05 Mar 2010
Seven trends for next seven years
09 Feb 2010
Bears in for double-dip disappointment
05 Feb 2010
Rumblings of a rally
14 Jan 2010
'Oil price set to fall'
12 Jan 2010
'High risk of equity sell-off'
08 Dec 2009
Equities – the outlook for 2010
06 Nov 2009
QE, equities and job creation
06 Oct 2009
'Key opportunity' to buy natural gas
08 Sep 2009
Equity rally to persist
07 Aug 2009
Equities: Building to a sell-off?
07 Jul 2009
Commodity supercycle alive and well
29 Jun 2009
Awaiting the buy signal
07 May 2009
High risk of equities sell-off
08 Apr 2009
US bear market over?
09 Mar 2009
Major equity reversal imminent
09 Feb 2009
Is Britain bust?
You need Adobe Flash player to view this content.
You can download it the flash player here
Chris Watling, Director, Longview Economics
After a solid run up in the oil price Chris Watling argues that an increase in production levels is likely to push the price down this year.
By viewing the video or accessing the transcript you are agreeing to accept the Cantos terms and conditions.
Since reaching its lows around the end of 2008, just above $35 per barrel, the oil price has rallied a cumulative 175 or so per cent, now standing slightly above $80 per barrel. Naturally, at the end of '08 it was pricing in a disaster economic scenario, a major recession or even a depression. And of course, today, we're pricing in a recovery, but accompanying that rally have been a number of factors that are really actually bearish, not bullish, for the oil price.
We have inventories running at record high levels; at the top end of the range that is normal over the last 10 years. We have spare capacity at 6 million barrels per day across OPEC, a level not seen since 2002, when the oil price was last at $25 per barrel. On top of which we have all sort of other factors that suggest the oil price has got a little bit ahead of itself.
On top of which, accompanying this price rally, we've seen a considerable degree of speculation, such that the net long held by speculators in oil is at a record high level as we stand today. That, on top of the fact that the fundamentals aren't really with the extremes of this rally suggests to us that there are some risks of some downside movement in the price of oil, especially when you consider the outstanding forward-looking supply scenarios that we see over coming months and years.
And whilst for the bulls on the oil price, the case for demand is very strong, most notably the demand we see coming through for oil amongst the BRIC economies - China being the high point of that, with another 10 million barrels per day expected on the demand side in the next five years or so.
The supply side is also interesting, because the spike in the price through to 2008 at $150 per barrel produced a response from the supply side much as you'd expect and economics tells you it should. Indeed, you can group major producers of oil into four key categories. Firstly those producers where supply is declining because politics is poor, fields are aging and the investment environment is not conducive to producing more oil in the near term. That's Venezuela, Iran and places like that. Russia.
Secondly, we have the countries where oil production has peaked and it's well known. They fit the theory of the peak oil theorists well, whether that's the UK or the US having peaked a number of years ago and where production now clearly is in decline.
And then third and fourth, we come to the positive supply cases. Firstly, the incumbents, the large reserve holders - Iraq, Saudi, Kuwait - where supply is expected to increase, has been increasing and indeed in the case of Iraq, we've seen all these contracts signed in recent weeks and months to move production from 2 million barrels per day all the way up to 6 million barrels per day over the course of a few years.
And then of course the last group, the new entrants, the growing supply of oil in the world - driven in large part by China's demand and China's investment - whether it's Kazakhstan, where production's increasing rapidly, Angola producing over 1.5 million or so barrels per day, Canada now the second-largest reserve holder, or indeed Brazil. Add all these together and supply's going to be coming on strong and, and will be significant enough to keep prices under control over the course of the next two or three years.
Beyond that, the bulls have it once again, in terms of the oil price. In the next two or three years, spare capacity as high as 6 million or 5 million barrels per day is likely to keep a lid on the oil price and push the price lower over the course of 2010 and perhaps into 2011.
That was The Longview. You can download this programme from the iTunes Store, from Cantos's website or indeed from our website, longvieweconomics.com. Do get in touch through the website if you have any questions or comments. We hope you enjoyed watching and we look forward to seeing you next time. Goodbye.

03 Mar 2010
Standard Chartered - Full year results 2009

01 Mar 2010
HSBC - 2009 annual results

16 Feb 2010
Barclays - 2009 full year results

25 Feb 2010
BAT - Preliminary results 2009

01 Mar 2010
Pearson - 2009 preliminary results

22 Feb 2010
Hammerson - 2009 full year results

19 Feb 2010
Anglo American - 2009 full year results
17 Feb 2010
PIGS will not sink the euro
20 Jan 2010
Bank tax will not pay off deficits
21 Dec 2009
2010: Emerging Markets beat Western Europe
24 Nov 2009
Jobless figures set to jump
04 Nov 2009
UK: Sick man of Europe
07 Sep 2009
Interest rate rises on the way
27 Jul 2009
US growth: Up in 2010, down in 2011
30 Jun 2009
Economic recovery may grind to a halt
29 Jun 2009
Economic crisis is deepening rapidly
29 Jun 2009
Economy starting to bottom out
16 Jun 2009
Economic recovery won't help Labour
12 Mar 2010
Telcos: Don't be afraid to go back in
10 Mar 2010
Forex focus: All change in China?
10 Mar 2010
Forex focus: Euro in long term reversal
09 Mar 2010
Forex focus: Sterling still undervalued
08 Mar 2010
Parabolic SAR: Complex trading made easy
05 Mar 2010
BAT leads tobacco sector growth
04 Mar 2010
Gold some way from recovering its shine
03 Mar 2010
Battle of the high yielders AUD and NZD
02 Mar 2010
A futures look at the sterling problem
01 Mar 2010
Channel trading with moving averages
26 Feb 2010
Optimistic outlook for oil E&P
25 Feb 2010
Time to accumulate gold
24 Feb 2010
Five shares to watch
23 Feb 2010
Market Sniper targets bearish currency pairs
22 Feb 2010
Moving averages for entry and exit points
19 Feb 2010
The case for being bullish on gold miners
18 Feb 2010
Oil: $90 'a possible target'
17 Feb 2010
Pound, dollar: More weakness to come
15 Feb 2010
S&P 500 poised for further gains
Looking for the best in online video to help your company reach its key audiences? Cantos can help.
Got a question about the website? Read through our help files to see if we can provide you with an answer.
Up-to date-data and company information for informed trading decisions.
Trade global shares, indices, treasuries, commodities and FX.
Our market analysis programming can also be followed on YouTube.
Follow our tweets on twitter and be alerted as soon as our interviews are ready.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter detailing the latest programmes on Cantos. Simply send us your email address below and we'll do the rest.
We will not use your email address for any other purpose or pass it on to third parties. You can unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time.
Get the latest in-depth company news straight to you inbox. Simply send us your email address and we'll do the rest.
We will not use your email address for any other purpose or pass it on to third parties. You can unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time.
Please log in to view the full video. If you do not have an account, please consider registering. Registration is free and only takes a minute.