Oil resumes slide as on fears that weak US economy will drive down demand - ResearchInChina

Date:2008-10-31liaoyan  Text Size:
THE latest economic report to suggest the United States has fallen into recession pushed oil prices lower on a strengthening conviction that the rest of the globe will follow.

Governments, businesses and consumers cut back on energy consumption during slow economic times and there is ample evidence to suggest that they already have.

Gasoline costs 30 percent less per gallon than it did just one month ago as thousands of people have lost jobs, stopped commuting, or are instead using mass transit and conserving money.

Light, sweet crude for December delivery fell US$1.54 to settle at US$65.96 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices have fallen 55 percent since peaking above US$147 a barrel in mid-July.

The broadest barometer of the nation's economic health, the gross domestic product, shrank at a 0.3 percent annual rate in the July-September quarter, the Commerce Department reported yesterday. It marked the worst showing since the economy contracted at a 1.4 percent pace in the third quarter of 2001, when the nation was suffering through its last recession.

The declining GDP number means demand for gasoline is dissolving, analysts said.

"We were smacked with the short-term reality that demand is just not going to be there," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp.

The deterioration reflected a sharp retrenchment by consumers, whose spending accounts for the largest chunk of national economic activity. Consumers ratcheted back their spending at a 3.1 percent pace in the third quarter, the most since the second quarter of 1980, when the country was in the grip of recession.

"If the consumers are struggling that bad, the outlook for gasoline demand is not that strong," Flynn said.

In August, Americans drove 15 billion fewer miles (24 billion fewer kilometers), or 5.6 percent less, than they did in August 2007 the largest single-month decline since World War II, the Department of Transportation reported last week.

Retail prices fell 4 cents overnight to US$2.547 a gallon (67 cents a liter), according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. Prices in some parts of the U.S. have fallen to below US$2 (53 cents a liter), including Oklahoma, Texas and Ohio, after topping US$4 just a few weeks ago.

Over the past week, a gallon of regular gasoline fell more than 25 cents, the Department of Energy reported Monday.

The decline in crude prices comes one day after oil prices jumped US$4.77, or 8 percent, to US$67.50 a barrel after the Fed cut its key interest rate, trying to stem the worst US financial crisis in decades.

That drove down the value of the dollar. Investors often buy commodities such as crude oil as an inflation hedge when the dollar weakens and sell those investments when the greenback rises.

The Fed also announced it will supply new lines of credit worth up to US$30 billion to the central banks of South Korea, Brazil, Mexico and Singapore to shore up confidence and help deal with the global credit crisis.

In other Nymex trading, gasoline futures fell 8.6 cents to US$1.467 a gallon, while heating oil fell nearly 2 cents to fetch US$1.9841 a gallon.




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