Oil Price Chart Since 1990
You are currently following Bespoke Investment Group
Stop FollowingYou are no longer following Bespoke Investment Group
Send Message
- Bespoke's blog: Think B.I.G.
- Market Research: Bespoke Premium
- Bespoke Money Management
- Bespoke Institutional
- Contact Bespoke
an article to
Doesn't it seem like forever ago that oil was in the mid $60s? Those were the days... Fergie's "Big Girls Don't Cry" topped the charts, LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavs were locked in an unforgettable series with the Detroit Pistons, and News Corp was in a battle to buy Dow Jones. It all happened just one year ago.
Below we highlight a chart of oil since 1990 with various price points included. It would be hard to draw a more vertical line since oil hit a low of $50.48 in January 2007.
About the author:
Bespoke Investment Group
Think B.I.G., by Bespoke Investment Group, provides some of the most original content and intuitive thinking on the Street. Founded by Paul Hickey and Justin Walters, formerly of Birinyi Associates and creators of the acclaimed TickerSense blog, Bespoke offers multiple products that allow... More
Send Message
Print
Email
Related Articles
Most Popular
- 10 Reasons This Is Not a Sustainable Rally
- Gold Corp Eyeing Buy or Die - Overpays for Andean Resources
- 3 Stocks to Green Up Your Portfolio
- Another Sign Web 2.0 Has Peaked
- Netflix: Defying the Laws of Gravity
- Can Silver Break $20 in September?
- 7 Dividend Stocks Sending More Cash to Shareholders
- For Natural Gas, Range Resources Offers Margin of Safety
- Apple Getting Serious About Enterprise, SMB Accounts
- Solar Sector Hot for a Reason
- Continued Market Strength or September Weakness?
Editors' Picks
- Harry Dent's Outlook on Demographics, Debt, and Deflation
- Private Sector Adds 1.8 Million Jobs
- Roll Risk and Convexity in the U.S. Debt Market
- Major Indexing Strategies and Their Effect on ETFs
- Four Strategies for September's Bad Reputation
- Market Review: Traders, Investors Turn Defensive on Bad Economic News
-
The Seeking Alpha 100
See allThe top 100 stock
market authors
selected for publication in the last week
Seeking Alpha 100 » -
Fastest Climbers
Those with the largestSee all
increase in followers
in the last week
Fastest Climbers » -
Top Commenters
Top commenters,See all
as ranked by their peers
Top Commenters » -
Top Instabloggers
The 100 most active
Instabloggers.- 1 Philip Davis
- 2 John Lounsbury
- 3 Richard Shaw
- 4 Paul Price
- 5 Dr. Kris
Top Instabloggers » -
Top StockTalkers
TopSee all
StockTalkers.
Top StockTalkers »
- Free E-Newsletters
-
Wall Street Breakfast -Sample
-
The Macro View -Sample
-
Investing Ideas -Sample
-
Jim Cramer's Picks -Sample
-
Stocks & Sectors -Sample
-
Global Markets -Sample
-
Alt. Energy Investing -Sample
-
ETF Daily -Sample
-
The Daily Dispatch -Sample
- Tools
- Feeds
- About Seeking Alpha
- About Seeking Alpha
- Editorial principles
- SA transcripts
- The SA management
- What's New
- Who reads SA
- SA Team Instablogs
- David (Founder)
- Eli (Editor in Chief)
- Boaz (Contributor Relations)








So oil falls to $110...$100...$90.
It won't be long before oil starts up again; it's still about supply and demand; and unfortunately, only demand is rising.
Interesting story in today's WSJ on synthetic oil and the Air Force taking the lead in testing. As it is profitable at $55/barrel, let's get going on commercial production.
"Iraq dramatically increased the official size of its oil reserves yesterday after new data suggested that they could exceed Saudi Arabia’s and be the largest in the world. The Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister told The Times that new exploration showed that his country has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, with as much as 350 billion barrels. The figure is triple the country’s present proven reserves and exceeds that of Saudi Arabia’s estimated 264 billion barrels of oil. Barham Salih said that the new estimate had been based on recent geological surveys and seismic data compiled by “reputable, international oil companies . . . This is a serious figure from credible sources.”
The last time this happened (early 1980s), oil went down to $8. No it wont go down that much but everyone will be surpised at how low it will go.
To me it seems like political uncertainties (more to come) have contributed to the sky-rocketing trend. But for now I am predicting the the price will drop right before the november elections. People have short memory.