Mon, May 28, 2012, 4:14 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Oil rises on Greek vote, Iranian supply concerns

Oil prices rises above $100 as Greece OKs spending cuts; tankers steer clear of Iranian crude

Oil prices rose Monday after Greece took a key step away from a default on its huge debt that could hurt Europe's economy and cut demand for oil.

Crude prices also got a boost from renewed tensions about Iran's oil supplies after some shipping companies said they will stop loading Iranian crude onto tankers because of pending U.S. and European sanctions against Iran.

Benchmark oil rose $1.36 to $100.03 per barrel Monday in New York. Brent crude, which is used to price many international varieties of oil, rose 82 cents to $117.57 per barrel in London.

Greek lawmakers over the weekend approved deep spending cuts needed for the country to get more bailout money and avoid default on its massive debt. European leaders will meet Wednesday to discuss giving Greece more funds. Without a deal Greece faces a crippling bankruptcy that could affect the broader European economy. That in turn could slow demand for oil.

Investors were encouraged that Greece would get the bailout money it needs, but "it's not like there is absolute certainty that everything is solved," said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research.

Meanwhile, several shipping companies have stopped taking on shipments of Iranian oil because of U.S. and European sanctions that will start taking effect in a few months. The U.S. and the E.U. want to deprive Iran of the oil income it needs to fund what they believe is a program to build nuclear weapons.

"The geopolitical risk premium may increase further this week given that several (oil tanker) operators are now purposely shunning Iran due to questions surrounding the validity of EU-based insurance in light of the sanctions," said analysts at JBC Energy in Vienna. The EU embargo on Iranian crude also halts insurance on ships with an EU link that would carry Iran's oil, effectively preventing them from hauling it.

JBC also estimated that Iran's oil production has fallen by over 200,000 barrels a day since August due to the lack of maintenance and investment in Iran's oil fields. Iran exports 3 percent of the world's daily supply of oil, including about 500,000 barrels to Europe.

Evercore Partners shipping analyst Jonathan Chappell said he doesn't believe the action by the shipping companies will have a significant impact on oil prices because Iran can sell more oil to India and China. "The Iranians do have their own fleet to move some of their oil and they also may just decide to store oil on ships if there is no end market," he said.

In other energy trading, heating oil rose about a penny to $3.18 per gallon, gasoline futures rose 3 cents to $3.01 and natural gas fell 6 cents to $2.42 per 1,000 cubic feet.

At the pump, the national average for a gallon of gasoline rose less than a penny on Monday to $3.51, according to AAA, Wright Express and the Oil Price Information Service. That's 12 cents more than a month ago and 38 cents more than a year ago.

___(equals)

AP Business Writers Alex Kennedy in Singapore and Pablo Gorondi contributed to this report.

 

36 comments

  • Gary  •  Fargo, North Dakota  •  3 months ago
    All I can say is Good Bye To Our Summer Vacation, We Will Be staying Home Again.
  • Robert  •  Albuquerque, New Mexico  •  3 months ago
    I guess we don't want any kind of recovery with these oil prices !
  • BKG1949  •  Montoursville, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    Oil speculation is the poison that is ruining the world's economy. Worldwide demand is dramatically down so they evil gargoyles invent "reasons" on a daily basis to bid up the price of grude. Case in point is this Greek thing....Oil prices rose "on fears" of no solution being found....now they rise when a partial solution is found. Lies, lies, and more lies.
    • GC 3 months ago
      Exactly correct. Gasoline inventories in the U.S. and Europe are at 11 and 10 month highs respectively, while growth in both those regions are slowing. On top of that, you have the IEA just cutting world oil demand. No reason for oil to be this high, it's pure manipulation. Unfortunately, politicians won't do anything about it because they are all in the the oil companies pockets.
  • Yee Haw  •  Kingman, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    I started walking to work because of the demands fuel prices are putting on my finances.
    • David 3 months ago
      I work from home..
  • Mike  •  3 months ago
    This is just so much hog wash. Supplies are up and now big Oil is being speculated to death. This is just insanity with the way futures are manipulated by rich scoundrels wanting to soak the hard working everyday guy and gal. Your killing us one gas pump at a time, and they don't care one bit.
    • a cat 3 months ago
      Ride youur bike or get an Volt or something.
  • westerner  •  3 months ago
    Crude took a lot higher jump than even the euro did over the dollar after this Greek news. And Iran threatens to shut off the gulf weekly, who do they scare anymore? Oil is entirely overpriced.
  • warren  •  Council Grove, Kansas  •  3 months ago
    what a load of crap this is nothing more than big oil and wall street fixing the market just like they have been doing for years more american greed
  • Silent Death  •  3 months ago
    Obama is partly to blame but when it spikes to $4.50 a gal. the voters are going to blame him no matter what. If he whats re elected he better reel these speculators and oil co's in
    • Bill 3 months ago
      Bush atarted all this crap and now him and his buddies are laughing all the way to the bank!!!
    • BKG1949 3 months ago
      Hey Bill, this started big time with the signing into law of the commodities futures modernization act of 2000 which allowed speculators into the oil market. Oh by the way....that act was signed by Bill Clinton in December of 2000... not George Bush. Both parties have screwed us on this oil thing.
  • Jacho  •  Wilmington, Delaware  •  3 months ago
    it doesn't require any reason to oil price to go up.. these are the greedy brokers.. Energy should be completely government control. u should not allow a handful amount of people controlling 350 million Americans. This need to be stopped immediately.
    • exp_x 3 months ago
      The government should never be given more power. Government is bad at everything. It shouldn't be trusted with any power.
  • Abby  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
    Someone IS Jacking those prices and wa all know it..Well, at that rate??No one will be able to afford gas to go and Vote .How's that for change..And?I am glad that they are trying to a words of war with the ultra rich and the well to do,how classy is that?
  • Kimberly A.A  •  3 months ago
    This just in, "Some one working in an oil field in the mid east stubbed his toe and fell. Gas prices to rise on uncertanty of his recovery." Well, sounds just as good as some of their other excuses for raising prices.
  • scott14  •  3 months ago
    The economy will never recover with these horrible gas prices.
  • Old Dad  •  Thousand Oaks, California  •  3 months ago
    Let's be sure to pad the pockets of the greedy...
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Wall St's continued greed and avarice has manipulated oil up to $100 a barrel. This is an enormous threat to the world’s economy! If you don't know it; listen up! Oil refineries all over the world are shutting down! Refineries in Hawaii, St Croix, Houston, Philly, Delaware, other places in the US, and Europe are shutting down! They’re shutting down for three reasons (1) The price of oil is too high. A refiner’s margins are so small at these high prices, not only can they not make money, most refineries have lost money. (Thanks speculators on Wall St!) (2) There is a glut of oil and distillates and no place left to store it. It’s been this way for a while (3 years). Some refineries are turning into oil storage facilities. They can make more money from renting tanks to banks and hedge funds than they can make by producing product. (3) Due to the European oil embargo on Iran, Iran is selling oil at a heavily discounted rate to Asian refineries who will sell refined products to us cheaper than American refineries. Bottom line; WE ARE SO SCREWED!!! If we aren’t drawn in to a war with Iran that affects the Strait of Hormuz , the bottleneck that much of the worlds oil has to pass through, then we’ll be affected by the refineries shutting down. Eventually, as our economies improve there will be terrible shortages of product. It takes time for refineries to come back on line. Expect shortages to skyrocket oil and distillates to the sky. Repeal the Commodities Modernization Act of 2000 and the Financial Modernization Act of 1999 and get speculators out of the Commodities markets!!!
  • a cat  •  Bellevue, Washington  •  3 months ago
    why is china allied with iran and syria and selling them missles and all that now.
  • bill  •  3 months ago
    Memorial day May 28th Boycott called Shove That Gas Day no Americans will buy one drop of gasoline or diesel fuel from any gas station ,send a message to Obama ,Wall Street and Big Oil we are tired of being ripped off pass the word.
  • jim  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    this is bull s it and we as a people need to stop this greed of big oil we must tell them all to stop rapping us!
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Shut down the Fed and anyone that supports them. They are the problem not the answer...................
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Shut down the Fed and stop Hyper inflation...........Ron Paul 2012......
  • Barry  •  Fort Wayne, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    wow how did I see this coming I must be so smart........ ya right wallstreet finds something new to use everyday for this bull to rise prices...... what a joke to bad someone in washington won't do something about it................... thats right they are making money on it too...............
 
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