April 14, 2009 12:04 PM
- Text
Oil Prices Keep Bubbling Upward
(CBS/AP)
Crude oil prices remained in record territory after soaring to new highs Friday past $66 a barrel as reports of new U.S. refinery outages rekindled fears that gasoline supplies in the world's biggest consumer would struggle to meet rising demand.
The U.S. trade deficit increased sharply in June as surging oil prices pushed petroleum imports to an all-time high, the Commerce Department reported Friday — and that was when a barrel of oil was only an average of $44.40.
A spate of refinery glitches, an unusually active hurricane season in the U.S. and concerns over Iran's decision to resume uranium conversion activities weighed heavily on people's minds, pushing prices upward, analysts said.
Tropical Storm Irene was expected to intensify Friday and possibly reach hurricane strength as it approached the U.S. East Coast, forecasters said.
Irene's potential threat to land was still uncertain, as its path had shifted east, according to forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Forecasters said the storm could strike the coast anywhere from South Carolina to New Jersey.
With bullish sentiment unabated and crude prices hitting consecutive highs this week, analysts expect front-month crude contracts to test the $70 a barrel threshold.
Along Northern California's scenic Highway 1, reports CBS News Correspondent John Blackstone, a gallon of premium gasoline costs more than $4 a gallon. $3 a gallon is common in San Francisco, and the effects are trickling down: Cab drivers in many cities now may add a fuel surcharge, airlines are adding as much as $20 a ticket to cover high fuel costs, and FedEx has increased its express delivery charges.
Analysts said gasoline demand, currently at its peak in the U.S. summer driving season, was pushing crude's gains. Last week, U.S. gasoline demand picked up by 1.4 percent from a year ago, according to government data.
It's the "law of supply and demand," truck stop owner Steve L'Ecluse told CBS News. "When you have more demand than you have supply, it's going to go higher."
Coupled with new reports of refinery outages this week, traders fear U.S. refiners, already running at near-maximized capacities, are straining to satisfy the rising demand.
"People fear there won't be enough gasoline at a time when it's so greatly demanded, so they're just buying, buying and buying," said Tetsu Emori, chief commodities strategist at Mitsui Bussan Futures in Tokyo.
Oil prices are almost 50 percent higher than a year ago, but they would need to surpass $90 a barrel to exceed the inflation-adjusted peak set in 1980.
The U.S. Energy Department said Wednesday that gasoline inventories fell 2.1 million barrels to 203.1 million last week.
"The refinery breakdowns are a big issue, they're happening at a time when gasoline supplies are already very tight," Emori said.
The U.S. trade deficit increased sharply in June as surging oil prices pushed petroleum imports to an all-time high, the Commerce Department reported Friday — and that was when a barrel of oil was only an average of $44.40.
A spate of refinery glitches, an unusually active hurricane season in the U.S. and concerns over Iran's decision to resume uranium conversion activities weighed heavily on people's minds, pushing prices upward, analysts said.
Tropical Storm Irene was expected to intensify Friday and possibly reach hurricane strength as it approached the U.S. East Coast, forecasters said.
Irene's potential threat to land was still uncertain, as its path had shifted east, according to forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Forecasters said the storm could strike the coast anywhere from South Carolina to New Jersey.
With bullish sentiment unabated and crude prices hitting consecutive highs this week, analysts expect front-month crude contracts to test the $70 a barrel threshold.
Along Northern California's scenic Highway 1, reports CBS News Correspondent John Blackstone, a gallon of premium gasoline costs more than $4 a gallon. $3 a gallon is common in San Francisco, and the effects are trickling down: Cab drivers in many cities now may add a fuel surcharge, airlines are adding as much as $20 a ticket to cover high fuel costs, and FedEx has increased its express delivery charges.
Analysts said gasoline demand, currently at its peak in the U.S. summer driving season, was pushing crude's gains. Last week, U.S. gasoline demand picked up by 1.4 percent from a year ago, according to government data.
It's the "law of supply and demand," truck stop owner Steve L'Ecluse told CBS News. "When you have more demand than you have supply, it's going to go higher."
Coupled with new reports of refinery outages this week, traders fear U.S. refiners, already running at near-maximized capacities, are straining to satisfy the rising demand.
"People fear there won't be enough gasoline at a time when it's so greatly demanded, so they're just buying, buying and buying," said Tetsu Emori, chief commodities strategist at Mitsui Bussan Futures in Tokyo.
Oil prices are almost 50 percent higher than a year ago, but they would need to surpass $90 a barrel to exceed the inflation-adjusted peak set in 1980.
The U.S. Energy Department said Wednesday that gasoline inventories fell 2.1 million barrels to 203.1 million last week.
"The refinery breakdowns are a big issue, they're happening at a time when gasoline supplies are already very tight," Emori said.
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