So oil prices are
down $10 a barrel over the last 2 days, and people are rejoicing. Sure, it’s a welcome break for some, but back on June 6 they were
up over $10 in one day, so I’m not holding my breath for a real turn around. It is pretty amazing how quickly people can jump on the bandwagon going the other way. In all fairness I suppose a lot of people, myself included are on the bandwagon going in the direction of rising prices.
The reason for the price reduction cited is that of larger than expected US crude supplies, but I imagine that the potential for progress on the Iran front also has something to do with it. Still, there is the potential for quick reversals. One news story of “Terrorists in country X destroy pipeline” or “Oil production breakdown reduces capacity in country Y” could quickly turn the tide.
I think this price drop is profit taking more than anything, and I’m still willing to say the sky is the limit for now on oil prices. It is still such a central component of the world’s economies, and even reducing the amount of driving we do, or the number of vacations we take, isn’t going to slow consumption in the developing world as much as it needs to in order to bring prices back to levels we might consider reasonable.
1 comment:
Look at what $10 gets you on a barrel of oil: roughly 8% price drop -- figure the factors you mentioned (i.e. Iran), a bit of profit taking (because some speculation is always going on), a bit of demand destruction (Americans are driving measurably less), and a bit of a recession in the biggest oil-consuming economy in the known universe. A simplistic analysis, I know, but a $10 drop in this case I think can be seen as a secular correction, and little else.
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