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Crude sinks below $88 a barrel; U.S. gasoline prices ease
The Associated Press
updated 11:25 a.m. ET, Mon., Dec. 3, 2007

NEW YORK - Oil prices fell in volatile trading Monday as investors placed bets on whether OPEC oil ministers will increase production during a meeting later this week.

At the pump, meanwhile, gas prices fell 2.7 cents overnight to a national average of $3.061 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Analysts expect gas prices to continue sliding in the weeks to come, as long as oil prices continue to fall.

Crude futures have dropped about $11 in one week on the belief that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have all but decided to boost production. But the price drop itself has raised questions about whether OPEC ministers will follow through during the Wednesday meeting in Abu Dhabi.

Recent OPEC comments about production increases have been divided, with ministers from Venezuela and Qatar suggesting there’s no need to boost supplies, while ministers from Indonesia, Nigeria and Kuwait say they’re still open to increases. Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi, possibly the most influential member of the cartel, has struck a neutral tone, telling reporters this weekend that “the field is wide open.”

“The rhetoric over the weekend has not made the picture any clearer as to which way the cartel will go,” said Edward Meir, an analyst at MF Global UK Ltd., in a research note.

Light, sweet crude for January delivery fell $1.17 to $87.54 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, but rose at times to near break-even.

Concerns about the economy were also weighing on prices. Several economic reports over the past week have suggested that growth is slowing, and the Institute for Supply Management, a Tempe, Ariz.-based trade group, on Monday reported that growth in the manufacturing sector slowed in November.

“There’s sort of a growing feeling that we’re going to see demand ... being so weak that this is going to pull prices down,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research Inc. in Amherst, Mass.

Lynch thinks OPEC will hold production levels steady, arguing that last week’s price declines have largely accomplished the cartel’s goals. OPEC is also worried that an oversupplied oil market would drive prices dramatically lower, Lynch said.

Other analysts are divided in their views, but a consensus appears to be forming that OPEC will increase production if prices remain above $80 a barrel.

Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill., notes that what OPEC says and what it does are not necessarily one and the same thing. The cartel could easily announce a production increase to keep prices on their downward tack, but then decline to boost supplies if prices remain low in the coming months.

“OPEC could easily fall short of any agreed upon production increase,” Ritterbusch said in a research note. “OPEC’s main goal out of this meeting will be to apply some bearish psychological pressures to a market that some key cartel members feel has been taken out of their control.”

Other energy futures also fell Monday. Gasoline for January delivery fell 2.16 cents to $2.209 a gallon on the Nymex, while January heating oil fell 4 cents to $2.475 a gallon.

January natural gas futures fell 11.7 cents to $7.185 per 1,000 cubic feet on the Nymex.

In London, January Brent crude dropped 76 cents to $87.50 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

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Shipping rates for oil soaring

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Monday, December 03, 2007

Shipping rates for wet cargo have “strengthened phenomenally” in recent weeks, especially in shipments designed for Asia, suggesting a big jump in OPEC crude oil shipments and prices dipping below $80 (U.S.) a barrel in the next few months, according to Merrill Lynch.
Part of the production hike reflects fields in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia coming on stream, as well as higher output from Iraqi, contends analyst Francisco Blanch.
He figures OPEC output will reach 32 million barrels a day by March, up from 30 million barrels last June, with non-OPEC production climbing by 1.1 million by March.
All of which could result in supply exceeding demand and prices coming down.

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