AOL Money & FinanceMoney News



Search, view and share videos about news and entertainment from around the Web.
See Videos »

Markets

U.S. open in 1 hrs, 33 mins
12,898.38
66.20
 
0.52%
2,496.70
1.58
 
0.06%
1,408.66
5.62
 
0.40%
99.688
0.0625
 
0.06%
Get Quote for:

Blog Chatter

Gas jumps above $3.67, oil passes $126 on Venezuela concerns

By JOHN WILEN,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-09 12:11:45
NEW YORK (AP) - Oil rose above $126 a barrel for the first time Friday, bringing its advance this week to nearly $10, as investors questioned whether a possible confrontation between the U.S. and Venezuela could cut exports from the OPEC member. Gas prices, meanwhile, rose above an average $3.67 a gallon at the pump, following oil's recent path higher.

On Friday, The Wall Street Journal published a report that suggested closer ties between Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and rebels attempting to overthrow Colombia's government. Chavez has been linked to Colombian rebels previously, but the paper reported it had reviewed computer files indicating concrete offers by Venezuela's leader to arm guerillas. That appears to heighten the chances that the U.S. could impose sanctions on one of its biggest oil suppliers.

"If we put on sanctions, I'm sure Chavez would threaten to cut off our oil supply," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. "Obviously that would have a major impact on oil prices."

Light, sweet crude for June delivery vaulted to a new record of $126.20 in morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before retreating to trade up $1.28 at $124.97 a barrel.

Even if Chavez cut oil shipments to the U.S., Venezuelan oil would still make its way to the U.S. via middle men, who would buy it from Venezuela and resell it to the U.S., Flynn said. But that new layer in the supply chain would bump up costs.

Oil prices also were boosted Friday by the dollar, which declined against the euro. The European Central Bank said it was unlikely to consider interest rate cuts to cool the strong euro against the slumping dollar. Investors often buy commodities such as oil as a hedge against inflation when the greenback falls. A weaker dollar also makes oil less expensive to overseas investors.

Many analysts believe the dollar's protracted decline has much to do with the doubling in oil prices since this time last year. Another school of thought thinks tight global supplies of oil, driven by growing demand in countries such as China, Brazil and India, is the primary factor driving oil higher.

Oil's surge is pushing retail gas prices higher. The national average price of a gallon of regular gas jumped 2.6 cents overnight to a record $3.671 a gallon according to a survey of stations by AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. The Energy Department expects prices to peak at a monthly average of $3.73 in June, though many analysts say national average prices could rise as high as $4. Consumers in many regions, including parts of California and Hawaii, are already paying that much.

Demand for diesel fuel is also growing worldwide, but supplies of distillates, which include diesel and heating oil, fell unexpectedly last week, the Energy Department said Wednesday. That's pushing U.S. diesel prices to record highs and inflating heating oil prices in the futures market; heating oil futures are often viewed as a proxy for diesel.

Heating oil for June delivery rose 7.15 cents to $3.5813 on the Nymex after earlier setting a trading record of $3.6125. At truck stops, retail diesel prices rose 1.8 cents overnight to a record national average of $4.269 a gallon,

Diesel is used to move most of the world's food, consumer and industrial goods via truck, ship and rail. Skyrocketing diesel prices are part of the reason food and consumer goods prices are so high.

In other Nymex trading Friday, June gasoline futures rose 3.92 cents to $3.177 a gallon, and June natural gas futures rose 14.8 cents to $11.411 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, June Brent crude futures rose $1.83 to $124.67 a barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange.

Associated Press Writer Pablo Gorondi in Budapest and AP Business Writer Thomas Hogue in Bangkok, Thailand, contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
05/09/08 12:11 EDT
Bookmark:

Recent Comments

1 - 6 of 6
6 comments

firecracker2536 03:13:49 PM May 09 2008

A little over one year ago:

1) Consumer confidence stood at a 2 1/2 year high;
2) Regular gasoline sold for $2.19 a gallon;
3) The unemployment rate was 4.5%.

Since voting in a Democratic Congress in 2006 we have seen:

1) Consumer confidence plummet;
2) The cost of regular gasoline soar to over $3.50 a gallon;
3) Unemployment is up to 5% (a 10% increase);
4) American households have seen $2.3 trillion in equity value evaporate (stock and mutual fund losses);
5) Americans have seen their home equity drop by $1.2 trillion dollars;
6) 1% of American homes are in foreclosure.

America voted for change in 2006, and we got it!

Cheerlvr131 01:59:50 PM May 09 2008

this is outrangeus!
this is no reason that gas should be this expensive!!
why are they continuing to go up>?

ragoboy58 01:57:29 PM May 09 2008

OIL IS GOING TO HAVE TO GO DOWN SOONER OR LATER,AND WENT IT DOZ , ITS GOING TO CRASH HARD

King n us 01:29:55 PM May 09 2008

Gas in my town is $3.85 today. Outside of Chi town.

machinerymartinc 01:16:31 PM May 09 2008

I WOULD BUY GAS FROM BIN LADEN IF CHEAPER!!!!!

PIR152 12:59:51 PM May 09 2008

Why do we keep worrying sbout what Cahves is going to do, We are his biggest buyerof crude do you really think he wants to loose all that revenue. He is crazy but he is not stupid, just like we need his oil, he needs our dollars. What we should do is not buy oil from him and watch what happens, also dont by gas at CITGO gas stations, the compny belong to Chavez

1 - 6 of 6
6 comments

Add your own Comments