HomeBack to Home
Search
advanced
AustraliaFranceGermanySouth AfricaUSAThe Daily Reckoning is global
Our newsletter pulls you inside a world of insightful, humorous and contrarian investment advice straight from our global network of experts.

Higher Gulf Consumption Underpins Oil

Garry White - Mon 07 Apr, 2008

Excess oil supply capacity from Gulf countries is vanishing as their own consumption increases

Why has the oil price stayed above $100, when all other commodity classes have shown larger falls?

The gold price has fallen significantly more than the oil price as the dollar gained ground in recent days. There appears to have been a decoupling of the dollar-oil movements that we saw through March. To me, this implies that gains in the oil price are not based on monetary reasons alone (i.e. a falling dollar)… it implies something more fundamental is going on.

A US energy economist has a neat explanation as to why this is happening – and it fits exactly with my view of the world. It’s all about population growth leading to energy shortages – and he believes it’s hitting oil-producing nations hard.

Writing in the Financial Times, Ohio Northern University Energy Economist AF Alhajji, said that Opec’s vanishing excess capacity was now keeping the oil price above $100. He argued that Gulf States’ power crises were now a primary driver of the oil price.

Alhajji argued that when considering total oil stocks, you must include inventories in industrial nations PLUS excess capacity in producer states. We all seem to focus on US oil inventories – but we should be looking at capacity in producing nations too.

Despite rising inventories; vanishing capacity in Gulf nations makes total global oil stocks so small that this has been the main driver keeping the oil price above $100, he argued.

So, based on this analysis, when we are considering global oil stocks, oil EXPORTS from these countries are the most important factor – NOT total oil production.

Rising living standards, soaring populations and urbanisation is increasing demand in oil-rich nations. They are using their own oil to supply their soaring energy needs. This would also explain why Opec has been reluctant to increase production… it simply can’t because of its own power shortages.

In March, the Middle East Economic Digest warned of an imminent power and water crisis across the Gulf. It said there was a serious supply and demand imbalance caused by a lack of infrastructure investment earlier in the decade.

The GCC is currently building a Gulf power grid that will connect the six member states, paving the way for a regional electricity market. The grid will not come online until 2009, however.

So, a temporary change in the dollar’s fortunes has revealed that the fundamentals are taking over now as the main driver of the price, now at $107. Cheap oil really has gone forever.

Regards,

Garry White
For The Daily Reckoning


Show more articles by this authorPrint this pageshare thissend to friend
Related Commodities Trading Articles
Most Popular Articles
Recieve Articles like this by email
Name
Email address


FSP Logo