Most of the nation states outside of the Middle East, and many of those within it, desperately need the revenue flows to balance Public Sector books.
In the recent past, action from local administrators in countries like Venezuela and Russia has meant that there is almost no outside financial help to be had when times get tough.
If dealers drive oil even lower, and it remains there, then the consequences could be quite severe.
Economists make much of the fact that the emerging markets will take up any slack in western demand. However with fuel efficiencies getting ever greater the increased demand from economic growth must be considerable just to keep up with reducing requirements.
It looks to many investors that the price will continue to go down. If so, those to decrease further will be the ones profiting from the fall.
Of course, if there is a concerted effort to decrease supply then the risk of a price bounce or permanent return to higher levels could catch out the speculators.
OPEC recently inspired such a rally when it announced a production cut. However that rally was both muted and short lived.
Whilst many fear the cartel and its potential power, the world has seen past evidence of poor attempts by OPEC to rein in production. According to it looks like the traders see no reason to expect that this time will be any different. If the price remains at the current levels for some time the temptation to ?pump just a little more? will become extreme as State coffers begin to dwindle.
Crude Oil is now around the $50 mark but there does appear to be some support at just below this price. Especially if the OPEC partners can actually implement the output cuts rather than just agree to them.
Easier said than done. And the failure of any such implementation is what many of the speculators are really betting on.
Countries such as Venezuela and Russia are massively exposed to a falling oil price. Their economies are geared to the higher revenue flows. Sustained periods below $60 might make for political upheaval with extreme shifts to the left or right possible.
Personally, I have to say that on current output levels, $60-$80 would appear to be the stable level. However that is vulnerable to wild swings as momentum and fear drives prices to extremes.
Mexico recently announced that they had hedged $1.5bn worth of oil at $75-$100 per barrel to protect themselves from falls. Whether other countries have hedged to similar levels remains to be seen.
Other nations have built spending plans on the price of oil staying above $80. Going forward, one expects plenty of posturing and talk of restricting supply to force up the price.
Unfortunately for the Oil producing nations none of them really trust each other when it comes to production levels.
The talk of consensus will always go hand-in-hand with the suspicion that one or more of them is exporting out the ?back door? ie gaining the higher prices without suffering the lower output income.
Time for a short term bet on the prices to fall further?
Spread bets carry a high level of risk to your money and may not suit all forms of investor. You can lose more than your initial investment so make sure you only speculate with capital that you can afford to lose. Likewise make sure you understand the risks involved and seek independent financial advice where necessary.
Crude Oil Historical Prices
World crude oil futures prices set a new record close Tuesday on supply concern despite the world's major oil producers decided to raise their daily output. Light, sweet crude oil for October delivery rose 74 cents to 78.23 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The former highest-ever settlement price for a front-month contract was 78.21 dollars a barrel, set on July 31.
OPEC, which produces about 40 percent of the world's oil, agreed late Tuesday in Vienna to boost its crude oil output by 500,000barrels a day, which would take effect on Nov. 1. OPEC officials said the agreement would add oil to current production levels over their current 25.8 million barrels per day quota ceiling.
However, the cartel's move could not ease investors' worries that the current oil production would not be enough to boost thinning world inventories. "The fact that OPEC indicated that it would boost oil production by additional 500,000 barrels makes great headlines, but is unlikely to achieve the stated result of meeting demand," Wall Street Strategies' senior research analyst Conley Turner told Xinhua. "Even though the cartel is saying that this production increase that will commence in November, the reality on the ground is that production is already at full throttle," Turner pointed out. "In fact, many members are already producing beyond their quota so an extra half a million barrels is really not going to have a meaningful impact on satisfying demand especially as winter approaches," he added.
The demand for oil is increasing. Oil is playing more and more important part. Oil prices have been risen 27 percent this year and have tripled since 2002 as investors buy into growing consumer demand, real or potential supply disruptions in producers such as Nigeria and Iran and infrastructure constraints such as a lack of refining capacity.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration, the Energy Department's reporting arm, warned Tuesday in a monthly report that tight global energy supplies are expected to keep energy prices high through 2008. According to the U.S. Energy Department, global petroleum consumption will probably increase 1.27 million barrels to 85.7 million barrels a day this year while demand will rise by 1.51 million barrels, or 1.8 percent, to 87.2 million barrels a day in 2008.
World oil production is expected to average 84.64 million barrels a day this year, up 14,000 barrels a day from 2006, according to the department. Output is forecast to rise by 2.42 million barrels to 87.1 million barrels in 2008.
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