Adamant: Hardest metal
Friday, March 21, 2003

Oil Drops as Traders Bet on Swift War End

biz.yahoo.com Thursday March 20, 4:50 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - World oil prices extended a week-long slump to set new three-month lows on Thursday as the United States launched a widening offensive on Iraq and dealers predicted an easy victory for Washington. Prices swung wildly during the day on reports, denied by Baghdad, that three or four oil wells were on fire in the south of the country.

OPEC (News - Websites)exporters have said they could fill any supply gap resulting from the conflict in the oil-rich Gulf, and that markets were already well supplied. The West's energy watchdog, the International Energy Agency (IEA), said it saw no reason to release emergency stocks.

U.S. crude futures for May (CLK3) delivery fell $1.24 to $28.12, touching its lowest price since mid-December. Benchmark Brent crude oil fell $1.25 to $25.50 per barrel in London, after having touched a three-month low of $25.30.

Oil has shed a quarter of its value in the last week on a massive bet by investment funds that the war will end quickly, without causing major damage to oil installations or supply disruptions.

"The war premium is diminishing on a growing certainty that coalition forces will prevail," said Peter Gignoux, head of the London energy desk at Salomon Smith Barney.

Hours after U.S. cruise missiles hit targets in Baghdad, officials in neighboring Kuwait said oil output was normal, despite two Iraqi missiles hitting the north of the country.

Oil tanker traffic from the Gulf, which provides 40 percent of world oil exports, was also running smoothly, shippers said.

Market assumptions of limited damage to oil installations were challenged by earlier reports that three or four oil wells were on fire in southern Iraq, where half the country's oil is produced.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said he had indications Iraq may have set fire to several wells, but Reuters eyewitnesses said there were no signs of fire at Iraqi oilfields close to the border with Kuwait.

Iraq has around 1,100 wells in total, analysts said.

Iraq suspended oil exports from its southern fields earlier this week, when United Nations inspectors left the country. Limited exports continued on Thursday from a pipeline to the Turkish Mediterranean.

OPEC TO FILL SHORTFALL

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has reassured consumers that it was ready to tap its spare capacity to make up for any shortage from Iraq, but said markets were already well supplied.

"We are not thinking of any increase in production," said OPEC President Abdullah al-Attiyah. "Oil prices are heading downwards. This shows there is more oil in the market than the market can absorb."

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest exporter, said its oilfields and export terminals were running normally and it was ready to pump more oil to stabilize markets.

Riyadh has already ramped up production well beyond nine million barrels daily, above an OPEC quota of eight million.

The IEA said there was no need for industrialized nations of the West to release emergency stocks as it was confident OPEC could cover the shortfall.

"At the precise hour we speak, I think it is not necessary (to release stocks)," IEA executive director Claude Mandil told Reuters. "We had a very strong statement from OPEC, which has said they will ensure any shortfall and we are confident they will do their best."

The IEA, which oversees some four billion barrels of stocks in 26 industrialized countries, said a release would become necessary only in case of a shortage that could not be covered by OPEC.

It also ruled out any unilateral reserves release by any one member, saying key importers the United States, Japan and South Korea all shared its view that a stock draw was not necessary.

You are not logged in