![]() Commodity prices see sharp fallWert-Berater, Inc. is a provider of economic studies, feasibility studies, market studies, and more for global developers, manufacturers, and bankers. Reach us at 1-888-661-4449, and visit our website at www.wert-berater.com .
By: Wert-Berater Oil prices fell, with US light, sweet crude down 5.2% at $103.44 a barrel. US weekly jobless claims figures hit an eight-month high last week, while German industrial orders fell unexpectedly in March. There are also concerns about what will happen to the US economy when the latest round of quantitative easing, known as QE2, ends. "Crude oil is selling off sharply for two primary reasons: QE2 is coming to an end in June and without a QE3 behind it, it will take liquidity out of the market, hurting risky asset classes such as commodities," "With Osama Bin Laden dead, the market is adjusting the geopolitical risk premium down accordingly." Precious metals have also been hit, with silver falling another 7% and heading towards its biggest weekly fall since 1983. The price of silver has fallen by more than 20% from its record high near $50 an ounce last Thursday. Some of the sell-off is due to an unprecedented raising of trading costs by CME Group, which oversees much speculative trading in silver. The speculative sell-off in silver set off other commodities, according to Luis Rangel, vice-president for commodity derivatives at ICAP North America. "It was sort of the ring leader and it's started to spread like a contagion," he said. Sugar and cocoa were also among the fallers. Oil-related shares also fell, with oil companies leading the fallers in New York. In afternoon trading, Exxon Mobil and Chevron were down by 1.7% and 1.3% respectively. Source: BBC Online http://www.wert- # # # Wert-Berater, Inc. is a diversified global consulting firm. Our business is centered upon feasibility, highest and best use, and market studies in a broad range of sectors, including development, manufacturing, agriculture, finance, and energy. End
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