Dayton Daily News

Oil plunge could help consumers

Shoppers should have more to spend on the holidays, less on gas.

- By David McHugh

Holiday FRANKFURT, GERMANY — shoppers should enjoy more spending power thanks to the recent sharp drop in oil prices, though cheaper energy could also weigh on the U.S. economy by dampening investment in shale oil production.

While the fall in oil prices doesn’t yet match the 2014-16 slump to $26 per barrel, the current decline should soon make itself felt through the global economy.

The internatio­nal crude benchmark, Brent, has fallen under $65 per barrel from a four-year high in early October over $86, and U.S. crude has dropped below $55 a barrel.

Retailers in the U.S., who depend on heavy Christmas spending, should see a boost as lower gasoline prices give consumers more spare cash to spend on gifts.

The average price of a gallon of regular gasoline in the U.S. has fallen to $2.60 from $2.85 a month ago. So the driver of a midsize car or crossover is saving about $4 on a fill-up while drivers of bigger SUVs could save $7 to $8.

President Donald Trump took the opportunit­y to tweet: “Oil prices getting lower. Great! Like a big Tax Cut for America and the World. Enjoy! $54, was just $82. Thank you to Saudi Arabia, but let’s go lower!”

The president had criticized OPEC during the run-up in oil to above $80. How much credit OPEC and Saudi Arabia deserve is questionab­le, however. Along with the U.S. and Russia, the Saudis had boosted oil production in anticipati­on of sharply lower exports from Iran, due to pending U.S. sanctions. But Trump added a sixmonth waiver for several countries that are major consumers of Iranian oil when he imposed the sanctions on Nov. 5.

Instead of spiking, oil prices have slumped. Concerns about slowing global growth and weaker demand have also weighed on prices.

It’s likely Saudi Arabia and OPEC will take actions to raise prices at the cartel’s next meeting on Dec. 6 in Vienna.

“We see the oil market as being in a phase of exaggerati­on and expect a noticeable price recovery after the OPEC meeting at the latest,” the analysts wrote.

The drop in oil prices isn’t all good news for the U.S. economy, now that the nation has more than doubled its production of oil over the last decade. The price decline could lead to less investment in new rigs in oil-producing U.S. states, offsetting the overall impact on economic growth.

“Lower oil prices are now a net drag on the U.S. economy. This is a huge break from the past,” said Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics.

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