November 6, 2006
Oil prices climb on new Nigerian trouble
Permalink: Oil prices climb on new Nigerian trouble
Filed under: Commodities, Oil, Metals, Economy
Crude oil prices were higher on Monday on a combination of factors that included comments from the Saudi Arabian oil minister and new violence in Nigeria.
According to sources in the Nigerian government, an oil production facility at Tebidaba, in the southern part of the country, was attacked early on Monday. The region supplies oil to a tanker terminal that handles around 200,000 barrels of crude per day. Meanwhile, the oil minister of Saudi Arabia said that the Organization of Oil Exporting Countries is prepared to cut production further if the market is still oversupplied when the cartel meets in Nigeria in December.
Brent crude for December delivery was 88 cents higher to $60.02 per barrel at early evening in London, while December contracts for West Texas Intermediate crude added $1.02 to $60.16 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
In the metals markets, gold was trading at $625.50/$626.60 per troy ounce, down $2, by mid-morning in New York after hitting $629.40 per ounce earlier in the day. Platinum was $10 lower to $1,188/$1,194 per troy ounce. Among base metals, zinc added $35 to $4,425 per tonne late in the session in London after going up to a new record of $4,430 per tonne earlier in the day. Lead, which is over 70 per cent higher since late June, traded at $1,707 per tonne late after going as high as $1,738 per tonne earlier. Copper, however, was $30 lower to $7,330 per tonne.
Trade was disrupted for a time on the London Metals Exchange when its electronic trading system stopped working on the first day of use of new software. Traders had to conduct business through voice brokers and floor traders. The LME said that the software, which failed due to an “unforeseen issue”, would be ready for Tuesday’s session.
October 23, 2006
Oil prices drop another dollar per barrel
Permalink: Oil prices drop another dollar per barrel
Filed under: Commodities, Oil, Metals, Economy
Crude oil prices were down on Monday despite last week’s announcement of production cuts from OPEC and in the face of a possible further cut in December. A number of analysts, however, doubt that the promised cuts will materialize since some of the nations scheduled to make cuts from actual production are already having trouble making their quotas. Those oil producers currently producing below their quotas include Nigeria, Indonesia, and Venezuela. Saudi Arabia is expected to absorb one-third of the production cuts and has told core customers in Asia that supplies will be 8 percent lower beginning in November.
Brent crude for December delivery dropped $1 to $58.68 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude December contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange were down $1.04 to $58.29 per barrel.
In the metals markets on Monday, gold dropped 2 percent to $583.70 per troy ounce, following oil downward, while silver traded at $11.62 per troy ounce, platinum was at $1,067 per troy ounce, and palladium traded at $315 per troy ounce.
Base metals were mixed, with nickel and tin higher but zinc, copper, and aluminium lower. Nickel added 1.1 percent to $32,400 per tonne, retreating from a new high of $32,700 earlier in the session, as inventories were at less than a day’s global consumption and a strike continued at a smelter in New Caldedonia. Tin was 2.5 percent higher to $10,400 per tonne with around 20 smelters in Indonesia still shuttered by the government there.
Copper was 0.2 percent lower to $7,545 per tonne, aluminium dropped 0.4 percent to $2,707 per tonne, and zinc fell 1.1 percent to $3,925 per tonne even though London Metal Exchange inventories were down by 2,500 tonnes to 122,400 tonnes of available metal.
October 16, 2006
Crude oil prices mixed ahead of OPEC meeting
Permalink: Crude oil prices mixed ahead of OPEC meeting
Filed under: Commodities, Oil, Metals, Economy
Crude oil prices were mixed on Monday ahead of an emergency OPEC meeting scheduled for later in the week in Qatar. It is expected that an announcement of a production cut of 1 million barrels per day will come out of the meeting, and that the cut will be made from actual production rather than from the official quota of 28 million barrels per day.
Several OPEC member nations, including Iran, Indonesia, and Venezuela are said not to be happy with the decision and instead want the cuts to come from the quota instead. This is apparently because those nations are already pumping below quota and do not wish to lose market share by having to cut their actual output.
Brent crude for November delivery was 14 cents lower to $59.38 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude November contracts were up, but just by 3 cents to $58.61 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
In the metals markets, supply concerns and low inventories meant a 17-year record high for the price of tin and new all-time high prices for nickel and lead on Monday. Tin added 12.8 percent to $11,000 per tonne late in the day in London on worries about disruptions in supplies from Indonesia.
Nickel was 3.4 percent higher to $31,800 per tonne, down slightly from a record high of $31.900 per tonne reached earlier in the day, with only 2,514 tonnes of the metal in London Metal Exchange warehouses. Lead, meanwhile, reached a new record of $1,545 per tonne during the day’s session before easing back slightly to a gain of 2.9 percent to $1,535 per tonne.
Copper and zinc were also higher on the day, by 4 percent to $7,760 per tonne and by 4.6 percent to $3,965 per tonne respectively. Zinc that was actually available was in short supply and could continue to be so in the next few months despite a forecast by the Lead and Zinc Study Group of a 7.3 percent hike in mine production next year.
October 13, 2006
Base metals prices see gains this week
Permalink: Base metals prices see gains this week
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