An Iranian oil official predicted on Sunday that the price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude could rise to about $90 per barrel by December if the US dollar continued to lose value, Iran''s state broadcaster IRIB''s web site reported.
"If the value of the dollar continues to drop; the price of ... WTI ... will reach about $90 in three months," said Hojjatollah Ghanimifard, international affairs director of the state-owned Iranian Oil Company.
WTI crude slipped $1.22 on Friday to $81.66 per barrel as traders took profits from near record prices and as worries lingered about a slowdown in the US economy.
''WTI'' is a benchmark oil grade on the US market.
Ghanimifard said that recent crude price rises had no connection with crude oil supply. "The increase of crude price is not related to the amount of supply. The drop of the dollar''s value against the euro is one of the main reasons for the recent rise in the price of crude," he said. A Reuters poll of analysts showed tight oil supplies, red-hot global demand and a weakening dollar will boost average oil prices to a record level next year.
Analysts raised their average 2008 oil price forecast for US crude to $67 a barrel as many believe the current rally will continue well into 2008. The forecast surpasses the record average of $66.24, reached in 2006. Analysts believe prices will peak in 2008 with average US crude prices declining to $62.74 the following year and $59.41 in 2010.
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