For the past two days, I’ve been driving…
I recently won an auction for a mustang — a gorgeous strawberry roan we’re calling Aesop Rye. I spent all of Wednesday towing all 1,000 pounds of him, plus the 3,500-pound trailer.
The trip was grueling, and we made plenty of pit stops along the way. But surprisingly, one of the things that didn’t bother us as much was the price of gas.
In
And gas prices could be falling even more in the next few days.
It’s all because of the big news in the crude oil sector this week. President Obama said he would release crude oil from emergency reserves. Obama, with the International Energy Agency, will put 60 million barrels of crude oil on the market.
This should send crude oil prices lower.
And gas prices will tick down right along with oil.
But talk about awkward timing… Crude oil was down to $92 a barrel earlier this week. Why didn’t the president do this last month when crude oil prices were above $113? The question is, "Why now?"
One reason could be to pressure OPEC.
The disastrous OPEC meeting last week ended in a huge split between its members over whether or not they should raise crude oil production.
No surprise… The reason
Time to turn on the taps.
But here’s the thing.
OPEC countries willing to boost their quotas are mostly friends with the West.
That Obama chose now to release crude oil from our Strategic Petroleum Reserves is like giving the finger to the OPEC members who voted against increasing oil production.
How this move will affect those OPEC "mavericks" who voted against the increase in production? From The Daily Ticker:
For true conspiracy theorists, the thinking goes like this: When the Fed downgraded its estimate of the
Lower crude oil prices mean fewer social programs in these oil-producing countries. Fewer social programs mean social unrest. It means uprisings and revolution.
You’ve heard the term: Arab Spring.
The young activists in places like
Oil prices are a double-edged sword, especially for those economies that need crude profits to keep the peace. High oil prices face pressure from the rest of the world. Low oil prices mean pressure from unhappy citizens.
More oil headed to the market lowers prices, and this news is already doing some damage to the price of oil… By 1:30 p.m. Eastern Time, crude oil prices had fallen 3.78%, down to $91.80 a barrel.
That’s also rotten luck for Apache Corp. (APA:NYSE) and Suncor Energy (SU:NYSE) that I talked to you about on Monday last week. Both were down significantly yesterday, but made up some of those losses at the end of the day.
This makes sense for oil companies, just like it does for crude oil-producing countries.
Of the full 60 million barrels from the emergency plan, the
But that might not have any effect on the demand six months, when
No… This short-lived symbolic finger won’t do much more than irritate a number of oil producers in the middle of a blossoming Arab Spring.
As for APA and SU, let’s set some tight exit points just in case this emergency plan weighs down crude oil companies.
Keep your exit point right around $114 for APA for now. Shares ended at $117.41 on Thursday. A drop to $114 would test a key support level. A breakdown below that means even more pain. A further drop to $110 could be in the mix if support at $114 breaks.
For SU, the situation is a bit tighter. Share prices closed at $38.11 yesterday, down 1.12%. Prices have been rounding over for the past four months. If SU doesn’t find support at current prices, a drop to $35 could be in the stock’s future.
That’s an 8% loss. Not huge, but not insignificant, either.
I’ll talk more about these two companies on Monday, but for now, I’m going to catch up on some well-earned sleep.
Written by Sara Nunnally for Taipan Publishing Group. Additional valuable content can be syndicated via our News RSS feed. Republish without charge. Required: Author attribution, links back to original content or www.taipanpublishinggroup.com.
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