SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: long-gone who wrote (14341)7/10/1998 2:35:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116768
 
FOCUS-Lowly oil penned in by record inventories
11:25 a.m. Jul 10, 1998 Eastern
LONDON, July 10 (Reuters) - Saturated oil markets on Friday showed
little inclination to break out of the price rut which is holding
petroleum exporters' revenues a third lower than last year.

Bellwether Brent blend August futures were three cents higher at $13.06
a barrel, 50 cents down on the week and more than $6 below average
prices for 1997.

Dealers said plentiful stocks of gasoline for the driving season in the
world's biggest market, the United States, were matched only by the
volumes of crude and products in transit for western refineries.

Industry-held oil stocks in the world's industrialised nations hit an
all-time record at the end of May, the Paris-based International Energy
Agency (IEA) said.

The large amount of oil held in stocks and in transit was blocking a
recovery in oil prices despite the renewed efforts of exporters to cut
supplies.

OPEC producers earlier in June agreed with non-OPEC nations on a second
round of output cuts in the space of three months in a bid to raise oil
prices from 10-year lows.

The output cuts should be enough to allow prices a climb little higher
later this year but crude was likely to remain significantly cheaper
than in recent years, a Reuters poll of analysts found on Friday.

A survey of 11 banks and consultants forecast an average fourth quarter
Brent price of $15.94 a barrel but saw little scope for much higher
prices next year.

''Oil now slowly making its way to the market must be absorbed and the
enormous inventories accumulated by consuming countries must be run
down,'' the IEA said.

''Absorbing the oil slowly on its way to market could prove as difficult
as staunching the daily flow of overproduction,'' the IEA said.

Russia's foundering economy is the latest blow for an oil market already
suffering the consequences on demand at the hands of Asia's financial
crisis.

Deteriorating Russian finances had forced more oil onto the glutted
market in recent months, with net exports from former Soviet territories
hitting a record for post-Soviet times of 3.1 million bpd in May, the
IEA said.

Prices in dollars per barrel:
July 10 July 9
(1512 GMT) (close)
IPE August Brent 13.08 13.03
NYMEX August light crude 13.94 13.88

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited



To: long-gone who wrote (14341)7/10/1998 2:40:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116768
 
U.s. June Producer Prices Fall, 1st Drop In 3 Months, Led By Energy
Costs
U.S. Economy: Producer Prices Fall for First Time in 3 Months

Washington, July 10 (Bloomberg) -- Producer prices dropped in June for
the first time in three months as energy costs retreated, the latest
evidence inflation isn't threatening the U.S. economy. A separate crop
report suggests food prices will remain tame.

The Labor Department's producer price index unexpectedly fell 0.1
percent last month. The core rate of the PPI, which excludes food and
energy costs, rose 0.2 percent in June. Absent a 3.2 percent increase in
prescription drug costs, the core rate would have risen 0.1 percent, a
government spokesman said. In May, the PPI and the core rate both
increased 0.2 percent.

Separately, the Agriculture Department raised its estimate of the U.S.
wheat crop by 5 percent to 2.522 billion bushels -- a level that will
keep processors well-stocked and food prices subdued, analysts said.
''Inflation is going to stay low as long as Asia remains in a
recession,'' said Suzanne Rizzo, an economist at Maria Fiorini Ramirez
Inc., a New York consulting firm. ''That creates a huge supply of cheap
goods for America consumers and producers, keeping prices down.''

That also suggests Federal Reserve policymakers will hold interest rates
steady this year, and Fed Governor Roger Ferguson hinted as much
yesterday. ''Continued strong economic growth with low inflation is not
outside the realm of possibility, and by adopting a cautious policy
posture, we may learn more clearly if that possibility is likely or
remote,'' Ferguson said in a speech at the Atlanta Fed Bank.

Benefits From Asia

Asia's economic crisis is contributing to the tame inflation outlook by
depressing the value of Pacific Rim currencies and bolstering the value
of the dollar -- sending import prices lower. The crisis has caused oil,
food and other commodity prices to decline -- and that's helped hold
down U.S. interest rates.

Procter & Gamble Co. said it will reduce the price of Folgers coffee,
the best-selling U.S. brand, for the second time this year after the
cost of buying raw coffee beans plummeted. Brazilian farmers -- with the
world's largest production -- are now collecting a coffee crop that's
expected to be the largest in 11 years.

With U.S. inflation in check, and investors less concerned that the
value of their investments will be eroded, long-term bond yields have
fallen to historic lows. The yield on the Treasury's benchmark 30-year
bond dropped to 5.57 percent July 6, matching the low previously reached
June 15. In trading today, the bond was little changed, yielding 5.61
percent.

The dollar was little changed against other major currencies, and stocks
declined. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 42 points, or 0.46
percent, in late morning New York trading.

First Drop in Three Months

June marked the first time in three months that the PPI didn't increase.
Before April, the PPI had declined for five straight months.

For the first six months of the year, the PPI declined at an annual rate
of 1.5 percent, compared with a decline of 2.4 percent during the first
six months of 1997. Also during the first six months, the core PPI rose
at a 1.4 percent annual rate, compared with a 0.1 percent decline for
the first six months of last year.

By industry, wholesale energy prices fell 1.7 percent during June as the
price of petroleum declined 12.3 percent. Crude oil prices have fallen
from more than $18 a barrel at the start of the year to as low as $13 in
mid-June.

For the 12 months through May 1998, import prices fell 5.2 percent, led
by a 26 percent drop in oil costs, according to a Labor Department
report released June 11. The U.S. imports more than half its oil.

Producer food prices increased 0.1 percent in June. Auto prices at the
wholesale level rose 0.3 percent.

Tobacco prices increased 0.1 percent in June. A 3.4 tobacco price
percent increase in April accounted for half of that month's PPI
increase.

Drug Prices Up

Prescription drug prices rose 3.2 percent last month. Although such
drugs account for just under 2 percent of the PPI, a record 10.7 percent
drug price increase in May resulted in all of that month's increase, the
Labor Department said.

Mylan Laboratories Inc. of Pittsburgh recently raised prices on some of
its generic tranquilizers and those drugs could have been the ones that
showed in the May PPI report, analysts said. The large price increase of
lorazepam and 13 other generic drugs has also fueled speculation that
the company has cornered the market on raw materials for the drugs.
Representative Pete Stark, a California Democrat, has requested an
investigation by federal antitrust regulators into generic-drug prices.

Intermediate goods prices fell 0.3 percent in June, while intermediate
prices excluding food and energy fell 0.1 percent. Crude goods prices
fell 1.4 percent, while crude prices excluding food and energy fell 0.5
percent.

For all last year, the PPI dropped 1.2 percent -- the first decline
since 1991 -- after rising 2.8 percent in 1996. The core PPI rate rose
0.1 percent in 1997, the smallest gain on record, following a 0.6
percent increase in 1996.



To: long-gone who wrote (14341)7/18/1998 1:07:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116768
 
US to buy surplus wheat, donate abroad
12:51 p.m. Jul 18, 1998 Eastern
By Randall Mikkelsen

LITTLE ROCK (Reuters) - The U.S. government will buy $250 million worth
of surplus wheat and donate it to hungry countries to help shore up
falling U.S. crop prices, President Clinton said in his weekly radio
address on Saturday.

The president said the government will begin in the next few days buying
more than 80 million bushels of wheat (2.5 million tons). The action, he
said, could boost depressed prices for the crop by as much as 13 cents
per bushel, or about five percent.

The wheat will be donated to Ethiopia, Sudan, Eritrea, North Korea and
Indonesia. U.S. officials said those countries have been battered by
economic crises, drought or war and are unable to feed themselves or buy
wheat commercially.

''With the economic crisis in Asia weakening some of our best customers
for farm products, and with strong world crop production bringing prices
down, and with farmers facing floods and fires and drought and crop
disease, our farmers face a difficult and dangerous moment,'' Clinton
said.

The address was recorded on Friday evening during a visit by the
president to his native Arkansas.

Clinton said he was taking steps to enhance a ''safety net'' under new
U.S. farm legislation, which he reluctantly signed in 1996. The
legislation did away with traditional subsidies linked to crop
production and replaced them with guaranteed payments that decline over
time.

''Sooner or later prices were bound to fall so low that we would need
that safety net. That day has come,'' Clinton said. ''America's farm
families face a crisis, and we have an obligation to help.''

Overall, the income of American farmers has been forecast to drop five
percent this year to $52 billion, reflecting the global grain glut and
the problems caused by the Asian economic crisis.

It would be a far cry from 1996 when income crested at $60 billion on
depleted stockpiles worldwide. Income averaged $53.2 billion annually in
the first half of the decade.

The White House said the purchase announced by Clinton would amount to
about $250 million worth of wheat with transportation costs included.
Wheat prices closed on Friday in Chicago at $2.66 per bushel for July
wheat futures contracts, down from $3.29 a year ago.

The prospects for a record soybean harvest and near-record corn harvest
this year portend continued weak prices, the White House said.

Earlier this week Clinton signed into law a measure that exempted farm
export credits from congressionally-mandated sanctions imposed on India
and Pakistan for conducting nuclear tests.

The Senate this week also adopted a $500 million plan to aid farmers who
experience repeated crop losses, a measure House Speaker Newt Gingrich
later said he was inclined to also support. He also proposed legislation
to speed up $5.5 billion payments farmers are to receive under the
existing farm bill.

But the Republican-dominated Senate rejected, on a party- line vote,
Democratic proposals for hefty increases in harvest- time crop loans to
farmers that was the first major challenge to the 1996 farm bill.

In his radio address, Clinton reiterated his call for more generous
credit and crop loan terms for farmers. He also urged in his speech that
Congress approve stalled funding for the International Monetary Fund as
a way to bolster the purchasing power of countries receiving IMF
support.

Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman told reporters in Washington the
purchases announced by Clinton may be followed by more as needed to cut
stockpiles, and could be expanded to other surplus commodities.

Brian Atwood, administrator of the U.S. Agency for International
Development, told reporters a total of nine countries were under
consideration for receiving food donations.

''For those of us in the humanitarian relief and emergency food
business, this has been one of the worst years on record,'' Atwood said.

''We have here a food surplus that is driving food commodity prices
down, and overseas we have serious starvation and famine and a real need
for the food that the American farmers can produce,'' he said.

Glickman said the purchases would not require additional appropriations
from Congress. He said the wheat purchases could also help boost prices
for corn.

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited