Kuwaiti Oil Minister: High Oil Prices of 2009 a Result of Market Speculation

Kuwaiti oil field. The Kingdom’s economy is wholly dependent on oil, which gives them a keen interest in the functioning of oil markets. (image: bbc.co.uk)
As reported by the Middle East North Africa Financial Network on Wednesday, Kuwait’s Oil Undersecretary for Economic Affairs believes that speculation has played a “great role” in driving oil prices higher in recent months. Nawal Al-Fzei said that speculators were the reason that oil prices crossed above the $80 per barrel mark recently.
Right now, according to Al-Fzei, oil prices are balanced above $75 per barrel, being held there by the interplay of forces:
Pushing prices higher—
• Metrics showing improving economies in industrial nations, including the U.S., which should lead to higher consumption (though see below for contrary evidence)
• Continued growth in Chinese and Indian consumption
• Anticipation of a cold winter in the northern hemisphere
Pushing prices lower—
• Offsetting evidence that the industrial world has not yet turned the corner on recession (sustained lower oil consumption; high unemployment; predictions that the U.S. economy may decline from the third to the fourth quarter)
• Geopolitical unrest in the Middle East, especially in Nigeria and relating to Iran’s nuclear program
• Increased oil reserves in major consumer states, such as the U.S.; while not at the early ’09 level of 65 days of oil in inventory, the current inventory of around 60 days is still a week or more over the typical stockpile level of 52-53 days inventory
OPEC is set to meet in Angola in December, at which time they will—based on their reading of political and economic conditions—decide between maintaining a production cap (since demand is still weak, even with some signs of a recovery) and increasing production (to stop oil prices from continuing to rise).


Study Calling Oil Speculation “Not Excessive” Misses the Point | HeatingOil.com says: says:
[...] consensus that it is, forged from the expert opinions of many industry analysts, traders, and producers on the one hand, and statistical studies showing that prices rise as the number of speculators rise [...]