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crude oil in the US stockpile drops 800,000, as does Distillate stocks

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papau Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-29-04 01:44 PM
Original message
crude oil in the US stockpile drops 800,000, as does Distillate stocks
Edited on Wed Dec-29-04 01:47 PM by papau
Not too bad as to expectations - Most energy analysts were expecting a 350,000 barrel drop in the amount of crude oil in the US stockpile (actual was 800,000) with Distillate stocks, which include heating oil, down 830,000 barrels (about right). Last week, at $1.815 per gallon on Monday, December 20, 2004, the national average gasoline price was 33 cents per gallon higher than last year, which matched exactly the increase in crude oil prices over this time period for Crude oil prices (12/20 -Crude spot price WTI of 46.31 - up $13.50 per barrel or 33 cents per gallon).


http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/twip/twip.asp
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/twip/twiparch/twiparch.html



http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/twip/twip_crude.html
Released on December 29, 2004
(Next Release on January 5, 2005)

Best of TWIP
In the tradition of recording studios systematically bundling the greatest hits of musical artists and releasing special CDs (or record albums in the good old days), with titles commonly referring to the artist’s name, such as “Best of (name of artist),” the current issue of “This Week In Petroleum” (TWIP) follows in the footsteps of that tradition with the greatest petroleum stories (hits) covered during 2004.

The year 2004 may be characterized as a year of extremes, which witnessed record prices for crude oil and gasoline, a severe hurricane season, and world energy markets that were roiled by unexpectedly high oil demand in China and continued volatility in the Middle East. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil prices for the near-term futures contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the benchmark crude oil for the United States, soared and closed at an all-time record of more than $55 per barrel on October 22, a level about two-thirds above the $33.78-per-barrel price of crude oil at the beginning of the year. Since the October peak, WTI crude oil prices have fluctuated downward to about $42 per barrel as of December 28, 2004 (see November 10 issue, A Temporary Phenomenon or Here to Stay? ). Although the record high crude oil price this year can be attributed to a number of factors, the most influential of those were: low U.S. crude oil inventories held in commercial storage, particularly during the early months of the year; uncertainty about the flow of Iraqi oil exports in the face of the high level of turmoil within that country; the damage inflicted on Gulf Coast and offshore oil installations following hurricanes Charley, Frances, and Ivan; unexpectedly strong world oil demand, particularly in China; and capacity constraints (upstream, downstream, and transportation). Moreover, Venezuelan political instability, Nigerian labor strikes, and internal strife between the Russian government and oil giant Yukos also contributed to keep crude oil and other petroleum prices higher this year.

Rising crude oil prices also pushed most petroleum product prices higher during 2004, including retail regular gasoline which set a record U. S. average of 206.4 cents per gallon (unadjusted for inflation) on May 24th. The U. S. average regular gasoline price ended 2004 about 19 percent higher than at the beginning of the year, rising from 151.0 cents per gallon in early January to 179.1 cents per gallon by December 27, 2004. Another noteworthy item during 2004 was record distillate fuel demand, which, spurred by nearly unprecedented demand for on-highway diesel fuel, measured nearly 4.1 million barrels per day. Even high diesel fuel prices, reaching a record (unadjusted for inflation) 221.2 cents per gallon on October 25, 2004, were not sufficient to temper strong demand that was in part fueled by a still strong U.S. economy. Diesel fuel prices have exceeded the price of regular unleaded gasoline since late August of this year (see November 3 issue, Gasoline vs. Diesel Fuel).

This year also marked one of the most severe hurricane seasons in many years with three back-to-back storms pummeling large sections of Florida, Alabama and Mississippi. The hurricanes caused major disruptions to Gulf of Mexico crude oil production, in addition to causing damage to port facilities, oil platforms, and refineries located near the Gulf Coast. The hurricanes also delayed the offloading of crude oil imports in the Gulf region, compounding the already low U.S. crude oil supply situation at that time (see September 22 issue, The Oil Market Impact from Ivan ). Last but not least, the December deep-freeze that sent arctic temperatures roaring across major portions of the nation during the last days of 2004 caused some petroleum market analysts to debate the adequacy of heating fuel inventories for the upcoming winter heating season (see December 15 issue, Baby, It’s Cold Outside ). With world crude oil markets expected to remain tight well into next year, along with the possibility of further Middle East turmoil, and the chance of severe winter weather in early 2005, the “Hit Parade” of petroleum stories will certainly continue to be covered by TWIP in the coming year.

Retail Gasoline Prices Fall Again, Diesel Fuel Increases Slightly
The U.S. average retail price for regular gasoline decreased this week by 2.4 cents per gallon from the previous week to reach 179.1 cents per gallon as of December 27, 31.3 cents higher than this time last year. This is the eighth week in a row, and the ninth time in ten weeks, that prices have dropped. Prices were down throughout the country, with the West Coast region seeing the largest decrease, falling 3.7 cents to 195.6 cents per gallon. Retail prices in the Midwest fell 2.4 cents to 170.4 cents per gallon, which is 26.4 cents higher than last year. Prices in California fell 3.9 cents to 201.0 cents per gallon, which is 41.5 cents higher than this time last year.

Retail diesel fuel prices rose 0.3 cent last week to 198.7 cents per gallon. Price changes were mixed throughout the country, with the East Coast seeing a decrease of 0.7 cent to 204.5 cents per gallon, while prices in the Midwest rose 1.5 cents to 195.9 cents per gallon. California prices rose 1.0 cent to 209.7 cents per gallon. Prices in New England stayed the highest in the nation, falling just 0.3 cent to hover at 219.6 cents per gallon.

Residential Heating Fuel Prices Decrease
Residential heating oil prices decreased for the period ending December 27, 2004. The average residential heating oil price decreased by 1.6 cents from the previous week to reach 197.7 cents per gallon, an increase of 48.6 cents from this time last year. Wholesale heating oil prices decreased 9.8 cents to reach 135.6 cents per gallon, an increase of 42.6 cents compared to the same period last year.

The average residential propane price increased 1.1 cents, from 171.8 cents to 172.9 cents per gallon. This was an increase of 31.1 cents over the 141.8 cents per gallon average for this same time last year. Wholesale propane prices decreased 3.0 cents per gallon, from 92.6 to 89.6 cents per gallon. This was a gain of 18.9 cents from the December 29, 2003 price of 70.7 cents per gallon.

Propane Inventories Post Seasonal Declines
U.S inventories of propane continued to post a seasonal decline last week with a 2.1-million-barrel drop that moved inventories lower to an estimated 56.7 million barrels for week ending December 24, 2004. For the first three weeks of December, weekly stockdraws have continued on a path just below the normal 5-year average for this month, with inventories remaining near the high end of the normal range for this time year. Midwest inventories were sharply lower last week with a 1.3-million-barrel decline that reflected cold weather in the region, followed by the Gulf Coast that reported a weekly drop of 0.6 million barrels. During this same period, East Coast inventories remained unchanged while the combined Rocky Mountain/West Coast regions reported inventories 0.1 million barrels lower. East Coast and Gulf Coast inventories remain at or above the upper end of their respective normal ranges last week, while the Midwest continues to track near the lower end of the normal range. Propylene non-fuel use inventories gained 1.0 million barrels last week to 3.4 million barrels, a level accounting for 6 percent of total propane/propylene inventories, compared with the prior week’s 4.1 percent share.

Text from the previous editions of “This Week In Petroleum” is now accessible through a link at the top right-hand corner of this page.




U.S. Weekly Crude Oil Ending Stocks Excluding SPR (Mbbl) U.S. Weekly Total Gasoline Ending Stocks (Mbbl) U.S. Weekly Total Distillate Ending Stocks (Mbbl) U.S. Weekly Propane/Propylene Ending Stocks (Thousand Barrels)
Date
Aug 20, 2004 291349 205743 125050 54836
Aug 27, 2004 287117 206552 126355 57453
Sep 03, 2004 285658 204073 126649 59689
Sep 10, 2004 278646 202493 128321 61601
Sep 17, 2004 269534 199654 126817 63790
Sep 24, 2004 272935 198846 125487 67267
Oct 01, 2004 274033 199429 123360 68345
Oct 08, 2004 278236 200616 120923 68614
Oct 15, 2004 279434 199883 119020 68229
Oct 22, 2004 283378 201163 116576 68173
Oct 29, 2004 289650 201677 115715 67549
Nov 05, 2004 291511 201270 115578 67141
Nov 12, 2004 292326 200879 114577 64808
Nov 19, 2004 292411 202741 115607 63725
Nov 26, 2004 293260 205741 117922 62656
Dec 03, 2004 293917 208096 119299 63686
Dec 10, 2004 293791 209616 119336 61456
Dec 17, 2004 295915 211381 119920 58760
Dec 24, 2004 295056 212251 119129
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Tandalayo_Scheisskopf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-29-04 01:57 PM
Response to Original message
1. Gotta keep those inventories down...
To keep them prices up! :eyes:
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papau Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-29-04 03:06 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Like, We should ever have market based pricing?
Oil - the cartel and the cartels that make the world go round.

sigh ....

:-(
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DainBramaged Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-29-04 04:27 PM
Response to Original message
3. Invading Iraq was not about controlling the supplies for OUR use
It was all about controlling the supply so prices remain high (along with the profits) for the oil companies. As long as Iraq is incapable of pumping and refining crude for world market use, the BFEE has the world by the balls, including Amerika. How stupid the Reich-wing lemmings are. Freedom, my ass. They don't have a clue.

Imagine what would happen if Iraq could produce 10,000,000 bbls. a day as was promised before the occupation? The BFEE is as beholden to the oil cartel as any member nation. And we are spilling blood for (profit from) oil, just as we thought.
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