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Last Updated: 12:10am BST 16/09/2007
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With oil prices rising amid tricky economic conditions, Sylvia Pfeifer wonders how much higher it can go
Oil barons like to think they've seen everything, but last week the déjà vu was positively spooky. Ten years ago, ministers of Opec, the oil price cartel, congregated in the Indonesian capital of
It would prove to be a fateful decision. The Asian financial crisis was unfolding and fears of a recession eventually cut economic growth and reduced demand for oil. Prices went into a tailspin and in 1999 they crashed to just $10 a barrel.
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Memories of that November day in 1997 were rife when ministers met in
This time, Opec blinked. The group decided to boost production by a relatively small amount, an extra 500,000 barrels of oil a day, as of November. " We don't see sufficient evidence that there's a need [for an output hike]," was how Chakib Khelil, the Algerian energy minister, explained the decision. "We still have a meeting [in November] and an extra meeting in December where we could make the right decision and not the wrong decision - like what happened in
No one knows whether Opec has read the runes right this time but the market reacted as if nothing had happened: oil broke through the $80 mark on Thursday night.
Speaking in
Van der Veer has a point, but he would no doubt admit that the era of cheap oil has been over for some time. While the real price of oil is still shy of its all-time peak, it is getting closer to the levels seen in the 1980s. And now that the barrier of $80 has been breached, there is a growing belief that the day of $100 oil is not that far away.
"It's not difficult to put together a persuasive scenario where oil prices go slightly higher than $80 a barrel," says Kevin Norrish of Barclays Capital. According to Norrish, the market fundamentals are enough to support an oil price of close to $80 a barrel; inventories are low and Opec production has not been that high. In addition, there is always a seasonal rise in prices ahead of the winter in northern
Jeff Currie, head of commodity research at Goldman Sachs, describes it as "a cyclical bull market for oil". "There is a risk that the oil price will spike to $95 per barrel by the end of this year if the market remains in significant deficit," he adds.
But what is keeping people like Norrish and Currie bullish on the oil price is the longer-term supply-demand balance. Production growth is slowing within non-Opec countries.
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It is in Opec’s longer-term interest to ensure the world still relies on the black stuff to keep the wheels turning |
"There needs to be increased investment every year to stop the decline [in these regions]," says Lawrence Eagles, the head of market analysis at the International Energy Agency.
Battered by the low oil price 10 years ago, oil companies cut their spending on exploration and production. The result is that there isn't the capacity nor the manpower to step up production that quickly. All this "pushes up the cost of finding new barrels", says Eagles. As a result, companies are looking at alternative sources of oil - Shell is exploring the Canadian oil sands, while others like BP are drilling ever deeper in places like the
The lack of resources has also meant that some newer projects have not come onstream as quickly as they could have done.
"Some of the big projects were due to come onstream but the services sector has not had the capability to bring them online," points out Andrew Bartlett, head of oil and gas at Standard Chartered. Kashagan, the giant field in
Refining constraints are another factor that are likely to keep oil prices high. But perhaps the biggest driver is sheer demand for the black stuff. There has been a marked shift away from OECD countries to non-OECD countries.
Demand growth in
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Others, however, are more cautious. "Everyone is concerned at the impact the current volatility will have on the oil market," says the IEA's Eagles. "The downside risks to economic growth have increased."
So how worried should we be about the impact of a high oil price on the world economy? Currie of Goldman Sachs points out the recent rise in prices has had less of an impact precisely because it has been slower than in the 1970s. "This has not been a spike, as in the 1970s, but rather a slow and insidious rise in prices, so the impact on the economy has been far less," he says.
Another factor to remember is that
Nevertheless, if prices do hit $100, the effect is likely to be rather more dramatic. An analysis of the impact of the $100 barrel by Ernst & Young's Item Club predicts that GDP growth in 2009 would be 2 per cent - down from its current forecast of 2.4 per cent for that year if oil prices stay around $70 per barrel. CPI inflation would rise to 2.7 per cent in 2009, far higher than Item's current forecast of 1.9 per cent.
So far, it is just a forecast but the million-dollar question remains: will prices hit the $100 mark? Barcap's Norrish says he expects prices to stay around the $70-a-barrel level for the rest of the year but notes that "the risk is that it will be higher than that". The bank's forecast for 2015 is for prices to reach a very precise $93 a barrel. The simple answer is that nobody really knows.
The one thing worth remembering is that it is in Opec's longer-term interest to ensure the world still relies on the black stuff to keep the wheels turning.
Dr Rilwanu Lukman, a former general secretary of Opec who was at that meeting in
It would prove to be a fateful decision. The Asian financial crisis was only just beginning and fears of a recession eventually cut economic growth and reduced demand for oil. Prices went into a tailspin and in 1999 they crashed to just $10 a barrel. Opec's power was under threat.
Memories of that November day were rife when ministers met in
This time, Opec blinked. The group decided to boost production by a relatively small amount, an extra 500,000 barrels of oil a day, as of November.
"Right now we don't see sufficient evidence that there's a need [for an output hike]," was how Chakib Khelil, the Algerian energy minister, explained the decision to the world's press.
"We still have a meeting [in November] and an extra meeting in December where we could make the right decision and not the wrong decision - like what happened in Jakarta before where we had the same situation and we made the wrong decision," he added.
No one knows whether Opec has read the runes right this time but the market reacted as if nothing had happened: oil shot broke through the $80 mark on Thursday night in
Speaking in
Van der Veer has a point, but he would no doubt admit that the era of cheap oil has been over for some time. While the real price of oil is still shy of its all-time peak, it is getting closer to the levels seen in the 1980s. And now that the psychological barrier of $80 has been breached, there is a growing belief that the day of $100 oil is not that far away.
"It's not difficult to put together a persuasive scenario where oil prices go slightly higher than $80 a barrel," says Kevin Norrish, head of commodities research at Barcap.
According to Norrish, the market fundamentals are enough to support an oil price of close to $80 a barrel; inventories are low and Opec production has not been that high. In addition, there is always a seasonal rise in prices ahead of the winter in northern
It would not take too much - a particularly severe hurricane in
Jeff Currie, the head of commodity research at Goldman Sachs, describes it as "a cyclical bull market for oil". "There is a risk that the oil price will spike to $95 per barrel by the end of this year if the market remains in significant deficit," he adds.
But what is keeping people like Norrish and Currie bullish on the oil price is the longer-term supply-demand balance. Production growth is slowing within non-Opec countries, in particular in older oil provinces such as
"There needs to be increased investment every year to stop the decline [in these regions]," says Lawrence Eagles, the head of market analysis at the International Energy Agency.
Battered by the low oil price 10 years ago, oil companies cut their spending on exploration and production. The result is that even though many are now flush with cash thanks to the high crude price, there isn't the capacity nor the manpower to step up production that quickly. All this "pushes up the cost of finding new barrels," says Segal.
As a result, companies are looking at alternative sources of oil - Shell is exploring the Canadian oil sands, while others like BP are drilling ever deeper in places like the
The lack of resources has also meant that some newer projects have not come onstream as quickly as they could have done.
"Some of the big projects were due to come onstream but the services sector has not had the capability to bring them online," points out Andrew Bartlett, head of oil and gas at Standard Chartered. Kashagan, the giant field in
Refining constraints are another factor that are likely to keep oil prices high. But perhaps the biggest driver is sheer demand for the black stuff. There has been a marked shift away from OECD countries to non-OECD countries.
Demand growth in
Others, however, are more cautious. "Everyone is concerned at the impact the current volatility will have on the oil market," says the IEA's Segal. "The downside risks to economic growth have increased."
So how worried should we be worried about the impact of high price on the world economy? Currie of Goldman Sachs' points out the recent rise in prices has had less of an impact precisely because it has been slower than in the 1970s. "This has not been a spike, as in the 1970s, but rather a slow and insidious rise in prices, so the impact on the economy has been far less," he says.
"Price inflation is more important than that price level in determining the impact on the economy. When Hurricane Katrina hit [the
Another factor to remember is that
Nevertheless, if prices do hit the $100 mark, the impact is likely to be rather more dramatic. An analysis of the impact of the $100 barrel by Ernst & Young's Item Club predicts that GDP growth in 2009 would be 2 per cent - down from its current forecast of 2.4 per cent for that year if oil prices stay around $70 per barrel. CPI inflation, meanwhile, would rise to 2.7 per cent in 2009, far higher than Item's current forecast of 1.9 per cent.
So far, it is just a forecast but the million dollar question remains: will prices hit the $100 mark? Barcap's Norrish says he expects prices to stay around the $70-a-barrel level for the rest of the year but notes that "the risk is that it will be higher than that". The bank's forecast for 2015 is for prices to reach a very precise $93 a barrel. The simple answer is that nobody really knows.
Ultimately, it bears remembering that it is in Opec's interest to ensure the world still relies on the black stuff to keep the wheels turning. Dr Rilwanu Lukman, a former general secretary of Opec, says: "In the longer term it is only Opec member countries that have the capability to provide enough supply.
"Opec does not set out to influence the market. It tries to balance the market so that neither the consumers nor the producers suffer. Nobody wants prices to go up unduly. We have learnt from the past that when prices go up, alternative sources of energy become more viable, so you have to be careful."