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News, September 2008

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Crude oil prices surge over 20% on weak dollar, short squeeze, settling at $121 per barrel

 

Crude prices surge over 20% on weak dollar, short squeeze

www.chinaview.cn 2008-09-23 03:11:09

·Crude prices soared over 20 percent Monday, the biggest ever one-day gain on record. ·Light, sweet crude for October delivery was up $16.37 to settle at $120.92 a barrel. ·The U.S. dollar was lower against other major currencies Monday.

    NEW YORK, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- Crude prices soared over 20 percent Monday, the biggest ever one-day gain on record, on short squeeze and concerns about the outlook of the U.S. dollar.

    Light, sweet crude for October delivery, which expires Monday, was up 16.37 dollars to settle at 120.92 dollars a barrel, after rising as high as of 130.00 dollars per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

    "The fact that oil experienced its biggest one day price spike ever has to do with a short squeeze of massive proportions taking place," Wall Street Strategies' senior research analyst Conley Turner told Xinhua.

    "In fact, the approximately 20 percent move suggests that some institutions are on the hook for making a wrong bet on the direction of the commodity and massive unwinding is taking place," added the analyst.

    Crude prices had tumbled from record highs of 147.27 dollars a barrel, which was set on July 11, weighed down by growing evidence that high energy costs and economic woes were curbing global demand.

    Investors' concerns about the outlook of the U.S. currency also push the prices higher.

    The U.S. dollar fell sharply Monday as concerns grew that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's 700-billion-dollar rescue plan will further burden U.S. finances.

    The new rescue plan would increase the public debt limit to 11.3 trillion dollars from 10.6 trillion dollars. The jump in federal debt would be negative for the dollar.

    The U.S. dollar was lower against other major currencies Monday. In Europe, the euro traded at 1.4689, up from 1.4470 late Friday in New York.

    "It is clear that the U.S. dollar had peaked in value some days ago and is now falling. Oil traders are pumping money into the commodity as the trade of choice now is to sell dollars and buy oil," said Turner.

    In London, Brent North Sea crude for November climbed 6.43 dollars to settle at 106.04 dollars a barrel.

Dollar falls on anxiety over U.S. bailout plan

www.chinaview.cn 2008-09-23 05:00:16  

    NEW YORK, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) --

The dollar fell against major currencies on Monday on anxiety over the 700 billion dollar bailout plan of U.S. government.

    The Bush administration asked U.S. Congress on Saturday for 700billion dollars to bail out firms burdened with bad mortgage debt in a bid to rescue financial institutions crippled by loss of mortgage-related assets and securities.

    U.S. stocks tumbled on Monday, as investors grew nervous about the plan. The greenback fell across the board amid worries that U.S. budget deficit would worsen if the plan were approved. It was also under pressure from oil prices, which jumped more than 25 dollars on Monday.

    Analysts said foreign investors would be increasingly reluctant to finance the growing U.S. deficit at the current dollar exchange rate and that funding the gap would require higher interest rates and a weaker currency.

    The euro bought 1.4804 dollars in late New York trading compared with 1.4470 dollars it bought late Friday. The British pound rose to 1.8584 dollars from 1.8365 dollars.

    The dollar fell to 1.0760 Swiss francs from 1.1024 Swiss francs, and fell to 105.40 Japanese yen from 107.01 Japanese yen. It fell to 1.0326 Canadian dollars from 1.0499 Canadian dollars.

Editor: Yan



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