The Commercial Appeal

Oil over $101 on U.S. demand

Traders also worried about Egyptian chaos

- By Jonathan Fahey

Associated Press

NEW YORK — The price of oil rose to its highest level in 14 months on concerns about Middle East supplies and signs of an increase in U.S. demand for fuel.

In afternoon trading Wednesday, U. S. benchmark oil was up $1.48 to $101.08. It rose to $102.18 a barrel earlier, a high since May of last year. Oil has not closed above $100 since May 3, 2012.

Brent crude, which is used to price oil used by many U. S. refineries to make gasoline, rose $1.71 to $105.71.

The U.S. Energy Department reported Wednesday that U.S. crude supplies fell by 10.3 million barrels from the previous week, more than three times the drop that analysts had expected.

The drop was likely the result of reduced supplies from Canada because of a temporary pipeline shutdown there, as well as increased demand from a BP refinery that restarted in Indiana. But the drop could also be an indication that U.S. demand is rising.

At the same time, traders were worried that political upheaval in Egypt could slow the flow of oil from the Middle East to world markets. Embattled Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi was ousted Wednesday.

Egypt is not an oil producer but its control of the Suez Canal gives it a crucial role in maintainin­g global energy supplies.

The Middle East accounts for about a quarter of the world’s crude oil output, or 23 million barrels per day. About 2 million barrels of that, or 2.2 percent of world demand, are transporte­d daily through the Suez Canal, which links the Mediterran­ean with the Red Sea.

Much of that oil is headed to Europe, but a supply drop anywhere in the world leads to higher prices everywhere.

Some analysts suggested market reaction to the political crisis in Egypt was exaggerate­d.

“Each time there is a bit of confusion in Egypt there will be calls that a geopolitic­al premium needs to be added to oil because of the risk to the Suez Canal,” said Olivier Jakob of Petromatri­x in Switzerlan­d. “But if there is one thing that the military has control of in Egypt it is the Suez Canal. We therefore do not see a significan­t risk for free passage on the waterway.”

The Suez Canal Authority, which operates the waterway, said it “has all the authoritie­s needed for running the Canal without being limited by the laws and the systems of the (Egyptian) government.”

The rising price of oil could end what has been a streak of 21 days of lower U.S. retail gasoline prices. The average U. S. retail price fell less than a penny Wednesday to $3.48 per gallon.

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