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WAR,
ENERGY, BANKS & USDOLLAR
by Jim Willie CB
March 22, 2007
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On
the eve of the next war front to explode in the Persian Gulf region,
some thoughts on the energy sector seem appropriate which attempt to tie
some factors together. In the last two to three years, the biggest
challenge to analysts is not so much identification of certain relevant
effects, as it is integration of analysis on a several simultaneous
patently clear crucial factors for correlation. To friends an assessment
has been often used by me, “This
is five dimensional chess, and at any one time, three dimensions are
dominant. All are linked increasingly and with more complexity. The
challenge is to finger the most important pairs of factors.” That
covers it in my opinion.
The
tight relationship between the crude oil price and the USDollar
valuation is historically well known, firmly in place for over three
decades. While the United States owns control of the world reserve
currency, a delicate PetroDollar linkage factor remains in force. Since
large oil purchases are conducted in US$-based transactions, entire
banking systems are designed accordingly so as to handle those
transactions. Some Persian Gulf nations like the United Arab Emirates
and Qatar have diversified more of their reserve assets away from the
USDollar and its related (in)securities. Instability in the region is
very likely to deliver some additional instability to the USDollar
itself. What the current hellbent political leaders seem to ignore is the
potential for continued and amplified economic and financial retribution
and vengeance on the most vulnerable façade to the United States
monolith, its faulty financial flank.
The
risks to the USDollar are rising from both liberal monetary forces and
desperate energy forces, not to mention geopolitical backlash forces.
The US has isolated itself irresponsibly. Prudent decisions and adept
leadership have taken a back seat to private profiteering and the rule
of law. One could defensibly claim the public till has been ravaged,
with enormous weaknesses having been made more vulnerable. Too bad
Thomas Jeffersion, George Washington, and James Madison could not sit as
permanent immortal special prosecutors in a triumvirate tribunal.
Instead, dissenters are more likely to be imprisoned, to disappear, or
to be buried. Maybe Harry Schultz is right. Descriptions nowadays of
certain figures are closer to Adolph than Winston, closer to Beelzebub
than to any Prophet in my book.
An
aside, when crude oil contract rollovers occur, the publicity is loud
and shrill of a 57 handle on the oil price on CNBC and other networks
& publications. But when the rollover is complete, the new month
contract takes root, the talk is minimal of the new 60 handle. With a
little push up in the oil price today, the handle is 61. My gut tells me
that oil is rising with the euro exchange rate and even the Canadian
Dollar, in response to the more obvious next US Federal Reserve move
being a rate cut, not a rate hike. But again, this is just language,
mere words. Expect the USFed to lie through its teeth in the next couple
months in defense of the USDollar. Lies cost nothing but credibility, an
empty bag for most matters pertaining to the US financial system. Given
the financial conditions measured by current account deficit, trade
gaps, foreign dependence on USTBond purchases, foreign dependence for
commodity & energy supply, credit growth, derivative mushrooms,
absent manufacturing base, one must conclude the USGovt is in worse
shape than the highly publicized cancer-ridden subprime mortgage
lenders. As cited recently in the alternative news sources, the
USGovt is the ultimate quintessential subprime borrower! How better the
armada of leaking vessels known as subprime lenders would fare if they
owned high tech military weapons to defend against barbarians at the
gate!
WAR MOTIVE
Most
wars in the past have been started to gain control over trade routes, to
gain control over known mineral or energy supply, to gain colonial
control over untapped continents related to both, or to gain trade
routes via ocean ports. In other words, economic motives are often
similar but more subtle than those driving the Golden Horde of Tartars
rampage across the Russian Steppes to steal autumn harvest bounty. This
Global Energy War seems no different, only the evasive confusing and
seemingly misdirected messages pertaining to democracy, even perhaps
terrorism. As for dangerous explosives and microbes, look closer to
home. The most dangerous weapons of mass destruction are phony money,
bad economic policy, lost industrial base, coerced emphasis away from
future technology, consumption over investment, and corruption waste
& fraud. The United States Govt has all these, but talks about enemy
threats a great deal as a distraction. The war finally was revealed from
official sources within the current Administration last autumn as being
about control of oil, which is vital to our economy. The truth took over
three years to surface, but only after the majority came to that
alternate conclusion on their own, using a thought process through a
cloud of confusion.
The
United States needs the war to secure supplies, dominate in the supply
line, and to put in a proximal presence for the Persian Gulf. Doing so
establishes the US as the first customer for oil delivery and helps to
ensure the USDollar as the preferred transaction currency. If things go
boom on the eastern shores of the Persian Gulf before income taxes are
due this April in the deteriorating homeland, once more, the war will be
about oil after more misdirection. Investment implications run thick. In
war the truth is the first weapon to be used and abused, if not the
first major casualty. Closer to home, an impact is real and notable. The
drain of US Army soldiers has affected WalMart, UPS, FedEx, Home Depot,
American Airlines, and more to the point of rendering them short of
skilled staff.
In my
simplest view, energy remains a key investment asset when an entire
military, its media justification, its cloud of terrorism to maintain
high ambient temperature, its usage of private sector mercenaries &
oil services contract workers, its greatly extended soldier tours of
service, the impact on numerous industries for key worker drain, are
devoted to secure its valuable supply. Follow the crowd, the tumult, and
the money, which all point to the energy world. When Putin from the
Kremlin orders usage of oil and natural gas pipelines to be used as
weapons, then again one must conclude energy is a key investment. When
the Shanghai Coop Org creates an alliance originally for security and
cultural reasons, but then morphs into a powerful phalanx to wall off
East from West on “new” energy supply, then again one must conclude
energy is a key investment. The
risks to the USDollar are rising from both liberal monetary forces and
desperate energy forces, not to mention geopolitical backlash forces. Let
that be the chorus refrain.
My
steadfast claim all along, for the last 18 months, ever since Iran
showed up on the radar, is that Iran is more a story about a wall to cut
the West from new energy supply, and associated banking of oil money.
The same brilliant politically motivated geniuses who gave us the WMD
lame argument as cause for war continue to ply their trade. They have
given us nuclear proliferation as the argument for attacking Iran. Sure,
they might be on a slow track for nuclear refinement, but oil pipelines and
a major Russian alliance and
Chinese mega energy contracts and
befriending former Soviet Republics in “Chaostan” and
selling oil in euro transactions and
integrated regional energy & military weapons contracts and
monumental accumulation of wealth (Western debt) in the East and
power shift from West to East, reaction
to these powerful forces is the real true valid unmistakable motives for
war. The American public is a bit too ignorant, hapless,
distracted, uninformed, and conveniently sleepy to properly grasp the
issue.
As
for the fallout of interrupted oil supply, some believe Japan is
vulnerable. My information points to Japan and South Korea as having
curtailed significantly their Iranian oil supply. The slack has been
taken up by China, which has little in the way of moral fiber in
business deals, to be sure. See Nigeria, Angola, Iran, and elsewhere,
like crushed internal dissent. No, the risk of interruption lies in
China, which might actually motivate action by the US Military and its
short list of allies, or is it ally?
Some
commit a grievous error in regarding the current USGovt Administration
as lame duck. Some commit a grievous error in regarding as likely the
current US Congress to exert itself, with firm feet founded on a new
majority. Neither is realistic. The lame duck image is truly
inappropriate. A wounded erratic insecure bear is a better image. No
evidence is discernible for respect in the last six years for the
democratic process or rule of law. A wider war seems to be the goal,
perhaps even martial law, even blessed by the new Congress.
ENERGY PRODUCTION
Halfway
around the globe, the dirty little secret is that Saudi Arabia is in an
accelerating decline in oil production output. Extend that to Kuwait and
other neighbors. Closer to home, the dirty little secret is that Mexico
is in an accelerating decline in oil production output. On home ground,
the US Congress cannot shake the pristine environment as more important
than economic survival and job preservation. In the middle ground, the
dirty little secret is that the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, Alaskan
slope, Australia, Indonesia, and even mature pockets of Russia (see
Samatlor) are in accelerating decline in oil production output.
On
the lunatic fringe, hardly a secret, is that the Nigerian oil business
is in a state of chaos as its indescribably corrupt regime might come to
an end, even a possible Muslim new regime to take its place. On the
lunatic fringe, little Angola has shifted to neutral on energy deals and
progress on production, as observers stand aside and await a possible
return of their bloody civil war. On that same lunatic fringe, the
Venezuelan oil business is on a steady slide from inefficiency,
cronyism, and corruption, whose failure is so blatant and at the same
time popular that the northern rim of South America wishes to embrace
its business model. See Bolivia and Ecuador.
The biggest untold story
in the energy world in my opinion is the rapid decline in Mexico at
their Cantarell elephant oil field.
My February and March Hat Trick Letter reports cover the story, with
full details, facts & figures. Cantarell oil production declined by
13.5% in 2006, and on track to decline by 15% additionally this year?
Will the Mexican Govt suffer massive deficits soon? Will their
Parliament and PEMEX labor unions obstruct ALL possible reforms and
construction actions? My conclusion is that political instability is
soon to come to the southern border of the United States!!! All $97
billion in PEMEX oil sales in 2006 went to the Mexican Govt to account
for 40% of its budget. The absurdly incompetent Mexican Govt (rivals
Washington DC and USGovt) has seen fit to commandeer almost every penny
of PEMEX oil income, denying much needed funds for investment in new
exploration, new capacity, even crimping basic maintenance. The press is
on the story in Mexico City, but not so much in the sleepy US, where
reality shows and the latest missing persons and porous borders and
murder trials dominate, the latest on obesity & diabetes, if not gay
marriage. PEMEX is the second biggest supplier of oil to the USEconomy.
Experts now forecast that by 2010, Mexico will be on the verge of
becoming an oil importer. Unlike the Saudi story, shrouded in state
secrecy, the Mexican disaster is in plain view, with no debate. In fact,
there has been no recognition even though the facts are laid bare for
all to see.
Then
comes Saudi output. Talk about putting into service excess capacity,
expanding output, cutting output, agreeing on quotas, agreeing on output
cuts, taking action against violator nations, bringing Angola into the
OPEC fold, all this is well and good for distraction. The story to focus
upon out of OPEC headquarters is the sharp decline in Saudi oil
production since 2005, as shown by the graphic below, taken from The Oil
Drum. This aint output cutbacks to support price. This is depletion
evidence taken in four views from four sources, with four parallel
trendlines. The time span shown overlaps with the push in the oil price
up to the Lebanon War last July. This Saudi oil output decline all occurred, despite a 150% rampup in oil
rigs in Saudi oil fields from January 2005 onward, as reported by Baker
Hughes. The Saudi decline is the biggest unreported energy story,
with Cantarell the second. Huge implications come to the USEconomy as a
direct domino from higher oil prices. Talk on Wall Street of downward
oil price trends are more propaganda and self-serving promotional
chatter, as the major firms like Goldman Sachs are loading up on their
energy investment positions. The risks to the USDollar are rising from
both liberal monetary forces and desperate energy forces, not to mention
geopolitical backlash forces.

Add
to the mix that the US & Western European major oil companies
invested in 2006 more in stock buybacks than in actual exploration and
production (see March Hat Trick Letter report for corroborative data).
One can confidently conclude the energy business is the worst managed in
the world. That spells out a recipe for shortage and higher prices,
along with great investment opportunities.
Is
the Halliburton decision to move its headquarters next door to Saudi
Arabia one motivated by locating close to where the implosion is to
occur? Is it to keep the pressure on Persian Gulf oil producing nations
not to divert sales of oil into euro-based transactions, not to divert
USTBonds away from US$-based (in)securities? Could it instead be to
better manage a flow of funds from any number of suspicious origins,
closer to the Iraq oil field service, closer to Afghan liberation,
closer to arms sales? Military weapon sales to Persian Gulf nations is
on a staggering radical rampup in recent months and years. Think the
worst and you will likely be in closer proximity to the truth.
BANKS WITH DIRECT &
INDIRECT DEPOSITS
Five
major factors influence the USDollar and gold today. The seas shift on
such factors. They are listed from my personal viewpoint, according to
perceived priorities today, this week, and next week,. The only common
thread is banks. Anyone who thinks the broad war (staged for now in Iraq
& Afghanistan) is not about banks, think again. Oil is tied like
through an umbilical cord to banks. Purchase of oil in large national
contracts is executed via banks, payments lifted off the bank structure.
Military budgets aid not only the incestuous defense contractors, but
also tangentially big banks with close associations through equity
positions and loans. Weapon sales are logged in banks, which are
increasingly seamless with business ventures. The entire USEconomic
so-called recovery in 2002 was done on the back of the war stimulus,
more indirect bank benefit. Then you have the Bank of Baghdad, where all
the gold bullion disappeared in 2003, and some new function took its
place.
The
most critical USDollar and gold factors today are:
-
The
War for Oil in the Mideast (nix mention of politics & religion)
-
The
Bank of Japan (gradual interest rate hikes, we must hope)
-
The
Mortgage cancer in United States (surely more than subprimes)
-
The
management of Chinese foreign reserves (new $300 billion kitty)
-
The
exploding credit derivatives (compound annual 80% growth rate)
It
bears repeating. The risks to the USDollar are rising from both liberal
monetary forces and desperate energy forces, not to mention geopolitical
backlash forces. They all have major banking origins and implications.
WIND SHIFT
After
the US Federal Reserve has decided upon no change, a distinctly
different whiff in the wind can be detected. They seem more worried
about the bank system cancer. They seem always worried about price
inflation, since their job, but maybe less so now. They seem to tip
their hand on an eventual interest rate cut, without commitment on its
timing. In the wake, we have the euro currency over 133 and steady, gold
over 660 again, crude oil over 61 from the rollover, copper over 3.0 and
steady, and the Canadian Dollar near 87 cents. The inverted Treasury
Yield Curve on the bond maturities has flattened. Another retest shock
is due soon, but after that, the commodity & resource sector looks
brighter for investment.
Isn’t
it curious that banking regulators sit on their hands during a
monumental mortgage finance centrifuge over a four year time span,
politicians cheer on the housing boom (just a bubble destined to bust),
and now politicians are asking tough questions when the cancerous horses
are running rampant in the farming field of crops ??? The housing bubble
is a good thing when it rescues the system from a 2000 stock bust, but
it is a problem when it busts? What an utter joke, travesty, and
laughing stock the USEconomic system has become, for all the world to
see !!!

©
2007 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials. Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
For personal questions about subscriptions, contact him
at “JimWillieCB@aol.com”
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