Oil jumped $4 to record highs over $120 a barrel on Monday on the weaker U.S. dollar and supply concerns from OPEC members
"People are piling back up on crude oil due to the weakness of the dollar and production issues in
U.S. government data released Friday that showed U.S. payrolls fell by 20,000 jobs in March, a quarter of the losses expected, helping to counter concerns that the weaker U.S. economy could drag down oil demand.
The dollar fell broadly on Monday, however, as forex investors decided the world's biggest economy was still struggling. A Monday report from the Institute for Supply Management that showed the
Further support for oil came from Iran's announcement on Monday it would not consider any incentives offered by world powers that would constrain its right to nuclear technology.
The comments come just three days after major powers said they would make a new offer to convince the Islamic republic to halt its nuclear plans, a process which the West believes
Crude has continued to surge since then, extending a six-year rally that has sent prices on a wave of investment by speculators seeking to hedge against inflation and the weak dollar.
U.S. President George W. Bush, who has called upon oil cartel OPEC to increase output to help bring down prices, is expected to talk with officials from
OPEC officials have rejected consumer nation's call to ramp up production and blame speculators for surging oil prices.
Additional supply worries came from
Renewed clashes between
A Reuters poll of analysts forecast a weekly U.S. government report on inventories due out on Wednesday will show a 1.8-million-barrel build in crude stocks, a 1.1-million-barrel increase in distillate inventories, and a 100,000-barrel fall in gasoline stocks.
An employee of Pakistani private gasoline station changes the price on a board in