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Traders
work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange early on September
9, 2004. U.S. stocks were little changed after cell phone maker
Nokia Corp. raised its earnings forecast and weekly jobless claims
fell more than Wall Street's forecast.
(Reuters) |
Oil prices rose on September 15th as Hurricane Ivan --
one of the fiercest storms on record -- churned toward the southeastern
United States, while the dollar struggled with worrying economic data.
Asian stock markets drifted after U.S. equity markets finished little
changed. Japan's Nikkei index slipped 0.29 percent by midday as technology
stocks IELEC, such as Hitachi, gave up recent gains.
World oil prices rose as energy companies shut
down refineries and offshore oil rigs
and evacuated thousands of workers from the path of
hurricane Ivan.
"The big concern is the potential for refinery flooding and other
damage that may have longer-term impact on production," said Ed Silliere,
a trader at Energy Merchant.
"If there is no long-term impact on refinery supplies, you may
see product prices coming back down again. Flooding could shut refineries
for a while and that could back up crude supply and prices may fall as a
result," he added.
U.S. light crude was 30 cents higher at $44.69 a barrel, restrained by
expectations Gulf OPEC oil ministers would propose raising the group's
formal output ceiling by 1 million barrels per day at a meeting in Vienna
later on Wednesday.
Spot gold was steady at $404.85 an ounce.
MSCI's index of non-Japan Asian share markets was little changed around
a four-and-a-half-month high by 10:20 p.m. EDT, but Singapore's Straits
Times Index edged higher to pierce 2,000 points for the first time since
February 2001.
Neptune Orient Lines, the world's seventh-largest shipper, was the most
active stock in Singapore ahead of the expiry of a $1.6 billion bid for
the company by state-owned investment agency Temasek The stock price was
unchanged.
Australian stocks briefly hit a new record high before easing a touch.
Share benchmarks rose 0.2 percent in South Korea, but fell 0.1 percent in
Taiwan and half a percent in Hong Kong.
The dollar drifted in a tight range after worrying U.S. economic data
failed to dent investors' expectations that the Federal Reserve would
raise interest rates at a measured pace.
The U.S. current account deficit ballooned to a record in the second
quarter and retail sales fell 0.3 percent in August, compared with
forecasts for a 0.1 percent decline.
The dollar bought around 109.69 yen unchanged from
late New York levels after a dip of 0.5 percent on Tuesday. The euro was
slightly lower around $1.2236
(Agencies) |