Showing posts with label oil prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil prices. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2008

Since I'm already going to hell for that last post...







...I figured I'd change the subject to something less ethereal - OIL PRICES.


For those who wonder why the price of oil has skyrocketed and better yet, who to blame, I came across this article today in, of all places, USA Today - it's a preety fair piece and very accurate;



Oil prices


USA Today
Fri May 16, 2008
http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20080516/cm_usatoday/oilprices


So who's to blame for record high oil prices?

In public opinion polls, oil companies get fingered as Public Enemy No. 1 by one-third to one-half of respondents. The other leading culprits include the OPEC cartel, President Bush, environmentalists and speculators.

Not one of them is as culpable as their critics claim. More important, none is capable of solving the problem, making the finger-pointing a destructive distraction. Before we get to some of the things the nation could have done, and should do now, to ease the crisis, let's assess the usual suspects:


Oil companies

Blaming Big Oil for higher prices is kind of like blaming bankruptcy lawyers for home foreclosures. Without doubt, oil companies benefit when shortages drive up prices, but they don't cause the problem, nor do they gain much leverage to increase profit margins when prices rise.

Take ExxonMobil, for instance. Last year, the world's largest petroleum company made an eye-popping $41 billion in profits. That's serious money, but it's a profit margin of about 10% on sales, a middle-of-the road level for major corporations. It's also the same margin ExxonMobil had when oil was cheap. In 2003, it made $21.5 billion on $213 billion in sales. Repeated federal investigations have shown no evidence of oil company conspiracies to drive up prices.


Oil producing nations

Producing nations can affect prices by limiting production. But that's a fact the United States can't do much about, other than trying to exert diplomatic pressure, as Bush will attempt to do on his visit today to Saudi Arabia. The United States can't really blame foreign countries for deciding how much of their oil to sell.

What's more, the fact that the Saudis and others aren't pumping more oil already — to prevent their customers from falling into recession or deter them from developing alternative energy sources — suggests they might not have a lot of excess capacity, a theory put forth years ago by people who predicted the current price run-up to near-universal skepticism. Further, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the demon behind the first oil crisis three decades ago, no longer has such control. It now pumps only about 40% of the world's petroleum.


Speculators

Oil traders are without doubt adding some cost to the price of oil. Some analysts say it's $10 a barrel. Some say more. Speculation, however, is a normal byproduct of tight supplies and actual or potential turmoil in oil-producing nations.

Environmentalists

Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge could produce about 600,000 barrels of oil per day. Although it's worth doing as a way to increase domestic supply, it's no panacea. It would still increase world oil production by only a fraction of 1%. Opposition to drilling there, as well as in offshore sites currently under moratorium, affects prices only at the margins.

Filling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

To judge by the debate in Congress, you'd think that the diversion of 70,000 barrels of oil a day into the Louisiana salt domes is a major reason behind the price surge. This week, in a laughable piece of political sleight of hand, the House voted 385-25 and the Senate voted 97-1 to suspend deposits into the reserve. Considering that daily world demand is about 84 million barrels, suspending SPR purchases increases the world's oil supply by less than one-tenth of 1%.

As gratifying as it is to point fingers elsewhere, the mirror is the main place to look for the reasons that oil prices are hovering around $125 a barrel. The nation decided to let the laws of supply and demand work. It was rewarded with two decades of low prices that led to larger cars, bigger homes and longer commutes. Meanwhile, with the Cold War's end, Third World countries suddenly saw the benefits of capitalism, fueling robust growth in places such as China and India. As in the West, oil fuels that growth, first for industry, then for consumers who, naturally enough, use rising incomes to buy cars. That trend more than anything else is behind rising prices. And it has just begun.

A keep-energy-cheap approach would have worked if supplies were unlimited and prices didn't tend to lurch forward, as in the 1970s and now, rather than to rise gradually.

An alternative would have been energy policies that discouraged consumption with gas taxes and subsidized alternative sources. But doing this would have required voters to be willing to accept short-term pain for long-term gain. It would have required leadership, vision and political courage — the very same qualities needed now to stave off menacing crises in health care and Social Security.

Ominously for the nation, those characteristics seem in even shorter supply than oil.


OK, the article blames all of us, and that's largely true, although ALL of the aforementioned players play some role. Still, it's us, as consumers, who produce the demand.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

This is for ALL those dopes who claimed “Bush is manipulating oil prices before the election”


The same nitwits confidently assured everyone that “As soon as the election is over, oil prices will begin rising back up the $3/gallon level, almost certainly reaching that level again by winter.”

I guess they were wrong.

Very wrong!

In fact, oil prices have fallen by a third since peaking at $78.40/barrel back in July and are already down by nearly 9% this YEAR!

An analysis by Standard & Poor's Investment Policy Committee recently concluded that the declining price for oil may have only just begun. The committee reported last week that a price break below $55 a barrel might open the door for a drop to the mid-$40s, where it could stay for three to six months.

There are other analysts, however, who argue that although unusual weather has put a damper on oil futures, demand from fast-developing countries such as China -- and the watchful eye of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries -- will prevent a severe price hemorrhage.

Craig Pirrong, a professor of finace at the University of Houston's Bauer College of Business says, "I'm not a believer that if you break a magic barrier you'll automatically see a certain drop, but $45 a barrel could happen," adding that, “Many commodities like copper are softening dramatically, indicating that the boom is over. With the economy softening worldwide, oil in the mid-$40s is not unrealistic."

The most bullish proponents like Pavel Molanchov, an oil analyst at Raymond James Financial in St. Petersburg, Fla., tend to believe that oil prices are reaching bottom. "We think the mid-$50s is the floor because OPEC is defending a $60 floor, and if they want to defend that level, they will," Molanchov defends that view by pointing out that oil fundamentals are more bullish than they were a year ago because of strong global economic growth.



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