Which OPEC Members Are Breaking Even? Each OPEC member needs to - TopicsExpress



          

Which OPEC Members Are Breaking Even? Each OPEC member needs to sell oil at a certain price to balance its budget. But there is a wide gap between the prices at which different members break even. (คร่าว ๆ คือ ประเทศไหนในกลุ่มโอเปค ต้องการที่จะขายน้ำมันที่ราคาเท่าไรเพื่อให้ดุลบัญชีประเทศบาล้านซ์) - Libya$184.10 - Iran$130.70 - Algeria$130.50 - Nigeria$122.70 - Venezuela$117.50 - Saudi Arabia$106.00 - Iraq$100.60 - UAE$77.30 - Qatar$60.00 - Kuwait$54.00 - รัสเซีย 100$ (จากแหล่งข่าวอื่นนะคะ) The Russian ruble, closely linked to oil because energy accounts for a big portion of the country’s exports, slumped to a fresh record low of 53.90 to the dollar, more than 5% weaker on the day. Later, the currency picked up from its weakest levels, amid signs of moderate dollar sales by the central bank, according to traders. The slide in oil is “reinforcing the loss of investor confidence in the ruble,” which has also been beset by concerns over Western sanctions against Russia and the conflict in Ukraine. The Nigerian naira also fell to a fresh record low against the dollar. But other energy-linked currencies proved more resilient, with the Canadian dollar and Norwegian krone rising, having fallen sharply on Friday. ทอง ประเทศสวิส Gold prices were also volatile Monday. They initially dropped after Swiss voters rejected a proposal to increase the central bank’s gold holdings. The initiative would have forced the country’s central bank to hold one-fifth of its assets in gold. Gold fell by 1.7% to $1,155.20 a troy ounce in early European trade before recovering to $1,197.50 an ounce. ประเทศอินเดีย Helping offset the pressure on the precious metal after the Swiss vote, India lifted its trade restrictions on gold imports with immediate effect. Given the move by one of the top gold importers, analysts at Barclays said they “expect the floor for gold prices to firm”. ประเทศญี่ปุ่น Elsewhere, a downgrade of Japan’s credit rating by Moody’s Investors Service only briefly dented the performance of the yen, which quickly rebounded from a seven-year low against the dollar to rise 0.2%. Although a rating cut often hurts a country’s currency, the yen tends to rise in times of market stress because it is seen by investors as a safe haven. graphics.wsj/opec-break-even-prices/?mod=e2tw online.wsj/articles/oil-metals-weigh-on-european-markets-1417423146
Posted on: Wed, 03 Dec 2014 08:10:53 +0000

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