General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOil isn't skyrocketing because a lot of countries are tapping their strategic reserves
Which is a time-bound 'solution', and then prices will be greatly impacted later as they have to refill them
gab13by13
(31,995 posts)SamuelTheThird
(980 posts)I mean you could try- oh I don't know- reading the news about all these countries releasing their reserves now...
gab13by13
(31,995 posts)The market looks at these releases as a sign of panic. These releases will cover 20 days of no oil going through Hormuz.
ProfessorGAC
(76,526 posts)But, it's several, not many, though I'll admit there are mostly high consumption countries.
But, it only started a couple days ago, and I have a hard time believing the traders care about that when they're bidding futures' contracts.
I think it far more likely that there is still sufficient supply on the water or in tankard.
Then, there are major oil producing countries that are not affected by the middle east bottleneck, including the US which is the world's #1 producer.
Finally, crude prices did skyrocket. Even though they settled back down a bit, the price is still more than 30% higher than a week ago.
A 30% price increase in a week could fairly be described as "skyrocketing". So your premise seems flawed.
SamuelTheThird
(980 posts)The US isn't affected? Gas prices are up and will go up significantly more
ProfessorGAC
(76,526 posts)I never said the US wasn't affected. Don't know how the heck you got that interpretation.
I was talking, quite clearly, about petroleum production. The #1 oil producing description should have been a clue.
Plus, what part of "up >30% in a week" did you not understand.
The petro market is always irrational. The prices went up nearly 80% in a typical overreaction.
They have settled back down but still at significantly higher prices for all grades of crude.
Once pricing tries to reach its new equilibrium, it doesn't tend to react to every event. That, in & of itself, explains why prices shoot up, but gradually recede. (There are other factors, but that move toward equilibrium is a consistent lever.)
If you just wanted everyone to agree with your assessment, you should have said so.
SamuelTheThird
(980 posts)for example - IEA Will Launch Largest-Ever Oil Release From Global Strategic Reserves
gab13by13
(31,995 posts)Those releases are not going to cure the problem in the long run.
SamuelTheThird
(980 posts)But we had like a quick 13% jump in oil before it came down the other day. It's a temporary fix to mask a catastrophic problem
LetMyPeopleVote
(178,710 posts)Petroleum prices rose in spite of the announcement, signaling real concerns about a more protracted conflict.
Link to tweet
Following the IEA announcement, U.S. crude oil prices briefly fell to lows of the day, on news of the potential for fresh supply. But they quickly climbed higher, passing $88 per barrel around midday.
The market moves Wednesday are a sign of real concerns about a more protracted conflict, despite President Donald Trumps assurances this week that the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran would be over soon.
The agency did not set out a definitive timeline for when the release the largest ever by IEA nations would begin. "The IEA Secretariat will provide further details of how this collective action will be implemented in due course," a statement said.....
Overall, "policy measures may have limited impact on oil prices unless safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz is assured," the analysts said, given how much oil is currently blocked from the global market in the region.
Historically, they said, "emergency releases have peaked around 1.4 million barrels per day." They added that it could be helpful but "that pace would not materially ease a 16 million barrels per day shortfall and would likely provide only initial relief."
IEA countries have executed emergency releases before, notably an estimated 180 million barrels in 2022, after Russia invaded Ukraine.