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November 21, 2010

Quarterly Energy Update
First Quarter 2008
Oil Prices Rise to Near-Record Levels, Then Fall
Oil prices rose sharply in early January, with the benchmark West Texas
Intermediate crude oil (WTI) almost reaching the $100 barrier (Chart 1). WTI
peaked at $99.63 per barrel on January 2, barely $3 shy of the inflation-adjusted
high of $102.81 set in April 1980. Escalating tension in the Middle East, fears of
disruptions in Nigeria, a further slippage in the U.S. dollar (in early January) and
a growing realization that oil resource development will likely not match the
growth in oil demand accounted for the upward pressure on oil prices.

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Oil’s roller-coaster ride continued through January, as declines in stock markets
worldwide and fears that a global economic slowdown could retard oil demand
pushed prices to a low of $87.32 by the third week of the month. At the end of
January, prices neared $90 per barrel, in part due to optimism about the impact
of monetary easing and fiscal stimulus on economic activity and in part to
OPEC’s insistence that oil market fundamentals did not warrant a production
increase.
While long-term oil price expectations strengthened by about 10 percent since
November, these expectations remained little changed through the volatility
seen in January. As of January 31, the long-term oil-price expectation—
measured by the December 2010 price—stood at just above $88. Futures
prices, consequently, showed far less backwardation at the end of January than
they did at the beginning, suggesting that the market did not expect a strong
decline in oil prices from their January-end levels.
Gasoline Prices Remain Around $3 per Gallon and to Climb Higher by
Memorial Day
Nationwide, the pump price of regular gasoline has hovered around $3 per
gallon during much of January (Chart 2). Gasoline prices are seeing normal
seasonal weakness, and refiners’ margins are being squeezed. After remaining
well below trend for much of 2007, gasoline inventories were back in good
health, with stockpiles above the five-year seasonal average for three straight
weeks in January (Chart 3).

If market conditions remain relatively unchanged, the Brown–Virmani gasoline
pricing model, developed at the Dallas Fed, shows spot gasoline prices peaking
at $2.55 per gallon the week before Memorial Day (Chart 4), which would mean
an all-time-high national average retail price of about $3.30 per gallon, 7 cents
higher than last year’s all-time high of $3.23 (also set the week before Memorial
Day). The Brown–Virmani model looks for higher refiners’ margins as the driving
season gets under way—a view underscored by recent reports that refiners are
cutting production runs because their current margins are unprofitable.

Crack margins for ethanol are reported as depressed because corn crop prices
are high and distillers now have more capacity to produce ethanol than the
market seems capable of using in 2008.
Natural Gas Prices Strengthen
Seasonal gains in demand, several cold spells and expectations of increased
natural gas use to generate electricity have pushed natural gas prices up to
about $8.20 per million Btu for delivery at Henry Hub (Chart 5). Extremely high
natural gas inventories continue to depress the market and are keeping natural
gas prices well below any normal parity with crude oil. Inventories hit a record
high of 3.545 trillion cubic feet at the beginning of the heating season and were
about 10 percent above normal levels in mid-January.

Natural gas exploration activity has been brisk, with current gas prices and
futures market expectations sufficiently high to support strong gains in natural
gas drilling.
The Brown–Yücel natural gas pricing model
, developed at the Dallas Fed,
shows current natural gas prices are now roughly consistent with crude oil
prices—given the inventory overhang and normal seasonality. The futures
market shows gains in natural gas prices throughout 2008 (Chart 6). High
inventories and some concerns that spring weather may prove to be warmer
than normal seem to be keeping natural gas futures from showing normal
seasonal pricing.

—Stephen P. Brown and Raghav Virmani
About the Authors
Brown is director of energy economics and microeconomic analysis and
Virmani is an economic analyst in the Research Department at the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas.

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