Long-dated oil prices are too low for comfort

Long-dated oil future prices appear to be too low right now with more at stake than oil investments and wagers - fresh global inflation.
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By Javier Blas

It's a puzzling mismatch. The oil industry believes it is underinvesting in future production capacity, creating the risk of future shortages and higher prices. Yet long-dated oil prices keep falling, sitting now at $65 a barrel and suggesting the market expects spending would be more than enough to avoid a gap. Either the industry is wrong — or the market is.

My bet is that both are somewhat wrong. I'm not trying to hedge my view, but it looks like the industry is exaggerating its alarm about investment. Still, if I have to choose a side, I would bet against the market. Long-dated oil future prices appear too low right now. More is at stake than billions of dollars of oil investment in new projects, or wagers in the futures market. If the industry is right, it would mean higher prices in the second half of this decade, potentially fueling fresh inflation in the global economy.

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