• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Record oil divorced from fundamentals: OPEC delegate

DUBAI
Sun Mar 16, 2008 10:22am EDT
A view of an oil refinery off the coast of Singapore March 14, 2008. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash

DUBAI (Reuters) - The weak dollar and the flow of investment money into commodities have pushed oil prices to a fresh record so more pumping from OPEC would have done little to stop the surge, a senior OPEC delegate said on Sunday.

Asian Markets

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) left its output steady at a meeting earlier this month despite calls from consuming countries for more oil to halt the record rally. The price hit a peak of $111 a barrel on Thursday.

"What can you do?" the senior delegate told Reuters. "Prices are completely ignoring the fundamentals of supply and demand. Even if we had increased (at the meeting), I don't think it would have changed anything. It is financial speculators, the weak dollar and funds driving the price."

OPEC officials have long insisted factors beyond their control are fuelling oil's rally.

The producer group, supplier of more than a third of the world's oil, would not react to speculative oil price movements when market fundamentals were balanced, the OPEC governor of the United Arab Emirates said on Sunday.

"OPEC does not look at prices," UAE OPEC Governor Ali al-Yabhouni told Al Arabiya television. "We look at market fundamentals: Supply, demand and inventories. Predicting prices is difficult because they are not (moving) because of market fundamentals... There is a lot of speculation."

Crude futures have jumped about 15 percent this year in part due to a steep decline in the U.S. dollar, which has helped push up the nominal value of all commodities prices in the currency.

Crude and gasoline inventories in the world's largest energy consumer the United States were rising, an indication that oil market fundamentals were not behind the price rise, the senior delegate said.

U.S. gasoline inventories hit their highest levels for 15 years last week, according to U.S. government data.

In its monthly report on Friday, OPEC said it was pumping more than enough to keep consumers satisfied and a potential U.S. recession could hit demand for its crude.

OPEC had no plans to call an emergency meeting to discuss output policy before the next scheduled meeting in September, Yabhouni said.

Ministers could confer if necessary on the sidelines of producer-consumer talks in Rome in April, the senior delegate said.

"I don't know if they will, but they can meet there and make a decision if they need to," the delegate said.

(Additional reporting by Inal Ersan; Editing by Jason Neely)



More from Reuters

 Demonstrator holds a signboard with a slogan "Bla bla bla ACT NOW" during a rally outside the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen December 12, 2009. REUTERS/Christian Charisius

"Polluters are given rights to continue their dirty habits"

A climate change scientist blasts proposals for a cap and trade system, arguing it allows dirty industries to continue polluting, instead of rewarding innovation.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

    People walk by a Bank of America branch in New York. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

    The search is on -- again

    Bank of America has less than two weeks left before Chief Executive Ken Lewis steps down. With the top candidate out of the picture, here's a look at what might happen next.  Full Article 

    Indian woman mourns death of her relative killed in tsunami in Cuddalore. When an earthquake of magnitude 9.15 struck off Indonesia's Aceh province on December, 26, 2004, it triggered a huge tsuanmi that raced across the Indian Ocean and hit Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India. The worst natural disaster of the decade left 230,000 people dead or missing. Taken on December 28, 2004 by Arko Datta

    Pictures that defined a decade

    A woman's grief amid the tsunami devastation and one woman's fight against police in the Amazon are among the indelible Reuters images of the last 10 years.  Slideshow