Original message posted to the "Truckers Unite" e-group
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----- Original Message ----- 
From: mart 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, November 08, 2004 2:37 PM
Subject: TRUCKERS UNITE! 80 Dollar A Barrel Oil, Here We Come!


Forward from mart

80 Dollar A Barrel Oil Here 
We come!

Wonderful news for oil companies, market
speculators and (other) war proftieers!!

[ "While most companies in North America 
are extremely profitable at $35 oil, $80 oil will 
generate earnings that will dwarf the so-called 
"windfall profits" of the 1970s. While many Wall 
Street and Bay Street analysts continue to use 
$35 oil in their assumptions for 2005, savvy 
investors should realize that the average price 
for oil will be far higher and should adjust their 
portfolios accordingly" ] 

- As the above statement shows, the investment community 
is absolutely salivating at the prospect of 80 dollar oil and as 
usual, to hell with what it will do to everyone else! - mart


TRUCKERS UNITE! 
UNION NOW! TEAMSTERS NOW!!
***********************************************
======================================================

Financial Sense - Nov 4, 2004

http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/powers/2004/1104.html
 
$80 Oil, Here We Come!!!

by Bill Powers, Editor
Canadian Energy Viewpoint

In January of this year, I put together an article that appeared in the
February issue that laid out the case for and against $50 oil. While 
the arguments against $50 oil have been thoroughly discredited, 
most market observers still do not understand that the price of oil will 
continue to head much higher. In this issue, I will examine several of
the reasons why the price of oil will not significantly pull back from 
today's levels and is likely to reach the $80 mark within the next 24 
months.


At the foundation of many oil analysts' argument for lower oil prices 
is the belief that OPEC can control the price of oil and use its spare capacity 
to keep the price within acceptable limits. There is one main reason this line 
of thinking is not valid -- OPEC has no spare capacity whatsoever.  OPEC, or 
more specifically Saudi Arabia, has given 
several indications over the past two years that it will increase 
production to keep oil prices at palatable levels, yet we continue to 
see oil prices reach new highs.


I believe OPEC's ability to increase prices is a geological impossibility since 
Saudi Arabia's Ghawar field is dying. Ghawar, the world's largest 
oil field, produces approximately 4.5 million barrels of oil per day and
has been on production since 1951. 


Due to the outstanding work of Matt Simmons, the world has become increasingly 
aware of the high water cuts at Ghawar and several 
other large fields in Saudi Arabia. According to Mr. Simmons, the use 
extensive of water injection wells has provided an illusion of stable 
production at Ghawar and elsewhere. Water injection wells are 
designed to push the oil column to the producing well bores and keep reservoir 
pressure high. However, as the amount of water produced 
along with oil increases, production often heads into a steep decline.  
High water cuts at Ghawar (7 million barrels of water a day according 
to Simmons) are a clear indication that the world's largest field is 
about to head into a steep and irreversible decline.


Without spare capacity and with several members experiencing 
steep production declines, OPEC is no longer a cartel. It has 
morphed into an extremely exclusive social club. Many market 
observers are about to wake up to the reality that making 
pronouncements of more supply coming online at some future 
date will no longer push oil prices down, even temporarily. In 
past years, when there was excess production capacity both 
inside and outside of OPEC, high prices always brought 
additional supply onto the market. Times have changed and 
many analysts have failed to recognize it.


Now that the world has reached the apex of Hubbert's Peak 
(the thesis that once half of a petroleum producing region's 
reserves have been extracted, that region's oil production will 
peak and decline along a bell shaped curve), the world's supply 
of oil will go down irrespective of price. This is an extremely 
bullish situation for the price of oil.


The reaching of Hubbert's Peak is not an economic event but 
rather a geological event. Oil, unlike many other commodities 
such corn and wheat, was not created during a growing season 
but rather over millions of years. For all intents and purposes, 
the world contains a finite amount of oil and there is strong 
evidence to suggest that there is a limit to what can be 
produced at any given time.


Some of the industry's most informed participants believe there 
is little that can be done to increase worldwide oil production. 
Earlier this year, British Petroleum announced that it will be 
returning to shareholders all cash flow it receives in excess of 
$25US per barrel. For every dollar the company receives in 
excess of $25US per barrel, BP will adjust its dividend or 
increase its share buyback program to return the cash flow to shareholders.  BP 
has essentially given up its efforts to 
increase production or even keep production flat.  Instead, the 
company has chosen to give shareholders back their capital 
with interest.


The analyst community and many economists could not have 
been more wrong about oil production in Iraq. It was only 18 
months ago that many market observers were calling for the 
price of oil to fall precipitously once the US took control of the 
country. I have always been skeptical of this scenario for a 
number of reasons that are now quite obvious. The political 
situation in Iraq has gone from bad to worse and the country's 
oil industry continues to spiral downward. While there is little 
doubt that Iraq has one of the world's largest endowments of 
oil, it will take years and tens of billions of dollars to restore 
Iraqi production to 2.5 million barrels of oil per day.


Another reason the price of oil is headed higher is that OPEC's 
reserve base is vastly overstated. One of the world's leading 
experts on petroleum supply, Dr. Colin Campbell, contends that 
OPEC has been vastly overstating its reserves for years.
Campbell offers substantial evidence that OPEC reserve 
estimates are politically motivated. Kuwait is an excellent example
of what is wrong with the way OPEC countries report reserves. 
The country reported a gradual decline in its reserve base from 
1980 to 1984. This should be expected from a mature producing 
country. However, in 1985 the country reported a 50% increase 
in reserves with no corresponding discovery.


The Kuwaiti government increased its reserve estimate following 
the implementation of an OPEC production quota system that set 
country production levels based on country reserves. Kuwait was 
not alone in increasing its reserves for political reasons. In 1988, 
Abu Dubai, Dubai, Iran and Iraq all significantly increased their 
reported reserves for political reasons. Even OPEC heavyweight 
Saudi Arabia followed suit and reported a massive increase in 
reserves in 1990.


OPEC is not alone in its overstatement of reserves. In January 
2004, Royal Dutch/Shell announced a huge write down of reserves. 
The company wrote off 20% of its reserves or 2.4 billion barrels of equivalent 
(boe). To be fair, most oil and gas companies do not 
overstate reserves but rather understate them. Due to the strict 
regulations set forth by the SEC about reserve estimates, a 
company that makes a new discovery may grossly underestimate
the recoverable oil that is likely to be produced.  As a result, 
conservative reserve reporting has created a distorted view of 
how much oil is being discovered each year.



While OPEC members have grossly overstated reserves and, 
on balance, most Western oil companies have understated their 
reserves, where does that leave us? Since OPEC member 
countries own 62.3% of world oil reserves (See the following 
URL for more information:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/international/iea2002/table81.xls), 

OPEC reserve numbers more than offset any underreporting by 
Western oil companies.


Therefore I believe world oil reserves are grossly overstated. Lack 
of new discoveries in both OPEC countries and non-OPEC countries 
has  led to the current situation in which the world consumes far more 
oil each year than it discovers. According to Dr. Campbell, the world consumes 
four barrels of oil for every one it discovers. Clearly this situation cannot 
continue indefinitely since discovery and consumption
must mirror each other.


Another pillar of many analysts' belief that oil prices will drop is the
notion that high oil prices will choke off economic growth which in turn will 
lead to lower prices. In a wonderfully researched white paper published in 2003 
entitled "Price Signals or Cheap Oil Noise?" economist Andrew McKillop provided 
substantial evidence to suggest that high oil prices and economic growth are 
not mutually exclusive.  Below is an excerpt from his white paper:


"The US economy achieved its highest ever postwar growth of real 
GDP, achieving today what would be the unthinkable and impossible 
growth rate of 7.5%, in the Reagan re-election year of 1984.  At the
time, in dollars of 2003 corrected for inflation and purchasing power
 parity, the oil price range for daily traded volume crudes was $57-65/barrel.  
Despite this fact of economic history, Cheap Oil is still 
regarded by uninformed sectarian opinion as a passport to 
economic growth." - Andrew McKillop, "Price Signals or Cheap Oil 
Noise", 2003


Despite record high oil prices in the third quarter of 2004, the entire
developed world achieved economic growth. Part of the reason for 
this growth is that oil prices are still not high enough to substantially 
alter spending habits. Spending on gasoline and home heating oil 
remains a small percentage of many consumers' disposable income. 
To put today's oil price in perspective, let's compare the price of oil 
to the cost of housing. In 1981, the cost of a barrel of oil domestically 
produced was $31.77 (Source: US Department of Energy) and the 
average cost of a new home in the US was $83,000 (Source: National Association 
of Home Builders). In 2003, the average price of a new 
home was $246,300 (Source: ibid) and the average cost for a barrel 
of domestically produced crude was $27.56 (Source: ibid). Over the 
course of 22 years, the average price of a home has tripled while the 
price of a barrel of domestically produced oil went down in price. With 
the exception of weakness in select markets in the late 1980's and 
early 1990's, the price of housing has gone straight up for nearly a 
quarter of a century. Even with today's low interest rates, spending 
on housing consumes a larger percentage of household income than 
at anytime in history. If the price of oil kept up with the price of housing, 
domestically produced oil would cost $95.31 a barrel today.


The last reason that I believe we will see $80 oil within the next 
24 months is that worldwide oil supply is dropping and prices 
have not yet reached levels high enough to choke off demand.  
Despite record gasoline prices in the US last summer, we saw 
demand increase 4% over 2003 levels. While Western 
economies will see modest demand growth due to the 
slow-growth nature of their economies, the developing world will 
see explosive demand growth for the foreseeable future.  In 2004, 
China became the number two consumer of oil and the number 
two importer of oil behind the US. With Chinese oil imports up 30%
from 2003 levels (despite today's record prices), it is quite clear 
that oil prices would have to achieve much higher levels before 
Chinese demand recedes.


What does $80 oil mean for investors?  Quite a lot. It is difficult to
overstate the impact that $80 oil will have on every unhedged publicly traded 
oil and gas producer. While most companies in North America are extremely 
profitable at $35 oil, $80 oil will generate earnings that will dwarf the 
so-called "windfall profits" of the 1970s. While many Wall Street and Bay 
Street analysts continue to use $35 oil in their assumptions for 2005, savvy 
investors should realize that the average price for oil will be far higher and 
should adjust their portfolios accordingly.


(c) 2004 Bill Powers, Editor Canadian Energy Viewpoint

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