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Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby Shadizar » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 18:18:07

The recent drop in oil prices and gasoline prices are very confusing. I for one don't understand themcompletely. Inventories are up, that is true(apparently). Supply and demand issues are the same as they have been for at least a year.

It is significant to note that the numbers for the U.S. (perhaps not for other countries) are not entirely reliable. I am only basing this on reports from http://www.financialsense.com/ and their interviews. Beyond that I have my own reasons to distrust the interview reports (such as the fact that they never significantly went down after Rita/Katrina).

But, beyond that is this really so surprising? The Hirsch resport's finding was that oil prices would first be volatile.

That is the idea. Volatility is not a good sign.

Prices would go down, and up far more than they would regularly be inclined to do. I think this recent move is only in support of that.

Most peak oil believers have accepted the fact (and I could be wrong here) that economics does play a part in it. However, it only makes an undulating curve. I personally think its what we're seeing now. Demand destruction lowers the demand (and kills growth in some economies) which lowers prices.

The next "growth faze" will be weaker than the last due to competition and lower oil supplies.

I for one am still in the Peak Oil camp. This does not really contradict peak oil theory....If anything it strengthens it.

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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rwwff » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 18:49:59

The problem with people that are looking for a very quick disaster is that, in the US, there is an enormous amount of demand destruction that can occur without costing jobs.

If Joe Schmoe has an eight year old 4Runner, and goes into the dealership to buy a new Toyota, he could buy a Titan, or he could buy a Yaris/Prius. Toyota doesn't much care which, and they are selling the Yaris/Prius at sticker+. If Joe buys the Yaris/Prius, then his mpg for all his driving just went from 15mpg -> 45mpg, and over the life of the vehicle, thats over 5000 gallons of destroyed gasoline demand. Not from a loss of a job, not from less driving, but simply a consumer choice, buy A, or buy B. The service tech will still work on that Prius every 15k miles; the oil changes still happen, new tires from time to time... MP3s/CD's for the commute still get bought.

What this means, is we'll have this up&crash price cycle for a very long time. On the transport side, there are a couple squeezes, the first, which we've seen a small bit of, is when Joe buys the efficient car instead of the SUV, takes him from 15 to 45 mpg. The next squeeze, which I think may happen somewhere in the $10-$15/gallon price range is when that efficient car is not efficient enough, at which point, PHEV and scooters enter the competition. Joe's gonna hate riding the scooter at first as much as he hated riding in the efficient car at first; but millions upon millions of workers around the world do it today; Joe will survive the experience.

The point here is to not exect gas to pass that $5/gallon mark until just about every SUV used for transporting a single 200lb human is off the road. Once that slack is gone however, it could be a very steep climb up, and I have no idea what goes splat first.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby Shadizar » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 19:02:42

Imo the real problem with this is that alternatives become less economical. The price will go up in the long run (imo). If alternatives do not become more competative we'll find ourselves in the same situation we did before.

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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby Ludi » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 19:04:05

Those kinds of changes have been quite hard on the auto industry and auto industry JOBS of late you may have noticed rwwff....
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rwwff » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 19:28:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'T')hose kinds of changes have been quite hard on the auto industry and auto industry JOBS of late you may have noticed rwwff....


I dunno, Toyota and Honda seem to be doing quite well.

I know its unpleasant, but I have been saying for quite a while that the American "big three" need to die, and the sooner, the better. They are in the way. If there's a few productive employees in those companies, they can apply for jobs as Toyota, et al, opens more production facilities here in the US.

Sorry, but detroit is not suffering from peak oil; they are suffering from peak stupidity.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby Shadizar » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 19:35:30

I totally agree with you rwwf. Unfortunately (or fortunately) Toyota et. al. do not pay as high (if any) medical or retirement pay.

That is the free market economy. Unfurtunately that is not good for the U.S. economy in general (for labor). GM and Ford are doing their best to destroy pensions. That is more competative in the globalized economy, but it does nothing for the domestic economy.

Toyota et.al. pay less and is more competative. U.S. companies cannot compete. Period. There are few industries in the U.S. that can imo.

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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby Ludi » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 19:35:46

Yeah, you may be right. But it's hard for me to picture standard of living improving or remaining steady during a period of decreasing available energy when standard of living is already decreasing for the middle class.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby ClubOfRomeII » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 21:27:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TommyJefferson', '
')
I am seriously lusting for a gas guzzler. If gasoline prices will flatten until early 201X, now would be a great time to purchase one. SUV prices are way down. Local gas is $2.40/gal. A few more months of this, and SUV prices will rise again.


I'm doing the opposite. I'm waiting for gasoline to crater sometime during the winter, then I'm getting a hybrid when demand slacks off a little and maybe some end of the year deals on slow sellers show up.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rwwff » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 22:20:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('emersonbiggins', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', 'T')he problem with people that are looking for a very quick disaster is that, in the US, there is an enormous amount of demand destruction that can occur without costing jobs.

If Joe Schmoe has an eight year old 4Runner, and goes into the dealership to buy a new Toyota, he could buy a Titan, or he could buy a Yaris/Prius.


I was unaware of the uncanny ability of that 8-year old 4Runner to self-destruct and end its cycle of oil usage permanently.

That 4Runner is heading down the street, or down the interstate to Mexico. Yes, it will possibly be driven less, but it will still be driven.


They last about 15 years or so. I could simplify the example and repost with Joe driving the 4Runner until the engine fully seized and transmission rusted out; but I wanted to keep it realistic. The person that eventually buys the old 4Runner, is likely replacing a vehicle that is no longer functional, and sitting on blocks in their backyard, where it will stay until mother earth reclaims it as Ferrous Oxide, Aluminum Oxide, and some eternal plastics.

People miles are what count; the car has no purpose and uses no fuel if it is not moving a human. Joe is going to drive those people miles either in a Titan or in a Prius/Yaris. If he chooses the Yaris, his people miles will consume 5000 some odd gallons less.

And that is the pure definition of demand destruction. Its not put off, its not transfered, it is demand that is foreever destroyed by a consumer choice in response to price pressure.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby emersonbiggins » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 22:28:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', 'A')nd that is the pure definition of demand destruction. Its not put off, its not transfered, it is demand that is foreever destroyed by a consumer choice in response to price pressure.


GDamnit, I deleted my post and I still get a response :razz:. I realized that my response wasn't really negating your point of an even wash as far as overall employment is concerned on the 4Runner trade-in. Now I look like an ass.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rwwff » Thu 05 Oct 2006, 22:53:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('emersonbiggins', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', 'A')nd that is the pure definition of demand destruction. Its not put off, its not transfered, it is demand that is foreever destroyed by a consumer choice in response to price pressure.


GDamnit, I deleted my post and I still get a response :razz:. I realized that my response wasn't really negating your point of an even wash as far as overall employment is concerned on the 4Runner trade-in. Now I look like an ass.


Tis ok, I'll be foreever quoted spelling the word foreever with three d*** "E"'s.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rockdoc123 » Fri 06 Oct 2006, 09:35:59

One thing I would like to bring to everyones attention is that everything you see in the press about possible demand destruction is talking solely about US demand. Yes US demand for gasoline is currently the highest in the world but China and India are growing extremely fast. The following I clipped out of a daily news report from IHS Energy:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')erhaps some oil ought to be diverted from US shores as China's oil demand rose 9.2% in August, even if four months of double-digit growth have been broken. Of note is that China's recent demand growth has been driven by motor fuel and fuel oil (1,000 new car
registrations/day in Beijing).


One of the economists who dabbles a lot in the oil business is Jeff Rubin. Whereas others have been pretty bearish on oil prices going forward Rubin is predicting $70/bbl for the fourth quarter of 2006 and above $70 for first half of 2007. Part of his rationale for this is that Asian demand appears to be completely inelastic.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby rwwff » Fri 06 Oct 2006, 09:55:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rockdoc123', 'O')ne thing I would like to bring to everyones attention is that everything you see in the press about possible demand destruction is talking solely about US demand. Yes US demand for gasoline is currently the highest in the world but China and India are growing extremely fast. The following I clipped out of a daily news report from IHS Energy:


Quite true; which is why I made a point to note that the price will rise again, crash, rise again, crash, each time with a little higher bottom. Until at some point the choke is no longer from SUV->efficient car; but from efficient car->PHEV & scooter. With PHEV & scooter as the primary personal transport...... MQ will not be a happy camper.

But for the short term, every time that gas price goes over $3, and especially if it holds for more than a week or two, people's choices in replacement vehicles will place efficiency ahead of size; and each time that happens on a large scale, a measurable hunk of US demand is destroyed forever. The combination of our economic dexterity, and our non-existant gas taxes, makes us the leading edge of each demand-drop driven price crash.
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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby TreebeardsUncle » Sat 07 Oct 2006, 00:53:11

Ok. So, it looks like PO will not occur for at least another decade or so after the last oil glut due to these various projects coming online off of the West Coast of Africa, in the Gulf of Mexico, in Brazil, in the ME, in the Caspian area of Central Asia etc. After that prices should go up significant ($10 to $20/ gallon in today's dollars within a couple decades). Incidentally, how much demand destruction has there really been in the states? Yes, folks are still selling their suvs, but it looks like most of those that were being driven a couple years ago, even by solo commuters, are still being driven. I still bet we have another 10 to 15 years before PO really starts being a big visible factor in how things play out. To summarize, demand destruction in the states thus far appears to be expressed in some fat suburnite commuters driving cuvs instead of suvs. And, I don't see this price drop as being driven by demand destruction as much as it has been driven by the end of the summer driving season and a mild hurricane season in which no hurricane came ashore in the states.

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Re: Oil prices projected to nosedive to $45

Postby AgentR » Sat 07 Oct 2006, 01:02:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TreebeardsUncle', 'O')k. So, it looks like PO will not occur for at least another decade or so after the last oil glut due to these various


I think this is the mistake that people are making. PO could very well be now; but we can't truly know until after the fact. Once production is maxed, thats the top of the supply curve. People then visualize a demand curve that pushes past this max production, then the economy goes splat. The end. I think this is way wrong. Demand is very, very flexible, at least for now; we use oil in so many ways that could be reduced without reducing any economic activity. Demand will drop, repeatedly in response to price signals, and nothing interesting will happen, price will dip, other foreign demand picks up the slack, excess tightens, price spikes, demand gets nuked, foreign demand picks up the slack, excess tights, price spikes, etc... "Undulating plateau", but not of supply, but rather DEMAND.

We don't get anywhere near the big splat, until all this excess slack is taken out of the system. When that happens, the next step that reduces demand kills jobs; and thats the effect everyone is worrying and planning over, real GDP takes a hit, real recession happens, money tries to flood in, excess cash looks for new products which aren't there, prices of everything go through the roof in response to excess liquidity, real GDP collapses. then.... ouch. lights out.
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