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From: allevett4/13/2007 3:03:43 PM
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WTI Prices Don't Reflect International Oil Market, Study Says

By Margot Habiby

April 13 (Bloomberg) -- Wholesale West Texas Intermediate crude oil, the U.S. benchmark, is no longer a gauge of the international oil market and may not be for years, according to a Lehman Brothers Inc. report today.

Prices of the grade, which is traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange futures market, are being depressed by a lack of storage at Cushing, Oklahoma, where WTI is delivered, competing supplies from Canada, refinery outages and difficulty in moving the oil elsewhere, the report said.

West Texas Intermediate prices ``represent local fundamentals for crude oil in the U.S. mid-continent, putting a question mark over the value of this inland U.S. crude as a world market for hedging speculation,'' said the Lehman analysts, led by New York-based Edward Morse.

The grade can still be useful when it comes to pricing crude oil far out into the future, though ``it's lost its utility'' for near-term pricing, the report said.

``WTI is not going to disappear as a U.S. benchmark,'' said Morse in an interview. ``It has a lot of liquidity.''

Until new pipelines are built or old ones are reversed to take oil out of Cushing, ``WTI will likely trade at a discount to waterborne crudes, ignoring freight, and Cushing is likely to be flush with inventory,'' the report said.
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