Oil prices touched a new record above $73 a barrel 
Friday amid concern about Iran's nuclear ambitions and declining U.S. gasoline 
stocks. 
Light, sweet crude for June delivery, which became the front-month contract 
Friday, opened in electronic trading at a high of $73.50 a barrel ¡ª setting a 
new intraday record for a front-month contract on the New York Mercantile 
Exchange. 
It later eased to $72.98 a barrel, down 71 cents from the contract's close 
Thursday, amid some profit-taking. 
On Thursday, Royal Dutch Shell PLC's announcement that its Mars platform will 
resume normal production by late June offered some relief to the markets 
Thursday. It is the largest oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico damaged by 
Hurricane Katrina, and accounts for about 5 percent of total Gulf of Mexico oil 
and natural gas production. 
It's "safe, domestic, in-our-own-backyard production we can count on," said 
John Kilduff, an analyst at Fimat USA. But he said traders will be watching next 
week's inventory reports closely. 
The June contract has been trading at these levels previously, touching a 
high of $74.50 a barrel on Thursday. 
"The pullback appears to be due to profit-taking, which is not surprising 
considering prices have really surged in the past few days," said Victor Shum, 
energy analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. "The decline will not be 
large because the Iranian issue is keeping a high floor under prices." 
The May contract, which expired Thursday, fell 22 cents to settle at $71.95 a 
barrel. It had traded as high as $72.49 the day before. 
"I'm inclined to think it's not reached a peak yet," said Tobin Gorey, 
commodity strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney. "We're 
still faced with a tight supply-demand equation against the backdrop of strong 
economic growth, and there's still more money to come into the market." 
"And traders are not relenting on their worries of Iran," Gorey said. 
On Thursday, Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela, one of the world's top oil 
producers, said oil prices would reach $100 a barrel should concern over Iran's 
nuclear weapons capability lead the United States to invade that Middle Eastern 
nation. 
The United States and Britain say that if Iran does not comply with the 
Security Council's April 28 deadline to stop uranium enrichment, they will seek 
a resolution that would make the demand compulsory. Iran has consistently 
resisted calls to abandon its enrichment program. 
Also, in Nigeria, the fifth-biggest source of U.S. oil imports, militants 
late Wednesday exploded a car bomb inside a military base, in their first major 
attack since February. This year, the group has been cutting more than 20 
percent of Nigeria's daily oil exports of 2.5 million barrels. 
Meanwhile, traders also fretted about the possibility of inadequate gasoline 
supply in the summer, after weekly U.S. government data showed a drop in 
domestic gasoline stocks. 
U.S. pump prices continue to rise. The average price for a gallon of unleaded 
regular gasoline rose to $2.825 a gallon, up more than 2 cents from Wednesday 
and more than 60 cents from a year ago, according to AAA's daily fuel gauge 
report. 
Gasoline inventories typically decrease this time of the year as refiners 
shut plants to perform maintenance ahead of the summer driving season. But there 
is additional worry about supplies this summer because of possible tight 
supplies of ethanol, which is increasingly needed as a clean-burning additive as 
refiners phase out use of methyl tertiary butyl ether, or MTBE. 
On Friday, gasoline futures fell 2.28 cents to $2.1920 a gallon, while 
heating oil prices lost 2.10 cents to $2.0326 a gallon. Natural gas slipped 12.4 
cents to $7.940 per 1,000 cubic feet.