podesta-emails
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This is one of the better pieces I have seen on oil prices. It is
significantly more open to the role of speculation in oil pricing than I
would have expected. (It is ironic that Barron's is accusing speculators
while Krugman is defending them) It also emphasizes the role of the
weak dollar and Federal Reserve Policy.
From this week's BARRON'S
Bye, Bubble?
The Price of Oil May Be Peaking
By ANDREW BARY
The price of oil may be peaking in the current range of $130 to $140 a
barrel. Here's where you want to be when the bubble bursts. (Video)
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
IT'S PERILOUS TO CALL THE TOP IN A BOOMING MARKET, but the price of oil
may be peaking in the current range of $130 to $140 a barrel.
Oil's sharp move up -- prices have doubled in the past year -- caught
the world by surprise, including almost everyone involved in the
petroleum market, from major exporting nations to big energy companies
to the global analyst community. The rally has emboldened oil bulls, who
argue the world is bumping up against oil-supply constraints, and that
demand will rise inexorably, despite sharply higher prices, as the four
billion to five billion people in emerging economies like China and
India get a taste of the energy-intensive good life, replete with the
cars, air conditioners, refrigerators and computers that Americans and
Western Europeans have long enjoyed. Statistics support their view that
demand growth is in its infancy in the developing world: U.S. per-capita
oil consumption is 25 barrels annually, while Japan uses 14 barrels per
person. China's 1.3 billion people consume just two barrels each per
year, however, and India's 1.1 billion use less than a barrel a year.
In the next decade, oil indeed may hit $200 a barrel. But prices could
fall to $100 a barrel by the end of this year if Saudi Arabia makes good
on its pledge to increase production; global demand eases; the Federal
Reserve begins lifting short-term interest rates; the dollar rallies,
and investors stop pouring money into the oil market. China raised
prices on retail gasoline and diesel fuel by 18% Thursday, in a move
that is expected to curb demand.
It's tough to know how much of the surge in crude-oil prices -- up 40%
just this year -- reflects fundamental supply and demand, and how much
is due to other factors, including the dollar, commodity speculation and
interest from institutional investors. Like some others, we suspect the
run-up was fueled by more than economics.
THERE IS GROWING TALK OF AN OIL BUBBLE, THOUGH evidence of asset bubbles
isn't conclusive until they burst. The trajectory of oil prices in the
past eight years looks eerily similar to the Nasdaq's eight-year run to
a peak of more than 5,000 in March 2000. More than eight years later,
the Nasdaq is at half that level.
"My basic message to those who say that prices have to go up forever is
that the oil markets have been cyclical for 140 years. Why should that
have stopped?" says Edward Morse, chief energy economist at Lehman
Brothers.
Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, has pledged to boost
production from a recent 9.5 million barrels a day to about 9.7 million
in order to reduce prices. The Saudis are hosting a summit of oil
producers and consumers on June 22.
"The analytic community is divided on what the recent Saudi comments
mean for the market," says Morse, who believes the Saudis will put more
oil on the market as they raise production. "That, combined with a
declining rate of consumption, should create an inventory surplus that
will be palpable as the year progresses."
Morse thinks oil could fall to $100 by year end.
Skeptics say the Saudi vow to boost production is merely talk, and that
the country is struggling simply to maintain production because of
aging, overworked fields like the huge, 60-year-old Ghawar reservoir.
The Saudi government refuses to allow in outsiders to evaluate the state
of its oil industry, which has fueled talk the Saudis are hiding
something.
Likewise, the size of speculative positions and commodity indexers is
impossible to determine, as most trading occurs away from the major
commodity exchanges in over-the-counter transactions.
It is hard to argue that oil demand supports $135 crude. Now at 86
million barrels a day, global demand could show little or no increase
this year after averaging 1% gains in recent years. Sanford Bernstein
analyst Neil McMahon projects that by the fourth quarter, global oil
demand could be running below the fourth quarter of 2007.
Consumption is down in '08 in the 30 member nations of the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which includes the
U.S., Western Europe, Japan and Australia. OECD nations account for 57%
of global oil demand.
While Americans are married to their cars, $4-a-gallon gasoline has
begun to bite; the number of vehicle miles traveled in the U.S fell in
March on a year-over-year basis for the first time since 1979. Further
declines in gasoline consumption may follow as drivers opt for more
fuel-efficient cars, and as innovations like plug-in cars reach the
market after 2010. Major U.S. airlines have announced widespread
capacity reductions, which could cut demand for jet fuel by 5% or more
later this year.
Oil demand continues to grow in the developing world and the Middle
East. In Europe, stiff energy taxes generally blunt the impact of higher
prices, but diesel fuel, now at nearly $10 a gallon in Britain (double
the American price), may be at an unsupportable level. Demand growth
could cool in emerging markets, too, as subsidies in many Asian
countries are reduced. There is also speculation China has been hoarding
diesel fuel ahead of the Olympics in August, in order to cut the use of
coal for power generation around Beijing in the hope of cleaning up the
city's notoriously polluted air. Once the games are over, China will go
back to burning cheaper coal, the story goes.
The supply/demand argument for higher oil prices has some merit. "Name
another commodity that has gone up two-and-a-half times in
three-and-a-half years and the world hasn't found a way to make more of
it," says Byron Wien, chief investment strategist at Pequot Capital
Management. "The world isn't finding oil fast enough to replace the 3%
to 4% that gets pumped every year."
Wien's boss, Art Samberg, who heads the Westport, Conn.-based investment
firm, stated in Barron's midyear Roundtable, published last week
<http://online.barrons.com/article/SB121339741569973523.html?mod=article
-outset-box> , that the commodity bubble "isn't going to burst. It's
going to continue to expand." Older oil fields in Mexico and the North
Sea are running dry while new sources in places like Kazakhstan and
Brazil may prove difficult to bring on stream. In addition, oil
increasingly is in the hands of government-run monopolies that may be
more interested in maximizing future revenue than boosting current
production.
The dollar's slide and the Federal Reserve's neglect of the greenback
have supported commodity prices, oil in particular. But Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke and his colleagues finally seem to have realized that the Fed's
aggressive easing actions since last summer, which dropped the key
federal-funds rate to 2% from 5.25%, may be fueling global inflation. If
the Fed moves to lift rates later this year, as financial markets
anticipate, it could buttress the dollar and spur an exodus of
speculators from the oil market.
One little-discussed way the U.S. could try to bring down oil prices is
to sell oil from the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR). The SPR,
intended as a source of oil for national emergencies, now holds 705
million barrels of crude, equal to about 35 days of domestic
consumption. With prices higher, Congress moved in May to stop adding to
the SPR as it neared capacity. A sale of 100 million barrels of oil
would shock the markets and potentially drive down prices.
Long term, the U.S. could benefit through lower oil prices if Congress
and the states back President Bush's proposal to allow drilling off
Florida, the East and West coasts, and in the Alaskan National Wildlife
Reserve, where billions of barrels of oil may lie.
A SHARP DROP IN ENERGY PRICES WOULD HELP WHOLE swaths of the U.S.
economy, including retailers, food and household-goods makers, auto
makers and transportation concerns. Beleaguered U.S. airlines would
benefit because they're expected to spend $61 billion on fuel this year,
up $20 billion from 2007.
Few oil stocks would be safe if crude falls $20 to $30 a barrel.
Independent exploration and production companies like Devon Energy
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=dvn>
(DVN), Apache
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=apa>
(APA) and XTO Energy
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=xto>
(XTO) could get hit hard because they're up sharply in the past year.
The majors, including ExxonMobil
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=xom>
(XOM), Chevron
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=CVX>
(CVX) and ConocoPhillips
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=cop>
(COP), might hold up better because they have refining and related
businesses like chemicals, whose profitability isn't directly linked to
crude and natural-gas prices.
Some of the biggest oil companies, notably ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=RDSB>
(RDS/A) and BP
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=bp>
(BP), have badly lagged in the past year. BP, for one, has been beset by
problems, including a troubled joint venture in Russia.
The majors may be the best energy values because they trade for less
than 10 times this year's earnings and around eight times estimated 2009
profits. The '09 earnings consensus reflects an assumption of $100
crude, not the current $135. Bernstein's McMahon estimates Exxon could
earn $12 share in 2009, versus the current consensus of $9, if oil holds
$130 and natural gas averages $11 per thousand cubic feet; it is now
around $13. This suggests Exxon, at 86, may be trading for just seven
times estimated '09 profits. Conoco and Chevron also could earn far more
than the current '09 consensus under the same oil and gas scenario,
Bernstein estimates. McMahon favors BP, Royal Dutch and Marathon Oil
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=MRO>
(MRO).
One reason for the strength in crude has been modest U.S. inventories.
Bill Klesse, chief executive of Valero Energy
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=VLO>
(VLO), the largest North American oil refiner, told analysts last month
that the inventory data may be misinterpreted as a sign of oil scarcity,
though it is more a function of the recent state of the oil market, in
which futures prices were below spot prices, giving refiners little
incentive to maintain excess supply. If the Saudis sell enough oil to
drive down spot prices relative to futures prices, refiners and others
will be induced to buy and hold more oil in inventory, he said. The oil
market is moving to such a configuration, with the current, or spot
price of $135 below the December 2008 price of $136.
OIL-MARKET EXPERTS ACKNOWLEDGE THAT commodity-indexing strategies
employed by endowments, pension funds and other institutional investors
have helped push up prices in the past year. Such investments are
thought to have totaled $260 billion as of March, up from $13 billion at
the end of 2003, according to Michael Masters, the head of Masters
Capital Management, an Atlanta investment firm. Some $55 billion may
have flowed into commodity investments during the first quarter alone.
The energy complex is the largest commodity market, and gets a
disproportionate share of fund flows. Masters estimates index
participants may control over 1 billion barrels of crude.
Managers of leading university endowments, including those at Harvard,
Yale and Princeton, in recent years have generated outsized returns from
investments in hard assets, prompting other investors, such as the giant
California Public Employees Retirement System, with over $200 billion in
assets, to attempt the same. Calpers is upping its commodity exposure to
$7 billion from under $500 million.
This activity is spurring a backlash in Congress, where pension funds
and others have been accused of driving up food and energy costs through
their increased commodity investments. Lawmakers including Senator Joe
Lieberman (independent, Conn.) have proposed a ban on commodity-related
investments by pension funds, which Masters supports. Last month he told
Congress that commodity regulators need to close a loophole that lets
indexers evade commodity-position limits by purchasing over-the-counter
swaps and other derivatives.
A selloff in oil and other commodities could cool the ardor for index
strategies. Ross Margolies, head of Stelliam Investment Management, in
New York, says financial investors would do better buying the shares of
commodities producers, not actual goods. Over time, it may be more
difficult to make money in commodity investing because holders
effectively incur financial costs to carry and store commodities, even
if they never take physical delivery.
Though little noticed, short-covering by independent oil and gas
producers might have contributed to the recent strength in oil and gas
prices. U.S. exploration and production companies like Devon, XTO and
Chesapeake Energy
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=CHK>
(CHK) have hedged an average of about 40% of their 2008 production by
selling oil and gas futures, options or derivatives, according to Credit
Suisse analyst Jonathan Wolff. As prices have surged, the hedges have
slipped underwater, and some producers have sought to unwind their
money-losing bets.
Newfield Exploration
<http://online.barrons.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=NFX>
(NFX) recently announced a $500 million hedge-related loss, and more red
ink could follow. Total hedge losses among E&P companies could top $15
billion for 2008, and $8 billion for 2009, Wolff estimates.
While supply challenges could continue to dog the oil market, current
prices seem excessive in light of weakening demand and other factors.
But it's impossible to know with precision when the bubble will burst.
The Saudis could roil the markets with a pronouncement June 22; the
dollar could revive or demand could plummet, or all three. And if prices
start falling, the downturn could accelerate, sending crude back to $100
-- where it would be cheaper, but still far from cheap.
Scott Lilly
Senior Fellow
Center for American Progress
1333 H Street N.W.
Washington, DC 20005
Office (202)682-1611
FAX (202)682-1867
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