Among the developments this past month, one that
dominated economic news headlines involved the precipitous drop in crude oil
prices. As of December 12, the spot price for West Texas Intermediate crude had
fallen to around $59 -- the lowest since 1H2009 and well below many producers’
cost of production. OPEC’s decision to maintain output levels
seems to be having the desired effect of knocking out weak shale oil
competitors: Permits for new U.S. wells dropped
by nearly 40% in November, and numerous bankruptcies are inevitable in the highly leveraged shale oil sector. Oil
producing countries are not necessarily “sitting pretty,” however. Many of them
have high fiscal break-even costs (e.g., Saudi Arabia: $98/barrel; Venezuela: $161) because
of prodigious welfare spending, and thus falling prices are “playing havoc” with their budgets.
Click here to read
the rest of the December 2014 Macro Pulse
recap.
The Macro Pulse
blog is a commentary about recent economic developments affecting the forest
products industry. The monthly Macro Pulse
newsletter summarizes the previous 30 days of commentary available on this
website.
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