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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Energy
price hikes are a major problem for the Baltic states - which could mean
trouble for American investors as well. Kevin Kerr gives us the whole
story...
Since the end of the Soviet Union, the Russian government has scrambled
to shore up its eroding power base. As a result, the surrounding Baltic
states are being slapped with energy price hikes they simply can't
afford. The situation is truly desperate... and that could mean trouble
for you.
At
first glance, there doesn't seem to be a lot of reason to care about
what's happening in this corner of the world. The three countries that
make up the Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - don't
produce any oil or gas. In fact, they depend on imports for much of
their natural resource needs.
But
these tiny nations do play a role in the global energy markets. They are
home to ports that transport oil overseas.
In
fact, up until 2002, there were only two Baltic ports connected to
Russia's massive oil pipeline system - Ventspils in Latvia and Butinge
in Lithuania. (Estonia's Tallinn port gets its oil by train.)
Ventspils
was the largest port on the Baltic Sea, too, until Russia completed its
Primorsk port in 2002. And that's when the trouble began.
At
the heart of the problem is Transneft, a holdover from the Soviet Union
that controls all of Russia's pipelines. After Primorsk was ready to
start operations, the company saw no reason to keep pumping oil to
Latvia's Ventspils port. It shut off the spigot.
Now
if Latvia wants to ship oil, it needs to get it to port by train.
Obviously, that's more expensive and less efficient than using a
pipeline. The higher costs and loss of volume cut into the port's profit
margins - and by extension, the country's wealth. Today, Ventspils is
shipping only a third of the oil it used to.
The
situation at Lithuania's Butinge port is a little less grim. The country
has retained better relations with its Russian oil suppliers than
Primorsk did. In fact, the port was able to ship more oil than its
larger Latvian neighbor in 2003. But that amount is still tiny compared
to the oil coming out of Primorsk. And Russia still holds the keys to
the pipeline... so it could choose to shut off Butinge's supply of oil
at any time.
How
likely is that? Who knows? The fact is the region is a mess, and things
can turn on a dime. Right now, Ukraine and Russia are in a struggle for
control of the pipeline system. Meanwhile, a border dispute between
Russia and Estonia has flared up again, just when it seemed like things
were settled. And shutting off Latvia's oil pipeline hasn't helped
relations there, either.
All
the Baltic states are having problems working with Russia to secure
borders and fair prices for energy supplies. And as if things weren't
bad enough already, Russia recently fired another shot over the already
struggling Baltic states...
In
early June, Russia's gas monopoly, Gazprom, announced plans to raise the
price of gas supplied to the Baltic states over the next three years.
Now,
to be fair, the Baltic states were getting a pretty good deal before.
Latvia was paying around $92-94 per thousand cubic meters of gas.
Lithuania paid $85 and Estonia $90. Meanwhile, Western European
customers pay about $150 per thousand cubic meters. Gazprom is saying
that will be the new price for the Baltic states too.
It
may seem like a common-sense move. But the truth is the company is
probably raising rates just because it needs the money.
A
Russian investment fund with a stake in Gazprom publishes a yearly audit
noting the firm's shortcomings. The report states that Gazprom has at
the very least stopped the wholesale looting of assets that it used to
allow through the sale of gas reserves to joint-venture partners at
knockdown prices.
But
this company still has many, many problems. The report points to
wasteful tax-payment schemes, seeming nonchalance about unpaid bills,
disproportionately high wage costs and extremely costly pipeline
projects. As a result, Gazprom's market value in relation to its
reserves is miniscule compared with the likes of BP or Shell. And
Gazprom's gas output in 2004 was no higher than in 1999.
So
the rate hikes might help Gazprom, but they're not doing the Baltic
states any favor. The average worker in the region earns between $400
and $600 a month. (My own mother-in-law is a doctor in Estonia and earns
around $700 a month.) With such low wages and the region's notoriously
cold winters, the next several months are going to be tough for the
people. The Baltic states may truly discover the price of independence.
Of
more concern to us, however, are the oil exports. On average, Russia's
Primorsk port is iced in 155 days out of the year - putting a damper on
exports. Higher prices could bring Ventsils' imports to a complete halt.
And no one knows what effect prices and events will play on Lithuania's
exports.
With
a total of 1.5 billion barrels of oil per day on the line, investors
will do well to pay close attention to this region.
Regards,
Kevin
Kerr
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2005 Kevin Kerr
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Editor's
Note: With 15 years of experience, Kevin Kerr is a true veteran of the
commodities markets. A licensed commodities trader since 1989, he's
worked the trading pits in Chicago and New York with legends like Paul
Tudor Jones, and he's even traded commodity derivatives in London. Over
Kevin Kerr's career he's dealt with everything from cotton to currencies
to oil and natural gas.
Kevin
Kerr's unparalleled expertise in futures and commodities has made him a
regular contributor to news outlets like CNN fn, CNBC and Marketwatch,
where he's been quoted in over 500 articles.
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