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Business leader warns against pay hike in ‘06
Local tour guides survive on visitors from Europe, US, not Korea - CAT-G
Oil prices decline to $57.83 a barrel
Cebu needs cheaper hotels; idle houses can provide tourists beds
Cebu firm to build more condo towers
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Oil prices decline to $57.83 a barrel

SINGAPORE - Crude futures fell yesterday in thin post-Christmas trading, as forecasters in the United States said the weather would be milder in the week ahead, raising traders’ expectations of lower demand for heating fuels.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery slipped 60 cents to $57.83 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange in Asian electronic trading, midafter-noon in Singapore.

Warmer

According to Accu-weather.com, temperatures in most of the United States apart from the northwest will be higher than normal in the next six to 10 days.

“The weather is unusually passive for late December,” the forecaster said.

Milder weather in the world’s largest energy consumer means less heating fuel consumption, which tends to put a downward pressure on oil prices.

Crude futures have in recent weeks been reacting to fluctuations in northern hemisphere temperatures, especially in the US northeast, the world’s biggest heating oil market.

“Ever since winter officially began last week, the weather in the northeast (and across much of the country) has gone the other way. It’s not that we’re having a heat wave in the northeast, but we are certainly in a different regime than we were earlier in the month,” said Accuweather forecaster Elliot Abrams in a report.

Yesterday, Nymex heating oil lost 2.53 cents to $1.6800 a gallon (3.8 liters) while gasoline declined 1.76 cents to $1.5329 a gallon.

Natural gas, which is most commonly used to heat homes in the midwest, slipped 78.9 cents to $11.494 per 1,000 cubic feet.

The contract reached an all-time high of $15.78 per 1,000 cubic feet in mid-December on cold weather and predictions of snow
storms.

The price of crude is 19 percent below its all-time high of $70.85 after Hurricane Katrina made landfall on Aug. 30. (AP)

Last week, the US petroleum snapshot showed the supply of crude oil rose by 1.3 million barrels to 322.5 million barrels – 12 percent above year ago levels.

But US inventories of distillate fuel, which include heating oil and diesel, fell by 2.8 million barrels to 127.7 million barrels. Gasoline inventories declined by 300,000 barrels to 204.1 million barrels. (AP)

(December 28, 2005 issue)
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