RalphW wrote:Yes it is clear that the oil intensive Western economies cannot sustain oil prices much above $100 for very long. Clearly the answer is to reduce dependancy on oil and its products...
Except they cannot be sustained on anything but oil.
Well, possibly nuclear.
But we cant replace "expensive" oil at $100 a barrel with "cheap" wind at $200 a barrel equivilant.
biffvernon wrote:WTI over $90 again and Brent at $112.
What's going on? It seems to have jumped about $10 in a day; and at the same time as people are concluding that growth is going to be a problem (see Steph) and presumably Libyan oil should be back on the agenda soon.
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
biffvernon wrote:WTI over $90 again and Brent at $112.
What's going on? It seems to have jumped about $10 in a day; and at the same time as people are concluding that growth is going to be a problem (see Steph) and presumably Libyan oil should be back on the agenda soon.
Peter.
That was yesterday. Apparently, the European financial problems will be resolved tomorrow and financial growth will storm ahead.
Normally, when we get bad news on the financial front, the price of oil goes down.
Today, we are seeing Italian bond rates hit unsustainable levels at 6.66%, and oil is currently up $2.50 to $114.50. Are we seeing a flight to commodities in the face of CDS triggered Dollar collapse?