><http://moneynews.newsmax.com/money/archives/st/2008/4/25/175710.cfm?s=sp&promo_code=6235-1>

Thanks Kirk. Let's put it in the archives. We were way ahead with 
this - there is no oil shortage, there's no food shortage either.

I thought you meant this Lehman's:
http://www.lehmans.com/

:-)

Best

Keith


Lehman Bros. Report: Oil Bust in the Cards

Friday, April 25, 2008 5:56 p.m. EDT

Is $120 oil even real? Not if you ask the Saudis, or even Lehman Bros.

The investment bank's oil expert said this week that the oil boom is 
due to bust. Economic growth across the globe will slow just as new 
refineries kick in, raising supply.

Recession or not, a U.S. slowdown will slacken demand sharply, right 
as new oil hits the market. "Supply is outpacing demand growth," said 
Michael Waldron, Lehman's oil strategist.

"Inventories have been building since the beginning of the year. We 
have pretty significant projects starting soon in Saudi Arabia, and 
large off-shore fields in Nigeria," he said.

Lehman is now predicting prices at $83 a barrel in 2009 and as low as 
$70 in 2010.

Although some years off, Brazil too has found as much as 8 billion 
barrels of light oil and gas offshore. The South American giant's 
president says his country might well join OPEC when the Tupi field 
begins to pump, in 2011.

In addition, Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds have pushed up the 
oil price by investing billions of their oil gains, ironically, in 
commodities index funds.

Now they could be looking to get out, warns Waldron. He figures the 
money effect has driven anywhere from $20 to $30 into the barrel 
price.

In addition, a weak dollar is holding oil prices high, according to a 
series of statements from OPEC leaders over the past week.

If you buy the views of OPEC's various leaders, that's at least 
another $20 of oil price that is not supported by the actual supply 
and demand situation.

In addition, Europe's central bank seems bent on containing inflation 
there. A rate increase in Europe is sure to contain the euro's rise 
against the dollar - if serious steps are taken soon.

Couple that with a lower-than-expected rate cut in the U.S. next 
week, or perhaps no cut, and the oil price drops as the dollar gains 
ground.

All this is having little immediate impact now, of course. U.S. gas 
prices at the pump hit $3.58 a gallon just as the summer driving 
season kicks off.

If nothing changes, analysts now expect gas to rise to as high as $4 
a gallon in as little as a month.


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