Crude oil prices are just 71 cents shy of the psychologically important $100 per barrel as a continuously weakening dollar has led to increased buying of the greenback-denominated commodity. |
The buying frenzy has led to increased demand, which has fuelled crude oil price rally to $99.29 per barrel on Wednesday from below $50 in February this year. |
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"The sharp rise in crude oil prices is from the demand side unlike the supply side spike in April 1980, when supply side constraints existed in West Asia," said a Mumbai-based analyst. |
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After touching the record $99.29 per barrel on Wednesday, the price of US light crude oil fell to $97.78. "It's almost like its own momentum will take the prices to $100 per barrel and only then will prices cool," said another Delhi-based analyst. |
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In line with global crude oil prices, the Indian crude oil basket also rose to $89.89 per barrel on Tuesday, the latest day for which data is available. It is, however, still lower than the all-time high of $91.12 per barrel it hit on November 7 this year. |
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The soaring prices of the Indian crude oil basket, which comprises Oman-Dubai sour (high sulphur) grade crude oil and Brent dated sweet (low sulphur) crude oil in 59.8:40.2 ratio, has forced Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to constitute a group of ministers (GoM) to look into the issue of prices of automobile fuels. |
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The GoM, which has not yet been constituted, will report to the Union Cabinet with its recommendations soon. |
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