Crude Oil Futures Tumble

03/09/07 - 05:09 PM EST

Chuck Marvin

Updated from 1:04 p.m. EST

Energy futures fell on Friday at the New York Mercantile Exchange as an anticipated easing in gasoline prices lured crude lower.

The April contract for light sweet crude oil closed the session 2.6% lower at $60.04 a barrel. Crude prices ended the week even. Reformulated gasoline was down 3 cents at $1.90 a gallon, and heating oil slipped 5 cents to $1.71 a gallon.

The near-term contract for natural gas fell 16 cents to $7.08 per million British thermal units.

Crude oil and gasoline futures fell despite figures released this week showing a tightening of inventories. News about rising violence in the Nigerian Delta and a sabotaged pipeline in the region also failed to support crude prices.

According to Max Pyziur, energy analyst at CPM Group in New York, energy futures markets and recent inventory numbers reported by the Energy Information Administration are sending mixed signals to traders.

Spreads between near-month futures contracts and contracts that are further out, known as calendar spreads, can indicate how market participants view the direction commodity futures will move, says Pyziur. Larger spreads account for unknown future risks that could affect markets. Narrow spreads suggest that markets in the near term will be tight, possibly because of risks to supplies of commodities.

"In early March, the calendar spread curve for gasoline was flat, which indicated that traders were anticipating a near-term tightening of gasoline supplies," Pyziur says. "The curve is beginning to normalize, suggesting that worries of tight supplies in the short term are easing. This sentiment is moving up the supply chain and lowering crude prices today," he said.

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