Oil Prices

Published 9:04 am Tuesday, August 5, 2008

By PABLO GORONDI

Associated Press Writer

Oil prices slid further Tuesday, dropping to as low as $118 a barrel on widening expectations that the slumping U.S. economy will keep eroding consumer demand for gasoline and other petroleum products.

The U.S. dollar’s gains against the euro also contributed to oil’s decline. Light, sweet crude for September delivery was down $1.51 at $119.90 a barrel in premarket trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier, it dropped to $118, before regaining some ground.

Crude has now fallen more than $25 since reaching a trading high of $147.27 on July 11. The growing belief that soaring prices have stifled demand has halted what appeared to be a relentless march higher.

“The main factor weighing on oil prices is worries about oil consumption being weakened, especially in the U.S.,” said David Moore, a commodity strategist with Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.

On Monday, the Commerce Department said consumer spending after adjusting for inflation fell 0.2 percent in June — the biggest drop since February — as shoppers dealt with higher prices for gasoline, food and other items.

Oil prices also fell as Tropical Storm Edouard seemed less likely to disrupt oil and natural gas output in the Gulf of Mexico. Though Edouard was threatening to pick up strength from warm Gulf waters and gain near-hurricane speeds over the next 24 hours, it likely would not be strong enough to damage offshore oil and natural gas drilling platforms that sit in its path.

Investors ignored continued tension over Iran’s nuclear program. Representatives of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany agreed Monday to seek new sanctions against Iran after the country failed to meet a weekend deadline to respond to an offer intended to defuse the dispute, State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos said.

Iran’s lack of response to an incentives package aimed at getting it to halt sensitive atomic activity left no option other than to pursue new punitive measures, Gallegos said.

Also Monday, Iran announced that it has tested a new weapon capable of sinking ships nearly 200 miles away, and Tehran reiterated threats to close a strategic waterway at the mouth of the Gulf if attacked. Up to 40 percent of the world’s oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage along Iran’s southern coast, and any move by Iran to close it to tanker traffic would send oil prices skyrocketing.

“Sometimes the focus of the market can shift, and at this point it’s focused on some of the areas of weakness in demand,” Moore said. “But some of the issues that caused oil prices to lift have not yet been resolved.”

Analysts at JBC Energy in Vienna, Austria, said the fact that markets where seemingly downplaying bullish factors like Tropical Storm Edouard and the Iran nuclear situation was a sign that “there is significant underlying bearish sentiment at play.”

The euro fell to $1.5475 from the $1.5587 it bought late in New York trading Monday, making oil and other commodities less attractive to investors seeking a hedge against inflation and dollar weakness.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures fell 5.76 cents to $3.2925 a gallon, while gasoline prices dropped 6.27 cents to $2.9375 a gallon. Natural gas futures shed 27.5 cents to $8.451 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, September Brent crude was down $2.33 to $118.35 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

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Associated Press writer Alex Kennedy in Singapore contributed to this report.

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