Greg's Note: Despite OPEC monopoly control and outright depletion, oil prices are down due to sheer destruction of demand but demand for oil isn't something that's likely to be destroyed all that much. Byron King expects that this demand will start growing again soon enough. Send all questions and comments to greg@whiskeyandgunpowder.com. Whiskey & Gunpowder
Along with the market decline, the price of oil has fallen. It's down 50% within three months. Back when oil hit $147 per barrel in July, I said that the price "ought" to be in the range of $100-110, with the possibility of a drop into the $90s. That's what the fundamentals told me back then. Most of the decline in oil price from $147 down to about $100 was directly related to the strengthening of the dollar. So the oil price slide in July, August and the first part of September was mostly a monetary phenomenon. Then we had the mid-September credit crunch and market meltdown. That dragged the price of oil from $100 or so per barrel down into the $70s (with price excursions down into the $60s). The demand weakness for oil has become clear in the past six weeks or so. Everybody just sort of woke up and figured out that the world was entering into a recession. The flip side is that inventories are building back up. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Special~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Fed's Handout Line Open to All Failing Companies Who will be the next failing company to come to the Fed with hands out ready for a handout? It's hard to tell unless you have the right information. One quick look at the secret 100-F document of Lehman Bros. and AIG would have predicted their collapse. Find out which company will be next by clicking here. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This has taken down all of the oil and oil-service companies. Among the latter, Superior Energy Services (SPN: NYSE), Halliburton (HAL: NYSE) and Baker Hughes (BHI: NYSE) have all tumbled. Even the perennially "too expensive" Schlumberger is way down. The thing about the oil service companies, though, is that a lot of their business is all but recession proof. And much of the oil service business is immune even to wide swings in oil prices. That is, many oil company capital budgets are drawn up a couple of years ahead of time. So oil service companies should have work despite the macroeconomic situation. Not as much as in the boom times, maybe. But it's not going to be as bad for the oil service companies as a lot of people seem to think. There are many reasons for this. Sometimes an oil company has leases that are going to expire if it does not drill within a certain time frame. So the oil company has to drill. Or maybe the oil company has a rig under contract. So it has to drill before the contract expires and the rig moves on to other sites. Or maybe there is maintenance or a major workover on a well or field that just plain has to get done for reasons of safety or the environment. As I said, there can be a lot of reasons. So keep an eye on the oil service companies. As Monty Python once said, they are "not dead yet." The oil service companies are way down from previous high prices. I believe that this is a time to nibble. Don't blow your whole wad of cash, but begin to accumulate a position while we watch how the larger economy unfolds. I think we'll see stronger oil prices sooner, rather than later. Oil Exporters Surprised, and Waiting at the Rope Line Speaking of how the larger economy unfolds, some of the most surprised people on the planet are the folks who run oil-exporting countries. Hey, they believed their own press releases. They thought that oil prices would continue to rise upward, ever upward. All they had to do was figure out what to do with all the money that was going to pile up in their bank accounts. No waiting at the rope line for these worthies. But right now, demand destruction trumps even market manipulation by OPEC, not to mention the inexorable effects of depletion. Get Gold Cheap Before It Takes Off Again Gold is giving you another chance to get in for the inevitable ride up at a bargain. Here's how to get it at a discount and multiply those gains. Click here to read more ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ So what are the OPEC people thinking? They are hopping mad. The OPEC folks sure got used to high oil prices in a hurry. They don't like these low oil prices. It costs money to run a petro-welfare state. According to the International Monetary Fund, Iran, Venezuela and Nigeria need oil prices above $95 per barrel just to cover their respective national budgets. Saudi Arabia requires oil prices above $75 to cover its budget. Well over half of the revenues of the Russian Federation come from taxes on hydrocarbons. Mexico gets over 40% of its federal revenues from taxes on Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex), the national oil company. So low oil prices are causing problems for the oil-exporting states of the world. No major oil exporting country can long afford to see oil prices where they are now. Come what may, OPEC is going to turn valves and reduce supply. It's just a question of how soon this will occur, how much oil OPEC will take off the market and what that will do to pricing. No less an authority than Hugo Chavez of Venezuela recently stated that "Venezuela can live with a price of $90 to $100 per barrel. But not less than that." "The Era of Cheap Oil Is Finished" According to Iranian Oil Minister Gholamhossein Nozari, "The era of cheap oil is finished." When a reporter from the New York Times asked Nozari what price Iran would want for its oil, Nozari declared, "The more the better." Nozari stated that he is urging his fellow OPEC members to cut production by up to 2.5 million barrels per day. How much oil is 2.5 million barrels? By comparison, the $6 billion BP (BP: NYSE) Thunder Horse Platform 20 years in the making in deep water in the Gulf of Mexico should produce 250,000 barrels per day by the end of 2009. So with one move by OPEC, there goes the equivalent of 10 Thunder Horses. OPEC representatives are touring national capitals, urging non-OPEC oil producers, such as Russia, Mexico and Norway, to follow the cartel's lead and cut production, according to Reuters news services. OPEC is trying to engineer a coordinated move to drive oil prices back up over $100 per barrel. Most OPEC nations have already reached their own version of "Peak Oil." Traditional oil-export powerhouses like Iran and Kuwait have admitted as much. Aside from Saudi Arabia, most OPEC exporters see a window of less than 20 years for significant international oil exports. By then, internal rising demand and falling output (due to depletion) will severely constrain the world oil markets. So all OPEC nations are interested in selling oil now for as much as they can get. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Special~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The End of Cheap Oil You wouldn't think so. After all, oil prices just plummeted But the fundamentals are clear as day. Oil is destined to get a lot more expensive. It's going to change life in the U.S. and the world forever but you can protect yourself and prosper Click here to take advantage of oil's temporarily lower prices. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "We Want the Money Now" Last May, I attended the Offshore Technology Conference in Houston. I had a revealing discussion with an oil manager who works for the national oil company of an African country. He told me this:
So you can see why the odds favor rising oil prices within a few months. That's all for now. Until we meet again, P.S.: Oil is truly going to be a lot more expensive and the price will be driven by fundamentals diminishing supply versus growing demand rather than any speculative actions. In short, next time don't count on a huge price pullback like the one we saw this time around. For more on this, click here. |
Whiskey & Gunpowder Special Reports New "Backlash" Set to Rocket Oil Past $150...and Send Gas Soaring to Over $6 per Gallon The 10 Shocking Reasons for China's Pollution Problem Geothermal Energy: Investment in the Future Here's One Coal Stock That's Set to Skyrocket Investing in Exchange Traded Funds The Real Story Behind the True Gold Bull Market If someone forwarded you this copy, please look here to start your own subscription. Wanna let us know what you thought of today's issue? Now you can... click on this link. Whiskey & Gunpowder is a free e-mail service brought to you by a team of rebellious brigands. If you have not already done so, please click here to confirm your subscription. This will help us ensure you get every Whiskey & Gunpowder without interruption. Are you having trouble receiving your Whiskey & Gunpowder? You can ensure its arrival in your mailbox here. Please note: we sent this e-mail to finan4@finanmart.com because you subscribed to this service. To end your Whiskey & Gunpowder e-mail subscription, click here. Nothing in this e-mail should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized investment advice.We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security recommended to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. © 2008 Agora Financial, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This newsletter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the World Wide Web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Agora Financial, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. |