Oil Prices Flirt With $100 A Barrel
Government Reports Oil Supply Increase At Key Terminal In Midwest
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Play CBS Video Video Oil Prices' Ripple Effects Crude oil is selling at nearly $100 a barrel, and the high costs are having ripple effects in unexpected places. John Blackstone reports.
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(CBS/AP)
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Overall crude inventories fell, and distillates including heating oil dropped more than expected last week, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration reported.
That could mean more bad news for heating oil customers already expecting costs to rise 22 percent this winter. Heating oil futures fell 0.32 cent to $2.6869 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange after earlier hitting $2.7154, a new record.
George Vukasin watches the price of oil, minute to minute, bracing himself when it rises, reports CBS News correspondent John Blackstone.
Vukasin isn't in the oil business -- he's in the coffee business. But a tour of his roastery shows how energy prices percolate through the whole economy.
The cost of shipping sacks of coffee around the world depends on the price of oil. Energy costs hit everything from firing the roaster, to running forklifts and delivery trucks, adds Blackstone.
"The price of natural gas, the price of propane, the price of oil, the price of electricity -- all is going up," said Vukasin of Peerless Coffee and Tea.
At the pump, meanwhile, gas prices fell 0.1 cent overnight to a national average of $3.089 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Prices have fallen 2.3 cents since last week, and are almost 14 cents below the record price of $3.227 a gallon set in May, a bit of good news for Thanksgiving holiday drivers.
Gas prices will likely remain flat or fall unless oil reaches $100 a barrel or higher, analysts say.
The price of oil has now increased 45 percent since August, reports CBS News correspondent Larry Miller.
Crude prices retreated Wednesday, however, after a mixed inventory report that didn't do much to change a prevailing view that oil supplies will tighten amid rising demand.
"It's two steps forward, then one back in terms of this week's inventory cushion," said Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup Inc. in New York.
Light, sweet crude for January delivery fell 90 cents to $97.13 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Before the inventory report, prices had risen as high as $99.29 a barrel in electronic trading to break the previous intraday record of $98.62 set earlier this month.
"Not exciting enough to get us over the hump just yet," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago, referring to the inventory data.
Crude prices are within the range of inflation-adjusted highs set in early 1980. Depending on how the adjustment is calculated, $38 a barrel then would be worth $96 to $103 or more today.
Other energy futures were mixed. December gasoline fell 1.31 cents to $2.4384 a gallon on the Nymex. December natural gas rose 13.1 cents to $7.608 per 1,000 cubic feet. In a separate report, the EIA said natural gas inventories grew by 4 billion cubic feet last week, more than expected.
In London, December Brent crude fell 63 cents to $95.86 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
Oil inventories fell by 1.1 million barrels last week, versus a 700,000 barrel increase analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, on average, had expected. Inventories at the closely watched Nymex delivery terminal in Cushing, Okla., rose by 1.2 million barrels, however. It was the first substantial increase in Cushing stocks in weeks, and the largest since the end of August.
The Cushing terminal is the physical delivery point for Nymex crude. Falling supplies there are seen as a symptom of a tight market. Those concerns ease when Cushing inventories rise.
The EIA also said refinery activity fell last week, countering expectations for a slight increase. Gasoline inventories grew less than expected, but distillate supplies fell by 2.4 million barrels, far more than expected.
The decline in overall crude supplies can be explained in part by imports, which fell by an average of 667,000 barrels a day, or about 6 percent, last week. Gasoline imports rose 11 percent.
Demand for gasoline remains tepid, a function of higher prices, analysts say. Demand for gasoline rose by 35,000 barrels last week, and by 0.3 percent over the last four weeks compared to the same period last year, the EIA said.
Analysts cautioned that trading in energy futures could be volatile Wednesday due to light volumes before Thanksgiving. The Nymex will be closed Thursday and will close early Friday.
"This is holiday trade, and some pension fund comes in with a sizable order ... and you're down half a buck," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch & Associates, in Galena, Ill.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 122 CommentsEverything they claim or stand for...all lies from all of them. They really should change their name, maybe people won''t notice.
Those who supported the failed and disgraceful empirial drive of the Bush League should only have gasoline available to them at $100 or so per gallon.
The excess receipts could be used to offset some of the costs that have resulted from their foolishness. We could call it a "stupidity" tax.
jowand,
I disagree. You don''t seem to be able to understand the concept of externalized costs.
"What is the real cost of things? Freakonomics author Stephen Dubner cited a study this week that estimates a pack of cigarettes actually costs US$222. The amount includes the economic cost of a reduced lifespan."
"So what is the real cost of the Iraq war in terms of oil import prices? My rough estimate is that the real cost of oil from the Middle East for Americans may total US$300 a barrel or more."
www.canada.com/nationalpost/fi
nancialpost/story.html?id=d09989e3-1c24-
4b7b-ba38-9a7b69a2bd94
Posted by FeelFree1 at 02:06 PM : Nov 22, 2007
No true at all, 100 percent fiction. Oil is priced where it is by more demand than supply, OPEC controls 40 percent of the worlds oil production and limits pumping. Chinas oil demand is going up 10 percent per year, India a similar amount. One US political party refuses to support drilling for more oil in places where there are abundant supplies of oil; they would rather be boot licking lackies to the whacked-out left.
You just hate Bush and want to blame him for everything where you can gain political advantage.
Posted by hypnotoad72 at 02:08 PM : Nov 22, 2007
Chavez is an Archair Marxist, just like Castro and all other hold outs from the last century. Demonizing people is all they have.
Hi ''formrusmcsgt'',
Re: "I often agree with you feelfree1, but this time I feel that you have not taken into account the economic impact of your proposal."
Just a quick comment. I am a strong believer that the true costs of any product should be included in the final sales price of that product.
Here is an article that touches on this topic:
"Iraq war hikes true cost of oil to US$300"
"What is the real cost of things? Freakonomics author Stephen Dubner cited a study this week that estimates a pack of cigarettes actually costs US$222. The amount includes the economic cost of a reduced lifespan."
"So what is the real cost of the Iraq war in terms of oil import prices? My rough estimate is that the real cost of oil from the Middle East for Americans may total US$300 a barrel or more."
www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/story.html?id=d09989e3-1c24-4b7b-ba38-9a7b69a2bd94
Posted by JetRanger7 at 05:53 AM : Nov 22, 2007
The more oil you have on the market the lower the price of oil will be. OPEC control 40 percent of the world production of oil. We have enough oil to be independent for 400 years in the US, between liquid oil and shale oil. Why are we not drilling for oil and exploiting oil shale, who is against it? Why are we not building more oil refineries to produce gasoline and fuel oil; who is against this?
Posted by JetRanger7 at 11:42 PM : Nov 21, 2007
Every group has a secret agenda an under the table deal(s) with all kinds of people. Why do you think nothing is ever done by goverment, either party, for the good of the average person. They go for the money to get relected year after year. You have the Bilderbergers, Illuminati, Tri Lateral Commission, CFo ....etc, they are not the problem.
It''s the Super (Merchant) Banks who wield the real power, they can make and break a nationions finances. The Federal Reserve in the USA is a primary cause of recessions in the US. Inflation used to be when you printed more paper money than you had something to back it up. Now, it is all kinds of rubbish which is thrown into th equation just to confuse things.
The Federal Reserve is controlling inflation (wages) by pushing interest rates up until it causes unemployment to go up, driving wages down.
Posted by jw218389 at 01:28 AM : Nov 22, 2007
You have deranged Bush syndrome, seek help immediatly
However, you reasons for doing so in the last post were somewhat tainted.
Oil is not bought like gasoline, and there is a time lag between the time it is purchased and when it gets refined. Now, I know you were talking about average prices, but did you ever wonder why in one location it can be 20-30 cents higher than another city or state ?
Different locations have different requirements for additives.
Anyway - check out my previous post on the Shale oil thing. We have means to produce $30 barrel oil here in the US, from a supply that is 3 times as abundant as all of Saudi Arabia''s liquid oil, AND do it ecologically!
Have a great Turkey day Man.
formrusmcsgt - I know you don''t agree with me, but did you know that feelfree supports hugo chavez, and has called Hillary a fascist ? Ask him if you don''t believe me.
Shale oil can be mined insitu: (A) Put a frozen ring around the area you want to mine using drilling rigs. (B) Heat the Shale to 750 degrees - extract gas and oil until it no longer flows -unlike with liquid oil this means you have the VAST majority if it. (C) let rock cool - as it does it traps the remaining oil and gas. (D) stop freezing around target shale.
This yields a three and 1/2 to one energy output. We have approximately three times the amount of oil in shale oil that Saudi Arabia has in liquid. It can be produced at $30 a barrel. With over 1,500 barrels for a plot of land 20 X 35 feet!!!
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/news_columnists/article/0,1299,DRMN_86_4051709,00.html
And Shale oil is in the middle of NO WHERE in NE UTAH and SW Wyoming.
http://ostseis.anl.gov/guide/maps/index.cfm
Ask your Representative WHY we haven''t been doing it!
http://www.house.gov/writerep/
Otherwise, whine on...
"Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful."
- Seneca, (Roman philosopher, writer, politician)
Posted by USAyesterday at 06:25 PM : Nov 21, 2007
What do you expect from an eletist Roman politician like Senaca, they had a god for everything. I may be the dumbest quote of the day too.
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