NOTE: THE CONTENTS OF THIS BLOG ARE NOT TO CAUSE FEAR BUT RATHER TO SOUND THE ALARM. WHAT IS HAPPENING AND WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN HAS BEEN IN THE BOOKS OF DANIEL, MATTHEW 24 AND REVELATIONS OF THE BIBLE WAY BEFORE THESE EVENTS HAVE UNFOLDED FOR OUR WARNING. I PRAY YOU TURN TO YAHSHUA/JESUS, MAY HIS PEACE FILL YOU AND MAY YOU HAVE ETERNAL SALVATION. DEATH HAS NO STING AND FEAR HAS NO PLACE IN HIM. KNOW THE LOVE OF OUR WONDERFUL SAVIOUR AND WHY HE CAME TO DIE FOR YOU - ROMANS 5
Monday, April 11, 2011
Oil shoots above $123
Fri, 08 Apr 2011 8:04 http://business.iafrica.com/worldnews/720382.html
Iafrica.com News Headline
World oil prices on Friday stayed above multi-year highs, supported by the continued tensions in the Arab world and the postponement of elections in Nigeria, Africa's biggest crude producer.
New York's benchmark West Texas Intermediate light sweet crude for May delivery rose 55 cents to $110.85 per barrel after touching its highest level in two-and-a-half years in US trade Thursday.
Brent North Sea crude for May delivery gained 38 cents to $123.05.
"Current levels for crude are primarily supported by the Middle East tensions and also the Nigeria elections," said Chen Xin Yi, a commodities analyst with Barclays Capital.
"The postponement of last's week parliamentary polls (in Nigeria) due to logistical problems does not bode well for presidential elections," Chen added.
Nigeria's electoral agency on Thursday announced a third delay in legislative polls in some parts of the country after it failed to sort out logistical problems in time for the weekend vote.
Political developments in Nigeria are important for the oil market because the country is Africa's biggest crude oil producer.
The market has been under pressure by tensions in the oil-producing Middle East and North Africa region, where long-time rulers are under threat by uprisings similar to those that deposed the leaders of Tunisia and Egypt.
Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi is battling to remain in power, with rebels controlling large parts of the country.
Gulf states have also piled pressure on Yemen's embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh, saying they expect him to quit following more than two months of bloody protests.
On Thursday, the International Monetary Fund warned that crude demand is outpacing the growth of global supplies, a situation that would lead to sustained higher prices over the long term.
"The persistent increase in oil prices over the past decade suggests that global oil markets have entered a period of increased scarcity," the IMF said in a report on the global economy.
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