Oil Prices Are Moving Lower, and It's Not Just Because There's a Glut
Money + Markets

Oil Prices Are Moving Lower, and It's Not Just Because There's a Glut

Eric Gaillard

The glut of gasoline and other refined products has taken center stage for the oil markets, threatening to initiate a new bear market and push oil prices down below $40 per barrel for the first time in months. But while a surplus of refined products is weighing on crude prices, there could be another culprit that does not get as much publicity.

Goldman Sachs says that a strong dollar deserves more blame for an oil price downturn, and further strengthening of the greenback looms as a much larger threat to prices than the gasoline glut. The U.S. Federal Reserve could raise interest rates and the effect of that, combined with lingering global financial uncertainty, could push oil prices below $40 per barrel. Goldman says that while there is indeed a glut of gasoline, it won’t be responsible for further declines in oil prices because it is a supply-side and not a demand-side problem.

“We are currently going through the typical later stages of an oil bear market, when strengthening crude fundamentals run into weakening product fundamentals,” Goldman wrote in a July 27 report. “Uncertainties on the near-term path of the oil market re-balancing have left the U.S. dollar as the primary driver to lower crude oil prices recently.” In other words, the fluctuation of the dollar could have a larger impact on oil prices than the fundamentals of oil supply and demand.

Related: How the Oil Market Threatens Stocks’ Record Run

There are several other factors that could push oil back down to $35 per barrel or lower. They include a return of production from Libya or Nigeria (unlikely, but not impossible), a global slowdown in demand, or China’s move to slow its stockpiling of crude for its strategic petroleum reserve.

Any of those possible scenarios would erase the 230,000 barrel-per-day deficit that the investment bank is predicting for the second half of the year.

The dollar may loom over oil prices, but it fell by the most in nearly two months on Thursday after the Fed hinted that it would stay cautious. The greenback fell 0.5 percent against an array of currencies after the Fed wrapped up its Wednesday meeting without signs of an imminent rate increase.

This article originally appeared on Oil Price. Read more from Oil Price:

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