Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

When does the next leg up in prices start?

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

When will oil begin to rise to $200

Poll ended at Wed 19 Nov 2008, 20:54:11

now
20
No votes
q1 2009
10
No votes
q2 2009
9
No votes
q3 2009
2
No votes
q4 2009
5
No votes
q1 2010
0
0%
q2 2010
2
No votes
q3 2010
1
No votes
q4 2010
1
No votes
 
Total votes : 50

So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby ProudFossil » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 21:32:57

Congress certainly did nothing about the speculators. The US dollar is still at the same level it was when oil was $145. Although consumption has dropped a bit in the US, still it is rising elsewhere. There has been no real increase in production even though Saudi Arabia promised it would do so.

The only thing I have heard of at the time the price started going down was President Bush removed the executive order banning new drilling off shore. Did that give a hint that maybe the US would start getting its own energy supply again?
User avatar
ProudFossil
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 92
Joined: Mon 26 May 2008, 03:00:00

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Carlhole » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 21:36:04

Signs of demand destruction.
Carlhole
 

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 21:44:59

SemGroup, a major oil tarder and purchaser, speculated heavily on the futures market - betting on the price of oil to fall. They lost more than $3 billion, went bamkrupt about a week ago, and suddenly they can not purchase 500,000 bpd from 2,000 small oil producers. They also ship the oil to Cushing, OK, which is perhaps the most important storage and pipeline location in the US.

So it is a matter of supply and demand. However with oil inventories already low, if other companies don't contract to pick up those small suppliers, we may have a bit of an inventory problem before too long.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
User avatar
DantesPeak
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6277
Joined: Sat 23 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: New Jersey

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby benzoil » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 21:46:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'S')igns of demand destruction.


Bingo. It's not going to be a straight line up to $500/bbl (or whatever price). The market will move up and down, but trend upwards. My guess is that oil will drop back below $100 briefly. Everyone will say Peak Oil is hooey and move on...except that as the credit recession ends (2009? 2010?), oil will shoot right back up because there still ain't enough to go around. And then we'll head right back into recession. Thus, The Long Emergency.
TANSTAAFL
User avatar
benzoil
Coal
Coal
 
Posts: 443
Joined: Fri 26 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Windy City No Longer

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby cipi604 » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 21:52:16

It's already going higher.Today 2$ up and some spare change.

This bubble doesn't want to burst... dammit!
User avatar
cipi604
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 818
Joined: Tue 14 Aug 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Montreal Canada

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Cashmere » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:02:15

Disagree wholeheartedly that a 20$ drop is a sign of "demand destruction," particularly given the dramatic run up.

This is a sign that the market moved too quickly.

Everybody in the know now gets that oil is only going one way, long term. That awareness led to the ramp up in price - fears of being locked out at too high of a price, fears of having your competitor pull a Southwest Airlines on you, and so on.

So we got the ramp up.

The drop of 20, IMO, is only an indication that a bit of the panic buying has subsided.

I don't buy demand destruction for one moment. Sure, there has been some in the U.S., but so what? As far as the numbers go, we are already in decline for sweet light. The rest seems poised to follow.

This is not aluminum foil, where consumers will sub out plastic wrap.

This is oil.

Perhaps the rate of increase will slow, but the price of oil will continue to rise.

The "long emergency" is a misnomer. It should be, "the acute emergency followed by the long descent into the new stone age."

Don't let the Siren of "demand destruction" bait you in.

Just because the cart got ahead of the horse for a short while doesn't mean that the horse is stopping.

And let's not forget that the rise has been historic. The fact is, if you had drawn a smooth curve from 60 in 06 to 125 today, nobody would be talking about "demand destruction". We'd all just be nodding and going, "yep, peak oil."

The dip recently is a very worrisome sign - because it means that those in the know have figured out the game, and it means that the next spike up will likely make the run to 146 look rather flat.

In other words, I can see a spike that takes us back to 150ish happen very quickly, because we've already been there, so there'll be less hesitation to buy in, followed by a spike to 160 or 170, then a settling back down to 150 ish.

"Demand Destruction" is a meaningless concept for oil, because there is no substitute.

What is critical is the demand versus supply delta.

That number will grow from today until there is no more oil left to pump, and that is why prices will continue to rise until you reach the number at which it makes no sense to process the oil.

Given that many people will gladly pay 20 bucks a gallon for gasoline, and certainly all militaries, I suggest that the top point for crude is going to be very high indeed relative to 125.

By the way, the belief of those in the Know that oil is only going up long term is shown in call options at high values going out a few years. You can't touch any long term options without laying out substantial cash, and much more than just 3 years ago. The difference is in long term expectations.

Time will tell.
Massive Human Dieoff <b>must</b> occur as a result of Peak Oil. Many more than half will die. It will occur everywhere, including where <b>you</b> live. If you fail to recognize this, then your odds of living move toward the "going to die" group.
User avatar
Cashmere
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1882
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby joewp » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:05:21

This is always a very weak time for oil prices. You had a big run up in the spring into July 4th, then some weakness starts to set in as the Summer drags on. Hurricane activity is low now, the driving season holidays are past us, and refiners are switching over to heating oil. Other responses in this thread are also part of the decline, but may only explain the size of the drop.

One big spiral storm in the Gulf of Mexico in late August or September and things will get exciting again, or failing that, some cold weather in the Northeast (the largest user of heating oil in the world) in November or December usually drives up prices.

Barring an unusual circumstance like a war in Iran or a major hurricane bearing down on the center of Gulf oil extraction, it's rare for oil prices to set new records from now until at least February or March.

Of course, if the oil extraction rate starts to decline, all bets are off and we can be off to the races with little to stop the price from rising almost every week.
Joe P. joeparente.com
"Only when the last tree is cut; only when the last river is polluted; only when the last fish is caught; only then will they realize that you cannot eat money." - Cree Indian Proverb
User avatar
joewp
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2054
Joined: Tue 05 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Keeping dry in South Florida

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:10:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cashmere', 'D')isagree wholeheartedly that a 20$ drop is a sign of "demand destruction," particularly given the dramatic run up.

This is a sign that the market moved too quickly.


The price spike before the drop of $20 also had much to do with SemGroup.

There appears to be a strong possibility that their traders who bet on falling prices did not follow company trading guidelines. When the loss was discovered, the short positions had to be closed out, driving up the price to a level we now call a price spike.

This has almost nothing to do with long term supply/demand. So far in 2008, net oil + product imports are dropping faster than 'demand destruction'. Demand destruction is just another (erroneous) way of saying that demand must drop somehow to available levels of supply.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
User avatar
DantesPeak
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6277
Joined: Sat 23 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: New Jersey

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby JoeW » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:16:02

This is how Peak Oilers get a bad name... US consumption declines and we have guys here that say there's no such thing as Demand Destruction when it comes to oil.

Apparently, at $4/gallon gasoline, we are indeed experiencing some demand destruction. Somehow, people have cleverly found ways to use less gasoline.

There are substitutes, you know. They're just not easy ones. There is:
1) drive (or ride) a smaller, less comfortable, and perhaps less safe vehicle
2) walk
3) live where you work or work where you live
4) stop driving like you have corporate sponsors and a pit crew
5) there are plenty of others, I'm sure, but you get the point.

People who can't afford the price have no choice but to change their habits. They were hesitant to do that until it became clear that the good old days of $1 gasoline were gone forever. In my opinion, the oil production situation has looked more like a plateau for the last couple of years than a peak. Once a serious decline sets in, all hell will break loose. There will be plenty of pain and suffering, if that's what you're looking forward to. But there will also be demand destruction, among the poorest people. To ignore it is to ignore their plight--not surprising given the "every man for himself" mentality that has become a real cultural force in the US.
User avatar
JoeW
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 647
Joined: Tue 12 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: The Pit of Despair

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:26:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'S')igns of demand destruction.

Correct.

The latest Weekly Petroleum Products Supplied stats from the EIA show another massive drop in U.S. oil consumption. Here's the figures:

July 20, 2007: 21,006kbd
July 18, 2008: 19,903kbd

That's a year-on-year drop in US demand of 1,103,000 barrels/day. Huge.

The new monthly stats for US demand are also out today, here.

May 2008 Product Supplied was 611,600 thousand barrels, down by 891,000bpd over May 2007.

For comparison, average demand growth for the Middle East + China + India over the last 3 years has been about 650,000bpd per year. The US drop is too big, and the oil guzzling nations can't guzzle fast enough to fill the hole.

Edit: can -> can't
Last edited by JohnDenver on Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:42:46, edited 1 time in total.
JohnDenver
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2145
Joined: Sun 29 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Cashmere » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:26:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JoeW', 'T')his is how Peak Oilers get a bad name... US consumption declines and <b><i>we have guys here</b></i> [s]that[/s] who say there's no such thing as Demand Destruction when it comes to oil.

There are substitutes, you know. They're just not easy ones. There is:
1) drive (or ride) a smaller, less comfortable, and perhaps less safe vehicle
2) walk
3) live where you work or work where you live
4) stop driving like you have corporate sponsors and a pit crew
5) there are plenty of others, I'm sure, but you get the point.

. . .

To ignore it is to ignore their plight--not surprising given the "every man for himself" mentality that has become a real cultural force in the US.


Hey Joe, if that's an allusion to me, then here's my response:

I choose my words very carefully, always. I don't mind being quoted, but I despise being misquoted.

I never said that "there is no such thing as demand destruction", as you put it. In fact, I yielded the point that there <i>has been</i> demand destruction in the U.S..

My points were:
1. Not responsible for the price drop.
2. DD is not a useful concept for oil.

As to 2, you have apparently attempted a rebuttal.

In short, "walking" is not a substitute for oil, unless you are going to eat the walking when the diesel tractors read "empty."

Sure sure, poor people will get priced out first. SO WHAT?

My point, which I believe to be simple, is just this:

Every drop of oil will get used as soon as it's produced, and the "demand" for that oil will be there forever. The maximum price oil will attain will be the price at which the cost of oil is too high to justify the end use.

I suggest that that price will be very high.

By the way - I have skin in the game - a lot. So take my prediction as my action as well.

Finally, I'm not seeing the "every man for himself" thing.

I'm seeing the "bail outs" and "socialism for all" thing.

Of course, we seem to have different perspectives, because we are, no doubt, looking at the same beast.
Massive Human Dieoff <b>must</b> occur as a result of Peak Oil. Many more than half will die. It will occur everywhere, including where <b>you</b> live. If you fail to recognize this, then your odds of living move toward the "going to die" group.
User avatar
Cashmere
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1882
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 22:29:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DantesPeak', 'S')emGroup, a major oil tarder and purchaser, speculated heavily on the futures market - betting on the price of oil to fall.


So now you're admitting that futures trading has an effect on real oil prices?
JohnDenver
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2145
Joined: Sun 29 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:01:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DantesPeak', 'S')emGroup, a major oil tarder and purchaser, speculated heavily on the futures market - betting on the price of oil to fall.


So now you're admitting that futures trading has an effect on real oil prices?


I've said many times it may effect prices in the very short term, but they have almost no effect in the long term - except to smooth price trends.

I said many months ago that most speculative oil trading activity concerned betting on prices to drop, now that has been proven to be true.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
User avatar
DantesPeak
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6277
Joined: Sat 23 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: New Jersey
Top

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Heineken » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:02:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'S')igns of demand destruction.

Correct.

The latest Weekly Petroleum Products Supplied stats from the EIA show another massive drop in U.S. oil consumption. Here's the figures:

July 20, 2007: 21,006kbd
July 18, 2008: 19,903kbd

That's a year-on-year drop in US demand of 1,103,000 barrels/day. Huge.

The new monthly stats for US demand are also out today, here.

May 2008 Product Supplied was 611,600 thousand barrels, down by 891,000bpd over May 2007.

For comparison, average demand growth for the Middle East + China + India over the last 3 years has been about 650,000bpd per year. The US drop is too big, and the oil guzzling nations can't guzzle fast enough to fill the hole.

Edit: can -> can't


John, don't you consider the US an "oil-guzzling nation"?

Give the industrializing nations time. Their potential demand dwarfs our current one.

Much has been made of demand destruction in the US, but that was just the froth---the easy part. The RV trips to Yellowstone and the commutes easily convertible to public transport. Much of public transport's available capacity has now been filled. We can destroy only relatively little demand here before we get into the marrow. Meanwhile, Chindia relentlessly makes up the difference. They are growing, we are not (not much, anyway).
"Actually, humans died out long ago."
---Abused, abandoned hunting dog

"Things have entered a stage where the only change that is possible is for things to get worse."
---I & my bro.
User avatar
Heineken
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7051
Joined: Tue 14 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Rural Virginia
Top

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:04:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'S')igns of demand destruction.

Correct.

The latest Weekly Petroleum Products Supplied stats from the EIA show another massive drop in U.S. oil consumption. Here's the figures:

July 20, 2007: 21,006kbd
July 18, 2008: 19,903kbd

That's a year-on-year drop in US demand of 1,103,000 barrels/day. Huge.

The new monthly stats for US demand are also out today, here.

May 2008 Product Supplied was 611,600 thousand barrels, down by 891,000bpd over May 2007.

For comparison, average demand growth for the Middle East + China + India over the last 3 years has been about 650,000bpd per year. The US drop is too big, and the oil guzzling nations can't guzzle fast enough to fill the hole.

Edit: can -> can't


Your highly selective use of statistics distorts the main supply/demand trends. US oil + oil product imports are falling 200,000 bpd faster than 'demand destruction' as you call it. There is an alternative better explanation - prices rising high enough to choke off demand to reduce it to available levels of supply.

EIA year to date statistics
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
User avatar
DantesPeak
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6277
Joined: Sat 23 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: New Jersey
Top

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Cashmere » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:14:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'S')igns of demand destruction.

Correct.
July 20, 2007: 21,006kbd
July 18, 2008: 19,903kbd

That's a year-on-year drop in US demand of 1,103,000 barrels/day. Huge.


Carlhole - check your premises when you see JD next to you in the debate.

JD - 5%. Or 1% of World usage.

Peanuts when you consider - the world grew more than 1% in that year and production of light sweet crude likely fell more than 1% in that year and demand around the world, not just China and India, likely increased more than 1%.

PO doesn't care who drinks the milkshake - only that it be drunk.

Finally, the poster above made a great point - we've simply stopped the hemorrhaging. As we cut, we approach base usage. Pain intensifies as base usage gets closer.
Massive Human Dieoff <b>must</b> occur as a result of Peak Oil. Many more than half will die. It will occur everywhere, including where <b>you</b> live. If you fail to recognize this, then your odds of living move toward the "going to die" group.
User avatar
Cashmere
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1882
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:25:21

Markets are not rational in the short term. That's just life. Get used to it.
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
User avatar
Starvid
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3021
Joined: Sun 20 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Uppsala, Sweden

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:37:12

Basically the first cuts to meet falling net supplies are the easiest made in the US, so the rest of the world - mostly Chinida - can increase their demand at the same time.

When supplies keep falling, it won't be so easy, for example, to stop driving to work or taking the kids to school when there is no alternative. Perhaps needless to say but declining enegy usage is a coincident economic indicator - or in other words - the loss of jobs in the US every month this year is no chance occurence.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
User avatar
DantesPeak
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6277
Joined: Sat 23 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: New Jersey

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Carlhole » Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:48:41

I don't know what stock market reports you guys tune into, but the ones I have been reading recently have simply said that the price of oil has gotten too pricey vis-a-vis expected economic growth, airlines started failing, the subprime mortgage threatened to place a big damper on credit and all that.

The market looked at this and decided to get scared. So there was a sell-off. It wasn't a huge sell-off --- it's acting the way markets typically act.

There is still a lot of bullishness on oil -- just read the investor comments on Google Finance on stocks like CHK or UNG or PBR and others. People are nervous about the momentum of the world's economies going forward in the near term but they are very bullish on oil in the long term.
Carlhole
 

Re: So why did the price of oil drop $20?

Unread postby Carlhole » Tue 29 Jul 2008, 00:08:34

Here's Tom Whipple's reply to the question:

Peak oil review - July 28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..In light of the energy shortages, hopes for a nine percent increase in economic growth are dimming rapidly while prospects for an actual economic decline are appearing ever more likely. India’s economic miracle may be coming to a close more rapidly than anyone thought.

3. China after the Olympics

The numbers are now in, and China’s increase in oil product consumption during the first half of 2008 is truly impressive – “apparent consumption” of gasoline was up 16.2 percent, diesel up 14.7 percent and kerosene up 6.6 percent. While some of this increase is related to last winter’s blizzards, the earthquake, and preparations for the Olympics, a lot came from plain old economic growth which was 10.4 percent in the first half.

Currently China is faced with a power shortage partly due to the temporary closing of power plants in the vicinity of Beijing in an attempt to clean-up the air for the Olympics. Most Chinese authorities say the heart of the problem is the inability of China’s railroad system to move enough coal to the rapidly increasing numbers of power plants scattered across the country. Coal stockpiles have decreased by eight percent in recent weeks and two or three percent of China’s thermal power plants are reported to have closed.

To guarantee adequate electricity supplies while attempting to clean up the air during the Olympics, Beijing ordered a number of major industries, most notably aluminum production, to cut back on consumption prior to the games. Despite the shortages, China’s power generation increased 8.3 percent in June over 2007 and thermal power production increased by 6.8 percent.

Price caps on coal and electric power are complicating the situation. While long term coal contracts and retail electricity prices are capped, spot coal prices have doubled recently so that 80 percent of the power companies are sustaining losses.

In another month, the Olympics will be over as will the need for cleaner air and reliable electricity. Power plants around Beijing will resume operation as will the 100s of industrial plants that have been forced to shut down and the 300,000 trucks and 1.5 million cars that have been banned from operating around the capitol.

Increased transportation of coal over the short run seems difficult to achieve as various efforts to increase coal shipments over the past year are likely to have rung the slack out of the transportation system. This suggests that if China is to keep on growing at 10+ percent, there will be a need to import more coal, oil and natural gas. While increases on the order of 15 percent as we saw in the first half of 2008 seem high, continued growth in imports seems likely. Beijing also may seize upon the recent $24 a barrel drop in world oil prices as an opportunity to build its strategic oil reserves.

The rapid run-up in oil prices during the first half of the year and the recent drop may have more to do with Chinese demand in a tight oil market than is generally recognized.
Carlhole
 
Top

Next

Return to Open Topic Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests