Crude Oil 2007

Fleursdumal

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Crude Oil Plunges as Mild U.S. Weather Curbs Fuel Consumption

By Mark Shenk

Jan. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil in New York fell 7.5 percent in the last two days, the biggest two-day drop since December 2004, as mild U.S. weather curbed heating-fuel use.

Home heating demand in the Northeast, where four-fifths of U.S. heating oil is used, will be 40 percent below normal through Jan. 11, forecaster Weather Derivatives said today. The decline accelerated after the Energy Department reported that U.S. fuel supplies surged last week.

``We're getting follow-through from yesterday because the picture hasn't changed,'' said John Kilduff, vice president of risk management at Fimat USA in New York. ``The temperature forecasts keep going up, which, combined with a relatively quiet geopolitical picture, is clobbering both crude and heating oil.''

Crude oil for February delivery fell $1.83, or 3.2 percent, to $56.49 a barrel at 1:16 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures touched $56.22, the lowest since Nov. 17. Prices are down 11 percent from a year ago. Yesterday, oil prices plunged the most in 20 months.

Prices are down 28 percent from the record of $78.40 a barrel reached on July 14. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to make two production cuts in the past three months. Members of OPEC, the group responsible for about 40 percent of global oil output, said high oil inventories in consuming countries may lead to falling prices.

Lower Inflation

``Prices are still high historically,'' said Jason Schenker, an economist at Wachovia Corp. in Charlotte, North Carolina. ``There should be some easing of inflationary pressure while at the same time revenue should remain strong for both companies and countries that produce oil.''

Inflation in the euro area held below the European Central Bank's 2 percent ceiling in December for a fourth month as energy prices declined and the euro rose. Consumer prices increased 1.9 percent from a year earlier, Eurostat, the European Union's statistics office in Luxembourg, said today.

Crude oil in New York has fallen 18 percent in the past year when measured in euros, 19 percent in British pounds and 8.5 percent in yen.

Federal Reserve officials concluded that the risk of inflation was ``the predominant concern'' last month, the Federal Open Market Committee said yesterday in minutes of the Dec. 12 session released in Washington.

Above-normal temperatures will cover the eastern U.S. from Jan. 9 through Jan. 13, the National Weather Service said yesterday.

``We are seeing a fall temperature range instead of one you would expect in winter,'' said Dale Mohler, senior meteorologist at AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania. ``It was mild most of December and the warmth is continuing into January. The long-lasting nature of this mild weather is what is surprising.''

Warmest Year

The world is likely to experience its warmest recorded year in 2007 because of the effects of the El Nino weather pattern and global warming, the U.K. government's weather forecasting division said toady. There is a 60 percent chance that this year will be hotter than 1998, the current warmest year, according to the Met Office, which is based in Exeter, England.

The main factor behind the prediction is the onset last year of El Nino, a warming of the eastern Pacific's equatorial waters that occurs every two to seven years, the Met office said.

Heating oil for February delivery fell 2.42 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $1.5639 a gallon in New York. Futures touched $1.5615 a gallon, the lowest since July 25, 2005.

Inventory Report

Supplies of distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil and diesel, jumped 1.97 million barrels to 135.6 million last week, the biggest increase since the week ended Sept. 22, the Energy Department reported. A gain of 835,000 barrels was expected, according to the median of 13 responses in a Bloomberg News survey.

Gasoline stockpiles rose 5.68 million barrels to 209.5 million barrels, the biggest one-week gain since the week ended Sept. 22, the report showed.

The department released its weekly report on petroleum inventories a day later than usual because of the New Year's holiday on Jan. 1.

The department said yesterday it published incorrect oil- supply data on Dec. 20 and that the error will not be corrected. The department reported on Dec. 28 that midwestern supplies in the week ended Dec. 22 were 17 percent higher at 80.5 million barrels and total U.S. supplies were at 329.1 million, 3.6 percent higher than actual.

U.S. crude-oil inventories for that week plunged a record 17.8 million barrels, or 5.4 percent, department spokesman Jonathan Cogan said in a phone interview today. The previous record was 15.2 million barrels, or 4.5 percent, in the week ended Jan. 1, 1999.

Brent crude oil for February settlement fell $1.85, or 3.2 percent, to $56.11 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures exchange. Futures touched $55.87 a barrel, the lowest since Dec. 28, 2005.
 
NYMEX to boost margins for crude oil futures
Fri Jan 5, 2007

NEW YORK, Jan 5 (Reuters) - The New York Mercantile Exchange Inc. (NMX.N: Quote, Profile , Research) announced margin changes for its crude oil and related futures contracts, beginning at the close of business on Monday, the exchange said on Friday.

Margins for the crude oil, crude oil calendar swap, and crude oil financial futures contracts will increase to $3,000 from $2,500 for clearing members, to $3,300 from $2,750 for members, and to $4,050 from $3,375 for customers, the NYMEX said in a release.

Margins for the NYMEX miNY crude oil futures contract will increase to $1,500 from $1,250 for clearing members, to $1,650 from $1,375 for members, and to $2,025 from $1,688 for customers.
 
AP
Oil Prices Rise on Reports of OPEC Talks
Monday January 8, 8:54 am ET
By George Jahn, Associated Press Writer

Oil Prices Rise on Reports That OPEC Oil Ministers Have Started Talks on Another Potential Cut

VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Oil prices rose Monday, supported by reports that OPEC oil ministers have begun talks on another potential cut and worries about energy shortages in parts of Europe as the fallout of a dispute between Russia and Belarus.


The rebound -- which came after last week's plunge amid a warmer-than-normal winter in the U.S. Northeast, a key region for heating oil demand -- strengthened amid reports that Belarus had ordered a halt to deliveries of Russian oil that goes via its territory to Germany, Poland and Ukraine.

The head of the Russian state pipeline operator Transneft, Semyon Vainshtok accused Belarus of siphoning off Russian oil destined for Europe since Saturday, the RIA-Novosti news agency reported.

Belarus recently had to accept a doubling of the price it pays for imports of Russian natural gas, on which it depends for industry and home heating, under the threat of supplies being but off. The two countries are now locked in a dispute over oil duties, with Russia determined to stop Belarus from re-exporting petroleum products made from processing Russian oil bought cheaply.

Jason Schenker, an economist with Wachovia Corp., said that if the dispute is not resolved soon, it could cause overall oil prices to rise as sellers from other markets could hike their own prices.

"If this situation is not resolved with relative expediency, the market may interpret it as a repeat of the Ukraine situation from last year, which would have bullish energy price implications," Schenker said "The magnitude of the reaction of energy markets will be directly dependent on how protracted this situation becomes or appears likely to become."

Countries in the European Union, which depends on Russia for 25 percent of its gas consumption, suffered a brief disruption in early 2006 after Moscow suspended gas deliveries to Ukraine because of a pricing dispute. Ukraine and Belarus are the transit route for Russian gas to Europe.

OPEC anxiety over recent declines in prices also appeared to be affecting prices, with Vienna's PVM Oil Associates saying the market's recovery was partly due to "reports that OPEC might hold an extraordinary meeting prior to its scheduled meeting on March 15."

Citing a senior OPEC source, Dow Jones Newswires also reported Monday that members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have begun talks on the potential need for a further output cut in response to a 10 percent drop in oil prices since the beginning of the year. OPEC had no immediate comment.

"OPEC almost has to do something here, and that is something we need to be ready for," said Peter Beutel at Cameron Hanover.

The oil cartel agreed to a 1.2 million barrel-a-day cut in crude output beginning in November and another 500,000 barrel-a-day cut set to begin Feb. 1.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery rose 82 cents to $57.13 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by afternoon in Europe. Brent crude for February rebounded by $1.01 to $56.65 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

"Because of a steep drop last week, the market is due for a rebound, and that's what we're seeing this morning," said Victor Shum, an analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore.

Over the weekend, the U.S. National Weather Service reported record or near-record temperatures across the U.S. Northeast. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration projected a December, January and February about 2 percent warmer in the Northeast than the 30-year average.

"The U.S. Northeast weather will remain a focal point but the winter season isn't over yet and some weather forecasters expect a cold front coming. There's a chance the cold weather will return and raise heating oil demand," Shum said.

Heating oil futures rose by more than 2 cents to $1.5875 a gallon, while natural gas prices gained more than 27 cents to $6.460 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In the longer term, analysts said many other factors that could send prices higher remained in place.

"With all the current bearish exuberance, we remind ourselves that Chinese demand, the overall (growth in the) economy, and the various geopolitical situations are hardly gone and should not be forgotten," said John Kilduff, senior vice president for energy risk management at Fimat USA.
 
http://www.cme.com/trading/dta/real/nymex19770.html

NYMEX

Free real-time quotes are now available on the NYMEX® Energy Futures trading on CME Globex®.

Products include NYMEX WTI and Brent Crude Oil, RBOB and Unleaded Gasoline, Natural Gas, Heating Oil, Gasoil and Propane Futures.

With this resource you can view:

* Cash settled and Physically settled quotes and spreads going out 6 months
* Outright market data – bids/asks 5 deep
* Calendar spreads corresponding to the outrights displayed - limited to the 6 months
* Total contract volume for NYMEX energy futures on CME Globex
 
ipotesi politico-finanziaria- US e Arabia Saudita si mettono d'accordo per metterlo nel q ad Iran e Venezuela , gli US tra l'altro prendono due piccioni con una fava perchè mettono anche una pezza ad alcune falle del loro sistema economico


Crude Oil Falls Below $51 on Saudi Rejection of More OPEC Cuts

By Mark Shenk

Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell below $51 a barrel in New York for the first time in 19 months after Saudi Arabia's oil minister rejected calls for more production cuts.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries must wait to assess the effect of a production cut starting on Feb. 1, the minister, Ali al-Naimi, told reporters in New Delhi. Saudi Arabia is OPEC's biggest and most influential member. Prices are down 14 percent this year, spurring Venezuela and Algeria to call for action before the next scheduled meeting on March 15.

``Crude oil has been down pretty sharply the last week and a half, leading some OPEC members to call for an emergency meeting and additional cuts,'' said Tom Bentz, an oil broker with BNP Paribas Inc. in New York. ``The Saudis say there is no need for further cuts, which has thrown cold water on the idea.''

Crude oil for February delivery fell $1.89, or 3.6 percent, to $51.10 a barrel at 1:22 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures touched $50.93, the lowest since May 31, 2005. Prices are down 23 percent from a year ago. There was no floor trading in New York yesterday because of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

Prices are down 35 percent from the record of $78.40 a barrel reached on July 14. The decline has accelerated during the past month because mild weather in the U.S. and Europe has curbed consumption of heating fuels.

Colder Weather

Below-normal temperatures will cover most of the U.S. from Jan. 21 through Jan. 25, the National Weather Service said yesterday. The Northeast, which accounts for 80 percent of the nation's heating-oil use, will be among the regions with colder weather.

Heating oil for February delivery fell 2.26 cents, or 1 percent, to $1.4810 a gallon in New York.

``Heating oil is a crude-oil product so you expect them to move in the same direction,'' said Eric Wittenauer, an energy analyst at A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. in St. Louis. ``There's been a strong move in crude, and heating oil is following, even though it's cold. Also, because of the warm weather we've had there are substantial heating-oil stockpiles along the East Coast.''

Heating-oil inventories on the East Coast in the week ended Jan. 5 were 29 percent higher than a year earlier, an Energy Department report showed last week. A report from the department on Jan. 18 is expected to show that U.S. inventories of gasoline and distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil and diesel, rose last week, a Bloomberg survey showed.

OPEC Agreements

OPEC, which produces about 40 percent of the world's oil, agreed last month in Abuja, Nigeria, to cut production by 500,000 barrels a day beginning Feb. 1. This comes on top of an agreement in Doha, Qatar, to cut output by 1.2 million barrels a day starting Nov. 1.

``There is actually no real need now'' for an extra output cut, al-Naimi told reporters at New Delhi's airport. ``All the fundamentals are significantly better than they were in Doha, and I believe in a very short time it is going to improve.''

Almost 100 million barrels were removed from the global oil market in the fourth quarter due to OPEC's first production cut starting on Nov. 1, al-Naimi said today. That ``put the market closer to balance,'' he said.

``It's likely that the Saudis' major concern was high inventories and they now feel that OPEC's already succeeded in getting them under control,'' said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts.

Al-Naimi's appeal to wait until February echoed comments earlier today in New Delhi by Edmund Daukoru, oil minister of Nigeria, the group's sixth-largest supplier.

Venezuela Seeks Cut

Venezuela, the group's fourth-largest producer, is seeking a further output cut to boost sagging prices, Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez told reporters in Caracas yesterday. Algeria would back a meeting to discuss larger reductions than the 500,000 barrels a day planned for Feb. 1, the country's oil minister, Chakib Khelil, told the state-run Algerie Presse Service.

Oil in New York has fallen 28 percent in the past year when measured in euros, 31 percent in British pounds and 20 percent in yen.

Brent crude oil for February settlement declined 82 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $52.30 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures exchange.
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
http://www.cme.com/trading/dta/real/nymex19770.html

NYMEX

Free real-time quotes are now available on the NYMEX® Energy Futures trading on CME Globex®.

Products include NYMEX WTI and Brent Crude Oil, RBOB and Unleaded Gasoline, Natural Gas, Heating Oil, Gasoil and Propane Futures.

With this resource you can view:

* Cash settled and Physically settled quotes and spreads going out 6 months
* Outright market data – bids/asks 5 deep
* Calendar spreads corresponding to the outrights displayed - limited to the 6 months
* Total contract volume for NYMEX energy futures on CME Globex
interessante...
vedo che vogliono la registrazione con tutti i dati, completi di indirizzo, telefono, email, ecc.... sicuro che è gratuito o poi ti mandano il conto a casa? :D
ok, a parte gli scherzi... è sceso ancora, a che livello posizioneresti un'entrata long? forse è ancora troppo presto... :-?
 
Petrolio ... non dovremmo essere troppo distanti dalla verità ... direi che da 51,1 $ sul contratto marzo si può iniziare ad accumulare ...

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io ci andrei cauto, da un semplice grafico si vede bene che potrebbe andare anche a 45
poi è ovvio che in molti stanno guardando quel livello e si anticiperà certamente di qualche tick, ma per ora siamo ben lontani
e poi non c'è nessuna certezza che dopo una forte discesa ci sia un inversione a V

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