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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank who wrote (69413)7/11/2000 10:18:01 AM
From: Jon Cave  Respond to of 95453
 
B: Survey: Oil Production Fell in June
B: Survey: Oil Production Fell in June

LONDON, Jul 11, 2000 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- World oil production fell in
June despite increased output by most OPEC members, and a key industry watcher
expressed concern about the possibility of heating oil shortages later this
year.

Refiners are now concentrating on gasoline production at the expense of heating
fuel, the International Energy Agency said Tuesday in its June report.

World oil production was down 420,000 barrels per day in June, dragged down by a

decrease of 490,000 barrels per day in Iraqi output, the IEA said. Production by
other OPEC countries rose by 250,000 barrels per day.

Distillate and gasoline stocks remain well below 1999 levels, a situation that
"warrants serious attention," the IEA reported.

"This is not just a U.S. problem," said David Knapp, editor of the IEA's monthly
oil report. "It is really an Atlantic Basin problem. The European stocks of
distillate and gas are also low."

On Monday, President Clinton said he was moving to stockpile 2 million barrels
of heating oil in the Northeast in an attempt to avoid a repeat of last winter's
sharp jump in heating oil prices.

The United States has 37 million barrels of heating oil in inventory, about half
as much as a year ago, said Gene Sperling, the president's chief economic
adviser.

Iraqi crude supply for June averaged 2.56 million barrels per day, while exports
were 1.94 million barrels per day. The seventh phase of the U.N. oil-for-food
program expired June 8, but Iraq didn't sign the memorandum of understanding for
next phase until June 22.

On June 21, OPEC nations excluding Iraq raised their production target effective
July 1 by 708,000 barrels per day to 25.4 million barrels per day. Those nations
had already exceeded that target in June, the IEA said, with production
averaging 25.49 million barrels per day.

World oil production averaged 76.48 million barrels per day in June, a drop of
420,000 barrels a day from May. Crude prices rose because of "speculative
interest, low crude and product inventories and strong gasoline demand," the IEA
reported.

The state of the market was discouraging refiners, the report said.

"The trouble is that the market is confused and nervous," the report added,
because of uncertainty about what producers will do next.

"Refiners do not really believe today's prices are sustainable, and hesitate to
run crude for product restocking: but product stocks are already unacceptably
low because of similar uncertainties earlier in the year..."

The report added that much of the crude coming into the market is heavier and
higher in sulfur than the light crudes normally used to refine gasoline, and
stricter standards are being imposed in the United States to minimize pollution.

The heavy crudes "will be difficult and expensive to refine into gasoline,
particularly gasoline meeting the new standards," the report said.

"In fact, the weekly average prices of some of these crudes (Urals and Iranian
Heavy) have actually declined over the last five weeks and others, such as Dubai
and West Texas Sour, have increased only slightly."



To: Frank who wrote (69413)7/11/2000 10:36:02 AM
From: Wowzer  Respond to of 95453
 
Sorry no real words of confidence, but I like my chances with MDR at 8. I agree with Razor that the corporate veil will not be pierced and the insiders seem to think that as well. Just may take awhile.



To: Frank who wrote (69413)7/11/2000 10:39:56 AM
From: Warpfactor  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 
RE: Dead Money

On days like today, I'm glad I've got the movers like CAM, RIG, FLC and ESV to offset my laggard nonperformers PGO, FGH and MDR. Not to mention OEI among the E&P group.

It seems like everytime in the past that I've tried to "safely park" money in some stock that "couldn't go lower", I've regretted it.

Warp



To: Frank who wrote (69413)7/11/2000 11:08:12 AM
From: Ronald J. Clark  Respond to of 95453
 
Frank,

Re: "Words of confidence" in connection with MDR and the "dead money" problem. DIVIDEND 2.5% MDR will bounce back and while you wait your money is not completely comotose.