Sander Cohan News
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Gasoline stockpiles on the U.S. East Coast may sink to the lowest level since at least 1990 as Hurricane Sandy moves ashore, curtailing fuel production and distribution, based on Energy Department data.
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Heating oil and gasoline rose a second day on concern that Hurricane Sandy may disrupt East Coast production and imports, and as the U.S. economy expanded more than forecast in the third quarter.
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Gasoline sank to the lowest level in 10 weeks as declines in Europe’s services and manufacturing sectors highlighted the toll the sovereign debt crisis has wrought on the region’s economy.
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Spot gasoline in New York jumped to the highest level in almost four years as supplies tightened after Hurricane Isaac shut Gulf Coast refineries.
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The U.S. exported more gasoline, diesel and other fuels than it imported in 2011 for the first time since 1949, the Energy Department said.
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Ethanol futures fell for a fifth day on speculation that weaker gasoline demand will slow consumption of the biofuel.
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Gasoline declined, following crude lower, after a report that oil inventories rose the most in 20 months last week and on speculation Western nations may release oil from reserves to combat rising prices.
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Gasoline rose as the Energy Department reported that demand for the motor fuel surged last week to the highest level since August.
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Gasoline widened losses after the Energy Department reported that inventories jumped last week to the most since 1993 on lower demand and higher imports.
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Gasoline fluctuated after the Energy Department reported that stockpiles rose last week even as U.S. refiners reduced production.
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