Posted on 07/03/2005 10:22:07 AM PDT by aculeus
'It's fear,' said Kyle Cooper, an analyst at Citigroup. 'It's not based on (any facts, whatsoever.) It's based on fear of what could happen.'
There. Fixed it! ;)
Gasoline is $2.25/gallon here this week. Still affordable, and no talk of local shortages. I just ran into town, and there were all sorts of boats, SUVs, camping vans, etc. filling up at the pump. Guess they didn't get this latest memo. ;)
Maybe, maybe not. The more likely scenario is that things will be rough for a little while, but the high prices will spur industry to come up with substitutes. At prices that are consistently over $60, coal liquification will likely be developed.
Cool! I'm going to mortgage my house and take my life savings and buy crude oil futures. I'm gonna be rich!!!!
WE'RE DOOOOOMMMMEDDDD!!!!!!
buy puts on home builders too
The President could put a gas-rationing emergency executive order into effect overnight, just as cities all over the west and southwest ration water during a drought. The oil speculators would lose their shirts in the resulting crash, but that would serve them right. Sounds like this guy got the headlines he wanted right before his book comes out, and of course, the leftists in the media love to hype any pessimism they can find to hurt the country.
Question; Will the price of oil go up, or down?
Answer; Yes
The high price of oil isn't being driven speculators. It's being driven by supply and demand. But I guess it's easier to blame a boogeyman than deal with the real problem of Peak Oil.
Demand for oil (and other commodities) will continue to increase as China and India continue their economic growth. Supply isn't keeping up, as seen by the recent doubling in the price of oil.
Production in the US peaked in the 70s. Production in the North Sea has also recently peaked. It's been 30 years since a new large oil field has been discovered. The large Saudi fields are starting to run out, and they are having to pump water into the fields to increase the pressure.
They are also lying about their oil reserves. They claim to have 260 billion barrels of reserves. This is the same amount they claimed 10 years ago. So while they are pumping out 10 million barrels a day, their oil reserves remain contstant! The last time an honest accounting of their reserves was done was back in the late 1970s. I think that number was around 100 billion barrels, which the Saudi government magically doubled in the 80s.
I think you're on to something.
all I know is that older family and friends on fixed incomes have been telling me that their oil contracts for the coming winter are showing home heating fuel at $2.39 a gallon - they are scared to death. the government is going to have to pony up some massive funds for HEAP this winter.
all the president has to do is open the SPR - release physical oil onto the market at $42/bbl - break the speculators. then sign a contract with the new iraqi government to replace the oil being released from the SPR.
and as soon as those new solutions come to market - oil will magically fall to $30 a bbl. industry isn't going to invest in new technology when they can't predict a stable price point for oil, since the market is manipulated.
Here is a link to his company web site.
His views are not so easily dismissed in my opinion.
They should be increasing the size of the SPR.
break the speculators
This isn't a "speculator" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Selling our reserves simply means that we'll be buying them back at a higher price next year. Sell low, buy high.
then sign a contract with the new iraqi government to replace the oil being released from the SPR.
Uh, weren't they promising to do this 3 years ago?
The high price of oil isn't being driven speculators. It's being driven by supply and demand.Really?
I guess these guys didn't get the memo then.
Excerpt:
Speculators hijack oil marketPrices have been forced up unnecessarily as investment banks and hedge funds join the 'black gold rush'. Robert Winnett reports
A LARGE WAREHOUSE in Amsterdam may seem an unusual place to attract the City?s top traders and hedge funds. But, in the past few months, Morgan Stanley has been accumulating warehouse space in the Netherlands to store its hottest new property - oil.
This and the tankers that have been hired by the investment bank illustrate just how important oil is now becoming in the City of London and Wall Street.
Morgan Stanley may be among the most advanced of the new breed of oil speculators, but, over the past year, many banks and hedge funds have joined the "black gold rush". With the stock market proving lacklustre, the oil market has been a godsend for the banks, which describe it as the "new Nasdaq".
Speculators have helped to drive oil prices to near record levels - peaking at almost $50 a barrel last month. Oil is the talk of the City with many millions of pounds being made every day, and oil traders are among the most sought-after employees.
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