Oil Futures Rise to $100 a Barrel For the First Time Ever, Dow Plunges 200 Points to Start 2008
Oil prices soared to $100 a barrel Wednesday for the first time ever, reaching that milestone amid an unshakeable view that global demand for oil and petroleum products will continue to outstrip supplies.
Surging economies in China and India fed by oil and gasoline have sent prices soaring over the past year, while tensions in oil producing nations like Nigeria and Iran have increasingly made investors nervous and invited speculators to drive prices even higher.
Violence in Nigeria helped give crude the final push over $100. Bands of armed men invaded Port Harcourt, the center of Nigeria’s oil industry Tuesday, attacking two police stations and raiding the lobby of a major hotel. Word that several Mexican oil export ports were closed due to rough weather added to the gains, as did a report that OPEC may not be able to meet its share of global oil demand by 2024.
Did you like this? If so, please bookmark it, about it, and subscribe to the blog RSS feed.
Possibly Related Posts:
- Pearl River Delta repositioned as China’s “reform test field”
- The number that scares me the most is the number we can’t get.
- “Lyin’ Bankers, Meet Mathematics” By Karl Denninger
- Citing quarterly real housing prices (adjusted for inflation 1975-2008) here:
- Why Crude Oil Prices will Decline






































Leave a Reply