What's Behind High Oil Prices?
Opinions Vary On Why Crude Oil Topped $80 Per Barrel
-
Play CBS Video Video Crude Oil Hits 80 Dollar High
Analysts are undecided about how high oil prices will affect the consumer. But sooner or later you will pay for it at the pump and in your heating bill. Randall Pinkston reports.
-
Oil traders at the New York Mercantile Exchange (AP)
-
Interactive Oil and Gas:
Fossil FuelsLearn more about energy costs and usage in your state and get the latest prices for gasoline.
Oil traders were watching as Hurricane Humberto roared through the Gulf of Mexico, fearing that hundreds of off-shore drilling rigs and coastline refinery facilities might be forced to shut down. But few analysts are blaming the weather for what happened to the price of crude.
As CBS News correspondent Randall Pinkston reports, the reason for the price spike depends on who you ask. One analyst places the blame on low supplies of gasoline.
"Gasoline inventories have been running at 20-year lows," said energy trader Eric Bolling. "I've been trading 22 years and I don't think I've ever seen a situation where gasoline inventories are at this level."
But others argue gasoline inventories alone don't explain the hike in crude oil prices, pointing out that crude oil inventories - the source of gas - are about normal for this time of year.
"We have seen some decreases in U.S. crude oil inventories, but that is what we see on a seasonal basis," said Bill O'Grady of A.G. Edwards.
O'Grady believes the price of oil is going up not because of demand or global crises but because of the Federal Reserve and inflation fears.
Next week, the Fed is expected to cut interest rates.
"The financial markets are clamoring for a large cut of one half percent so the fear is - among investors - is that to ease this aggressively, without some evidence that inflation is under control, could spark higher inflation down the road," O'Grady said. "And to protect themselves from that, they're going to traditional inflation hedges which are oil and gold."
So far higher crude prices have not hit consumers at the pump. With the summer driving season over, the price of gas appears to be holding steady. But it's a good bet that the price of crude will find a way to your wallet sooner or later.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





- 1
- 2
- next
See all 22 CommentsYou must be kidding. Zionists? Try good old WASPY skull and bones corporate fascist-wanna-bes.
$$ FORTY BILLION DOLLARS in PROFITS by Exxon Mobile??
(probably not, since Exxon sponsors CBS News. Gee, I wonder why Exxon sponsors the News???)
Corporations own and effectively run our government, write the laws. If you haven''t figured that out, you need to get more informed. We need a CITIZENS revolution to take back our nation. (FBI, who is data mining all these sites - I mean a non-violent revolution, OK?)
Speculators
Nuclear has its problems, especially the waste, and also the high technical requirements of the workers that operate the plants, but Chernobyl and 3-mile are poor excuses.
I wouldn''t want a nuke plant at my doorstep, by I wouldn''t mind a huge wind mill!
Furthermore, since the nuclear power plants are owned and operated by lazy, greedy corporations, their primary motivation is ALWAYS to cut costs by cutting corners-- safety is just not sufficiently high on their list of priorities. Short-term profit is their enduring goal.
Have you people forgotten Three-mile Island? Have you forgotten Chernobyl? Explosions at the Chernobyl power plant and the resulting fire sent a plume of radioactively contaminated fallout into the atmosphere and over an extensive geographical area. The plume drifted over parts of the Western Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Northern Europe, and Eastern North America. Large areas of the Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia were horribly contaminated. Nobody knows how many people were killed because the Soviet cover-up made it difficult to track down victims. Lists were incomplete, and Soviet authorities later forbade doctors to cite "radiation" on death certificates.
Do you want a nuclear plant next door to your family? I don''t think so!
They can make those cars now. They just don''t want to because it doesn''t make everyone rich enough.
Unfortunately, nuclear won''t power our cars, unless you have a DeLorean and flux capacitor :)
Folks can thank the Democrat party because since the 1970''s one of the Dems biggest donors (behind our mob-run unions and vampire trail lawyers) the environmentialist''s.
No new oil refineries (which means we have to import gasoline at a much higher cost)
No new oil drilling (thanks to the Dems in Congress blocking/obstructing any expanision of domestic drilling in KNOWN reserves)
No new Nuclear power plants (France has built 60 news ones since the USA was "allowed" to build its last one in the 1970''s)
p.s we even had the Dems pals, the environmentialist''s, try to block "wind farms" in Western Maryland because they would kill bats and birds.
Unfortunately America''s corrupt liberal MSM wolfpack press doesn''t want to educate Americans on the history of "how" we got here.
But I will.......................
Plus these are the folks who own George W. Bushit, and they want their payback now that the reign of Bushit is mercifully drawing to a close (assuming he does not suspend the 2008 elections due to a self-generated "emergency").
All you idiots need to do is read the article.
IT''S FEAR.
Rich people''s F-E-A-R makes oil prices go higher.
"Rich people" are skeerd that their funny money is going to tank so they start hording commodities.
All you kids and "junior investors" really need to educate yourself. Do us all a favor by studying what happened to the commodities markets during the mid 70''s to early 80''s when financial FEAR was running rampant.
Our nation should do the same, we have natural resources too, wheat, corn, grains should be exported for the same price per bushel as oil is per barrel and the profit could be used to offset fuel prices. I can drive a little less, can they eat less?
DOES ANYONE REMEMBER WHAT THE PRICE OF GAS WAS BEFORE DUBYA?
STAY THE COURSE.................
- 1
- 2
- next
See all 22 Comments