Crude oil extends rally to 83.95 in European session. Weakness in USD, abnormally cold weather in the Northern hemisphere and strong demand from China are pushing energy prices higher. Oil products also advance. Heating oil surges to 2.224. The benchmark contract has rallied in the past 4 weeks as government reports showed declines in distillate inventory. Gasoline price also rises to 2.185 as the rally accelerated after an upside break of 2.11 on January 4.
Attacks in Nigeria once again spurred worries about production disruption. Chevron reported that its Makaraba-Uyonana pipe was breached on January 8. This forced the company to shut down 20B bpd of crude oil production.
Rebel groups who want a share of oil revenues have been a threat to Nigeria’s oil production. Among them, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) is the largest group. The
MEND signed an indefinite ceasefire on October 25, 2009 and agreed to have peaceful talk with the government. However, it resumed attack in mid-December as member was dissatisfied with the progress of the negotiations.
Gold stays strong with other commodities as USD weakens. The February contract rose to as high as 1163 before pulling back to 1157.
USD’s rally against the euro accelerated after breaching the cluster of 1.4218-1.448. Currently trading at 1.453, the greenback has plummeted to a 3-week low against the euro as unexpected decline in payrolls evaporated traders’ hope for Fed’s tightening in 1H10.
Stock markets in both Asia and Europe advance as driven by robust trade data in China. Apart from strong commodity imports, export growth from China, up +17.7%, indicated global economic recovery is taking place in a fast pace.
In Asia, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index ex Japan rose +1.2%. Benchmark indices in Australia rose +0.8% while indices for both China and Hong Kong rose +0.5%. In European morning, UK’s FTSE 100 Index rises +0.6% to 5565.2, Germany’s DAX adds +0.4% to 6065 while France’ CAC 40 gains +0.7% to 4074.