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Oil has wrong-footed even the most bullish analysts, having shot up an astonishing 85% over the past 12 months and 37% this year alone.
The rise has big implications for the economy and markets, so we answer your questions.
Why has the oil price gone up so much?
Demand is strong and supply is tight, but that’s only part of the story. Opec, the oil-producers’ cartel, has ruled out increases in production, while hedge-fund speculators have been blamed for pushing the price well beyond the laws of supply and demand.
Demand is certainly strong: the International Energy Agency estimates that global demand will rise to 86.8m barrels a day this year, up from 85.8m barrels last year, largely thanks to booming demand from industrialising nations such as India and China.
However, demand in North America fell about 3% in the first three months of the year. Growth in demand from China also slowed to about 3.7% in the year to April.
What’s more, 85% of global demand growth for oil over the next two years is from countries subsidising prices — China, India and the Middle East, according to Investec Asset Management.
However, the authorities are under considerable pressure to end the subsidies as the cost has just become too high.
All this suggests there should be downward pressure on oil prices, supporting the view that a large part of oil’s rise has been down to speculation.
Analyst Ed Morse at Lehman Brothers has warned that crude prices have developed into a bubble and he thinks the price could come back down to $80 next year.
His rival at Goldman Sachs, however, thinks crude could hit $200 over the next two years. As the investment bank behind the world’s biggest commodity index, however, it has a vested interest in talking prices up.
So what does this mean for my investments?
You probably have about a fifth of your portfolio in oil and mining stocks. Even if the price comes off, some analysts think oil firms have some way to go.
Robin Batchelor, manager of Blackrock’s World Energy fund, said: “Analysts continue to factor a long-term oil price of between $70-$80 into their valuations, whereas oil futures imply $125 until 2015. We can expect a strong re-rating of energy shares.”
It is probably too late to add additional exposure to energy to your portfolio, though.
What about the economy?
If oil continues at this level, consumers and companies will start to feel the pain through higher fuel costs. However, that will dampen demand and ultimately bring the price down.
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Don't worry, its just another bubble thats about to pop.
within a month crude oil will be $110, and lower still as the US recesion starts to bite.
The Market Oracle, sheffield,
Speculation is in the driving seat, armed with UK and US state funding that is loaned to the banks but not on to customers. We are paying taxes to drive up our own cost of living!! ahhh!
Shame on our goverments and central banks.
Inflation is the only medicine on offer from Za-New Labour.
Mike, Tauranga, New Zealand
The Fed, the BoE, the European Central Bank are all inflating their respective (Fiat) money supplies. This is an attempt to save the corrupt/greedy banking systems from the utter mess they have created, and are now suffering under.
Inflated money supplies = devalued currencies = HIGHER PRICES.
Guru, Harrogate, England
Speculators cited for high prices
From Herald News Services
Published: Friday, May 23, 2008
OPEC secretary general Abdalla el-Badri said speculators are playing an "important role" in the surge in oil prices to records and increasing production won't stem the surge.
Geopolitics and weakness in the U.S. dollar are also contributing to the rise in price, el-Badri said Thursday in a speech at Ecuador's Energy and Mines Ministry in Quito, as oil futures hit a record $135 US a barrel.
"There's an enormous amount of oil in the market," he said. "There's no shortage whatsoever."
karen, ny, usa