Tags: oil

Better Kill the Economy – and Fast

Published on: 06/14/2011
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Editor’s Note: This has been one of the major themes behind much of the work behind creating a jobless recovery, etc. And it has barely been touched by the mainstream press.

(Reuters) – Oil prices will rise and could harm the economy if an expected supply shortage materializes later this year, OPEC Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri said on Tuesday.

Consumer countries urged the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to pump more to replace supplies shut down in Libya and to prevent fuel inflation hurting economic growth.

Instead last week’s OPEC talks collapsed without a deal, although Badri said the OPEC secretariat had presented all the evidence for a production rise.

Its 33 economists pointed to the need for 2 million barrels per day (bpd) more oil in the third quarter and 1.5 million bpd in the last three months of the year.

“This shortage of 2 million barrels, if it materializes, in the third quarter and the fourth quarter, then the price will go up for sure,” Badri told the Reuters Global Energy and Climate Summit.

While he agreed with the need for more oil, Badri took exception to insistent lobbying from the International Energy Agency (IEA), which represents 28 industrialized countries and has long engaged in cooperation talks with OPEC.

“We never interfere in the IEA and really we don’t want them to interfere in our business. They should do it in a professional manner. We should not talk to each other through the media,” he said.

SAUDI WILL PUMP REGARDLESS

With or without an OPEC deal, leading exporter Saudi Arabia’s Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said the kingdom would pump as much oil as the market needed.

Since Saudi Arabia is the only country able to raise production significantly at short notice, the expected increase in its supply has raised concern in oil markets that the world’s cushion of unused oil capacity is deflating fast.

Comment: Saudi Arabia’s mysterious ability to pump oil without ever revising estimates is one of the cornerstones of hiding the reality of peak oi. Their ability to nearly instantaneously increase production to whatever level is needed to satisfy the markets is another. Oddly enough, they’ve never actually done the latter – even at persistent $100 plus oil in 2007-08.

Badri said spare capacity was still “4.5 million bpd or more,” leaving plenty for any emergencies. He did not foresee a repeat of the 2008 record bull run, when U.S. crude hit a record high just above $147 a barrel.

Oil prices climbed on Tuesday when Brent oil rose above $120 a barrel.

“I don’t think we will see $147. I think now we have spare capacity. I think if consumers will go to member countries and ask for more oil, I’m sure they will sell it to them.”

Badri would not be drawn on a price range OPEC considered appropriate, but said its aim was for moderate prices.

“We don’t want to see a very high price. We don’t want to see a very low price. We would like to see a moderate price,” he said. “We think high prices will affect world growth.”

Badri said OPEC would carry out its mandate of moderating prices and that its next scheduled meeting in December would reach agreement.

“I think the ministers will go back and discuss the outcome of the meeting and they will explain to their governments what happened,” Badri said. “I am sure they will educate themselves more and come up with a decision that will be approved by all the member countries.”

At last Wednesday’s OPEC meeting, a proposal by Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Arab allies the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar to lift OPEC production was blocked by seven countries including Iran, Venezuela and Algeria. Nigeria was neutral.

OPEC last changed its official output limit in December 2008, setting a target for 11 members except Iraq to produce no more than 24.84 million bpd. With actual production of the 11 about 1.4 million bpd higher than that, Badri said OPEC had effectively ditched its old targets.

“This target is really not valid any more due to the current production,” he said.

The OPEC official said the December meeting would have to tackle the thorny issue of realigning output targets among the 11 members subject to them, a task made harder while Libyan output is shut down.

Badri did not anticipate OPEC would call an emergency meeting before December, saying that would be up to the president and the members.

By December, some of the uncertainties should have disappeared.

“When we meet in December, our numbers will be proved valid or the price will come down. I don’t know,” Badri said.

IEA ‘SHOULD BE QUIET’

Whatever the case, he hoped there would be no more outside pressure from bodies such as the IEA, which issued a veiled threat to OPEC before last week’s meeting.

It had said it would use all the tools at its disposal, which include the use of oil held in emergency reserves, unless OPEC increased supply to calm the oil market.

“Strategic reserves should be kept for their purpose and not used as a weapon against OPEC,” Badri said.

As OPEC secretary general, he had regular conversations with the IEA and considered public intervention inappropriate.

“As long as they are talking to me, they don’t have to go to the public. They should really be quiet,” he said.

Aside from supply and demand, Badri cited speculation as a huge factor in the oil market and said neither the two world benchmarks Brent and U.S. crude reflected market realities.

Brent’s premium to U.S. crude, also known as West Texas Intermediate (WTI), was trading close to a record of well above $22 a barrel on Tuesday.

“I don’t feel comfortable. I don’t think they represent the market, WTI or Brent.”

He saw a need for a third benchmark, but said he could not say what it should be.

IMF Cuts US Growth Forecast

Editor’s Note: But they’re certainly sipping Kool-Aid from the same glass as the government. Just a 2.2% increase in consumer prices? Do they think everyone just fell of a turnip truck?

April 11 (Bloomberg) — The International Monetary Fund lowered its forecast for U.S. growth this year, predicting higher oil prices and the pace of job gains will restrain the recovery.

The world’s largest economy will expand 2.8 percent this year, down from the 3 percent projected in January, the IMF said today, citing the need to reduce deficits and boost exports. Global gross domestic product will grow 4.4 percent in 2011, matching the previous estimate, according to the Washington- based lender’s World Economic Outlook report.

Consumer spending, the biggest part of the U.S. economy, faces headwinds from the rising cost of food and gasoline. Federal Reserve officials last month said the expansion is on “firmer footing,” lessening the need to extend a bond purchase program beyond June.

“If the U.S. is going to do fiscal consolidation of the size that it has to do, then demand has to come from elsewhere,” Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the IMF, said today at a news conference. “It has to come from net exports. This just has to happen for the U.S. to be able to sustain growth.”

The economy grew 2.9 percent last year, the most since 2005, according to figures from the Commerce Department. U.S. GDP will expand 2.9 percent this year and 3.1 percent in 2012, according to the median estimate of about 70 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News from April 1 to April 7.

‘Pause that Refreshes’ – Pure Propaganda

“This may just be a pause that refreshes in the overall expansion,” Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, said in an interview on April 8. “The primary risk to the forecast is oil, front and center.”

Oil for May delivery fell 69 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $112.10 a barrel at 10:50 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures settled at $112.79 a barrel on April 8, the highest closing price since Sept. 22, 2008. Prices have risen 32 percent in the past year.

“Recovery in the labor market remains lackluster,” the IMF said in the report. “The drag on 2011 growth from oil price increases largely offsets the boost from the Federal Reserve’s unconventional policies and from stronger net exports.”

The jobless rate in the U.S. will average 8.5 percent this year and 7.8 percent in 2012, the IMF said in the report. Unemployment was 8.8 percent in March, according to U.S. Labor Department data.

“Job creation has recently accelerated, but the pace of improvement in the labor market remains disappointing considering the size of the job losses during the decline,” the fund said in the report.

Several Risks

The IMF also highlighted several risks to the recovery, including a spike in oil and commodity prices that “could dampen confidence and weaken consumer spending.” The housing market, which precipitated the recession that began in December 2007 and ended in June 2009, may see home prices decline further, according to the report.

The Fed, after its latest policy meeting March 15, pledged to continue its program of purchasing $600 billion of bonds through June, in order to “promote a stronger pace of economic recovery.” Fed officials also said a rise in commodity prices signaled the deflation risk had diminished and they were unlikely to expand the bond purchase plan.

Living Cost

Consumer prices will climb 2.2 percent this year and 1.6 percent in 2012, according to the IMF report. The cost of living in the U.S. increased 2.1 percent in the 12 months ended February, according to the Labor Department in Washington.

The fund also called for the U.S. to tackle its growing deficit. “A credible strategy to stabilize public debt in the medium term, and a down payment on fiscal consolidation in 2011, are urgently needed,” the IMF said in the report.

Signs of improvement in the economy, according to the IMF report, consist of business investment in durable goods, manufactured items meant to last at least three years, and “healthy corporate balance sheets,” putting companies in a position to “support stronger hiring.”

Gas Prices Less than 10% Below All-Time Highs

Editor’s Notes: There is a lot to say on this issue, and some key analysis that will be reserved for our newsletter subscribers. There is a lot more in this report than the size of the article might indicate.

NEW YORK, April 10 (Reuters) – The average price for a gallon of gasoline in the United States has moved closer to $4, jumping more than 19 cents since mid-March to a level less than 10 percent below its all-time high, a widely followed survey said on Sunday.

The Lundberg Survey said the national average price of self-serve, regular unleaded gas was $3.765 on Friday, up from $3.573 on March 18, and up 91.3 cents from $2.852 a year ago.

Prices in several western U.S. cities are already above $4 per gallon, led by San Francisco at $4.13. Chicago was close behind at $4.11 a gallon, the survey said.

The national average would have been higher had refiners and retailers not resisted passing on rising crude oil prices as customers grow less willing to pay what it takes to fill their gas tanks, analyst Trilby Lundberg said in an interview.

“Demand has been falling at these prices,” she said.

The record high average pump price is $4.112 set on July 11, 2008. Lundberg tracks roughly 2,500 gas stations.

Crude oil prices are higher amid unrest in Libya and elsewhere in the Middle East, as well as a weaker U.S. dollar, which on Friday fell to a 15-month low against the euro.

A falling dollar often lifts dollar-denominated commodities such as oil. This is because some investors use commodities as an inflation hedge, and consumers who use other currencies may view the commodities as cheap and buy more, driving up prices.

U.S. crude CLc1 settled Friday at $112.79 per barrel, after earlier reaching its highest intraday price since September 2008. ICE Brent crude LCOc1 settled at $126.65 per barrel, the highest settlement since July 2008.

Even if crude prices do not change, Lundberg said pump prices could rise another dime per gallon as earlier increases work their way into the retail market.

“One gets a little bit depressed talking about it, but we are getting closer” to a $4 per gallon average, though “there is no telling” when or whether it will occur, Lundberg said.

The average price for diesel fuel did top $4 per gallon for the first time since 2008, rising to $4.09 from $3.978 three weeks earlier, and $3.056 a year ago, according to the Lundberg survey, which is done in Camarillo, California.

The lowest average price for a gallon of unleaded gas in the 48 contiguous states was in Tucson, Arizona, at $3.41, Lundberg said. San Francisco had the highest price.

Traders Preparing for $175 Oil

Oil at $175 a barrel; copper at $12,000 a tonne and corn at $10 a bushel. As commodity prices rally, the world’s largest trading houses have been busy ‘stress testing’ to be sure their finances can withstand a “super spike”.

The levels are not a forecast – indeed, executives tell me they do not expect such hefty prices – but do signal a “worse case scenario” for which oil, metals and food commodities traders need to prepare.

“Can we reach $175? I don’t think so,” says a trading executive. “But there is a chance of a spike to that level for one or two days if something happens in Saudi Arabia.” The same reasoning justifies tests for copper at $12,000 a tonne (think of an accident at a big mine in Chile) or corn at $10 a bushel, which could, for example, be caused by bad weather during the US planting season in May and June.

The stress tests have become more common at the physical trading houses in London, Geneva and Singapore. There is reason for it. Contrary to popular wisdom, high commodities prices are bad for pure traders: they consume lots of capital as houses need to finance their cargoes and post more collateral with exchanges for their hedges, leading to a decline in returns.

Take oil: when prices were around $50 a barrel in 2009, traders needed just $100m of capital to finance a supertanker. At current prices, they need about $250m. Not surprisingly, trading houses are now on the capital market raising multibillion dollar one- year and three-year credit lines.

Some traders are also tapping the public bond market – Trafigura did last year – while others are turning to private placements in the US.

A banker who works closely with some of the world’s largest trading houses jokes that money, rather than oil, copper or corn, is the commodity in shorter supply. Of course, it is an exaggeration: the banks’ appetite to finance the houses is very strong and traders are raising money with little trouble. But the comment holds some truth: traders will need lots of credit this year.

I do not expect that any trading house will run into trouble: the rollercoaster market of 2008 cleared the market of the small players unable to compete because of lack of credit. Traders have also learnt from the experience, with more standby lines with banks.

Moreover, the more vulnerable smaller players that rely on “transactional finance” are protected. Yes, they need more credit, but the value of the commodities they move and that they pledge as collateral has also increased, offsetting the blow.

Nonetheless, trading executives say they are thinking twice about some trades and acknowledge that what was profitable a few months ago on the basis of risk-adjusted return on capital is no longer worthwhile because of higher credit needs.

All in all, the rise in commodities will make the life of chief financial officers and treasurers at the trading houses more difficult. With banks happy to continue lending and credit still cheap, traders will be able to weather the storm. But if access to credit gets tighter, the smaller players, which have been able to grow rapidly over the past five years, will end up as the prey of larger, well financed rivals.

Walmart CEO Warns of ‘Serious’ Inflation

U.S. consumers face “serious” inflation in the months ahead for clothing, food and other products, the head of Wal-Mart’s U.S. operations warned Wednesday.

  • The nation's largest retailer needs to get back to its roots as the lowest priced one-stop shop for consumers, Walmart CEO Bill SImon said. By Spencer Platt, Getty Images

    The nation’s largest retailer needs to get back to its roots as the lowest priced one-stop shop for consumers, Walmart CEO Bill SImon said.

By Spencer Platt, Getty Images

The nation’s largest retailer needs to get back to its roots as the lowest priced one-stop shop for consumers, Walmart CEO Bill SImon said.

The world’s largest retailer is working with suppliers to minimize the effect of cost increases and believes its low-cost business model will position it better than its competitors.

Still, inflation is “going to be serious,” Wal-Mart U.S. CEO Bill Simon said during a meeting with USA TODAY’s editorial board. “We’re seeing cost increases starting to come through at a pretty rapid rate.”

Along with steep increases in raw material costs, John Long, a retail strategist at Kurt Salmon, says labor costs in China and fuel costs for transportation are weighing heavily on retailers. He predicts prices will start increasing at all retailers in June.

“Every single retailer has and is paying more for the items they sell, and retailers will be passing some of these costs along,” Long says. “Except for fuel costs, U.S. consumers haven’t seen much in the way of inflation for almost a decade, so a broad-based increase in prices will be unprecedented in recent memory.”

Consumer prices — or the consumer price index — rose 0.5% in February, the most since mid-2009, largely because of surging food and gasoline prices. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy costs, rose a more modest 0.2%, though that still exceeded estimates.

The scenario hits Wal-Mart as it is trying to return to the low across-the-board prices it became famous for. Some prices rose as the company paid for costly store renovations.

“We’re in a position to use scale to hold prices lower longer … even in an inflationary environment,” Simon says. “We will have the lowest prices in the market.”

Major retailers such as Wal-Mart are the best positioned to mitigate some cost increases, Long says. Wal-Mart, for example, could have “access to any factory in any country around the globe” to mitigate the effect of inflation in the U.S., Long says.

Still, “it’s certainly going to have an impact,” Long says. “No retailer is going to be able to wish this new cost reality away. They’re not going to be able to insulate the consumer 100%.”

Andy Sutton on Liberty Talk Radio

Andy Sutton will appear again for a regular monthly appearance with host Joe Cristiano on Liberty Talk Radio. The show starts at 8PM EDT tomorrow, March 16th, 2011.

They will be discussing the economic ramifications of the ongoing crisis in Japan, and the multitude of other boiling points around the globe including the Middle East, Europe’s debt woes, and our own stateside fiscal situation. Click Here to Listen

Listeners are encouraged to call in – (888) 773-4496 or (646) 652-4620

Japanese Markets Crash as Nuclear Disaster Unfolds

March 15 (Bloomberg) — Stocks and U.S. futures sank, with the Nikkei 225 index posting its biggest two-day drop since 1987, while commodities slid and Treasuries jumped on concern a nuclear disaster is unfolding in Japan. Bahrain credit risk soared after Saudi troops entered the nation. The MSCI World Index fell 2.3 percent, while the Nikkei dropped 10.6 percent to the lowest since April 2009 and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures tumbled 2.7 percent. Ten-year Treasury yields slid 12 basis points to 3.23 percent and the two-year German note yield fell 15 basis points, adding to its longest run of declines since November 2009. The Swiss franc strengthened against its 16 most-traded peers, reaching a record versus the dollar. Oil lost 3.7 percent to $97.41 a barrel. Credit-default swaps insuring Japanese debt climbed to a record as Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s damaged nuclear power plant was rocked by two explosions today as workers struggled to avert a meltdown that may lead to more radiation leaks in the wake of last week’s earthquake.

Saudi Arabian troops moved into Bahrain with a regional force in the first cross-border intervention since uprisings swept through parts of the Middle East. “In addition to the tragic events in Japan, the market had to contend with a potential escalation of the Middle East situation,” Gary Jenkins, head of fixed-income at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, wrote in a client note. “It would not be a surprise if the significant price moves of the last couple of days did not lead to problems elsewhere in the financial system.”

Biggest Drop

The Nikkei 225’s one-day drop was the biggest since October 2008. South Korea’s Kospi Index sank 2.4 percent, the most in four months, while Taiwan’s Taiex Index retreated 3.4 percent, the most since February 2010. Credit-default swaps on Japan’s government debt soared 25.8 basis points to a record 122.3, according to CMA. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 3.2 percent as the VStoxx Index, which gauges the cost of protecting against declines in the region’s shares, surged 28 percent. Volkswagen AG and Daimler AG led automakers lower, tumbling 4.6 percent and 5.1 percent respectively.

German utilities RWE AG and E.ON AG fell more than 4.7 percent each after Chancellor Angela Merkel put plans to extend the life of the nation’s nuclear plants on hold for three months. The slide in S&P 500 futures indicated the index will decline for the fourth time in five days.

Manufacturing Accelerates

Futures maintained losses after manufacturing in the New York region accelerated in March at the fastest rate in nine months, a sign factories remain at the forefront of the economic expansion. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s general economic index rose to 17.5 from 15.4 in February. Economists projected an increase to 16.1, based on the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. The 1.4 percent increase in the import-price index exceeded the 0.9 percent median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey and followed a 1.3 percent rise in January, Labor Department figures showed today. Prices excluding fuel rose 0.3 percent. Food costs over the past 12 months posted the biggest gain since records began in 1977. The 30-year Treasury bond yield slid 9 basis points to 4.44 percent, with the 10-year yield declining to the lowest since Dec. 10. The Fed will keep its main interest rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent today, according to all 101 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The 10-year German bund yield dropped 12 basis points to 3.11 percent, while the yield on the two-year note sank 13 basis points to 1.51 percent. Belgian Bonds, Bahrain Swaps Belgium said it postponed a sale of six-year bonds because of market volatility caused by the Japan nuclear crisis. Credit-default swaps on Bahrain jumped 20 basis points to 334, the highest since July 2009, according to CMA. Contracts on Japan soared 26 basis points to a record 122, and Tepco rose 253.5 basis points to an all-time high 402.5, up from 40.5 basis points on March 11.

The Bloomberg GCC 200 Index of Persian Gulf shares sank 2 percent and Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index lost 2.4 percent, the biggest slide in almost two weeks. Brent crude for April settlement fell 4.3 percent to $108.79 a barrel as Japanese refinery shutdowns reduce the demand for oil. U.S. gasoline futures fell as much as 6.2 percent to $2.7768 a gallon in New York electronic trading. Natural gas futures rallied for a third day, advancing 0.4 percent on the New York Mercantile Exchange to $3.929 a million British thermal units on expectations Japan will require more gas for power generation after the nuclear disaster. Copper for delivery in three months fell 2.2 percent to $8,990 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange, leading a decline in industrial metals. Silver for immediate delivery retreated 5.4 percent to $34.00 an ounce, dropping for the first time in three days. Platinum, palladium and gold also fell. Derivatives tied to rates for capesize ships used to haul coal and iron ore also fell, on speculation the earthquake will disrupt demand. Forward-freight agreements, traded by brokers and used to hedge or bet on future shipping rates, dropped 6.1 percent to $14,300 a day, according to data from Clarkson Securities Ltd., a broker of the contracts.

Oil Markets Brace for Saudi ‘Rage’ – Spare Capacity Diminishes

Published on: 03/09/2011
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Those exhorting OPEC to boost output should be careful what they wish for. The cartel card can be played once only, and it risks exposing the fragility of the global energy system if the Gulf powers are seen struggling to deliver.

Oil markets brace for Saudi 'rage' as global spare capacity wears thin

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor 6:49PM GMT 08 Mar 2011

Goldman Sachs suspects that OPEC has been pumping far above its agreed quota since November and therefore cannot easily raise output much without cutting deep into global spare capacity.

Jeff Currie, the bank’s oil guru, said Saudi output had quietly crept up by 700,000 barrels a day (bpd) even before the Libyan supply shock.

Assumptions that OPEC has added 1.9m bpd over the last two years are wishful thinking. These new fields have been “largely offset” by attrition in old fields.

“We believe that OPEC spare capacity has already dropped below 2m bpd. The question therefore arises how much spare capacity is left to absorb potential supply disruptions in other countries,” he said.

If this picture is broadly correct, spare capacity is already close to the wafer-thin levels that led to wild price moves in mid-2008.

The flow of Libyan oil has so far fallen by 1m bpd. This may not sound much against global supply of 88m, but oil prices are determined by levels of spare capacity once supply tightens.

Beyond a certain point, the price spiral can kick in with explosive force until the economic damage crushes demand.

Libya’s conflict has already cut spare capacity by a third. Hopes for a quick solution are fading as the country succumbs to civil war along ancient lines of tribal cleavage. A raft of new projects planned for the Sirte Basin by mid-decade will be mothballed.

Chris Skrebowski, editor of Petroleum Review, said the long-denied oil crunch is starting to bite. “We cling to the comfort blanket that spare capacity exists, but it is mostly fictional, or inoperable. If you take 2m bpd off the figure, the whole dynamic of global oil supply changes,” he said.

A Wikileaks cable cited a Saudi geologist claiming that the kingdom’s reserves had been overstated by 40pc. A second cable questioned whether the Saudis “any longer have the power to drive prices down for a prolonged period”.

Some investors see trouble. They are buying oil options contracts for $150 and $200 a barrel with expiry dates late this year, either as a bet or as an insurance against Mid-East mayhem. Barclays Capital said the options “call skew” is more stretched now that it was during the 2008 spike.

The implication is that markets are less sure this time that the crisis will blow over quickly, perhaps because the events the last month amount a strategic rupture.

The entire political order of the Middle East has effectively disintegrated, risking of years upheaval in a region that provides 36pc of global oil supply and holds 61pc of proven reserves.

Mass protest by Bahrain’s Shi’ite majority against the ruling Sunni dynasty has been a rude awakening for investors who thought oil wealth would shield the Gulf against turmoil.

“We in the West have been listening to the wrong people,” said Mr Skrebowski. “We have not been talking to the young: we missed what was happening underneath.”

Bahrain sits at the epicentre of the world’s energy system. It is a hop to Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province, home to an equally aggrieved Shi’ite population and the kingdom’s giant oil fields.

Bahrain’s Al Khalifa family has sought to defuse the island’s crisis since the original crack-down, when seven people died. Yet protesters have refused to drift away, digging in at the financial hub and staging rallies outside the interior ministry. Sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia has been escalating.

What happens on the tiny island is being watched with alarm across the Gulf. The “demonstration effect” has already led to Shia protests in the Saudi oil region. Saudi police have released a Shia cleric arrested last week for demanding a constitutional monarchy.

Yet the country’s Wahabi clerics also warned against “sedition” and violations of Islamic law, while the interior ministry said all rallies were banned and warned that police would use “all measures to prevent any attempt to disrupt public order.”

The threats aim to quash a “Day or Rage” planned by cyber-protesters for Friday, allegedy swollen to 17,000. A similar event in Syria was nipped in the bud by secret police.

The world’s economic fate now hangs on the success of Wahabi repression. Any sign that the Saudis are losing their grip risks an oil shock large enough to derail the global recovery.

Nobody knows where the “inflexion point” is. Bank of America says we are already in the danger zone since energy costs as a share of global GDP have reached 8.5pc, near historic peaks.

Deutsche Bank said the outcome differs depending on whether spikes are driven by booming demand or a supply crunch. It warns that a sudden jump to $150 will abort world recovery.

Former Fed chief Alan Greenspan said economists have been “bedevilled by over the years” trying to quantity the effect of oil shocks. “We don’t know fully where all the channels are. My view is that when oil prices get up to this area and start to move up even higher, you do have to start to worry.”

Traders Short Dollar as Crises Fail to Generate Appeal

Hedge funds and forex dealers are betting record amounts against the dollar, reflecting a growing belief that the US currency has lost its haven appeal and that eurozone interest rates will soon rise.

As the crisis in the Middle East has worsened, the latest exchange data show that traders are selling “short” the currency. The big US fiscal deficit and concerns about the effect of rising oil prices have been blamed by some for the dollar’s slide.

Figures from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, which are often used as a proxy for hedge fund activity, showed that short dollar positions surged from 200,564 contracts in the week ending February 22 to 281,088 on March 1.

This meant that the value of bets against the dollar on the CME rose $11.5bn in the week to March 1 to $39bn, $3bn more than the previous record of $36bn in 2007.

In contrast, speculators have added to their euro holdings amid expectations that the European Central Bank will soon raise interest rates to head off rising inflation.

Jean-Claude Trichet, ECB president, said last week that “strong vigilance” was warranted, a phrase used throughout the bank’s 2005-08 rate-tightening cycle to pave the way for a rate increase at the next governing council meeting. That strengthened the market view in financial markets that the ECB could raise rates at its April meeting and the euro last week rose to a four-month high of $1.3997 against the dollar, taking its gains from a 16-week low of $1.2871 in January to nearly 9 per cent.

“Dollar bears have become a marauding horde,” said David Watt, analyst at RBC Capital Markets. Given the continued losses for the dollar this month, he said it was likely that investors had since added to their bets against the US currency, short of an “absolutely stunning” reversal in sentiment.

“We may be seeing a turn in the longer-term outlook for the dollar – for the worse,” said Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Société Générale. He said the US Federal Reserve was likely to react more dovishly to a supply-side inflationary shock caused by rising oil prices than other central banks.

The figures showed that speculators on the CME had raised the value of their bets that the euro would rise against the dollar to $8.8bn, the largest since January 2008, in the week to March 1.

The data confirm the sharp turnround in sentiment towards the single currency from speculative investors, who as recently as January were betting on losses for the single currency on worries over the eurozone sovereign debt crisis.

Analysts said the prospect of ECB monetary tightening was outweighing investors’ concerns over the eurozone’s fiscal problems.

Indeed, since March 1, it is likely that speculators added to their long euro positions. Beat Siegenthaler, forex strategist at UBS, said further gains for the euro against the dollar were likely given that other investors, such as pension funds and asset managers, had not yet joined short-term, leveraged investors such as hedge funds in adjusting their bets against the single currency.

“Clearly some asset managers, presumably the more speculative in orientation, joined hedge funds in putting on long euro exposure, but on a longer view, asset managers remain significantly short and private clients have not even started to turn round their bearish euro positioning,” Mr Siegenthaler said.

He said an April interest rate rise from the ECB could therefore boost the single currency as these investors turned their positions round.

“For real money investors, the ECB decision could mean more euro buying over the medium term,” he said. “Longer-term positioning still looks short the euro.”

$4 Gas by Summer?

It won’t be long before we’re paying $4 a gallon for regular unleaded gasoline, at least if prices keep going up at their current pace.

Prices have already surged 38 cents a gallon in metro Detroit since President’s Day and likely will jump again by early next week as crude oil prices shot up nearly $3 Friday to $104.63 a barrel.

While Californians are already paying $4 a gallon for premium, unleaded regular reached an average of $3.53 for metro Detroit on Friday, according to AAA’s Daily Fuel Gauge Report. That reflected a range from $3.29 at a BP outlet at Jefferson Avenue and Masonic in St. Clair Shores to $3.79 at the Metro Airport BP at Middlebelt and Wick Road in Romulus.

“If you see a good price, go for it,” said AAA spokeswoman Nancy Cain. “Until the Middle East crisis settles down, pump prices will follow crude oil prices.”

The average wholesale price for the state was $2.88 a gallon Friday afternoon, according to Mark Griffin, president of the Michigan Petroleum Association. That’s before retailers pay taxes, credit card fees and overhead.

“That equates to a breakeven price of $3.63 a gallon,” Griffin said.

Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service, said fear that the Libyan conflict will continue and possibly spread to Saudi Arabia is driving oil prices to the highest point since September 2008.

“Retail prices have another 3 to 5 cents a gallon of catching up to do, then we’ll see what happens Monday,” Kloza said.

U.S. motorists would spend about $44 billion on gasoline this month if pump prices average $3.50 a gallon, or 36% more than the $32.3 billion they spent on gas in February, according to calculations from OPIS.

Inevitably, that means they will cut spending on other goods and services. They also may rethink the type of vehicles they buy, although that should not cripple the auto industry’s fledgling recovery, said Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Robert Schulz.

“Higher oil and gas prices are definitely bad for the auto sector,” Schulz said. “Prices at $4 a gallon will change the mix. As people buy more small cars, every automaker will be less profitable. Fortunately, this time they have a much lower cost base.”

Light trucks – pickups, SUVs, minivans and crossovers – accounted for 53.4% of total industry sales in January, a month before the latest oil price spike. Light trucks were 67% of sales at Ford and 62.6% of sales at General Motors. For Chrysler in February, light trucks represented 81% of sales.

Ford has increased the portion of sales coming from small cars to nearly 11% in January from 6.9% in 2007. Both Ford and GM also have done well in the crossover segment, which generally are lighter weight and more fuel efficient than SUVs.

Ford shares fell 2.3% Friday, to close at $14.42, its lowest price since early November. GM shares slipped to $32.39, the lowest closing price since last November’s initial public offering.

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