9/15/2010 - Heating Oil About Even On Weak Oil & Gas Demand
Heating oil added 0.38 cent to settle at $2.1326 a gallon and gasoline fell 0.65 cents to settle at $1.9625 a gallon.
NEW YORK –
Benchmark crude for October delivery lost 78 cents to settle at $76.02 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Once the pipeline starts operating again,
"Statements from Enbridge and local officials indicate that the line will be restarted earlier than priced by the market and we will now not exclude a weekend surprise on the resumption of flows," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix.
On Tuesday, Enbridge reopened a pipeline that runs from Ontario, Canada, to New York that was shut down a day earlier to investigate a possible low-level leak near Buffalo, New York. Enbridge said it found no leak but would monitor the site.
Industrial production in the U.S. rose slightly in August, but at a slower rate than earlier this year. Also the Fed's regional index of manufacturing fell from August to September. Both point to less consumer spending and soft demand for oil and gas at the business and consumer levels.
In its weekly report on petroleum inventories, the
Platts senior oil analyst Linda Rafield noted the decline in crude stocks was the first time total petroleum inventories fell in nine weeks, with declines concentrated along the Gulf Coast and Midwest.
Japan's decision to weaken the yen by buying dollars helped push down oil prices on Wednesday. A stronger dollar makes oil and other commodities priced in dollars less appealing to foreign investors.
Analysts looking at the technical aspects of oil trading said crude's failure to break above $78 a barrel in recent days could mean further price declines.
"This can be interpreted as a signal of an imminent downward movement, which could take oil prices back toward the lower end of the multi-month trading range of $70 to $80," said a report from Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
In other Nymex trading in October contracts, heating oil added 0.38 cent to settle at $2.1326 a gallon and gasoline fell 0.65 cent to settle at $1.9625 a gallon. Natural gas gained 2.9 cents to settle at $3.995 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In London, Brent crude fell 25 cents to settle at $78.91 a barrel on the
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Associated Press writers Pablo Gorondi in Hungary and Alex Kennedy in Singapore contributed to this report