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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Everyone
is wondering what the falling price of crude means - and how long it
will last. Today, Outstanding Investments’ Justice Litle gives us some
perspective on this market. Read on...
After
holding in the $60s for many months, crude has dropped precipitously in
the past few weeks, and is now in the vicinity of $50 a barrel. A number
of reasons have been given for the sharp fall in price, all of them more
or less linked.
To
begin with, warm winter weather has resulted in lower seasonal energy
use than anticipated. (Global heating oil demand, for example, is
estimated to be off by 20-30%.) At the same time, OPEC’s production
cuts are seen as ineffectual in the face of cheating, and Russia has
been hesitant to slash its record output.
On
top of this, commodity speculators have become bearish and institutional
investors are getting cold feet. When spot crude fetches a higher price
than the further-out futures contracts - a situation known as
“backwardation” - it becomes profitable to buy the back months and
wait for prices to rise as the spot draws closer. The persistence of
backwardation in 2006 led institutional investors and commodity index
trackers to load up on long-dated crude oil contracts; now that the
market is no longer in backwardation, those same players find themselves
losing money.
As
icing on the cake, the crude oil market is suffering from intrigue
fatigue. Like a jaded child desensitized to violence on television, the
market has grown bored with overly familiar catastrophe scenarios. (Yet
if anything, the geopolitical situation is more precarious today than a
year ago: Israel leaking plans for a tactical strike on Iran; Saudi
Arabia threatening to aid Iraq’s Sunnis if the Shia majority pushes
too far; U.S. military morale at low ebb; escalating tensions between
Russia and Europe; nationalization on the rise; Iran accelerating its
nuclear program; and so on.)
In
light of all the recent bearishness, it is worthwhile to ponder the
Energy Information Administration’s recently released “Annual Energy
Outlook 2007 (Early Release version).” Here are the two most
interesting sentences out of the whole thing (in your humble editor’s
opinion):
“Oil,
coal and natural gas... are projected to provide roughly the same 86%
share of the total U.S. primary energy supply in 2030 that they did in
2005 (assuming no changes in existing laws and regulations...
“In
2030, the average real price of crude oil is projected to be above $59
per barrel in 2005 dollars, or about $95 per barrel in nominal
dollars.”
Trying
to predict anything 23 years out is a foolhardy exercise... but the EIA
projections are nonetheless instructive.
For
one thing, the projections show just how small the alternative energy
base still is in comparison with fossil fuels. It is not that the EIA
expects zero growth in alternative energy’s slice of the pie over the
next few decades; rather, the EIA expects total energy demand to
overwhelm all else, with fossil fuels filling the breach. (For this same
reason, the EIA expects nuclear power’s share of the pie to actually
fall in percentage terms, even as more nuclear power plants go online.)
The
EIA’s second prediction is chuckle inducing. For crude to be just
above $59 in 2030 - not far from where it is now - means little will
have changed on the whole. And how helpful of the EIA to let us know
that $59 in 2005 will translate to $95 in 2030. That’s a wonderfully
benign inflation rate... just over 2% per annum between here and there.
As
you might have guessed, the point here is not to put faith in government
agency predictions. Instead, it’s to get some perspective on where we
stand for the long term.
As a
government agency and an offspring of the Department of Energy, the EIA
is congenitally optimistic in its conclusions -- much as the Bureau of
Labor Statistics is congenitally blind to inflation. And with all the
data at hand, the EIA’s projected long-term price band of $50-60 crude
(more or less) is truly the optimistic case.
Such
a prediction almost completely writes off the ramifications of Peak Oil,
and relies on heavily aggressive assumptions in regard to deep-water
drilling and Canada’s oil sands. Such a prediction also requires an
almost touching naivete in terms of U.S. monetary policy; can we really
expect inflation to run just 2.1% per year for the next 23 years? (What
happens when the dollar goes down in flames?)
There
are far too many variables to make an informed guess at crude oil’s
2030 price. But we do have enough information to note that, given the
piles of data presently available, the optimistic number crunchers at
the EIA see crude trading solidly for the duration. In fact, their
$50-60 price range represents the shiny happy scenario, leaving out the
ugly but all-too-real possibilities looming before us.
The
other thing we can gather from the EIA prediction is this: Nobody knows
nothin’. Meaning, all the data points in the world can’t predict the
distant future. To grasp how ludicrous these types of specific
predictions are, just observe the fate of those who make them. In the
real world, the best you can do is marshal the facts to get a sense of
what’s possible and what isn’t... what makes sense and what
doesn’t. In this sense, broad observations regarding the possible
course of future events should be rooted in the laws of physics. What
goes up must come down... that which cannot persist must eventually
cease... and so on.
In
the short run, a market can do most anything - especially one dominated
by speculators with a quarterly, or even monthly, time horizon. But in
the long run, as Jesse Livermore noted, the best and truest allies will
always be underlying conditions. You’ll see all kinds of numbers fly
around in the coming weeks and months, feet stampeding this way and
that... but through it all, the long-term energy picture won’t shift
much.
We’re
dealing with sweeping sea change here, not ephemeral seasonal stuff.
That’s
why I’m not inclined to worry too much about this recent crude oil
slide. There’s never any money in running around like a chicken with
your head cut off. Traders rely on speed and reflex, investors on
patience and fortitude; to the best of my knowledge, nervous panic is no
help to either discipline. If anything, the short-term roller coaster
gives an edge to those with a taste for the long-term view.
Regards,
Justice Litle
for The Daily Reckoning

© 2007 Justice Litle
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Justice Litle is an
editor of Outstanding Investments, ranked number one by Hulbert's
Financial Digest for total return performance over the past five years.
He has worked with soybean farmers, cattle ranchers, energy consultants,
currency hedgers, scrap metal dealers and everything in between,
including multiple hedge funds. Mr. Litle also acted as head trader for
a private equity partnership, and made contributions to Trend Following:
How Great Traders Make Millions in Up or Down Markets, a popular trading
book by Mike Covel (FT/Prentice Hall).
This
essay was originally published in The Daily Reckoning.
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