NEW YORK, June 6 (Reuters) - U.S. crude oil prices rose
more than $9 a barrel to a record $137.70 a barrel, the biggest
gain in dollar terms in the history of the market.
Dealers said the gains were due to weakness in the dollar,
tensions in the Middle East, and bullish forecasts from big
investment banks like Morgan Stanley -- which said Friday oil
could hit $150 a barrel by early July. []
ANALYST COMMENTS:
DAVID DIETZE, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST AT POINT VIEW
FINANCIAL SERVICES, SUMMIT, NEW JERSEY:
"The huge spike up in crude oil... is being seen more as a
force to weaken the economy and not a potential source of
inflation and that is why people are bidding up Treasuries,
notwithstanding the inflationary implications of a higher crude
oil price."
However, "fixed income players may become concerned about
the depreciating value of the currency and that is a negative
for the bond market and there might be a sell-off."
PETER BOOCKVAR, EQUITY STRATEGIST, MILLER TABAK & CO., NEW
YORK:
"Crude was up $5.50 yesterday and the stock market roared
on the upside. Today oil is up $8, and are we down because of
that? No. We're down because the payrolls number was not good.
Maybe the rise in crude is adding a little extra on the
downside. I think the payrolls number was poor and that's the
reason why we why we sold off today."
CHRIS JARVIS, SENIOR ANALYST, CAPROCK RISK MANAGEMENT, HAMPTON
FALLS, NEW HAMPSHIRE
"There is a whole plethora of things. Short-covering from
the dollar trade kicked it off. Then the $150 trade report
(from Morgan Stanley). Nobody is short this market. Everyone
is a buyer. The real fear is as the refineries start to come
online there will be a bigger draw in crude. The speculators
are taking advantage of the fundamentals."
MARK ZANDI, CHIEF ECONOMIST, MOODY'S ECONOMY.COM, WEST CHESTER,
PENNSYLVANIA:
"The surge is a direct reflection of the bad economics and
the weak dollar. Investors are not sure where to go so they are
piling into commodities especially oil.
This also exacerbates the problems in the economy. It's
very debilitating. It's making matters worse.
It also makes life very difficult for the Federal Reserve.
It cuts into growth and lifts inflation, making it hard for it
to meet their dual mandate.
Today's rise in oil could make gasoline go up to $4.50
gallon. That's another $50 billion tax increase, which is
another weight on an already struggling economy."
JIM RITTERBUSCH, PRESIDENT, RITTERBUSCH & ASSOCIATES, GALENA,
ILLINOIS:
"We've had a huge historic rally on little fundamental
input, other than the weakness of the dollar and the news this
morning out of Israel that seems to have pushed some
geopolitical risk premium back in the market.
"A lot of this looks technically motivated. When we reached
new record highs, we touched a lot of buy-stop activity.
"It's become somewhat of a self-feeding frenzy in the last
couple of days. People are buying because people are buying.
"There doesn't seem to be any discernible ceiling, it just
looks like it's going to push higher until we see evidence of
some broad-based demand deterioration or destruction."
(Reporting by Ellis Mnyandu, Janet McGurty, Rebekah Kebede,
John Parry)