Net Exporter Status Helps U.S. Weather Oil Shocks, Carlyle and Apollo Global Say
The United States' status as a net energy exporter, achieved for the first time since the 1950s, fundamentally reshapes the economic equation when facing oil shocks: energy sector revenues now partially offset household losses.
| Countries | États-Unis, Iran |
|---|---|
| Companies | Carlyle, Morgan Stanley, Apollo Global |
| Sector | Pétrole |
| Theme | Marchés & Finance, Analyse sectorielle |
American stock markets have proved resilient amid recent oil price increases, as investors anticipate limited economic growth impact. This resilience stems partly from a structural transformation: the United States has become a net oil exporter for the first time since the 1950s. The country's annualized energy surplus has reached nearly $100 billion over the past twelve months, according to Jason Thomas, strategist at Carlyle. The surge in crude prices only increases this amount, the same source indicates.











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