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Crude Oil Touches New Intraday High
Jul 7 08:11 AM US/Eastern
By GILLIAN WONG
Associated Press Writer
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SINGAPORE (AP) - Oil prices rose to a new high above $75 a barrel Friday amid geopolitical tensions and rising gasoline demand.

Light, sweet crude for August delivery touched a new intraday high of $75.42 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, before easing back a bit to $75.36, up 22 cents.

The previous intraday record was $75.40 set Wednesday, when oil futures settled at $75.19, an all-time closing high on Nymex, where oil trading began in 1983.

August Brent on London's ICE Futures exchange rose 64 cents at $74.72 a barrel on Friday, just shy of its record high of $74.97 reached on May 2.

Gasoline futures lost less than half a cent to $2.2562 a gallon while heating oil prices gained less than half a cent to $2.0649 a gallon.

In its weekly inventory report, the U.S. Department of Energy said Thursday the country's supply of gasoline unexpectedly rose by 700,000 barrels to 213.1 million barrels, or 1.4 percent lower than a year ago. But the department also said U.S. gasoline consumption over the past four weeks averaged 9.5 million barrels a day, or 1.4 percent more than a year ago.

America's growing appetite for motor fuel comes despite an average nationwide pump price that is just below $3 a gallon—a level many analysts once believed would sap consumption.

Natural gas futures gained nearly 2 cents to $5.680 per 1,000 cubic feet, after falling to settle at $5.664 in the previous session—the lowest closing price since Sept. 27, 2004.

The United States is awash in natural gas and some analysts believe there may not be enough underground storage capacity, potentially forcing some producers to shut wells. Others say the falling price will spark more demand.

Commercial inventories of crude oil declined by 2.4 million barrels last week to 341.3 million barrels, or 3.6 percent above year ago levels.

Analysts said the spike likely had more to do with an increase in geopolitical uncertainties than already-tight market fundamentals.

Iran remains in a stalemate with the West, which is concerned about Tehran's nuclear ambitions. Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, said this week his country remains "serious" about continuing negotiations to defuse the international standoff.

President Bush also said the United States will seek a diplomatic solution to a standoff with North Korea, which test-fired missiles earlier in the week.

In Nigeria, armed men kidnapped a Dutch oil worker, the second hostage taking in less than 24 hours in a region where regular raids continue to destabilize oil production. Attacks on oil pipelines and kidnappings have cut Nigerian oil production by more than 500,000 barrels a day, or 20 percent, this year.


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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