![]()
MOST SHARED
- Sun to Set on Commodities Super-Cycle: Morgan Stanley
- Apple CEO: Ping Failed, TV Gaming Interesting
- Declines in Asian Bank, Property Stocks Yield Rich Dividends
- Asia’s Message to Europe: Bite the Bullet and Implement Reforms
- China's Sany Heavy to Raise $2 Billion in HK IPO
- Thaksin’s Return to Thailand Would Cause Conflict: Former Premier
- JPMorgan Implicated in Japan's Insider Trading Probe
- JPMorgan Dips into Cookie Jar to Offset "London Whale" Losses
- Home Prices Hit Lows, But 'We See Signs of Hope'
- Detroit: From Urban Blight to Tech Might
- ECB Rejects Madrid Plan to Boost Troubled Bankia
- Asia's Message to Europe: Bite the Austerity Bullet
- More Trump Birther Remarks Overshadow Romney
- Madrid in ‘Game of Chicken’ With European Union
- Sun to Set on Commodities Super-Cycle: Strategist
- Why I Fell Out of Love with My BlackBerry
- Crisis-Battered Greek Banks Set for Weak Quarter
- Detroit: From Urban Blight to Tech Might
- Spain to Go to Market to Fund Banks, Regions
- Apple CEO: Ping Failed, TV Gaming Interesting
- Why It’s Suddenly Exciting to Be a Yahoo Shareholder Again
- PB&J, Mac & Cheese Step Out From Kids-Fare Shadow
- Ackman: JCPenney Sales Have Hit 'Bottom'
- Goldman Investment Shines Light on Solar Power
- Facebook Options Soar on First Day
- Home Prices Hit Lows, But 'We See Signs of Hope'
- Auto Sales to Really Take Off This Summer?
- JPMorgan Debacle Points to Regulatory Incompetence, Corruption
Oil Logs Third Straight Yearly Gain, Ending at $98
Oil prices slipped Friday in choppy year-end trading but posted a third straight yearly gain, with Brent closing out 2011 up more than 13 percent and U.S. crude up more than 8 percent.
![]() |
Light holiday-week trading volumes allowed for sharp price moves and Iran's navy drill in the Strait of Hormuz, along with internal tensions in Iraq, Syria and Nigeria, helped limit losses even after U.S. government data showed crude oil and distillate stocks rose last week.
Brent crude closed 2011 at a record-high average above $107 a barrel, surpassing the previous annual peak of just below $100 reached in 2008. With the exception of 2008, oil prices have closed higher every year for the last decade.
Brent February crude futures [LCOCV1
Loading...
()
] settled at $107.38 a barrel on the final trading day of 2011, having swung from $106.62 to $108.25.
U.S. light, sweet crude futures [CLCV1
Loading...
()
] settled at $98.83 a barrel, after falling to $98.61, then recovering and seesawing.
U.S. crude trading volume was 66 percent below the 30-day average, with Brent turnover 59 percent under the 30-day average.
Brent's premium to its U.S. counterpart was little changed near $8.30 a barrel.
Expiring January U.S. gasoline and heating oil contracts added to the trading volatility.
Despite a mild start to the U.S. winter heating fuel season, broker said heating oil, the distillate benchmark, received support from the credit struggles of Europe's largest independent oil refiner Petroplus.
Petroplus is to close three of its five oil refineries because it has run out of money for crude supplies since bankers abruptly froze credit lines this week.
Chinese factory activity shrank again in December as demand at home and abroad slackened, the HSBC Purchasing Manager's Index showed. The survey is designed to preview the state of industry ahead of publication of official data.
Iran will fire long-range missiles during a naval drill in the Gulf on Saturday, a semi-official news agency reported. Iran has threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz if the West imposes sanctions on its oil exports.
The euro edged up against the dollar on Friday, after Spain announced a slew of measures to control its finances, but analysts expect the region's debt crisis to continue to pressure the single currency in 2012.
U.S. stocks edged lower as investors waited for next year to begin making large bets, with the S&P 500 on track for a slight gain for the year after returning to positive territory on Thursday.
- The economy is relatively resilient but there are some decisions that could hurt, says this analyst.
- To escape taxes or political uncertainty, millionaires and billionaires are migrating like never before.
- Some places are kinder than others when it comes to selling homes, as these cities seem to be.
- Here are the 15 publicly traded stocks, by value, that are the biggest holdings of Berkshire Hathaway.
- Some restaurants are taking kid favorites like peanut butter and jelly and turning them into adult fare.
- What we have here are the 10 richest counties in America, according to the average income.











