skip to main content
|

Financial News

Thursday June 11, 11:27 AM
Oil may be saying recession is receding: IEA

Photo
PARIS (AFP) - Oil may be signalling that the global recession is on the turn, the IEA said on Thursday, raising its estimate for overall demand for the first time for many months.

The data suggested that this slight upward boost came from leading industrialised economies, and particularly from activity in the United States.

A recent 20-dollar surge in the oil price and unexpectedly strong US consumption were among signals that the recession may be receding, the International Energy Agency said in its June report.

Some of the price rise was driven by investors on futures markets anticipating trends on stock and money markets, and the price surge appeared "difficult to justify from fundamental factors alone," the IEA warned.

But overall data did suggest that industrial demand was picking up while consumption by the transport and services sectors remained depressed.

"While rapid price swings can prove destabilising, higher prompt prices, if symptomatic of a gradually recovering global economy, in themselves may be no bad thing," and might encourage investment in oil production.

Raising its estimate for global oil demand this year by 120,000 barrels per day from the figure in the May report, the IEA said this reflected "stronger-than-expected early-year OECD demand."

It said its revisions "do not necessarily imply the beginnings of a global economic recovery, and may only signal the bottoming out of the recession."

It said: "While the bull run in prices since mid-February was largely driven by market sentiment that a recovery in the global economic outlook was nearing, the latest surge in crude oil markets was partly fuelled by signs of slightly stronger fundamental factors."

Global oil demand was now estimated to be 83.3 million barrels per day this year, a fall of 2.5 million barrels per day or of 2.9 percent from the level last year.

The IEA, the energy-monitoring arm of the 30-nation Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, said it had raised slightly its estimate for OECD demand this year to 45.2 million barrels per day, to show a fall of 2.3 mpd or 4.9 percent than last year.

This was 120,000 barrels per day higher than previously expected.

The agency also said it had revised upwards OECD consumption in March by 650,000 barrels per day, to show a fall of 3.2 percent over 12 months instead of 4.5 percent calculated earlier. Three quarters of that revision was attributable to the United States.

However some of this might reflect a rebuilding of oil held by industry in inventories, and the IEA said it was not factoring all such revisions into its estimates until stronger evidence emerged.

The agency said that members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries had raised their output again in May, by 160,000 barrels per day to 28.4 mpd.

And the so-called OPEC-11 countries had raised output by 110,000 bpd to 26.0 mpd, or 1.1 mpd above the OPEC target of 24.85 mpd, confirmed at a meeting on May 28.

Send Article by Email  |  Send Article by IM  |  Blog This with Y! 360  |  Printable View

Full Coverage : Business News for Mobile
  Previous article : Hong Kong yet to emerge from financial crisis ( )
  Next article : Penske to acquire GM's Saturn brand ( )
Full Coverage : Headline News
Yahoo! Finance : Interest Rates | Latest Interest Rate News Headlines - Yahoo! Finance UK
  Next article : Germany faces 'sizeable', possibly extended recession: IMF ( )

AFP logo

FTSE 100  Gainers  Losers
FTSE 250 Quotes by Sector
Dow Jones  Nasdaq  S&P 500
DAX 30   Eurostoxx 50
 

Recession

  Just how deep is the trough?
Banking Crisis
 

Are the banks out of the woods?

Stock Market Crash
  Explaining the global market turmoil
Money saving Tips
 

How to beat the credit crunch

Isn't Finance Funny?
 

Scandals and silliness


Message Boards
Property Pensions
Savings Utilities
UK Stocks Investing
Speach bubble Happy Thanksatan Day!
Speach bubble Where would you invest.
Speach bubble Dubai Up a Shiity Creek Without a Paddle.
Speach bubble Climategate: the final nail in the coffin of 'Anthropogenic Global Warming
Speach bubble Unauthorised overdrafts


Archives of

Copyright © 2009 AFP AFP. All rights reserved.