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SMALL BUSINESS
Oil slips towards $77 as markets await data
By BARRY HATTON
, AP
-Oil slipped towards $77 a barrel Tuesday as markets awaited data expected to show that the pace of U.S. economic recovery is slower than previously estimated.
By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark crude for December delivery was down 12 cents to $77.44 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 9 cents to settle at $77.56 on Monday.
The U.S. government was due to report Tuesday on gross domestic product and consumer confidence. Investors expected the data to show the economy is still growing, but at a slower pace than initially calculated.
Also, many analysts predict the economy will weaken again next year as the effect of stimulus packages wears off and the jobless rate dampens consumer spending.
Crude has bounced between $76 a barrel and $82 for more than a month as a weakening dollar offsets concerns about tepid consumer demand. Oil often trades inversely to the strength of the dollar as investors buy commodities as a hedge against inflation.
"The ceiling has been set by weak refining margins, lackluster demand and a global economic recovery that is expected to be sluggish," Societe Generale said in a report.
Investor optimism was buoyed by a report Monday from the National Association of Realtors that October home sales rose more than 10 percent, suggesting strength in the U.S. economy. On the other hand, crude refiner Valero Energy said it shut down a plant last week because demand for oil products such as gasoline has been weak.
In other Nymex trading, heating oil was up 0.81 cent to $1.9880 a gallon. Gasoline for December delivery rose 0.84 cent to $1.9878 a gallon. Natural gas for December delivery was 0.4 cents higher at $4.477 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In London, Brent crude for January delivery rose 23 cents to $77.69 on the ICE Futures exchange.
—
Associated Press writer Alex Kennedy in Singapore contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-11-24 06:47:44
COMMENTS ( 505 )
MoNoGaZeR
This comment has been deleted.
RLMKnowlton
6:32AM Nov 24 2009
I'm surprised the monkeys in singapore aren't trying to beef up the prices because of Iran's military excercises. Imagine that, a military that performs military excercises? WOW. Bush let this high priced oil sh*t happen, and now it's happening on Obama's watch too. Maybe none of them care about us enough to stop it. Time to get rid of them all, start fresh with people that haven't been in office for 30 years.
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Lghtning38
2:35AM Nov 24 2009
wow sgentlejr, it must really suck to be you, why don't you get your facts straight, the economy started really flying south when the LIEberals took congress, lets see what happens in 2010 when the people are fed up with the LIEberals
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Gluetank
6:51PM Nov 23 2009
Anything to make, oops....er, I mean TAKE a buck.........
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NATTXN
9:48AM Nov 23 2009
Speculators drive the price up then roll over their bids into the next period, they never take the commodity just run the price up. If you watch the prices they will have a very brief, 5 minutes, of wild change then back to the level that the speculators want. That wild swing was a oil company taking their bid. Speculators are responsible for over 50% of the market price and oil companies love them for it keeps the profit up.
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