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Why The U.S. Can't Be Called A "Swing Producer"

Submitted by Arthur Berman via OilPrice.com,

Daniel Yergin and other experts say that U.S. tight oil is the swing oil producer of the world.

They are wrong. It is preposterous to say that the world’s largest oil importer is also its swing producer.

There are two types of oil producers in the world: those who have the will and the means to affect market prices, and those who react to them. In other words, the swing producer and everyone else.

A swing producer must meet the following criteria:

OPEC Basket Crude Price Crashes Below $30 - Lowest Since 2004

With WTI trading with a $32 handle, collapsing below December 2008's $32.40 lows briefly overnight, OPEC's broad basket price for crude has also reached a worrisome milestone. Amid Saudi price cuts to Europe, the basket price was set at $29.71 today - the first print below $30 since April 2004.

WTI broke 2008 lows overnight... and then ran stops to overnight highs...

 

and following the inclusion of Indonesia's crude oil price, OPEC's basket price is back below $30...

 

For the first time since April 2004...

As Mideast Tensions Soared, Traders Bet On Another Plunge In Oil Prices: Here's Why

That wasn't supposed to happen. In the not so distant past, a dramatic escalation in tensions between OPEC nations (in this case Iran and Saudi Arabia) would have led to a spike in crude oil prices. However, as futures opened Sunday night, the brief rally in oil prices was met with selling pressure and instead of buying calls, traders loaded up on $30 puts. The oil market's different this time - here's why...

That the rally this time couldn’t be sustained...

 

and worse still, traders piled into Deep OTM Puts...

Someone Bets Big On $15 Crude As OPEC Forecasts Oil Demand Slumping Until 2020

Someone Bets Big On $15 Crude As OPEC Forecasts Oil Demand Slumping Until 2020

In OPEC's latest annual World Oil Outlook released on Wednesday, the now defunct cartel (courtesy of Saudi Arabia's insistence on vetoing any production limit) said that demand for its crude will slide to 2020, as rival supplies continue to grow. On the supply side, OPEC said it would need to pump 30.7 million barrels a day by the end of the decade, which is 1.7 million barrels more than it projected a year ago but well below, or some 1 million barrels less than the group pumped in November.

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