Bloomberg: Saudi Arabia not willing to see crude at discount
[Skip to the end] Saudi Arabia Not Willing to See Crude at Discount, Naimi Says by Fred Pals (Bloomberg) Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil
[Skip to the end] Saudi Arabia Not Willing to See Crude at Discount, Naimi Says by Fred Pals (Bloomberg) Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil
[Skip to the end] (an email exchange) A few of things: First, the rising wages in the 70’s led to bracket creep that put the
(an interoffice email) > >  On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 4:05 PM, Pat wrote: > >  What about the continued allocation increases from non-end
Saudi Oil Production Even with crude prices now well over $100 there’s no sign of demand for Saudi crude falling off. I expect they will
Supplies probably aren’t ‘excessive’ or US companies wouldn’t import so much and futures spreads would be in contango instead of backwardation, and WTI now trading
(an email) > On Feb 19, 2008 10:03 AM, Mike wrote: > Warren, note spec comments and dollar issues, a big hurdle to overcome >
Higher oil prices mean lower rates from the Fed, and higher inflation rates induced by shortages mean stronger currencies abroad. Why do I have so
CNBC just had a session on trying to reconcile high gdp with large credit losses. Seems they are now seeing the consumer clipping along at
This means Saudis/Russians will continue to be price setters for at least the next few quarters. IEA Lifts 2008 World Oil Demand Growth Forecast By