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There was much more to Hilary Clinton’s China
and India trip than meets the eye. It was an acid test of the power of the
U.S. to press its political will upon the world. The issue at hand was the
U.S. trying to halt sales of Iranian oil worldwide and to offer India the
same amount of oil from other sources. Supplies from Saudi Arabia to replace
Iranian oil were already in the market place. The halting of the Iranian oil
from the market would have lost 3 million barrels a day, but it seems Saudi
oil capacity has added that much. The oil price before the visit was over
$100 a barrel; today it stands at $92.49 a barrel. In the first week of May,
crude oil supplies climbed by 1.9 million barrels per day to 377.8
million barrels per day, a rise not seen in more than 21 years! We’re
led to believe that supplies remain at high levels.
The last fortnight in the oil markets was one of
great pertinence to gold, a week in which the oil price fell 10%. It seems
that the extra supply coming from Saudi Arabia is not compensating for
Iran’s oil but now coming in addition to it –hence the fall to
almost lower than break-even point for the oil producers. Unless, either
Saudi Arabia withdraws this extra supply or China and India accede to
Clinton’s requests, the oil price will remain at these levels or fall
lower.
Dollar Oil Price is
the ‘Vital Interest’
It seems that India and China may have cut supplies
as a token gesture but not enough to keep the price above $100. Of greater
significance is the fact that India is paying for Iranian oil in Rupees and
China is paying in Yuan. Seen from the U.S. standpoint, this impinges on its
vital interests. That ‘vital interest’ is not simply involving an
attempt to prevent Iran from developing nuclear arms (remember the threat
from Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction) but include the use of the USD
as the sole currency in which oil is traded and priced.
It’s the link of the dollar to oil that is so
critical to the U.S. The value of the dollar and its use in global trade
depends upon this link. If it’s damaged then the balance of power
–where the U.S. and its dollar are the dominant financial powers in the
world— is undermined. So the Iranian issue is a prelude to a fracture
in the power of the U.S.
We have been pointing to the importance of the
dollar oil price being critical to the value of and use of the dollar as the
sole global reserve currency for years now. That link allowed a change in
Greenspan’s requirements for valuable money and the replacement of gold
by the dollar. Furthermore it allowed the dollar to exert a stranglehold on
world trade that it cannot afford to see broken. Because the dollar, as a
piece of paper, can only have value through its link to oil, the dollar
became critical to the supply of basic energy needs worldwide. Oil will
remain so for as long as it’s used as the prime source of energy across
the globe. But change its pricing to allow the use of other currencies and
the link is broken. Consequently and over the time it takes for other
currencies to take a substantial market share from the dollar as oil price
currencies, the USD will wane as far as it’s replaced by other
currencies in the pricing of oil.
Oil Producer’s
Dependence on the U.S.
The U.S. will do what it takes to fight for the
continuance of the link, even while it breaks down. Their success rests on
the strength of their hold over the oil producers themselves. The customers
of the oil producers, to which the U.S. provides security, will continue to
be made to use the dollar as payment.
So the battle for securing oil producers to the side
of payers in other currencies may well become fierce in the
not-to-distant-future! Take a look at the list of main oil suppliers below.
Top
Global Oil Suppliers
Four
Year Production and Export Figures
(Thousand Barrels a day)
|
Country
|
Production
|
Exports
|
|
2006
|
2009
|
2006
|
2009
|
Saudi Arabia
|
9,152
|
8,250
|
7,036
|
6,274
|
Russia
|
9,247
|
9,495
|
5,106
|
5,430
|
Iran
|
4,028
|
4,037
|
2,540
|
2,295
|
Nigeria
|
2,440
|
2,208
|
2,190
|
2,051
|
UAE
|
2,636
|
2,413
|
2,324
|
2,036
|
Iraq
|
1,996
|
2,391
|
1,480
|
1,878
|
Norway
|
2,491
|
2,067
|
2,176
|
1,759
|
Angola
|
1,413
|
1,907
|
1,393
|
1,757
|
Venezuela
|
2,511
|
2,239
|
2,349
|
1,691
|
Kuwait
|
2,535
|
2,350
|
1,760
|
1,365
|
Total
|
|
|
|
11,434
|
Total
|
|
|
|
11,173
|
Total
|
|
|
|
3,929
|
This table shows the oil production that is exported
‘dollar-dependent’ in black, oil production that is exported
‘non-dollar dependent’ in red and oil production that is exported
that may swing away from the dollar if given sufficient reason to do so. As you
can see, almost half of these producers exports can be switched from the
dollar to other currencies should the producers wish it. Just over half are
dependent on the U.S. for their security, so will not switch from the dollar,
unless Shi’ite governments follow Iran in switching from the dollar to
other currencies when pricing their oil.
With the issue now on the table, Iranian oil the oil
price becomes a measure of the influence of the U.S. to stop the change to
the Yuan and other currencies. With the oil price at $92 that influence is
clearly not succeeding so far.
But with the coming change in the role of the Yuan
in the global monetary system, the issue gains in importance. China is not
‘taking on’ the U.S. but simply growing in power and will not bow
to any other nation’s political will, if it is not in China’s
interests. The point at which this takes away from the power of the U.S. is
rushing towards us and could be far closer than we think. Provided the
currencies they do accept in payment for their oil are globally used, the oil
producers above in red will be content to take currencies other than the
dollar. We must see the Yuan become a global reserve power first. This may happen
next year or soon after that.
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