Page added on December 13, 2005
Investment bank sees crude entering a ’super spike’ phase
LONDON – Oil prices, which hit record levels this summer, have entered a “super spike” phase that could last for four more years as global demand booms and supply growth slows, Goldman Sachs analysts said on Tuesday.
“We disagree with what appears to be a growing consensus that crude oil prices reached their peak levels earlier in 2005,” said the firm’s Global Investment Research.
The analysts said oil demand remained resilient and supply growth lacklustre, prompting them to keep their average U.S. crude price forecast for next year unchanged at $68 a barrel.
They predicted oil prices could see 1970s-style price surges to as high as $105 a barrel during this period.
“With WTI oil prices on-track to average about $57 a barrel in 2005, we think the past phase will be remembered as the first of what could be a four-to-five-year ’super-spike’ phase,” their report said.
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