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


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10639)5/12/1998 11:27:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY / TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY, MAY 11 1998 (2)

OIL & GAS

OPEC Oil Ministers To Consult On Low Prices

DAMASCUS, Syria - Oil ministers of the world's largest oil exporters will consult on action needed to increase low oil prices on the sidelines of an Arab energy conference opening in Damascus on Sunday.

Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali Bin Ibrahim al-Naimi told Reuters on arrival in Syria on Saturday he had hoped market reaction to recent oil production cuts would be stronger.

Naimi said he and other OPEC ministers taking part in the conference, organised by the Organisation of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC), would consult over the current low oil prices and how these could be improved.

He said the Damascus meeting "constitutes a good chance for us to discuss the prices and the general market situation."

Asked about the possibility of a meeting between Saudi, Venezuelan and Mexican oil ministers to try to improve oil prices, Naimi said: "We will do, if we are obliged."

OPEC Secretary-General Rilwanu Lukman said he had come to Damascus to take part in the Arab energy conference, but would participate in consultations among OPEC ministers about the markets and their response to the recent production quota cuts.

"The first month of the cuts has just passed, and consequently we have to see what the effect of that cut is in the market. Then the ministers will decide what the next step would be."

Asked whether he was satisfied by the reaction so far, he said: "prices are not bad, but not good."

Lukman told reporters output figures for April were still coming in, so it was premature to discuss the possibility of further cuts.

He did not expect a decision on any new quota cuts before an OPEC meeting next month.

"When the time comes to examine the result of the cuts, then a decision will be taken what to do."

Asked when this might be, he replied: "We have a meeting scheduled for June... we are already in May."

Lukman and Naimi will attend the OAPEC meeting which runs from May 10 to 13.

Arab officials taking part in the Damascus meetings were cautious when discussing the possible need for further production cuts.

Suleiman al-Omani, undersecretary of the Kuwaiti Oil Ministry, told reporters in Damascus: "Nobody in the producing countries is happy with these prices."

But he said: "No consensus yet among oil producers on further output cuts."

Asked if Kuwait would push for more production cuts he said: "For the time being we have to see the situation."

Salim Shaaban Ojaili, undersecretary at Oman's Ministry of Oil and Gas said Oman would be happy to see producers that had not cut production under the Riyadh pact move to reduce their output.

Saudi Arabia Believes Oil Market on the Mend

DAMASCUS, May 11 - Saudi Arabia believes oil markets are on the mend with supply and demand back in balance after oil producers started reducing supplies, a Gulf source said on Monday.

The source, familiar with Saudi oil policy, said OPEC's biggest producer was "optimistic" that crude prices would continue their recovery from the nine-year lows of early March.

"We are 100 percent sure prices will not fall," the source told reporters on the sidelines of an Arab energy conference.

He said it could take another four to six weeks to see the full impact on the market of the cuts agreed by OPEC and non-OPEC after a secret March meeting hosted in Riyadh by Saudi Arabia.

"The market is getting tighter. Prices will improve in coming weeks and months," he said, calling the market "well balanced."

But he said all producers, including Saudi, remained open to the possibility of a second round of production cuts if necessary.

Producers were discussing ways to improve the market "including the possibility of further production cuts if required," he said.

Mexico, one of the Riyadh trio of producers which orchestrated the cuts, said last week that the outlook for the market indicated more cuts would probably not be needed.

Major oil producers have pledged reductions of about 1.5 million barrels a day (bpd) to year's end including 1.25 million from Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members.

The source said Saudi Arabia was satisfied that producers were sticking by those pledges.

"We are sure that most countries are committed to pledges -- OPEC and
non-OPEC," he said.

Estimates were that OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers removed at least 1.3 million barrels a day (bpd) from the market in April compared to the February benchmark for cuts, the Gulf source said.

The estimates came from a number of secondary sources which monitor the market.

Oil markets had found further support from a fall in Russian exports and were likely to draw strength from North Sea maintenance and some improvement in Asian demand, the Gulf source added.

The oil market situation would be discussed further at a scheduled meeting of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) oil ministers on June 16 in Riyadh.

OPEC members Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar
and non-OPEC Oman are GCC members along with Bahrain.

OPEC meets in Vienna on June 24.

OPEC Implements Most Oil Output Cuts

LONDON, May 11 - OPEC has implemented most of the output cuts it agreed in March to help rescue prices, removing some of a bearish surplus of petroleum supply, the International Energy Agency said on Monday.

The agency said the cuts were among several factors tackling the global glut and helping to brighten sentiment in uncertain oil markets, the Paris-based agency said.

At the end of April, OPEC production cuts appeared to have been largely implemented, removing some, but certainly not all, of the second quarter surplus,'' the agency said in its Monthly Oil Market Report.

Members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries excluding Iraq agreed in March to reduce output from April 1 by 1.25 million barrels per day (bpd) under a pact with non-OPEC producers to shave two percent off world production.

The agency said it estimated OPEC produced 27.95 million bpd in April, some 1.03 million bpd below February output levels used as a benchmark or 80 percent of its pledged goals.

Allowing for an increase of 160,000 bpd in Iraqi exports, OPEC's April production was 800,000 bpd below its March output. Outlining another bullish factor, the agency revised down its 1998 non-OPEC supply forecast by 200,000 bpd to 45.1 million bpd.

''The market had expected not only slower implementation...but also a lower level of compliance,'' the IEA said.

Non-OPEC supply reductions removed an additional 200,000 to 250,000 bpd, it said.

The IEA said strong demand for gasoline in the United States was expected to contribute to global oil demand growth of 1.5 million bpd in 1998, but it added that this remained sensitive to continuing uncertainty about Asian demand.

More support for the market could come from what the IEA called Iraq's reminder that it could remove as well as add to global supply in the event of prolonged disagreements about the U.N.'s oil-for-food arrangement under which Baghdad exports crude.

Prices have remained about $2 a barrel above their mid-March lows but benchmark North Sea Brent crude still languishes more than $4 a barrel below the $19.32 it fetched on average in 1997.

OPEC ministers have said they would be prepared to consider making more reductions to support the market if prices continue to look sickly.

The IEA said the next major events for the oil market included a scheduled OPEC ministerial conference in Vienna on June 24 and discussions between Iraq and the United Nations about exports of Iraqi oil under the oil for food arrangement.

It said the market remained in wait-and-see mode on OPEC and possible increases in Iraqi exports.

''Without definitive developments on either front, market sentiment may continue to push upwards while the physical market fundamentals, although improving, still pull downwards,'' the agency said.

Tosco Positive On Asian Crisis Fallout

NEW YORK, May 11 - Asia's economic crisis and depressed global crude prices are providing a bullish outlook for U.S. refiners, Tosco Corp (TOS) Chairman Thomas O'Malley said on Monday.

''We view the Asian crisis as an absolute positive,'' O'Malley told Reuters in an interview.

O'Malley said the crisis will lead to better margins because Asian refiners will be forced to cut back on investments in refining capacity, which will lead to a gradual tightening and rationalization in worldwide refining.

''We are seeing an adjustment in refining investment decisions, particularly in countries like South Korea which were irrational. The slowdown in demand in Asia was a bubble waiting to burst,'' O'Malley said.

He added the possible import of surplus Asian barrels into the U.S. was not a threat since Asian refiners were not capable of meeting the strict specification requirements of California, one of the largest gasoline markets in the U.S.

''It hasn't really worked as a negative for us,'' O'Malley said. ''They can't make the products, ....and we are just as efficient as the Asian manufacturers.''

Although Tosco is based in Stamford, Connecticut, it has a strong presence on the West Coast, running five refineries which produce 500,000 barrels-per-day (bpd) of products.

It has another 450,000 bpd on the East Coast, making it the the largest independent oil refiner and marketer in the U.S.

The Asian crisis also prompted the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non-OPEC oil producers to agree to shave some two percent from world supplies in a bid to strengthen crude oil prices.

O'Malley said however he did not see evidence of ''real concrete evidence of cuts in oil production.''

''In the absence of any real agreement by the producers of oil that had a meaningful adjustment and any political event, we can't understand why crude prices should go up.''

''We see WTI prices ranging between $15 to $16 (per barrel) over the next couple of months,'' he said.

Crude prices fell to record nine-and-a-half year lows in March, and are still under pressure leading to calls for further cuts.

But low crude prices have boosted refining margins in March which have contributed toward strong downstream company results in the first quarter.

Sector leader Tosco's first-quarter results topped analyst estimates, with a net income of $41.5 million or $0.26 per diluted share on sales of $3.0 billion, compared with net income of $3.6 million or $0.03 per share on sales of $2.4 billion in the year-ago quarter.

Analyst have projected even better margins in the second quarter amid a boom summer gasoline demand season as U.S. highway travel and gasoline demand is expected to post the largest annual increase in a decade, rising about 2.8 percent between April and September.

''We prefer lower energy prices which would mean ultimately higher consumption,'' O'Malley said.

O'Malley declined to comment on any projections for the second quarter but said the second quarter's refinery margins ''look significantly better, particularly on the West Coast.''

He added that there was ''no significant impact'' from refinery outages last month at its Los Angeles refineries after a power outage and its 100,000 bpd Trainer, Pennsylvania, cat cracker.

Oil Sideways as Extra Output Cuts Recede

LONDON, May 11 - Oil prices shuffled sideways on Monday unperturbed by renewed calls for producers to consider a second round of output reductions.

London futures for benchmark North Sea Brent ticked up seven cents to $14.76 a barrel.

Dealers remained sanguine about the chance of further output cuts from world producers. They said that in spite of a call from Qatar for more cuts, it now looked likely that producers would wait at least until June to consider more output restraint.

Qatari Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah said on Monday that oil markets remained very weak and he wanted ministers to quickly agree more output cuts.

Attiyah said he wanted Arab oil ministers meeting in Damascus to consider further cuts in production to reduce what he estimated was two million barrels a day of oversupply.

"Qatar is demanding during the consultations in Damascus that a further cut should be made to support prices,'' Attiyah said.

Major oil producers have pledged reductions of about 1.5 million barrels a day (bpd) to year's end including 1.25 million from Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members.

But the world's largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia, appears optimistic that oil markets are now robust enough to recover without more supply being withdrawn.

A Gulf source familiar with Saudi thinking said on Monday in Damascus that the markets were on the mend, bringing supply and demand back into balance.

''We are 100 percent sure prices will not fall,'' the source told reporters on the sidelines of an Arab energy conference.

He said it could take another four to six weeks to see the full impact on the market of the cuts agreed by OPEC and non-OPEC countries after a secret March meeting hosted in Riyadh by Saudi Arabia.

But he said all producers, including Saudi Arabia, remained open to the possibility of a second round of production cuts if necessary.

Producers were discussing ways to improve the market ''including the possibility of further production cuts if required,'' he said.

Mexico, one of the Riyadh trio of producers which orchestrated the cuts, said last week that the outlook for the market indicated more cuts would probably not be needed.

The source said Saudi Arabia was satisfied that producers were sticking by those pledges.

''We are sure that most countries are committed to pledges -- OPEC and
non-OPEC,'' he said.

The International Energy Agency on Monday said that OPEC had implemented most of the oil production cuts it had promised.

The agency estimated OPEC produced 27.95 million bpd in April, some 1.03 million below February output levels used as a benchmark.

NYMEX Crude, Products Pare Gains At The Close

NEW YORK, May 11 - NYMEX crude pared gains at the close Monday, as the buying spurt that lifted the market for most of the day petered out towards the end, traders said.

The contract settled at $15.17 a barrel, up four cents. The contract briefly touched $15.75, the day's high, trigerring selling that quickly brought the front-month down.

In the morning's opening, June crude dipped to $14.90, breaking the $14.95 low of April 27.

There was also interest on the July contract, which ended unchanged at $15.87, after reaching a high of $16.14 on the day.

''While crude appeared vulnerable at the start, buying interest developed when we broke below $15.00,'' said a NYMEX floor trader.

''We managed to finish within the trading range, thanks to fund and local buying,'' said the trader.

Heating oil ended lower after trading up most of the day. The June contract finished at 42.91 cents a gallon, down 0.10 cent, after trading as high as 53.95 cents on the day.

Gasoline closed down at 53.35 cents a gallon, up 0.21 cent down from the day's high of 53.95 cents.

One trader said fund buying early in the day reversed an early drift downwards, following overnight losses on ACCESS trading.

Traders said there was very little impact on the market from the weekend meeting of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) in Damascus, Syria.

''The calls for further production cuts have been making the rounds for quite sometime,'' said a market player, who added that Qatar's plea for the Damascus meeting to consider the issue ''only validates what we have known all along.''

However, the world's largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia, appears optimistic that oil markets are now robust enough to recover without more reducing supplies.

A Gulf source familiar with Saudi thinking told Reuters on Monday in Damascus that the markets were on the mend, bringing supply and demand back into balance.

The source said it could take another four to six weeks to see the full impact on the market under the Riyadh agremeent in March, which called for output cuts of about 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd).

Other analysts appear to see matters differently.

One of them, Purvin & Gertz, Inc., the Houston-based energy consultants, said Monday the cuts under the Riyadh pact will not diminish the large overhang in first quarter production, which it estimated at well over 2.0 million bpd.

''Second quarter stock increases under the March arrangements will still be excessive, especially with increased Iraqi volumes,'' it said.

It said continued producer response to market demand levels ''are not likely to be proactive, and the market should remain weak, on average, with the stock overhang remaining for some time,'' it said.

NYMEX Natural Gas Ends With Pared Gains

NEW YORK, May 11 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures pared afternoon gains but still ended higher Monday in moderate trade, helped by some technical buying and reports the heat in Texas helped firm the cash, industry sources said.

June climbed 4.8 cents to close at $2.215 per million British thermal units after trading in a range today between $2.18 and $2.27. July settled 4.3 cents higher at $2.27. Other deferreds ended up 0.7 to 4.3 cents.

"We sold off toward the close, but we still ended up on the day. Cash was up and they couldn't get June through unchanged," said one East Coast trader.

While some remained skeptical prices will move much higher, citing mild weather in most regions and a hefty storage surplus, others noted buyers recently surfaced with the first sign of heat in Texas and psychology may now favor the upside.

Midwest temperatures this week are expected to average eight to 14 degrees F above normal. Texas also is forecast to stay several to 10 degrees above normal for the period. Eastern weather should average within a couple of degrees of normal.

Technical traders said June was still in a range but a close above the double top at $2.27 could signal a break to the upside. Next resistance was seen at last week's high of $2.355. Further resistance was expected at $2.37, which is the 50 percent retracement point of the recent selloff. Major selling was expected at another double top at $2.63.

Key support was pegged at $2.105-2.11, a spot continuation chart low and last Monday's low. Major buying was expected at the $2.05 double bottom from January and then at $2.

In the cash Monday, Gulf Coast swing prices firmed more than a nickel to the mid-teens. Midwest pipes were up a similar amount to the $2.10-13 area. New York city gate gas was more than five cents higher in the low-to-mid $2.40s, while Chicago was up almost a dime to the low-$2.30s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip rose 2.7 cents to $2.41. NYMEX said an estimated 63,726 contracts traded, up from Friday's revised tally of 59,848.

US Spot Gas Prices Driven Higher By Southern Heat

NEW YORK, May 11 - U.S. spot natural gas prices turned higher Monday as pre-summer heat seeped into the south central U.S. and sporadic outages drained supply, industry sources said.

Temperatures this week are expected to remain above normal throughout most of the central U.S., with the warmest weather seen in the southern plains and Texas. Weather in the Northeast is forecast to warm to normal by Wednesday and continue through next weekend, while below normal temperatures are expected to cover the Southwest.

Cash prices at Henry Hub were quoted today mostly near $2.20 per mmBtu as temperatures in the regionclimbed into the 90sF.

In the Midcontinent, prices were up by a similar amount to about $2.10-2.12, with Chicago city gate pegged around $2.30.

In west Texas, Permian prices rose five cents to about $2.00-2.02, while San Juan values rebounded to the mid-to-high $1.90s.

In maintenance news, Northern's Keystone gas plant in western Texas is still scheduled to return to service Friday following unplanned maintenance.

Also, the 750 megawatt (MW) Four Corners 5 coal unit and the 540 MW San Juan 3 coal unit in New Mexico were both expected to restart tonight.

In the Northeast, gas at the New York city gate traded mostly in the low to mid $2.40s, while Appalachian prices on Columbia moved into the mid-$2.30s, market sources said.

Canada Spot Natural Gas Prices Slide With Excess Supply

NEW YORK, May 11 - Canadian spot natural gas prices headed sharply lower in Alberta on Monday as an ample supply of gas flooded the market, industry sources said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted mostly at C$1.66 per gigajoule, though prices ranged anywhere from the C$1.70s early to about C$1.60 this afternoon.

Traders attributed the softening to a weak weather-related demand and the return of field receipts on NOVA following last week's forest fires.

Also, TransCanada's system was undergoing maintenance, which will limit capacity in northern Ontario to 2.47 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) on Tuesday and as low as 882 million cubic feet per day on Friday.

At the borders, Sumas export prices were quoted at US$1.41per million British thermal units (mmBtu), down about eight cents from Friday.

Conversely in the east, gas at Niagara traded a few cents higher at US$2.29-2.30 per mmBtu, in line with the NYMEX uptick.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10639)5/13/1998 10:20:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY / TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, MAY 12 1998 (1)

MARKET OVERVIEW

Closing world markets: TSE, Asia down, New York up

Lagging gold stocks dragged down the Toronto Stock Exchange Tuesday as investors watched as the price of the precious metal slide.

In London, the Financial Times Index of 100 industrials closed Tuesday at 5,956.7, down 71.6. Most Asian stock markets fell Tuesday, with the key index in Seoul tumbling 2.7 percent to its lowest close since Dec. 24 on fears that more companies are facing bankruptcies.

Canadian gold mining shares fell as the spot price of gold on the New York Mercantile Exchange dropped $2.30 to $298 US an ounce.

Shares in Barrick Gold, the largest Canadian producer, lost $1.00 to $31.20, and Placer Dome dropped 50 cents to $20.30 as the gold and silver index lost 2.36 per cent on the session.

"One of the reasons we couldn't make it to the plus side was gold," said Fred Ketchen, chief equities trader with ScotiaMcLeod in Toronto.

Overall, the TSE 300 composite index slipped 3.03 to 7,717.70, while on Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average moved in the opposite
direction.

The blue-chip Dow traded in a narrow range through most of the day, then rose 70.25 to 9,161.77. Analysts said few investors were making big bets in advance of data due Wednesday on wholesale prices and retail sales.

The reports, along with Thursday's reading on consumer prices, are the last major clues on inflationary pressures before Federal Reserve officials meet next Tuesday.

The U.S. central bankers are reportedly mulling an increase in interest rates to contain inflation.

On Bay Street, the real estate and construction index slid 1.33 per cent, led downward by giant TrizecHahn, which dropped 50 cents to $32.30.

Meanwhile, the continuing battle over the future of WIC Western International Communications pushed communications stocks down 0.95 per cent.

Among the losers was CanWest Global Communications, which lost a court battle Monday to scuttle a $975-million acquisition agreement between WIC and Shaw Communications, a Calgary cable TV operator.

CanWest subordinate voting shares lost 55 cents to $27.05. Shaw, WIC's
favored suitor, lost $1.20 to $22.70 and WIC B dropped 75 cents to $41.50.

"So, based upon Wednesday's market action, nobody won," Ketchen said.

Transportation was one of five TSE index groups to show gains, led by Laidlaw Environmental, up 40 cents to $19.85. Air Canada gained 35 cents to $13.85.

The transportation gained 0.96 per cent, utilities 0.67 per cent and industrial products 0.43 per cent.

BCE Inc., Canada's largest telecommunications company, rose 90 cents to $64.25 to lead the utilities sector upward. The gains came on news BCE is selling its indirect 14.25 per cent stake in Cable and Wireless Communications, Britain's largest cable TV and telephone company, for about $2.2 billion.

Fairfax gained $13.00 to $578.00; Corby Distilleries B lost $2.75 to $67.00. Canadian Occidental Petroleum rose $0.85 to $32.35; Silverside Resources fell $2.00 to $21.00.

Declining issues outnumbered advances 619 to 412 with 301 unchanged in trading of 101.3 million shares worth $1.85 billion.

The TSE 100 lost 0.55 to 471.08.

Traders said South Korea shares fell in reaction to news that three companies have collapsed, including Kyong Hyang Construction Co.

Shares of Kyong Hyang were suspended on the the Korea Stock Exchange following news that the company had failed to honor its debts.

Fears of further collapses among financially weak companies hurt market sentiment, traders said.

On Monday, Moody's Investors Service lowered the long-term debt ratings of South Korea banks.

The main Korea Composite Index fell 9.72 points to 351.86, it lowest close since Dec. 24, 1997, when it stood at 351.45.

Prices on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange also tumbled after two straight sessions of advances.

The Hang Seng Index, the Hong Kong market's key indicator of blue chips, fell 254.86 points, or 2.5 percent, closing at 9,841.51. On Monday, the index had gained 35.99 points.

Brokers said investors took profits following gains in share prices in the past two sessions.

They said the slump was caused mainly by future-related selling on blue chip stocks, and that trading remained light because many investors were wary about the future prospects of the Hong Kong market.

On the Tokyo Stock Exchange, share prices closed mixed as traders took to the sidelines ahead of this weekend's G-7 summit in Birmingham, England.

The benchmark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average lost 59.42 points, or 0.39 percent, to 15,322.48 to end the session. On Monday, the average rose 232.90 points, or 1.54 percent.

Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar was quoted at 133.13 yen at late afternoon, up 0.59 yen from late in Tokyo Monday and also above its late New York
level of 132.75 yen.

Philippine share prices closed slightly higher after Monday's presidential elections, with traders saying that buyers emerged after prices fell to attractive levels. The Philippine Stock Exchange index of 30 selected stocks rose 4.56 points, or 0.2 percent, to 2,214.52.

Elsewhere:

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian share prices closed sharply lower, dragged down by fall in other regional bourses. The Composite Index fell 10.88 points, or 1.9 percent, to 569.17.

TAIPEI: Share prices closed lower, dragged down by a sell-off in technology stocks. The market's key Weighted Stock Price Index fell 100.45 points, or 1.2 percent, to 8,278.43.

SINGAPORE: Shares closed mostly lower in subdued trading, as foreign institutional investors remained wary of investing in the region. The Straits Times Industrials Index fell 1.5 percent, or 20.70 points, to 1,400.50.

WELLINGTON: New Zealand share prices closed lower. The NZSE-40 Capital Index fell 13.79 points, or 0.6 percent, to 2,231.95.

SYDNEY: The Australian share market closed lower, pressured by heavy price falls in Lend Lease Corp. and National Mutual Holdings Ltd. following the collapse of a merger plan between the companies. The All Ordinaries Index fell 10.7 points, or 0.4 percent, to 2,786.9.

JAKARTA: Share prices closed slightly lower as negative sentiment kept investors away amid growing political protests. The Composite Index fell 4.12 points, or 0.9 percent, to 430.526.

BANGKOK: Thai share prices closed lower as investors worried about the health of financial institutions. The Stock Exchange of Thailand index lost 4.77 points, or 1.2 percent, to 381.65.

World Markets Wednesday morning: Asia down, London stable

Worsening tensions in Indonesia and a spate of bad local news drove Asian share prices and currencies sharply lower on Wednesday. Along with Jakarta, Singapore and Hong Kong were hit particularly hard.

Traders in many markets cited fears that the deaths of six students in anti-government protests Tuesday would increase instability in Indonesia. The Indonesian stock market and rupiah currency nosedived, and dragged other markets down.

A World Bank official said Wednesday that the drop in confidence on regional markets had produced "a crisis of confidence, which is deeper than originally anticipated."

"And of course, there is a snowballing effect to some extent," said Javad Khalilzadeh-Shirazi, regional manager of East Asia and Pacific Region of the World Bank.

Jakarta's Composite Index plummeted 6.6 percent to close at 402.057 percent, after falling below the key 400-point level at 393.364 at one point.

The rupiah fell to as low as 11,150 to the dollar, before retracing marginally. In late trading, the rupiah was trading at 10,800 to the dollar, down sharply from 9,250 late Tuesday.

Matthew Pecot, president-director of PT G.K. Goh Ometraco, said early Wednesday that market sentiment was "obviously very negative."

"The major impact of the shooting will be that most of the population of the country will support the students' movement," he said.

Rioting and looting continued throughout Indonesia Wednesday. Shops, a gas station and a police station were all set on fire by marauding mobs just outside Trisakti University in central Jakarta.

Currency dealers say the rupiah's fate is now squarely tied to Indonesia's political situation.

In Singapore, the key Straits Times Industrials Index plunged 4.9 percent to close at 1,331.98 points. It was down 6.8 percent an hour before close, but last-minute buy orders helped the market rally.

The Singapore dollar also fell heavily, breaching the psychologically important level of 1.65 to the U.S. dollar to reach 1.66 toward the end of Asian trading, a 1.7 percent drop from Tuesday's rates.

Traders said everyone in the Singapore market wanted to buy U.S. dollars, and domestic property slump and heavy investmedollar was quoted at 134.12 yen, up 0.99 yen from late Tuesday in Tokyo and above its late New York level of 134.07 yen.

The weaker yen also pushed the South Korean won sharply lower.

The dollar ended at 1,405 won, compared with 1,388.5 at Tuesday's close.

Seoul's shares also opened lower on concerns that lagging reforms would hurt foreign investor confidence, analysts said.

But share prices later inched higher on unconfirmed market talks that the government will raise the ceiling on foreign stock investment in two state-owned corporations. The key index closed 1.3 percent higher at 356.58 points.

In Manila, share prices and the peso also plunged as investors watched for results from Monday's presidential elections.

The key index closed down 2.3 percent to 2,163.67 points. The dollar averaged 39.446 pesos, 1.9 percent more than Tuesday's 38.673 pesos.

Elsewhere:

SYDNEY: Australian share prices closed weaker after a rally ignited by the government's new budget failed to outweigh profit taking in selected blue-chip stocks. The key index fell 13.2 points to 2,773.7.

TAIPEI: Taiwan shares ended lower as investors opted for the sidelines on declines in the New Taiwan dollar. The key stock index fell 0.91 percent to 8,202.90 points. The New Taiwan dollar was quoted at 33.3386 to the U.S. dollar, up from its close of 33.324 Tuesday.

WELLINGTON: The key New Zealand stock index finished lower, with market volume boosted by the trading of a block of 23 million shares The key index lost 3.26 points, closing at 2,228.69.

In LONDON at midday on the London Stock Exchange, the Financial Times 100-share index was up 6.8 points to 5,963.5. The U.S. dollar rose against other major currencies in early European trading Wednesday. Gold fell.

In Toronto, the Canadian dollar closed at 69.74 cents US on Tuesday, up 0.07 cent. The U.S. dollar stood at $1.4340 Cdn, down 0.13 cent.

In London, the Canadian dollar is trading at 69.63 cents US -- down 0.11 cent from Tuesday's close.

London dealers fixed a recommended gold price of $295.60 US bid per troy ounce at midmorning, down from $298.50 US Tuesday. Gold traded in Zurich at $295.70 US, down from $298.70 US. Gold fell $3.90 US in Hong Kong to $295.85 US. Silver opened in London at $5.56 US bid per troy ounce, down from $5.74 US.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10639)5/13/1998 10:33:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY / TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, MAY 12 1998 (2)

OIL & GAS

Oil Jumps As Saudis Say Not Against More Cuts

LONDON, May 12 - Oil prices surged higher on Tuesday on news that Saudi Arabia is keeping an open mind about the need for more output cuts from petroleum producers to trim global oversupply.

London futures for benchmark North Sea Brent closed 27 cents a barrel firmer at $15.11 after slicing through $15 earlier in the session.

The market drew strength from comments by a Gulf source that Saudi Arabia had no objections to further output cuts by oil producers if prices languish at current levels.

The source added the kingdom and fellow major producers Venezuela and Mexico had been in contact in recent days over possible further production cuts, and if necessary a decision on the issue could be made before a key OPEC meeting in June.

Saudi Arabia was ''not against cuts and is willing to participate in any decision'' that will improve weak oil prices, the source said.

The source was speaking at a conference of the Organisation of the Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) in the Syrian capital Damascus that ends on Wednesday.

His comments helped sentiment by raising hopes that further producer cuts would drain a glut of crude that pushed Brent under $12 in early March for the first time in nine years.

They helped stoke a rally on international benchmark Brent already gathering pace as traders take aggressive buying positions on Brent derivatives markets.

Major Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members and non-OPEC producers have already pledged to cut output by about 1.5 million barrels a day (bpd) until the end of the year to support oil prices.

''They (output cuts) could happen before June. Everything is possible,'' the source said in reference to a ministerial meeting of OPEC starting in Vienna on June 24.

The source described the oil market as ''not bad.'' But he added: ''The possibility of cuts is there if prices do not improve.''

Asked whether there were any disagreements between OPEC and non-OPEC producers about the output issue, he said: ''Not really. There are more agreements than disagreements.''

OPEC President Obeid bin Saif al-Nasseri of the United Arab Emirates said earlier he expected loud calls from oil producers for more output cuts unless crude prices rise further.

''There will be loud voices asking for cuts,'' Nasseri told Reuters on the sidelines of the Damascus conference.

But Nasseri said he expected no decision on further cuts at least until OPEC ministers meet in Vienna.

Oil prices have risen nearly $2 a barrel since the March 22 agreement sealed at a secret meeting in Riyadh which paved the way for the first significant supply cuts by oil producers in a decade.

But Brent is still running more than $4 below last year's $19.30 a barrel average.

NYMEX Crude Up, Saudis Not Against Fresh Cuts

NEW YORK, May 12 - NYMEX crude futures firmed at the close Tuesday, after pulling back from a surge around midday on news that Saudi Arabia was not against more oil output cuts if prices remained at current levels.

June crude spurted to a gain of about 20 cents on the news, and settled at $15.24 a barrel, up seven cents on the day, coming back down on profit-taking.

The front-month contract hit a high of $15.39 earlier but kept within trading range, dipping to a low of $15.11.

According to a Gulf source who talked to reporters in Damascus, OPEC member Saudi Arabia was ''not against cuts and is willing to participate in any decision'' that will improve weak oil prices.

The kingdom and major producers Venezuela and Mexico had been in contact in recent days over possible further production cuts, and if necessary a decision on the issue could be made before an OPEC ministerial meeting in Vienna on June 24, said the source.

''What you can read into what the Saudis are saying now is that if prices don't recover before OPEC's meeting in June, there is a chance there can be further cuts,'' said Tom Bentz, analyst for Cresvale International.

''Most people had expected there would be no cuts until the June meeting,'' he said. With the prospect of a meeting earlier if prices did not improve, the market popped, he said.

NYMEX crude futures backtracked later but within the range following ''people going out of their positions,'' said a NYMEX floor trader.

For most of the day, crude futures stayed up in the trading range despite some forecasts that the front month may retest the area just below $15.00, where it dropped briefly on Monday before regaining buying interest.

NYMEX activity on the day lifted the July and August contracts. July rose six cents at $15.93 and August closed up three cents at $16.32.

Refined products rose, with June heating oil finishing up 0.25 cent at 43.16 cents a gallon, while gasoline ended up 0.43 cent at 52.73 cents a gallon.

In London, IPE Brent futures closed well up after the remarks by the Gulf source on the Saudis' position on further oil output cuts.

Front month June Brent closed at $15.11 a barrel, off a $15.25 session high, but up 27 cents on the day.

Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico, a non-OPEC producer, crafted the Riyadh agreement in March that led to OPEC and non-OPEC members pledging to cut production by about 1.5 million barrels per day.

The cuts took effect in April, but prices have continued to be low and many analysts say additional cuts were needed to mop up excess output and raise prices.

Venezuela recently said the markets needed additional cuts of about 500,000 barrels to raise oil prices.

Meanwhile, the market was awaiting release of weekly inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute, which usually signals short-term market direction, to be issued later in the day.

A Reuter poll showed that traders and analysts forecasting an increase in crude stocks by 1.3 million barrels for the week ending May 8.

They also predicted stockbuilds in gasoline, by 1.3 million barrels, and in distillates, mostly heating oil, by 500,000 barrels.

In addition, they also think refinery runs would be up 0.4 percentage point.

U.S. 1998 Natural Gas Wellhead Price At $2.15/tcf

WASHINGTON, May 8 - U.S natural gas wellhead prices in 1998 should average $2.15 per thousand cubic feet, the Energy Information Administration said Friday, down from its previous estimate of $2.24 per tcf.

Higher than expected amounts of natgas in storage at the end of April are expected to weigh on prices, the EIA said.

''These relatively high storage levels should obviate the necessity for strong storage injections in the early summer, perhaps leaving more current supply for use in power generation without heavy additional pressure on spot prices,'' the EIA said.

The EIA's May estimate for 1999 natgas wellhead prices was $2.17 per tcf, up slightly from its April estimate for 1999 of $2.13 per tcf.

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Ends Higher With Cash, Temps

NEW YORK, May 12 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures mostly ended higher Tuesday in a moderate session, with firmer physical prices and heat across the central and southern U.S. still underpinning the complex, industry sources said.

June edged up 4.1 cents to close at $2.256 per million British thermal units after trading in a range today between $2.219 and $2.265. July settled 3.9 cents higher at $2.309.Other deferreds ended flat to up 3.7 cents.

''Cash firmed again today. Futures are still stuck in a range, but we could push higher because of the heat (in the South and Midwest),'' said one Midwest trader, adding firmer electricity prices this morning helped trigger some buying.

Most agreed the season's first heat wave last week in Texas helped raise concerns that a hot, El Nino-type summer was just around the corner.

But with storage still 42 percent over year-ago, few expected the bulls to take complete control near-term.

Early injection estimates for Wednesday's weekly AGA storage report range from 51 bcf to 105 bcf. For the same week last year, stocks gained 70 bcf.

Eastern temperatures later this week are expected to warm to as much as 17 degrees F above normal. The Midwest is expected to remain five to 10 degrees F above normal for the week, while in Texas, warmer-than-normal weather will last into the weekend. In the Southwest, mostly below-normal levels are forecast for the period.

While the market this week seemed to be probing the upper end of its recent range, technical traders said June still needed to close above key resistance at the $2.27 double top to signal a break to the upside.

Next resistance was seen at last week's high of $2.355. Further resistance was expected at $2.37, which is the 50 percent retracement point of the recent selloff. Major selling was expected at another double top at $2.63.

Key support was pegged at $2.105-2.11, a spot continuation chart low and last week's low, respectively. Major buying was expected at the $2.05 double bottom from Jan and then at $2.

In the cash Tuesday, Gulf Coast swing prices firmed three cents to the mid-to-high teens. Midwest pipes were up a similar amount to the low-to-mid teens. New York city gate gas was a few cents higher in the mid-to-high $2.40s, while Chicago was up about the same to the mid-$2.30s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip rose 3.1 cents to $2.441. NYMEX said an estimated 44,695 contracts traded, downfrom Monday's revised tally of 64,044.

U.S. Spot Natural Gas Prices Stretch Higher With Heat

NEW YORK, May 12 - U.S. spot natural gas prices continued to strengthen Tuesday as buyers clung to the market amid warmer than normal weather in the central U.S., industry sources said. The central U.S. is expected to experience above normal temperatures throughout this week, equating to some highs in the 90s F. By Friday, the warmer than normal weather is expected to seep into the East and linger there through early next week. However, cooler weather is forecast to continue in the Southwest.

Cash prices at Henry Hub were quoted today mostly at $2.22-2.24 per mmBtu, up about four cents from Monday.

In the Midcontinent, prices were up by a similar amount to about $2.14-2.15, with Chicago city gate pegged at $2.33-2.35.

In west Texas, Permian prices rose five cents to about $2.06-2.07, while San Juan values stretched to about $2.00-2.01.

In maintenance news, Northern's Keystone gas plant in western Texas is still scheduled to return to service Friday following unplanned maintenance.

Also, the 750 megawatt (MW) Four Corners 5 coal unit is now expected to restart later today after Monday's restart attempt failed.

In the Northeast, gas at the New York city gate traded mostly in the high-$2.40s, while Appalachian prices on Columbia edged up to near $2.40, market sources said.

Separately, preliminary injection estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report were about 50-80 bcf.

Canadian Spot Gas Prices Sharply Lower In Erratic Trade

NEW YORK, May 12 - Canadian spot natural gas prices extended their losses on Tuesday as ongoing maintenance outages backed supply into Alberta, industry sources said.

Spot gas prices at the AECO storage hub in Alberta slid to a low of C$1.00 per gigajoule (GJ) before recovering to the mid-C$1.30s by late morning.

Forwards, however, were slightly firmer. For the remainder of the month, AECO prices were talked at C$1.72-1.83, while June business was quoted at C$1.79-1.80. The July market was pegged at C$1.80-1.81, traders said.

''It's a short-term thing. You can't push the gas into storage right now,'' one Calgary based trader said, adding he expected prices to recover in Wednesday's session.

Maintenance is underway at NOVA's Turner Valley unit 1 (scheduled to end May 15) and Schrader Creek units 1 and 3 (scheduled to end May 22). Beginning tomorrow, an oil leak will also be repaired at its Beiseker unit 1, while Turner Valley unit 2 is set to shut May 18-22 for maintenance.

Also, the allowable IT at the East Gate (Empress/Mcneil) was 11 percent of IT nominated, NOVA reported today.

In addition, TransCanada's system was undergoing maintenance, which limits capacity in northern Ontario to 2.47 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) today and as low as 882 million cubic feet per day on Friday.

At the borders, Sumas export prices were quoted at US$1.37-1.39 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), down about four cents from Monday.

Conversely in the east, gas at Niagara traded about seven cents higher to the mid-to-high US$2.30s per mmBtu, in line with another NYMEX uptick.