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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bridge Player who wrote (42735)3/11/2000 8:37:00 AM
From: jttmab  Respond to of 99985
 
I understand that many community colleges offer remedial math..... Ok. It was a really stupid mistake.

Energy Panel: Oil Reserve Dwindling

By BRUCE STANLEY, AP Business Writer

LONDON (AP) -- The world's richest countries have depleted
their oil inventories to the lowest levels seen in four years, a
widely read survey said Friday, reinforcing concerns that
motorists will soon be paying even stiffer prices to fill their
tanks.

Pinched profit margins for oil refineries have caused a
slowdown in the production of gasoline and other products,
and this delay could lead to gas shortages during the peak
driving season this summer, the International Energy Agency
reported.

World output of oil increased in February by a slight 0.3
percent to 75 million barrels per day.

However, drastic reductions in oil inventories in the United
States, Europe and Japan have created a shortfall in global
petroleum supplies of about 2.5 million barrels per day, said
David Knapp, editor of the IEA's monthly oil report.

This shortfall is expected to widen in the during the second half
of 2000, when consumer demand historically rises, first for gas
and later for home heating oil.

'We are quite concerned,' Knapp said from his office in Paris.

For motorists, the report's implications are bleak. Americans
are already paying nearly $1.50 for a gallon of gasoline,
compared to prices of less than $1 last winter.

Average U.S. retail gas prices of $1.80 and even $2 per gallon
are looming on the horizon, warned Roger Diwan of The
Petroleum Finance Company, a consultancy based in
Washington.

'You need to build stocks and you need to be able to run your
refineries at a higher rate in order to meet the higher demand,'
Diwan said.

The IEA report reinforces a prediction by the U.S. Energy
Department issued earlier this week that gas prices could spike
at $1.75 to $1.80 this summer because production isn't keeping
pace with demand.

The IEA is part of the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, a group of the world's wealthiest countries.
Its report underscores the importance of the March 27 meeting
in Venice of oil ministers of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.

OPEC is worried about the recent price volatility, and analysts
now expect the group to ease some of the production cuts that
it made in 1998 and 1999 to boost historically low prices.

OPEC members have refused to specify the likely size of any
increase.John Toalster of SG Securities in London predicted a
'fairly cautious' addition of a maximum 1.5 million barrels per
day.

The likelihood that OPEC would boost output improved this
week when Iran, one of the group's staunchest price hawks,
appeared to express support for increased production.

However, analysts suggested that OPEC is not likely to pump
enough barrels for importers to meet current demand while also
replenishing oil inventories.

The IEA noted that inventories in rich countries have slipped to
their lowest level since the early spring of 1996. Heavy
consumption should ease somewhat in the second quarter, but
demand will pick up again toward summer, it said.

These factors have contributed to volatile oil prices.

Crude has surged from $10.72 a barrel on Dec. 10, 1998,
reaching a 9-year high of $34.37 during after-hours trading
Tuesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange. At late
afternoon in New York, light sweet crude for April delivery
was trading at $31.76 per barrel, up 7 cents.

Heating oil prices doubled in some parts of the northeastern
United States this winter, and U.S. gasoline prices have neared
$1.50 a gallon.

In London, a contract of North Sea Brent crude for April
delivery was trading at $29 per barrel on the International
Petroleum Exchange, down 29 cents from Thursday's close.

OPEC boosted production last month by 540,000 barrels per
day, with Iraq and Nigeria accounting for much of the increase,
the IEA said. OPEC was 74 percent compliant with its output
cuts in February, down slightly from a revised compliance rate
for January of 78 percent.

However, the IEA warned that several OPEC members,
including Venezuela -- the group's No. 3 producer -- are
already at or near their production limits. The report blamed the
lack of spare capacity on a dearth of investment in new
equipment during 1998, when oil prices and revenues were
much lower.

The impact of the report, said Peter Gignoux, head of the
petroleum desk at Salomon Smith Barney in London, was to
fire 'warning shots all over the place.'