Bullish factors included (1) concern that civil unrest in North Africa and the Middle East will spill over into major oil-producing countries in the region, (2) the report from Al Arabiya that operations at Libyan oil ports are suspended and the report from Reuters that said Libya, owner of Africa's biggest oil reserves, declared force majeure on all oil-product exports, (3) the drop in the dollar index to a 2-1/2 week low, which bolsters investment demand for commodities, and (4) the prediction from Nomura Holdings that oil prices may surge to $220 a barrel if the spread of civil unrest halts crude production in Libya and Algeria as OPEC spare capacity would be reduced to 2.1 million barrels a day.
Bearish factors include (1) a report that said Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Angola and Nigeria would be willing to boost their oil production if buyers demand it even if no OPEC emergency meeting is held, and (2) the outlook that weekly US crude oil inventories expanded for a sixth week when the DOE reports weekly inventories on Thu (one day later due to the President's Day holiday on Mon). Expectations for the weekly DOE inventory report are for crude supplies to climb +1.13 million bbl, gasoline stockpiles to gain +850,000 bbl, distillate inventories to fall -1.35 million bbl and the refinery utilization rate to rise +0.5 to 81.7%.
For the latest updates PRESS CTR + D or visit Stock Market news Today
No comments:
Post a Comment