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Pastimes : The Justa and Lars Honors Bob Brinker Investment Club Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (244)7/13/2000 10:05:31 AM
From: Wally Mastroly  Respond to of 10065
 
Oil affecting import prices - June import prices rise 0.8%:

WASHINGTON — The price of imported goods rose in June, led almost
exclusively by a jump in oil costs, government figures showed. The index of
imported prices increased 0.8% last month, after rising 0.3% in May, the
Labor Department said. Excluding petroleum, the index was unchanged
after falling 0.2% in May.

''Outside of oil, the pressures from imports on inflation are tame,'' said Joel L. Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors. Still, ''petroleum costs are clearly an issue and they're beginning to show up in other sectors.''

Prices of U.S. exports fell 0.1% after rising 0.2%
in May, the Labor Department said. The decrease was led by the first drop
in farm export prices since December and was the largest decline since they
fell 2.2% in July 1999. Excluding agricultural products, export prices fell
0.1% after rising 0.3% in May.

-

Meanwhile - Crude Oil Tops $30 a Barrel as OPEC Fails to Agree on Output,
By Brian Gorman

London, July 13 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose for a third day, returning to more
than $30 a barrel, after the president of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries said members had yet to back Saudi Arabia's proposal to increase
production.

Ali Rodriguez, OPEC president and Venezuela's oil minister, after meeting in
Dubai with United Arab Emirates Oil Minister Obeid bin Seif al-Nasseri said no
agreement had been reached on Saudi Arabia's July 3 call for a third output
boost of the year. Prices had fallen as much as 8.3 percent as traders expected
new oil would flow, though OPEC has yet to form a consensus to act.

``There probably will be an increase, but it may not be this month, and it may be
less oil than the Saudis want,'' said David Nesbitt, trader at Prudential Bache
(Futures) Ltd.

Brent crude oil for August settlement rose as much as 40 cents, or 1.4 percent,
to $30.07 a barrel on the International Petroleum Exchange in London. August
crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange was up 24 cents at $30.56 a
barrel in electronic trading. Oil has almost tripled in the last 18 months.

Saudi Arabia wants to raise output by 500,000 barrels daily, equal to 0.7 percent
of world output, to move prices closer to $25 a barrel. The U.S., the biggest
energy consumer, has warned high prices may hurt economic growth and
demand for energy. Rodriguez yesterday met with Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi
though a statement said only that the two would cooperate with OPEC to ensure
oil markets are adequately supplied. Later today, Rodriguez is expected to visit
Qatar before traveling tomorrow to Iran and Iraq.

Pact Efforts

Some traders had expected that Rodriguez during his trip would form a
consensus for OPEC to produce more oil. So far, no announcement has been
made.

``The issue of increasing production is decided by the situation in the market,''
Rodriguez said today in Dubai, the official WAM news agency reported. ``OPEC
countries will take the decision that meets the requirements of the market.''

OPEC, which pumps about 40 percent of the world's oil, has increased output
twice this year, in April and July, boosting world supply by a total of more than 2
million barrels a day.

Most of any extra oil would come from Saudi Arabia because it has most spare
capacity. Yet OPEC appears split on a third increase. If prices drop because of
another increase, Saudi Arabia would benefit by selling more oil, while other
nations collect lower revenue.

A Persian Gulf oil official said this week that an agreement may be reached
within a week, and analysts said Saudi Arabia may well go ahead with the output
increase alone if it doesn't get the backing from other members. Kuwait said
yesterday that oil supplies were sufficient for now.

OPEC wants the price of a basket of crude oils it monitors to be closer to $25 a
barrel. This group of oils, typically 40 cents to 80 cents below Brent, has been at
more than $28 a barrel since June 19. OPEC may raise output by 500,000
barrels a day if the price stays above $28 a barrel for 20 consecutive days.



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (244)7/17/2000 3:24:46 PM
From: Wally Mastroly  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10065
 
More oil from OPEC!...- that's a definite maybe..<g>

OPEC Tells Members to Ready Next Oil-Output
Increase (Update3)
By Alex Lawler

London, July 17 (Bloomberg) -- The Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries told members to prepare by the end of the month for their third output
boost this year, ending a two-week debate among a group that pumps 40 percent
of the world's oil.

The 500,000 barrels of additional daily supply, equal to 0.7 percent of world
output, will come if prices stay high, OPEC President Ali Rodriguez told the
official OPEC News Agency. Saudi Arabia, the group's most influential member,
proposed the move on July 3 to ensure rising prices don't hurt growth in oil
demand, although some members, including Iran, opposed the plan.

Oil fell 2 percent after the announcement, though prices remain above $30 a
barrel in New York and 50 percent higher than a year ago. With many nations in
OPEC already near their production limits, the increase may be less than
promised, keeping prices high, analysts said.

More ``oil is on its way,'' said Lawrence Eagles of GNI Research. Yet ``it's going
to be an across-the-board increase, which means, nominally, less oil than Saudi
Arabia had promised.''

The increase would raise daily quotas by 500,000 barrels, or 2 percent, to 25.9
million for 10 members of OPEC, excluding Iraq. Of that increase, Saudi Arabia,
the world's largest producer, would pump an extra 162,000 barrels a day.

Benchmark Brent crude oil for September settlement dropped as much as 71
cents, or 2.4 percent, to $28.52 a barrel on London's International Petroleum
Exchange. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, oil for August delivery fell as
much as 78 cents, or 2.5 percent, to $30.62 a barrel.

Rates

Higher oil prices have contributed to rising costs for everything from gasoline to
freight transport. That's slowed economic growth by forcing up interest rates in
the U.S. and Europe. The European Central Bank has boosted interest rates by
1.75 percentage points since November to 4.25 percent, forcing consumers to
pay more for home loans and similar products.

OPEC's members have been split over another boost after increases in April and
earlier this month failed to lower the group's price benchmark to $25 a barrel.
Rodriguez, who is also Venezuela's oil minister, in the past week visited other
OPEC countries to discuss the plan.

Rodriguez ``notified his colleagues, fellow OPEC oil ministers, that in the event of
prices remaining at current levels, they should be prepared to take the necessary
steps to raise output,'' OPECNA said. ``Other things being equal, it is expected
that this will happen before the end of the current month.''

The statement may formalize what OPEC officials have called an informal
understanding to consider boosting supply if an oil index the group watches
stays above $28 for 20 consecutive working days. OPEC adopted the so-called
price-band agreement, a new version of a previous mechanism, at its June 21
meeting in Vienna.

The group agreed in June to raise output by 500,000 barrels a day if the ``average
price of the OPEC reference basket of crudes remained above a certain level for a
specified period of time,'' OPECNA said, without being more specific.

Meeting

The OPEC benchmark, which stood at $28.84 Friday, has been above $28 since
June 20. An Iranian oil official has said the 20- day countdown started July 1,
when the latest quota accord came into effect, which means the limit would be
reached on July 28.

Members had considered a proposal to hold an emergency meeting tomorrow in
Vienna to consider output policy, a step Rodriguez on Friday ruled out. A
meeting in the next few days is unlikely, an OPEC official said.

OPEC decided to share the extra oil that Saudi Arabia had proposed, even
though only the kingdom, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates can pump more
oil quickly, to ensure unity remains within the group, analysts said.

``This is the compromise they've reached,'' Eagles said. ``We now have to see if
Saudi Arabia accepts the increase or decides to go for the full (amount). This has
important implications for the rest of the year.''

Current New

Quota Increase Quota

Algeria 811,000 16,000 827,000 Indonesia 1,317,000 26,000 1,343,000 Iran
3,727,000 73,000 3,800,000 Kuwait 2,037,000 40,000 2,077,000 Libya 1,361,000
27,000 1,388,000 Nigeria 2,091,000 41,000 2,132,000 Qatar 658,000 13,000
671,000 Saudi Arabia 8,253,000 162,000 8,415,000 UAE 2,219,000 44,000
2,263,000 Venezuela 2,926,000 58,000 2,984,000

Total 25,400,000 500,000 25,900,000