Jump to content

Oil Dips Under $40 A Barrel


Recommended Posts

Posted

Oil prices fall below $40 a barrel for first time since 2009

 

Oil prices dipped below $40 a barrel Friday for the first time in 6 ½ years on the prospect of falling global demand, busting through a key threshold that could signal further declines and market turmoil.

The price of West Texas Intermediate for October delivery dropped as low as $39.86 a barrel, $1.40 below Thursday’s close and the lowest since March 2009. Crude rallied to $40.32 in mid afternoon trading, but some analysts say the drop below $40 likely portends an additional slide into the $30s and continued weakness in the short term.

"It's a very important psychological level,“ says Phil Flynn, senior energy analyst with the Price Futures Group. “It really signals that the global economy is in trouble.”

U.S. crude prices have now fallen for eight straight weeks, the longest such stretch since 1986.

 

Fueling Friday’s drop was a report that manufacturing activity in China recently tumbled to the lowest level in more than six years. That underscored that the recent fall in Chinese stocks and the government’s currency devaluation reflect fundamental weakness in the world’s second-largest economy.

Global supplies, meanwhile, are abundant, with production from both the U.S. and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries at or near record levels. Saudi Arabia has said it would not scale back output to prop up prices.

Further pushing down prices was a government report that U.S. oil inventories unexpectedly rose last week. And the start of a refinery maintenance season slated to run through October is throwing more crude onto the market, says Tom Kloza, chief global analyst for the Oil Price Information Service.

But both Flynn and Kloza say the bear oil market is likely to be short-lived. Flynn expects the Chinese government to pump more monetary stimulus into the economy to fuel demand.

And a report Thursday from research firm Genscape says US drilling cutbacks this year have reduced production by far more than government figures show. Flynn says that should help nudge up prices in coming months.

Meanwhile, the end of refinery maintenance in November will likely coincide with the beginning of the winter fuel season, further supporting crude prices, Kloza says. He predicts oil could hover in the $30-$40 range for a couple of months before rising toward $50 by the end of the year.

 

 

 

 

Posted

ma Socal lo matram penchukunta potharu .. LK lu Shock1_zpsf848fa02.gif

vuuu ....bay area ante anthe man mari  #/{-  #/{-  #/{-

Posted

ma Socal lo matram penchukunta potharu .. LK lu ..

 

adi simple ga cheppaali ante mana india lo farmers and brokers type man :giggle:

 

madhyalo unna broker gaallaki full profit :giggle:

×
×
  • Create New...