Truths about 'high' oil prices

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13 years 9 months ago #5398 by niadmin
Caroline Baum, author of "Just What I Said," is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.


No. 1. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar

 For folks who use the term "inflation" interchangeably with higher prices -- as in wage inflation or commodity inflation --they are not the same thing. A higher price for oil and/or other commodities is a higher relative price until ratified by the central bank.
 What does the central bank have to do with it?
 Inflation is a monetary phenomenon: too much money chasing too few goods and services.
 Where does the money come from?
 In the U.S., it comes from Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, and his trusted band of governors and district bank presidents.
 
To be more accurate, it comes from the New York Fed's Open Market Desk, which buys Treasury securities (generally) from a group of primary dealers at the direction of the Fed's policy committee.
 Higher oil prices don't cause inflation. They aren't synonymous with inflation. Higher oil prices represent a relative price increase until proven differently.
 No. 2. Zero Sum Game
 Higher oil prices are always viewed as a negative because they crimp consumer purchasing power.
 
It's not a one way street. Wealth is transferred from consumers to producers and recycled.
 
Higher prices act as an incentive for oil exploration. Exxon Mobil Corp. buys new drilling equipment and hires more workers. Those dollars go back into the economy, they don't suck life out of it.
 
Because the U.S. imports about half of its crude oil, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, some of those profits end up in the pockets of the Saudi royal family and other Middle East potentates.
 
What do they do with them? They spend them on U.S. goods and services. They buy U.S. stocks, bonds, trophy real estate and F-16 fighter jets.
 
This doesn't happen simultaneously, of course. But to portray every dollar of oil profit as a net drain on the economy is inaccurate.
 
When oil prices rise, consumers have to allocate more of their household budget to filling the tank and heating the house, leaving less for discretionary purchases. The composition of their spending may change, but nominal spending shouldn't be affected. There will be some effect on real GDP, but that depends on the Fed.
 
No. 3. Taxing Thought

The claim that oil is a tax on the consumer is one of the most common talking points during every oil-price spike. It also happens to be dead wrong.
 
An excise tax raises the price to the consumer, who will demand less, and lowers the price received by the producer, who will supply less. The result is deadweight loss.
 
The recent increase in oil prices qualifies as a supply shock -- a decline in Libyan oil production and expectations of further disruptions in Middle East supply -- on top of what was already a demand-driven rise as the world economy recovered. Crude oil had already breached the $90 a barrel mark at the end of last year, well before Egyptians took to Tahrir Square in January to demand that President Hosni Mubarak step down.
 
A supply shock results in higher prices and a lower quantity demanded. It's only taxing if you think about it incorrectly.
 
No. 4. Mo' Money
 
The Fed needs to respond to higher oil prices, high oil price syndrome (HOPS) victims say. Bad idea, especially if "respond" means print more money. That was the medicine applied in the 1970s. The result was higher inflation and slower

growth, which created a problem for those who thought there was a trade-off between the two.
 "Respond" could have another meaning for those who think higher oil prices are inflationary (see No. 1 above) -- tighten policy. HOPS victims will have to sort that one out before they decide on a recommended course of action.

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13 years 7 months ago #5897 by yeng
Replied by yeng on topic 'high' oil prices fell
Crude-oil futures fell nearly 9% on Thursday to settle below $100 a barrel, dragged down by a selloff in precious metals and fears of diminished demand after a report showed a still-ailing U.S. job market.
Light, sweet crude for June delivery CLM11 +0.74%  dropped $9.44, or 8.6%, to $99.80 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
That was oil’s lowest settlement since March 16, and the biggest one-day percentage decline since April 20, 2009. It traded as low as $99.35.

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13 years 7 months ago - 13 years 7 months ago #5911 by yeng
Replied by yeng on topic High oil prices
Let's see how fast the petrol companies in SG drop their pump prices. I am skeptical.
The companies will just use every excuse to make more profits. They are fast to raise prices when oil is going up and slow action on the downslope.
Last edit: 13 years 7 months ago by yeng.

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13 years 4 months ago #6810 by Joes
Replied by Joes on topic Oil price @ US$80
Oil Prices Settle Near $80

NEW YORK ( TheStreet ) -- Oil prices collapsed to the lowest level in the past year on Monday as domestic economic growth concerns triggered by a historic downgrade of U.S. credit ratings by Standard & Poor's thwarted buying interest.

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13 years 4 months ago #6824 by yeng
Replied by yeng on topic re Oil price @ US$80
Good news indeed! After petrol prices fall, the next one to hope for would be COEs. It's totally unacceptable that it's going for $50K-70 K a paper.

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