Brent, U.S. crude slip on expected stockbuild

Tue Jan 15, 2008 4:08am EST

----------------------------------------------------------------
NEARBY MONTH  LAST  CHANGE    PCT   SUPPORT  RESIST RSI-14  RIC
ICE BRENT     92.52  -0.40   -0.43  90.00  - 93.00   45  LCOc1
NYMEX CRUDE   93.62  -0.58   -0.62  91.20  - 94.50   44  CLc1
ICE GAS OIL   807.00 -1.50   -0.19  780.00 - 810.00  39  LGOc1
NYMEX HEAT    2.5850 -0.0042 -0.16  2.5500 - 2.6000  46  HOc1
NYMEX RBOB    2.3650 -0.0078 -0.33  2.3000 - 2.4000  43  RBc1
--------------------------------------------------------------
 LONDON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Brent and U.S. crude futures
eased on Tuesday, pressured by concern about a potential
recession in top consumer the United States and expectations of
a rise in U.S. crude inventories.
 
 - President George W. Bush complained on Tuesday about
soaring oil prices and the threat posed to the U.S. economy
during the second day of his visit to Saudi Arabia, the world's
biggest oil exporter.
 Former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the
U.S. economy was probably in a recession or about to slide into
one.
 
 - U.S. crude oil inventories rose last week as imports
recovered from a sharp drop, a preliminary Reuters poll of seven
industry analysts showed on Monday.On average, the analysts
forecast a 1.2 million barrel increase. [EIA/S]
 Distillate supplies, which include heating oil, were
forecast to have increased by an average of 1.2 million barrels,
the poll showed. Gasoline inventories were forecast to have
risen by an average of 2.5 million barrels.
 
 - Technical analysts said prices would probably head lower
for now.
 "Despite the uptick on Monday, a head and shoulders top
completed upon a break below $94.47 keeps our focus lower," said
Barclays Capital in a report.
 "For WTI crude, while capped by $96.40, we expect the
decline to extend below a trendline at $92.05, through which
opens a measured target at $88.90."
 - The latest supply disruption in Nigeria limited the
decline for crude.
 Shell declared a force majeure on crude shipments from its
Forcados export terminal in Nigeria after last week's pipeline
attack, a spokesman said.
 Exports have been halted since Friday due to sabotage at two
of its pipelines connected to the Forcados export terminal.
Production has not been affected, the spokesman said.
  (Reporting by Alex Lawler; editing by Wiliam Hardy)


















Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.