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Iranian Oil Exchange
Declaration of War?
Iran wants oil market in Euros
Associated Press
TEHRAN, Iran Iran took a step on Friday toward establishing an oil
market denominated in euros, a plan analysts described as highly
unlikely to materialize but which in theory could have serious
consequences for the U.S. economy.
Iranian state-run television said the country's oil ministry granted a
license for the euro-denominated market, an idea first floated back in
2004, though just who would trade on it remains unclear.
If the market were to succeed or if Iran simply demanded payment for
its oil in euros commodities experts said it could lead central
bankers around the world to convert some dollar reserves into euros,
possibly causing a decline in the dollar's value.
Oil is currently denominated in dollars around the globe, whether
through direct sales between producers and consumers or in trades made
on markets in New York and London.
But if one day the world's largest oil producers allowed, or worse
demanded, euros for their barrels, it would be the financial equivalent
of a nuclear strike, said A.G. Edwards commodities analyst Bill
O'Grady.
If OPEC decided they didn't want dollars anymore, he added, it would
signal an end of American hegemony by signaling an end to the dollar as
the sole reserve currency status.
If the dollar lost its status as the world's reserve currency, that
would force the United States to fund its massive account deficit by
running a trade surplus, which would increase inflationary pressures.
O'Grady said there are practical reasons why the Iranian threat is an
empty one.
For starters, Iran is not a very attractive site for a market, given the
volatile nature of its politics, the U.S. sanctions against it and the
lack of a fair legal system. Moreover, there is no indication that the
European Union is interested in vying to become the world's central
bank, which requires a willingness to run large currency deficits, he
said. For the U.S., that has meant allowing cheap imports to undermine
the strength of some major industries, including textiles, autos and
electronics manufacturing.
PFC Energy oil analyst Jamal Qureshi said the fears stirred up by a
hypothetical euro-denominated oil market in Iran or anywhere else are
overblown, not least because the oil trade is just a small component of
the overall global economy.
Iranian legislators earlier this year urged the government to set up the
market to reduce the United States' influence over the Islamic
republic's economy. They also criticized Oil Minister Sayed Kazem Vaziri
Hamaneh, saying he had delayed setting up the bourse.
First floated in 2004 when reformist president Mohammad Khatami was in
power, the idea of a euros-traded oil bourse gained new life after the
stridently nationalist Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was elected president last
summer.
Iran is the fourth-largest oil producing country in the world, the
second-largest in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries and
controls about 5 per cent of the global oil supply, so it has a measure
of influence over international oil markets. Tehran also partially
controls the Persian Gulf's Strait of Hormuz through which much of the
world's oil supply must pass.
Iran has sought to wield its oil resources as a bargaining tool in
Tehran's ongoing standoff with the West over its nuclear program.
Oil prices jumped above $75 a barrel last month amid escalating
diplomatic tensions between Washington and Tehran. On Friday, crude oil
futures traded just above $70 a barrel.
Iran's deputy oil minister, M.H. Nejad Hosseinian, said Thursday he
doubted the U.N. Security Council would impose sanctions on Iran's oil
sector because such a move would drive oil prices higher.
Council members are considering imposing sanctions on Iran for defying
their request to halt all uranium enrichment-related activities by late
last month.
AP Business Writer Brad Foss in Washington contributed to this
report.
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