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Oil prices have hit their floor. Here's why.

Oil prices are dropping on high supply and low demand, and everyone is wondering how much lower can oil prices drop. The answer, writes Tillier, is not much lower.

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David McNew/Reuters/File
Oil rig pumpjacks, also known as thirsty birds, extract crude from the Wilmington Field oil deposits area where Tidelands Oil Production Company, which is owned by Occidental Petroleum Corporation operates near Long Beach, California. The reason oil prices have continued to fall is because OPEC has allowed them to, Tillier writes.

If you are paying attention, you will be aware that oil prices have been falling dramatically since the end of June, losing over 20 percent from the highs at that time. This is bad news for investors in the energy sector and for the companies that produce the black stuff, but for the global economy as a whole it will provide an unexpected boost to growth. All energy costs are benchmarked against oil, so declining oil prices equate to declining energy costs, and that is a positive for growth. Whether you are benefitting from that or worried about your energy investments, however, there is one obvious question鈥︹滺ow low can it go?鈥

The answer, it seems, is not much lower.

The drop has been caused by two factors, one on the supply side, and one on the demand side. Supply of oil has been growing as unconventional recovery methods, primarily hydraulic fracturing of 鈥渇racking鈥, have gained ground, particularly in the U.S. At the same time, the growing demand for oil has come into question due to a slowing growth rate in China and the prospect of deflation in Europe. Economics 101 tells us that if supply is increasing faster than demand, price will fall. ()

Ultimately, though, the reason oil prices have continued to fall is because OPEC has allowed them to. That may sound somewhat cynical, but even as production in the U.S. and other nations has grown, the fact remains that OPEC member nations control听. The U.S. may have听听as the world鈥檚 largest current producer, but the OPEC countries combined still call the shots.

It is interesting then that a prominent Saudi oil official was talking up the price this weekend according to听听in the financial times. The drop in oil prices really gained ground a couple of weeks ago when the Saudi government said that they weren鈥檛 going to act to cut production and bolster prices, so any suggestion of a turnaround is significant. Their attitude is understandable. They have a very low cost of production for their abundant oil, so allowing prices to fall as a lesson to America and other upstart frackers makes perfect sense, but there is a limit.

Saudi Arabia and many other major OPEC producers face a problem. The actual cost of extracting oil may be low, but that doesn鈥檛 mean that they would be happy with oil at say $50 per barrel. They need prices to remain somewhat elevated to pay for massive social programs that oil revenues fund. The 鈥淎rab Spring鈥 showed what can happen if a populace is unhappy, even in what looked before like a relatively stable nation ruled by one party or family, so massive cuts in these programs are not an option. ()

An IMF Gulf Cooperation Council听听from October of last year indicates that at their baseline price of just over $80 per barrel in 2018 the budget of Saudi Arabia would be balanced.

Anything below that and the country would be in deficit, meaning that some of those social programs essential to preserving stability would be in danger.

Of course it could be that the global economy, and therefore demand for oil will collapse completely and no amount of production cuts by Saudi Arabia and other OPEC nations will make any difference, but that looks unlikely. It is far more likely that things will stabilize and, faced with cuts to social programs that they cannot afford to make, Saudi Arabia will lead the call for OPEC production cuts. That won鈥檛 be enough to drive oil back up to over $100 in a hurry, but it should stop the freefall.

By Martin Tillier of Oilprice.com

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