Oil prices could go ‘parabolic,’ putting global economy in ‘critical situation,’ says Trafigura chief
“‘We have got a critical situation. I really think we have a problem for the next six months. … [O]nce it gets to these parabolic states, markets can move and they can spike quite a lot.’”
That’s Jeremy Weir, who heads up Trafigura, one of the world’s largest commodity traders, sounding the alarm bell at the FT Global Boardroom conference on Tuesday, according to the Financial Times. He’s the latest bigwig to raise an alert over the potential for global economic turmoil as the Russia-Ukraine war stokes energy-market volatility.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon last week warned of a potential economic “hurricane.” Wars, Dimon said, “have unintended consequences, and this happens to be within the commodity markets of the world wheat, oil, gas and stuff like that, which, in my view, will continue. We’re not taking the proper actions to protect Europe from what’s going to happen in oil in the short run, and we’re not taking the proper actions to protect you all. … [I]t almost has to go up in price.”
A parabolic move would be one in which prices accelerate exponentially to the upside. Weir told the conference that oil prices were highly likely to hit $150 a barrel or more in coming months as the market wrestles with strains on supply chains as Russia attempts to shift oil exports away from Europe, the report said.
“If we see very high energy prices for a period of time, we will eventually see demand destruction,” Weir said. “It will be problematic to sustain these levels and continue global growth.”
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August Brent crude BRN00,
Goldman Sachs on Tuesday said oil could hit $140 a barrel in the coming months. Oil remains off its all-time high just shy of $150 a barrel set in 2008, but gasoline prices have hit records, with analysts blaming tight supplies of products on both sides of the Atlantic and limited refining capacity.
The S&P 500 energy sector, up by around 66% to date in 2022, has left all other sectors in the dust, while the S&P 500 index SPX,