Evidence points to even higher oil prices

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eröffnet am: 22.08.04 18:58 von: FlorianPasca. Anzahl Beiträge: 6
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22.08.04 18:58

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleEvidence points to even higher oil prices

Evidence points to even higher oil prices
MATHEW INGRAM
11:08 EST Saturday, Aug 21, 2004


The world's major stock markets tried hard this week to ignore the proverbial elephant at the table -- record high oil prices -- but it is getting harder and harder to do so. Every time there is a ray of hope out of Iraq or Russia, the price of crude subsides briefly, only to continue its seemingly inexorable climb toward the level of $50 (U.S.) a barrel.

Even the OPEC oil cartel and its largest member, Saudi Arabia, seem to have lost their traditional ability to bend the market to their will. On three separate occasions since May, leaders of both, have promised the world more crude, and oil has sagged on the news. Each time, however, it has recovered and gone on to a new record.

In part, the global oil picture is a byproduct of decisions made by OPEC in the late 1990s, after it boosted production at the wrong time and prices crashed to $10 a barrel.

Determined not to let that happen again, the cartel kept a tight rein on supply, to the point where production capacity was crimped. All it took was stronger-than-expected demand from China, and the picture changed dramatically for the worse.

OPEC has repeatedly said the rise in crude, which hit another record of $49.40 a barrel in intraday trading yesterday, is being driven largely by traders. But the speculative interest in crude has actually declined over the past several months, and yet the price has kept climbing. Although part of the price (estimated at anywhere from $5 to $15 a barrel) is still influenced by traders playing on the market's fear, the fact is that much of the fear is justified: OPEC hasn't had this small a buffer of spare production capacity since the 1970s.

In July, the cartel pumped about 29 million b/d -- OPEC says about 29.57 million, while the International Energy Agency's latest report says 29.1 million. In any case, that was within a virtual hair's breadth of the group's maximum capacity of 30.3 million b/d, according to the IEA, and that includes full production from Iraq, which at its peak can produce about 2.5 million barrels.

Even after the recent boost in production by Saudi Arabia, the total will likely only hit 30 million b/d this fall, and OPEC estimates demand for its crude will hit 28.25 million b/d in the fourth quarter. That means spare capacity of less than two million barrels, or about 5 per cent of supply (the 10-year average is five million barrels).

Of course, OPEC only supplies about a third of the world's oil; global production was 83.5 million b/d in July. But global demand is expected to rise by more than 2.5 million b/d this year to about 82 million b/d, according to the IEA, which is the fastest growth since 1980. That means OPEC's spare capacity amounts to 2 per cent of demand -- or a very small drop in a very large ocean. And that assumes Iraq is at capacity, which it isn't; it's only producing one million b/d.

Most OPEC members are already at full capacity. The IEA estimates that while Saudi Arabia had spare capacity of about 300,000 b/d last month, all the other so-called "OPEC-10" countries (excluding Iraq) combined for spare capacity of just 380,000 b/d. (Iraq had another 520,000 b/d of unused capacity in the month.) Meanwhile, the IEA continues to revise its demand forecast upward: In its latest update, it raised its estimate for this year by 750,000 barrels to 82.2 million. In other words, the upward revision alone eats up all of OPEC's unused capacity, excluding Iraq's notoriously unstable and unreliable output.

In a market under that kind of pressure, almost anything can cause a flare-up, and crude has two major flash points: Iraq and Russia. In Iraq, terrorism is still a factor, while Russia's largest producer is in limbo because its senior executives are in jail and the Russian government has frozen its assets. OAO Yukos produces 1.8 million b/d, or more than several OPEC countries, including Indonesia. Losing all that crude would instantly soak up all of OPEC's spare capacity.

Saudi Arabia says it is stepping up plans to bring new oil fields into production, which it expects will add another one million b/d of capacity by next year. However, the IEA says demand for OPEC crude will rise by more than one million b/d by the first quarter of next year, and will have climbed by two million barrels by the fourth quarter of 2005.

In other words, OPEC is like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland: forced to run faster and faster just to stay in the same place. It's no wonder oil is so high -- in fact, the real surprise may be that it isn't higher.  

22.08.04 19:04

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleOPEC is like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland:

"In other words, OPEC is like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland: forced to run faster and faster just to stay in the same place. It's no wonder oil is so high -- in fact, the real surprise may be that it isn't higher."

Ich wundere mich gerade, warum es dort ein Bedürfnis gibt um den Betrag an barrels per  day, month, year, zun steigern gerade wenn der Ölpreis nicht höher ist als bei der letzten Krise, inflationsbereinigt, natürlich.

"There are several reasons to worry less about oil prices than during past oil shocks. The economy is much less dependent on oil than it was then. Today, it takes about 20 percent less energy to create a dollar of gross domestic product than it did during the last oil spike, during the first gulf war in 1991."

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/21/business/21oil.html  

22.08.04 19:49

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleOPEC is like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland:

"Ich wundere mich gerade, warum es dort ein Bedürfnis gibt um den Betrag an barrels per  day, month, year, zun steigern gerade wenn der Ölpreis nicht höher ist als bei der letzten Krise, inflationsbereinigt, natürlich."

Mehr Bedarf nun, mehr Menschen, mehr Autos, mehr LKW`s, mehr Flugzeuge, die Chinesen benutzen nun mehr Autos als Fahrräder, mehr Plastik, etc. etc. Jahr für Jahr, so befinden wir uns gerade ungefähr auf der Stufe wo das Angebot den Bedarf trifft, so wenn irgendeine kleinere Panne in der Angebotskette passiert (Irak/Russland/Streiks/Terrorismus)bedeutet dieses das irgendjemand nicht den Betrag an Öl erhält den sie haben wollen oder benötigen, somit wird der Ölpreis ansteigen und mit dem weltweiten Wachstum wird dieses nur noch schlimmer werden, so lange bis irgendjemand eine Alternative findet, die es erlaubt, das die Welt weniger benötigt.  

Die September Futures haben am Freitag geendet und die Märkte schalten nun auf die Oktober Futures um mit nur einem geringen Pullback und wir kommen nun in die Heizsaison, so wer weiß wo die Oktober Futures hingehen werden.

Aus einer Investmentperspektive: Die meisten Schäzungen von den Ölunternehmen basieren auf einem Ölpreis von ungefähr US-$30, so wenn der Ölpreis nur auf US-$ 45 hängen bleiben wird (zurück gehen wird er auf lange Sicht nicht mehr!) bedeutet dieses das ein Unternehmen welches 300.000 barrels per day gegneriert seine Gewinne um $15/brl oder um $4.5M/day oder um $400M/qtr steigern wird und dieses ist eine Steigerung über dem was sie normalerweise machen. Die Gewinne werden explodieren. Ein Blick auf die aktuellen Gewinne von einem Unternehmen wie Northstar Energy NXS-T mit einem EPS von $10,32 und einem PE von 8,40. EnCana (ECA) produziert 650.000 BOE/D und diese sind keine riesigen Unternehmen. Ich kann es mir gerade nicht vorstellen, wie es Chevron, Shell etc. ergehen wird. PM's und Ölunternehmen sind der Ort wo man nun investiert sein sollte und wir stehen gerade nur am Anfang von dem Bullmärkten von den Commodities wie Gold, Palladium, Silber und dem Öl.  

22.08.04 19:50

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleEvidence points to even higher oil prices

"It's no wonder oil is so high -- in fact, the real surprise may be that it isn't higher."  

22.08.04 19:56

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleEvidence points to even higher oil prices

Abraham Fadley

I have a few theories I think could be in the cards. One is that oil companies, oil traders, and oil governments see 50 and 60 in their sights. Why would they let this opportunity slip by without touching those levels? Granted the reality may be something different but if OPEC can get $60 or so in the not so distant future why wouldn't they do anything and everything possible to get it, including price fixing, news hype, etc. I am sure they are not interested in saving global economies, etc. etc.

second long shot of a theory is to create a large deficit, weaken the dollar, and infalte the economy to pay back the deficit with weak devalued dollars in the future. It is like borrowing money at a discount. Who really pays,.. those people with investments and savings that do not inflate with the real inflation and are pegged to the dollar. their dollars will now only buy goods (much higher) at the new prices with old dollars.  

22.08.04 20:00

525 Postings, 7234 Tage FlorianPascaleThe Peril That Trails an Oil Shock

The Peril That Trails an Oil Shock

To be sure, the price of oil could turn down, removing the recession threat. But Mr. Hatzius at Goldman Sachs said that the recent increases look more permanent than past spikes.

His evidence is a sharp rise in oil futures contracts, especially those with five-year terms, which have risen above $35 a barrel. For the past 15 years, he said, these contracts traded in a narrow range of around $20 a barrel. This move in the futures market suggests that substantially higher oil prices are here to stay, Mr. Hatzius argued.


What is pushing oil prices? First, there are the fundamental factors related to increased consumption and a decline in exploration and extraction over the past 20 years.

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/22/b...ey/22watch.html  

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