Has Oil Topped Out?
Paris, France Thursday, July 17, 2008
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*** Whats the real story behind the oil price?...we see both a bubble behind oil prices and a useful commodity responding to economic forces...
*** Investors are waking up to something they should have seen a long time ago...viva la (coal) revolution...
*** The stock market is delighting over yesterdays oil slippage...a draw in the Flationary War...and more!
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Has oil finally topped out?
Yesterday, the price fell another $4 to $136. Still, of course, not far from its all-time high. But sliding...
Oil is a bubble ready to pop, say some analysts. No, oil is merely responding to supply and demand, say others.
Whats the real story?
As usual, you can count on us, here at The Daily Reckoning
, to give it to you -- straight, unvarnished and unmitigated.
Trouble is, the real world always has a bend to it. Everything has a lacquer on it. And mitigations are everywhere.
In the oil market, we see both a bubble...and a useful commodity responding to economic forces. If you want to see a pure bubble, you have to look at something like the tulip mania in Holland or the Mississippi affair in France or the dot.com debacle in New York. These were pure bubbles because neither tulips, nor shares in the Mississippi company, nor dot.coms had any real economic value. Their prices were based 100% on speculation not supply and demand. And since there was no there there, as Virginia Woolf might say, there was nothing left when the speculation disappeared. Their prices could go to zero, in other words.
Will the price of oil go to zero? No...not a chance. If the oil market is in a bubble, at least it is a bubble mitigated by three very important circumstances: 1) oil is perhaps the worlds most useful commodity, 2) more and more people want the stuff, 3) it is priced mostly in dollars whose value, in terms of everything else, is going down.
Normally, we can set aside the first two circumstances. Everyone knows oil is useful. Everyone knows the Chinese, the Indians and all the other foreigners are becoming addicted to it just as Americans have been addicted for the last 50 years. These circumstances come as no surprise to anyone...and markets can sort them out. They were obvious in the oil market two years ago...they are obvious now.
Of course, even if they are obvious doesnt mean investors have noticed. And in todays oil market, it looks as if investors are suddenly waking up to something they should have seen a long time ago. But we suspect that the real surprise to most investors is the third circumstance. During the last 15 years a period known as the Great Moderation it was inflation that seemed to be taking a long nap. The band was playing loud music. Free drinks were passed around. Everyone was there except inflation. Maybe it was out of town, some wondered. Or, maybe it was dead. Whatever happened to it, inflation was not around.
But, then the old party pooper showed up and people began looking for their hats and saying goodbye to each other.
US consumer prices up most in 26 years, was yesterdays most telling headline. Even the Wall Street Journal
announced a price increase to $2 an issue.
If youre an oil sheik whose only asset is $100 billion worth of oil under the desert sand, you pay attention. The dollar has lost about 25% of its purchasing power depending on how you measure it in the last 5 years. If inflation rates just stay the same, the poor oil sheik stands to lose more than $25 billion by 2013. If he doesnt think hes getting a fair deal at todays oil price, hes likely to put a little crimp in the oil pipeline reducing production until the price increases.
On the other hand, if the price of oil goes up enough, hes likely to think that he should get it while the gettins good. Then, he would increase production driving down the oil price.
Our guess is that the oil market has probably over-reacted to circumstances. When investors realized how much demand was increasing...they bid up prices. And when they realized how much inflation was increasing...they bid up prices further. And when speculators saw prices rising so much, they bid them up even further.
Now, oil is probably ready for a correction. Ten years ago, an ounce of gold would buy about 10 barrels of oil. Today, it buys only about 7. As is the case with oil, gold has responded to the increase in inflation rates. As to everything else, it is probably indifferent. So, if we were just adjusting the oil price to inflation, it should probably sell for about $95 a barrel.
As to the forces of supply and demand Mr. Market would know better than we do. But Mr. Market, for all his sage experience, has a tendency to over-react. He probably over-reacted to growing, worldwide demand. Now, growth rates are declining throughout the world; he will probably over-react to that too.
So, where will the price of oil go? We wish we could tell you. It might very well sink below $100. But it will never sink as low as a busted dot.com or a crushed tulip bulb.
Even if the price of oil does drop, the U.S. has gotten the message: the time to find what will power the car of the future is now.
The coal revolution is here, Byron King tells us. It's always been cheap and plentiful. Now it's going to be clean, and soon it will even be liquid. It's also going to cause a massive shift in world power. Two American companies will profit big time.
Discover the fastest-growing energy source in the world. Also the cleanest and safest. America may miss out, but you can still profit
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*** The stock market seemed to delight in oils slippage yesterday. After weeks of falling prices and gloom on Wall Street, investors were ready for a little fun. So the Dow went up 276. Even the financials started tapping their toes.
The dollar managed a feeble improvement too; after hitting a new all-time low against the euro this week, it rose to $1.58.
And gold? Mr. Spoilsport lost $16, to end the day at $962.
*** If you were describing the days action in terms of our war between inflation and deflation...youd have to say it was a draw. Deflation has been gaining territory following its massive counterattack, launched a couple weeks ago. But yesterday, the front stabilized. Stocks were up, not down. And consumer price inflation was back in the headlines.
On the other hand, golds big drop was clearly a victory for deflation, not inflation. And we got an item from the Wall Street Journal
that reminded us that the U.S. economy is still just beginning a deflationary pullback:
Record Store Closings.
We were too busy to read the accompanying article. For a second, we thought we might have misread the headline. Maybe it meant that record stores were closing. Then we remembered; there arent any stores that sell records any more. So, we must have read it right the first time retail is in trouble.
There is probably nothing surer, dear reader. After a spending spree that saw Americans spend ALL there money...and then some, they are not now going to spend MORE. Its not possible. Instead, they are going to spend less. And that means the retailers are going to sell less. And it means that they are going to need fewer clerks...and less space.
This is not the time to be holding retailers...or shopping malls especially those that are far out in the boonies.
*** Heard from an old friend with a new idea:
Global warming is much more of a threat than I thought. Im embarrassed that I dismissed it for so long without any evidence. Apparently, there is much less dispute in the scientific community on this subject than we thought. Very few real scientists doubt that the climate is changing...and that the changes are at least in part caused by man. And from what I hear, since it is a problem caused by man, it is also something that we can fix at relatively little cost or, at least that part of it caused by mankind.
Not that Im sure of any of this. Maybe the whole thing is wrong. I dont know. But then, I dont know if my warehouse is going to burn down either. And I still buy insurance. From what Ive heard, the cost of insuring the world against the worst effects of climate change if the theory is correct is relatively low. Of course, the world doesnt work as a business...or a household. But if I were running the world...and I were treating it as a business, Id buy the insurance. Even it fit turned out to be untrue, Id still think it was a good buy.
Until tomorrow,
Bill Bonner The Daily Reckoning
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