“This Is Much More Than A Spat”: What The Qatar Crisis Means For Global Energy Markets

We and quite a few others have spent a lot of time discussing the spat between Qatar and its neighbors. As noted first thing Monday morning, Qatar’s finance minister wants you think there’s nothing to see here. It’s “business as usual in Doha,” Ali Shareef Al Emadi told CNBC. “Our reserves and investment funds are more than 250 percent of gross domestic product, so I don’t think there is any reason that people need to be concerned about what’s happening or any speculation on t

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2 thoughts on ““This Is Much More Than A Spat”: What The Qatar Crisis Means For Global Energy Markets

  1. Spat, bickering, fight on the playground not even close, this is the beginning of Saudi Arabia pushing the envelope of conflict. Saudi Arabia and Russia want oil to rise and the fastest and worst situation for the world would be the old stand-by, WAR. Nothing gets the blood of oil flowing better than a religious or/and political war that is almost impossible to stop. You want $120 a barrel oil it’s easy, just stop the flow of the “death juice”or kick the sh*t out of a smaller country with no chance of defending themselves. It’s coming.

  2. PS:Guess who wouldn’t lift a finger to stop something like that??? All that “dark $$$$” floating around the sleazy “Citizens United” bullsh*t that is ruining our country.

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