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Oil closes below $113 a barrel
 
By Staff and Wire Reports
Published: 8/18/2008  4:02 PM
Last Modified: 8/18/2008  4:26 PM

Crude prices settled below $113 a barrel for the first time in over three months Monday as Tropical Storm Fay steered clear of oil-producing infrastructure in the Gulf of Mexico.

Light, sweet crude for September delivery fell 90 cents to settle at $112.87 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier rising as high as $115.35. It was the first time crude ended below $113 since May 1. The contract fell $1.24 on Friday to settle at $113.77 a barrel, about $35, or 24 percent, lower than its trading record of $147.27, set July 11.

At the pump, a gallon of regular fell another penny overnight to a new national average of $3.741, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. With consumers cutting back on driving to save money, prices have now dropped 9 percent from the record $4.114 retail gas reached July 17.

In Tulsa, many retailers were holding at $3.35 for a gallon of regular unleaded Monday afternoon.

Fay, the sixth named storm of the 2008 Atlantic season, was approaching the Florida Keys after leaving at least eight people dead in Haiti and the Dominican Republic. The storm is expected to near hurricane strength later Monday but does not currently pose a threat to oil platforms in the Gulf, forecasters said.

“The storm’s not a concern. It just doesn’t look like it’s going to do a lot of damage,” said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC said it evacuated 425 workers from the region as a precaution but said it will redeploy them if the storm remains on its current track. So far during this year’s hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean, no storm has significantly damaged oil installations in the Gulf.

A slightly weaker dollar compared to the euro kept oil prices from slipping further. A falling dollar typically pushes oil prices higher as investors buy crude and other commodities as hedges against inflation.

Still, analysts said that if the dollar’s rising trend continued in coming weeks and months, it likely would limit gains in oil prices.

A forecast from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on Friday of lower global oil demand growth helped to keep prices from rising higher.

In its monthly oil report, the organization forecast world appetite for oil this year would grow by 1 million barrels a day, a reduction of 30,000 barrels a day from its previous forecast for demand growth for 2008. It also said growth for 2009 will be 900,000 barrels a day, which it said would be the lowest growth in world demand since 2002.

Demand growth from the major industrialized countries will actually decline, OPEC said, with non-OECD countries accounting for all oil demand growth next year.

“It’s another signal that conditions are easing,” Mark Pervan, senior commodity strategist at ANZ Bank in Melbourne. Uncertainty over the conflict between Russia and Georgia also kept trading erratic earlier Monday, as traders remain nervous that oil supplies in the region could be halted. Russia said it has begun withdrawing troops, but U.S. officials said Moscow has positioned missile launchers in the separatist South Ossetia province.



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By Staff and Wire Reports

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AdMan, (8/18/2008 7:27:36 PM)
Don't blame me I voted for Sally Bell.
 

 
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