Global General

Oil gains after Iran-Iraq oilfield row

(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-12-19 07:53
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NEW YORK: The U.S. dollar gained broadly on Friday on improved economic sentiment and a safe-haven bid after Iranian soldiers crossed into Iraq and took up positions in a disputed southern oilfield, which also lifted oil prices.

The euro fell below $1.43 for the first time since early September, flushing out short dollar trades, while the dollar rose for a fourth consecutive day against the Japanese.
   
The dollar's advance led investors to pare risky bets earlier in the session, but U.S. stocks ended higher and trimmed the U.S. currency's gains.
   
Oil rose above $73 a barrel after Iran's incursion into an Iraqi oilfield sparked tension between two major crude exporters.
   
A cold snap in the U.S. Northeast, the biggest heating oil market in the world, also helped support prices.
   
Dollar strength forced investors who had bet on further weakness in the greenback to cover their short positions by selling equities or other assets.
 
"A strengthening dollar ... means, in my opinion, a rotation into quality," said Haag Sherman, co-founder and chief investment officer for Salient Partners, a Houston-based investment firm with $8 billion in client assets.
   
Trading was choppy as Friday marked the expiration of December options and futures.
   
The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 20.63 points, or 0.20 percent, at 10,328.89. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index    was up 6.31 points, or 0.58 percent, at 1,102.39. The Nasdaq Composite Index  was up 31.64 points, or 1.45 percent, at 2,211.69.
   
The Nasdaq rose on upbeat results from Oracle and Research In Motion boosted optimism about technology spending.
   

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Oracle shares rose 6.4 percent, while RIM's Nasdaq-traded shares jumped 10.3 percent.
   
The dollar was up against a basket of major currencies, with the U.S. Dollar Index up 0.06 percent at 77.741.
   
The euro was down 0.03 percent at $1.434. Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.55 percent at 90.37.
   
"I think we're seeing a continued flight to safety," said Tom Schrader, managing director of U.S. equity trading at Stifel Nicolaus Capital Markets in Baltimore.
   
"The stronger the dollar gets it means investors will be unwinding the dollar carry trade and that's going to put upward pressure on the dollar and downward pressure on the stocks."
   
U.S. Treasury debt prices fell as profit-taking emerged after a safe-haven rally in bond markets on Thursday that was ignited by falling stocks and concerns about Greece's fiscal problems.
   
The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was down 16/32 in price to yield 3.54 percent.
   
At the end of the year investors are trying to position themselves for 2010, said Jerry Webman, chief economist at Oppenheimer Funds in New York.
   
"Everybody is trying to ask if there really is some of sort of synchronized global recovery, the answer to which I think is 'yes,' Webman said.
   
U.S. crude for January delivery -- which expires on Monday -- settled up 71 cents a barrel to $73.36. Barrels for February delivery, which were more heavily traded, settled up a modest 34 cents a barrel.
   
London Brent crude rose by 38 cents to $73.75 a barrel.
   
Signs of improvement in the U.S. economy have helped the dollar in recent days, as did the Federal Reserve's pledge this week to wind down most stimulus measures by February, lifting hopes of a more robust U.S. recovery in 2010.
   
The dollar and Swiss franc also attracted safe-haven flows due to Iran-Iraq tensions.
   
Traders said all these factors encouraged a bout of position squaring, with investors buying back the dollar and taking profits on trades that had helped push the U.S. currency down more than 15 percent between March and November.
   
"There's a winding down of activity into year end, with people taking profits on core trades," said Samarjit Shankar, managing director of global FX strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston. "But the dollar has been well-supported lately, and given the positive surprises in U.S. data lately, people are looking at the U.S. recovery story now as a glass half full."
   
Spot gold prices rose $14.15 to $1112.00 an ounce.
   
European shares closed lower, with banks falling as ongoing concerns about tough new Basel regulations weighed. The FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading European shares closed 0.5 percent lower at 1,013.15.
   
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks traded outside Japan, which has rallied more than 60 percent this year, was 0.5 percent lower. In Japan, the Nikkei share index dipped 0.2 percent, paring most of the day's losses.