Did the International Energy Agency (IEA) just deliver the oil equivalent of QE3?
The decision to release two million barrels per day of emergency oil reserves — with the U.S. covering half from its strategic petroleum reserve — is surely aimed at the sputtering economies of the U.S. and Europe following an onslaught of bad economic statistics and forecasts. This includes a gloomy Fed forecast that Ben Bernanke unveiled less than 24 hours before the energy news hit the tape.
I wonder if all this was coordinated.
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The Bernanke Fed significantly downgraded its economic projections, blaming this forecast on rising energy (and food) prices as well as Japanese-disaster-related supply shocks. Of course, the Fed head takes no blame for his cheap-dollar QE2 pump-priming, which was an important source of the prior jump in energy and commodity prices. That commodity-price shock inflicted a tax on the whole economy, and it looks to be responsible for the 2 percent first-half growth rate and the near 4.5 percent inflation rate.
Bernanke acknowledged the inflation problem, but he didn’t take ownership of that either. Reading between the lines, however, the Fed’s inflation worries undoubtedly kept it from applying more faux stimulus to the sagging economy with a third round of quantitative easing.
Somehow the new Fed forecast suggests that the second-half economy will grow at 3.5 percent while it miraculously presses inflation down to 1.4 percent. But the plausibility of this forecast is low. It’s almost Alice in Wonderland-like.
So, low and behold, the IEA and the U.S. Department of Energy come to the rescue.
Acting on the surprising news of a 60 million barrel crude-oil release from strategic reserves scheduled for July, traders slammed down prices by $5 to $6 for both West Texas crude and European Brent crude. That’s about a 20 percent drop from the April highs, which followed the breakout of civil war in Libya in March. In fact, both the IEA and the U.S. DOE cited Libyan oil disruption as a reason for injecting reserves.
Of course, most folks thought Saudi Arabia would be adding a million barrels a day to cover the Libyan shortfall. The evidence strongly suggests they have. So the curious timing of the oil-reserve release — coming in late June rather than last March or April — strongly suggests that governments are manipulating the oil price with a temporary supply add to boost the economy.
In theory, these reserves are supposed to be held for true national emergencies. But the real U.S. national emergency seems to be a political one — that is, President Obama’s increasingly perilous reelection bid amidst high unemployment and the second-worst post-recession economic recovery since 1950.
Tall joblessness, big gasoline prices, low growth, a poor housing sector, growing mortgage foreclosures, and sinking polls are probably the real reason for the strategic-petroleum-reserve shock. European Central Bank head Jean Claude Trichet warns of a “Code Red” emergency due to Greek and other peripheral default risk. China has registered its lowest manufacturing read in 11 months. U.S. jobless claims increased again. And the U.S. debt-ceiling talks have broken down. It’s almost a perfect storm for economic and stock market jitters.
So, will the government-sponsored oil-price-drop work? Will it fix the economy, by lowering inflation and speeding up growth? Well, it might, provided that the Bernanke Fed doesn’t bungle the dollar.
If Bernanke keeps his balance sheet stable, applying what former Fed governor Wayne Angell calls quantitative neutrality, it’s quite possible that the greenback will rise and oil and commodity prices will slip. In fact, ever since Bernanke’s first press conference in late April, when he basically said “no QE3,” the dollar had been stabilizing with oil prices slipping lower.
Bernanke is right to hold off on QE3; we could all be surprised with a stronger dollar. Then we could lower tax, spending, regulatory, trade, and immigration barriers to growth. If we did that, we wouldn’t need another short-run, so-called government fix, this time from the strategic petroleum reserve.
Lord save us from short-run government fixes. Haven’t we had enough of them?
– Larry Kudlow, NRO’s Economics Editor, is host of CNBC’sThe Kudlow Reportand author of the daily web blog, Kudlow’s Money Politic$.
The release makes no sense, unless it happened before gas prices dropped 20%. Give it a few days, and then watch the lapdog media reverse the chronology.
I tend to equate all of these stimulus programs to drinking salt water. It only quenches your thirst for the briefest of moments. Then it makes you increasingly crazy the more you drink, and eventually it KILLS YOU.
Release strategic reserve oil to lower market prices and then replenish strategic reserve oil when the prices (inevitably) go up again. Now there's a plan. Qui bono?
Obama's strategy is very understandable. As head of household, having spent every nickel in the piggy bank, and maxed out the credit cards and home equity, he's down at the pawn shop selling the furniture.
Sorry, this little oil release will not save Obama's reelection. Why?
(1) It is way too early, 17 mos before the election, for the President to panic so. And the drop in the oil price will be very short lived.
(2) It may burn some speculators, but so what? They exist to be burned. The fundamentals have not changed, and supply and demand will reassert themselves quickly enough.
(3) Every barrel of oil released now is a barrel that can't be released later. As the reserves dwindle, the speculators will bid up the price more than before. The only thing that can save Obama's reelection is a true collapse in oil demand. Only a recession in China and India can do this, and that would also depress US exports, profits, and stocks. When you are between a rock and a hard place, you tend to get crushed.