AFP - Wednesday, May 20

Oil rigs extract petroleum in the Los Angeles area community of Culver City, California. Oil prices jumped to a six-month high above 60 dollars on Tuesday on growing signs of economic recovery amid concerns about unrest in African crude producer Nigeria, traders said.

LONDON (AFP) - - Oil prices jumped to a six-month high above 60 dollars Tuesday on growing signs of economic recovery amid concerns about unrest in African crude producer Nigeria, traders said.

New York's main futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in June, rallied to 60.48 dollars a barrel -- a level last seen on November 10. The contract later stood at 59.90 dollars, up 87 cents from Monday's close.

Brent North Sea crude for July delivery touched a six-month high of 59.65 dollars a barrel before pulling back to 59.05 dollars, up 58 cents from Monday.

"Gains in the stock market increased optimism that the global economy is recovering," said BetOnMarkets analyst David Evans.

Global equity markets posted fresh gains Tuesday on hopes that the global economy is through the worst of its slump, setting the stage for a pick-up in energy demand, dealers said.

In early afternoon stock market trading in Europe, Frankfurt rallied 2.03 percent, Paris gained 0.82 percent and London climbed 0.61 percent.

In Asia, Hong Kong added 3.06 percent, Tokyo put on 2.78 percent, Seoul advanced 2.99 percent, Sydney added 2.19 percent and Taipei gained 1.18 percent.

Oil jumped by around two and a half dollars on Monday as traders tracked prospects of a global economic recovery, rising shares on Wall Street and developments in Nigera.

New York share prices shot higher Monday after better-than-expected earnings from home improvement retailer Lowe's helped reinforce hopes for a recovery in the United States.

A strong US economy is a key growth engine for the world because it is a major export market for many countries -- and is the biggest energy consuming nation on the planet.

Prices were also boosted by rising violence in oil exporter Nigeria, where the country's main armed group said it had ordered a blockade of key shipping channels in a bid to inflict further damage on the energy industry. Nigeria's military has urged oil firms to ignore the threat.

"Fresh violence in Nigeria helped to support prices," said VTB Capital analyst Andrey Kryuchenkov. "Militants there claimed to have sabotaged two pipelines, while threatening more supply disruptions."

Unrest in the oil-producing Niger Delta region has reduced Nigeria's daily output to 1.76 million barrels compared with 2.6 million barrels in January 2006.

From Yahoo! News; see the source article here.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

0 comments:

Post a Comment