Oil above $49 as investors eye Gaza conflict, OPEC

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009 9:47 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
LONDON (AP) — Oil prices neared $50 a barrel Tuesday amid signs OPEC is implementing its announced production cuts and as Israel's ground offensive in Gaza kept tensions high in the oil-rich Middle East. The gas dispute between Ukraine and Russia also caused gas prices to jump.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery rose $1.07 to $49.88 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by midafternoon in Europe. The contract rose overnight $2.47 to settle at $48.81.

Israeli forces edged closer to Gaza's major population centers and attacked new sites in the eleventh day of fighting with Hamas. The offensive has killed at least 500 people, about 25 percent of whom were civilians, a U.N. official said Monday.

The U.N. Security Council met with Arab delegates in New York Monday, urging members to adopt a resolution calling for an immediate end to the Israeli attacks and a permanent cease-fire. At the same time, diplomats and European leaders traveled the region in an effort to stop Israel's expanding ground and air offensive.

An Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander has urged Islamic nations to use crude oil as a weapon to exert pressure on Western backers of Israel. However, key Persian Gulf producers like Saudi Arabia have so far not backed any measure to target specific consuming countries.

Story continues below
"Whenever Hamas and the Israelis are fighting, there's always a risk of things escalating," said Christoffer Moltke-Leth, head of sales trading for Saxo Capital Markets in Singapore. "Oil is sensitive to political issues, and the price could overshoot until we know if this conflict could affect supplies."

Analyst Olivier Jakob of energy analysis firm Petromatrix in Switzerland said the conflict in Gaza is "no threat to the prompt and direct supply of oil." But he added: "As the humanitarian disaster continues to intensify it could turn to have an indirect impact on oil supplies, as it will become more and more difficult for Arab leaders to explain to their street that they need to keep low oil prices to support the Western consumers while the Western powers will not help in supporting their call for a cease-fire."

Oil prices have been bolstered by signs the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is implementing production cuts of 4 million barrels a day that the group has announced since October, Moltke-Leth said.

Iran's OPEC governor, Mohammad Ali Khatibi, said Monday that OPEC members decided to hold an extraordinary meeting in Kuwait in February to discuss oil prices.

Recent comments

The Democrats are in complete power and the the price for a barrel of...

Makes sense | Jan. 6, 2009 at 11:27 a.m.

If you look in the dictionary under the word yoyo it says, "See...

Brighamite | Jan. 6, 2009 at 10:59 a.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Brain Johnson should have said the exact same thing to BYU but he actually...

He is nuts, crazy, and morally disgusting, but he is competent.

BYU says Hall incident resolved

BYU fans expect UofU fans to be classless: they meet all expectations....

That's it? No more to say? I'm stunned that a football rivalry, that...

Woods withdraws from tourney

Can't wait to hear how this plays out for the next month to a year. SNORE

Utes won't respond to Hall

The Utah organization and its fans at RES treat our opponents with the utmost...

A Church rule school that tolerates talk like that is not a school I would...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Sure but that was more then 50 years ago, a very different contrast compared...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

I'm very disappointed in Max Hall's comments. But he was just reacting to...

Religion in politics is tiresome

@ 6:52, What do you mean, "How do I account for that?" I don't account...

Advertisements