Quote from Picaso:
They figure the US consumer is addicted. You don't quit because price goes up, you simply grumble and maybe drive a bit less for a while, but still demand huge cars, more tax breaks (at the expense of public transport systems), etc.
Quote from schizo:
Is the price down because the US demand for oil is waning or because the market knows that Saudi Arabia will not be sucked into the Jasmine Revolution? If supply and demand really does affect the oil price, why the Syrian protest is not sending oil higher is beyond me. I'm beginning to think the supply/demand equation thrown around by the pundits has no relevance on oil prices. Zip, nada, zilch!
Quote from schizo:
Is the price down because the US demand for oil is waning or because the market knows that Saudi Arabia will not be sucked into the Jasmine Revolution? If supply and demand really does affect the oil price, why the Syrian protest is not sending oil higher is beyond me. I'm beginning to think the supply/demand equation thrown around by the pundits has no relevance on oil prices. Zip, nada, zilch!
I say it's down primarily because of fear of US fiscal austerity. Premature spending cuts are deadly in a balance sheet recession (see Japan, Great Depression). The US and especially China (which has a growing inflation problem though) held the economy on life support with big fiscal stimuli.Quote from schizo:
Is the price down because the US demand for oil is waning or because the market knows that Saudi Arabia will not be sucked into the Jasmine Revolution? If supply and demand really does affect the oil price, why the Syrian protest is not sending oil higher is beyond me. I'm beginning to think the supply/demand equation thrown around by the pundits has no relevance on oil prices. Zip, nada, zilch!

Quote from Good Fortune:
Just me Schizo, but I think the inventory numbers tomorrow will give us a correct and updated piece to the supply and demand puzzle.