 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, October 14, 2005
------------------------- - There is an oil crisis coming
except that it's not
the crisis you'd expect,
- Sooty, disheveled and boisterous around a cauldron of
flames - a book burning to remember and,
- Out of 35 Total Picks in 2004, 31 Were Winners - The
service you can't afford NOT to be in.
------------------------- [Joel's Note: "You did what at work today?" The incredulous mother of your junior editor asked on the phone last night. "Just as I said, we had a ceremonial burning," I replied. "And your boss, Joel, was your boss o.k. with this?" "Well, it was the manuscript of his book that we were burning. He was reading aloud from it as the embers floated into the afternoon air and his maniacal entourage cheered." Empire of Debt is the new book by Addison Wiggin and Bill Bonner, the team that brought us Financial Reckoning Day. The manuscript is but a pile of ash in an ally dumpster, but the book you can order here (sans soot). http://www.invest-store.com/dailyreckoning/mi/?i=3373984 A noticeable absence from this group of revelers was Chris Mayer. The ashes may have drifted over his Maryland home as he penned the essay below. Here, Chris takes a look at the oil crisis that we're NOT expecting. So please, read on and enjoy. Oh, and while I perform some routine maintenance on my regular email address, please mail your comments, ponderings and abuses to jbowman@agorafinancial.com --- Advertisement --- Out of 35 Total Picks in 2004, 31 Were Winners
And 5 Of Them Could Have Tripled Every Dollar Invested. Options are an exceptional way to make money in volatile markets. This is simply because options trading does not require a soaring stock market to make you money. You can do it regardless of whether stocks are going up or down. Because options profit from stock movement, in either direction. And nobody has mastered the art of options trading better than Steve Sarnoff. To learn about the special tool he uses to do this, click the link below. http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/OHL/WOHLFA09 ------------------------- THE OTHER OIL CRISIS By Chris Mayer There is an oil crisis coming. Except that it's not the crisis you'd expect. The price of oil is likely headed lower, not higher. The next oil crisis, therefore, is the looming sell-off in oil stocks that will send many of them to significantly lower prices. Today, most people feel higher oil prices are a cinch. "Everyone" knows we are in an energy bull market. "Everyone" knows about the supply bottlenecks and the voracious demand from China and the hurricanes and all that. When you start reading lead stories about a coming energy crisis in Barron's, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and other mainstream papers - it should give you some pause. Walter Deemer is a market strategist with more than 40 years of experience, and pause he has. His advisory, "Market Strategies and Insights for Sophisticated Investors," recently turned bearish on energy stocks. "It actually is difficult for me to imagine more perfect conditions for a long-term top," he says in a welling@weeden interview. "We've had a huge, multi-year run in the stocks, even though - until quite recently - the consensus expectation was always for a pullback in the commodity price. Now, practically all we are hearing is
'This time is different.'" "This time is different" - those four little words, arranged just so, may be the most dangerous phrase in all of investing. Deemer reports that the Bullish Consensus (an indicator that tracks the buy/sell recommendations of commodity advisories) has been running 87-88% bullish on the price of crude oil in the last several weeks and spiked to 96% bullish recently. "I have never seen a reading of 96% bullish on anything," Deemer says. "That is an incredible extreme. At 96% bullish, we just have to look back some day and say, 'It was obvious,' it seems to me." If you have any kind of contrarian streak at all, buying red-hot oil and related energy stocks should feel uncomfortable. But it's more than just contrarian comforts at play. There are sound market reasons as to why oil prices north of $60 are not likely sustainable. Shad Rowe, in a short piece appearing in the Sept. 9 edition of Grant's Interest Rate Observer entitled "Bearish on Crude," laid out the basic argument for lower oil prices. In brief, higher prices are making alternatives look cheaper and changing the way consumers and businesses use energy. Adam Smith, the great 18th century economist, created the metaphor of the invisible hand as a shorthand way to describe the market process of shifting supply and demand in response to prices. It's happening again, predictably, in the energy markets. Rowe, relying on Smith's metaphor, observes, "The invisible hand is moving fast." Indeed it is. Rowe relies on the work of George Littell of Groppe, Long & Littell, a Houston, Texas-based consulting firm. Summarizing Littell's analysis, Rowe writes: "At $50 to $60 a barrel for oil, coal, nuclear power and liquefied natural gas are relatively cheap substitutes for stationary plants such as utilities
. We are already seeing extensive fuel switching at stationary facilities around the world." Nearly every day, I clip out some article about energy users switching to lower cost sources. In Asia, for example, the search is on for homegrown oil alternatives. Recently, there was a piece about Thai biofuel in The Wall Street Journal. Esso Thailand, which is a unit of ExxonMobil, is planning to install gasohol pumps in all of its 650 stations by 2006. Gasohol is a mixture of gasoline and fuels made from the region's abundant crops. Other countries are pursuing similar initiatives. In Malaysia, don't be surprised to see palm oil used as a base for diesel fuel by 2007 (Malaysia is the world's largest producer of palm oil). China is looking at a $24 billion coal-to-oil plan that will shave off 1 million barrels from China's daily consumption, currently running at around 7 million barrels a day. And even right here at home, a group called Panda Energy is hard at work building an ethanol plant in Kansas that will use a billion pounds of cattle manure each year as a renewable fuel to power the plant's operations. "The manure is gasified and converted into a clean bio- gas," a recent press release explained. "By utilizing bio- gas produced from manure instead of natural gas, [Panda's] facility will save the equivalent of 1,000 barrels of oil per day." This is not pie-in-the-sky stuff, or even cowpie-in-the-sky stuff. You don't need a great imagination to see how demand for oil backs off at the margin - both from efficiency gains and the use of alternatives. Much of this demand for oil will not snap back. Once it goes, it will be gone for a long time. As Rowe notes, after the oil shock of the 1970s, it took two decades for demand to reach the level achieved in 1978 - even though the economy grew enormously over those two decades. See the nearby chart, "U.S. Oil Demand, 1960-2003."
[Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration] Basically, the market adjusted - Adam Smith's invisible hand - and the economy as a whole became far more energy efficient. And we haven't even talked about supply. As Rowe sums it up, "At $55, there is room for a lot of technology, fuel switching, conservation and exploration." The long history on oil, and energy generally, is one where the gloomy natural scientists and engineers are always surprised and always wrong. It reminds me of economist Joseph Schumpeter's observation (published posthumously in 1954) on Thomas Malthus' errant predictions. Thomas Malthus was an economist who predicted we'd all run out of food because the growth in population would exceed the growth in food supply. Malthus' original treatise, published in 1798, was utterly wrong. Schumpeter wrote: "The most interesting thing to observe is the complete lack of imagination which that vision reveals. Those writers lived at the threshold of the most spectacular economic developments ever witnessed. Vast possibilities matured into realities under their very eyes. Nevertheless, they saw nothing but cramped economies, struggling with ever- decreasing success for their daily bread." So it is with today's neo-Malthusians. This is not to say the price of oil can't go higher, or that the oil business can't remain a good business to be in for several more years. The point is that oil is still a commodity and it is still subject to cyclical swings. It seems to me, we are nearer a top than a bottom in the price of oil. [Joel's Note: Be sure to check out the new look newsletter that Chris is gallantly steering towards the profit zone. If you can't make money (and be thoroughly entertained) with this guy's missives and musings, please unsubscribe to this e-letter, forget about pursuing wealth and take up crotchet. Click here for more: Capital and Crisis www.agora-inc.com/reports/FST/WFSTFA37/ --- Advertisement --- Make 50% a Year on Your Investments Every Year for the Next Decade - GUARANTEED Don't believe me? Put me to the test! Simply follow my crystal-clear investment recommendations. If I fall short even once over the next 10 years - even if it's in the tenth year of your subscription - I'll refund every penny you've paid in subscription fees! It's one of the boldest guarantees ever offered
backed up by the most powerful investment strategies ever developed. Get the full story HERE. http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/CPT/WCPTFA19 ------------------------- And the Markets
| Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,217 | 10,217 | -76 | -5.3% | S&P | 1,177 | 1,178 | -19 | -2.9% | NASDAQ | 2,047 | 2,037 | -43 | -5.9% | 10-year Treasury | 4.47 | 4.45 | 11.00 | 4.43 | 30-year Treasury | 4.66 | 4.66 | 9.00 | 4.61 | Russell 2000 | 623 | 622 | -21 | -4.3% | Gold | $471.65 | $470.90 | -$3.20 | 7.8% | Silver | $7.71 | $7.74 | -$0.01 | 13.1% | CRB | 328.92 | 332.10 | 3.71 | 15.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $62.89 | $63.88 | $1.05 | 44.7% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 114.32 | JPY 114.37 | -0.53 | -11.5% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2033 | $1.2031 | 93 | 11.2% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7559 | $1.7515 | 48 | 8.5% |
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