by Gandalf_the_White » Fri 16 May 2008, 15:08:27
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'I') think that the price may dip a bit this next few weeks, but if Goldman-Sachs are right we may see it go up again soon:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... fer=energyThey think that there will be an average of $141 in the second half of the year.
I feel a twinge of hypocrisy in praising GS for their high price predictions, but let's tacitly go with that.
An average of $141 in the sceond half of the year would mean the goose is cooked.
I'm going to get a little technical here but look, a best fit line of the oil price for that time frame would have to pass through $141 per barrel on some day, that is the mean value theorem. The area below the mean, the days below average will exactly cancel the days above. Therefore we are guaranteed, by that prediction, of oil reaching either (not all scenarios are listed)
a) a constant $141 per barrel for the second half of 2008
b) that the higher prices go in the summer above $141 the lower they will go below it in the winter.
c) If we get their predicted $200 spike this summer they are predicting oil to be around $80 by this winter.
d) If the spike only goes to $150 then we are looking at a predicted low of around $130 this winter.
The other option would be that we are falling off peak and the price curve will just keep going up and reach that $200 sometime next year. Then GS has signalled oil will move up from where it is.
To be honest I think a summer superspike with a drop back to $80 would be less severe than a prolonged $141.
Let's make no mistake though GS has done a complete 180% on prices and is no doing us doomers proud.
$141 average has to mean at least $5 per gallon at the pump and a winter of near $4.
Jeoffrey may be doing us a service that no one else has the courage to do. The King of SA is saying 'noone is going away empty from the spiggot.' That is very subtle and glosses over alot of complexities in the market, especially the futures.
I return to you now at the turning of the tide.