Energy

The Theory The Low Demand Will Moderate Oil Prices Dies

oilThe theory that the recession would mitigate the price of oil had all the trappings of being true. Consumption in the US, UK, EU, and Japan happen to be down substantially. Industrial production has been dropping at a near-record pace. Consumer spending, especially on gas, has dropped. Fewer people are driving and those who are driving drive fewer miles.

China may be recovering from a slow period in its economy, but that recovery appears to be moderate and certainly not powerful enough to drive up crude prices around the world.

The alternative theories about oil prices are based on the fact that reserves in large producing nations including Russia, Norway, and China dropped last year, at least based on data from BP (BP). When oil prices were below $40, a number of nations cut back exploration and production. Large refiners like Exxon Mobil (XOM) cut capacity. The supply side partially collapsed.

Kuwait’s oil minister recently warned that prices could move back up quickly. He is dismayed by that, ironically, because he believes that higher crude will mean a prolonged global recession. Almost no one would disagree with him.

The price of a barrel of oil drove above $71 today, the first time it has hit that level since the beginning of the year. There are concerns that US crude inventories are down. That is simply a guess on the part of traders and analysts, but oil price speculation runs on guesses which may be one of the reasons that crude trading is so volatile.

The psychology behind the buying and selling of oil futures has swung to the fear that crude will keep going higher and only suckers will miss out on that trend. Just a few months ago, no one could be sold on the idea that oil prices would rebound this year or next.

Buying has reached a panic stage, a greed for gain and a fear of loss. That kind of mentality could easily push oil back to $100.

Douglas A. McIntrye

Are You Ahead, or Behind on Retirement?

If you’re one of the over 4 Million Americans set to retire this year, you may want to pay attention. Many people have worked their whole lives preparing to retire without ever knowing the answer to the most important question: am I ahead, or behind on my goals?

Don’t make the same mistake. It’s an easy question to answer. A quick conversation with a financial advisor can help you unpack your savings, spending, and goals for your money. With Zoe Financial’s free matching tool, you can connect with trusted financial advisors in minutes. 

Why wait? Click here to get started today!

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.