Markets
U.S. open in 54 hrs, 17 mins
BUSINESS NEWS
- Market News
- Earnings
- Recalls
- Recession Watch
- Tech News
- Financial Crisis
- Madoff Scandal
- BloggingStocks
- Luxist
- Money Videos
INVESTING
- Stock Quotes
- Stock Charts
- Stock Ticker
- Currencies
- Portfolio
- Stock Screener
- Broker Center
- Mutual Fund Center
- ETF Center
- Money
- 24/7 Wall St.
- Financial Glossary
PERSONAL FINANCE AT WALLETPOP
- Bargains
- Banking
- Budget
- Calculators
- College Finance
- Community
- Credit
- Deals
- Debt
- Economizer
- Food
- Home
- Fraud
- Insurance
- Interest Rates
- Loans
- Mortgages
- Real Estate
- Recalls
- Recession
- Retirement
- Saving
- Simplification
- Specials
- Taxes
SMALL BUSINESS
Oil Falls as US Recovery Hopes Wane
By PABLO GORONDI
, AP
posted: 197 DAYS 21 HOURS AGO
filed under: Financial Crisis, Crude Oil Prices
(May 14) - Oil prices fell to below $57 a barrel Thursday as weak U.S. retail sales and housing figures dampened optimism about an economic turnaround and a new study predicted oil demand would fall by 3 percent this year.
Benchmark crude for June delivery was down $1.06 to $56.96 a barrel by midday in Europe, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Wednesday, the contract fell 83 cents to settle at $58.02.
In London, Brent prices fell 74 cents to $56.60 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
The Paris-based International Energy Agency said it expects global oil consumption to fall by 3 percent in 2009 to 83.2 million barrels a day this year, or 2.6 million barrels a day less than in 2008.
It was the ninth consecutive monthly cut that the IEA has made to its oil demand forecast. In its previous report, the IEA said it saw a 2.8 percent demand drop this year.
Coming after a 0.3 percent fall in crude consumption in 2008, this will be the first time oil demand has fallen for two consecutive years since 1982-1983.
Prices have jumped from near $50 a barrel earlier this month — and rose above $60 earlier this week — on hopes that the worst of the recession is over the U.S. economy, the world's biggest oil consumer.
But figures showed that U.S. retail sales unexpectedly fell in April, and department story Macy's Inc. said its loss in the first-quarter widened from a year ago. The American housing market also continues to struggle. RealtyTrac data said Wednesday that April's foreclosures were up 32 percent from a year ago, and up slightly from March.
Higher crude prices are raising gasoline prices as well, which could help snuff out any nascent recovery in demand.
"We shouldn't expect the U.S. consumer to be as strong as they've been over the last few years," said Ben Westmore, an energy analyst with National Australia Bank in Melbourne.
Oil will likely trade sideways for the next few months before a global economic recovery at the end of the year boosts demand and prices, Westmore said.
"You have these two opposing forces," Westmore said. "On the one hand, fundamentals and the massive inventories that need to be drawn down weighing on prices, and on the other, market speculation coming back to equity and commodities, looking for a turning point."
In other Nymex trading, gasoline for June delivery fell 1.68 cents to $1.6720 a gallon and heating oil slid 2.07 cents to $1.4693 a gallon. Natural gas for June delivery dropped 8.1 cents to $4.252 per 1,000 cubic feet.
—
Associated Press writers Alex Kennedy in Singapore and Greg Keller in Paris contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-05-14 06:42:13
COMMENTS ( 145 )
AOL, and others have a responsibility to refrain from being a party to this.
Open letter to AOL...we dont want to hear what the American Petroluem Institute has to say anymore. See above statement for the real story