Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
HK remains No. 1 overseas investor on Chinese mainland
Hyundai chief handed 3-year suspended sentence
Former liquor firm bosses face prosecution
China Eastern seals a deal with Singaporean airliner
WTO to rule on U.S., Mexcican allegations of Chinese subsidies
Chinese court awards US$25,500 in video piracy case
carve out  
China's auto output, sales both to hit record 9 mln units in 2007
China considers lowering threshold for investment in QDII products
China to restructure telecommunications industry
US, China tackle food safety issues
AmCham-China speaks highly of China's new anti-monopoly law
US toy giant recalls 27,000 Chinese art sets

Resources  
GE to launch 5 regional headquarters in China
Mill's revamp signals sector's restructuring may speed up
Coal, power firms ink supply deals
Energy demand may ease by 2018 in China
China's software industry jumps 30% in 1H
Property sales in China continue decline

 
Sliding oil price to benefit China economy 
BEIJING, Sept. 20 (Xinhua) -- Depressed by the global economic recession and Wall Street turmoil, the price of crude oil plummeted heavily this week. Market analysts said the drop would bolster China's economic development.

PRICE PLUNGE AMID ECONOMIC TURMOIL

The turmoil on Wall Street in the wake of the U.S. sub-prime crisis is far from conclusion. Global financial markets tumbled again after the historical "Black Monday" on Sept. 15 when the fourth biggest U.S. investment bank, Lehman Brothers, filed for bankruptcy. Adding to the woes,financial giant Merrill Lynch was taken over by Bank of America, while leading insurer AIG needed an85 billion U.S. dollar bailout from the U.S. government to keep afloat.

This was accompanied by a tumbling price for crude oil. Light, sweet crude for October delivery fell below the 100 U.S. dollars per barrel level to hit 95.71 U.S. dollars on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) on Sept. 15, a 35 percent drop from the record 147.27 U.S. dollars of July 11.

"An ebbing world economy and declining demand for crude oil has dragged down the price, while a stronger greenback and weaken speculation also led to the result," said Jiang Xinmin, an expert with the National Development and Reform Commission, the country¡¯s economic regulator.

"Speculators are prone to sell off oil if demand is expected to fall in the future. They will shift to speculate in some other commodities and financial products. This will further help a fading price," he explained.

Professor Dong Xiucheng of the Beijing-based China University of Petroleum said the world's big investment banks were the major speculators and participants in the futures markets. They had contributed much to the surging oil price.

"However, this wave of financial crisis is expected to play the role of an alarm bell, which will warn them to give up excessive and abnormal speculation in crude oil markets in future."

Jiang predicted the price would very likely stay bellow 100 U.S. dollars a barrel for a long period. "Crude prices will come back to reflect the world economic situation."







Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.