Latest Oil, Gas and INvestor news; Oil Price.com
Crude Oil Graph Heating Oil Graph Natural Graph Gold Graph
      Home Energy Oil Prices Crude Oil Holds on to Week’s Gains Aft...

Crude Oil Holds on to Week’s Gains After High Inventories Threaten Rally

PDF Print E-mail
Written by Darrell Delamaide   
Friday, 18 June 2010 22:31

Oil Market Summary for 06/14/2010 to 06/18/2010.

Crude oil futures held on to strong gains for the week in lackluster Friday trading, after higher-than-expected inventories earlier in the week threatened to cut short the rally.

At the same time, with the front-month July contract set to expire on Tuesday, analysts didn’t see much incentive for prices to move above current levels next week.

The benchmark West Texas Intermediate contract settled at $77.18 a barrel on Friday, locking in a gain of 4.6% for the week, compared with $73.78 a week earlier. The August contract, which becomes the benchmark on Wednesday, settled at $78.26 a barrel.

The weekly inventory report from the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed crude stocks increased 1.69 million barrels in the week ended June 11, compared with the consensus forecast for a decline of 1.3 million barrels.

Futures markets initially shrugged off the report, and, spurred by a rising stock market, pushed prices up on Wednesday to a $77.67 high for the week. Doubts set in again on Thursday, and the price fell below $77 a barrel before recouping some of the ground on Friday.

A new report put out under the aegis of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the Paris-based grouping of industrial countries, purported to establish that increased trading by index funds did not contribute to price volatility in futures markets.

The report was authored by two Illinois university professors, Scott Irwin and Dwight Sanders, who have build an academic career on debunking the notion that speculation causes volatility. Not surprisingly, they found once again in their new study that there was “no evidence” to establish a link between large inflows of capital into commodity investment funds and increased volatility in crude oil prices.

The report comes as a conference committee in the U.S. Congress is putting the final touches on regulatory reform legislation that will impose limits on most futures positions.

The authors analyzed data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from 2006 to 2009 – a period in which crude oil prices shot up to $147 a barrel and then fell to $33 a barrel.

Even Gary Gensler, the CFTC chairman, expressed the opinion in congressional testimony during his confirmation hearings last year that the rapid growth of commodity index funds and increased hedge fund allocation to commodity assets contributed to the “bubble in commodities prices that peaked in mid-2008.”

By. Darrell Delamaide for OilPrice.com

 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh


 

Follow us on Twitter

Related Oil Price Reading

Watch Financial Video News

Latest Comments
  • I had heard that Petronas had a disagreement and was packing up to leave Ethiopia. Is this true or a...
    More...
    By abinet2

  • That was good despite of financial constraints still the defensive side are keep on doing upgrading....
    More...
    By Stephen SS

  • When I began to teach energy economics, which was a long time ago, I knew about thorium. And it was ...
    More...
    By Fred Banks

  • Time to start learning Mandarin..
    More...
    By Sharky

  • I think the author of this article presented the fact and the consequence of the future in new wealt...
    More...
    By Getachew

Advertise on Oil Price.com
Oil Price.com
No. 1 Oil Resource Site
More About Us Energy Metals Alternative Energy Site Info
About Us Oil Prices Gold Nuclear Power Terms and Conditions
Site News Crude Oil Silver Solar Energy Disclaimer
Sitemap Natural Gas Prices Commodities Hydroelectric Privacy Policy
Advertise with us Heating Oil Platinum Renewable Energy RSS Feeds
© 2010 OilPrice.com
The materials provided on this Web site are for informational and educational purposes only and are not intended to provide tax, legal, or investment advice. Nothing contained on the Web site shall be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or offer to buy or sell a security to any person in any jurisdiction.