"I would encourage you to consider whether three data points can really be used to substantiate the oil/euro conjecture. You have 'verified' James Turk's data but not his hypothesis."
Well, how about oil traded above the "official" pricing band for 108 trading days over an 8 month period of continous analysis? From July 200 to mid-Feb 2004 the OPEC oil sales were within a 22 - 28 euro band for 106 of those days, with 2 days in which the price slipped below 22 euros.
This is important for a various reasons. First, OPEC has traditionally used a dollar based pricing band for teh past 3 decades, and thus we as Americans have not felt what other nations experience re their currency valuations relative to the dollar(in year 2000 the OPEC $22-$28 pricing band was formalized). This is one reason why all other nations tax gasoline so much - to provide a 'cushion' from oil currecny risk (avg world price of gasoline is about $4.50 to $5.00 US).
As to your statement that OPEC pricing oil is 'hype' based on 3 data points, here's the article from Feb that analyzed it for 102 trading days...(the link is no longer pointing to the same article, but you can still see the point here...)
Feb 20, 2004
'Crude futures prices rise in shortened NYMEX session'
by Sam Fletcher
http://ogje.pennnet.com/news/news_display.cfm?Section=NEWS&ArticleID=1 ...
"...The average price for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' basket of seven benchmark crudes slipped by 8¢ to $30.44/bbl Thursday.
"The value of the OPEC basket has been above the $22-28 target range for 108 trading days over the past 8 months," Horsnell noted. "Over the same period, the value of the OPEC basket in euros has stayed within a 22-28 euros band on all just 2 trading days, and on those 2 days it was below the band."
He said, "This is of course just a rather bizarre statistical coincidence. It certainly does not imply that the target band has been secretly switched into euros or that the dollar has lot its primacy in the oil market."
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OPEC considers to use euro for pricing of crude oil' (Jan 12, 2004)
http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/news/ntm40467.htm"Beyond the blow to the greenback's prestige, a move by OPEC to even partly price in euros would ensure that any further depreciation in the US dollar boosts oil prices, Mr Gobert said. And any country -- not just the United States -- using the US dollar for pricing would see the cost of the commodity rise as that currency fell. Indeed, while OPEC has yet to make any formal break with the US dollar, its refusal to boost output has already offloaded much of the cost of the dollar's depreciation on to the American economy.
***Mr Gobert said oil prices at the end of last month, about $ 32 a barrel, would have been much lower if not for the decline in the value of the US dollar over the past 24 months. Using the exchange rates of the dollar versus the euro two years ago, crude would be selling for $ 22 a barrel instead, he said.****
All of the oil prices used in OPEC's benchmark index, or basket, are currently denominated in US dollars. The cartel uses that index as the basis of its price-band policy, whose stated intent is to adjust output so the basket hovers within a $ 22-$ 28 range.
Oil prices have lingered well above that maximum for 26 consecutive trading sessions, which in theory means that OPEC should have increased its output by 500,000 bpd to lower prices. But the cartel has ruled out doing so before its regularly scheduled meeting on Feb. 10, arguing that it is the depreciation of the US currency -- not a lack of supply -- that is fuelling the rally in crude prices.
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(That ain't no hype, that's just economics..)
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IMHO,
It appears that OPEC is trying to maintain their purchasing power, so they may be *tacitly* pricing oil around 24 euros per gallon. Mr. Fletcher and others are still in halfway denial, but rather than using the typical "conspiracy theory" to reduce their cognitive dissonance, they are using the "bizarre statistical coincidence" as their reality denying coping mechanism.
Indeed, if the currency analysts are correct that the euro may go to 1.40 to the US dollar by year-end, and OPEC continues to price oil in a more stable currency to maintain purchasing power, we might very well experience what happened in Europe when the euro was at its historical low to the dollar in September 2000 (82 cents to the dollar). The following pictures should illustrate the pain of currency risk plus a little dip in supply, especially when we do not have a "tax cushion" for our gas prices here in the US...
"German Truckers Fume Over Fuel Prices," CBS News, Sept. 26, 2000
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2000/09/15/world/main233748.shtml E.U. Commerce came to a standstill in Germany due to high petrol prices in the autumn of 2000. The economic fall-out reached from the U.K., Spain, France to Germany and Greece.
“Thousands of truckers from across Germany clogged the streets around the capital's center Tuesday demanding relief from higher gas prices. And they got some when the government offered low-interest loans to some trucking companies.
”….The protest is the biggest so far in Germany, on the heels of demonstrations that halted traffic in France, Britain and Spain before easing in recent days. Elsewhere Tuesday, minor blockages continued in Spain, where markets ran out of fish, and Greek motorists fearing for shortages due to trucker strikes lined up for gas. <35>
"French fuel dispute escalates," CNN.com, September 7, 2000
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/europe/09/07/france.fuel /
Similar protests erupted in Paris, with thousands of French farmers driving their tractors into Paris as a sign of their displeasure at the rapid increase in fuel prices.
“….French farmers are threatening to block access to the Channel Tunnel as a growing protest over fuel prices entered its fourth day with no signs of an agreement to resolve the dispute.
“….Oil prices are currently the highest they have been for 10 years. Prices have risen by 25% in the past 18 months.”
OPEC, the organisation of petroleum exporting countries, is due to meet on Sunday to discuss the situation. <36>
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So, why would OPEC begin to quietly price oil closer to a euro pricing band as opposed to the dollar? Three reasons immediately come to mind. #1 Economically, they want to preserve their purchasing power. #2 From a trade perspefctive, the newly enlarged EU (as of May 2004 w/ 22 nations) will import *more than half* of OPEC oil exports, which makes them the most important customers. #3.
Despite the rhetoric of Saudi making a supposed promise to lower oil prices for Bush's re-election campaign, I think items #1 and #2 are more importantly. Indeed, to be fully cnadid, me also thinks that OPEC/EU may want to facilitate regime change here in US in 2004....and energy prices is one way to challenge US hegemony/neocon policies in a very covert but painful way...
"Several OPEC members have called for a revision of this price band, saying it has been eroded by inflation and the depreciation of the U.S. dollar, the currency of oil trade."
(OPEC also recently mentioned a new $28-$34 pricing band, but that may not hold.)
Finally, many OPEC finance ministers have stated publically that the depreciated dollar is *in fact* one of the reasons why oil has become expensive. Lastly, the final factor of high oil prices is that Saudi Arabia and all other oil OPEC producers are - according to the President of OPEC - "at near maximum capacity." Now with China's oil consumption gorwing, along with our ridiculous oil consumption, demand is beginning to outrun supply. One day soon we will all learn about Peak Oil, and the pricing band and quotas will become irrelevant that point, as supply will begin an irreversable decrease, while demand increases - unless drastic/draconian measures are taken here in the US, where we use 25% of the world's output...
(FYI: Please don't expect the Bush admin and the US media conglomerates to fully discuss these implications.)