Peak Oil Is Nowhere To Be Found On The WTI Futures Curve: April 22, 2012

 | Apr 22, 2012 02:12AM ET

As predicted back in February the crude oil rally has stalled. WTI reached $110 in late February, which so far has been the high for the year.

MarketWatch: And despite ongoing Middle East threats to global supplies and a complicated background comprised of market manipulation talk, government oversight proposals and pipeline changes and expansions, many analysts don’t believe prices are where they should be — simply because there’s too much oil in the market.

Spot crude is of course higher than it was 3 months ago, driven primarily by the Iran fears.

MarketWatch: “The economic price for (West Texas Intermediate) oil is in the $80-$85 range,” said Mickey Cargile, managing partner at Cargile Investments, basing his estimate on where he sees supplies locally and in Cushing, Okla., the delivery hub for Nymex oil.

“Our range valuation suggests a 15%-20% risk premium priced for potential supply disruption from Iran,” he said.

Europe and Asia have been hoarding supply in the last few months, according to Phil Flynn, a vice president at PFGBest. “The market and countries were basically pricing in and expecting war” with Iran.

Interestingly enough that "economic price" prediction is roughly where the long-term WTI futures are in fact trading. The chart below shows how the WTI crude futures curve has moved in the last three months. As Iran fears drove up the front end, the back of the curve came down materially.