miercuri, 3 februarie 2016

Cum se explica pretul petrolului?

Cum se explica pretul petrolului? – 18 ianuarie 2016

 
Draghi Puterity
 
 Ma uit la pretul barilului de petrol care a ajuns putin peste 27 $ si ma intreb: nu cumva si-au marcat rusii un autogol de dimensiuni strategice ajutand Iranul sa iasa de sub sanctiunile vestului, aducand astfel inca un exportator de petrol pe piatza? Si anume unul infometat rau dupa zece ani de sanctiuni?

 

 

Gavrila Ch Nu-i subestimati niciodata pe rusi; in primul rand pretul a fost stabilit de o 'piata' de pe malul Potomacului tocmai pentru a-i slabi pe muscali. Acum ca Iranul va putea face comert, rusii vor putea vinde mai bine armamentul lor pe bani cash. Mai sunt granele si ceva reactoare nucleare pentru o frumoasa cifra de afaceri.

 

Draghi Puterity Mai e o informatie interesanta, data sheful OMV, care zice ca el poate sa faca "afaceri solide" cu rusii si la un pretz al barilului de 15-20$. 

http://www.dcnews.ro/omv-un-nou-program-de-austeritate-nu...

Totusi, rusii au anuntat recent taierea cu 10% a cheltuielilor guvernamentale, deoarece bugetul lor pornea de la un pretz mediu de 50$ / baril.

 

 

OMV, un nou program de austeritate. Nu sunt excluse concedierile. Cum va fi…

 

Costel Gilca Prețul a scăzut ca urmare a exploatării făcute gratis de ISIS. Cel mai mare jaf al acestui secol!

 

Draghi Puterity Probabil asa cred rusii. Si daca totusi sauditzii sunt pe felie cu americanii (desigur nu cu cei care voiau fracking)?


Prospectiv A-z  Majoritatea comentariilor la NYTimes atribuie cauza problemelor rusilor de rand lui... Putin. Nicio surpriza.

Sunt si alte voci:

Alice Clark Winnetka, Illinois 12 hours ago

Blaming Putin is simplistic. Saddam Hussein is dead. How's life for the Iraqis now? Is the surge still working?

My first trip to the USSR was in 1968. I studied there and lived in post-Soviet Russia for several years. Russia today is not the Soviet Union. First, citizens are free to leave. Second, there's greater freedom of speech. Yes, the state lays a heavy hand on the media and organized protest is punished, but not at all like back in the USSR. Finally, citizens know what's happening in Russia and beyond its borders to an extent unimaginable in the USSR.

If we need to assign blame for Russia's current economic problems, we can point fingers at corrupt Russian oligarchs and equally at the Western banks that only too willing helped them launder their money. Only now, 25 years after the Soviet collapse, are we asking questions about the piles of Russian money surfacing to buy real estate in New York City.

If not Putin, who then? Ousting Putin won't necessarily bring in someone better. Does Russia now have the domestic political institutions and respect for law to build a stable democratic society? That's what we need to focus on and support.

atmorris DC 2 hours ago 
I have traveled to Russia extensively over the last ten years, especially St. Petersburg and Moscow. I am always amazed by the eruditeness of the Russian people. Admittedly, my sample consists mostly of the university educated in two large cities. Nevertheless many Russians I know speak at least three languages (Russian, English and a third language, often German or Mandarin, but others as well), are well informed about world affairs (the internet is not censored and the BBC and CNN appear on some cable outlets), and possess a keen knowledge of literature and the arts. These are people who, in my opinion, would be highly-paid professionals in Europe or the U.S. Yet, in Russia, many scratch out a living as translators, small entrepreneurs, tour guides, or university professors (very low paying in Russia). This always makes me sad as I see an immense waste of human capital caused by the misguided petrostate policies of Putin. Despite his many sins (including perhaps the Litvinenko murder), the greatest tragedy has been his government's (featuring cronyism and corruption) inability to capitalize on the immense human capital of the Russian people. It has also struck me how many Russians I know somewhat passively accept this situation. In my view, it is not a fear of repression but a consignment to the way it has always been. I hope this article signals a change in that attitude and believe, as in Ukraine, that if enough Russians speak out change will take place.

Qwerty Portland, OR 17 hours ago

Russia is under Economic attack by the West. There has been a long strategy in place to prevent Russia from being able to refit its Armed Forces. I think this is one reason why Obama wanted to lift sanctions on Iran - to increase the Global supply of Oil, in order to further hurt Russia's economy. 

e.s. cleveland, OH 17 hours ago

Seems strange that oil was pumped up to around $150 per gallon in 2008 with the threat of peak oil and by 2016 the price was down to approx. $28 per gallon.
It makes you wonder who is getting rich on manipulating the oil markets.



http://www.nytimes.com/.../russians-anxiety-swells-as-oil...Vezi traducerea


 

Russians' Anxiety Swells as Oil Prices Collapse

NYTIMES.COM|DE NEIL MACFARQUHAR

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