Oil Volatility Returns

 | Sep 23, 2019 12:01PM ET

  • An attack on Aramco (SE:2222)
  • No response just yet
  • Iran is not going away soon
  • Oil-related shares continue to lag the energy commodity
  • Watch Brent Oil Futures: The BNO ETF on price dips
  • Crude oil is the energy commodity that powers the world. Over half of the world’s petroleum reserves are in the Middle East, which is the most turbulent political region on the face of the earth. Meanwhile, the United States is the leading consumer of crude oil.

    For many years, the US dependence on Middle Eastern oil contributed to its price variance. The Arab-Israeli War in the 1970s led to an oil embargo and gasoline shortages in the US. When I first got my driving license, the US was on a program where gas was only available on alternate days each week depending on if a license plate had an odd or an even last digit. In 1979, the Islamic revolution in Iran led to a hostage crisis and supply concerns in the oil market.

    In 1990, Saddam Hussein’s foray into Kuwait caused extreme volatility in the oil market as did the Arab Spring in 2010. Meanwhile, technological advances when it comes to extracting crude oil from the crust of the earth in the US, together with regulatory reforms, has made the US the world’s largest producer of petroleum. Over recent years, the US surpassed both Saudi Arabi and Russia when it comes to daily output, which is around a record level at 12.5 million barrels per day. The US is now a net exporter of the energy commodity.

    The tensions surrounding Iran in the Middle East boiled over during the weekend of September 14. After a period of calm over the summer weeks, hopes for negotiations or talks between Washington and Teheran increased after the departure of John Bolton, a hardliner in the Trump administration. At the same time, the Saudis began talking about an IPO of Aramco once again even though their ideas on valuation at the $2 trillion level is more than a little too high. However, that all went up in smoke with half of Saudi Arabia’s oil production when seventeen drones strategically hit oil fields in the Kingdom.