You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front Economy
Oil Prices Fall Below $59 a Barrel
2007-01-04
NEW YORK -- Crude oil prices kicked off 2007 with a plunge below $59 a barrel Wednesday, as persistent mild weather in the United States led traders to bet on lagging demand for heating fuels.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $2.54 to $58.51 a barrel in midday trading, a 4.2 percent drop from Friday's settlement price.

Forecasters are saying the warmer-than-normal temperatures in the Northeast United States _ the biggest heating oil-consuming region _ will continue through January. "That's going to put heating oil distributors around the country in pretty bad shape," said Mike Fitzpatrick, a vice president for energy risk management at Fimat USA.

Traders were pulling down prices near the low levels they reached late last year: "If those are breached, they can fall a long way," Fitzpatrick said. On Nov. 17, the crude contract had closed at $55.81 a barrel, the lowest settlement since June 15, 2005.

The front-month crude contract finished 2006 at $61.05 a barrel _ a penny above where it ended a year earlier. This year's mild winter has arrived against a backdrop of ample global crude inventories, slowing economic growth in the United States, and a production spurt from non-OPEC countries.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  As long as the price of oil is high, new technologies like oil shale extraction and photo-voltaics will continue to advance and become cost effective. If the oil ticks - is it mean to call them that? - had any sense they would drop the price drastically. Unfortunately for them, they are as hooked on the income as we are on the energy.
Posted by: SteveS   2007-01-04 21:58  

#2  As of Jan., 4 2007 – 10.53AM (EST)
Light, sweet crude for February delivery fell $1.30 to $57.02 a barrel in morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after dipping as low as $56.86. On Wednesday, the contract plunged $2.73 to $58.32 a barrel, the biggest one-day drop since Aug. 17, 2005.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2007-01-04 10:57  

#1  ...Part of me is just cynical enough to say that this is the usual post-holiday price letdown, and it MIGHT get back down around $2.05 or so here - then some as*hole is going to scream, "Tension in the Middle East!" and it goes back up to $2.25 again.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2007-01-04 08:26  

00:00