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WEEK IN REVIEW
Tuesday


Try out your sea legs: Replicas of historic shi...
Lucas leads Hulbert for Superior Court seat
Bergeson, Dorn lead in race for state schools c...
Monday


Gardeners create an oasis on Everett's Casino Road
Mukilteo polls its potential citizens on annexa...
Local kids dream of Olympics with every stroke,...
Sunday


'53 Olds: Rare, low miles, must sell to help ho...
Shoreline man in hospital after jump from I-5 o...
$140,000 paid out in probe of Everett teacher
Saturday


Everett's next big wave
Drop in driving could leave hole in budget
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Friday


Twins' lives 'a story of miracles'
Snohomish County Executive Aaron Reardon overst...
Fewer break-ins on Camano Island: Is fugitive g...
Thursday


Woman to be sentenced as juvenile in Ecstasy de...
Retired Herald photographer Jim Leo, 73, dies
Fear and sorrow in Puget Sound area for Georgia
Wednesday


Marysville standoff ends in arrest
Hunter, 14, to be charged in killing
Craigslist sex ads lead to 15 arrests
 

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Mike Benbow, Business Editor
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Published: Thursday, May 8, 2008

Oil hits $124 a barrel on supply issues

NEW YORK -- Oil futures rose to a new record near $124 a barrel Wednesday after the Energy Department reported an unexpected drop in diesel and heating oil supplies last week. At the pump, gas prices rose for the first time since last week.

Light, sweet crude for June delivery hit a new record of $123.80 in afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before retreating slightly to trade up $1.75 at $123.59 a barrel.

The department's Energy Information Administration said in a weekly report that distillate fuels, which include diesel and heating oil, fell unexpectedly while gasoline demand rose slightly last week. Traders chose to focus on those numbers and shrug off crude inventories, which rose much more than analysts predicted, and gasoline supplies, which increased when analysts forecast a decline.

"We've got heating oil pulling up the complex," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill.

June heating oil futures rose 9.44 cents to $3.4479 a gallon after earlier rising to a new trading record of $3.4524.

Earlier, oil prices waffled as traders were torn between relief that crude and gasoline supplies are rising versus worries about rising demand and falling distillate stockpiles. But the fact that prices didn't decline sharply signaled to some investors that the market was poised to rally, analysts said. "It shows you that this market ... at times just ignores bearish news," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago.

Oil prices didn't react to the dollar, either, after it strengthened against the euro.

The dollar's protracted decline against the euro and other foreign currencies has played a major role in oil's rise by attracting investors looking for a hedge against inflation. When the dollar reverses course and strengthens, the effect usually reverses, sending oil prices lower.

At the pump, the average national price of a gallon of regular gas rose Wednesday for the first time since last week, adding 0.8 cent to $3.618, according to a survey of stations by AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.

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