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International-UN-NGOs
Falling dollar puts pressure on Opec
2007-07-24
The falling US dollar is lowering the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting CountriesÂ’ purchasing power by up to a third, making the powerful oil cartel more reluctant to increase production and cut prices.

Although oil is trading near last August’s record $78.65 a barrel, Opec calculations show that, when adjusted for the weaker dollar and inflation, an average of the 12 Opec members’ crude oil prices has fallen in the past year. The adjusted “Opec basket price” averaged only $43.60 a barrel in June compared with $44.30 a barrel in the same month last year, according to the organisation’s latest monthly report.

Growing trade between Opec members, especially in the Middle East and North Africa, and the European Union is aggravating the problem because the pound and the euro have risen. The dollar on Monday fell to an all-time low against the euro of $1.3844 and a 26-year low against sterling, at more than $2.06.

Mohamed Bin Dhaen al Hamli, Opec president, said at its latest meeting three months ago that the cartel was “concerned about the continuing weakness of the US dollar” because “this is having a significant effect on the purchasing power of oil producing countries”. Since then, the dollar has continued to fall against the euro and sterling.

Eric Chaney, a Morgan Stanley economist, estimates that a 10 per cent drop in the dollar against major currencies cuts OpecÂ’s Middle East membersÂ’ crude oil purchasing power by about 5 per cent.
Good! Now let's get the Iraqi oil on line and gut the price. See if the Mad Mullahs™ in Iran have an answer to that one.
Adam Sieminski of Deutsche Bank said the refusal of the cartel to increase its production to force a drop in the oil price was “more understandable if the lower value of Opec’s spending power...is taken into account”.

But the decline in the value of the dollar is insulating some countries from high oil prices, which provides Opec with strong demand even as oil prices soar above $75 a barrel.

Non-Opec members, such as Egypt and Sudan, face similar problems to those of many Opec countries.
Posted by:Steve White

#2  A weak dollar is definitely not all bad.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-07-24 09:45  

#1  encourage their insurgent friends to cool it and the dollar plus their wealth would rise....
waiting
waiting....
Posted by: 3dc   2007-07-24 00:46  

00:00