Business | Oil & Gas
Saudi Arabia blames speculators for spike
Speculation is driving triple-digit oil making it impossible for any organisation to control price movement, Saudi Arabia's oil minister said in remarks published on Friday.
Dubai: Speculation is driving triple-digit oil making it impossible for any organisation to control price movement, Saudi Arabia's oil minister said in remarks published on Friday.
"Speculation in futures market is determining prices," Ali Al Naimi told Asharq Al Awast newspaper in Morocco. "Today there is no link between oil [market] fundamentals and prices." "The duty of oil exporters is to make sure that fundamentals are healthy," said Al Naimi. "If these fundamentals were stable and fulfil market needs, then there is no need to raise or decrease production."
Al Naimi was speaking on the sidelines of a mining conference a day after the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) decided to leave its output unchanged, dismissing a call from the US, the world's top energy consumer, to act to tame prices.
Opec ministers said recent record high prices had been driven by factors beyond their control, such as a weak dollar, speculation and political strife, not by a lack of oil.
Al Naimi, who also oversees the country's minerals industry, called on foreign and local firms to boost their investments in the Arab mining sector.
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