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Oil Slides Toward Multiyear Low

By MARK WILLIAMS
,
AP
posted: 287 DAYS 13 HOURS AGO
comments: 1487
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (Feb. 12) - Oil prices slid to a new low for the year Thursday because of growing doubts that the $789 billion stimulus package will reinvigorate the economy and demand for energy.
Crude supplies in the U.S. reached an 82-week high last week, according to the Department of Energy, showing just how far demand has fallen.
Retail gas prices, meanwhile, reached a new high for 2009 on Thursday and appeared headed back to $2 a gallon as refiners cut back on production.
Light, sweet crude for March delivery tumbled $1.96, more than 5 percent, to settle at $33.98 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Since Monday, the price for a barrel of oil has fallen nearly 20 percent. Crude last settled below $34 two months ago.
Dispiriting economic news continues to depress energy prices because traders see consumers and businesses cutting back spending even further in coming months.
The number of people requesting first-time unemployment benefits dropped slightly last week, but remained near a 26-year high as companies lay off thousands of workers amid a deepening recession. The Commerce Department said Thursday the number of initial jobless benefit claims dropped to a seasonally adjusted 623,000, from an upwardly revised figure of 631,000 the previous week. The latest tally still was above analysts' expectations of 610,00 claims.
The 631,000 figure was the highest number since October 1982, when the economy was emerging from a steep recession, though the labor force has grown by about half since then.
In a sign that laid-off workers are having difficulty finding new work, the number of people claiming benefits for more than one week rose to 4.81 million from 4.78 million, the highest total since records began in 1967. The continuing claims data lags the new claims numbers by one week.
Retail sales surprised analysts by rising 1 percent in January, reversing a six-month trend. Analysts said the rise was unlikely to last though and that much of the increase was due to rising gasoline prices.
Moving with lightning speed, the Democratic-controlled Congress and White House agreed Wednesday on a compromise stimulus bill designed to create millions of jobs. President Barack Obama could sign the measure within days.
"The stimulus package getting done is wonderful, but it will be months or a half a year before it filters into the real economy," said Addison Armstrong of Tradition Energy. Until then, the market will have to work through the excess amount of oil on the market, he said.
Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates, said it is unclear how much oil will benefit from the stimulus package and the Treasury Department's plan announced earlier this week to spend more than $1 trillion to help remove banks' soured assets from their books and unclog the credit markets.
"Just like the stock market, there's a feeling of the malaise because of a lack of definition," he said.
He said he is looking for oil prices to retest multiyear lows of $32.70 reached in January.
While oil prices have been sliding, gas prices have been on the move. Prices at the pump rose 1.2 cents overnight to $1.95 nationwide, the highest level since Thanksgiving, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.
Prices are 34 cents higher than they were when they bottomed on Dec. 31, but still $1.02 below year-ago levels.
Oil, as it has done for much of the past few weeks, also seemed to be following the stock market lower. The Dow Jones industrial average was off about 150 points in afternoon trading and was near the multiyear lows it hit in November.
The Energy Information Administration said Wednesday that crude inventories for the week ended Friday jumped 4.7 million barrels to 350.8 million barrels, surpassing the expectations of analysts surveyed by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos., who expected a boost of 3.4 million barrels. Including last week's buildup, crude inventories have increased by more than 30 million barrels in the past five weeks.
Oil trader and analyst Stephen Schork said inventories are now 16.5 percent above year-ago levels and within 10.5 percent of the all-time high of 391.9 million barrels set in the summer 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait.
Gasoline inventories last week, however, slipped by 2.6 million barrels, or 1.2 percent, and demand for the four weeks ended Friday rose 0.1 percent to 8.8 million barrels a day, suggesting that more people may be spending money on fuel. Analysts expected stockpiles of the motor fuel to rise by 900,000 barrels.
U.S. refineries ran at 81.6 percent of total capacity on average, a drop of 1.9 percent from the prior week. Analysts expected capacity to slip to 83 percent. Refiners took in 214,000 fewer barrels of crude last week and gasoline production fell, the EIA reported.
The companies that own refineries are seeing the same dour headlines about job losses, and have slashed production as they try do match supply with demand. They also have curtailed production for maintenance typically performed this time of year.
Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service, said his forecast is for gas to hit $2 to $2.50 a gallon. He said gasoline now is nearly $20 a barrel above crude prices east of the Rocky Mountains and nearly $40 in California.
But he said the high refinery margins for gasoline will not last.
EIA said Thursday that natural gas storage levels in the U.S. dropped less than expected last week, but remain above year-ago levels. In its weekly report, EIA said inventories held in underground storage in the lower 48 states fell by 159 billion cubic feet to about 2.02 trillion cubic feet for the week ended Friday.
Analysts had expected a drop of 165 billion to 170 billion cubic feet, according to a survey by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.
In other Nymex trading, gasoline futures fell 1.15 cents to settle at $1.2583 a gallon. Heating oil rose less than a penny to settle at $1.3218 a gallon while natural gas for March delivery fell 4.7 cents to settle at $4.485 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In London, the March Brent contract rose 37 cents to settle at $44.65 on the ICE Futures exchange.
Associated Press writers Jake Neubacher in Vienna, Alex Kennedy in Singapore, and Christopher S. Rugaber and Marcy Gordon in Washington 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.
2009-02-12 12:38:39
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Recent Comments

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1487 comments

AngelicDevil1x11 01:36:14 PM Feb 15 2009

To Dang1067 you are right on!! your mind thinks exactly like mine. you put a very descriptive explanation of exactly how most of us feel. keep up the good work. im cursing with ya against the greedy ******* bastards!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

NATTXN 02:06:25 PM Feb 13 2009

It is funny how only the front month of crude is up, the oil companies must think everyone is stupid.

NATTXN 01:43:06 PM Feb 13 2009

All the blogging about oil down gas up and guess what oil went up 3.00 today. The oil companies don't like it when people know they are a bunch of lieing cheats.

GaryBeltz1 11:32:16 AM Feb 13 2009

They are cutting production/supply due to a drop in consumer demand.....they can't keep producing because gasoline and diesel has a shelf life and there's just so many places you can store it. Just because they are reducing production/supply doesn't mean a drop in price......for example, they produce 100000gal @ $1.00gal that's $100000, but they cut production to 80000gal.....now they have to charge $1.25gal to make that same $100000. THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THEY ARE DOING AND AS LONG AS NOBODY UNDERCUTS THE OTHER IT WILL CONTINUE TO WORK.

GaryBeltz1 11:12:16 AM Feb 13 2009

The are producing less gas due to consumer demand being down, but this doesn't mean cheaper gas.......for example, you produce 100000gallons of gas @1.00 gallon....that's $100000, but you cut back on production due to demand and only produce 80000gallons......you have to raise your price to 1.25gallon to make that same $100000.......THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THEY ARE DOING. YOU CAN DO THIS AS LONG AS YOU AGREE NOT TO UNDERCUT EACH OTHER.

NATTXN 10:42:13 AM Feb 13 2009

I wanted to write my Senator but found John Cornyn had recieved 695,000 from big oil in 2008 and I thought he would not be on the side of the voters as he was the best senator that money could buy. Look like we the people will have to find a way out of this mess on our own.We need to nationalize the energy refineries as they are now all in collusion and operating at less than 80% in order to maintain a higher gasoline price than if they let the businesses run without everyone having their secret meetings and price agreements. The agreements are taking place or else they would not all raise their prices winthin a few minutes.How else can you explain operating at the same lower capacity at all the refineries. I thought price fixing was illegal but I guess it is all right if you have paid off congress with large contributions.

NATTXN 09:08:16 AM Feb 13 2009

Man AOL does its best to keep oil stories and comments where you can't find them. I think the are in this with big oil. You know the story, crude goes down gas goes up. The demand story only works on raising prices never on lowering them. A good ole boy from Louisana said the way to fix them was to shoot the price window on the pumps as they couldn't replace them for a few days and the repair cost them about 100 or more for pump.

CARMON1970 06:39:21 AM Feb 13 2009

fix the time on the comments, the comment i just posted was done at 6:43 not 6:36

CARMON1970 06:36:48 AM Feb 13 2009

Ok aol you ask for comments. people type one about the truth and you don't want to post it. What's up with that. I posted a comment at 6: 35 and guess what it is not there. Oh I did the refresh button 4 times and it is still not there. Greedy Oil companys and greedy retailes. Lower your prices and people will buy.

CaspperThegimp 06:22:09 AM Feb 13 2009

mcreek25 05:16:12 AM Feb 13 2009(Expensive oil feeds Russia and our enemies in Columbia and the Middle East.) Does your blog state we, the united states, get most of our oil from Canada, and mexico, and little from Russia and not the middle east? Although I agree with your sentiments, Canada and mexico have no plans to launch attacks against us. Other stories state Russia has used up most of their oil deposites, and are in danger of running out. I wonder, is that why they're buddying up with Iran? because Iran will sell oil to them when theirs runout? Maybe Nobama and "do nothing" Biden can talk Iran into not selling oil to Russia ? But I don't that very much !!!!!

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