WASHINGTON — Global and U.S. oil prices tumbled sharply to four-year lows Friday on news that the oil-producing cartel OPEC has opted not to cut production, raising the prospects of a world oversupplied with crude for the foreseeable future.
WASHINGTON — Global and U.S. oil prices tumbled sharply to four-year lows Friday on news that the oil-producing cartel OPEC has opted not to cut production, raising the prospects of a world oversupplied with crude for the foreseeable future.
The price for a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. oil reference price, fell by $7.70 to $65.99 in post-Thanksgiving trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, a dizzying drop considering it was above $100 a barrel over the summer.
The price for Brent crude, an international reference price that U.S. gasoline producers use to set their own prices, tumbled $1.01 to $71.57 in European trading Friday after falling 6.7 percent the previous day.
The drops follow a decision by the oil cartel Thursday to leave its production target of 30 million barrels per day in place.
The price plunge signals even lower gasoline prices for U.S. consumers, who are enjoying the cheapest Thanksgiving travel period in five years. A gallon of regular unleaded gasoline averaged $2.792, the AAA motor club said Friday, compared with $3.034 a month earlier and $3.283 a year ago.
OPEC’s hold-the-line approach, allowing for an oil glut, amounts to a high-stakes game of chicken. Here are some answers to questions about the road ahead.
Q: Why is OPEC’s move a game of chicken?
A: Falling oil prices hurt unsavory oil-rich nations such as Iran, Russia and Venezuela, but they also hurt the U.S. oil industry, which has hit record daily production levels above 9 million barrels per day thanks to technological developments that allow oil trapped below shale deposits to be drilled. Rather than lower production to make oil supplies tighter and push up prices, OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, seems intent on a game of mutual harm. Saudi Arabia wants U.S. producers, who don’t belong to any cartel, to share the pain of any cuts.
Q: Is this a temporary action by OPEC?
A: That’s the $1 million question. Analysts for now expect prices to fall further.
“It’s obvious that the market is convinced that OPEC is going to continue to flood the market with oil,” said Phil Flynn, a senior energy analyst with the Price Futures Group. “The market is going to be in for a long slog. U.S. shale (oil) producers are going to be able to withstand lower prices. … In the meantime, we’re just going to have to get used to lower prices.”
Q: Why do analysts think prices will stay low next year?
A: Absent any OPEC production cuts abroad or large-scale bankruptcies among U.S. oil producers, the world will continue to have more oil pumped out of the ground than there is demand for it.
“This leaves the oil market with a prospective supply surplus of around 1 mbpd for 2014,” noted a report Friday by Gordon Gray, the global head of oil research for the global bank HSBC, and the bank’s senior global economist, Karen Ward.
Q: What do low oil prices mean for bigger oil companies such as Exxon Mobil and the like?
A: If the stock market is any indication, the near term is not bright for energy stocks. Share prices for Exxon Mobil fell 4.2 percent Friday in a shortened trading day. Chevron Corp. saw its stock fall 5.4 percent. As a sector, oil exploration and production companies saw their share prices fall 8.43 percent Friday, a sign that Wall Street is frowning on their near-term future and fretting over economic fallout from a downturn in a jobs-creating sector.
“The U.S. oil boom has really been a boon to our economy. It’s created a lot of jobs,” said Flynn, the oil analyst. “But if it’s under threat, it could hurt our (economic) growth down the road.”
Q: Consumers want low prices; what’s the problem?
A: Price swings too sharply up or down are problematic. If the price drops too far, say in the $50-a-barrel range, it will become too costly to extract oil from the ground for some U.S. producers. They’ll lay off employees, and eventually they’ll be forced out of the market. The reduced supply that follows will create a self-correcting rise in prices.