Wednesday, October 10, 2012

OIL FUTURES: Crude Pushes Above $93/bbl

--U.S. crude oil adds gains as Middle East keeps traders on edge
--Nymex oil recently up 99 cents to $93.38/bbl
--Iran, Syria worries trump OPEC warning on demand slowdown
 
   By Jerry A. DiColo 
 
NEW YORK--U.S. crude-oil futures pushed higher Wednesday, adding to a $3 rally Tuesday as investors stay focused on renewed tensions in the Middle East.
Light, sweet crude oil for November delivery recently traded 99 cents, or 1.1%, higher at $93.38 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil on the ICE futures exchange traded up 77 cents to $115.27 a barrel.
Oil prices rose Wednesday as concerns about Turkey and Syria continued to mount, after Turkey's top military commander warned that the country would take tougher action if Syrian shells continued to land on Turkish territory.
While Turkey and Syria aren't major oil producers, the possibility of expanded military activity highlights the threat that Syria's civil war could devolve into a regional conflict. Turkey is also an important oil-transportation route, and fears have grown that the 400,000 barrels a day of Iraqi oil piped to the Turkish port of Ceyhan could become a target.
"Elevated tensions and military activity along the Syria-Turkey border are reminders that isolated incidents could quickly spread," analysts at JP Morgan said in a note to clients.
On Tuesday, prices rose more than $3 a barrel as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called parliamentary elections for early 2013, a move seen by some as a way to shore up his political base ahead of possible military action against Iran.
The latest worries about oil supplies from the Middle East has trumped several reports this week suggesting global oil demand growth will stall.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said Wednesday oil supplies will remain comfortable in the coming year, lowered its forecast for global demand growth this year and predicted a continued slowdown in 2013.
"Right now the market is undecided on the next move," said Phil Flynn, an energy analyst at Price Futures Group. "Weaker demand should mean lower prices but, in a world hellbent on keeping the economy afloat with stimulus, and the rising geopolitical risk, supply and demand won't matter."
Oil prices have seen big swings in recent days, but have still remained close to the level of $90 a barrel since falling from near $100 a barrel in mid-September.
In its monthly oil-market report, OPEC said oil-demand growth will fall to 800,000 barrels a day this year, down 100,000 barrels a day from its previous estimate. But the group warned that next year's demand faces "considerable uncertainties" that could lower its 2013 estimate by as much as 20%.
The OPEC report followed a report from the International Monetary Fund earlier this week suggesting that the risk of a global recession has risen, raising worries about oil demand even as Middle East tensions keep traders on edge.
Front-month November reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, recently traded 2.07 cents higher at $2.9794 a gallon. November heating oil recently traded 2.64 cent higher at $3.2296 a gallon.
--Ben Winkley contributed to this report.
Write to Jerry A. DiColo at jerry.dicolo@dowjones.com.

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