The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries left a
Cairo meeting without an agreement to cut production, according to
various media reports.
In recent years, the international oil cartel has seen
significant disagreement between its countries, especially between
U.S. allies in Arab nations like Saudi Arabia and U.S. adversaries
Iran and Venezuela.
In a statement, Algerian Oil Minister Chakib Khelil said
"Ministers have agreed to take any additional decision on Dec. 17
to balance oil supply and demand and to achieve market
stability."
In October, OPEC cut its production by 1.5 million barrels a
day. U.S. adversaries have been quietly concerned that
American allies have not cut their production while demand has
dropped amid the global financial crisis.
Crude oil futures fell under $50 last week on speculation, among
other things, that U.S. president elect Barack Obama would be less
heavy handed in his approach to foreign policy matters. Some
have also suggested that there is heavy unregulated short selling
on crude oil as hedge funds continue to desperately look for ways
to profit and manage their risk.
Oil's production cuts, however, have recently proven ineffective
in convincing the market that it will have significant
effect. Traders are more interested in significant
international events and continue to watch for any possibility of
an Israeli attack on the Islamic Republic of Iran. Any hint
of attack would cause oil to skyrocket. However, chatter
about an attack has faded away as many doubt U.S. president Bush
has any political ammunition remaining with less than sixty days in
office.