Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cheap oil’s economic benefits may be a big myth -- MarketWatch

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cheap oil’s economic benefits may be a big myth -- MarketWatch

    Cheap oil’s economic benefits may be a big myth

    MarketWatch

    Anora Mahmudova and Mark DeCambre
    12/4/2014

    Excerpt:

    NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Cheap oil is awesome, right? Most economists describe it as a sort of tax cut for Americans at the gas pump. Even Larry Fink, a hot-shot Wall Street money manager, declared oil’s decline “spectacular.”

    “This is an incredible tax cut for Americans and everywhere else around the world,” Fink told CNBC Wednesday, referring to the startling plunge oil has seen in recent weeks.

    The cheap oil argument goes like this: consumers and businesses save in heating costs and in fueling their cars and those savings will be spent on discretionary items, fueling consumption.

    A recent article in the Washington Post indicated that Americans would pocket a $230 billion windfall, if prices stay at their current levels, compared to where they were in June.

    However, some financial experts argue that a decline in oil isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be. In fact, it could be a bad omen for the U.S. economy.

    Lance Roberts, Strategist for STA Wealth Management, said the idea that declining energy prices are good for the economy is wrong.

    “[When] an individual fills up their automobile, there is not an extra $10 bill that shows up in their wallet, therefore, the incentive to spend really is not recognized and the ‘savings’ get washed within already tight consumer budgets,” Roberts argued.

    It’s often noted that consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of gross domestic product. But Roberts pointed out that history does not seem to support the idea that lower gasoline prices, and other cheaper energy costs, lead to higher consumer spending, as the following chart shows:
    StreetTalkLive.com

    In fact, as Roberts attempted to illustrate in the chart ..., sharp declines in energy prices have actually “been coincident with lower economic growth rates,” as he termed it. In other words, falling oil prices have typically been a harbinger of difficult economic times to come.

    Think of oil prices as a measure of the global economy’s blood pressure. While there has been a production glut, the strengthening dollar has also contributed to the dramatic drop in oil prices — and that rapidly rising dollar is a function of weakness elsewhere, particularly in Europe and Asia.

    European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said falling energy prices are a concern for the central bank. “We will be particularly vigilant as regards the broader impact of recent oil-price developments on medium-term inflation trends in the euro area,” he said during his introductory comments to the ECB’s Thursday meeting.

    Joseph Saluzzi, co-founder and co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading, a brokerage firm, was also skeptical of the benefits promised by cheap oil prices. He put it this way:

    “Falling commodity prices are a function of global deflation. In the short term, lower oil prices are great for consumers, but if slow demand and deflation continue overseas, eventually it will arrive to the U.S. In the long-term, deflation is a killer, not because prices are going down, but because the demand is falling.”

    Others have made this point as well, including MarketWatch contributor Michael Gayed, who noted that “if falling oil were bullish, shouldn’t more cyclical areas of the market rally on that.”

    Nymex West Texas Intermediate crude CLF5, -4.28% which was up in Wednesday trading, has been down for five of the past six trading sessions, and has lost 38% of its value since June. Meanwhile, Brent crude LCOF5, -4.33% for January delivery, which trades on the London ICE Futures exchange, has lost around 39% of its value since June. Oil continued its descent in Thursday trading.

    Inherent in the debate surrounding the benefits of shrinking oil prices is the question of causation. What has driven oil prices lower? The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’s decision on Nov. 27 not to cut oil output has played a hand in the decline, but OPEC has placed the blame for oil’s oversupply squarely on the shoulders of U.S. shale-oil producers.

    They are betting that shale producers will be brought to their knees by mid-2015, as the Wall Street Journal reported.

    Sluggish demand from heavy-commodity giants like China also has been a contributing factor to lower oil. In fact, slowing demand from China may be the biggest factor, which implies, perhaps, a longer-term issue with demand rather than purely supply. Certainly oil speculators, hedge funds and other investors, have played their part in inflating the commodity’s price over the years. They may be playing a hand in dragging prices lower now.
    .................................................. .

    View the complete article, including charts, at:

    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/che...yth-2014-12-04
    B. Steadman
Working...
X