Why I'm Not Buying Oil's Recent 'Correction' [View article]
John Pseudonym
Even if oil reaches to $100, you will not see cheap gas any time soon if ever again. Refineries have been eating a lot of the oil price on their side and the lower oil price will just bring their cost back in line. $3 + gas is probably here for a while. So, I do not see a mass return of gas guzzling SUV driving.
However, if oil reaches back down around $75 and STAY there, you may see gas drop to below the $3 mark.
Confirmatory Bias and Oil Investing [View article]
Presuming oil is going to drop to a realistic price, I really think the best thing to happen would be that gas goes down to a goldilocks price. Not to high to help the economy and inflation correct back, and not to low as to stop the pressure of alternative energy and fuel sources.
What We Can Do To Reverse the Oil Crisis [View article]
One thing that I have not read about or missed if someone has touched on is the fact that if oil continues to increase in price, the amount of cash return when a profit is made in true value declines.
That is, since oil effects the cost and inflation of almost all products and services, the real cash value decreases on returns since the dollar value declines. I mean, I can not pay my house payment or go out and pay for my hdtv with oil(at least not yet). So, money has to have some real value against oil and other commodities and can not sustain a continued loss against them.
So basically, piling investment money into commodities that are the bases for an economy creates no real capital and can only be a temporary profit.
These investment firms either know this and will pull out at some point, or they are stupid as hell.
Also, if you think that changing currencies to the Euro would make a difference, It might for a while. But, any economy that uses oil and other commodities will eventually lose true value up against continued price increases on the commodities.
"If the speculators have better information about the future then this should be helpful, i.e., the price impact should help the oil market."
That is exactly the problem. Demand data can be measured very accurately, however actual real supply can be ambiguous. The supply chain has to many hands in the pot making the data inaccurate and left to opinion.
"if there is at some point more speculation on the short side then this can push the spot price down."
As soon as this starts to happen, a fresh new round of BS propaganda comes from the Middle East to bait investors back. There is no doubt in my mind that the Axis of Oil are cashing in on the over valued price and will do everything they can to keep that extra money coming in.
IEA's Oil Market Outlook: Off the Mark [View article]
Did the IEA predict the current demand destruction going on in the US last year? Of course not, Index investors are really putting a new twist on how to accurately predict future supplies and demand.
We Can Lower Gas Prices Now If We Drill, Drill, Drill [View article]
Any increase in future supplies would be good, however to reduce the current price it would have to be a very very significant supply increase. And, just recently, Saudi Arabia announced significant future production increases. Additionally, there has been demand destruction in the US. None of these factors has had any impact on prices. This leads me to believe that the contracts are being artificially inflated to keep the market profitable. Also, I think oil producers are and can reduce production to keep supplies "tight" when they receive demand reduction data, thus controlling the market psychology.
The current pricing is not sustainable, whether it is a bubble or not. It is already having an impact globally. I have not heard of one country that uses oil where their inflation is going down. Having all the other food commodities in the same boat will have an impact on the developing world's ability to afford the high cost of oil and dampen the demand at least for now. The balance curve has swung way to far in the other direction.
The thing that concerns me is how much control oil producers seem to have right now. Please tell me if I am incorrect in deriving my conclusion, but it seems to me if you have so many future contracts bought ahead of time, you have a fairly accurate picture of how much you need to produce to meet those contracts. Then adding the fact you can get real time physical demand information allows you to control the supply. This allows the producer to have tighter inventories thus fueling the "tight supply" psychology. I think that there is evidence of this when Libya made their announcement that they may cut production. Why would they do that if there is such a high demand? Retaliation or not, you would not do this if you were making major $$ on what you are producing. Seems more logical to suck money from America if the demand was there. The only conclusion is to keep inventories from building so that they can keep prices from falling.
Why I'm Not Buying Oil's Recent 'Correction' [View article]
Pseudonym
Even if oil reaches to $100, you will not see cheap gas any time soon if ever again. Refineries have been eating a lot of the oil price on their side and the lower oil price will just bring their cost back in line. $3 + gas is probably here for a while. So, I do not see a mass return of gas guzzling SUV driving.
However, if oil reaches back down around $75 and STAY there, you may see gas drop to below the $3 mark.
Confirmatory Bias and Oil Investing [View article]
What We Can Do To Reverse the Oil Crisis [View article]
That is, since oil effects the cost and inflation of almost all products and services, the real cash value decreases on returns since the dollar value declines. I mean, I can not pay my house payment or go out and pay for my hdtv with oil(at least not yet). So, money has to have some real value against oil and other commodities and can not sustain a continued loss against them.
So basically, piling investment money into commodities that are the bases for an economy creates no real capital and can only be a temporary profit.
These investment firms either know this and will pull out at some point, or they are stupid as hell.
Also, if you think that changing currencies to the Euro would make a difference, It might for a while. But, any economy that uses oil and other commodities will eventually lose true value up against continued price increases on the commodities.
The Effects of Oil Speculation [View article]
That is exactly the problem. Demand data can be measured very accurately, however actual real supply can be ambiguous.
The supply chain has to many hands in the pot making the data inaccurate and left to opinion.
"if there is at some point more speculation on the short side then this can push the spot price down."
As soon as this starts to happen, a fresh new round of BS propaganda comes from the Middle East to bait investors back. There is no doubt in my mind that the Axis of Oil are cashing in on the over valued price and will do everything they can to keep that extra money coming in.
IEA's Oil Market Outlook: Off the Mark [View article]
We Can Lower Gas Prices Now If We Drill, Drill, Drill [View article]
Oil: If It Looks Like a Bubble... [View article]
The thing that concerns me is how much control oil producers seem to have right now. Please tell me if I am incorrect in deriving my conclusion, but it seems to me if you have so many future contracts bought ahead of time, you have a fairly accurate picture of how much you need to produce to meet those contracts. Then adding the fact you can get real time physical demand information allows you to control the supply. This allows the producer to have tighter inventories thus fueling the "tight supply" psychology. I think that there is evidence of this when Libya made their announcement that they may cut production. Why would they do that if there is such a high demand? Retaliation or not, you would not do this if you were making major $$ on what you are producing. Seems more logical to suck money from America if the demand was there. The only conclusion is to keep inventories from building so that they can keep prices from falling.