karena owner masih belum puas nahan harganya ... emang belon tahu yah gaya
main MAD COW ... heheh

On 4/23/08, Ricky Dahlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>     Terus, kenapa saham MEDC mandek di sini?
>
> --- On *Wed, 4/23/08, James Arifin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>* wrote:
>
> From: James Arifin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [obrolan-bandar] Why oil could hit $180 a barrel
> To: "obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com" <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
> Date: Wednesday, April 23, 2008, 2:00 AM
>
>
>
> On 4/22/08, <ladung.web.id> wrote:
> >
> >   For your pleasure readings.
> >
> > Salam,
> > Ladung
> >
> > Why oil could hit $180 a barrel
> >
> > Just when crude is becoming more costly to extract and process,
> > producers in
> > three key countries are short of cash. And without that money, recent
> > finds
> > won't do much good.
> > By Jim Jubak
> >
> > Yikes! Oil at $117 a barrel. It has to go down from here, right?
> >
> > Wrong. In the short term -- say, the next two years or so -- we're
> > looking
> > at bad news about global oil supply that could take the price of a
> > barrel of
> > crude to $180.
> >
> > Needless to say, today's $3.50-a-gallon gasoline would look cheap if oil
> >
> > prices hit $180 a barrel. At that price for a barrel of oil, gasoline
> > would
> > cost somewhere north of $5.50 a gallon.
> >
> > The good news is that's about the price, experts now say, that would
> > send
> > global consumption tumbling and oil prices into retreat, as drivers
> > scrambled to find ways to conserve.
> >
> > Of course, experts once thought $3-a-gallon gasoline would lead to a
> > drop in
> > consumption. The latest forecast from the International Energy Agency
> > calls
> > for global oil demand of 87.2 million barrels a day this year. That
> > would be
> > an increase in consumption of 1.3 million barrels a day from 2007 --
> > despite
> > a U.S. economic slowdown and soaring oil prices.
> >
> > So why do I think oil prices will keep climbing for two more years at
> > least?
> >
> > A terrible coincidence of geology and geopolitics. Just when oil is
> > getting
> > more expensive to produce, the oil industries in three key countries --
> > Mexico, Russia and Nigeria -- find themselves short of cash. And without
> >
> > that cash, oil production in these countries, and global oil production
> > in
> > general, is headed into a decline.
> >
> > The Russian oil industry, for example, announced that production had
> > fallen
> > 1% in the first quarter of 2008. According to the Russian energy
> > ministry,
> > oil production for the full year could be lower than in 2007.
> >
> > Any decline would mark a huge turnaround. Russian production has grown
> > steadily over the past 10 years, and in its supply-and-demand
> > projections
> > the International Energy Agency has been counting on growth in Russian
> > production of 5% by 2012 to offset big declines in older fields in the
> > North
> > Sea and Mexico.
> >
> > .
> >
> >
>
> ------------------------------
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