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Jun 10 2008
Oil prices retreat as dollar rises | Print |  E-mail
Economy
By Agencies   

Oil prices fell to $134 after hitting a record $139 per barrel last Friday [EPA]
Oil prices fell to $134 after hitting a record $139 per barrel last Friday [EPA]
The price of crude oil has retreated on a stronger dollar and a call by Saudi Arabia for a meeting of oil producing countries to discuss what it called unjustifiably high prices.

The dollar improved against the euro on Monday after Henry Paulson, the US treasury secretary, said he would not rule out intervention to stabilise the currency.
 
And a Saudi minister said the country would work with the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) to "guarantee the availability of oil supplies now and in the future", adding that the current price was unjustified.
 
July futures for light, sweet crude fell $4.19 to settle at $134.35 a barrel in volatile trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Monday.

On Friday, oil prices had hit a record $139 a barrel after jumping nearly $11 in a single-day record.

The sharp hike had come after the European central bank announced a possible increase in interest rates in July to counter rising inflation, a move that sent the dollar falling against the euro.

Stronger dollar

But Paulson's comments on the US treasury's possible intervention helped the dollar strengthen against the euro on Monday, sending oil lower.

Many investors buy commodities such as oil as a hedge against inflation when the greenback weakens.

But on Monday, the effect reversed. The dollar gained ground, making oil less effective as an inflation hedge.

Also, a stronger dollar makes oil more expensive to investors overseas.

Another factor that underpinned Friday's rally was an Israeli cabinet minister's comment that his nation might attack Iran if it did not halt its nuclear programme.

But that prospect appeared to dissipate over the weekend as Israel's prime minister, Ehud Olmert, distanced himself from the comments and other officials noted that the minister had not been expressing official government policy.

Some analysts, however, see warning signs in Friday's bold oil price jump.

"It was a freakish oil market Friday as the market's worst fears – some real and some imagined – exploded into a rhapsody of wild buying," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Chicago-based Alaron Trading Corp, in a research note.

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