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Oil: More Demand, Higher Prices
An expert says the market for oil is growing, while the power of the dollar will shrink.
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After the price of a barrel of oil hit a new high last week (almost $105), President Bush asked the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to increase production to drive prices down. Instead OPEC officials said they'd maintain current output levels, a move that could lead to prolonged economic sluggishness for the United States. The cartel's denial looked like political bickering between oil-rich countries—like Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Nigeria—and their biggest consumer: the United States, which cartel members blamed for economic mismanagement of the resource. But some analysts say that output may not be so easy to increase, even if the producers wanted to. NEWSWEEK's Daniel Stone spoke with J. Robinson West, chairman of global consulting firm PFC Energy, on where the global oil market might be headed. Excerpts:
How political is it for the cartel to reject America's request to raise oil production?
Frankly, this is not the first time that the U.S. has asked OPEC to move, and it's not the first time they've been rejected. So I don't think that's a big deal, and I would have been amazed if they had responded. The U.S. consumer and the president are very concerned. From the standpoint of the OPEC producers and the markets it's a very different situation, and some of these countries, notably Iran and Venezuela, need oil at very high prices in order to finance their economy.
But don't these countries have an incentive for the world's largest consumer to avoid a recession?
Well, first of all, there is enormous worldwide demand. And demand in the United States has remained very high. The politicians in the U.S. always make efforts to increase supply. They do next to nothing about demand. Secondly, demand is growing very rapidly in Asia and the Middle East, so you have got demand factors, some of which are beyond the control of American politicians, and others certainly beyond the control of OPEC officials.
Talking about Asia, what role will a rising consumer continent play in the global oil market?
They're transforming the market. There is analysis that shows a very high correlation between the per capita GDP and car ownership. Per capita GDP in China is still quite low, and car ownership is low. But as per capita income grows, car ownership will grow. This has happened in Korea, the Netherlands and Brazil. It happens everywhere, and as you move up that curve it's inevitable. If you believe the Chinese economy is going to grow—and I believe the Chinese economy must grow—then automobile demand and ownership must grow. If you look at Ratan Tata, a leading Indian tycoon and industrialist, he has introduced the Nano, a new [gas-powered] car that will cost $2,500. He'll bring the automobile to the general public. And if he does that, demand is going to go up.
Will the market be able to meet that demand?
There's very little spare capacity in the world. Most of it is in Saudi Arabia, and most of that is heavy oil. You also have places like Nigeria, where there's a risk built into the market. But another factor is driving the price of oil: a lot of traders are basically shorting the dollar. They believe the dollar is going to go down, so they're buying oil. And that has the effect of pushing the dollar down and pushing the price of oil up even more. Oil has become a financial instrument beyond just the energy markets.
The value of oil is constantly changing, lately reaching new highs with every fluctuation. Everyone wants to know how high could it go.
Well, there are a lot of people that believe that with a U.S. recession the price of oil would soften as the economy softens. But one of the things challenging that right now is this "financialization" of oil that's being used as a hedge against the dollar.
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