Iran and (Temporarily) Lower Gasoline Prices

Oil prices would be even lower but for the risks that an escalating conflict with Iran could curtail Middle East supplies, either through the imposition of stricter sanctions against Iranian oil exports in July or worse, through an escalation to a regional war.
But for the Iranian situation, the downward trend for oil prices might be more dramatic, given rising inventory levels, the worsening economic situation in Europe and a long term rosier picture that the United States’ upward trend in onshore oil production could gain momentum over time. A decision in the state of California that the Obama Administration has proposed be adopted in the nation as a whole to tighten corporate average efficiency standards for automobiles to 54.5 miles per gallon would also ensure that US oil demand remains on a more sharply declining path.
Oil traders say that the shale boom storyline of steadily rising US production is finally winding the “peak oil” story out of pricing mindsets, leaving open the possibility of a more bearish permanent view of the long term oil price down the road, were Middle East news to fade more definitively. But for now, no one is willing to bet on a return to $70 a barrel and instead, the backdated years in derivatives markets are only discounted about $5 a barrel from today’s values. Moreover, Americans will have to stay tuned to Tehran to know whether the current reprieve in oil prices will last. Any breakdown in talks, such as the blip today, could usher higher international crude oil prices right back to the fore and with them, higher prices at the pump.
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