by MrBill » Tue 08 Aug 2006, 10:30:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')akes your head spin, doesn't it? Can you blame us for mocking, scorning and generally dissing economists when they spew out horseshit like this?
They insist the market will solve the problem. They are in total denial of the physics of the coming energy meltdown. They continue to believe the resources are down there somewhere, waiting patiently for us to extract them.
That's all we're talking about. We're simply saying that their market-solution ideas are absurd when the resource they're talking about is getting scarcer by the day.
You're preaching to the converted as it seems that many economists, journalists, politicians and policy makers in general have not caught onto peak oil the geological fact, yet. However, JPMorgan also sees a lot of extra supply, and refining, coming online between 2008-2010 as well.
I cannot post the article here as I need a memory stick to move it from my Reuters to this PC, but will try to update this tomorrow with their comments/insights.
That extra supply may be only a temporary blip in the long emergency, but it may depress spot prices as more companies try to hedge their forward production, especially if there is also a recession in 2007 and either a mild winter or a mild summer? But perhaps enough to cause the price to retreat back to $60 in any case. That might not be cheap, but it is also not $100 either? Like we might see if events surrounding ME do not take a turn for the better.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')It's a brutal market but the money continues to flow in here," said Steven Schork, analyst and publisher of the Schork Report, an intelligence service for energy market investors.
Schork said hedge funds were estimated to own 2.4 times more barrels in NYMEX crude oil contracts than actual physical barrels of oil deliverable to the market.
"The long-term perspective for the energy market is a very long bull run. So, the lesson from MotherRock, if there's one, is 'buyer beware'. It's a classic risk-rewards scenario. The potential rewards are tremendous. So are the risks," he said.
Bottom line, if prices could go to $60 or $100 you're not an idiot for pointing out the risks of a move in either direction. The fool is the one who thinks markets can only move in one direction, they're right, and everyone else is wrong! I have certainly been there on a few occasions! ; - )