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Gasoline inventories give bulls a reason to charge

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It has been a strong day for oil following this morning's weekly inventory report from the Energy Information Administration. The EIA reported that gasoline inventories were unchanged last week, and this was all the bulls needed to come out and drive crude prices higher.

So far oil prices are trading up $1.07 to $66.42, just a few pennies shy of their intra-day high of $66.48. We have been watching gasoline inventories closely lately, as record high prices at the pump this year have been felt across the nation.

Yesterday, I wrote about a report out of the EIA about how gasoline prices had fallen a bit over the past couple of weeks, but that unless American refineries were able to keep up with soaring demand, we should be expecting higher prices to come back into the market. That scenario is still holding strong.

Refineries have been blamed this year for causing the record high prices we have seen at the pumps, and with another week of lackluster improvements in inventories, it looks like refineries are just not yet back up to the task. Analysts had been hoping to see a rise of roughly 2 million barrels of gasoline. This week's flat inventory results bring to an end a 5 week run of rising inventories and could be a bad omen for what we can expect to see at the pump over the next few weeks.

Michael Fowlkes has worked as a stock trader for seven years and spent the last two years working as an analyst for the online investment advisory service Investor'sObserver.
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Last updated: November 27, 2009: 01:07 AM

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