Carlyle Group Highlights Significant Underinvestment in Oil and Metal Markets, Foresees Substantial Upside Potential

Deep News
Feb 10

Carlyle Group LP's Chief Strategy Officer for Energy Pathways, Jeff Currie, stated that oil and metal markets are "severely underinvested" and possess substantial upside potential. He also noted that the long-standing narrative of oversupply, which has weighed on oil prices, is exaggerated.

"If you have to search hard through the data to find evidence of an oil surplus, then there isn't really a surplus," Currie said in an interview on Monday. "A true surplus is obvious, like being hit over the head with a hammer."

Since the start of the year, New York crude oil prices have risen more than 10%, trading near $64 per barrel. This contrasts sharply with long-standing warnings from Wall Street analysts that an oversupply would crush oil prices. The significant gap between predictions and reality is largely attributed to sanctioned Russian crude remaining stranded at sea—supply that exists but only a few countries are willing to purchase—with China absorbing most of the excess.

Jeff Currie of Carlyle Group LP emphasized that oil and metal markets are "severely underinvested," indicating considerable room for price increases.

Currie estimated that if international sanctions were lifted immediately, up to 100 million barrels of crude oil could re-enter the market. However, he added that such a scenario is unlikely, stating, "nobody expects that to happen."

Prices are also being supported by a range of favorable factors, including tensions between Washington and Tehran, disruptions at a key export terminal in the Black Sea, and the impact of winter storms in the United States.

Currie noted that rising geopolitical risks are triggering hoarding behavior across various commodities, driving capital away from technology-dominated "new economy" sectors and toward asset-intensive traditional industries. He pointed out that this situation bears strong resemblance to the surge in gold prices following the dot-com bubble burst in the early 2000s.

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