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Oil holds steady near $122 on waning US demand

Crude futures have sharply fallen over the past 19 days. The price of oil has dropped in seven of the last 10 sessions, and is down about 17 percent from its peak above $147 a barrel earlier this month. Prices remain about 60 percent higher than at this time last year.

By ALEX KENNEDY
The Associated Press

7/30/2008

SINGAPORE — Oil prices held steady Wednesday in Asia near $122 a barrel after sliding overnight on expectations that this year’s surge in energy costs is undermining U.S. gasoline demand sent crude.

Investors expect more evidence of falling gasoline consumption when the U.S. Energy Department’s Energy Information Administration releases its weekly oil inventory report later Wednesday, said Mark Pervan, a senior commodities strategist with ANZ Bank in Melbourne.

“People are looking closely at the deteriorating demand for petrol,” Pervan said. “The market will probably fence-sit ... ahead of the DOE numbers.”

Gasoline stocks were expected to rise 400,000 barrels in the petroleum supply report, according to the average of analysts’ estimates in a survey by energy research firm Platts. The survey also showed that analysts projected crude oil inventories to fall 1.3 million barrels.

Light, sweet crude for September delivery fell 5 cents to $122.14 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by midafternoon in Singapore. The contract dropped $2.54 to settle at $122.19 a barrel on Tuesday.

In London, September Brent crude was down 9 cents at $122.62 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Crude futures have sharply fallen over the past 19 days. The price of oil has dropped in seven of the last 10 sessions, and is down about 17 percent from its peak above $147 a barrel earlier this month. Prices remain about 60 percent higher than at this time last year.

Oil prices fell despite Royal Dutch Shell PLC saying Tuesday it may not be able to fulfill some oil-export contracts after Nigerian militants sabotaged a pipeline in the Niger Delta.

Militant attacks on Nigerian oil facilities have trimmed nearly one quarter of the country’s regular daily output.

The strongest Nigerian militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, said it sabotaged two pipelines early Monday in the southern oil-producing region.

Nigerian media reported the main pipeline normally carries about 130,000 barrels per day of crude oil from wells to export terminals.

Shell didn’t specify how much oil production was cut by the militant attack or how long repairs would take. Shell said its so-called “force majeure” announcement covers three months of supply contracts from the affected pipeline, but didn’t specify how much oil that covered.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 0.48 cent to $3.477 a gallon while gasoline prices fell 0.02 cent to $3.0075 a gallon. Natural gas futures fell 4.3 cents at $9.087 per 1,000 cubic feet.

JB Hunt