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Beiträge: 36
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baanbruch:

Bitte give me WPKN / 999510 klappt nicht !

 
23.12.02 23:09
verdi, ich möchte gerne die Entwicklung selber im Chart
verfolgen können. Im Chart von Deinem 1. Posting kann
man mit der Lupe eine 6-stellige "WKN"-Nummer entziffern.
Ich lese 999510 und dachte, das wäre eine deutsche WPKN.
Aber weder comdirect noch Onvista kennen diese Nummer.
Wenn ich so eine Geheim-Info erhielte, könnte ich auch
noch mal bei Onvista suchen, ob es nicht auf den Ami-Future
einen Put gibt, statt nur die von SocGen auf Brent.
667302 (Brent 27) hatte heute übrigens erstmals zarte Umsätze
an der Euwax.

Für jede Hilfe bin ich dankbar.
Antworten
verdi:

Lieber baanbruch,ich kann Dir leider nicht

 
24.12.02 01:28
weiterhelfen!
Der Thread sollte eigentlich nur zum Registrieren da sein,nicht zum diskutieren!;-)

Ich hatte noch nie die Absicht,mit Öl-Futures zu handeln!
Ich sehe den Ölpreis nur als einen mächtigen Indikator für steigende oder fallende Märkte.Wer nicht!!;-)
Und im Moment haben die Aktienmärkte noch nicht den gestiegenen Ölpreis antizipiert!
Wenn es nur um "Venezuela" geht,vielleicht zurecht!!

Tut mir leid!!

Gruss verdi

PS:Wenn Du meinst,an dem Future was verdienen zu müssen,frage doch Reinyboy.Der hilft Dir bestimmt!;-)
Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 26(24).12. : 32,49$ (+ 0,74)

 
27.12.02 13:31
Crude Oil Rises on Skepticism Venezuela Can Restore Exports
By Mark Shenk

New York, Dec. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose to a two-year high on speculation that the government of Venezuela, the fourth- biggest supplier to the U.S., will be unable fulfill a pledge to boost exports that have been limited by a strike.
Exports from Venezuela will return to normal next month, Petroleos de Venezuela SA President Ali Rodriguez has said. Analysts and traders are skeptical that normal shipments can be restored before the strike ends. Oil prices have climbed 19 percent since the walkout began on Dec. 2
``Every day that passes we miss another 2.5 million to 3 million barrels of oil.'' said Andrew Lebow, an energy broker with Man Financial Inc. in New York. ``The strike continues and there's no resolution in sight.''
Crude oil for February delivery rose 52 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $32.49 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest closing price since Nov. 30, 2000. Prices were up 53 percent from a year ago.
The International Petroleum Exchange in London was closed today for the Boxing Day holiday.
``Even if they started tomorrow, it would be difficult to get all the fields and refineries operating by March,'' said Antonio Szabo, president of Houston-based energy research company Stone Bond Corp. ``There are very specific procedures to starting up an oil field or refinery. There are safety and equipment considerations. There are very complex processes.''
Tanker Shipments
Before the walkout, Venezuela pumped 3 million barrels a day of crude oil and exported 2.4 million barrels. Venezuela was loading between 12 and 14 tankers a day before the strike.

``I would say, in the month of January, we will have completely normalized the flow,'' Rodriguez said, the New York Times reported yesterday. ``I'm talking about the exports of crude. It will take time to restart the wells and to equip the plants.''
The country yesterday moved a seventh shipment of oil overseas since the strike began. The oil tanker Owe Venture left the port of Maracaibo, said Alexandro Rivero, a port authority spokesman. The tanker was carrying 400,000 barrels of crude oil for Chile, El Universal newspaper reported.
As many as 20 other tankers owned by international oil companies are anchored off Puerto la Cruz, refusing to go to loading docks because of insurance concerns, said Antonio Valladares, manager of the Puerto la Cruz shipping terminal.
Strikers are demanding that Chavez, who was elected to a six- year term in 2000, resign or call early elections. They say he has violated private property rights, undermined press freedoms and driven the economy into recession. Chavez has said he would consider calling a vote on his presidency next August.
Strike Negotiations
Talks between the government and opposition leaders were set to resume today for the first time in three days under the mediation of the Organization of American States. Opposition leaders have called for protest marches to continue this week throughout the country.
Gasoline and heating oil futures rose on concern that the strike will make it difficult for refiners to get enough crude oil to operate normally, analysts said.
Gasoline for January delivery rose 0.2 cent, or 0.2 percent, to 92.97 cents a gallon on the New York exchange, the highest closing price since June 1, 2001. Prices were up 55 percent from a year ago.
Heating oil for January delivery rose 0.42 cent, or 0.5 percent, to 90.91 cents a gallon, the highest closing price since Dec. 27, 2000. Prices were 53 percent higher than a year ago.
Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 27.12. : 32,72$ (+ 0,23) o. T.

 
30.12.02 12:10
Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 30.12. : 31,37$ (- 1,35)

 
31.12.02 12:41
Crude Oil Falls as OPEC Signals It May Raise Output Next Month

By Stuart Wallace


London, Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil declined from close to a two-year high in London after OPEC members signaled they may raise output in January and as Venezuela said its oil industry should be operating normally within a month.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which pumps a third of the world's oil, will raise output in January under an informal agreement, an unidentified OPEC delegate from the Persian Gulf said yesterday. That echoed comments made by oil ministers from Saudi Arabia and Libya last week in Cairo.

The higher ``price attracts volume and therefore the market is going to come under a little bit of pressure again,'' said Robert Laughlin, a director at GNI Ltd. in London.

Crude oil for February settlement fell as much as 66 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $29 a barrel on the International Petroleum Exchange in London. It was 37 cents lower as of 10:04 a.m. Crude oil fell 1.7 percent yesterday, its biggest decline since Dec. 4. The IPE closes at 12:30 p.m. today.

Brent, the benchmark for two-thirds of the world's oil, has risen 47 percent this year. In part, that was prompted by concerns about a possible U.S.-led attack on Iraq, OPEC's fourth-biggest producer. United Nations arms inspectors yesterday began their second month of visits to suspected weapons sites in Iraq.

Oil pared its earlier losses as traders said they doubted Venezuela would be able to boost its strike-hit production as quickly as it said.

``I don't believe Venezuela at all,'' Laughlin said. ``I don't know what has changed there so that they're suddenly going to be able to ramp up their production. Until the Venezuelan strike stops, this market will remain firm.''

Rising Production

One OPEC delegate from a Persian Gulf nation yesterday said the group will boost production only after its benchmark oil price holds above $28 a barrel for 20 trading days. OPEC hasn't given new figures since Dec. 20.

OPEC's 10 members with production quotas, excluding Iraq, pumped about 24.38 million barrels a day on average last month, above the group's target of 21.701 million, according to Bloomberg estimates.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is replacing oil workers who joined a 29-day national strike. Energy and Mines Minister Rafael Ramirez said production will double by next week to 1.2 million barrels of oil a day, or 40 percent of pre-strike levels. Some analysts said the government can't meet its timetable or production targets.

The strike has cut production in the world's fifth-biggest oil supplier to about 11 percent of pre-strike levels and helped push oil prices to two-year highs. Venezuela was producing 3 million barrels a day before the strike began Dec. 2, and exporting about 2.4 million barrels a day. The work stoppage has caused $2 billion in losses for the state oil company, Ramirez said.

While Ramirez said output is now between 600,000 and 700,000 barrels a day, strikers estimate production at 150,000 barrels.

In the U.S., crude oil for February delivery was 25 cents higher at $31.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The exchange was open after the IPE closed in London yesterday.


Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 31.12. : 31,20$ (- 0,17) o. T.

 
02.01.03 13:44
Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 02.01. : 31,85$ (+ 0,65)

 
03.01.03 12:21
Hier eine aktuelle Zusammenfassung vom Ölmarkt:

Brent Crude Oil Rises on Venezuela Supply Disruption, Iraq
By Stephen Voss


London, Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose as traders doubted Venezuela will soon recover from a monthlong strike, further depleting inventories in the U.S. that are approaching a 26-year low.

President Hugo Chavez yesterday said the country, the world's fifth-biggest exporter of crude, will have oil production back to 3 million barrels a day in 45 days as an opposition-led strike in Venezuela ran into its fifth week. Output is now 172,000 barrels a day, strikers have said.

``It's a little bit unrealistic,'' said Jon Therkleson, an oil and gas specialist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney. ``Already there's a bit of skepticism about some of the claims that are coming out about the current level of production.''

Brent crude oil for February delivery was 21 cents, or 0.7 percent, higher at $29.64 a barrel in electronic trading at 8:50 a.m. London time on the International Petroleum Exchange. Prices earlier reached $29.67, the highest since Dec. 30.

In the U.S., crude oil for February delivery was up 24 cents at $32.09 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. New York oil futures rose more than $11 a barrel in 2002 and have added almost $1 two trading days into the New Year.

Striking Venezuelan oil workers said the country's crude production is only a quarter of that stated by Chavez and far short of levels before the nationwide strike began on Dec. 2. Strikers are demanding Chavez step down or call elections.

Output is now 172,000 barrels a day, Horacio Medina, president of the union of management workers, Unapetrol, told reporters last night. Chavez said earlier the output by state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA was 800,000 barrels a day as the country's nationwide strike entered its 32nd day.

``Petroleos de Venezuela isn't producing 600,000 barrels a day,'' Medina said. ``Refineries haven't been restarted, and gasoline production isn't normal.''

Iraq

Oil prices also are bolstered by tensions between Iraq, OPEC's fourth-biggest producer, and the U.S.

United Nations inspectors have been in Iraq since Nov. 27 checking on its weapons program. They will report to the Security Council at the end of this month.

The U.S. will ask the UN Security Council to authorize military action if inspectors report Iraq has failed to disarm. The U.S. has about 35,000 troops near Iraq. The Pentagon earlier this week ordered the 3rd Infantry Division, including about 20,000 troops, tanks, helicopters and rocket launchers, to the Persian Gulf.

U.S. President George W. Bush yesterday said Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's ``day of reckoning is coming.''

Venezuelan Appeal

Yesterday, Venezuela's Chavez appealed to Brazil and other Latin American countries for help in replacing oil workers. Chavez said he requested technical help from Petroleo Brasileiro SA, Brazil's state oil company.

``We are going to overcome this situation, sooner rather than later,'' Chavez told reporters at a press conference. ``We have asked several countries, including Brazil, for help. Mexico and Ecuador have already sent people.''

Petrobras declined to comment on possible aid to Venezuela.

The disruption in oil production from Venezuela, which was the fourth-biggest supplier to the U.S., drove last week's U.S. crude oil inventories down by 9.1 million barrels, or 3.2 percent to 277.5 million barrels, the American Petroleum Institute reported Dec. 31.

The decline left supplies just 4.2 million barrels above a 26- year low reached in October. The drop was three times larger than analysts in a Bloomberg survey expected. The API will next report inventories on Jan. 7 for the week ending Jan 3.

Venezuela exported 2.4 million barrels a day before the strike, half to the U.S., where Venezuelan crude made up 9 percent of consumption. Venezuela was the third-biggest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in November.

Venezuelan strike organizers are planning to march today on the military base where the government is holding a dissident general, two days after a Caracas court ordered his release. Police arrested National Guard General Carlos Alfonzo Martinez earlier this week after he led a protest against Chavez.

Supplies

The U.S. Energy Department yesterday also reported a 9.1 million barrel drop in inventories for last week.

OPEC ministers, including Saudi Arabia's, have said they may raise output later this month to counter rising prices. OPEC will boost production only after its benchmark oil price holds above $28 a barrel for 20 trading days. The OPEC benchmark price was at $29.85 on Tuesday, its 11th day above the target.

The producer group pumps a third of the world's oil and restrains supply to support prices. Under a plan agreed to on Dec. 12, OPEC starting this month aims to lower production by as much as 1.7 million barrels a day to 23 million, to bolster prices after the Northern Hemisphere winter.

``I can't imagine that anyone in OPEC has cut production,'' said Adam Sieminski, an oil strategist at Deutsche Bank AG. ``OPEC production decisions depend on how long Venezuela stays out of the market and that situation is fluid.''


Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 03.01. : 33,08$ (+ 1,23)

 
06.01.03 12:39
Aktueller Kommentar und aktueller Brent crude oil Preis

Crude Oil Falls After OPEC Ministers Eased Concern of Shortages
By Thomas Tugendhat


London, Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell from a two-year high after Saudi Arabia and Russia, the top two largest crude oil exporters, agreed to cooperate in an effort to lower prices and prevent any supply shortages.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' benchmark index rose to $30.83 on Friday, the 13th day above its $28 a barrel target. The group has an informal agreement to boost production to if the price stays above the target price for more than 20 consecutive trading days.

``There are seven working days to go'' before the OPEC agreement is due to take effect, said Orrin Middleton, an energy analyst at Barclays Capital. ``Comments this weekend have eased nerves a bit.''

Brent crude oil for February settlement fell as much as 32 cents, or 1 percent, to $30.45 a barrel on the International Petroleum Exchange in London. Prices were down 29 cents at 10:18 a.m. Brent, the benchmark for two-thirds of the world's oil, has risen 38 percent in the past year.


Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future vom 06.01. : 32,10$ (- 0,98) o. T.

 
07.01.03 13:33
Antworten
verdi:

Oil-Future(Nymex) vom 07.01. : 31,08$ (- 1,02) o. T.

 
08.01.03 14:37
Antworten
jack303:

weiter gehts

 
29.01.03 15:49
uf wiedrluagn jack

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