NEW YORK — Oil prices fell Wednesday despite another
decline in crude supply, with lingering doubts about whether people and
businesses will be using more energy anytime soon.
Crude supplies have fallen in seven out of the past eight weeks, according to a government report Wednesday.
Benchmark
crude for August delivery fell 51 cents to $69.38 a barrel on the New
York Mercantile Exchange. In London, Brent prices rose $1.21 to $70.51
a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
All major fuel futures fell
on Nymex Wednesday, and gasoline led the way. Average retail gasoline
prices have now fallen for 10 straight days.
The Energy
Department's Energy Information Administration said in its weekly
report that the massive surplus of oil in the United States continued
to shrink last week. Crude supplies fell more than some expected,
losing 3.7 million barrels for the week ended June 26.
Falling
supplies are part of the reason energy prices have been rising for
months, but that doesn't necessarily mean energy consumption is
rebounding strongly.
Some of the biggest users of energy, heavy
industry and manufacturing, have cut thousands of jobs. Many of the
people who have lost jobs are no longer commuting because the can't
find work, meaning they aren't using as much gas.
Crude levels
are falling, but not necessarily because more is being used. Imports
are falling. Crude imports over the last four weeks are down nearly
800,000 barrels per day.
Oil exporting countries slashed
production after the global economic downturn sent crude prices
plunging from near $150 per barrel last summer to just above $30 per
barrel by December.
While prices have been surging for two
months, a lot of that has been driven by money from Wall Street that is
using crude only to hedge against inflation.
"There are some
people, like me, who think 'So, what if there's less oil? There's still
plenty out there," said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at
Oil Price Information Service.
A gallon (3.8 liters) of regular gas now averages $2.63, but last year on this day gasoline went for $4.09 a gallon on average.
In
other Nymex trading, gasoline futures fell 3.3 cents to $1.8694 a
gallon and heating oil for August delivery fell 2.5 to $1.7629 a
gallon. Natural gas for August delivery lost less than a penny to trade
at $3.827 per 1,000 cubic feet.