Brent
crude swung between gains and losses after rising for the first time in three
days yesterday as U.S. lawmakers urged backing for military action against
Syria, fanning concern that possible strikes may disrupt Middle East oil
exports.
Futures
climbed and fell as much as 0.1 percent in London after advancing 0.3 percent
yesterday. Republican Senators John McCain of Arizona and South Carolina’s
Lindsey Graham urged fellow lawmakers to recognize the danger of letting Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad’s use of chemical weapons go unanswered. Hedge funds
and other money managers increased bullish bets on Brent to the highest in more
than two years.
Brent
for October settlement was at $114.32 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe
exchange, down 1 cent, at 10:45 a.m. Sydney time. The contract gained 32 cents
to $114.33 yesterday. The European benchmark crude was at a premium of $7.50 to
WTI futures from $7.49 yesterday, the most since June 19.
WTI
for October delivery fell 81 cents from Aug. 30 to $106.84 a barrel in
electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Floor trading was
closed yesterday for the U.S. Labor Day holiday and yesterday’s transactions
will be booked with today’s trades for settlement purposes.
(Source: Bloomberg)
so great was the impact of the conflict, the conflict in syria hopefully get it over with
ReplyDeleteinfo yang cukup menarik, saya juga sering baca berita dari bloomberg tapi lemot internet saya
ReplyDeleteThanks Jalatama sudah mau share berita dari bloomberg.
Salam kenal min.
saya juga suka ke www.jalatama.com artikelnya juga menarik
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ReplyDeleteinformasi yang disajikan sangat bermanfaat
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