Oil becomes speculators' market of choice
With heavy investment fund buying driving oil prices up 27 % this year to a 21-year high, opinion is divided on
whether large funds are buying on the basis of solid market fundamentals or creating a bubble.
Oil has become the market of choice for speculators in recent months with a niche group of unknown investors holding
a significant portion of the total outstanding crude-related energy contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
That volume is equivalent to an underlying 1 bn barrels of crude oil and petroleum products, or about 4 1/2 months
worth of global consumption.
“There is no doubt that there is a speculative bubble that has created a big premium in the price, which should
be closer to $ 30 to $ 32 a barrel based on the current supply and demand trends,” Mike Rothman, chief energy
strategist at Merrill Lynch told. He is predicting a sharp increase in global crude inventory levels over the next
month.
“Speculative interest in oil is at unprecedented levels.”
Speculators have been attracted to the energy futures because of the surge in oil demand as the global economy has
grown at its fastest pace in several years and a reduction in global production capacity, tightening the oil market.
The loss of price control from producers to the futures markets since 1983 has been a sore point with members of
OPEC, who do not use these markets.
Despite the increasing fund presence, there is a school of thought that the key measurement to determine whether
speculators are influencing the higher price is the net position between those who buy on the long side -- the camp
that expects prices to continue to rise -- and those who buy on the short side, investors who expect prices to fall.
Kevin Norrish, energy analyst at Barclays Capital, said this net position had fallen from its peak in March, meaning
that fewer people now think prices will keep rising. Despite that, crude prices have risen $ 8 since then. However,
the current level is still double that of last year -- a net position that was considered a record at the time.
“If the net position had continued to grow with the increase in speculative interest in crude oil then that
would reflect a bubble, but we are not seeing that. The buying is based on market fundamentals of strong demand and
concerns about security of supply,” Mr Norrish told.
US oil prices held strong above $ 41 as traders expected a rise in US petroleum inventories. US light crude futures
were up two cents at $ 41.16 a barrel, after a 58-cent fall. London Brent crude rose six cents to $ 37.50 a
barrel.
Prices have failed to respond even to leading OPEC producer Saudi Arabia's promise to raise production sharply in
June and pump at full capacity if necessary. Fears are the funds will stay long in oil, and wait to see firm evidence
of inventory builds in key consumer economies before relaxing their bet on continued oil strength.
