Wednesday, October 14, 2009

TIMELINE-Oil's wild ride: Price moves since 2008 14 Oct 2009 14:30

 Oct 14 (Reuters) -  Oil prices rallied for a fifth day on 
Wednesday to top $75 a barrel for the first time this year,
stoked by a weak dollar and surprisingly strong China trade data
that underscored a recovery in the world's No. 2 oil consumer.
Markets have been steadily rising after a dramatic collapse
to near $30 a barrel in December and January, from a record peak
of almost $150 in July last year.
Here is a brief timeline charting the price highs since
January 2008.

Jan. 2, 2008: U.S. crude <CLc1> briefly breaks the $100
barrier for the first time on the first trading day of 2008.
Prices rise fairly steadily through the first half of the year.
March 5: Despite new record price highs of over $104 a
barrel, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC), which pumps more than a third of the world's oil, says it
will not put more oil on the market. It says there is enough oil,
and blames U.S. economic "mismanagement" for global prices.
June 6: Prices surge $11 to a record high near $139 a barrel
on a slumping dollar and mounting tensions in the Middle East.
Soaring crude leads a frenzied broad-based commodity rally on
U.S. grains and oilseed futures markets.
June 7: Average retail price for regular gasoline tops $4 a
gallon for the first time in the United States.
July 11: Oil peaks at $147.50 for Brent <LCOC1> and $147.27
for U.S. crude.
July 15: A sell-off begins after remarks by Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke indicating a significant fall in demand in
the United States, the world's top consumer.
July 18: Oil prices drop by more than $18 from a week ago to
$128.88 per barrel. The price fall is triggered by a 3 million
barrel increase in U.S. crude stocks and falling U.S. demand.
Aug 15: Prices continue sharp decline, falling to around $110
a barrel for Brent crude.
Sept 15: Prices below $100 a barrel for first time since
March 4, and still falling.
Sept 22: Oil spikes $16 in biggest one-day gain on record.
Prices pop over $120 a barrel, extending a climb from a low near
$90 the previous week after the United States unveils a sweeping
rescue plan for its battered financial sector.
But soon after, oil prices begin a heavy slide.
Nov 21: National average price of regular gasoline falls
below $2 a gallon for first time since March 2005 -- dropping 3.1
cents to $1.989.
Dec 19: Oil drops below $34 a barrel -- charting about a 75
percent loss of value since July.
Jan 2, 2009: Oil falls more than $3 on first day of trading,
with U.S. crude at $41.25 a barrel and Brent at $42.18.
Aug 25: U.S. crude rises to touch this year's resistance
level of $75 a barrel, the first time since late-Oct 2008.
Sept 10: At its meeting, OPEC kept output targets steady at
the reduced levels agreed in September 2008, as high oil prices
of above $71 meant there was no need for action.
Sept 25: Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said that $75 was a
fair price for crude and he saw no need for OPEC to change
production ahead of its next meeting in December.
Oct 14: U.S. crude rises to $75.15 a barrel, the highest in
2009, underscored by a soft dollar and optimism over a global
economic recovery.

Source: Reuters, Energy Information Administration
(http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/MEC_Past/2008.html)
((gill.murdoch@thomsonreuters.com, +65 6417 4681, Reuters
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