CNBC's "Breaking News mode" (Note: The screenshot comes from CNBC Asia, so the style of the top bug and the ticker are different from the package of CNBC US). This "Breaking News" graphic (from 2007) was used from 2006-2008. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
The supply of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel into the U.S. East Coast ground almost to a halt on Monday as Hurricane Sandy forced the closure of two-thirds of the region's refineries, its biggest pipeline, and most major ports, Reuters reported.
(Read More: What Will Sandy Mean for Gasoline and Heating Oil?)
"If you think of it from the end-users' standpoint, if they can't process it then they're going say, 'I'm going to store it and use it later,'" CME floor trader Tres Knippa of Kenai Capital Management told CNBC's 'Closing Bell' on Monday. "So if you don't have the end-users using it, that means there's more supply and, ergo, crude going down. However, as we move into the election I am not interested being short crude at these levels."
Brent December crude [LCOCV1 109.51 0.07 (+0.06%) ] dipped 11 cents to settle at $109.44 a barrel, having reached $110.26. Brent was on pace to post a more than 2 percent loss for the month, a second straight monthly loss.
U.S. December crude [CLCV1 85.22 -0.32 (-0.37%) ] fell 74 cents to settle at $85.54 a barrel. Monday's $84.66 intraday low was the lowest price since July. U.S. crude futures were on track to end October down more than 7 percent, after sliding more than 4 percent in September.
Still, at this juncture traders appear divided over the direction crude and product markets will take in the wake of the worst weather event to hit New York City since at least 1938.
November gasoline futures [RBCV1 2.7346 -0.0222 (-0.81%) ], which expire on Wednesday, rose 5.77 cents to settle at $2.7568 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Monday. The $2.8115 session high was the highest price since Oct. 17. U.S. November heating oil gained 1.74 cents to settle at $3.1152 a gallon, reaching its highest level relative to U.S. crude oil on record.
"With all these big closures of all these refiners on the East Coast, it's not a surprise that you're going to see crude a little bit lower and unleaded gasoline higher," Kenai Capital's Knippa said.
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