论坛全局菜单下方 - TICKMILL 285X70论坛全局菜单下方 - ThinkMarkets285X70论坛全局菜单下方 - 荔枝返现285X70论坛全局菜单下方 -  icmarkets285X70
  • 1
  • 2
前往
共 24 条
查看:1936回复:23
半个大西瓜
注册时间2007-04-11
沙特国王宣布原油日产量将增加20万桶
楼主发表于:2008-06-22 13:16只看该作者倒序浏览
1楼 电梯直达
电梯直达
新华网沙特阿拉伯吉达6月22日电 沙特阿拉伯国王阿卜杜拉22日宣布,为抑制国际市场过高的原油价格,沙特的原油日产量将增加20万桶,增至970万桶。   阿卜杜拉国王是在吉达国际石油会议开幕式上致词时宣布这一决定的。他表示,沙特对石油消费国的需求十分关注,并准备满足“任何额外的需求”。   阿卜杜拉国王还表示,沙特将捐资10亿美元,在石油输出国组织(欧佩克)的框架下设立一个旨在帮助发展中国家的基金。此外,沙特还将向最不发达国家提供总额为5亿美元的软贷款,用于资助能源和发展项目。 不知道下周石油能去120转转不。。。但一般好象都是见坏消息就拉升先。。。
TK29帖子1楼右侧xm竖版广告90-240
个性签名

韬客社区www.talkfx.co

广告
TK30+TK31帖子一樓廣告
TK30+TK31帖子一樓廣告
半个大西瓜
注册时间2007-04-11
楼主发表于:2008-06-22 13:17只看该作者
2楼
道指还N久没收在12000以下了,期待套息交易解除一下下~~~~~~~~~~
vince
注册时间2007-10-06
发表于:2008-06-22 13:18只看该作者
3楼
不是说的30万么?我记忆出错了?不好的信号。。。
duwei
注册时间2008-06-21
发表于:2008-06-22 13:37只看该作者
4楼
油价快下来吧,,哈哈。。
chimney2005
注册时间2005-08-14
驿站美文奖365积极参与奖快乐投资奖技术派达人
发表于:2008-06-22 13:55只看该作者
5楼
坏了坏了,千万不要是真的. 因为联合国主席叉叉文放风说是30万桶; 而外界的期望是50万桶. 只增长20万桶,油价稍微下跌后恐怕更疯狂. 如果是30万以上,对欧元就是利空.20万不好说.
个性签名

智慧、慈悲

与狼为伍
注册时间2008-02-12
365积极参与奖
发表于:2008-06-22 14:06只看该作者
6楼
呵呵,没有影响的,,
chimney2005
注册时间2005-08-14
驿站美文奖365积极参与奖快乐投资奖技术派达人
发表于:2008-06-22 14:08只看该作者
7楼
有D有D,周五就是给油价闹的啊.
半个大西瓜
注册时间2007-04-11
楼主发表于:2008-06-22 14:13只看该作者
8楼
那道指这样会不会来个套息解除啊~~~砸到200什么的
与狼为伍
注册时间2008-02-12
365积极参与奖
发表于:2008-06-22 14:15只看该作者
9楼
原帖由 半个大西瓜 于 2008-6-22 22:13 发表 http://www.talkforex.com/images/common/back.gif 那道指这样会不会来个套息解除啊~~~砸到200什么的
油价下跌对股市是利好,哪来套息解除啊
半个大西瓜
注册时间2007-04-11
楼主发表于:2008-06-22 14:16只看该作者
10楼
那油价跌,欧元肯定也上不去了
chimney2005
注册时间2005-08-14
驿站美文奖365积极参与奖快乐投资奖技术派达人
发表于:2008-06-22 14:20只看该作者
11楼
对,如果真能压住,欧元就要回落了.就算欧元本该涨的,上周五反映得也过度了,该望5500方向调整. 我担心的是增产这么点,压不住.
与狼为伍
注册时间2008-02-12
365积极参与奖
发表于:2008-06-22 14:20只看该作者
12楼
呵呵,你不知道炒原油家伙的凶悍性,有增加产量的消息还有可能上涨呢
半个大西瓜
注册时间2007-04-11
楼主发表于:2008-06-22 14:26只看该作者
13楼
原帖由 与狼为伍 于 2008-6-22 22:20 发表 http://www.talkforex.com/images/common/back.gif 呵呵,你不知道炒原油家伙的凶悍性,有增加产量的消息还有可能上涨呢
这个同意,没准反拉一下,但石油代表通胀,一但被压到100-120去了,那欧元去1,50,我相信~~
小青
注册时间2007-07-06
发表于:2008-06-22 14:33只看该作者
14楼
原油早该调整了,就是不知什么时候开始。。。 7月份?
vince
注册时间2007-10-06
发表于:2008-06-22 14:37只看该作者
15楼
原帖由 chimney2005 于 2008-6-22 21:55 发表 http://talkforex.com/images/common/back.gif 坏了坏了,千万不要是真的. 因为联合国主席叉叉文放风说是30万桶; 而外界的期望是50万桶. 只增长20万桶,油价稍微下跌后恐怕更疯狂. 如果是30万以上,对欧元就是利空.20万不好说.
哦,是这样呀,我记得什么地方看的30万呢~
太保
注册时间2008-03-27
365积极参与奖
发表于:2008-06-22 16:11只看该作者
16楼
不是20万桶或30万桶、重要的是它的意义
g2know
注册时间2008-03-02
发表于:2008-06-22 16:26只看该作者
17楼
原帖由 chimney2005 于 2008-6-22 05:55 发表 http://www.talkforex.com/images/common/back.gif 坏了坏了,千万不要是真的. 因为联合国主席叉叉文放风说是30万桶; 而外界的期望是50万桶. 只增长20万桶,油价稍微下跌后恐怕更疯狂. 如果是30万以上,对欧元就是利空.20万不好说.
今早看了CBC NEWS , 由于尼日利亚的动乱导致减产100万桶(从原来的250到现在的150不到),市场期望30,但却是20,。。。。。看周末下周的油价还要升 The most likely scenarios for productions (and the oil price reaction) are the following: - Saudi Arabia could announce nothing more than a 200,000 barrel-a-day production increase. This together with its recent 300,000 b/d increase would boost the kingdom’s output to 9.7m b/d, the highest since 1981. This would probably disappoint the market and could lead to a jump in oil prices because much of the increase would be heavy, sour low-quality oil for which their is limited appetite. - Saudi Arabia could announce a 500,000 b/d, on top of last month 300,000 b/d, bringing the kingdom’s overall output to record of 10m b/d. This would mean the kingdom would bring its spare capacity to the one of the lowest levels on record. The questions will be whether the market reacts to the increase in supplies or focuses on the fact that Saudi’s spare capacity would not be able to cover any unexpected shortage in supplies elsewhere, such as Nigeria, Iraq, or the hurricane-prone Gulf of Mexico. Saudi Arabia could announce some kind of production increase (see above) together with a reduction in the prices it charges refines around the world, particularly to the politically sensitive US, but also to Asia. This is likely to have the largest downward impact on oil prices, as it would signal a significant policy shift, in which Saudi Arabia allows global crude oil inventories to rise significantly. The move, however, would deepen Opec divisions because it would lower international oil prices and hurt the revenues of countries such as Iran or Venezuela. Saudi Arabia could announce that its production remains unchanged and that it would respond – as always – to the demand of its customers. The official production level remains at 9.45m b/d. The oil price would probably skyrocket, but this scenario is unlikely as Washington and other European capitals would blame Saudi Arabia for risking a global economic recession and a sharp increase in inflation. Saudi Arabia could also do something radical, having lulled the market into expecting little. The kingdom has announced surprises before. Nervous traders suggest Saudi Arabia could ‘drop a nuclear bomb on the market’ by changing the way it prices its oil, slashing its prices and de-linking them from international futures markets. This would be a reversion to the past. Until the early 1980s - the infancy of the futures markets - Saudi Arabia set its oil price monthly. This could have a huge impact on prices because Saudi Arabia would in effect be setting market prices, kill speculators and drive a wedge into its relationship with other Opec members. Saudi oil boost fails to alleviate concernsBy Andrew England and Carola Hoyos in Jeddah Published: June 22 2008 10:06 | Last updated: June 22 2008 15:05 Saudi Arabia’s decision to pump more oil than it has in nearly 30 years risks being completely negated by the sharp drop in output caused by attacks on production facilities in Nigeria. Nigeria now pumps less than 1.5m barrels a day, rather than the 2.5m b/d it has the ability to produce, the lowest level in 25 years, according to officials attending Sunday’s high-level meeting in Jeddah. EDITOR’S CHOICEIn depth: Oil
- Apr-29
UK Daily View: Carola Hoyos on Saudi Arabia’s oil summit
- Jun-20
What to watch for at Jeddah’s oil summt
- Jun-20
Editorial comment: Saudi oil dilemma
- Jun-18
Oil price recovers ahead of Jeddah summit
- Jun-20
West rethinks strategic threats
- Jun-20
At the conference, attended by Gordon Brown, the British prime minister, as well as energy ministers and chief executives from around the world, Saudi Arabia confirmed it would pump 9.7m barrels a day next month, an increase of 200,000 and the highest level in nearly 30 years, and repeated its standard offer of extra barrels if customers demanded them. The outcome of the hastily convened talks is likely to be seen as a disappointment because it yielded little more than had been expected from the world’s largest exporter in spite of global concerns that developing countries were cracking
under the burden of record oil and food prices. The kingdom reiterated its promise to expand production capacity, noting that it could add another 2.5m barrels of potential supply, to the 12.5m b/d it expects to achieve after an exhaustive investment programme. Ali Naimi, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, said in a speech: “This will enable us to maintain our spare capacity in the interest of global market stability – which is in everyone’s interest.” However, he spent much of the rest of the speech blaming speculators, high taxes and refining bottlenecks, a set of issues he said “has to be addressed primarily by parties other than oil producers”. Saudi Arabia’s spare capacity – production it keeps idle to be used in case of sudden shortages elsewhere around the world – is now estimated at 1.5m b/d, the lowest in a generation. As Saudi Arabia pumps more oil into the market, that cushion shrinks. The fear Saudi’s extra oil might not be enough is one element that drove oil prices to a record $139.89 last week - double what they were a year ago. Such fears are fuelled by – among other things – attacks by militant groups in Nigeria. For long Africa’s largest producer, the country recently fell to second place behind Angola, crippled by attacks such as those on fields run by Royal Dutch Shell and Chevron, which stopped production of 345,000 b/d. Consumers and producers came into the conference disagreeing about the main causes of high prices, with Opec countries insisting the market was well supplied and blaming market speculation and a lack of refining capacity. Consumers, led by the US, said the speculation was not a major cause but said low supplies and concerns about future production were the key factors. Sam Bodman, the US energy secretary, said on Saturday that market fundamentals “show us that production has not kept pace with growing demand for oil, resulting in increasing prices and increasingly volatile prices.” He said if there were no increase in crude supply then for every 1 per cent increase in demand he would expect a 20 per cent increase in price. However, he said, there was no evidence “that we can find that speculators are driving futures prices,” adding that inventories had been drawn down. Mr Brown, in his speech, suggested the UK would help Nigeria with its instability issues. But he also spoke about his new energy deal for Britain that would see consumers and producers move away from playing a “zero-sum game”. He called for greater market transparency, a boost in oil supply, an increase in alternatives, particularly nuclear power, and greater access for oil producers to invest in alternative energies overseas. Apparently seeking to move the UK more squarely onto the stage of international energy diplomacy, Mr Brown also called a follow-up meeting in London in October. The offer was treated with some scepticism, however, given the fact that he spent hardly any time in Jeddah, arriving a day after Sam Bodman, the US energy secretary. Mr Brown was scheduled to leave about six hours after he arrived. Jeroen van der Veer, the chief executive officer at Royal Dutch Shell, said there was no “silver bullet” solution to the price rise. “But if you are looking to do something for the long term you have to do something today,” he said. “Playing the blame game is pretty useless.” Shokri Ghanem, head of Libya’s national oil company, said publicly what many were only willing to say privately when he complained: “We are coming to discuss a very important subject, supposedly, and expected to get an important decision in three hours. That’s impossible.”
vince
注册时间2007-10-06
发表于:2008-06-22 16:44只看该作者
18楼
恐高撤退的投机资金有米有呀??
xxyy
注册时间2005-10-04
积极参与奖快乐投资奖
发表于:2008-06-22 18:31只看该作者
19楼
我决定在我家后院每年增加养两只鸡 不知对世界经济有什么影响? emoji-image emoji-image emoji-image
个性签名

怎么做都赚

vince
注册时间2007-10-06
发表于:2008-06-22 21:04只看该作者
20楼
你为世界鸡市场增加了2只鸡的供给,
  • 1
  • 2
前往
共 24 条

本站免责声明:

1、本站所有广告及宣传信息均与韬客无关,如需投资请依法自行决定是否投资、斟酌资金安全及交易亏损风险;

2、韬客是独立的、仅为投资者提供交流的平台,网友发布信息不代表韬客的观点与意思表示,所有因网友发布的信息而造成的任何法律后果、风险与责任,均与韬客无关;

3、金融交易存在极高法律风险,未必适合所有投资者,请不要轻信任何高额投资收益的诱导而贸然投资;投资保证金交易导致的损失可能超过您投入的资金和预期。请您考虑自身的投资经验及风险承担能力,进行合法、理性投资;

4、所有投资者的交易帐户应仅限本人使用,不应交由第三方操作,对于任何接受第三方喊单、操盘、理财等操作的投资和交易,由此导致的任何风险、亏损及责任由投资者个人自行承担;

5、韬客不隶属于任何券商平台,亦不受任何第三方控制,韬客不邀约客户投资任何保证金交易,不接触亦不涉及投资者的任何资金及账户信息,不代理任何交易操盘行为,不向客户推荐任何券商平台,亦不存在其他任何推荐行为。投资者应自行选择券商平台,券商平台的任何行为均与韬客无关。投资者注册及使用韬客即表示其接受和认可上述声明,并自行承担法律风险。

版权所有:韬客外汇论坛 www.talkfx.com 联络我们:[email protected]