Oil Down $16 to $130, Everything Wonderful Again: Not
Charles Hugh Smith
I hate to pop the balloon about how everything's wonderful again now that
oil has collapsed from $146 to a mere $130/barrel--no, scratch that. I delight in popping that nonsensical bubble.
Before we allow euphoria to lift us to a heady height so great we're ready to believe
Lehman and Merrill and all the other "players" are suddenly whole again, let's look
at a chart.
As a proxy for the oil sector, let's use the XLE:

Here we see a number of interesting points:
1. XLE just touched key support.
2. Every time XLE pierces its 200-day moving average and the Bollinger Band on the
downside, a sharp rally to a new high has followed.
3. The downside breaks are very sharp and very short. The XLE can drop 20+% in a
few weeks, and then bounce back within 6 weeks as it extends to a new high.
4. The MACD is at an extreme--even lower than when the XLE touched a "death of the
Oil Bull" low in January 2008.
5. The uptrend is still intact.
Based on this chart, I would expect a rally from 75 to 85 in short order. Let's just say the chart makes me skeptical of calls for the end of the Bull market
in petroleum.
The "recession-Lite" scenario that's getting a lot of airplay nowadays is based on
the idea that demand for petroleum will plummet in a recession, leading to a collapse
in oil prices.
I highlighted the fatal flaw in this fantasy in Saturday Quiz: Demand Destruction of Gasoline in the U.S. (July 12, 2008): reducing demand for gasoline 3-5% in the U.S. is supposed to
deliver a crushing knockout blow to oil prices, but that works out to a
meager 300-500,000 barrels a day in a world that produces 85 million barrels a day.
Meanwhile, what nobody mentions when recounting this rosy scenario is that oil exports
to the U.S. from Mexico are falling at 30% per year--and the U.S. gets 20% of its
imported oil from Mexico and Venezuela.
Frequent contributor U. Doran sent in this link from the Association for the Study
of Peak Oil & Gas-USA: Peak Oil Is A Done Deal .
Bottom line: Saudi Arabia and Russia, which together pump about 23% of the world's
oil, are both in depletion decline. So are Mexico, the North Sea, etc.
Simply put: every time the "Oil Bull" is declared dead, as it was in January,
it rises with extraordinary alacrity to new heights. The reason is not gol-durned
speculators but supply and demand--even as demand inches downward, supply is
declining even faster.
Let's put "demand destruction" in the U.S. in its proper context. 300,000 barrels a day
is chump-change in a nation which burns 21 million barrels a day. if supply
were increasing by leaps and bounds as it was in the 80s, fine, then you could
have a huge demand-supply imbalance in favor of supply. But by even the most
optimistic estimates, "excess capacity" (all in heavy crude few can refine) is
about 1.4 million barrels a day--a razor-thin margin.
I have predicted one last "head-fake" decline in oil prices, but it's going to take
serious reduction in demand, on the order of 4-5 million barrels a day globally,
to get that drop.
It takes a long time to locate, drill, pump and process new reserves of petroleum. I was fortunate to receive a report from a working petroleum geophysicist, who due to
the nature of the business, prefers to remain anonymous. His report is a real eye-opener. Read on:
I am an exploration geophysicist working for a large
oil company. The quiet consensus in the industry is that yes, we are at peak oil. (emphasis added, CHS)
Such an idea was not even discussed even a year ago, but now it is a silent consensus.
I also agree with your assessment that a serious downturn can cause the oil prices
to go down temporarily for the last time. Worrying thing is that it is a "perfect
storm" coinciding with a large economic downturn and with the long-term trends of
an aging population and of global warming. Weakened immune systems from aging,
stress and poorer nutrition and the disturbed ecosystems may also cause some
super-virus to spread.
However, it is crucial to make the transition to the new
world (petroleum-less, older, changed climate) as slow as possible so that we can
adapt. Otherwise it's finally the day the guys at survivalblog.com have been
yearning for :-) I will do my best to prepare myself and my newly-started
family, but ultimately it comes down to chance. Was it you who posted the story
about Aaron Schwartz, the smartest man in the 20th century, who foresaw Hitler's
rise and moved with his family to a quiet Pacific island called... Guadalcanal?
It's possible to have a long career in petroleum as everyone either goes back to old wells to extract a
bit more or drills a lot of dry holes looking for the elusive super-giant field
which will save us all :-)
The strong job market for geophysicists has more to do with the fact that the
oil industry downsized massively between 1983 and 2003 than with peak oil. Why?
Assume you own an oilfield or hold a long-term lease on one. If you believe that
the current price is just a cyclical high, then you will do all you can to explore
the land to find oil, or to do extra surveys to find bypassed pockets in the
reservoir, and get the oil to market before the price falls.
However, if you expect
the price to keep rising, and rising, why would you work so hard today to find new
oil / get some more now, when if you do the same amount of work a couple of years
down the road, you will sell it for much more? And maybe more capacity will come on
the market for drilling rigs and oilfield services, so you would not pay those
outrageous prices to your service providers either. Companies do have to replace
reserves (they usually have about 6-8 yrs of reserves in their
portofolio), but they don't do much more.
BTW re: the dramatic capacity cuts, they were indeed amazing. In 1983 there were 730
land crews doing land seismic surveys in North America, and in 2003 there were only
37.
These statistics were published by The Leading Edge (TLE), the monthly magazine of
the 25,000-members Society for Exploration Geophysicists (seg.org). That's 20 x
reduction in capacity, for God's sake!! How does one expect to find more of something
with 20x less people?? Technology did not make much of a difference, as for land
seismic the crews still have to go and plant geophones by hand.
Companies were
downsizing entire departments. As late as 2004 you could read in "career advice"
articles in TLE leading geophysicists saying that they are not advising their
children to go into this field, that they should only do it if they really love
it and they should expect to be out of a job half the time... Walter Lynn, SEG
president 2001-02, was downsized from his company (PGS) the day
after his president mandate was over (it's visible in his CV at www.lynn-inc.com).
I spent the 2000-05
period working towards a PhD at a top U.S. university, and we were in contact with
many
companies. 2003 was the bottom; out of about 15 graduate students, only 2 or
3 got internships although most tried. That was in a leading research group
in the field. Unemployment in geosciences as measured by the Houston Geological
Society was above 10%. In 2004 an American colleague of mine graduated after
working for 7 years for a PhD and he only got a menial job warranting a BSc with
a company in Houston. You see, supply and demand.
In 2005 things turned around
and I quit my PhD as soon as I got a job offer in hand, because I believed that
by the time I would graduate (the last of my cohort "got out" 1 month ago) oil
prices would be again at a low. In the early
2000s US produced only about 100 (yes,
one hundred) graduates with decent BSc degrees in geophysics. China produced
easily 20x more, and well prepared too, not some junk diplomas. In 2004 85%
of the graduate students in the Petroleum Engineering department at Stanford
were foreign. Now oil prices are high everywhere and they start to have good
employment in their home countries as well...
My former research group is down
to half the number of students... Things are not always what they seem, and the
level of
activity in the oil industry now is still FAR from a emergency-level, all-out
effort, WWII kind of thing. The industry is still recovering from 20 years of
capacity cuts!
In other words: additional capacity might well come online, but it will take
an entire new generation of geophysicists/geologists and an effort which dwarfs
current exploration levels.
Oil insiders also note that there are no spare rigs or drilling platforms lying
about; every rig is already in use. So we have to construct, at enormous
expense, an entire new generation of equipment.
Let's say this takes 10 - 15 years, which is what knowledgeable sources like Matt
Simmons guesstimate. That means we can look for new oil flowing in about 2021.
All that new production will do, of course, is replace some of what's been
lost to depletion in the next 13 years.
Maybe I'm wrong and oil is heading to $100/brl or less. If so, it's the final
head-fake before Peak Oil strikes with a vengence:
July 18, 2008
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