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Back to the Future: $100 Oil May Return Soon

jwmorrice

Gentleman by Profession
Jun 30, 2003
7,133
2
0
In the laboratory.
Good news for oil company shareholders!

jwm

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100502/wl_time/08599198633300
Back to the Future: $100 Oil May Return Soon

By ERIK HEINRICH
Sun May 2, 2:05 pm ET


Oil has been a slumbering giant for nearly a year, but experts say the world's most important commodity is set to resume its climb back to $100 by this summer at the latest.

If speculators - including investment banks and hedge funds - add fuel to the momentum as they did two years earlier when light crude topped out at $147, oil might be trading at even higher highs around the time of the next U.S. presidential election. This could turn energy security into the top campaign issue, ahead of health care, financial reform and climate change. (See the worst business deals of 2009.)

The big reason for oil's expected jump is - rising demand from developing countries, which are approaching the same torrid pace of expansion they enjoyed prior to the financial meltdown of 2008. "The Asian recovery is coming on fast, with China and India leading the way," says David Pumphrey, deputy director of the Energy and National Security Program at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies. In the case of China, the economic slack created by lower exports to the U.S. has been picked up by internal growth and trade with the rest of Asia as that country scrambles to raise the standard of living of a burgeoning middle class numbering in the hundreds of millions.

The oil market is revving up again," says economist Peter Tertzakian with Calgary-based ARC Financial Corp., an energy investment firm with a $2.8-billion asset portfolio. "It wants to go higher, but it's being held back."

By that he means that stagnant and declining demand for oil in the G7 group of nations has created spare capacity of about 6 million barrels per day, on top of the 86 million barrels presently being consumed daily by the global economy. This temporary oversupply is also the result of heavy investment in new sources of oil by industry giants, including Exxon Mobil, Shell and British Petroleum, at the height of the last market bubble. BP's catastrophic rig explosion off the coast of New Orleans has produced an environmental disaster, but the loss of an estimated 5,000 barrels per day of oil from the seabed should have little effect on global supply as it is a tiny sliver of total output. (See the top 10 financial-crisis buzzwords.)

However, over the coming months oil should begin to once again reflect changing patterns of global demand. Consider that daily consumption of oil in the U.S. declined 5% to 18.7 million barrels over a 10–year period ending in 2009, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. By contrast, China's daily oil consumption increased 73% to 8.2 million barrels over the same period - and this trend shows no signs of slowing. The current margin of daily surplus capacity could quickly be taken up by higher demand from emerging markets, which would quickly be reflected in prices.

This means that the price of gas at the pump is likely headed higher too. So far this year in the U.S. gasoline prices have stayed low relative to oil prices due to abundant supply. Gas producers are keeping their unit cost of refining down by running at full capacity, and pushing product into the market despite lower consumer demand. An upward correction is expected in the months ahead, however, powered by summer driving demand and a rising price of oil.

Consumers could feel even more pain at the pump if oil speculators return to the market in a big way. Financial speculators added an estimated $20 to $40 to oil's $147 peak price, according to some industrial consumers. Though many of these players were driven off by the financial crisis, a rising oil price could draw them back. "Oil is a vital commodity we can't live without," says Tertzakian with ARC Financial. "That triggers a hoarding mentality when the world's economy is firing on all cylinders."
 

Rockslinger

Banned
Apr 24, 2005
32,773
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Aren't all the other rigs in the Gulf shut down until they figure out why the rig that blew up blew up?
 

JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
18,621
4,149
113
Accident waiting to happen. Apparently, these wells were done on the cheap and don't have a shut-off system.
Done on the cheap????
Any idea what an offshore rig costs?
http://www.dailywireless.org/2010/05/01/e-drilling-for-offshore-oil/

The rig cost about $350 million to build in 2001 and would cost at least double that to replace today. With helicopters, support vessels and other services, it costs close to $1,000,000 per day to operate in the course of drilling for oil and gas.


This was not built on the cheap
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,949
5,755
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
Basic needed safety features were not installed which left them to operate in a slipshod CHEAP fashion and a hazard to run, as we now see! Proper Regulation would have fixed this but alas those doofus OILmen in the White House then were more concerned with protecting a bunch of incredibly greedy OIL bastards than protecting the environment and fishermen who see their way of life/jobs being destroyed by selfish piggish Corporate Greed!...
 

wet_suit_one

New member
Aug 6, 2005
2,059
0
0
And they do it all for us end users of oil. It is, in part, our collective fault. If you're gonna use oil, expect a few spills. That's just the way it is.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
14,650
2,447
113
Ghawar
The economy is too fragile for oil to stay above $100 for any extended
period. So don't worry be happy. If it does the economy will have to be a lot
more resilient than it appears. More likely oil will pull back from $100+
like it did when the market crashed in 2008. As long as you keep your
job and don't have too much money in the stock market you will be fine.
But any pull back triggered by an abrupt contraction of demand won't likely
last too long. We probably will experience a series of boom and bust cycles
for a few more years before oil price has nowhere to go but the moon.
 
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