Brent crude rallied to a 28-month high above $103 on Thursday as the
political crisis in Egypt erupted into violence, sparking fresh concern
over energy supplies in the crude-rich Middle East.
“The continued unrest in Egypt has prompted Brent oil prices to
climb overnight to $103 a barrel, the highest level since September
2008,” said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.
Brent North Sea crude for delivery in March climbed to $103.37 a
barrel — the highest level since September 26, 2008. It later stood at
$102.67 in London trade, up 33 cents compared with Wednesday’s close.
New York’s main futures contract, light sweet crude for March, gained 79 cents to $91.65 per barrel.
Egypt’s health ministry said five people were killed and 836 injured
since Wednesday in running clashes for control of Tahrir Square, the
focal point of the protests against President Hosni Mubarak.
The oil market is jittery due to fears the crisis could spill over
to other countries in the crude-rich but politically volatile Middle
East.
And although Egypt is not a major crude producer, it is home to the
Suez Canal, which carries about 2.4 million barrels daily, roughly
equal to Iraq’s output.
“The latest news from Egypt triggered… fresh buying from funds,” Newedge brokerage analyst Ken Hasegawa told AFP on Thursday.
“So far there is no factor to prompt traders to sell. We don’t see any sellout in the market at the moment.”
Hasegawa added that the spread in the price between Brent crude and
the benchmark New York contract, also known as West Texas Intermediate
(WTI), was likely to widen further because of oversupply in the US port
of Cushing in Oklahoma.
The latest weekly stockpiles report from the US Department of Energy
showed reserves had increased sharply for a third week in a row.
Crude oil stocks rose 2.6 million barrels to 343.2 million in the
week ending January 28, in line with expectations, official data showed
on Wednesday.
At the almost-full depot at Cushing, reserves rose 600,000 barrels to a record high of 38.3 million.
“Cushing is the delivery point for WTI and therefore decisive for WTI pricing,” said analyst Fritsch.
“The plentiful supply of crude oil and oil products to the USA
should mean that the WTI price continues to benefit less than Brent
from the political tensions in the Middle East.
“In the short term, however, WTI prices could gain impetus from a
winter storm which is likely to push up the heating demand in the
Midwest and Northeast of the USA.
“Even so, distillate inventories are also still at a comfortable level despite the reduction of 1.6 million barrels last week.”
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