The oil price is partly determined
by actual supply and demand, and partly by expectation. Demand for energy is
closely related to economic activity. It also spikes in the winter in the
northern hemisphere, and during summers in countries which use air conditioning.
Supply can be affected by weather (which prevents tankers loading) and by
geopolitical upsets. If producers think the price is staying high, they invest,
which after a lag boosts supply. Similarly, low prices lead to an investment
drought. OPEC’s decisions shape expectations: if it curbs supply sharply, it
can send prices spiking. Saudi Arabia produces nearly 10m barrels a day—a third
of the OPEC total.
Four things are now affecting the
picture. Demand is low because of weak economic activity, increased efficiency,
and a growing switch away from oil to other fuels. Second, turmoil in Iraq and
Libya—two big oil producers with nearly 4m barrels a day combined—has not
affected their output. The market is more sanguine about geopolitical risk.
Thirdly, America has become the world’s largest oil producer. Though it does
not export crude oil, it now imports much less, creating a lot of spare supply.
Finally, the Saudis and their Gulf allies have decided not to sacrifice their
own market share to restore the price. They could curb production sharply, but
the main benefits would go to countries they dislike such as Iran and Russia.
Saudi Arabia can tolerate lower oil prices quite easily. It has $900 billion in
reserves. Its own oil costs very little (around $5-6 per barrel) to get out of
the ground.
The main effect of this is on the
riskiest and most vulnerable bits of the oil industry. These include American
frackers who have borrowed heavily on the expectation of continuing high
prices. They also include Western oil companies with high-cost projects
involving drilling in deep water or in the Arctic, or dealing with maturing and
increasingly expensive fields such as the North Sea. But the greatest pain is
in countries where the regimes are dependent on a high oil price to pay for
costly foreign adventures and expensive social programs. These include Russia
(which is already hit by Western sanctions following its meddling in Ukraine)
and Iran (which is paying to keep the Assad regime afloat in Syria). Optimists
think economic pain may make these countries more amenable to international
pressure. Pessimists fear that when cornered, they may lash out in desperation.
Dig deeper:
The economics of oil have changed
(Dec 2014)
Will falling oil prices curb
America's shale boom? (Dec 2014)
What is the oil cartel up to? (Dec
2014)
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