by chuck6877 » Wed 28 May 2008, 09:38:44
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'C')huck, I think you are mistaking occasional gallows humor for glee, in most cases.
There is going to be volatility, more and more of it. But the price is going to keep going up over time. This has been the standard theory of all major peak oil theorists. Day to day, and even month to month timing of prices is, of course, nearly imposible. You seem to be making quite a bit about a one day (so far) dip. We'll see how long that lasts.
And I see no reason that gas prices shouldn't continue to rise, unfortunately, even if oil price stalls for a while.
So do you see the price of oil or of gas going significantly down in the next six months? Twelve months? Two, five, ten...years?
I know why people cheer. They're sick of being ridiculed and called a doomsdayer/chicken little by their friends and family. They secretly want to see some pain from their fellow man that hasn't listened to them. A little bit of me wants that too for the ridicule I've taken the last three years trying to warn people!
It's not going to be a one day decline. It's a normal market movement in a bull market to go two steps forward and one step back. Like Lowem just said we have to work off the overbought condition which extended to the very limits and let the moving averages catch up. This is normal in any traded item from soybeans to the stock of Walmart if its in a bull market.
I see the price going down to somewhere between about $100 at the most(to join the 200dma)-$120(to join the 50dma) slowly going up and down between 2-3 months, allowing the overbought condition to work its way off, and then resuming its upward path to $200-$300 and beyond. I probably see the price going much higher than other people on these boards because I think our currency will completely collapse in the USA.
Of course my call for a correction down for a while could change if there's a black swan event that causes a major disruption in supply like another Katrina or war with Iran. Then the price will blow way higher than any of us could imagine until the disruption is remedied.
I do think gasoline prices could stay firm or even rise with the price of oil going down. Most likely though I think the national average will barely eek over $4.00/gallon this summer, come back a little at the end of summer, and then go to even higher highs the end of the year when supply/demand is supposed to be even worse for crude oil.
See ya,
Chuck