Brent crude oil has hit a nine-month high of $114.57 a barrel, as Sunni jihadists started capturing several parts of Iraq this month. Oil prices have remained benign over the past couple of years, which has helped importing countries such as India.
Brent crude has traded in a narrow band of $108-112/barrel for the past 10 quarters and deviated from it only on three other occasions. With Brent breaking out its narrow trading band, many are quick to term this event the next oil shock. Global analysts and strategists are not as worried about the spike in oil prices because these might not sustain. Also, India is better prepared to handle higher crude prices now than even a year ago.
Markets can ignore the mayhem in West Asia, says CLSA's Christopher Wood, if oil remains below the lofty $120-a-barrel level. Barclays Commodity Research says although fundamentals are tightening, geopolitical threats are high and crude oil prices are moving higher again, a permanent move back to a more volatile price regime in oil seems unlikely any time soon.
Saumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economic adviser at State Bank of India, says even if the prices move up to $115, CAD would be below three per cent of GDP. Also, most of Iraq's oil facilities are in the south and under the government's control. All these factors suggest India’s CAD may not see a significant impact.