Do More With Reuters

Oil dips on Iran comments, U.S. distillate build

Wed May 14, 2008 10:38pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil fell on Wednesday, edging away from record highs near $127 a barrel after Iran assured it had no plans to cut exports and U.S. inventory showed a rise in supplies of distillates.

U.S. crude fell 64 cents to $125.16 a barrel by 12:45 p.m. EDT, after hitting an all-time high of $126.98 a barrel on Tuesday. London Brent crude traded down $1.40 to $122.79 a barrel.

Oil prices have rallied on concerns about global distillate supplies this month, amid signs of rising diesel demand for power generation in some emerging economies.

Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed a 1.4 million barrel rise in distillate stocks, more than analysts had forecast, helping to ease supply concerns. The rise outweighed a smaller-than-expected build in crude inventories and a steep draw in gasoline supplies.

"Crude runs were up more than expected and imports were down, leading to the small build in crude stocks," said Tim Evans, energy analyst at Citi Futures Perspective.

"The gasoline draw was a bit more than expected on a drop in imports. Overall, this is a mixed set of data, but we'd watch the heating oil price for a reaction to the build."

European middle distillate stocks fell sharply in April to 361.28 million barrels, down 1.4 percent from March and 7.2 percent lower than a year ago, data from industry monitor Euroilstock showed on Tuesday.

Oil prices came under pressure after Iran said it had no plans to reduce supplies to the market. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday had said the OPEC nation was studying a proposal to cut output, sending prices to new highs.

A top Iranian official said on Wednesday Tehran was continuing sell oil to international customers as usual and has no plans to cut exports to world markets.  Continued...

 
Photo
Photo

Record oil prices, rising inflation and political uncertainty is spooking investors and the markets. Track the latest on our markets page.  Full Coverage 

Photo

Catch the latest as India acts to quash inflation and guard food supplies.   Full Coverage 

Photo

India and South Asia market Technical Analysis with Phil Smith

REUTERS POLL

What concerns you more:
Nuclear deal
Price rise
Indian cricket team's performance
Symbol Bid Ask
BRENT CRUDE $0.00 $0.00
GOLD $0.00 $0.00
SILVER $0.00 $0.00