Ellen R. Wald, Ph.D | Sep 20, 2018 05:30AM ET
Brent, the European crude oil benchmark, triggered by the weekly US Energy Information Agency (EIA) report that showed a drawdown of over 5 million barrels of stockpiled oil.
Just two years ago the price of Brent was only $45 per barrel and analysts were wondering if low oil prices might become a more permanent market fixture.
Now that prices are heading upwards of $80, is it safe to declare the era of low oil prices over? Could we soon see oil climbing the $90 or $100 per barrel and gasoline prices topping $4 per gallon for consumers in the United States?
Here are two different takes:
The reality will likely fall somewhere between these two extremes:
US production will keep WTI prices low, but Venezuelan production will continue to drop. Somewhere around 1 million barrels per day of Iranian oil will probably come off the market due to sanctions, but China, Turkey and India will continue to import some Iranian oil. OPEC and Russia will probably decide to increase production, though they will not be able to entirely compensate for the decline in Iranian and Venezuelan oil exports.
But at the same time, speculation will continue to push oil prices higher even when the fundamentals show that the market is well-supplied or even slightly over-supplied.
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