Futures Oil

Monday 31 May 2010

Crude Futures Prices - Commodity Crude Oil?

According to Bloomberg, due to the energy demand of global economic recovery is high, the Prices of Crude Futures will be changed little - below $74 a barrel.

July delivery for Crude Future will be at $73.89 a barrel - down 11 cents comparing the normal prices in Commodity Crude Oil Markets.

Brent crude for July was unchanged in Crude Markets, but the prices dropped slightly in Global Markets.

The fuel demand showed that Crude Oil rose last week with 5.6 percent.

The currency also was affected due to the change in Commodity Crude Oil and Future Metals. Going with the change in the prices of Crude Oil was the change in the prices of Commodity Silver in Silver Markets. Silver Future Prices will go down slightly.

According to Bloomberg, for immediate delivery, Silver Prices was little changed at $18.3725 an ounce - and this was first monthly drop in four months.

Friday 28 May 2010

Out of Crude Oil in the Future

What will happen when one day Commodity Crude Oil is used up. Recently, Crude Future Prices in Commodities Markets have been fluctuating due to the change in Prices of Future Metals. Moreover, the Crude Oil Exploitation has affected the environment in the negative way due to the misuse of method. Crude Oil is not treated and transported properly; this is the cause of pollution, especially, Water Pollution. It is time for government should do something about this issue. Alternative resources are a good method and solution for green environment. We ourselves have to save the Earth from pollution.
Go back the Crude Futures Markets, if traders and investors want to be successful in trading Crude Oil in Markets, they should learn more about the fundamentals about Crude Markets. Avoid the risks and reduce the losses when trading Crude Oil...The fall in Precious Metals Prices, especially, Gold Prices will also affect the Prices of Crude Oil. Learn more about Trading Metals in Markets in order to get enough information for trading Crude Oil...

Monday 10 May 2010

Crude Oil in Futures Markets

According to Bloomberg, the demand for Commodity Crude Oil in this year will rise highly due to a debt crisis in Greece; also this will affect other European nations with slow growth.

Saudi Arabia’s Ali al-Naimi said that Crude Future demand will be very good and it is going to go up in this year. In China, India and the Middle East, the use of Crude Futures will increase and rise.

In Europe, the economic recovery will slow down due to debt crisis, and also for the demand in fuel. And this is the time that Commodity Crude Oil reached a 12-week low on May 7.

In this week today, according to Bloomberg, Crude Oil rose; and it reached $77.50 a barrel at 10:50 a.m. in Dubai.

For Greek Optimism, Kehlil said that they will get through its crisis soon by receiving the help from the European Union.

For Crude Futures, They dropped to $74.51 on May 7; this would be the weakest intra-day price since Feb. 16. And this seems to be a good sign for the fluctuations that have sent volatility to its highest in almost 2 months...

Source: Bloomberg.com
Don't forget to learn more about Futures Investments to manage your future trading...

Monday 19 April 2010

Crude Oil continued to fall when dollar strengthened....

According to Bloomberg, On April 19, in global demand, Crude Oil fell for a third day on speculation.

For 10 weeks, after reaching 2.7%, Crude Oil extended losses. The speculation and currency movements have driven the prices of Crude Future. According to Abdullah, before its October meeting, OPEC is not necessary to review output. The appeal of commodities reduced due to the value of dollar in currency market; the dollar strengthened against the euro in currency market.

For May delivery, in electronic trading on the NY Mercantile Exchange Crude Oil fell $1.58, or 1.9%, to $81.66 a barrel. The prices of Crude Oil have reached the highest since October 2008 after being at $87.09 on April 6; and now the prices have declined in eight of the nine trading days.

In May, the contract lost $2.27 on April 16 to $83.24 a barrel; this is the biggest drop since February 5.

In June, Brent Crude Oil settlement fell $1.36, or 1.6%, to $84.63 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Don’t forget learn more before trading Crude Future. Learn more about Commodity Crude Oil in Future Markets. Reduce the risks and avoid the losses when trading Crude Oil Future.

Useful tips, advices, and fundamentals about trading Crude Oil can help traders understand the Crude Oil Markets. Don’t trade when lacking of information…
Source: Bloomberg.com

Monday 12 April 2010

Crude Oil Future: Go Up Again in the Markets

According to Bloom-berg, when the dollar fell, for the first time, Crude Oil continued to go up in four days. Also, due to the surging demand, China had to increase Crude Oil imports.

As in more than three weeks, the dollar slipped to its lowest level and Crude Oil continued to advance; this would be the appeal of commodities as an alternative investment. In March, 29% more Crude Oil was imported into China, based on customs data released April 10.

According to Daily-futures, "June natural gas closed up 16.3 cents at $4.169 in spite of forecasts for warmer U.S. weather ahead".

For May delivery, in electronic trading on the NY Mercantile Exchange, Crude Oil continued to rise as much as 79 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $85.71 a barrel. Base on Singapore time, the contract was at $85.38 at 3:15 p.m. In 2010, Futures Crude Oil have gained more than 7 percent unexpectedly.
Learn more before trading Crude Future...

Thursday 1 April 2010

Crude Future: Markets & Information

Energies
According to Daily-futures, last week the supplies of Crude Oil were up 2.9 million barrels to 354.2 million barrels. The supplies of gasoline were up 300,000 barrels and the heating oil supplies were up 1.0 million barrels. In June Crude Oil closed up $1.41 at $84.18, the highest close in eleven weeks. Learn more about Crude Future...

According to Boomberg, the supplies of Crude Oil increased from 2.93 million barrels to 354.2 million in the week ended March 29. Inventories were forecast to climb by 2.5 million barrels, according to the median of 16 analyst estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Last week, Gasoline stockpiles rose 313,000 barrels to 224.9 million. Forecast was a 1.85-million-barrel increase in Crude Oil Markets.

According to DOE, last week, refinery use moved up from 81.1% to 82.6% of capacity. Over the past four weeks, the demand of gasoline was up 1.5% from a year ago and distillate demand was down 1.0% from a year ago. The prices of Commodity Crude Oil can be impacted by the prices of Index Metals in Precious Metals Markets....Learn more about Trading Metals through Futures Wiki...The contracts and advices about trading Commodities...

Thursday 18 March 2010

Prices of Crude Oil: Crude Future

Prices of Crude Oil ticked higher over the next half decade leading up to the Iranian Revolution. The Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi was over thrown and essentially replaced by Ayatollah Khomeini at the end of 1979. The year following this executive changed, included the Iranian Hostage Crisis and concluded with the commencement of the Iran-Iraq war. Over that time, the crude market price increased by 2.5x that was seen at the beginning of the Iranian Revolution. Over all, the Oil Prices rose approximately 1,200% in the 8 years from 1973-1981. That is why we can conclude that in the history of the Crude Future this rally was the result of the two greatest intermediate term price rallies.

Crude Future: Markets & Prices

Having a look at reviewing record of Crude Oil Price, you do not have to waste your time looking to far back into history in order to find the greatest nominal price move in history. There was a change in the Prices of Crude Oil; The Prices of Crude Oil rally actually stemmed from the last time Crude Future traded under $10/barrel. For over the next nine years, the Price of Oil fluctuated over 1,400% before topping out at $145/barrel in 2008. During the 18 months from January 2007 to July of 2008, the most impressive stage or phase of this rally took place. “The Crude Oil Market hit an intraday high of $147.27 and a closing high of $145.29 on July 11 and July 3 respectively; these broke and currently hold record intraday and closing figures. The rally from approximately $50/barrel in Jan. 2007 to the closing highs in July equated to 190% rally. One of the fundamentals that influenced the timing of this rally was a 1.7 million barrel per day two phase production cut by OPEC. The cuts were in Nov. 2006 (1.2 mb/day cut) and Feb. 2007 (500 tb/day cut). In looking back at other noteworthy price runs, OPEC member nations seem to have a driving influence on the volatility.”

The Crude Oil Market rally that climaxed in 2008 was an amazing occurrence that will be talked about for some time to come, but the move is relative in comparison to other historic rallies on a percentage basis. These other pricing events went down within the 1970s and the first half of the 1980s. In fact, prior to 1973, the Price of Crude Oil pretty much was below $5/barrel except during a rally in the 1860s. In October of 1973, OPEC implemented and put an oil embargo on the U.S. and other European nations who helped Israeli with supply and military support during the Yom Kippur Arab-Israeli conflict. These supplies were important and necessary for Israel to hold off the Egyptian and Syrian offensives. In March of 1974, the embargo was repealed, but not until Prices of Oil had gone through the greatest percentage move to this date. In that 5 month period, Oil Prices quadrupled from $3/barrel to $12/barrel.

Thursday 4 March 2010

Crude Oil Trades Near $81 After Rising on Economic Optimism

According to Bloomberg, "Crude Oil traded near $81 a barrel after rising yesterday as reports showed improvement in the U.S. job market and refineries operated at the highest level since October in the world’s biggest energy consumer."

Oil climbed to a seven-week high yesterday as service industries in the U.S. accelerated in February more than anticipated, indicating the economic expansion may soon create jobs following the worst employment slump in the post-World War II era. Inventories of crude oil climbed 4.03 million barrels and refinery utilization increased 0.7 percentage point in the U.S. last week, according to the Energy Department.

Crude Future for April delivery traded at $80.83 a barrel, down 4 cents, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 8:42 a.m. Singapore time. Yesterday, the contract increased $1.19, or 1.5 percent, to $80.87, the highest settlement since Jan. 11.

Oil also advanced as the dollar weakened, increasing the investment appeal of commodities. The currency rose after Greece approved an additional 4.8 billion euros ($6.6 billion) of deficit cuts. The dollar traded at $1.3690 per euro at 11:18 a.m. Sydney time, from $1.3697 yesterday...
Don't forget to watch the Video...
Can Oil Break Its Trading Range?
Oil hovers around $80 despite rising inventories and Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services says investors may be...

Source: CNBC
Source: Bloomberg

Tuesday 2 February 2010

Oil Tops $75 on Optimism About US Recovery

In recent, Oil Prices began to change rapidly; the Prices of Oil is fluctuating in Crude Future.
Crude Oil Last: 74.64 Go up: 0.22 %Change:+0.3%
Brent Crude Last: 73.29 Go up: 0.18 %change:+0.23%

Crude oil for March delivery climbed as much as $1.01, or 1.4 percent, to $75.44 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was at $74.70 at 1:50 p.m. Singapore time. Yesterday, the contract rose 2.1 percent to settle at $74.43, the biggest one-day increase since Jan. 4.

Brent crude oil for March settlement rose as much as $1.41, or 1.9 percent, to $74.52 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was at $73.36 at 1:51 p.m. Singapore time. Yesterday, the contract climbed 2.3 percent, the most since Jan. 4, to settle at $73.11.

Oil rose for a second day on Tuesday and accelerated gains after reaching $75 on optimism that the U.S. economy has turned the corner following strong manufacturing data for January.

U.S. crude for March delivery [CLC1 74.69 0.26 (+0.35%)] reached $75.44 a barrel, the highest
intraday price since Jan. 22, after prices touched $75, triggering automatic buy
orders.

It was trading up 53 cents at $74.95 at 0245 GMT, having rebounded by almost $3 from last week's 2010 lows.

London ICE Brent [LCOC1 73.35 0.24 (+0.33%)] gained 53 cents to $73.64.

"People are quite nervous around $75," said Tetsu Emori, a fund manager at Tokyo-based Astmax Co Ltd.


"There was short-covering after prices broke above that level. In the very short term, the market has been oversold, so some people see it as a good time to buy on dips below the $75-$80 range." ..."Demand for oil isn't really improving," Emori said. "We don't see any sign of real recovery. There is a huge amount of inventories in the physical markets."...
Read the entire article...

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Tuesday 26 January 2010

Oil Drops Toward $74 on Chinese Banks

Oil Prices tumbled towards $74 a barrel on Tuesday, approaching one-month lows, after higher reserve ratios for selected Chinese banks took effect, rekindling concern that tightening measures by the world's second-largest Oil consumer would restrain demand.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell more than 2 percent, after China's central bank told the banks that needed to raise their reserve ratios to make the change on Tuesday, banking sources said.
U.S. light, sweet crude [CLC1 74.46 -0.80 (-1.06%)] fell as much as $1.12 a barrel to $74.14 and was down on the day. On Friday, it touched a one-month intraday low of $74.01, retreating from a 15-month peak of $83.95 on Jan. 11.
ICE London Brent [LCOC1 72.96 -0.73 (-0.99%)] declined. Read more...
Or Learn more about Crude Future before trading...

Thursday 21 January 2010

Oil Tomorrow! CNBC's Sharon Epperson!

Wednesday 20 January 2010

BHP Boosts Oil, Gas Exploration Spending Forecast 33% on Wells

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According to Bloomberg, because there is an increase in drilling in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and offshore Australia, the biggest oil and gas producer in Australia declared its forecast for petroleum exploration spending by 33 percent.
"BHP said in October it was on target for 10 percent annual growth in petroleum output in the year ending June 30." However, going with the increase in the prices of Crude Future is the environment concerned. After the Crude Oil is pulled from the ground it needs to be transported by truck, pipeline or super tanker. Using tanker trucks is the least efficient and has a greater environmental effect of the three methods of transportation. That’s when everything is going accident free, but that’s not how it always works out. There have been a handful of pipeline explosions over the past several years that resulted in the release of harmful emissions from burnt fuel and 100s of thousands of carbon based fuel spilt. These occurrences are the result of standard pipeline erosion as well as human intervention. Tanker spills are one of the most publicly noted environmental risks associated with oil production. The infamous Exxon Valdez tanker crash resulted in 10.8 million gallons of oil that was dumped into the ocean. Cleaning up an oil spill of this size is both expensive and time consuming. Although rare in occurrence, oil tanker spills have a devastating impact on the environment. Certain aspects of the oil industry will come and go with political favor. These changing trends will have significant implications on the crude market.

Oil Tomorrow! CNBC's Sharon Epperson!












Tuesday 12 January 2010

Crude Oil Prices

Today, many factors impact on the Crude Oil Prices. Then, if you want to catch up with the up-to-date information, let's find it at Commodity Prices Oil and Current Crude Oil Prices.


Commodity Crude Oil:
Crude Future is one of the most actively traded commodities markets nowadays. If you are passionate about trading Crude Oil in Future, you should have a good understanding about Crude Oil Future Market. Before Trading Crude Oil, you should learn more about Crude Future fundamentals & valuable tools for the Commodity Market Oil.

The Green Movement:

Oil Production and the Impact of Environmental concerns:
The consumption of Crude Oil and the environment issues are related to each other. When the demand goes up, it will lead to the moving of the supply of Crude Oil; and this will cause the damage to the environment when the exploitation of Crude Oil occurs. Based on the statistics, there is about 10.5 trillion pounds of carbon emissions from U.S. Just imagine that if the demand increases, the Crude Oil Exploitation and the impact of environmental relating to Oil production will increase in the negative way. And this means that these impacts relating to the environment and greenhouse gases have rapidly evolved into political and social hot topics.

As we know that the process of exploring, producing, and transporting oil all has an influence on the environment.
When there is oil spill, cleaning up an oil spill of this size is both expensive and time consuming. Although rare in occurrence, oil tanker spills have a devastating effect on the environment. Certain aspects of the oil industry will be related with political favor and social issues. These changing trends will have important implications on the Crude Oil Market.