Oil futures rose Monday, extending their gains
to a third straight session with some global economic data pointing to
improved prospects for demand, but prices ended well off the day’s highs
above $90 a barrel as U.S. fiscal-cliff negotiations dragged on.
London Commodity Markets News
Oil for January delivery
CLF3
+0.17%
tacked on 18 cents, or 0.2%, to settle at $89.09 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after trading as high as $90.33.
Prices had tallied a 2.8% gain over the past two trading sessions.
“It’s been a real tug-of-war in the crude oil market today with ‘bulls’
citing a stronger PMI manufacturing number in China and rising
geopolitical tensions in the Middle East,” said Alan Herbst, a principal
at Utilis Advisory Group in New York.
But the early momentum that lifted Nymex prices above $90 a barrel “was
held in check by recurring concerns over a lack of progress with
fiscal-cliff negotiations in Washington, which might result in a new
U.S. recession should no deficit agreement be reached by the end of the
year,” he said.
Herbst said he expects “daily crude-oil price volatility to continue for
the remainder of the year or until there is significant development
from either the bullish or bearish perspective.”
Source: Market World to read the complete and original article click here
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