I’ve been predicting record oil prices for a number of years now, so when crude oil
prices recently plunged from their record highs, I warned investors and
consumers that the decline was nothing more than a temporary respite.
But now it’s clear that the fallout from the $700 billion banking bailout
pact will virtually guarantee that my prediction will come true.
As the curtain closed on the third quarter yesterday (Tuesday) - leaving many
investors worried that the long-feared "Super Crash" was imminent - crude-oil
futures were staring at their first decline in seven quarters and their biggest
quarterly decline in 17 years, thanks to worries that a slowing economy would
curtail global demand. As of early afternoon yesterday, crude oil for November
delivery had dropped $39.36 a barrel - or 28% - during the third quarter to
close at $100.64 yesterday afternoon.
It’s been a volatile market, too. Oil traded within a $56 range in the quarter, reaching a record
$147.27 a barrel on July 11 and retreating to as low as $90.51 a barrel on Sept.
16, Bloomberg News reported. Oil futures moved 5% or
more during one quarter of the trading days.
Analysts said this decline was merely the beginning, and that with a global
economy that had been severely singed by the U.S. credit crisis, oil prices had
nowhere to go but down.
But I continued to make the opposite argument. And a week ago, the markets
made my point for me. On Sept. 22, crude oil futures for October delivery soared
$16.37 a barrel, or 15.7%, to close at $120.92, after trading as high as $130 a
barrel - thanks to a steep decline in the U.S. dollar and to speculation that
the Bush administration’s plan to bail out the financial sector might actually
jump-start the U.S. economy, fueling inflation in the process. The gain
surpassed the previous record single-day-price gain of $10.75 a barrel, a move
that occurred on June 6. [The biggest-ever percentage gain in a single day -
20.9% - was recorded on Jan. 3, 1994, according to FactSet Research
Systems Inc.]
This record one-day surge caught many by surprise and jump-started
speculation about whether oil prices will rise or fall from here.
For you disciples of doubting Thomas out there, you only have to look at the reaction
to the different phases of the bailout negotiations this week to see that the
market has spoken again. Crude oil for November delivery dropped $10.52 a
barrel, or 9.8%, to close at $96.37 on Monday after the House of Representatives
rejected a Bush administration bailout plan. But that was a knee-jerk reaction
to a worry that the lack of a bailout pact might spawn a recession.
Yesterday, however, crude oil futures rebounded $4.27 a barrel, or 4.4%,
after analysts realized, upon reflection, that the U.S.