From the Maestro himself, Alan Greenspan, to innumerable industry pundits, we have heard the reverberations of how resilient the economy has been in the face of increasing energy prices. Oil has skyrocketed from $22 per barrel in 2004 to $77 today, and not withstanding the fact that energy is required for all economic activity, the amazing US economy keeps chugging along. Held up as proof that the economy is immune to higher energy cost, this one fact has become the corpnucopians primary defense against PO pessimism.
In lieu of this perplexing US economic fortitude, the Peak Oil crowd has mostly ignored the fact that the situation has not yet become critical. They don’t speak about how bad things are, they talk about the inevitable day of reckoning. When in fact, the situation is probably very, very bad; it is just that the ingenious mastications of a hand full of investment bankers, have unintentionally, temporarily papered over the problem.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with the mysteries of investment banking and the derivatives market, I would like to recommend Paul Tustain’s link. Even for those knowledgeable on the subject, this plain English presentation is worth the read for his unusual insights.
Tustain
In particular, pay attention to his discussion on the enigma of declining credit spreads. As oil prices have been going up, interest rates have been going down. Fairly Flaky has been able to finance its increasing energy cost with the magic of CDO/CDS instruments. By passing the risk on to unsuspecting investors, Fairly Flaky manages to stay in business long after it creditors should have auctioned off its assets.
In spite of rising energy costs, these tinkling, clever money managers have keep the housing market, retail sales and the insatiable consumer humming along. This has kept much of the rest of the world busy as well. But the spread can not close much more, and oil can continue its upward journey.