by EnergySpin » Mon 08 Aug 2005, 23:50:10
I'm C&P from one of own earlier posts today ... but what the heck
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '$')300-$600 will be the end of it ... However at those price levels and with the depletion well under way, the oil producers will have an incentive to cut back the production to stretch their reserves longer ....
Lets see $300-$600 is about 5-10 times today's price. This would translate to $12.5-$25 per gal. (USA). As long as the cheap credit continues ... this will not be much of a problem. However at those levels, China, EU, Japan might get tempted to pull the plug off the US economy in order to devaluate the US$. OPEC might switch to a basket of currencies to offset their losses and suddenly all the cheap credit in the world would not be able to save the US economy. Even running the military would get prohibitively expensive. A controlled demand destruction triggered by the US (could be a simple tightening of the cheap credit extravaganza) is the only rational way to prevent this scneario from materializing
The missing piece?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergySpin', 'I')t appears that the Fed will try to defuse the bubble before the Japs/Chinese/Europeans detonate the bomb that will sink the dollar so they can afford oil (as long as oil is priced in dollars).
BBC News$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ock-bottom interest rates have helped drive a boom in house prices as homeowners remortgage their properties, and sometimes increase their borrowing to fund consumer spending or home improvements.
Fed chairman Alan Greenspan has denied there is a nationwide housing bubble but acknowledged that some locations may be at risk.