Articles


  • Oil prices start 2012 up more than 4%



    Oil prices soared yesterday as tensions grew over key Persian Gulf oil shipments.
    Benchmark crude jumped by US$4.13, or 4.2 percent, to end the day at US$102.96 per barrel in New York.
    Brent crude, which is used to price foreign oil varieties that are imported by US refineries, rose by US$4.75, or 4.4 percent, to finish at US$112.13 a barrel in London.
    Prices climbed as soon as exchanges opened for the first day of 2012 trading. Commodity prices tend to rise at the beginning of January as investors start the new year with a fresh round of trading. This year prices were driven up by heightened concerns that Iran might try to close the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf to oil tankers, if Western nations impose new sanctions.
    Iran warned the US to stay out of the strategic waterway, where one-sixth of the world’s oil shipments pass every day. On Monday its navy fired a cruise missile as part of a military exercise.
    Military experts say Iran’s navy is too small to pose a serious challenge to the United States, but the missile exercise showed that it still has the ability to frustrate the international oil trade.
    “A ship on the ocean is an obvious target,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research. “Even the Iranians can hit one.”
    The US and European nations are mulling further economic sanctions against Iran because of its nuclear program. Doing that comes with some major economic risks, however. A standoff with Iran could hurt the global economy, slowing oil supplies at a time when the world needs every drop. Global oil demand is expected to rise to a record 89.5 million barrels per day in 2012.
    Oil producers are expected to meet that demand, but a prolonged conflict could lead to shortages and fuel price spikes that stifle economic growth. Recent reports that the world’s factories continue to ramp up underscored the growing demand for crude. Manufacturers ended 2011 on a high note, increasing activity in December in the US, China and India, according to separate surveys.
    US manufacturing, which was one of the first areas to grow after the recession, continued to gain ground in December. Factories hired more workers and boosted production to accommodate the biggest growth in orders since April. A private trade group said that US manufacturing expanded last month at the fastest pace in six months.
    The Commerce Department said that US construction spending jumped in November on a spate of new projects for single-family homes and apartments.
    In other energy trading yesterday, heating oil rose 12.4 cents, or 4.3 percent, to end the day at US$3.0382 per gallon, while gasoline futures rose by 9.12 cents, or 3.4 percent, to finish at US$2.7486 per gallon. Natural gas was virtually unchanged, ending at US$2.9930 per 1,000 cubic feet.

    ————————————————————————————————————————

    Email Story   Printable View   Blog Story   Copy Headline/URL

    News textNews titlePhoto captionsLive in Shanghai

    Advanced Search

    Our Products

    Home Delivery

    Online Account

    Amazon Kindle

    iPhone
    App

    iPad
    App

    Blackberry Phone App

    PlayBook
    App

    MMS
    ???

    Windows Phone App

    more products

    Metro

    Aging, Crime and public security, Education, Health, Traffic, Urban construction, Weather…

    Business

    Banking, Energy, Foreign investment, Insurance, Macro-economy and policy, Real estate, Securities…

    National

    World

    Odd

    Districts

    Changning, Hongkou, Huangpu, Jing’an, Luwan, Minhang, Pudong, Putuo, Xuhui, Yangpu, Zhabei…

    Sport

    Basketball, Boxing, Cricket, Golf, Gymnastics, Ice hockey, Olympics, Rugby union, Soccer, Tennis…

    Feature

    Art, City Style, Culture and history, Expat Tales, Fashion, Home Deco, Literature, Music, Stage, Travel…

    Opinion

    Chinese perspectives, Foreign perspectives, Shanghai Daily columnists

    Sunday

    Animal Planet, Book, City Scene, Cover, Film, Food, Home and Deco, Now and Then, People, Style…

    Supplement

    Downloads

    PDF, eMagazine

    Gallery

    Photos, Cartoons, HD Photo Album

    Blogs

    Buzzword and Shanghai Talk, Word on Street, Team Blog

    Services

    Subscribe, Advertising Info, Contact Us, RSS Center

    FEATURED SITES

    Live in Shanghai

    City Guide, Directory, Classifieds, What’s On

    Campus

    Learning, Careers, Students’ Club, Prize English, Sense & Simplicity

    Mini sites

    Undiscovered Zhoushan, Minhang today, Science Podcasting, Elegant Rhythms from the East

    @ CONTACT US |  BACK TO TOP

    MetroWorldNationalBusinessSportsFeatureOpinion

    About Shanghai Daily | About US 5.0 New | Advertising | Term of Use |  RSS | Privacy Policy | Contact US | Shanghai World Expo

    ?ICP???ICP?05050403 | ????????0909346 | ???????????????354?

    Copyright © 2001-2011 Shanghai Daily Publishing House. All rights reserved.


    Read full article
  • Rabindra Kayastha

    Authorized Person for MEX NEPAL
    Mob: +977 9856030634

  • Pawan Dhakal

    Biratnagar Branch Manager
    Mob: +977 9852033934

  • Our Clearing Member

    Himalayan Commodity Brokers
  • Our Banking Partners

    Laxmi Bank
  • Bank of Kathmandu
  • Nepal Investment Bank Limited
  • Century Commercial Bank Limited