Oil Curve Steeper Than ’99 Shows Crude May Gain in ’09 on OPEC
Monday, January 5, 2009 : PermalinkBloomberg – The steepest plunge in crude prices on record may be setting up oil investors for a rally this year, if history is any guide.
The so-called forward curve of futures contracts traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange suggests oil will rise 30 percent to $60.29 a barrel by December. The curve looks almost the same as 10 years ago, after Russia’s default and the collapse of the Long-Term Capital Management LP hedge fund raised concerns that a global economic slowdown would reduce energy demand. Crude prices fell 25 percent in the final quarter of 1998, the steepest drop in seven years.
Tags: 10-years, collapse, crude-prices, energy demand, forward curve, futures contracts, global economic slowdown, investors, long term capital management, long-term-capital, new york mercantile exchange, new-york-mercantile, plunge, rally, russia, seven years, york-mercantile-exchange
trackback from your site.








