Oil Prices Jump
"With Oil Prices Poised to Jump as Much as 70%, Every Investor Needs an Energy
Strategy"
The U.S. news media has convinced many investors that oil consumption is falling because of the global
recession. While that may be true, it's a disservice to millions of investors because oil production is declining
at a pace that's actually three times faster.
And that suggests higher oil and gasoline prices in coming months - perhaps as much as 50% - 70% higher, or more -
particularly if a U.S. economic recovery is truly in the offing.
To really see what I'm talking about, let's start with a close look at consumption. I'm asked about this frequently
in my global wanderings, most recently at the Las Vegas Money Show last week.
For months we've been hearing about a drop in global demand. It's a popular story and one that sounds credible:
After all, it seems logical to assume that during economic chaos, consumers and businesses alike will rethink their
budgets and ratchet back their spending.
For consumers, the continued economic malaise will mean fewer trips to the store, less-ambitious vacations, and
car-pooling to school or work. For businesses, the cutbacks by consumers will clearly translate into canceling
trips where conference calls will suffice and using lower-cost shipping alternatives for the decreased sales
volumes most U.S. companies will experience.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, oil consumption fell by nearly 50,000 barrels a day
throughout 2008. According to the latest figures, the EIA suggests that global oil demand may slump to 83.4
million barrels a day in 2009 - nearly 2.4 million barrels below 2008 consumption levels. On a percentage basis,
that's almost a 3% drop. I have my doubts that we'll actually see a decline of this magnitude, but if it does
occur, it will be the first time ever that consumption has declined for two straight years. That alone is pretty
noteworthy in this era of cohesive and powerful global growth.
Emerging markets oil consumption growth
The reason I have my doubts about such a steep decline in demand is this: While overall consumption is dropping
in such developed economies as the United States, Europe and Australia, it's being at least partially offset by
continued growth in China, the Middle East and Latin America. Because the data produced there is less than
transparent, I can't help but think that analysts are underestimating the growth we'll be seeing in those markets,
where consumption is accelerating strongly. And it's entirely possible that growth in those markets will outstrip
any fall here in the developed world.
Even if the growth in the emerging markets doesn't quite offset the decline in their developed brethren, analysts
seem to be forgetting that oil prices are a function of two variables - consumption and production. And it's the
change in production that's going to catch a lot of people by surprise.
After a run of record high oil prices punctuated by frantic resources development, we're now seeing the opposite
scenario. The long period of lower than anticipated oil prices following oil's meteoric rise last year means that
the entire industry is no longer making the investments needed to sustain production capacity or actual
production.
And not many folks recognize this fact.
Oil production has been declining
For instance, direct project investment in drilling may be down as much as 20%, while the number of drill rigs
in operation in America alone has dropped by more than 40%. Various estimates from the EIA and private sources
suggest that actual U.S. production may fall by as much as 320,000 barrels a day. While the amount is a matter of
debate, the fact that production is declining is not.
More than 20% of total U.S. oil production comes from tiny wells located in remote areas that were marginally
profitable producers when crude oil was trading at $100 a barrel. With oil currently at about $61 a barrel, those
producers are practically worthless now. So the "mom-and-pop" shops that own them are actually abandoning entire
fields and equipment without a moment's thought.
To be fair, at least part of the drop in demand can be attributed to increased reliance on methanol, ethanol and
other types of biofuel, but that's hard to quantify at the moment because the long period of low oil prices has
eroded the economic viability of alternative fuels - at least for now.
The story is much the same with new exploration projects being cancelled left, right and center. The trend is
particularly apparent in the
Canadian oil sands that were everybody's fancy only 24 months ago. Now we're seeing Royal Dutch Shell PLC
(NYSE ADR: RDS.A, RDS.B), StatoilHydro ASA (NYSE ADR: STO) and Petro-Canada USA (NYSE: PCZ) each backing away from multi-million dollar investments that were to bring online an
estimated 500,000 barrels a day.
Russian, Saudi and Mexican producers are reporting the biggest production drops seen in 50 years. Even Venezuelan
leader President Hugo Chavez - the perennial motor mouth and longtime U.S. critic - is eating crow. He's
begrudgingly invited (read that to mean "is begging") the oil companies whose assets he nationalized only a year
ago to "come back" into the market.
He has no choice. Venezuela's oil production is already below its 1997 levels, and many analysts say that output
could fall even more since Chavez has done such a thorough job of alienating the big foreign oil companies that
actually possess the technology needed to extract crude oil from that country's hard-to-reach reserves.
Chavez's Chavez’s government seized the assets of 60 foreign and domestic oil service companies after conflict
erupted over nearly $14 billion in debt owed by the country's state-owned energy company, Petroleos de Venezuela
(PDVSA). PDVSA accumulated the debt as oil prices took a dramatic slide from over $147 a barrel last July to less
than $35 a barrel in February.
Then there's simple shrinkage. This is an oil industry term for declining output. The EIA recently released data
suggesting that production at more than 800 oil fields around the world is going to decline by about 9.1%. It
doesn't matter whether the decline is prompted by depletion, war, or simple neglect. The fact is that this
shrinkage will take an estimated 7.6 million barrels per day out of the system.
I could go on but I think you get the picture.
Now imagine what could happen to oil-and-gasoline prices when normalized demand resumes. Not only will there be
less oil in storage, but virtually the entire industry - exploration, production, refining and sales - is going to
be caught sitting on its heels when the world needs it to be zooming along in high gear. And that means the
companies that make up this industry will have to ramp up again to meet the newly increased consumption
demands.
This whole process could take two years - or even longer - to play out.
As for prices, history is replete with examples of what happens when there are major shortages of key
commodities.
In the Energy Crisis of 1973-74, for example, I can still remember the numbingly long gas lines and
waiting in the car for hours to get a fill-up. My father and grandfather vividly remember that prices quadrupled
in a matter of months. I'm sure you do, too.
Only a few years later, in 1979, we got another oil shock when prices quadrupled again. Because it was coupled with stagnant
economic growth and virulent inflation (stagflation), this period was an economic disaster for the United
States.
For those who had learned from the earlier crisis, however, it was a mondo profit opportunity.
High oil prices contributed to the current financial crisis
The same can be said for 2007-2008, when the huge spike in oil prices that I predicted contributed to the
bear market in stocks, tight credit and recessionary conditions that led to the current malaise that continues to
grip the U.S. economy. As much as anything else, high oil prices contributed to the carnage we've seen in the
auto-making and airline industries, and to the financial crisis that started here before spanning the globe. Which
brings us full circle.
Many investors will refuse to believe we've arrived at this new energy nexus, especially given all the hype we've
seen surrounding alternative fuels, hybrid vehicles and the new "green" mentality that's taken hold here in this
country. If you listen to some of the real believers, they'll tell you that we could be living in a petroleum-free
Nirvana - as early as tomorrow.
While I personally would like that, too, it's a misleading argument if for no other reason than there are millions
of consumer items we use - from plastic bags to makeup - still created using petroleum. And there are still more
than 60,000 manufacturing processes that depend on petroleum, and even the most aggressive estimates suggest that
it will take the world decades to shift away from them.
We're in much the same situation when it comes to hybrid vehicles. There isn't a mass-produced electric vehicle
available today that could offset the coming rise in recovery-driven demand for oil and gasoline. There's a strong
effort underway, but I'm not aware of a single company ready to field the solution in cost-affordable quantities by
2010 - which is when most analysts say a recovering economy will stoke demand for oil.
Of course, U.S. President Barack Obama's much-lauded efficiency and greenhouse-gas-standards mandate will help
significantly, but that's like bolting the barn door after the horses have run for the fields. The irony of
watching auto executives "applaud" his press conference was almost too much to watch with a straight face. But
that's a story for another time.
The bottom line is this: Our society will be highly dependent on oil for many years to come and investors should
plan accordingly.
If governments around the world really want to get serious, they could collectively work to eliminate the fuel
subsidies that are part of the price paid for gasoline in Asia or sugarcane ethanol in Brazil. We could also stop
our own energy pork barreling. But given the complete lack of transparency that surrounds this issue - not to
mention the influence wielded by vested industry interests, and the scores of well-paid lobbyists that patrol the
halls of power in our nation's capital - I don't think we'll see any big changes anytime soon.
So I'm left with one inescapable conclusion, at least in the intermediate term. Every investor needs to have at
least some sort of energy strategy - preferably one that includes a range of drillers, producers and suppliers to
cover the spectrum from wellhead to consumer.
That way, we can profit from an increase in energy prices that we can only hope rise fast enough to jump-start the
oil industry's production arm but not so fast that it snuffs out the badly needed economic recovery.
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