Oil
prices higher in Asian trade
SINGAPORE
Petroleumworld.com, May 16, 2008
World oil prices rose in Asian trade Friday amid
tight global supplies and as investors continued to buy into the commodity which
has given better returns than bonds and equities, dealers said.
In morning trade, New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for
June delivery, was up 64 cents to 124.76 dollars per barrel, off its record high
of 126.98 dollars a barrel on Tuesday.
London's Brent crude contract for July rose 73 cents to 123.36 dollars. The contract
for June expired at the close on Thursday, settling at 122.77 dollars.
"The bullish enthusiasm in the market remains. The global oil market remains
indeed structurally tight," said Victor Shum, an analyst with energy consultancy
Purvin and Gertz in Singapore.
"Even though demand growth is showing some weakness, supply growth is also
not there. OPEC continues to restrain supply and production in non-OPEC states
are not expected to be strong," he said, referring to the Organisation of
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Because of the tightness in supply, "the bullish psychology of the market
is unlikely to change in the near term," Shum said.
The market is awash with speculative money ready to buy once prices dip to attractive
levels, he added.
"Investors are likely to get into oil because oil has performed better than
equities and bonds... There is money looking for better returns and oil is offering
better returns."
Story
from AFP
AFP 16 0247 GMT 05 08
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