http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/071025/oil_prices.html

Oil Hits Record Above $90 on OPEC Report
Thursday October 25, 4:23 pm ET 
By John Wilen, AP Business Writer 


 

Report That OPEC Won't Lift Production Quotas Lifts Crude Oil Prices Back
Above $90 a Barrel 

NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil futures jumped to a new record close of $90.46 a barrel
Thursday on news that OPEC production increases aren't coming as fast as
expected and that the cartel won't announce new output quotas when it meets
next month. 

Prices rose in early trading on growing concerns about conflict in the
Middle East and declining supplies of crude in the U.S. They got a further
boost after Dow Jones Newswires reported that Oil Movements, a company that
tracks oil tanker traffic, said crude shipments from Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries members will grow more slowly than anticipated
through early November. 

Meanwhile, OPEC Secretary General Abdalla el-Badri told The Wall Street
Journal Asia the cartel is not in discussions to boost production by 500,000
barrels. El-Badri's comments counter rumors that Saudi Arabia is pushing for
a production increase. In September, OPEC bowed to Saudi pressure and
announced a production increase of 500,000 barrels a day, effective Nov. 1. 

"It shows a little drama in the cartel," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at
Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago. 

Light, sweet crude for December delivery rose $3.36 to settle at $90.46 a
barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after rising as high as $90.60
earlier, a trading record. 

Geopolitical events influenced early trading, with crude rising after
Lebanese troops fired on Israeli warplanes. A conflict between Israel and
Lebanon wouldn't itself have much impact on oil supplies, but traders worry
that any hostilities in the Middle East would eventually draw in big oil
producers such as Saudi Arabia and Iran. 

Energy traders also remain concerned that a threatened incursion by Turkish
armed forces into Iraq in search of Kurdish rebels would cut oil supplies
out of northern Iraq. 

On Wednesday, crude prices jumped sharply after the Energy Information
Administration reported that oil inventories fell by 5.3 million barrels
last week, much more than analysts expected. That report reversed a
three-day downward price trend, and put energy traders back in a bullish
mood, analysts said. 

"Yesterday's EIA report pretty much changed the personality of the market,"
said Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena,
Ill. 

In other Nymex trading, November gasoline rose 8.83 cents to settle at
$2.2358 a gallon, and November heating oil added 6.64 cents to settle at
$2.4084 a gallon. 

November natural gas rose 21.6 cents to settle at $7.188 per 1,000 cubic
feet as traders shrugged off a government report that inventories grew by 68
billion cubic feet last week, more than analysts had expected, and focused
instead on forecasts for colder weather in the Midwest and Northeast and the
possibility that a storm system in the western Atlantic could develop into
tropical strength as it moves into the Caribbean Sea. 

In London, December Brent crude rose $3.11 to settle at $87.48 a barrel on
the ICE Futures exchange. 

At the pump, gas prices slipped 0.2 cent overnight to a national average of
$2.82 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. 

Associated Press Writer George Jahn in Vienna contributed to this report. 




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