Showing posts with label oil bull market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil bull market. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Oil Failing to Rally on Bullish News...A Foreboding Sign

Have you been piling into oil with the rest of the hot money? Might want to think about covering...or even reversing...your position.


The fact that oil didn't leap up with delight at riots in Iran should make oil investors quake with fear. Iran produces about 5% of the world's oil every day. Its populace is rioting... and yet the price of oil fell 3%.

As my colleague Brian Hunt pointed out, it's a big bearish sign when an asset cannot rally on bullish news. We could see oil prices go into decline any minute.

Since breaking the $70 mark, oil has looked a bit toppy. News that China has stockpiled more oil than it can handle appears to have given investors pause.

Oil may be running out of breath after a huge run-up. (Source: Barchart.com)

Now's probably a good time to take some profits...and if you like to live dangerously, maybe even consider taking a small short position for a short-term trade.

PS - If you're a fan of short-term trading, I'd suggest you check out Jeff Clark's S&A Short Report. It's pricey...but if you're a serious trader, it's really top notch insights and recommendations. And right now they are running a special 3-month trial deal.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

BP Review of World Energy Stats for 2009

Global oil producer BP reported that oil reserves fell for the first time in 10 years...from 1.261 trillion barrels to 1.258 trillion barrels. Enough reserves for about 42 years at current production rates, according to the company.


Some quick highlights:
  • Global oil consumption fell by 0.6% in 2008 - the largest decline since 1982
  • Meanwhile, production increased by 0.4% for the year
  • World natural gas production grew by 3.8% in 2008, with consumption only increasing by 2.5%...less than the historical average

Friday, May 15, 2009

Is Oil Going to $30 or $300?

Last week, with oil pushing $60/barrel, CNBC asked the question: Is oil going to $300?

On cue, crude fell this week, to close at $56.  CNBC can have an uncanny ability to signal short term tops.

Where is crude heading from here?  Some folks believe the bullish supply/demand fundamentals that drove crude north of $140 still in place, while other experts say there is plenty of crude on the market right now, and no reason for crude to be north of $40 right now.

In this guest article, Casey Research's Marin Katusa takes a stroll down memory lane to review where crude has been, and analyze where it may be going from here.  

I think very highly of Marin's work, and am a subscriber myself to his Casey Energy Opportunities publication...if you like his analysis, there's a special link at the end of the article where you can grab a free trial.

***

The Price of Oil
How did it get here, and where is it going?

By Marin Katusa, Senior Editor, Casey Energy Opportunities

What a difference a year makes.

While March lions and April showers were at work in 2008, so were these factors in the U.S. and global economies:
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average remained steady above 12,000.
  • The leading indicator of existing home sales was down over 21% from the previous year, and the official unemployment rate was just beginning its upward creep by crossing the 5% mark.
  • The first official admissions of the “R” word. In early April 2008, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) declared a 25% chance of a global recession, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress that gross domestic product “could even contract slightly.”
  • The novelty of bailouts began. Bernanke also assured Congress that the Fed's emergency authorization of a loan against $29 billion of Bear Stearns assets wasn't putting taxpayer money at risk: “I feel reasonably confident that we'll be able to recover all the principal and indeed some interest, and there is some chance of even upside beyond that.
  • The dollar's six-year slide against the euro, hitting its lowest ever at $1.60 in late April. It also fell below the 7-yuan mark in China for the first time.
  • And oil, comfortably above $100/barrel, was heading for its summer crest of $147.
  • A scant 12 months later, the Dow is trying to stagger back from a plunge to 6,500. Home sales are hinting a possible turnaround, unemployment (even the official, conservative figures) is expected to reach double digits before long, “recession” and “bailout” are household words (often accompanied by four-letter ones), the dollar is recovering... and a barrel of oil is worth half that hundred dollars. Hardly worth pulling out of the ground.
What happened? And even more important for us as investors, what's going to happen?

The Casey Energy Opportunities team pulled together the pieces of the oil sector picture that other sources tend to scatter or ignore. We’ll give you a broader understanding of the drivers within the oil industry, the markets in which they operate, and how you can use that knowledge to push your profits upward.


The Oil Industry Now: A Rock, a Hard Place, and a Supply Glut That Isn't

Everyone who drives a car or heats a home with petroleum has welcomed the fall in oil prices from their high in the summer of 2008.

While it's hard to argue that filling your tank at $2 per gallon is a lot easier on the wallet than $4 or $5 per gallon, the broader economic effects of such low oil prices are troubling.

Leading the concerns is the drop in oil exploration and drilling that accompany a drop in price. Below the $50/barrel mark – and for many companies the bar is closer to $65 even for conventional fields – oil producers typically spend more money getting oil out of the ground than they can recoup by selling it. At the same time, turbulent financial markets have tightened credit. These two factors have pressured producers to allocate exploration budgets away from drilling projects and toward meeting debt obligations and day-to-day operating costs instead.

The plunge in prices has consumed the cash buffers of even the major oil companies. ConocoPhillips, for example, announced in January that along with eliminating 1,300 jobs and writing down $34 billion in assets, it was also planning to cut its 2009 investment budget by 18%. Exploration projects are part of both writedowns and spending cuts. The results of curtailed exploration are two-fold. First, some oil companies will be simply unable to survive the economic crisis. Second, supply in the longer term is being sacrificed to stay afloat now.

Storage facilities are bulging. The chart below shows the contents of the Cushing, OK, storage facility — where NYMEX deliveries take place — have recently doubled from their average 2008 volume. Along with a host of other facilities around the world, it got this way because of an unusually dramatic contango at the beginning of 2009. (A contango is a kind of market inversion, when the current [spot] price dips lower than the future price.)


In January, the spot price of oil plummeted as low as $37/barrel, while futures for July delivery were trading for $52. That meant if an oil company could buy and store product for seven months, it could lay out $37/barrel and be guaranteed a profit of $15 – or 40%, minus costs – in July. And indeed the buying frenzy took off, reinforcing the decision to turn off the drills.

So for the moment, we are artificially flush with oil, and demand has dropped as the global economy will likely shrink for the first time since World War II. It’s no surprise that oil prices have been staying down.

Many analysts say we won't feel the effects of declining exploration for a few years. But the numbers are emerging already. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), non-OPEC countries demonstrated an average annual growth in supply of 570,000 barrels/day from 2000 through 2007. In contrast, they recorded a drop last year of some 300,000 barrels/day.

At the same time, OPEC appears to be conforming to its production cuts of 4.2 million barrels/day, begun in September 2008. The oil cartel is known to announce cuts that its members don't actually follow; it's in their economic best interest, if only in the short term, to sell all they can. But this time, oil has plunged far below levels to sustain their economies. Even Saudi Arabia expects to run a budget deficit this year.

OPEC, which produces about 40% of the world's oil, would like to see prices around $75/barrel, at least. But the fragile global economy would have a difficult time absorbing such a price at the moment, and the cartel decided against further production cuts when it met in March. In fact, some three weeks later, Saudi Arabia actually announced a price cut on all its grades of crude to European, North American, and Mediterranean markets – a dramatic attempt to spur demand amidst high inventories.

So, entwined as it is with the economy, the oil industry is currently in a conundrum. The fix it requires – higher prices for its product – will choke the framework in which it operates.

At the same time, we've got supply problems ahead.


How Did We Get Here Anyway?

Like many aspects of the markets, movements in price are driven partly by real factors and partly by perception. Rags-to-riches-to-rags-to-riches Texas oilwoman Sue Sanders summed it up when she noted wryly in her 1940 autobiography that “nothing succeeds like reports of success.”

Last year's run-up of oil was no exception: part real, part report. Some of the real factors:
  • The weak U.S. dollar. The United States is not the only country that buys oil in U.S. dollars. The price per barrel is pegged to it, in fact. When the dollar is weak, the cost of U.S. exports drops; and indeed by December 2008, the U.S. trade deficit had fallen to its lowest in nearly six years ($39.9 billion, according to U.S. Commerce Department data). However, a weak dollar means it takes more dollars to buy a barrel of oil. Global concerns over the strength of the U.S. economy, including America's ever-rising level of debt, had undermined the dollar to the point that OPEC members began to murmur about dumping it for the euro or a basket of currencies.
  • Geopolitical turbulence in oil-producing countries. The Iraq war, oil-related militancy in Nigeria, and Iran-Israel-U.S. posturing over nuclear issues were hotspots in the first half of 2008. The average nightly news covered casualties in Iraq, but industry watchers tracked attacks on pipelines and oil facilities. Likewise, in Nigeria, sabotage and oil worker kidnappings by militant groups such as the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) regularly shut down facilities to repair, negotiate, or improve security. And as spring warmed up, so did the war of words between Iran and Israel. By early July, Iran had gone so far to indicate it would move against shipping in the Persian Gulf if attacked. The United States would have moved next, of course... thus driving up the price of oil in the jittery oil markets, which depend on Persian Gulf shipping lanes.
  • Unusually low crude and gasoline supplies entering the 2008 summer driving season. In early April, the EIA reported significant drops in supply – gasoline declined by 4.53 million barrels and crude oil by 3.2 million barrels, a one-two blow that surprised and worried industry watchers. Behind the gasoline slump were lower refinery margins, called crack spreads. In mid-March, when refineries would normally be coming off their maintenance schedules to churn out gasoline for summer driving, the margin for turning a barrel of crude into gasoline was negative for the first time in three years. Refineries sought profits in other oil products, and the markets responded to the expected imbalance in supply and demand.
  • High demand. China is a stand-out here, and for more than its usual energy appetite. China has a penchant for aiming to break records – from its goals in five-year plans and building projects to its haul of Olympic medals – and in the first half of 2008, it was visited by some dramatic examples: a great earthquake and major snowstorms, events that disrupted the country’s energy industry. Combine that with the fact that China was also preparing for the Beijing Olympics in August, and it’s easy to understand why it was buying oil very heavily until mid-summer.
On the perception side of price drivers, it's hard to overlook the fact that the market push stayed strong in the face of increasingly gloomy economic data. Casey Research was earlier than most in predicting the economic crash (we published reports such as “The Coming Currency Crisis” in June 2006), but by spring 2008, even officialdom was dancing around the word recession.

Normally, news of burgeoning foreclosures, plummeting home sales, spiking personal and business bankruptcies, rising unemployment, and other economic indicators would tend to exert a bearish influence. After all, consumers generate 70% of U.S. economic activity, and if they stop or cut back on driving to work or the shopping mall, telephone relatives or business partners instead of flying out to see them, reduce purchases of items containing plastics, turn down the thermostat, and other weather-the-storm measures, oil consumption should decline.

It took months for all these drivers to realign – but as we all know, they did, and then some. The chicken-and-egg debate, whether oil's sky shot triggered or portended the economic debacle in the closing months of 2008, will require more distance and data to resolve. But it's true that the dollar had started its comeback by mid-summer, supply had caught up, geopolitics had settled a bit, China backed off on its buying, no major hurricanes hit – but economic realities did.

Meanwhile, Congress jumped up and down and cried “Speculators!” “OPEC!” “Oil producers!” in tidy sound bites.


The Next Big Plays: Where You Need to Be

Oil companies are influenced by the range of market drivers and economic conditions according to size. The junior oil producers, those with market capitalizations of $250 million or less, have the small-business advantage of flexibility when times are good. These times aren't good, of course, and even well-managed juniors with good projects are in trouble. Their vulnerability is in the credit market. You’ve likely heard of credit lines being revoked and refinancings denied to people with impeccable credit. Now imagine pitching a drill project without a wallet full of assets ready to lay on the table.

Mid-tier producers, with market caps between $250 million to $2 billion, will look to mergers and acquisitions to survive. The majors ($2-20 billion market cap) and Big Oil (over $20 billion) will also be shopping. With low oil prices shutting down exploration, development, and even production, these companies will be looking to replace their reserves instead by purchasing smaller, solid companies with proven production. It's simply cheaper.

We see two ways to profit from this trend.

First, we buy shares in undervalued, producing companies that are profitable even below $40/barrel, are best of peer, and own large reserves. These are the companies that Big Oil will be looking to acquire. One such company, an oil sands producer, is currently a part of the Casey Energy Opportunities portfolio.

Second, we believe that owning a potential consolidator is the best position. As debt load and low commodity prices overtake them, junior producers will be forced to consolidate their projects. We currently own one such candidate, and are scouting for others with such muscle. Consolidators will be purchasing projects from the bank at 25 to 30 cents on the dollar.

Our tactics have already paid off handsomely in the last six months: all our recent recommendations have been on fire. A few tripled their value, and one generated a return of 540%.

As we’ve seen, supply problems are looming, no matter what timetable of Peak Oil you may believe in. With increased demand inevitably come higher prices. Our approach at Casey Energy Opportunities positions us to take advantage of the trend in both the short and longer term. And we guide our subscribers not only when to buy or sell, but also when to take profits and a “Casey Free Ride” to eliminate risk.

We’d like to offer you the opportunity to kick the tires of Casey Energy Opportunities RISK-FREE for 90 days, with 100% money-back guarantee. Click here to give it a try.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Oil Service Stocks are Breaking Out

Brian Hunt, Editor in Chief at Stansberry Research, writes that oil service stocks are breaking out to 6-month highs, according to the chart of OIH, the ETF of major oil service companies.


Brian writes: "If oil continues the slow and steady rebound it's been enjoying since February, the oil services could run much higher. Just don't forget your trailing stops once the rest of the crowd figures out."

An interesting trading play on oil that you may want to keep your eye on.  Brian is a very astute trader/investor - I had the good fortune to recently connect with him, and since I've started penning some guest pieces for Stansberry Research's new website The Daily Crux.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Is Oil Supply Shrinking Faster Than Demand?

It appears so - as you can see from the chart here, oil supply is projected to shrink by a significant amount each quarter of 2009:

This chart is courtesy of Frank Holmes, who writes on his blog:

It’s also important to point out that it is much cheaper and easier to cut supply than to bring that same supply back on line. Demand for commodities will likely be hastened by the trillions in stimulus spending by the United States, China, Europe and others. When that happens, there’s a good chance of a supply shortage.

Frank is the CEO of US Global Investors, a commodity focused fund, and one smart dude when it comes to commodities.  Definitely worth reading his entire blog post here.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Crude Oil Drops Over 7% Today

Seems like the same old theme - when the stock market gets slammed, so does crude oil.

Crude oil closed the day below $49/barrel. 

(Chart source: BarChart.com)

When crude is up on days like today, that's when we'll take a hard look at going long crude.  

The only bright spots today?  Gold, Silver, US Treasuries, and the US Dollar.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Which Energy Plays Will Prevail Under Obama

Which energy plays will win, and lose, under the Obama Administration? The Casey Research Energy Team breaks it down for us here, in this exclusive piece. Note: I subscribe to their regular publication, Casey Energy Opportunities.


How Obama Will Influence Energy Stocks

By Marin Katusa

Chief Strategist, Casey Research Energy Team

Casey Energy Opportunities

One might think the United States would be charging hard on energy security as well as border and other kinds of security in its Global War on Terror campaign. Not so. For example, America imports some 12 million barrels of oil per day, yet maintains a Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) whose maximum is 727 million barrels (and its inventory is currently lower, 701 million barrels, because the government cut off shipments to it last year in an effort to modulate gasoline prices.) The math gets even more discouraging when you work in the fact that the SPR's daily drawdown capacity is only 4.4 million barrels – so America is completely unprepared for any worst-case scenarios, or even the bad-case ones.

It's not that the United States doesn't have the capacity for domestic energy production. Administration after administration, Republican as well as Democratic, is simply choosing to legislate it away. Designate the land above one of the biggest, cleanest coal deposits in the world a national monument, rope off huge swaths of offshore waters to drilling, threaten stringent new mining laws, derail hydroelectric projects, and America is handing foreign suppliers its own barrel for the country to crawl under.

Speaking of administrations... how about the new one? Will President Obama's promised green policies make a difference? As we laid out in the November 2008 edition of
Casey Energy Opportunities, the short answer is no. In fact, we believe that if Obama pushes through the goals as he's outlined, the United States is actually headed for a more, not less, dangerous path. Green energy isn't enough to offset the pressure he plans for the “dirty” energies. A bull market will come for the traditional energies in the long run; the problem lies in the shorter term, in the instability of America's energy portfolio before the Obama administration realizes that nice girls don't wear that much paint.

With this in mind, let's look at each power generation technology from an investor's view.

Coal. However you slice it, the coal industry is in for a hard time under Obama. He proposes a tough 100% cap-and-trade system that will make coal plants uneconomical to run at almost any electricity or coal price around now. This goes for existing as well as new plants, and installing the latest-generation scrubbers will just be another route into the red for many companies. Did we mention that coal generates almost half of America's electricity?

As a result, we expect coal prices and coal utilities to trade well below their worth for the next few years. We're closing our position on a coal ETF in our portfolio, which we recommended in February 2007 and took a free ride on in June. But as time goes on, America will realize how overambitious Obama's targets are and come back to the tried and true. With the help of the coal industry's powerful coal lobby in Washington – not to mention all the voters the coal industry employs – coal will catch fire once more, and we'll reevaluate our position then.

Natural Gas. While a thermal-generation technology like coal, natural gas is less likely to feel pain under Obama because of its cleaner burning. And as natural gas is already one of the cheapest power technologies available, the industry would weather a cap-and-trade system better than coal. Natural gas is set to push to the forefront of the electric world.

So far, so good. The next factor changes things a bit for the savvy investor, however. Without Russia's heavy hand on the tap to deal with, prices should shadow market patterns in United States. Due to the country's large natural gas reserves and resources in both gas shale and coal bed methane, we predict natural gas prices will drop in the near term. Thus we're avoiding all but the best U.S. natural gas plays in the
Casey Energy Opportunities portfolio.

Nuclear. Obama's stance on nuclear energy is decidedly neutral. He appears to recognize its benefits for domestic energy security as well as its carbon-reducing qualities. He's also aware it's still a touchy subject for many Americans, even with the Yucca Mountain waste disposal site moving forward. We add this up to mean that nuclear reactors currently in planning stages are likely to go ahead unimpeded by federal or state meddling. This is good news for our uranium picks.

There's another bullish influence coming for uranium: the sunset of America's current Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) agreement with Russia in 2013. At best, Moscow will demand to renegotiate the bargain-basement price it's now obligated to offer under terms of the agreement. More realistically, it will threaten to shop its converted weapons-grade uranium elsewhere – another barrel over the land of the free – and Russia actually has several incentives to do so. Sooner or later, the United States will return to sources within its own borders, then from Canada.

Wind. Wind energy has much to gain from Obama's plan, which, as it stands, has some $15 billion slotted for clean energy initiatives. His target of “25% by 2025” would require roughly double or even triple growth for the wind industry. Obviously this growth is achievable only through government subsidies, which may or may not be sustainable. Only a few areas of the United States, such as around the Great Lakes and offshore in territorial waters, enjoy the steady stiff breeze that wind farms require to be viable.

Offshore projects raise another hurdle: transmission lines. For fun, let's run some numbers for President Obama. For wind power to supply 20% of America's power by 2030, the country would need to build an estimated 12,000 miles of 765 kV transmission lines. At a cost to generate power of US$0.06 – about the same as geothermal – the transmission lines would cost $2.6 million per mile (in today's money), or $31 billion total. That figure would account for 21% of the total budget for clean energy alternatives, or to put it another way, two years' funding for NASA.

A company with projects bearing very good wind reserves near an existing transmission line is the only kind of investment we'd consider here. For now, however... like T. Boone Pickens, who recently announced he's putting his giant Texas wind-farm project on hold because of the credit crunch and falling energy prices – we, too, are steering clear of wind energy.

Solar. Sun-powered electricity is a great long-term energy provider. Despite advances in the technology, however, it continues to be one of the highest-cost producers; and there will always be the issue of what to do when the sun doesn't shine (and not just on cloudy days – there's every night). And while the Mojave Desert isn't as remote as China's Gobi, the incoming administration still needs to consider cost of infrastructure when promoting solar farms. That said, we still believe that our investment in two hand-picked solar stocks will return good profits in the next few years.

Geothermal. Many projects generating electricity from hot water would run into trouble if oil were to go below $50 per barrel. True still, but geothermal continues to appeal nonetheless. First, oil is unlikely to stay this low for long; and more fundamentally, geothermal's load factor – as high as 95% -- pushes it far to the head of the renewables class and comparable to natural gas and nuclear.

Its limitation is geographical. At the very best, only 10% of the United States could be supplied with geothermal power, according to the Department of Energy, and we find that figure optimistic. Geothermal currently represents 0.35% of America's power generation.

We're willing to invest in geothermal companies because of the robust economics and the fact that they're likely to do well under the cap-and-trade system that appears inevitable. We want to pick those that have not only good resources but also customers, so two top-quality geothermal companies are currently in the
Casey Energy Opportunities portfolio.

Hydroelectricity. On the scale of energy generation technologies, hydroelectricity tends to rate as reliable, and generally cheap and environmentally benign. Like Europe, however, the United States has little hydroelectricity left to exploit, and even the newer run-of-river technology is unlikely to bump its contribution up much from hydropower's current 10%.

Biofuels. Unlike the Casey Research Energy Team, Obama is fond of this stuff. Biofuels are both heavily subsidized and currently high-cost alternatives to reducing carbon – second generation (from non-food organic material) and third generation (using algae) included. However, the White House is soon to hold a former senator from Illinois, one of the largest ethanol producers in the United States, so biofuels are likely to hang around in some form or another. We'll keep our eye on research, as well as industry developments in the near future.

***

As Casey Research Managing Director David Galland likes to say, “There has never been an economy so heavily politicized as the current one.” Therefore, anticipating how a market sector will be faring is not enough anymore… you also need to be able to foresee what Washington and/or the Fed is going to do to influence that industry.

To that end, Casey Research offers you a brand-new FREE special report, Obama’s Newer Deal, a short but comprehensive guide on the policies and stances you can expect from the new administration… and how it affects you as an investor. Plus, test Casey Energy Opportunities risk-free with this special offer… clicking here.


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Deflation? What Deflation? Girl Scouts Adjusting for Cookie INFLATION

As our Fed prints money to battle this current "deflationary spiral", the economically pragmatic Girl Scouts are bracing their sales force for the very real effects of inflation.

Here are some "Fingertip Facts for Girls and Families" listed on the Girl Scouts website, so these brave girls can educate their neighbors about the very real effects of inflation on Girl Scout Cookies.

A decision by Girl Scouting
• The national Girl Scouting office said it was okay to change the weight of some licensed Girl Scout
cookie packages.
• Rising costs of food and gas have made baking cookies more expensive.

It costs more to make a cookie than it did one year ago
• You probably know that your family’s grocery bill is rising. The same is true for the bakery’s food bill for
ingredients like flour, baking oils and cocoa.
• It’s expensive to fill a car’s gas tank nowadays. Imagine the cost of filling the tanks of all the trucks that transport ingredients and deliver baked cookies.

Some things never change
• The taste is as great as always!
• The average consumer is still expected to buy 2-4 packages according to national consumer insights research.
• The number one reason consumers do not buy Girl Scout cookies is simply because they are not asked.

Why the new sizes are the right sizes
• Even if money is tight, consumers want to support you! Share your goal with customers when asking themto buy Girl Scout cookies.

What if a customer asks: Is this cookie package smaller?
• Always tell the truth. Here’s a great way you might respond:
Yes, the packages are a little smaller. That’s because the cost of baking cookies has gone up along with food and gas prices. Of course, the delicious taste of your favorite Girl Scout cookie is exactly the same!

Brett again - I'm wondering if some of the TARP funds could have been better spent subsidizing girl scout cookies. These tasty delights were already quite expensive!

We'll let CBM readers weigh in - has anyone bought the "newly sized" Girl Scout Cookie Box this year?

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Goldman Sachs Analyst Expects "Swift, Violent" Oil Rebound in Late 2009

Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. commodity analyst Jeffrey Currie said he expects a “swift and violent rebound” in energy prices in the second half of the year.

Oil prices may have reached their lowest point already, after falling to $32.40 in mid-December, and are expected to rise to $65 by the end of this year, the analyst said. There is scope for a “new bull market” in oil, Currie said.

Full article

Monday, December 15, 2008

Stratfor: Oil Prices Likely to Remain Low for Some Time

Strategic Forecasting logo

Falling Fortunes, Rising Hopes and the Price of Oil

December 15, 2008

Graphic for Geopolitical Intelligence Report

By Peter Zeihan

Related Links

· Mexico: Insuring Oil Exports

· Canada: Oil Sands Tax Increase

Related Special Topic Page

· Global Energy Prices

Oil prices have now dipped — albeit only briefly — below US$40 a barrel, a precipitous plunge from their highs of more than US$147 a barrel in July. Just as high oil prices reworked the international economic order, low oil prices are now doing the same. Such a sudden onset of low prices impacts the international system just as severely as recent record highs.

But before we dive into the short-term (that is, up to 12 months) impact of the new price environment, we must state our position in the oil price debate. We have long been perplexed about the onward and upward movement of the oil markets from 2005 to 2008. Certainly, global demand was strong, but a variety of factors such as production figures and growing inventories of crude oil seemed to argue against ever-increasing prices. Some of our friends pointed to the complex world of derivatives and futures trading, which they said had created artificial demand. That may well have been true, but the bottom line is that, based on the fundamentals, the oil numbers did not make a great deal of sense.

CHART: Spot Oil Prices for December 2008

Things have clarified a great deal of late. We are now facing an environment in which the United States, Europe and Japan are in recession, while China is, at the very least, expecting to see its growth slow greatly. Demand for crude the world over is sliding sharply even as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) member states so far seem unable (or, in the case of Saudi Arabia, perhaps unwilling) to make the necessary deep cuts in output that might halt the price slide. The bottom line is that, while the breathtaking speed at which prices have collapsed has caught us somewhat by surprise, the direction and the depth of the plunge has not.

Prices are likely to remain low for some time. Most of the world’s storage facilities — such as the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve — are full to the brim, so large cuts are needed simply to prevent massive oversupply. Yet any OPEC production cuts — the cartel meets Dec. 17 and deep cuts are expected — will take months to have a demonstrable impact, especially in a recessionary environment. And there is the simple issue of scale. The global oil market is a beast: Total demand at present is about 86 million barrels per day. This is not a market that can turn on a dime. A firm fact that flies in the face of conventional wisdom is that oil actually falls far faster than it rises when the fundamentals are out of whack. This has happened on multiple occasions, and not that long ago.

Falls occurred both in the aftermath of the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf War and as a result of the 1997-1998 Asian financial crises that were similar in percentage terms to the present drop. Until the balance between supply and demand is restruck — something not likely until a global economic recovery is well under way — there is no reason to expect a significant price recovery. The journey, of course, is not necessarily a one-way trip. Quirks in everything from weather to shipping to Nigerian riots and Russian military movements can set prices gyrating, but the fundamentals are clearly bearish. It will most likely take several months for the core features of the new reality to change much at all.



CHART: 2008 Oil Production/Consumption

(click image to enlarge)

Low oil prices create both winners and losers on the international scene. First, the winners’ list.

Far and away the biggest winner from drastically lower prices is the world’s largest consumer and importer of oil: the United States. The last two years of high prices have spawned a sustained American consumer effort to get by with less oil via a mix of conservation and a shift to better-mileage vehicles. Whether this purchase pattern in automobiles lasts is not at issue. The point is that it has already happened: Many Americans have already shifted to more fuel-efficient vehicles. Just as the 1990s obsession with sport utility vehicles artificially boosted American gasoline demand so long as those automobiles were on the road, so the new fleet of hybrids and smart cars will push demand in the opposite direction for a sustained period.

Overall U.S. oil consumption has plummeted by nearly 9 percent from its peak in August 2007 to November 2008, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. Combining this with the drop in prices since July translates into U.S. energy savings of approximately US$1.95 billion at a price of US$50 a barrel and US$2.1 billion at a price of US$40 a barrel. And that is daily cost savings. In recessionary times, that cash will go a long way to building confidence and stanching the recession.

Next on the list are the major European importers of crude: Germany, Italy and Spain. As a rule, European economies are less energy-intensive than the United States, but by dint of fuel mix and lack of domestic production these three major states are forced to rely on substantial amounts of imported oil. We exclude the other major European economies from this list as they are either major oil producers themselves (the United Kingdom and the Netherlands) or their economies are extremely oil efficient (France, Belgium and Sweden). Don’t get us wrong — the EU states are all quite pleased that oil prices have dialed back. Nevertheless, in terms of relative gain, Germany, Italy and Spain are the real winners. And with Europe facing a recession much deeper and likely longer than that in the United States, the Europeans need every advant age they can get.

India, far removed from Europe culturally and geographically, sports a somewhat similar economic structure in that it boasts (or suffers from, based on your perspective) an industrializing base that is highly dependent on oil imports. Broadly, the Indians are in the same basket as Spain in that they are voracious energy consumers who have seen their demand skyrocket in recent years. Between the Nov. 26 Mumbai attack, upcoming federal elections and the energy price pain from earlier in the year, the government is desperate to pass on the cost savings to the population to shore up its support.

Then there are the East Asian states of South Korea, China and Japan (listed in descending order of how much each one benefits from the price drop). All import massive amounts of crude oil, but we put them at the end of the list of winners because of their financial systems. In East Asia — and particularly in China and Japan — money is not allocated on the basis of rate of return or profitability as it is in the West. Instead, the concern is maximizing employment. It does not matter much in East Asia if one’s business plan is sound; the government will provide cheap loans so long one employs hordes of people. One side effect of this strategy is that firms can get loans for anything, including raw materials they otherwise could not afford — such as oil at US$147 a barrel.

Therefore, high oil prices just do not affect East Asia as badly as they affect the West. Just as the East Asian financial system mutes the impact of high prices, the converse is true as well. In the West, energy consumers are not shielded from high prices, so lower prices immediately translate into more purchasing power, and thus more economic activity. Not so in East Asia, where the same financial shielding that blunts the impact of high prices lessens the benefits of low prices.

The order in which we listed the three Asian giants relates to how much progress they have made in reforming their financial practices. South Korea’s financial system is much closer to the Western model than the Asian model: South Korea hurts more as prices rise, and so will be more relieved as prices fall. China is in the middle in terms of financial practices, but it is also attempting to unwind its system of energy price-fixing as oil costs drop; due to subsidies being reduced, Chinese consumers actually may not be seeing much of a change in retail prices. Finally, Japan will benefit the least because its system is already highly efficient compared to the other two, so the price impact was less in the first place. One barrel of oil consumed in Japan generates approximately US$2,610 of Japanese gross domestic product (GDP), while the comparative figures for Korea and China are US$1,270 and US$1,130 respectively.

In short, the heavily industrialized Asians still benefit, but the impact isn’t as much as one might think at first glance. In fact, the biggest benefit to these states from cheaper energy is indirect — lower prices spur consumption in the West, and then the West purchases more Asian products.

And now, the losers.

Venezuela and Iran top this list by far. Both are led by politicians who have lavished vast amounts of oil income on their populations to secure their respective political positions. But that public approval has come at its own price in terms of economic dislocation (why diversify the economy if strong oil prices bring in loads of cash?), low employment (the energy sector may be capital-intensive, but it certainly is not labor-intensive), and high inflation (high government spending has led to massive consumption and spurred rampant import of foreign goods to satiate that demand).

Of the two states, Venezuela is certainly in the worse position. By some estimates, Venezuela requires oil prices in the vicinity of US$120 a barrel to maintain the social spending to which its population has become accustomed. Iran’s number may be only somewhat lower, but President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is in the process of at least beginning to bow to economic reality. On Dec. 5, he announced massive cuts in subsidy outlays with the intent of reforging the budget based on a price of only US$30 a barrel.

It is an open question whether the Iranian government — and especially the increasingly unpopular Ahmadinejad — can survive such cuts (if they are indeed made), but at least there is a public realization of the depth of the crisis at the top level of government. In Venezuela, by contrast, the mitigation process has barely begun, and for political reasons it cannot truly be implemented until after a referendum in early 2009 on term limits that could allow Chavez to run for president indefinitely.

Next is Nigeria. In terms of seeing an increase in human misery, Nigeria should probably be at the top of the losers’ list. But the harsh reality is that Nigerians are used to corrupt government, inadequate infrastructure, spotty power supply and all-around poor conditions. Some of the perks of high energy prices undoubtedly will disappear, but none of those perks succeeded in changing Nigeria in the first place.

The real impact on Nigeria will be that the government will have drastically less money available to grease the political wheels that allow it to keep competing regional and personal interests in check. Those funds have been particularly crucial for funneling cash to the country’s oil-rich Niger Delta region, giving local bosses reason not to hire and/or arm militant groups like the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta to attack oil and natural gas sites. With Abuja having less cash, the oil regions will see a surge in extortion, kidnapping and oil bunkering (i.e., theft). We already have seen attacks ramp up against the country’s natural gas industry: Within the last few days, attacks against supply points have forced operators to take the Bonny Island liquefied natural gas export facility offline. And since Nigeria’s mil itants never really differentiate between the country’s various forms of energy export, oil disruptions are probably just around the corner.

Russia is also in the crosshairs, but not nearly to the same degree as Venezuela, Iran and Nigeria. Russia has four things going for it that the others lack. First, it exports massive amounts of natural gas and metals, giving it additional income streams. (Venezuela and Iran actually import natural gas and have no real alternative to oil income.) Second, Russia never spent its money on its population. Thus, Russians have not become used to massive government support, so there will be no sharp cuts in public spending that will be missed by the populace. Third, Russia has saved nearly every nickel it made in the past eight years, giving it cash reserves worth some US$750 billion. The financial crisis is hitting Russia hard, so at least US$200 billion of that buffer already has been spent, but Russia still remains in a far better position than m ost oil exporters. Fourth and last, the Russians can rely on Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin to (somewhat forcefully) keep the books firmly in balance. At his insistence, the government is in the process of refabricating its three-year budget on the basis of oil prices of below US$35 a barrel, down from the original estimate of US$95.

At the end of the losers’ list we have two states that most people would not think of: Mexico and Canada. Both have other sources of economic activity. Canada is a modern service-based economy with a heavy presence of many commodity industries, while Mexico has become a major manufacturing hub. But both are major oil exporters, and have been leading suppliers to the American economy for decades. So both are exposed, but their concerns are more about unforeseen complications rather than the “simple” quantitative impact of lower prices.

Mexico has purchased derivatives contracts that, in essence, insure the price of all its oil exports for 2009. So should prices remain low, Mexico’s actual income will be unchanged. We only include Mexico on the list of losers, therefore, because it’s quite rare in geopolitics that such planning actually works out as planned. Hurricanes and strikes happen. (Mexico also faces the problem of insufficient funds, expertise and technology to counter rapidly declining output, something that will leave it with a lack of oil to sell in the first place — but that is an issue more for 2012 than 2009.)

As for Canada, most of the oil it produces comes from Alberta province, the seat of power of the ruling Conservative Party. Right now, the Canadian government is wobbling like a slowing top. Seeing the Conservatives’ power base take a massive economic hit due to oil prices is not the sort of complication the government needs right now. In the longer term, Alberta recently increased taxes on oil sands projects. Oil sands extraction is among the more capital-intensive and technologically challenging sorts of oil production currently possible. Combine the tax changes with the nature of the subindustry and the recent price drops and there is likely to be precious little investment interest in oil dur ing — at a minimum — 2009.

Most readers will take note of the countries we have chosen not to include on the list of vulnerable states. These include the bulk of the OPEC states — specifically Angola, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Libya. All of these states count oil as their only meaningful export (except the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, which also export natural gas), so why do we feel such countries are not in the danger zone?

For its part, Angola only became a major producer recently. Nearly all of Angolan oil output is from offshore projects controlled by foreigners — shutting in such production is a very tricky affair for a country that is utterly reliant on foreign technology to operate its only meaningful industry. But the primary reason Angola is not feeling the heat is that most of its income has not been spent but instead has been stashed away due to a lack of the necessary physical and personnel infrastructure needed to leverage the income.

Iraq is in a somewhat similar position as far as finances are concerned. While Iraq has been producing crude for decades, its current government is only a few years old, and its institutions simply cannot allocate the monies involved. Despite massive outlays by both Iraq and Angola, their respective governments simply lack the capacity to spend, and so have stored up cash accounts worth US$26 billion and US$54 billion respectively.

The rest of the Arab oil producers warrant a much simpler explanation: They’ve been fiscally conservative. While all have shared the wealth with their somewhat restive populations, none of them has repeated the mistakes of the 1970s, when they overspent on gaudy buildings and overcommitted themselves to expensive social programs. All have been saving vast amounts of cash, with the Saudis alone probably having more than US$1 trillion socked away. Tiny Kuwait officially has a wealth fund worth more than US$250 billion.

So while none of the Arab oil states are particularly thrilled with the direction — and in particular the speed — oil prices have gone, none of these governments faces a mortal danger at this time. What they are now missing is the ability to make a substantial impact on the world around them. At oil’s height the Gulf Arab oil producers were taking in US$2 billion a day in revenues — far more cash than they could ever hope to metabolize themselves. Bribes are powerful tools of foreign policy, and their income allowed them — particularly Saudi Arabia — to wield outsized influence in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and even in Beijing, London and Washington. So while none of these states faces a meltdown from falling prices, there are certainly some hangovers in store for them. It is jus t that they are more political than economic in nature, at least for now.

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