by Ming » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 10:36:21
Let's wait for the revisions.
Just check the evolution between the Jan 16 report and the new one (Feb 13):
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ighlights of the latest OMR
dated: 13 February 2008
Crude oil prices are little changed from mid-January at just over $90/bbl. Weaker projections for global economic growth are offset by low stocks, forecast cold weather in the US and parts of Asia, supply disruptions (Nigeria/North Sea) and concern about Venezuelan supplies. Products have underperformed crude, leading to weak refining margins.
Global oil product demand has been revised down by roughly 200 kb/d to 87.6 mb/d in 2008, following weaker GDP growth figures in an interim report by the IMF. Weaker OECD growth, however, stands against still-robust projections for GDP growth in China and the Middle East, the key oil demand growth centres.
January world oil supply rose 745 kb/d to 87.2 mb/d on new output from Brazil, and recovering non-OPEC output elsewhere. However, a reassessment of 2008 prospects lowers OPEC gas liquids growth by 250 kb/d to 365 kb/d. Rising FSU, Asia-Pacific, Brazil and biofuels supplies generate 2008 non-OPEC growth of 0.97 mb/d.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')6 January 2008
HIGHLIGHTS
• NYMEX light sweet crude futures breached $100/bbl in early January
and remain near record highs, lifted by falling stocks, cold weather and
tight fundamentals. Tensions in Nigeria and the Middle East and fund
positioning remain important supportive factors.
• OECD total oil industry stocks fell by 38.1 mb in November
(-123.8 mb year-on-year), extending the move below the five-year
average and lowering forward cover to 51 days. Preliminary December
data for the US, Japan and EU-16 show another 30.7 mb draw.
•
World oil supply averaged 87.0 mb/d in December, up 870 kb/d from
November on increases in OPEC-10, North America, the FSU, Brazil
and China. Global supply in 4Q was more than 1.0 mb/d higher than a
year earlier, having averaged at or below levels of a year ago in the
previous three quarters.