Supply concerns, rising demand keep fire under oil prices
World events are keeping oil traders edgy.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- With oil futures roaring past $44 a barrel amid supply concerns and rapidly rising global demand, analysts say it's possible prices could reach $50 in the not too distant future.
"Fundamentally, there are some pretty crazy prices that are justified," said Jamal Qureshi, an oil market analyst at PFC Energy, a Washington-based consulting firm.
"OPEC is putting out a lot of oil, but the market is absorbing it," Qureshi said.
PFC Energy estimates that total global production will average 82.1 million barrels a day in 2004, or just 100,000 barrels a day above consumption, leaving very little cushion in the market in the event of a supply disruption.
Uncertainty
Right now, geopolitical uncertainty in a host of oil-producing nations, including Russia and Iraq, is making energy traders edgy, raising fears that the supply-demand balance could tilt further in the wrong direction.
UIn Russia, the worry surrounds the fate of troubled oil giant Yukos, which produces 2 percent of the world's oil but is under pressure from the government to come up with billions of dollars in back taxes.
UIn Iraq, insurgents' attacks against oil infrastructure are setting back the reconstruction of the industry and sending shock waves through already jittery oil markets.
UAnd Tuesday the president of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which accounts for about a third of global output, warned that it could not immediately boost output any further.
That helped propel light crude for September delivery to a closing price of $44.15 -- an all-time high on the New York Mercantile Exchange, where futures have been trading since 1983. Oil prices also hit new heights in London on Tuesday, closing at $40.64 on the International Petroleum Exchange.
Attempts failed
Recent attempts by Saudi Arabia, the world's leading oil producer, to soothe markets have failed, analysts said, because there are doubts about how much more actual supply the country can add in the short-term. Analysts believe that most of the remaining 1 million barrels a day in excess global capacity are in Saudi Arabia.
Moreover, it could take several years before significant amounts of new capacity are added around the world in places like Central Asia and in deep waters off the coast of West Africa, analysts said. Keep in mind, they added, global demand is likely to keep rising as well.
"It doesn't seem any supplies available in the near term will dampen prices," said Peter Beutel, president of energy consulting firm Cameron Hanover Inc. in New Canaan, Conn.
"I don't know if we'll see $50, but it looks like prices want to climb higher here," Beutel said.
Demand has grown
Worldwide demand for oil has grown by nearly 3 million barrels a day in the past year, according to PFC Energy, with about a third of that extra consumption occurring in China. Demand is up by about 350,000 barrels a day in the United States.
Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago, believes that the sharp decline in prices in the late 1990s has resulted in a legacy of hesitancy among major oil companies to invest significant amounts of capital into exploration and production. The price of oil fell below $11 per barrel in December 1998, due to abundant supply.
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