Business | Oil & Gas
Crude plunges $4 to below $116
Oil fell $4 to below $116 on Friday in line with declines across the commodities complex as weaker demand and a stronger US dollar outweighed concern conflict in Georgia could disrupt Caspian energy supplies.
London: Oil fell $4 to below $116 on Friday in line with declines across the commodities complex as weaker demand and a stronger US dollar outweighed concern conflict in Georgia could disrupt Caspian energy supplies.
US light crude was down $3.50 at $116.52 a barrel by 1430 GMT, up from an intraday low of $115.75.
London Brent crude fell by $3.52 to $114.34.
Oil has lost over $30, or nearly 20 per cent, since hitting a record high of $147.27 in mid-July.
"It seems that we've got a lot of selling based on the stronger dollar," said Peter Beutel, president of trading consultants Cameron Hanover. "Energy demand destruction and the dollar return have formed a quiet alliance to bring the oil market down, and today the louder of the two is the dollar."
The dollar rose to a seven-month high against the yen yesterday, helped by the drop in oil prices which boosted US stocks.
Oil had rallied slightly on Thursday, driven upwards by the disruption of supplies through the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline following a blast earlier this week in Turkey.
The pipeline was still burning, halting loadings of Azeri Light crude shipped to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, but the fire could be extinguished today, a source said.
Once the blaze is out, the pipeline could be reopened within 10 days, the source said, but meanwhile BP has cut output by at least 400,000 barrels a day at the Azeri-Chirag Gunashli oilfields, traders said.
Analysts are concerned fighting in Georgia's breakaway South Ossetia region could lead to much wider disruption of exports from the Caspian as Georgia is a major energy transit route.
"In other circumstances, you might have expected it to push oil up $5," said John Kemp, economist at RBS Sempra. "I think it's an indication of how bearish the underlying sentiment is right now [that it hasn't]".
Bearishness has grown after oil prices fell through key technical support around $120 and as stocks of refined products have swollen, dragging down heating oil and diesel markets in Europe and the United States.
Share this article
Popular in Business
-
XPRESS
Way to go this DSF
A fun-filled route to guide you to all the happening dos in town
Business Editor's choice
-
Shaikh Mohammad reaffirms UAE unity
Vice-President quashes talk of discord and reassures investors on the strength of Dubai's economy
-
Pizzazz on the palm: A Nikki Bisiker project
Bright, bold and ultra glam are the top notes of this apartment in The Palm Jumeirah's beautiful marina
-
flydubai starts service to Sudanese capital
Dubai's first low cost airline, celebrated its eighth inaugural flight in less than six months


