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American bank predicts increase in price of crude oil

Piper Sandler, an American multinational independent investment bank and financial services company, has predicted that crude oil could hit $100 and top it before end of the year.

Its official, Craig Johnson said who spoke to CNBC said:  “I could actually see a number that could be north of 100 in the next, say, six to … 12 months from here,” noting the still strong upside potential of crude. He added: “To us, it looks like you could have more than 40 per cent upside to get back to the old highs in 2018.’’

Johnson joins other financial professionals in their upbeat predictions for crude oil prices, largely driven by the $1.9-trillion economic stimulus package that Congress approved last week. That is widely expected to jumpstart the U.S. economy, boosting oil demand.

Global demand recovery is also a factor in these bullish oil price forecasts even if this recovery has been uneven, strongest in Asia and most notably China but slow to return to pre-pandemic levels in other key markets.

Then there is the supply side. Non member countries of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) have decided to keep its 7.2-million-bpd production cuts, which recently drove Brent over $70 a barrel, albeit briefly.

If the cartel continues to limit production, the global oil market will swing into a deficit of some 3.5-3.6 per cent of demand, according to Princeton Energy Advisors. And this deficit has the genuine potential to drive oil price closer to $100.

Yet nothing is certain, even with improving demand. China’s oil storage space is filled to capacity, according to reports. In India, another major driver of global demand, fuel prices have gone so high they are dampening demand.

And the country is already looking for alternative suppliers to the Middle Eastern members of OPEC because current prices are too high for it.

Not all forecasters are so bullish, however. A recent Reuters poll revealed a consensus price projection of $59.07 a barrel for Brent crude. Individual forecasts vary from $50-70 over the next five years, according to Bank of America, to $67 a barrel this year, according to Barclays, and $75 by the third quarter, according to Goldman Sachs.

(NATION)

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