A lot. China has a big say in the energy market now.
   
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  From the Oil and Gas Journal
   
  MARKET WATCH: Energy prices continue to crumble

  Sam Fletcher
Senior Writer 
  HOUSTON, Oct. 24 -- Energy prices continued to crumble Oct. 23 amid 
indications that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is boosting 
oil production to meet the Nov. 1 increase of 500,000 b/d that the group agreed 
to Sept. 11 in Vienna. 
  "The producing group has begun increasing October supplies in anticipation of 
Nov. 1," said analysts in the Houston office of Raymond James & Associates Inc. 
"Further driving oil prices down is the anticipation of an [US] inventory 
build," they said. 
  The second high-level energy roundtable between China and OPEC ministers took 
place Oct. 24 in Beijing. Officials from both sides announced only that they 
had agreed to a third energy roundtable next year at the OPEC Secretariat in 
Vienna. 
  However, Olivier Jakob, managing director of Petromatrix GMBH, Zug, 
Switzerland, said, "The Chinese economic planning agency has been reported 
complaining to OPEC that prices are too high, and the Chinese voice has 
probably these days a greater weight than the same complaints emanating from 
the head of the US Department of Energy. Coincidently, OPEC sources are 
providing more sound bites of a possible supplemental increase [in crude 
supplies.]" 
  US inventories
The Energy Information Administration said Oct. 24 that commercial US crude 
inventories fell 5.3 million bbl to 316.6 million bbl in the week ended Oct. 
19, vs. expectations among Wall Street analysts of an 800,000 build. Gasoline 
inventories dropped 2 million bbl to 193.8 million bbl, while distillate fuel 
inventories decreased by 1.8 million bbl to 134.5 million bbl. The previous 
consensus among Wall Street analysts was for increases of 300,000 bbl in both 
categories. Propane and propylene inventories increased by 600,000 to 61 
million bbl last week. 
  Imports of crude into the US fell more than 1.3 million b/d to 9.1 million 
b/d during that same week. The input of crude into US refineries dropped 
183,000 b/d to 14.9 million b/d with refineries operating at 87.1% capacity, 
down from 87.3% capacity the previous week. Nevertheless, gasoline production 
rose to nearly 9 million b/d while distillate fuel production fell to 3.9 
million b/d. 
  Energy prices
The new front-month December contract and the January contract both lost 75¢ to 
$85.27/bbl and $84.46/bbl, respectively, Oct. 23 on the New York Mercantile 
Exchange. On the US spot market, West Texas Intermediate was down $1.09 to 
$86.48/bbl. The November contract for reformulated blend stock for oxygenate 
blending (RBOB) dropped 2.45¢ to $2.11/gal on NYMEX. Heating oil for the same 
month declined by 1.11¢ to $2.30/gal. 
  The November natural gas contract lost 13¢ to $6.76/MMbtu on NYMEX on 
forecasts of warm weather. On the US spot market, gas at Henry Hub, La., fell 
13.5¢ to $6.36/MMbtu. "Without the 'storm premium' built in during the Atlantic 
hurricane season, natural gas prices are likely to decline with high supplies 
and mild near-term weather forecasts reducing demand for gas," said Raymond 
James analysts. 
  In London, the December IPE contract for North Sea Brent crude was down 42¢ 
to $82.85/bbl. Gas oil for November dropped $3.25 to $719/tonne. 
  The average price for OPEC's basket of 12 reference crudes dipped by 12¢ to 
$80.11/bbl on Oct. 23. 
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