Here is a connection that had not occurred to me.  Falling oil prices can drive 
up
interest rates.

Yang, Catherine. 2006. "The Downside Of Cheaper Oil." Business Week (9 
October): p.
50.
"One reason long-term interest rates are so low is that oil producers, enjoying 
a
spike in fuel prices, raked in petrodollars and put much of their profits in 
U.S.
Treasury bonds.  Now, as oil prices fall and fuel-producing nations find more 
ways
to invest and spend within their borders, fewer petrodollars may flow into U.S.
government securities.  That could put upward pressure on America's long-term
interest rates.  "It will be the sting in the tail," says George Magnus, senior
economic adviser at UBS in London."
"When the price of a barrel jumped from $66 on the New York Mercantile Exchange 
this
January to $75 in July, the trade surpluses of oil-producing nations jumped 
along
with them.  In 2006 their surplus is projected to eclipse that of Asia, 
according to
the International Monetary Fund, with fuel exporters expected to generate a $505
billion surplus, vs. $462 billion from Asian nations.  Much of that money ended 
up
in U.S. Treasuries.  Banking officials can't pin down the exact total of
petrodollars invested in these notes and bills since purchases made through
financial intermediaries in London and elsewhere are not counted toward the fuel
exporters' share.  Although oil exporters' aggregate holdings of U.S. paper are
dwarfed by those of Asia, data show that oil-exporting countries have recently 
taken
the lead in buying U.S. bonds and Treasury bills.  The rate of petrodollar 
purchases
of U.S. Treasuries jumped by 61% from July, 2005, to July, 2006, Treasury Dept.
stats show, while Chinese investment in Treasuries grew by only 12% during the 
same
period.  "The oil exporters are outpacing China," says Paul Ashworth, senior
international economist at Capital Economics, a London consultant.  He argues 
that
it is oil exporters' additional spending, not their total purchases to date, 
that
affects the direction of long-term interest rates."
"But don't expect countries that have been major investors in U.S. Treasuries to
continue their buying spree, experts warn.  China, for one, is attempting to 
slow
its export-led growth and plans to spend more of its trade surplus on domestic
consumption.  Fuel-exporting nations will likely follow suit, says IMF senior
economist Nikola Spatafora.  They are already planning to boost domestic 
investment
and economic development at home.  Oil-producing Russia, which more than 
tripled its
holdings of Treasuries from 2005 to 2006, has a large domestic economy that 
would
also benefit from the return of petrodollars."

--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com

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