Falling Oil Prices Put Producers Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Over the last few months, the price of Brent crude oil lost over 20 percent of its value, dropping below $90 just yesterday and hitting its lowest level in over two years. In consequence, oil producers will no longer be able to rely on oil revenues to pay their bills.
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Over the last few months, the price of Brent crude oil lost over 20 percent of its value, dropping below $90 just yesterday and hitting its lowest level in over two years. In consequence, oil producers will no longer be able to rely on oil revenues to pay their bills. The fiscal break-even price -- a metric that determines the price per barrel of oil required for a nation to balance its budget at current levels of production -- puts the problem into perspective.

Using data from Bloomberg and Deutsche Bank, I prepared a chart showing the break-even prices for the world's major oil producers and the price on Brent crude. Over the past six months, Brent crude fell far below the break-even price for 11 of the top oil producers in the world; Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria, and even Saudi Arabia can no longer finance their governments' largess through oil revenues.

2014-10-10-6monthbrentv6.JPG

The combination of oil markets flying into a perfect storm and excessive government spending puts most of the world's oil producers between a rock and a hard place, where they will stay for some time.

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