F9 Driver
Wear The Fox Hat
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2001
- Posts
- 515
Nuke em all & drill through the glass! (just kidding George - take your finger off the button)
http://www.reuters.com/financeNewsArticle.jhtml?type=businessNews&storyID=7475595
OPEC Approves of $50 Oil, Holds Output
Sun Jan 30, 2005 08:01 AM ET
By Peg Mackey and Francois Murphy
VIENNA (Reuters) - OPEC producers agreed Sunday to keep output limits on hold, convinced that oil prices near $50 a barrel are not stifling world growth.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries took little time to settle on no change in supply quotas, despite worries among consumer nations about inflated fuel costs.
Gone are the concerns that dominated in OPEC last year about the impact of rising crude prices on the economic growth that drives demand for its oil.
With inflation among the world's big economic powers in check and low interest rates still generating above trend growth, cartel ministers see no reason for cheaper oil.
"I am comfortable with the market between $45 and $55," said Edmund Daukoru, Nigeria's Presidential Adviser on energy. "Between $45-$55 (for U.S. crude) has not affected global economic growth."
"We think the high price will not affect the global economy. There won't be a strong negative for the economy," said Kuwait's OPEC President Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd al-Sabah.
OPEC now appears ready to defend oil prices at a floor of about $40 a barrel for U.S. crude, or $30-$35 for a reference basket of cartel crudes.
Ministers agreed to suspend the old $22-$28 range for the basket, set in March 2000, but are in no hurry to set a new target, saying prices are too volatile.
"We have to wait until the second quarter of this year to know exactly where the price indicator will head," said Sheikh Ahmad. "But I believe that $35 is a suitable price as an average price for the OPEC basket of crudes."
"Somewhere between $30-$40," said Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh.
Economists agree there is little sign yet of an energy price shock, partly because the U.S. dollar's decline on currency markets has protected non-dollar importers from the rise in dollar-denominated oil prices.
"Yes, oil prices are high but the U.S. economy hasn't skipped a beat and the weaker dollar has insulated many growing economies from a shock," said Yasser Elguindi, analyst for Medley Global Advisers.
"High oil prices are not hurting demand because the value of the dollar allows emerging economies to afford higher prices."
Several in the 11-member group, including Saudi Arabia, said they can detect no significant slowdown in world growth. They point to forecasts that oil demand in energy-hungry China will rise strongly again this year.
Ministers, meeting next in Isfahan, Iran on March 16, may yet decide to shave production to contain a seasonal quarter stockbuild.
At Friday's U.S. close of $47.15 a barrel, oil prices were too high to justify arranging cuts now for implementation at the start of April, when seasonal demand ebbs.
"Now is not the time to cut," said Zanganeh.
But some in OPEC worry the mid-March meet comes a little late for comfort to adjust supply. Middle East exports take six weeks to reach Western markets. Should inventories build too quickly and prices fall, said group president Sheikh Ahmad, he would intervene and call a ministerial teleconference to take action.
http://www.reuters.com/financeNewsArticle.jhtml?type=businessNews&storyID=7475595
OPEC Approves of $50 Oil, Holds Output
Sun Jan 30, 2005 08:01 AM ET
By Peg Mackey and Francois Murphy
VIENNA (Reuters) - OPEC producers agreed Sunday to keep output limits on hold, convinced that oil prices near $50 a barrel are not stifling world growth.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries took little time to settle on no change in supply quotas, despite worries among consumer nations about inflated fuel costs.
Gone are the concerns that dominated in OPEC last year about the impact of rising crude prices on the economic growth that drives demand for its oil.
With inflation among the world's big economic powers in check and low interest rates still generating above trend growth, cartel ministers see no reason for cheaper oil.
"I am comfortable with the market between $45 and $55," said Edmund Daukoru, Nigeria's Presidential Adviser on energy. "Between $45-$55 (for U.S. crude) has not affected global economic growth."
"We think the high price will not affect the global economy. There won't be a strong negative for the economy," said Kuwait's OPEC President Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd al-Sabah.

Ministers agreed to suspend the old $22-$28 range for the basket, set in March 2000, but are in no hurry to set a new target, saying prices are too volatile.
"We have to wait until the second quarter of this year to know exactly where the price indicator will head," said Sheikh Ahmad. "But I believe that $35 is a suitable price as an average price for the OPEC basket of crudes."
"Somewhere between $30-$40," said Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh.
Economists agree there is little sign yet of an energy price shock, partly because the U.S. dollar's decline on currency markets has protected non-dollar importers from the rise in dollar-denominated oil prices.
"Yes, oil prices are high but the U.S. economy hasn't skipped a beat and the weaker dollar has insulated many growing economies from a shock," said Yasser Elguindi, analyst for Medley Global Advisers.
"High oil prices are not hurting demand because the value of the dollar allows emerging economies to afford higher prices."
Several in the 11-member group, including Saudi Arabia, said they can detect no significant slowdown in world growth. They point to forecasts that oil demand in energy-hungry China will rise strongly again this year.
Ministers, meeting next in Isfahan, Iran on March 16, may yet decide to shave production to contain a seasonal quarter stockbuild.
At Friday's U.S. close of $47.15 a barrel, oil prices were too high to justify arranging cuts now for implementation at the start of April, when seasonal demand ebbs.
"Now is not the time to cut," said Zanganeh.
But some in OPEC worry the mid-March meet comes a little late for comfort to adjust supply. Middle East exports take six weeks to reach Western markets. Should inventories build too quickly and prices fall, said group president Sheikh Ahmad, he would intervene and call a ministerial teleconference to take action.