It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices plunged more than $2 to less than $70 a barrel on Thursday following news U.S. gasoline stocks had risen for the first time in two months.
U.S. light sweet crude was $2.23 a barrel lower at $70.05 a barrel by 1555 GMT, just off a session low of $69.85.
Brent futures fell $1.90 to $70.75.
Both contracts fell around $2 on Wednesday after U.S. inventory data signaled a 2.1 million barrel increase in gasoline stocks, soothing worries about inadequate supplies for the approaching U.S. driving season.
...
INFLATION-ADJUSTED HIGHS
Fears that sanctions or even military action could lead to the disruption of Iranian crude supplies pushed U.S. crude to a record of $75.35 in April.
So far there is little sign that high prices are having a major impact on the world economy or denting consumption, though they are near to the inflation-adjusted highs that coincided with a sharp reduction in demand growth during the 1980s.
"Crude oil prices are now less than $20/barrel from the monthly peak of $89/barrel reached in November 1979," Barclays Capital wrote in a daily report.
Wednesday's U.S. government data indicated a softening in U.S. gasoline demand.
today.reuters.com... eid=&cap=&sz=13