| Glimmer of hope amid the gloom
Resources stocks were hit hard after gold and base metals prices dipped overnight, while oil dropped to its lowest level in a month. Locally, a late session rally pared back losses on the benchmark indices from more than three per cent in morning trade. At the 4.15pm close (Sydney time), the S&P/ASX200 index had fallen 48.8 points, or 0.84 per cent, to 5747.3 while the broader All Ordinaries shed 57.6 points, or 0.98 per cent, to 5799.4. On the Sydney Futures Exchange at 4.25pm, the March share price index contract had dropped 29 points or 0.5 per cent to 5763 on a volume of 36,599 contracts. But CommSec equities Analyst Juliana Roadley said the Australian sharemarket remained a good vehicle for retail investors, adding that the current environment would also present some bargains.
Oil price hits new record of $US101.32 a barrel
WORLD oil prices hit a new record of $US101.32 ($110.48) a barrel in Asian trading today on renewed concerns over global crude oil supplies. New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in March, closed overnight up 73 cents at an all-time high of $US100.74. The latest price spike burst Tuesday's record price of $US100.10 and record close at $US100.01. In London, Brent North Sea crude for April delivery settled 14 cents lower at $US98.42, after striking a record $US98.70 Tuesday. Prices have soared amid growing speculation OPEC, which supplies about 40 per cent of the world's oil, may cut output at its March 5 meeting in Vienna, anticipating a fall in demand at the end of the northern hemisphere winter and a US economic slowdown, analysts said. "Supply worries and comments by some OPEC members that the group might not raise output at their March meeting provided the catalyst for the sharp rally," said Barclays Capital analyst Kevin Norrish.
Oil nudges higher after $2 fall, eyes dollar
SINGAPORE: Oil rose marginally in thin trade on Friday after falling sharply a day ago on concerns about the US economy, the strengthening dollar and the market's failure to break above a key resistance level. US light sweet crude futures for January delivery rose 36 cents to $92.61 a barrel after falling by $2.14 a day ago, halving gains from Wednesday when the market was buoyed by a US oil stock draw and a global central bank cash injection. London Brent crude rose 41 cents to $92.53. Oil prices touched a two-week high of $94.85 a barrel on Wednesday and Thursday, which may have triggered the reversal. "We have been feeling that there seems to be quite heavy resistance at $95 at the moment, we failed to break above it for two days, which is why people may have taken profits," said Tetsu Emori, a fund manager at Astmax Futures Co Ltd in Tokyo.
London robusta coffee hits 9-year high
London robusta coffee futures hit a nine-and-a-half-year high and cocoa reached a four-year peak on Friday on a wave of enthusiasm among investment funds for all sorts of commodities. Reallocation of investments for the New Year has already seen several basic resource prices, including gold and oil, hit record highs this month and soft commodities such as coffee and cocoa have been tipped as a good bet for the year ahead. "Funds are increasing their holding in both commodities at the moment. It is not an overnight thing, I think it has been building for some time," soft commodities trader Jeff Cooper of Ambrian Commodities said. .
Apache enjoys doubling of quarterly profit
Apache Corp., the largest U.S. investor in Egypt, said Thursday that its fourth-quarter net income doubled because of record oil prices and increased production. Profit jumped to $1.07 billion, or $3.19 a share, from $520.8 million, or $1.56, a year earlier, Houston-based Apache said. Profit excluding the impact of tax-rate changes and currency fluctuations was $2.92 a share, 44 cents higher than the average of 26 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. U.S. oil futures traded 50 percent higher than a year earlier in the fourth quarter on their way to topping $100 a barrel for the first time in January. About half of Apache's production is oil. More than 85 percent is sold at the going rate, rather than under hedging contracts that lock in prices. "Every day that we see $90 oil is a very good day," Chief Financial Officer Roger Plank told investors at an industry conference in November.
Pressure mounts for new controls on oil futures speculators
Sean Cota runs a family-owned fuel oil business in Bellows Falls, Vt., and has been active in the futures markets for 20 years, locking in prices to protect both himself and his customers. But over the past five years, he has watched in amazement -- and growing anger -- as speculators flooded into the market. It has created tremendous volatility and, he believes, driven up prices for crude oil, heating oil and a host of other commodities. As prices hover near record levels this year, his customers are bearing the brunt -- turning down their thermostats, taking longer to pay their bills and even using credit cards to pay for home heating. "All of these things are having a huge impact on people for something that is just not justified by supply and demand," Cota said.
Oil prices remain near US$99 a barrel but market seen staying bullish
Oil prices were barely higher Friday from the previous session's close after setting a record above US$100 a barrel overnight on a larger-than-expected drop in U.S. crude stockpiles. Light, sweet crude for February delivery was up 4 cents to US$99.22 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by midday in Europe. On Thursday, the contract rose as high as US$100.09 a barrel, a trading record, before retreating to settle at US$99.18. In London, Brent crude fell 8 cents Friday to US$97.52 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange. The U.S. Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said Thursday that crude inventories fell 4 million barrels last week, much more than the 1.7 million barrel decline analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, on average, had expected.
Oil price strikes record $US90
CRUDE oil prices struck a record $US90 a barrel in after-hours trading in New York overnight, amid increased tensions between Turkey's government and Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq. Traders said a weak US dollar and supply jitters had also stoked the price surge. The price gains came after New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in November, had jumped $US2.07 to a record close of $US89.47 a barrel. London prices also pushed higher in after-hours trading, as Brent North Sea crude for December delivery soared to $US84.88 after the contract had earlier settled $US1.47 higher at $US84.60. Oil prices have pushed higher this week amid geopolitical angst related to the Turkey-Iraq border and a weakening dollar, which makes dollar-priced commodities such as oil cheaper for buyers with stronger currencies and therefore lifts crude demand.
Oil price hits record $US101
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in March, subsequently receded, but closed up 73 cents at an all-time high of $US100.74. The latest price spike burst Tuesday's record price of $US100.10 and record close at $US100.01. In London, Brent North Sea crude for April delivery settled 14 cents lower at $US98.42, after striking a record $US98.70 Tuesday. Prices have soared amid growing speculation that OPEC, which supplies about 40 per cent of the world's oil, may cut output at its March 5 meeting in Vienna, anticipating a fall in demand at the end of the northern hemisphere winter and a US economic slowdown, analysts said. "Supply worries and comments by some OPEC members that the group might not raise output at their March meeting provided the catalyst for the sharp rally," said Barclays Capital analyst Kevin Norrish.
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