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May 27, 2008
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Tuesday
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Jamadi-ul-Awwal 21, 1429
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‘Record oil price looks like a bubble’
From Our Special Correspondent
LONDON, May 26: Speculators are largely responsible for driving crude oil prices to their peaks in recent weeks and the record price now looks like a bubble, billionaire investor George Soros has warned.
The comments of Mr Soros, known as ‘the man who broke the Bank of England’ came only days after the oil price soared to a record high of $135 a barrel amid speculation that crude could soon be catapulted towards the $200 mark.
In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mr Soros who had forced the BoE in September 1992 (by borrowing pounds and buying the German marks) to abandon the Exchange Regime Mechanism (ERM) and made over a billion dollar in the process, said that although the weak dollar, ebbing Middle Eastern supply and record Chinese demand could explain some of the increase in energy prices, the crude oil market had been significantly affected by speculation.
“Speculation... is increasingly affecting the price,” he said. “The price has this parabolic shape which is characteristic of bubbles,” he said.
The comments are considered to be significant, not only because Mr Soros is the world’s most prominent hedge fund investor but also because many experts have claimed speculation is only a minor factor affecting crude prices.
However, Mr Soros warned that the oil bubble would not burst until both the US and Britain were in recession, after which prices could fall dramatically.
“You can also anticipate that [the bubble] will eventually correct but that is unlikely to happen before the recession actually reduces the demand.
“The rise in the price of oil and food is going to weigh and aggravate the recession.”
Mr Soros warns Britain is facing its worst economic storm in living memory, dwarfing those of the 1970s and early 1990s, with a housing slump and serious recession.
He said: “The dislocations will be greater [than in the 1970s] because you also have the implications of the house price decline, which you didn’t have in the 1970s.”
The warning undermines predictions that Britain will suffer only a brief and relatively painless recession, unlike the precipitous dives of previous years.
Mr Soros also warned that the Bank’s inflation report represents a “Faustian pact”, obliging it to keep interest rates high to control inflation, even as the economy is starting to slump.
“You had the nice decade,” he said. “Now that is over and you are in a straitjacket.”
“It’s much better than the straitjacket sterling was in when I broke the Bank of England.”
For which, by the way, he is, rightly, unapologetic: “The ERM would have been abandoned even if I had never been born”.
As hedge funds and other speculators pile in to the current crude oil boom, the Hungarian-born investor instead focuses on the wider picture - maintaining his estimated $8.5bn (£4.3bn) fortune, much of which he spends on his philanthropic and political ventures - most notably his Open Society Institute, which has a particular focus on Eastern Europe. However, don’t try to read any of his politics into his trades, he insists.
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