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Oil Prices
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teeth53
Supreme |
10-Sep-2009 13:06
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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Oil pump price finally came down by 0.06 cents as of yesterday. |
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smartrader
Elite |
05-Sep-2009 11:02
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Our local oil rigs builders are world-class... opportunities abound Local Impact of BP Oil Discovery Posted: Sep 4, 2009 07:59 AM Updated: Sep 4, 2009 09:17 AM
BP's "giant" oil find in the Gulf of Mexico may not cause lower prices at the gas-pump, but could still have an impact in the area. "Lafayette is the center of the oil service industry for the Gulf of Mexico," said Gregg Gothreaux, president and CEO of the Lafayette Economic Development Authority (LEDA). According to LEDA there are thousands of businesses in the oil services industry in Lafayette and Acadiana. It's these businesses that can expect more business as BP prepares to extract oil from the new site in the Gulf, a process that can take some time. "By the time they develop and get all the wells in place, it takes many years to get on-line, they're estimating sometime around 2020," said Don Briggs, president of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association. Briggs says discoveries like this one are crucial for the oil and gas industry, as the nation's production of oil depletes 10% every year. He says its finds like this that will be key offsetting those statistics, and lessening our dependence on foreign oil. |
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teeth53
Supreme |
05-Sep-2009 10:32
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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Oil price closed of at, OIL $ |
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teeth53
Supreme |
04-Sep-2009 21:35
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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A day after oil traded up, went up above US$70 a barrel...Today it went down again...err humm. Volatile...Ya. OIL $ http://money.cnn.com/2009/09/04/news/economy/jobs_august/index.htm?postversion=2009090408 Job losses ebb, but unemployment up. Unemployment jumps to a 26-year high of 9.7%, even as employers cut the smallest number of jobs since August 2008. August in the 20th straight month to decline... |
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teeth53
Supreme |
31-Aug-2009 22:56
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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After it hit a high of US$75/-...OIL $ | ||||||
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teeth53
Supreme |
17-Aug-2009 20:19
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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http://money.cnn.com/2009/08/17/markets/oil.reut/index.htm?postversion=2009081706 Oil fell to a two-week low below $66 a barrel on Monday as investors became more cautious about the pace of global economic recovery and any revival in energy demand. "It's a very weak market, continuing the weak tone on Friday, linked to falling stock markets and more bearish sentiment about demand," said Christopher Bellew, a broker at Bache Commodities. U.S. crude oil futures fell $1.71 to $65.80 a barrel. Prices hit an intra-day low of $65.65. |
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teeth53
Supreme |
16-Aug-2009 00:15
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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Oil egg lower and went below US$68 dollars.....OIL $
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louis_leecs
Elite |
15-Aug-2009 00:11
![]() Yells: "half cash" |
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CREATE BY SPECULATOR,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,OVERDONE,,,,,,,,,,,IS ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,ALERT | ||||||
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teeth53
Supreme |
14-Aug-2009 23:37
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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Oil edging and trading lower by more then 3%...fallen OIL $ | ||||||
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teeth53
Supreme |
14-Aug-2009 22:59
![]() Yells: "don't learn through life, learn to grow with life " |
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After thinking marketing is reviving....Oil prices have climbed sharply from lows near $30 last winter as dealers anticipated an eventual rebound in the global economy that could revive ailing world energy demand. OIL $ http://money.cnn.com/data/commodities/index.html? Gasoline prices near their peak 1:50pm: Summer price spike is below normal due to weak economy, but markets and storms could change the forecast. More |
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mirage
Veteran |
30-Jul-2009 14:07
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RPT-GLOBAL MARKETS-Asia shares steady after bruising; oil pauses* Asian shares mixed after Wednesday's Shanghai-led falls * Shanghai's index highly volatile, MSCI ex Japan gains * China says to stick to appropriately loose monetary policy * Oil at $63 a barrel, extending losses on stockpile rise (Repeats item to more subscribers) By Charlotte Cooper TOKYO, July 30 (Reuters) - Asian share markets were largely steady on Thursday, struggling to regain multi-month highs, while Shanghai shares see-sawed after a 5 percent sell-off the previous day that sent other markets reeling. Crude futures hovered at $63 a barrel CLc1, after a drop of 5.8 percent on Wednesday when data from the United States, the world's top oil consumer, showed an unexpectedly large build in crude oil stocks last week. [O/R] The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 0.4 percent after tumbling 1.8 percent on Wednesday. The index hit a 10 month high on Tuesday. Tokyo started higher, helped by early losses in the yen, but caution over Asia's tumble on Wednesday prompted investors to pare the losses. The Nikkei stock average was flat. [.T] However, shares in automakers Honda Motor (7267.T) and Nissan Motor (7201.T) gained strongly following surprise quarterly profits. [ID:nT188181] "Though the market initially jumped a bit in response to a weaker yen, yesterday's falls in Asian shares as well as Wall Street are definitely a concern," said Yutaka Miura, chief technical analyst at Mizuho Securities. The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI fell 0.3 percent to 9,070.72 on Wednesday. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index .SPX shed 0.5 percent and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC slid 0.4 percent. [.N] "There's a sense that perhaps the July rally in global stocks may be coming to an end," Miura said. The Nikkei hit its highest level in nine months this week and other markets such as Seoul have also risen rapidly, some to levels not seen since the collapse of Lehman Brothers last year, as global recovery hopes have fuelled buying. But worries on Wednesday that China might be ready to hit the brakes on lending, a move that could curb demand and hinder a global economic recovery, sent Shanghai's index .SSEC tumbling and hit commodity prices and energy and raw materials shares. In comments reported on Thursday, the vice governor of China's central bank said it would "unswervingly" stick to an appropriately loose monetary policy and will use market tools not quota controls to ensure credit growth was appropriate. [ID:nPEK357846]. The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC gained more than 1 percent but was still well below Wednesday's 14-month high. Shares in Seoul fell, but Australia fared better, buoyed by top banks after a broker upgrade and their gains offset falls in top miners on worries about Chinese demand. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index .AXJO rose 0.8 percent with top lender National Australia Bank Ltd (NAB.AX) leading banks. Miner BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) fell, but less than traders had expected from the drop in oil and metals prices. In New Zealand, the central bank warned the strength of the New Zealand dollar was adding to the risks of economic recovery as the country tries to emerge from its worst recession on record. It kept rates unchanged at a record low of 2.5 percent but left the door open to more cuts if the currency, which has risen 30 percent since March, did not ease. The currency dropped a cent after the central bank news but was steady on the day at $0.6505 later. [ID:nWEL467297] South Korea too reaffirmed it would maintain expansionary economic policy until the private sector revived and warned a premature shift in policy to tightening mode could cause problems. [ID:nSEO354010]. Concern about China also made waves in the currency market, where the dollar had risen on Wednesday as investors took profits on currencies that have benefited from improving investor confidence that the global economy has hit bottom. The dollar trimmed gains against a basket of currencies .DXY after the comment by China's central bank. The yen, another currency which benefits when investors turn defensive, held steady at 95.02 yen per dollar JPY= but lost some of the previous day's gains against the euro and Australian dollar. (Additional reporting by Elaine Lies and Satomi Noguchi in Tokyo, Jungyoun Park in Seoul and Sonali Paul in Sydney; Editing by Neil Fullick) |
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mirage
Veteran |
13-Jul-2009 15:31
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MEND has thus far confined its attacks to the oil-rich but volatile Niger Delta and kidnapped several foreign and local oil workers. Lagos residents, including AFP correspondents, heard a loud explosion reverberating across the bustling, sprawling city of around 16 million people. Atlas Cove Jetty is the first point of contact for vessels as they enter Nigerian territorial waters from the west. Oil tankers are loaded here. The attack came just hours before treason charges against a top MEND leader were expected to be dropped at a court hearing on Monday as part of a government amnesty deal offered to rebels. Lawyers for MEND leader Henry Okah and top government officials agreed on the unscheduled hearing at a meeting Sunday, Okah's lawyer Femi Falana told AFP. Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua on June 25 declared an unconditional pardon for militants in the Niger Delta, if they "surrender their weapons and renounce militancy." The release of Okah, incarcerated since September 2007 and who has been facing treason charges, is one of the rebels' main demands to give up violence. The MEND, which launched an armed rebellion in the swamps and creeks of oil-rich southern Nigeria in 2006, say they are seeking greater share of the oil wealth for the locals of the Niger Delta. But the group adopted a pugnacious tone in Sunday's statement, replete with Biblical references. "The two-pronged approach of combining dialogue and intensifying attacks throughout the course of negotiations, will be the unique characteristics of Moses," MEND said, referring to its new oil war. "We want to assure our people and well wishers that we will not sell our birthright for a bowl of porridge," it said. "The mother of all plagues will be used as a last resort if the Nigerian Pharaohs show stubbornness over reasoning ..." it said, without elaborating. "We sincerely hope for the sake of avoiding a total calamity that (the Nigerian government) will nor harden its heart," it added. The state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has painted a grim picture of the fallout of the violence, saying monthly oil revenue this year dropped to around one billion dollars from an average of 2.2 billion dollars in 2008. |
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mirage
Veteran |
08-Jul-2009 14:25
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Slumping crude oil prices drag stock market lowerStocks slump as tumbling oil prices drag energy shares down; Jitters grow about earnings
NEW YORK (AP) -- Falling oil prices are becoming another sign of investors' deflating hopes for a speedy economic recovery. Major stock indexes skidded 2 percent Tuesday as crude fell for the fifth straight day and the Dow Jones industrial average fell 161 points to its lowest close since late April. Lower oil prices can help the economy by reducing costs, but investors are looking to the latest slide as an unwelcome prediction that demand for energy and basic materials will remain weak as the recession lingers. Trading volume remained light amid a dearth of news about the economy this week and as investors await the beginning of the second-quarter earnings season, which starts Wednesday with Alcoa Inc. but won't pick up speed until next week. Stocks have drifted lower in recent days as the market's confidence about the economy took hits from a poor jobs report for June, waning consumer confidence and plunging commodities prices. That stoked fears that the market might have gotten ahead of itself in March and April, when investors sent stocks soaring in hopes that a nearly two-year-long recession will end some time this year. The next guideposts for the market will be the forecasts companies give during earnings reports about how business conditions look for the rest of the year. "Uncertainty has crept back into the picture," said Carl Beck, partner at Harris Financial Group. "We started to get some data that put a damper on some of the optimism that had been growing about the economic recovery and that sort of put everything on hold until we start hearing from companies." The Dow fell 161.27, or 1.9 percent, to 8,163.60. It was the lowest finish for the blue chips since April 28. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 17.69, or 2 percent, to 881.03, its lowest finish since May 1. The Nasdaq composite index lost 41.23, or 2.3 percent, to 1,746.17, the lowest close since May 27. Stocks ended mixed on Monday after all the major indexes posted losses last week. The Dow and the S&P 500 have shed about 7 percent since their recent highs on June 12. The Dow is still up 25 percent from a 12-year low hit on March 9 and the S&P 500 index is up 30.2 percent. Oil tumbled from an eight-month high hit last week on concerns that a weak economy will dampen demand for energy. Light, sweet crude fell $1.12 to settle at $62.93 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, helping to send Exxon Mobil Corp. down $1.54, or 2.3 percent, to $66.56. ConocoPhillips lost 84 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $39.99. Doreen Mogavero, president of brokerage Mogavero, Lee & Co., said thin trading volume meant many investors were standing on the sidelines. She said discussions in Washington and on trading desks about the potential for more government stimulus spending was unnerving. "Once you start saying this is something we might have to do again, that says it's not working and that's not good," she said. Disappointing economic news over the last few weeks, culminating in Thursday's worse-than-expected jobs report for June, has undermined investors' belief that the economy would rebound significantly. Investors are already on edge with corporate results due. Analysts say expectations are still relatively low, so companies could do better than what the market has forecast. At the same time, companies have cut costs dramatically in recent months, which could boost profits. "Over the next few weeks, we'll get a real sense for whether there are reasons to be optimistic about the business outlook during the second half of 2009," said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial. Despite the overall weakness in the market Tuesday, there was some buying of health care stocks after an analyst said the White House had signaled it would be open to negotiation on a public insurance option in its drive to reform health care, which would benefit managed-care companies. Aetna Inc. jumped more than 6 percent, adding $1.53 to $25.94. Cigna Corp. rose more than 7 percent, gaining $1.77 to $25.24. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by more than three to one on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 4.6 billion shares and was essentially flat with Monday. Light volume can exaggerate market movements. Bond prices were mostly higher as investors looked for safety. Results from an auction of $35 billion in three-year notes were mixed but demand was decent. Investors have been worried in recent weeks that the government might have to raise interest rates to entice buyers as it issues massive amounts of debt to fund its stimulus programs. That could drive up borrowing costs. So far though, auctions have been going relatively smoothly. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.46 percent from 3.51 percent late Monday. The dollar gained against other major currencies. Gold prices rose. In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 9.78, or 2 percent, to 484.25. Overseas, Britain's FTSE 100 reversed early gains and fell 0.2 percent, Germany's DAX index lost 1.2 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 1.1 percent. Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 0.3 percent. |
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dealer0168
Elite |
07-Jul-2009 18:42
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Ooo btw i mean a new technology is invented to use water as oil.....
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dealer0168
Elite |
07-Jul-2009 18:34
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USD.10.00 ,emm too cheap. Impossible lah. ![]() Unless, people start to use water as oil............. a new technology invented that resulted in oil no longer important....maybe. |
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Hulumas
Supreme |
07-Jul-2009 14:54
![]() Yells: "INVEST but not TRADE please!" |
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The world crude supply glut will happen in 2010. Price is trending down to USD.10.00 I predict!
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mirage
Veteran |
07-Jul-2009 13:39
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Crude tumbles on doubts about economic reboundOil plunges near $64 as weak economic data spreads doubt about a recovery
NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices tumbled to a five-week low Monday on growing evidence of an extended recession that could sap energy demand for some time. Benchmark crude for August delivery fell $2.68 to settle at $64.05 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was the fourth straight day of declines on Nymex and since hitting a midday high for the year last Tuesday. Crude prices have fallen nearly 13 percent since then. Natural gas prices plunged as well. Major natural gas users, like industrial manufacturers, have been hit hard by the recession and unemployment data released last week in both the U.S. and Europe doused hopes for a quick recovery. The Labor Department reported Thursday, the final day of trading last week because of the July Fourth holiday, that U.S. economy lost a larger-than-expected 467,000 jobs in June. On the same day, a report from Europe indicated that in the 16 countries that use the euro spiked to a 10-year high in May. "The recent evidence concerning the U.S. economy is terrible. The news regarding Europe seems no better," said economist Philip Verleger. "This suggests oil use will continue to decline for another year." Oil prices had been rising for months on the belief that the economy would improve by the end of the year. Prices had also been pushed higher by the weak U.S. currency. Because crude is bought and sold in dollars, it essentially becomes cheaper when the dollar falls. And the dollar has fallen steadily with the U.S. government spending billions to prop up major banks and the auto industry. Doubts about how long the weak U.S. currency can sustain prices have begun to tamp down prices. Even last week, when oil prices hit an eight-month high above $73 per barrel, it was another sign of how volatile the market has become. A barrel of oil fell midway through the day last Tuesday and prices have been declining since. The soaring price of energy has baffled experts because demand for everything from crude to gasoline is dismal. The U.S. is mired in recession and Americans are driving billions fewer miles than they have in past years. Retail gasoline prices rose every day for nearly two months as refiners slashed production. That streak finally ended two weeks ago and prices at the pump have fallen every day since. Gasoline prices fell again overnight to a new national average of $2.611 a gallon, according to the Oil Price Information Service and AAA. Prices for gasoline are likely to fall even further with the busiest driving weekends for the summer now over, said AAA spokesman Geoff Sundstrom. "With the economy still limping along, we don't really see a reason for gasoline demand to increase," he said. In other Nymex trading, gasoline for August delivery fell 5 cents to settle at $1.7404 a gallon and heating oil slid 7.5 cents to settle at $1.6266. Natural gas for August delivery shed 12.8 cents to settle at $3.487 per 1,000 cubic feet. In London, Brent prices dropped $1.56 to settle at $64.05 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange. |
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