 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, September 14, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: If only the Wall Street Journal would produce a "Weekly Reader" version, we might be reading sentences like these in upcoming editions. We might also be reading sentences like, "See Oil Prices!
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Fall! Fall! Fall!" If only the Wall Street Journal would produce a "Weekly Reader" version, we might be reading sentences like these in upcoming editions. We might also be reading sentences like, "See Oil Prices!
See Prices Fall!" Energy demand worldwide is falling. So says the International Energy Agency; and so says the weight of anecdotal evidence worldwide. Because energy prices have been climbing to very high levels - and staying at very high levels - the world's energy consumers are beginning to trim their consumption. Falling energy prices would seem, therefore, like a likely and enduring consequence. Net-net, the recent selloff in crude oil, unleaded gas, energy stocks and almost everything else related to the energy complex may be both justified and enduring. At a minimum, we investors should consider this possibility. (For the record, we still love oil stocks, but we're a little leery of buying them at this very moment). Let's take and unscientific world tour of energy demand. · The International Energy Agency's (IEA) estimates of global oil demand topped out in March and have been ratcheting lower ever since. As the nearby chart illustrates, rising oil prices are clearly to blame for the falloff in demand.
· U.S. gasoline consumption slumped 4% in the week ending September 2, according to the U.S. Energy Department. Nationwide, sticker-shock at the pump seems all but certain to restrain consumption. (An acquaintance informs me that he will begin charging his teenage daughter a "fuel surtax" to shuttle her back-and-forth from parties on the weekend). · Chinese and Indian energy demand growth is also ebbing. These two countries, by themselves, account for nearly three quarters of the IEA's recent cuts to its demand estimates. "Asian demand is faltering," Bloomberg News reports, "as soaring crude oil costs disrupt supplies to refiners in China, the nation that led global growth this decade." · Slowing demand for other commodities corroborates the idea that energy demand might also slow down. Copper consumption dipped 2.1% in the first half of 2005, according to the International Copper Study Group. Copper consumption in the U.S. tumbled a whopping 9.7% during the first half. Energy demand seems likely to fall even more, as many Asian countries raise the price of government-subsidized oil products. Since oil prices have more than tripled since the end of November, many Asian governments are feeling the heat to reduce subsidies and relax price controls. They simply can't afford to suppress the true cost of energy products. The State-owned Indian Oil Corporation, for example, is losing almost $12 million per day, thanks to various government mandates that force the company to sell petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene below the cost of production. Not surprisingly therefore, the Indian government jacked auto fuel prices by seven percent last week. Likewise, Brazil's state-controlled oil company, Petrobras, just raised the price of gasoline and diesel fuel for the first time this year. Both motor fuel prices saw a stiff of 10% or more. In the name of protecting the poor," notes Andy Mukherjee, a columnist for Bloomberg News, "governments in China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Sri Lanka have either subsidized fuel prices from thei own budg4ets. Or what's worse, ordained tht they be kept low by twisting retailers' arms. "The result," Mukherjee asserts," is that one half of the world is distorting prices for the other half." To the extent that countries like India and China migrate fuel prices toward global levels, the more that demand growth in these two countries might slow. And the more that demand might slow, the lower the price of gasoline might become in place like, say, New York City.  The Indonesian government provides gasoline to its citizens for 87 cents a gallon. Motorists in Bangkok pay about $2.42 a gallon. In Beijing, the official government price of gasoline is $1.59 a gallon. No wonder that Asian energy demand is soaring. But last week's round of price hike's in Asia and elsewhere, coupled with the soaring price of energy here at home, threatens to alter consumption patterns around the globe. In other words, demand might fall
and so might prices
at least for a while. [Ed. Note: We brought your attention to him when he was 16 for 16. We told you about him again when he was 29 for 32. The man they dub the Maniac Trader is a profit machine in the resource market. We here at the Rude Awakening don't like repeating ourselves so you won't be getting an update for a while. Only those that sign up here will know what the next set of numbers will be:
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| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,597 | 10,683 | -81 | -1.7% | S&P | 1,231 | 1,241 | -10 | 1.6% | NASDAQ | 2,172 | 2,183 | -4 | -0.2% | 10-year Treasury | 4.13 | 4.18 | 0.00 | 4.08 | 30-year Treasury | 4.42 | 4.45 | 2.00 | 4.37 | Russell 2000 | 673 | 681 | -5 | 3.3% | Gold | $446.60 | $449.15 | -$2.60 | 2.1% | Silver | $6.97 | $7.03 | -$0.05 | 2.3% | CRB | 318.00 | 319.98 | -5.32 | 12.0% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $63.22 | $63.09 | -$0.86 | 45.5% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.63 | JPY 110.33 | -0.95 | -7.9% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2271 | $1.2283 | 141 | 9.5% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8228 | $1.8187 | 165 | 5.0% |
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