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Trader's Corner 2007

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Where will WTI crude be on DEC 31st 2007?

Poll ended at Thu 19 Apr 2007, 04:20:21

under $50 per barrel
5
No votes
around $55
0
0%
around $60
5
No votes
around $65
12
No votes
around $70
11
No votes
around $75
28
No votes
 
Total votes : 61

Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby BigTex » Mon 27 Aug 2007, 15:19:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheDude', 'W')hat do you fellows think of these stories:

Mystery trader bets market will crash by a third

$4.5b bet on another 9/11 within 4 weeks

Discussion at tickerforum.org

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')enee Schultes

16 Aug 2007

Carry trade unwinds as yen hits one-year high

An anonymous investor has placed a bet on an index of Europe's top 50 stocks falling by a third by the end of September, as world equity markets plunged for a third day and volatility hit a three-year high.

The mystery investor has bought put option contracts on the DJ Eurostoxx 50 index that will result in a profit if it plunges to 2,800 or below by the end of September. Based on the 2,800 strike price, the position covers a notional €6.9bn, and potentially even more using a market price of about 4,100 when the trades were done on Tuesday and Wednesday.

The identity of the investor is unknown but market sources speculated it was either a large hedge fund hedging itself against deepening losses, or a long-only fund manager pressing the panic button to protect its gains.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '$')4.5 billion options bet on catastrophe within four weeks

Anybody have a clue as to what these 'investors' are expecting?

The two sales are being referred to by market traders as "bin Laden trades" because only an event on the scale of 9-11 could make these short-sell options valuable.

There are 65,000 contracts @ $750.00 for the SPX 700 calls for open interest. That controls 6.5 million shares at $750 = $4.5 Billion. Not a single trade. But quite a bit of $$ on a contract that is 700 points away from current value. No one would buy that deep "in the money" calls. No reason to. So if they were sold looks like someone betting on massive dislocation. Lots of very strange option activity that I haven't seen before.

The entity or individual offering these sales can only make money if the market drops 30%-50% within the next four weeks. If the market does not drop, the entity or individual involved stands to lose over $1 billion just for engaging in these contracts!

Clearly, someone knows something big is going to happen BEFORE the options expire on Sept. 21.


There's a lot of vague information and claims in the stories.

I don't doubt that September will be a wild month, based on recent market activity, but these stories sound a little over the top.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby Micki » Mon 27 Aug 2007, 20:53:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') don't doubt that September will be a wild month, based on recent market activity, but these stories sound a little over the top.


Yes, but so were the put's on AA and United before 911 as well.
And from what I could see, these are genuine trades.
I am not too skilled (read: not at all) in options trading my self, but the traders/posters at some other forums suggested that the trader(s) making this bet would loose US$700Million if the market didn't tank by Sep21.
To me that suggests we follow up.

MrBill, I think you are the most qualified to respond to this.
Could this be more benign than it looks (i.e. some mega hedge for an all long fund etc?)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby Micki » Mon 27 Aug 2007, 21:11:47

This came through from LeMetropoleCafe.com this morning on gold/silver positions (sorry, no link);

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n the October contract the largest PUT Open Interest is 5016 at strike $650. The largest CALL OI is 6696 at Strike $700.

Looking at December contract the largest PUT Open Interest is 10060 at strike $600. The largest CALL OI is 19679 at Strike $800.

There are also CALL OI of 18598 @ $700, 11285 @ $850, 3935 @ $900 and 7161 @ $1000

It is absolutely stunning that the CALL Open interest in December Strike $1000 exceeds the OI in October Strike $700. It is also very significant that the largest position is $140 higher than the price today.

It is not Joe & Jane six-pack who buy gold options. This is a way for serious money to get a big position in gold without blowing the roof off the price when they purchase. If the price moves into the strike price the options can be exercised for futures contracts or gold bullion.


.....

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here are big CALL option positions in silver in the December contract. The open interest is approximately 22,400 contracts or 112 million ozs. By comparison in the October contract the CALL OI is only 1555 contracts (7.8 million ozs). In October the highest strike price with OI is $16. In December it is $25 with an OI of 1693. In other words the OI in DEC strike $25 call alone is higher than the TOTAL OI in ALL the October calls!

If the Silver price were to run to only $15 by December there would be 13,000 contracts in the money equivalent to 65 million ozs. Many “in-the –money” options are often settled for cash but nonetheless the size of the open interest and the range of strike prices is very significant.

As only sophisticated investors play the commodity options I don’t consider this as a contrarian indicator. The large build up in calls in gold and silver for December I believe is telling us where the smart money is going. It also corresponds with the usual high demand season which in itself is usually a good positive indicator and not a contrary indicator.


ALSO:
The 7 big shorts on TOCOM have covered massivly during the last couple of weeks.
This means either 1) they are giving up the gold price surpression knowing they would otherwise be runover AND/OR 2) they are collecting ammo for a massive short attack at a higher price level.
Should however the market really tank or if there is a "terrorist" attack, one can imagine that gold quickly emerges again as THE safehaven.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Mon 27 Aug 2007, 21:13:59

A Little.......?

(I hit the links)


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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby TheDude » Tue 28 Aug 2007, 02:39:04

This comment goes to town on all these wild speculations. Seems to consider it all business as usual, very caustic of some of the bloggers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Aug 2007, 04:07:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'M')r. Bill,

Are you still thinking Bull Trap?

When an anticipated rate cut is all that is keeping the market going, that's not good.


Yes, very much so. This is the anticipated 'return to normal' part of the Bull Trap as per that chart that I posted on the previous page. But as you say, so far all that has rescued the market from fear and then capitulation has been coordinated central bank intervention, and that is a shaky foundation on which to build a rally.

I am thinking to now sell some more energy stocks. We have bounced from 485 to 533 on the S&P Energy Index or almost 10%, but yesterday ended on a down note despite a pick-up in crude prices. That is not very promising. 519-522 is my pivot point. Below that I do not like it at all.

Also, EUR/JPY (my proxy for risk) is down again as yen strengthens on the back on carry trades unwinding. EUR/JPY did not take out the psychological 160 level on the upside. Resistance is 159.66 and support is 157.20 with secondary support at 155.95 on the daily chart. A reversal would see us re-testing the previous low at 149.25 on the way to 146.50 which is the 50% retracement of the move higher in EUR/JPY that started in 2003 at 124. EUR/JPY went from 88.80 to 124 between 2000 and 2003.

My point being that EUR/JPY (representing two major producing and exporting economies) has traveled a long ways and a reversal of 169 to 149 is significant if you happen to be short yen, but in the great scheme of things is a correction that was bound to happen eventually.

The S&P 500 is having trouble holding on to weak gains. I see resistance at 1480 and temporary support at 1455 and 1447. Below 1450 and I think we will gravitate towards 1371 again. As hopes of a Fed rate cut begin to fade, or at least be objectively questioned, this will erode support for a miracle return to normal despite serious problems in the US domestic housing market and still deteriorating credit conditions. The latest forecasts I am reading point to a 15-20% fall in the real value of homes including inflation between now and 2009, and perhaps 8 to 10 years before homes re-hit previous peaks.

Those are just estimates and you can figure in your own post peak oil depletion scenarios on top of those baseline forecasts, but it does not support, in my opinion, a quick return to business as usual. We still do not even know the extent on the subprime mess and that is just the tip of the credit iceberg as far as I am concerned.

I was talking to an Austrian bank with $9 billion in fixed income under management. I was shocked that such a conservative bank would have exposure to US subprime, but like many others they had bought AAA CDO tranches thinking they were safe.

I will not even start to talk about the incompetence of the German Landesbanks. State-run savings banks that had no business speculating in US subprime mortgages or complex financial derivatives. Let us just say these Landesbanks have a long history of making very large risky bets that have a habit of blowing up in their faces. Each crisis piles on to the one before, so that they are forced to merge under duress with one another instead of carefully planning much needed consolidation in the German banking system. Simply too many banks all chasing low domestic margins.

WestLB, one of the largest and most international of the Landesbanks, announces its Q2'07 results today. Estimates are that they may be exposed to high risk loans to the tune of $500 million, but I have also heard estimates of up to $3 billion. Compared to Sachsen LB that would be a drop in the proverbial bucket, but none the less comes on the heels of a long string of bad lending decisions for West LB, so I will not be surprised if today only reaffirms poor risk management control and supervision at this savings bank.

I expect Bayerische Landesbank to be the next to admit they have bad loans in their portfolio. Another bank that wobbles from one disaster to another.

The major German banks - Deutsche, Commerzbank, Dresdner and HVB (Unicredito) all have their own problems in the crowded German market, but all are much stronger than the Landesbanks and/or have strong parent firms that can financially back them. Still, Commerzbank of the five looks particularly vulnerable to an eventual take-over, so if overall problems drive down share prices it may the next to go.

So to make a long story short, no, I do not think that a poorly timed interest rate cut on behalf of the Fed or other central banks is going to magically solve all these systemic problems stemming from mismanagement, poor strategy and mispricing risk. And the insurance companies and asset managers are likely the next shoes to drop heavily. All that such monetary policy relaxing can do is re-ignite inflationary pressures elsewhere even if domestic demand is weak or expected to fall.

As for the options pricing story, I really not have time to chase it down at the moment. I do not know how transparent large option trades are to the rest of the market? I assume any trades struck on an exchange are recorded. Any done over the counter (OTC) are not publicly traded information and proprietary in nature. The story certainly has not been picked-up yet by Reuters, Bloomberg, the FT or Wall Street Journal, so it may be just a red herring. Another Internet prank.

If you expected a market crash and a pick-up in volatility then you would want to buy OTM puts, so that they would increase in value as the price moves towards your strike and their volatility increases. The puts would gain in value even if your strike price was not triggered. But of course you would have to sell them before expiry if they were still OTM to salvage your premium. One month puts would have a pretty high time value decay in the last couple of weeks to maturity. If they were close to ATM by that time you might find a buyer, if not they would be quite invaluable. Why not sell S&P futures (short the indices with or without leverage) instead and save the premium, but achieve the same goal?

All good questions, but back to work here. I am filling the funding sandbags and boarding up my stock portfolio ahead of any financial storms that may hit Cape Fear in the next few weeks. I am predicting an active Blow Off season as a stronger than usual El Capitulation may herald the Winter of our Despair.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Aug 2007, 06:26:01

UPDATE: RGE Monitor
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f Gulf Cooperation Council currency union proceeds, the new currency - the Khaleeji - has the potential to be among the strongest currencies in the world. With an estimated surplus of $20 trillion over the next 20 years if oil prices stay around $60bbl, the reserves backing the Khaleeji would ensure the strenth of the currency regardless of how they were invested. As it is, it looks like more GCC central banks are watching Kuwait's return to a weighted basket for its currency, shifting away from ties to the US dollar. A weighted-basket Khaleeji would severely undermine the dollar relative to the dollarised currencies currently importing huge inflation to the region from the weak US dollar.

source: Petrodollars (once again)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby seahorse » Tue 28 Aug 2007, 09:10:26

Mr. Bill Wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he latest forecasts I am reading point to a 15-20% fall in the real value of homes including inflation between now and 2009, and perhaps 8 to 10 years before homes re-hit previous peaks.


Many here know I was concerned and warned of a housing downturn for a long time, based on what I'm seeing as an attorney in my own local area. Here's the latest, a local bank took over the assets of a developer gone belly up. Now, the banks are getting crafty, and rather than foreclosing (which would show them as having a bad loan on the book) they are doing other things to keep the loan as appearing good on the books and attempting to salvage it as long as possible. For example, in this particular case, the bank took security interest in this particular developers stock ownership. They've now taken those stocks and are acting as the owner of the otherwise bankrupt developer. In this capacity, the bank is trying to get rid of assets using the funds to service the bad loan without otherwise having to foreclose or call the loans (we are talking at least 50 million here or more). Last week, the bank set up 4 McMansions for an auction. These were spec homes that they have not been able to sell. The bank's actual cost in these homes is from $317,000+. They started bids on the first home at $250k, but got no bids. They didn't get any bids until the price was dropped to $160k. The first home finally sold for $202k when the cost in the home were $317k. The bank took the last 3 homes off of the auction block, thinking that somehow, things will get better. Good luck.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Wed 29 Aug 2007, 03:38:37

This whole thing is a microcosm of the pyschology which surrounds peoples inability to accept what is staring them right in the face. It's going to be an ugly lesson in how PO will be dealt with. I dont like where we are going with this particular crisis at the moment. Looking down the short term path it's appearing as if a LOT of folks are just in denial.

Cultural momentum. The inability for modern mankind to believe the current pardigm can change. We are brainwashed into thinking things will always grow, always get "better". The idea that a crash is coming is rejected totally. "It cant happen here, not in these times!". Oh I think it most certainly can! History shows us this and everything going on right now is evidence of it.

We are going to need a lot of luck over the next few years.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 29 Aug 2007, 05:25:23

seahorse wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Many here know I was concerned and warned of a housing downturn for a long time, based on what I'm seeing as an attorney in my own local area. Here's the latest, a local bank took over the assets of a developer gone belly up. Now, the banks are getting crafty, and rather than foreclosing (which would show them as having a bad loan on the book) they are doing other things to keep the loan as appearing good on the books and attempting to salvage it as long as possible.


Thanks for the update. I have certainly publicly recognized your timely, inside knowledge into the coming subprime fiasco before it was out in the open. Thanks once again.

Airline pilot wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his whole thing is a microcosm of the pyschology which surrounds peoples inability to accept what is staring them right in the face. It's going to be an ugly lesson in how PO will be dealt with. I dont like where we are going with this particular crisis at the moment. Looking down the short term path it's appearing as if a LOT of folks are just in denial.


I think Denial is right at the cusp of a bear market. Yesterday was quite a blow to those that had already convinced themselves that a) the Fed was about to ride to the rescue of financial markets, and b) those who thought a simple cut in interest rates was all it would take to sort out the type of systemic mess that seahorse alluded to in the gimicks that banks other affected parties will go to pretend this is a return to business as usual.

Believe me it would be much better if these banks just took the bad loan provisions and came clean about their risks. Their stock price would get hammered, but if the market smells a rat they will anyway.

Just a quick update as I am in a little bit of jam here as another US investment bank pulled funding on me last night. Talk about fair weather friends. What upsets me is not that they consider us a risk, they don't, but they want to re-lend that same capital at a higher rate to someone else. Plain and simple opportunism. But very short-sighted on the relationship side. My firm has very long memory and many such investment banks think we will quickly forget next time they come around willing to lend now that conditions are back to normal. Wishful thinking. They just locked themselves out of the next $500 million convertible bond issue or collar over a lousy quarter of a percent interest on some smallish repos. Losers! ; - )

So as I said yesterday the S&P500 was unable to hold onto gains and slid after the FOMC minutes were released. This dragged the S&P energy index (GSPE) also under my pivot points, so I pared my underlying positions even more. It hurt to sell into a falling market, but all at levels that I can live with. I think we will slide back to 1371 on the way to 1256 in the S&P500 (SPX), while the GSPE heads for 480 with some support at the previous low of 485.

It was tough to decide what to sell as some of the P/E ratios looked reasonable, and some only looked like they have another 5% to fall, but I took the view that traders will sell what they can to fund what they cannot sell to stay liquid. Therefore some stocks will be punished unjustifiably. Others looked like they had more than 10% to fall, so I just dumped them. With high betas relative to the SPX I do not think the GSPE can resist the slide and will be sold on the back of a slowing global economy story. That may leave some terrific bargains later, but at the moment I am really not worried about missing the boat for the next rally.

Cash is safer at the moment and I want to have lots of ammo for later. If the central banks do sacrafice monetary discipline for the sake of the markets then I believe it will haunt them in terms of much higher inflation going forward. Therefore I would wait until September 18th when both the Fed and the BOJ meet to see what they do. I doubt the ECB will raise rates on September 6th. Not against this troubled backdrop. It would be much more prudent for them to wait until October to raise rates in the eurozone again. If in the meantime the Fed has acted then this will be very bearish the US dollar. The euro is already very strong against not just the US dollar but also yen and yuan as well. If the ECB raises rates and the market subsequently tanks then they set themselves up for a lot of criticism. It is a safer bet for them to wait. But that is just my tummy talking.

Then if the world still looks inflationary one could look at the GSCI excess return notes (ENHGE27P) or those Commerzbank commodity linked notes (WPK CB4TXX or ISIN XS0312078941) that pay up to 160% of any gains in the underlying gold, copper and oil that I mentioned before. In any case, good luck. Keep the faith.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 30 Aug 2007, 09:46:10

Due to an impending death in the family this week I just do not feel like talking about Mr. Market at the moment. Life does not hang on a Fed rate cut here or there. So keep it in perspective.

On the difference a Fed rate cut makes in the larger scheme of things...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he proviso leaves more than a little room for debate today about America’s mounting financial promises. The current sum of red ink, according to one estimate, rises to a monumental $64 trillion. Yes, that’s trillion with a “t.” Washington’s future pledges exceed the country’s long-run capacity to pay by a cool $64 trillion. For comparison, U.S. gross domestic product in 2006 was $13.2 trillion.

The $64 trillion shortfall is calculated as the total long-run claim on federal coffers less the anticipated tax revenues if—a big “if” corporate-style accounting is applied to the government’s balance sheet over the infinite future. By that measure, the annual gap works out to $2.4 trillion, reports “Do the Markets Care about the $2.4 trillion U.S. Deficit?” in the March/April 2007 Financial Analysts Journal. The authors are Jagadeesh Gokhale (senior fellow, CATO Institute) and Kent Smetters (associate professor, Wharton School), a duo with a paper trail of studying government debt and drawing rather dark conclusions.

No one necessarily disputes the $64 trillion figure, which is to say that the underlying calculation is more or less accurate as far as it goes. The dispute centers on the accounting assumption that informs the math. Indeed, the Congressional Budget
Office reported a budget deficit of $248 billion for fiscal year (FY) 2006, or just 10 percent of Gokhale and Smetters’ estimate of the annual imbalance.


Source: Is the long-term budget outlook really a ticking time bomb—and does the Federal Government need a financial advisor?

I will say this though, moves up and down in the order of 3% daily are not usual. They usually portend a bruising battle between the bulls and the bears. I know which side I am on at this point in the game. There can be many opinions, but only one right answer.

I will be away next week. See you on the other side of the slide.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby BigTex » Thu 30 Aug 2007, 17:00:46

See you on the other side of the slide is right.

I am very uneasy about next week. I don't know if it's the market or something else, but next week just feels kind of spooky right now. Lots of indicators pointing in the wrong direction (the "house of cards" metaphor comes to mind).

We'll see.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby Concerned » Thu 30 Aug 2007, 17:39:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Just a quick update as I am in a little bit of jam here as another US investment bank pulled funding on me last night. Talk about fair weather friends. What upsets me is not that they consider us a risk, they don't, but they want to re-lend that same capital at a higher rate to someone else. Plain and simple opportunism. But very short-sighted on the relationship side. My firm has very long memory and many such investment banks think we will quickly forget next time they come around willing to lend now that conditions are back to normal. Wishful thinking. They just locked themselves out of the next $500 million convertible bond issue or collar over a lousy quarter of a percent interest on some smallish repos. Losers! ; - )


Disappointing yes but

actually you should be happy that the money went to the highest bidder pure market forces, why call it opportunism? or alternatively you should have bid higher or taken some instrument to secure your right to the funding at set rate.

Future wise if they came to the $500 million bond issue at 25 basis point discount would you reconsider your position?

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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 31 Aug 2007, 04:13:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', '
')
Disappointing yes but actually you should be happy that the money went to the highest bidder pure market forces, why call it opportunism? or alternatively you should have bid higher or taken some instrument to secure your right to the funding at set rate.

Future wise if they came to the $500 million bond issue at 25 basis point discount would you reconsider your position?

Business is business.


I am a relationship banker from way back. You fund your customers precisely during a crisis not pull their funding at the first sign of a problem. That is why I fund from many sources and try not to rely too heavily on only a few. That is also why I cultivate relationships with boring old commercial banks with large balance sheets and do not rely too much on pure investments banks. They are too often here today, gone to Maui.

It was actually a one year funding deal, but contained a break clause in it. Naturally, the banks always say, 'oh we don't intend to use that clause, but our lawyers insist on putting it in the agreement'. Like right, I know from experience that when everyone is heading for the exits at the same time that is when the lawyers burn the midnight oil looking for a way to close such deals.

But in any case I bollocks them. They missed the notice period, so I refused to close the equity backed repo. And I refused to increase the rate. Screw 'em. They get their next chance only in three months now, and by that time I will have had time to unwind trading positions as well as secure new funding. In the meantime, as I said, they will be out of the running on any structure finance deals as a matter of principle.

The last 25 basis points is chump change. Let them have it. I still have my plain vanilla commercial banks that are always glad to have a chance to help if they can! ; - )
Last edited by MrBill on Fri 31 Aug 2007, 05:13:57, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 31 Aug 2007, 04:24:21

Thanks for the comments everyone. My grandfather had a very long, happy and productive life. We are all very proud of him, and he set a good example for all of us how to live our lives right. He will be sorely missed.

Before I leave I just wanted to post this private message for everyone's benefit. Actually, I would like your feedback. This is my condensed take away from several years here at peak oil dot com, so I am interested to hear if people generally agree or disagree with my reasoning about the coming energy crisis. Thanks.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
I’m having a hard time coming to any conclusion about the likely outcome of peak oil in regards to inflation/deflation.

My first reaction was inflation is going to be double digit chaos. However, the case for a deflationary spiral is also pretty strong.

My current thinking is certain areas of the economy will clearly be deflationary, but core or inelastic areas will be inflationary and the expansion of the money supply through deficit spending will also be inflationary.

What are your views and do you think it could be possible to model in anyway?


Good question. Post peak oil depletion is clearly deflationary as it makes labor cheaper relative to the remaining energy mix that will become more expensive, perhaps exponentially so, and therefore permanently lower living standards for great swathes of workers.

However, a government's response to falling output from less energy inputs could very well be inflationary. As output falls debt becomes more expensive and harder to repay. And any government having to repay large debts, or having un-funded liabilities, might attempt to inflate those debts away either by currency devaluation or higher inflation or both. This would be more akin to stagflation.

On one hand you might have a Zimbabwe where you have hyper-inflation and falling real GDP. On the other hand you might have a Argentine style debt default that also leaves people poorer as it wipes out savings and increases the cost of capital. Neither is a very good scenario. Say goodbye to the middle class and the stability it allows.

The problem with modeling post peak oil resource depletion in the future context based on examples like Zimbabwe or Argentina is that this energy crisis will not be confined to one or several poorly governed countries, but affect all nations almost simultaneously. And unlike financial crises where the solution is usually pretty obvious there is no solution to post peak oil decline. We can mitigate its economic effects, but short of a new source of cheap, abundant energy to replace petroleum we cannot solve peak oil which is a geological fact.

Also, during the power down and transition period we simply do not know how large groups of newly impoverished citizens will react. If we look at developing countries we often see valuable infrastructure destroyed out of spite or for the salvage value of the metals or materials that are sold for scrap. That is a double whammy as theives steal needed infrastructure that is expensive to replace and you have less energy to replace it with.

As prices for base metals soar due to less energy for mining and smelting, for example, the newly poor may grab what they can, as quick as they can, with little thought for the long-term economic consequences. I think you can find enough examples of such short-termism in Sub-Sahara Africa and in such places like Afghanistan. The difference is that there will be no international aid agencies or police forces to protect or rebuild this infrastructure. So once it is lost it is gone. Period.

I think an orderly transition combined with new technology is possible, but just very unlikely given human nature. We are already in many ways poorly governed, even during these times of plenty, so there is no reason to suppose that we will magically find the collective will to do what is necessary overnight in the face of a crisis. I may be wrong, but unfortunately only time will tell, and by then it may be too late. I just know it will be hard to thrive while others are struggling to survive. No matter where you are.

As I cannot really prepare for the as yet unknown economic effects of post peak oil depletion I just plan to be financially prudent in the remaining time between now and the crunch. Too be honest I do not know if that is 2012 or 2030? Certainly before 2050.

Based on what I am seeing in financial markets now I am seeing more of a central bank and official government bias towards inflation. Currency manipulation and excess money supply creation on one hand and distorted trade policies on the other are creating global imbalances that cannot easily be unwound. And too many governments are running large deficits and making entitlement promises that they cannot pay for in the long run. That in my opinion is not only not preparing for the economic consequences of post peak oil resource depletion, but actively undermining the economy's capacity to weather the transition ahead of the energy crisis. It is like starting an ultra-marathon with a broken ankle in the first place. It isn't going to help.

The problem is that there are very few assets that are cheap. They are all expensive. Only cash is cheap at the moment and governments and central banks are doing their best to erode the purchasing power of that cash. So when I look around for an asset to hedge against inflation I come up with the usual suspects - precious metals, commodities, real-estate, etc. But they are not cheap by any stretch of the imagination at this point in the business cycle. They are safe havens against a financial storm, but they may also fall in value if there is a larger global growth slowdown or recession in the coming years.

Purely financial assets as a hedge against inflation are, of course, only as good as the credit of the institution guaranteeing them and their ability and will to repay on demand. Here the subprime fiasco is a sobering reminder of how quickly such bonds of mutual trust can breakdown in a financial panic when markets seize up suddenly. Unfortunately, when you read the fine print there is usually always an force majeure clause of some description as everyone heads for the exits at the same time.

So for me I just want to have a well-diversified portfolio that is geographically spread about and currency hedged. Then I like real-estate, farmland and especially income earning rental units. And, of course, no debt. Inflation aside I am still over-weight cash because I want to be able to take advantage of falling prices for assets in the short-term as well. Plus, liquidity is an asset in volatile markets. Will it protect me from peak oil? Probably not, but it won't hurt me either. As I do not know when the crunch is coming I have to prepare for the future just in case the world does not collapse on schedule.

Take care and have a nice weekend.

MrBill.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby BigTex » Fri 31 Aug 2007, 09:44:04

To your point about inflation vs. deflation, I think that medium term we will continue to see the globalization deflation effect on lots of manufactured goods like electronics, toys, clothing and basically any worthless crap that can be made for pennies a day in the third world.

On the other hand, I think we will continue to see inflation in commodity driven products like food, energy, building supplies, etc.

It's interesting that the CPI excludes food and gas, since these are "volatile." Maybe they should rename the CPI the "Chinese Product Index", since the China crap will probably be the most resistant to inflation.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby Concerned » Sun 02 Sep 2007, 02:45:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')On the other hand, I think we will continue to see inflation in commodity driven products like food, energy, building supplies, etc.

It's interesting that the CPI excludes food and gas, since these are "volatile." Maybe they should rename the CPI the "Chinese Product Index", since the China crap will probably be the most resistant to inflation.


The CPI should include a moving average of those volatile items say over a 3-4 year time frame. That way you can strip volatility out of the CPI figure.

As for Chinese price index LOL priceless. I agree.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby halcyon » Sun 02 Sep 2007, 05:59:47

What about real-estate?

My understanding is that it is already clearly overvalued in many markets (excluding some parts in Asia and Latin America, maybe Germany).

This suggests that in times of volatility, risk aversion and real estate oversupply, the prices will fall (real estate will deflate).

However, in a loner term, inflationary cycle (too much cash, assets deflated) with rising energy costs real estate should go up, right?

I'm also wondering about gold as a deflation hedge. Some say it'll work better than even cash, but I think the reasoning on this seems somewhat contradictory.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Sun 02 Sep 2007, 11:11:36

"The uranium market's roller-coaster ride has left many investors with their fingers burnt, and has raised questions about whether the so-called nuclear renaissance - a push by governments around the world to build new nuclear power stations - will be economically viable."


OOOOOOOWWWWW!!!

(down about 40% on Uranium Participation Corp)


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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Sun 02 Sep 2007, 11:56:48

I think we'll have a recession long before PO hits which will be deflationary with regard to commodity and real estate prices. This will be driven by a decrease in investment, consumer, and business spending. Oil demand will plummet

What happens when PO does hit though is another matter. I can't see how we won't have massive inflation. For instance you are building a new home; you need natural gas for the production of the cement and drywall as well as electricity and diesel. Natural gas for the brick kilns, crude oil for the shingles. Diesel and gasoline for the lumberjacks, electricity for the sawmill. You get the picture, everything has expensive energy inputs.

Could you imagine how much firewood it would take to produce a batch of quicklime from limestone? That's how the Romans did it 2000 years ago. Natural gas makes the process easy by comparison.

I suppose in the near future labour costs might be low enough that lumberjacks might be a dime a dozen, but our modern production models lose all their efficiencies without energy. A modern sawmill can't be run on manpower, or horsepower, or waterpower for that matter.

Without cheap energy allowing for cheap mechanized production commodity prices will go through the roof with resulting poverty for the average bloke.

My 2 cents..

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