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Business News/ Opinion / Online-views/  Oil tumbles 8% after late surge capped dismal ’08
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Oil tumbles 8% after late surge capped dismal ’08

Oil tumbles 8% after late surge capped dismal ’08

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Singapore: Oil fell as much as 8% on Friday, kicking off 2009 on a weak note as traders bet a late-day rally that drove up prices 14% on Wednesday was overdone.

US light, sweet crude fell $2.94 to $41.66 a barrel by 0752 GMT after earlier sliding by as much as $3.52, or almost 8%, reversing a part of Wednesday’s $5.57 a barrel gains. Oil tumbled 54% in all last year.

London Brent dropped $3.04 to $42.55 a barrel.

Oil products helped trigger the surge on the last trading day of 2008 after weekly US data showed a fall in refinery activity and an unexpected 500,000-barrel rise in crude stocks, stoking worries that fuel supplies could grow tight.

Inventories of refined products also rose, though less than analysts had expected. Gasoline stockpiles increased by 800,000 barrels, less than forecasts for a 1.5 million-barrel build, while distillates rose by 700,000 barrels, below expectations for a 1.1 million-barrel increase.

But demand remained lower than a year ago, underscoring the dual impact of last year’s record-high prices followed by a deepening economic recession, which combined to knock oil prices more than $100 off their $147 a barrel July peak.

Factory activity surveys in the United States and Europe due on Friday are expected to show steeper contractions in December.

Demand is also faltering in emerging Asia, with Chinese commercial fuel stocks rising to another record high in November, while Indian refinery production fell versus a year ago for the first time in three years.

“(Oil demand) data in recent days have been more positive in the cases of the US and the UK, and weaker in the cases of Japan and China," Barclays Capital wrote in a report.

Faced with slumping demand and prices, producer grouping Opec last month agreed to lower output by 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd), its deepest reduction ever, taking its total cuts since September to the equivalent of 5%of world supply.

Evidence is mounting that Opec is complying with its goal to reduce production, led by top exporter Saudi Arabia.

Geopolitics support

Oil markets have also watched anxiously the dispute between the world’s biggest non-OPEC oil exporter, Russia, and its neighbours over natural gas supplies.

Russia shut off the gas to neighbour Ukraine on Thursday, after a contract dispute but increased supplies to other European states to try to reassure customers.

The row could stir new doubts about Moscow’s reliability as an energy supplier and fuel suspicions in the West - already running high since Russia’s war with Georgia last August - that the Kremlin bullies its pro-Western neighbours. However, similar past disputes rarely had an impact on oil flows.

Violence in Gaza that stoked oil’s rise this week continued into a sixth day on Thursday, when Israel killed a senior Hamas leader in its first deadly blow against the top ranks of the Islamist group in an offensive that has killed more than 400 Palestinians.

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Published: 02 Jan 2009, 04:23 PM IST
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