by Soft_Landing » Thu 14 Oct 2004, 16:24:06
Pup, I endorse your use of the US economy data to locate a price, but surely, the further away that peak is, the less the relevance of US GDP/barrel and the more relevant China's GDP/barrel. You didn't put those figures on the table, perhaps if you have them handy? I mention this particularly because of your peak date of 2020. It seems many other posters are leaning toward an earlier peak, and for them, a focus on the US economy is probably very useful... but perhaps when considering a more distant peak, you'd want to factor in China more.
With regard to the 'black box' model, I do have a problem with that.
The improvement in the GDP/barrel for the US economy is seen as making the US economy more oil efficient... I think this idea is a little too 'economic' for its own good. It seems to me that the services sector is comprised more of luxury or discretionary spending items, compared to manufactured goods, which may be either luxuries or necessities. The point is, when an economy slows, wouldn't one expect a relative shift in spending away from services sector and toward manufactured goods. The bad news is, the declining GDP/barrel precisely represents this shift toward services (in any case, toward luxuries, innovations, complex high-end goods etc.). In contrast, China's economy is heavily centred upon low-end manufactured goods - the kind of items least vulnerable to economic downturn. Little wonder their economy can handle higher oil price, the demand for their goods is relatively inelastic to declines in discretionary spending. Further, being tied to the US dollar helps no end. This ensures that currency appreciation doesn't eat into demand either. Actually, as the $US has declined in reference to most countries currencies, China's produce has actually got cheaper, increasing demanded quantity, and making up for margin pressure coming from higher oil price.
Therefore, in my opinion, I think it's important to specifically consider the US economy with regard to a world tipping point.
Stephen Leeb says 60% increase in YOY average price, right? That's about a yearly average of $55 now, from memory.
Andrew McKillop keeps saying not till after $75.
These numbers, however, indicate timings for first wave of demand destruction. It is possible that an initial worldwide recession would destroy demand (and lower price) prior to later episodes of severe price run-up as depletion hits steeper parts of the curve (as pup mentions explicitly aka 25 yrs post peak).
So, we need to be careful we don't talk through each other here. Are people guessing all-time-high oil price, or the first high price that destroys demand about the time of peak?
I don't think an initial price run-up needs to go past $100 for initial demand destruction, enough to kill the world economy for a few years, and hold oil price back for a while. In the long run, I am much more comfortable with the possibility of much higher peaks in the oil price. The behaviour of oil price post peak seems to me to be far more at the mercy of random events than economic modelling - at any time is the possibility of civil disorder in Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Venezuela, Saudi, the list goes on. Similarly, civil disorder in Japan, for instance, may have the effect of freeing up a large portion of world supply. Small events will have big consequences, thus, price prediction post peak is for me a fool's game, as they say.
As far as the first price peak is concerned, I imagine onset of peak to be accompanied by a worldwide recession, triggered by sustained oil price of $90 plus or minus $20. The bottom of that recessionary cycle might, as a pie in the sky guess, see oil prices touch $50, before stabilizing and reaching up again.
(I am interested in any argument as to why the second price peak should be higher or lower than the first price peak - the only tentative idea I'm working with is that demand destruction for oil should exhibit diminishing returns - thus, higher oil price fist time round would destroy the easy-to-destroy demand, and later price rises face increasingly harder to destroy demand... Therefore, later price peaks would be higher than early ones… any other suggestions very much welcomed)