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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (9014)2/13/1998 10:10:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1998 (4)

FEATURE STORY

Oil Prices To Dilute?
Low Demand Pushes Quotes Down Despite Possible Strike On Iraq

London - Reuters

Sickly world oil markets are likely to take a turn for the worse in the weeks to come even in the event of a U.S. attack on Iraq, oil traders and analysts said Wednesday.

They said that only a lengthy disruption to U.N.-monitored Iraqi oil sales can provide a tonic to a glutted market where inventories are growing by the day.

"Any rally is an opportunity to sell," said Russell Hill at Austrian OMV. "This market could be heading for $12 a barrel or lower."

Trading at $15 a barrel Wednesday, benchmark Brent blend crude has not been lower since the spring of 1994.

"I simply can't see light at the end of the tunnel," added Hill. "We're stocked to the buffers."

Traders increasingly seem to have discounted the impact on oil markets of a military strike by the United States against Iraq over weapons inspections.

Futures screens in London barely flickered on Wednesday when the commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East said he would be ready to strike Iraq within a week or so.

Some dealers remain concerned that a sustained U.S. attack might oblige the United Nations to remove from Iraq officials monitoring aid distribution and oil exports.

"Obviously there's a lot of uncertainty over the consequences [of military action], but if nothing happens to Iraqi oil installations, then it's really a question of how low do you go," said Leo Drollas at London's Center for Global Energy Studies.

"It's frightening to think that even at $15 there may still be a war premium in the price of oil," said Peter Gignoux, head of the energy desk at broker Smith Barney.

Iraq now is selling more than a million barrels a day under the oil-for-food exchange that the United Nations wants to expand.

Most analysts concede that, under current circumstances, oil markets this year would be lucky to build stocks by a million barrels daily.

"Even with a conservative estimate for Iraq, the most optimistic scenario I can come up with is a stockbuild of 1.2 million barrels a day," said one oil company analyst in London.

"It's not difficult see a lot more, but physically there would be no room to stock the stuff. Something would just have to give."

Rising supplies from the non-OPEC producers in Latin America, the North Sea and beyond, though hampered by a drilling bottleneck, are competing with extra oil from OPEC.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, encouraged by the higher supply limits agreed to in December, broke above 28 million barrels a day (bpd) in January and, with Iraq at full stretch, is expected soon to approach 29 million bpd.

Giant OPEC producer Saudi Arabia has not yet quite met its new supply entitlement but Riyadh, impatient with others in the group who ignore quotas, has made it clear it will not make a lone attempt to prop up the market.

World demand for oil, meanwhile, has been stunted by Asia's financial crisis and a mild winter in the big consuming nations of the West.

The International Energy Agency (IEA), a thinktank, said Tuesday it expects supplies to exceed demand at least in the first half of the year.

It said global demand growth probably will be restricted to 2.3 percent, reaching 75.34 million bpd this year, putting an end to a four-year run of accelerating demand growth.

The IEA estimates world stocks grew by 800,000 bpd last year, capped by 600,000 bpd of stockbuild in the fourth quarter, when inventories normally are drawn down in preparation for winter.

Oil experts don't rule out prices spending a lengthy period in the bargain basement. Brent dipped briefly below $12 in 1994 but has not been in single digits since the mid-1980s.

Shell Chairman Mark Moody-Stuart warned an industry conference this week that, in the medium term, surplus capacity is increasing and might result in the biggest glut since the 1980s.

Roll Out The Barrels
Industry Backs Day's Oil Price Predictions

Glen Whelan Calgary Sun

Stockwell Day is bang-on in his oil price predictions and the effect they will have on the government's coffers, energy officials said following yesterday's budget.

Day called for oil and gas revenues to drop $1.1 billion due to weaker world commodity prices, with the annual average price of oil running at $17.50 US per barrel.

The price represents a drop of $1.62 from last year's forecast, but a significant rise over its present value.

West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed down 12 cents yesterday at $16.03 US.

Natural gas is expected to drop six cents on average to $1.70 per thousand cu. ft.

"Those prices would seem to be reasonable at this point in time," said Greg Stringham, vice-president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

Gerry Doucet of the Canadian Gas Association agreed, citing El Nino, the financial crisis in Asia and an opening of the taps by OPEC as main causes for softer commodity prices. "But it's not a long-term problem," Doucet said. "When the bottleneck opens in takeaway capacity, exports will strengthen significantly."

A loss in royalties from the oilpatch is expected to drop overall revenues in 1998-99 to $15.2 billion, down 11% from last year.

"It's not something to lose sleep over," said Teresa

Courchene, senior economist with Toronto Dominion Bank.

"Alberta has the healthiest economy in the country ..."




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (9014)2/13/1998 10:16:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1998 (5)

NYMEX

Crude Oil

Crude oil prices continued to fall Thursday toward four-year lows as oil traders wondered when or if the oil-rich Middle East Gulf will be disrupted by a military confrontation between Iraq and U.S.-led forces.

At the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude oil for March delivery closed 19 cents a barrel lower at $15.96, dipping below the $16 level for the first time since Jan. 26. The $15.70 low Jan. 25 was the lowest crude oil price since April 1994.

The United States and Britain have threatened Iraq with air strikes unless it grants U.N. weapons inspection teams unfettered access to suspected weapons sites, a condition of the 1991 Gulf War cease-fire.

Saber-rattling comments by U.S. officials in recent weeks had driven oil prices up $2 a barrel as nervous traders perceived an air strike by massing U.S.-led forces in the region was imminent. But none has been forthcoming, letting traders again focus on current significant over-supply in world oil markets.

The United States also faces stiff opposition to a strike against Iraq from fellow U.N. Security Council members Russia and China.

"There is probably a 70 to 80 percent chance that supply would not be affected by a military strike," said Bill O'Grady, an analyst with A.G. Edwards in St. Louis.

The Gulf region where Iraq is located is the source of most of the world's daily oil exports.

"The market knows that Saddam Hussein could emerge fine from his bunker after military strikes, and Iraq would be left with a deal that allows them to sell more oil," O'Grady said.

Britain Thursday circulated in the U.N. Security Council a resolution to increase from $2 billion to $5.256 billion the amount of oil Iraq would be permitted to sell over six months under a standing "oil-for-food" program it has with the United Nations, another sign that military action was not imminent.

Before the Iraq-U.N. standoff came to a head several weeks ago, oil prices had been in a four-month decline.

OPEC's decision last November to raise its production ceiling by 10 percent, even with world oil demand flagging due to economic turmoil in Asia and mild winter weather in the northern hemisphere, has swollen world oil inventories.

Tracking crude prices, products also closed weak and set new life-of-contract lows during the day.

March heating oil closed 0.49 cent lower at 44.57 cents a gallon and March gasoline 0.69 cent lower at 49.48 cents.

Natural Gas

Natural gas futures ended higher across the board Thursday in a quiet session, boosted by some daytime technical buying when support held on ACCESS, but few expected much upside without colder weather.

March climbed five cents to close at $2.288 per million British thermal units after trading between $2.23 and $2.27 for most of the day. April settled 5.4 cents higher at $2.331. Other months ended up by 2.8 to 4.8 cents.

"It was dead all day, then it rallied at the end. There was a little paper buying on the close, but we're still in the range," said one East Coast trader, adding ample storage and bearish weather forecasts should limit any upside.

Forecasts still call for mostly above-normal U.S. temperatures right through next week, particularly for the Midcontinent region. Texas and the South are expected to cool to about seasonal levels, then warm by midweek next week.

On the technical side, traders still pegged key resistance in March at Monday's $2.32-2.35 gap. Major selling should emerge at last week's prominent high of $2.435 and then in the $2.50 area.

After $2.20, key March support was at $2.18, with $2.03 the next level.

In the cash Thursday, Gulf Coast swing gas eased one to two cents to the mid-to-high teens. Midcon pipes were little changed at about $2.10. Chicago city gate gas was two cents lower in the low-$2.20s, while New York was slightly lower in the high-$2.30s.

NYMEX will be closed Monday for the U.S. Presidents Day holiday.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip rose 4.5 cents to $2.44. NYMEX said an estimated 35,722 Hub contracts traded, little changed from Wednesday's revised tally of 35,999.

CANADA SPOT GAS

Canadian spot natural gas prices edged lower in Alberta but were mostly unchanged at the export points on Thursday, market sources said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted about three cents lower at C$1.67-1.68 per gigajoule (GJ) as milder weather moved into the region.

Temperatures in southern Alberta were forecast to reach highs of 43 and 45 degrees Fahrenheit on Friday and Saturday, respectively.

Meanwhile, March AECO clung onto the daily market at C$1.68 per GJ.

In the export market, the recent decline in Sumas, Wash., prices came to a halt today as prices were reported mostly unchanged at US$1.19-1.20 per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

Few buyers entered the market as forecasts still called for normal to slightly above-normal temperatures in the U.S. Northwest amid heavy rains.

At Niagara, prices were quoted mostly steady at US$2.35-2.36 per mmBtu in sluggish trade.

U.S. SPOT GAS

Mild weather and a stagnant futures market chipped away at U.S. spot natural gas prices on Thursday, industry sources said.

Forecasts still call for above- to much-above-normal temperatures across the U.S. this week, a trend which is expected to continue into next week in the Northeast, upper Midwest and across the uppermost northern plains.

Swing gas at Henry Hub was quoted slightly lower at $2.17-2.22 per mmBtu, as temperature highs hovered in the 60s F across the Gulf Coast.

In western Texas, Permian prices slipped a few cents to mostly $2.02-2.03, with some shortcovering emerging late. San Juan values were similarly softer at $1.98-2.03.

In generation news, restart of the 498 megawatt (MW) unit 4 at the San Juan coal plant in New Mexico was back on line as of this morning after being shut over the weekend for tube leak repairs. The adjacent 316 MW unit 1 was taken off line as planned last Friday for about three weeks of maintenance.

Also in New Mexico, the 750 MW unit 5 at the Four Corners generating station, shut late Tuesday for repairs, was expected to restart early Monday. This followed Monday's unplanned outage at the 220 MW unit 3 at the Four Corners plant. This unit is expected to restart this weekend.

Furthermore, a 875 MW Intermountain coal unit in Utah was ramping back up this morning slightly ahead of schedule and was expected to reach full power later today.

Meanwhile in the Midcontinent, prices remained fairly steady at $2.10-2.13, with Chicago city-gate quoted mostly at $2.22, off one to two cents.

In the East, New York city gate prices were talked mostly in the high-$2.30s to about $2.40, while Appalachian prices on Columbia eased to about $2.25-2.29.

OIL & GAS REFERENCES

Charts:

oilworld.com

oilworld.com

NYMEX Reference:

quotewatch.com