NEW YORK
(MarketWatch) — A well-known Saudi prince is making a big call on oil, saying
that the $100-a-barrel threshold will never be topped again.
“If
supply stays where it is, and demand remains weak, you better believe [the
price of oil] is gonna go down more. But if some supply is taken off the
market, and there’s some growth in demand, prices may go up. But I’m sure we’re
never going to see $100 anymore,” said Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the
billionaire Saudi businessman, in an interview with Maria Bartiromo of Fox
Business News published in USA Today.
“I said a
year ago [that] the price of oil above $100 is artificial,” Alwaleed said.
“It’s not correct.”
Oil has
tumbled more than 56% from its June 2014 high of around $107 a barrel, with Nymex
WTI futures CLG5, -1.89% on Monday trading below $47 a a barrel for the first time in nearly
six years. Also see: Oil’s slump could upend $2 trillion in
investments: Goldman Sachs
A
combination of weak growth in oil demand and a global supply glut have kept
pressure on crude prices, while the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries, or OPEC, has refused to cut production.
In the
interview, Alwaleed said the Saudi government and other oil producers were
caught off guard by the steep drop in oil prices. That said, he sees the
refusal to consider a production cut as a smart strategy aimed at preserving
market share.
’[H]ad Saudi Arabia cut its
production by 1 or 2 million barrels, that 1 or 2 million would have been
produced by others.’ Prince Alwaleed
“The
decision to not reduce production was prudent, smart and shrewd,” he said.
“Because had Saudi Arabia cut its production by 1 or 2 million barrels, that 1
or 2 million would have been produced by others. Which means Saudi Arabia would
have had two negatives, less oil produced, and lower prices. So, at least you
got slammed and slapped on the face from one angle, which is the reduction of
the price of oil, but not the reduction of production.”
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