Oil prices fell in Asian trade Thursday on rising US crude stockpiles while traders were also disappointed by muted stimulus measures from the Federal Reserve, analysts said. New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for August delivery, shed $1.09 to $80.36 a barrel in the afternoon of its first trading day and Brent North Sea crude for delivery in August retreated 47 cents to $92.22. “The lack of fresh Fed stimulus, the downgrade to the US outlook and an unexpected rise in US inventories took their toll on the price,” IG Markets said in a report. The Fed on Wednesday announced that it was extending a programme designed to push down interest rates on long-term bonds, encouraging investors to move money into more neglected securities and lowering costs for borrowers. But traders had been hoping for a third round of asset purchases, or quantitative easing, to boost growth in the world’s largest oil consumer.
It is up to her to figure out what the bredoar context of her research is, who might benefit, what the benefit might be, and how to make that happen. But what if she can’t? Perhaps she’s simply not imaginative enough? And even if she does, what are the chances that this impact turns out to be real’. Aren’t you encouraging academics to take part in what is essentially an exercise in deception (deceiving themselves, the public and the funders?)
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