Business
Oil Prices Soar Amid Middle East Tensions
Crude oil futures meandered between small gains and losses Thursday, most recently extending gains made this week as tensions continued to simmer in the Middle East.
Crude for March delivery /quotes/comstock/21n!f:cl\h11 rose 8 cents to $85.07 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Oil gained 0.8 per cent at the previous session, amid continued protests in Bahrain, Yemen and other Arab countries, and reports that Iran was sending warships to Syria via the Suez canal.
On Thursday, Iranian state TV confirmed the reports, saying warships are on their way to the canal. However, details of the deployment were scarce.
The day’s developments in the region also included the break-up of an encampment of demonstrators in Bahrain by police, according to reports.
“Mideast tensions [are] providing something of a short-term prop,” said energy analysts at MF Global.
They are looking for further gains in the energy sector, at least in the short term.
“It seems that investors are content buying the dips, and we likely will see energy prices (at least in the Brent complex) maintain their gains for little while longer,” the analysts said.
Brent for April delivery advanced 26 cents, or 0.2 per cent, to $104.06 a barrel on ICE Futures in London.
Energy products in New York also tracked crude higher.
Natural gas for March delivery /quotes/comstock/21n!f:ng\h11 rose less than a penny to $3.93 per million British thermal units, even as the US Energy Information Administration released its weekly report on natural gas supplies, Thursday.
Analysts had predicted a decline of 235 and 239 billion cubic feet from storage stocks.
A decrease within those estimates would be larger than the 190 billion cubic feet in the same week of 2010 and above the five-year-average of 150 billion cubic feet, they said.
Gasoline for March delivery also added less than a penny to trade at $2.55 a gallon.
Nelson Chukwudi, with agency reports