Via CS Monitor
Oil prices made small gains above $78 a barrel Friday but remained near eight-month lows after signs of slowing global economic growth triggered a sharp plunge this week. |
In London, Brent crude for August delivery was up 98 cents at $90.21 per barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
Crude
fell from $84 earlier this week and has plummeted 26 percent in less
than two months as signs mount of a slowdown in the global economy, led
by Europe, that would reduce demand for crude.
"Until a permanent solution is found to the eurozone's
problems, the global economy is likely to muddle through this crisis
for a considerable while, and persistent bouts of risk aversion are
likely to haunt the oil markets, making any sustained upside difficult,"
said analysts at Barclays Bank in London.
Reports on Thursday that showed industrial production is slowing in the U.S. and China
added to evidence that the world's two largest economies and oil
consumers are weakening just as global crude supplies are growing.
Europe's
debt and economic woes are unlikely to be solved soon. The formation of
a new Greek government this week briefly boosted investor optimism, but
doubts about other debt-ridden European countries such as Spain and Italy continue to weigh on markets.
"Currently,
all indicators point to continued sliding prices: sentiment on the
financial markets remains very gloomy, economic growth is set to slow
even further, the U.S. dollar is still showing strength and no rapid solution to the 'euro crisis' is in sight," said a report from Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
"Nonetheless, we believe that the fundamental supply/demand situation
is in a better state than market prices would suggest and that
commodities will reach a price bottom by the late summer at the latest."
In
other energy trading, heating oil was down 0.07 cent at $2.5224 per
gallon while gasoline futures gained 1.44 cents at $2.4664 per gallon.
Natural gas was up 0.4 cent at $2.586 per 1,000 cubic feet.
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