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Business news with words department+prices+raising. 3 news.

by pages: 1

Recent news

Tue, 25 Dec 2007 (more news this day)
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
OIL prices drifted higher in light holiday trading yesterday after predictions of a drop in crude inventories raised new supply concerns. With little other news to motivate buying or selling, investors focused on forecasts by analysts including Addison Armstrong, director of exchange traded markets at TFS Energy Futures LLC, who predicted crude inventories fell by 1.5 million barrels last week. Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup Inc, predicted that crude stocks fell by 2 million to 3 million barrels. The Energy Department's Energy Information Administration reports oil inventories on Thursday this week, a day late due to Christmas. Light, sweet crude for February delivery rose 82 cents to settle at US$94.13 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after falling as low as US$92.50 earlier. Prices rose more than US$2 on Friday after the government reported consumer spending jumped more than expected in November, raising hopes that the economy will weather the crisis roiling
Sat, 22 Dec 2007 (more news this day)
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
OIL prices jumped in light trading yesterday after the government reported that consumer spending surged last month, raising hopes that the US economy will weather the crisis roiling credit markets and that demand for oil and gasoline will strengthen. The Commerce Department said consumer spending jumped 1.1 percent in November, the biggest one-month gain since 2004 and well above analyst expectations for an 0.7 percent increase. Light, sweet crude for February delivery rose US$2.25 to settle at US$93.31 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices were also supported by stocks, which rose yesterday, and a slightly weaker dollar. Energy investors often view stock market moves as reflective of overall economic sentiment. Also, oil futures offer a hedge against a weak dollar, and oil futures bought and sold in dollars are more attractive to foreign investors when the greenback is falling. Many observers blame oil's rise last month to near US$100 on speculators
Sun, 16 Dec 2007 (more news this day)
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
THE difference in yield between Japanese and US 10-year bonds climbed last week to the widest in a month on signs inflation is a bigger threat in the United States than in Japan. The extra yield investors demand to hold Treasuries instead of Japanese notes climbed as high as 2.696 percentage points on Friday, after a Labor Department report showed the biggest increase in US producer prices in 34 years. Japan's bond yields rose less than US debt after confidence among the Asian nations' largest manufacturers slumped more than forecast, cementing speculation the Bank of Japan will delay raising interest rates. "JGBs are a better buy than Treasuries at the moment," Xinyi Lu, chief strategist at the international treasury division at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd in Tokyo, told Bloomberg News. "Nobody believes very firmly that there will be inflation here again." The yield on the 1.5-percent bond due December 2017 fell two basis points last week to 1.545 percent at