High crude oil prices could be here to stay
Strong global economy continues to strain limits of production capacity
![]() | Traders work in the crude oil futures pit of the New York Mercantile Exchange this week as oil prices hit a record high. |
Mary Altaffer / AP |
Futures contracts for light, sweet crude, available for delivery within a month, changed hands on the New York Mercantile Exchange for $75 a barrel, extending a run that has lifted prices significantly in the past month.
The sources of the upward price pressure are varied. For starters, the world's thirst for oil seems to be undiminished by rising prices. On the eve of President Hu Jintao’s U.S. visit, for example, China announced that its red hot economy had grown by more than 10 percent in the fourth quarter — stronger than expected. That’s more than twice as fast the U.S. economy, which is posting healthy economic gains of its own.
The world’s demand for more oil comes as supplies are more vulnerable than at any time in the past 30 years. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which has long provided global markets with a cushion of extra production capacity, is now pumping as fast as it can. Production facilities by OPEC producers Nigeria and Iraq are under attack by armed insurgents, raising the threat of supply interruptions. Growing tensions with Iran have raised fears that the 4.1 million barrels a day it produces could once again become a political weapon, much as it did when a cutoff of oil after the Iranian revolution of 1979 touched off a spike oil prices and long lines at American gasoline stations.
With multiple pinch points looming, even minor threats to the global oil supply chain can send prices surging.
“If somebody sneezes in any part of the world everybody catches cold.” said Fadel Gheit, an oil industry analyst at Oppenheimer and Co.
Ordinarily, higher commodity prices encourage development of new supplies to take advantage of greater profit potential. As oil prices have risen, so has investment in developing new supplies. But it takes years to bring new supply to market. Despite the billions invested worldwide in new production capacity, those new supplies haven’t come online fast enough to prevent the doubling in crude oil prices over the past two years.
And it remains to be seen whether additional investment will bring down long-term prices. With most of the world's potential new oil finds mapped and explored, discoveries of major new reserves of oil have been few and far between. Some analysts and oil industry veterans believe that most of the world’s cheap oil has already been found.
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Higher prices are also supposed to cut demand, and there are some early signs that may be happening. Sales of gas-guzzling SUVs and light trucks have fallen sharply in the U.S.
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“A 50-cent rise in gasoline still represents less than 1 percent of disposable income,” said Matthew DiFrisco, an analyst who follows the restaurant industry at Thomas Weisel Partners. "So it's roughly about $200 to the average American.”
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