29 August 2023
BY
Clem
Chambers
Oil Is Going To $300 A Barrel
Oil pump on a sunset background. World Oil
Industry - GETTY
The best ideas are the simplest and the biggest
markets are the best. So here is a simple idea for one of the biggest
markets out there. It is oil.
For roughly 10 years after 2005 to the later part of 2014, oil
(in this case West Texas Intermediate) was above $100 a barrel,
peaking in 2008 just below $200 a barrel. In that period it spent
years in a channel between $120-$140.
The thing about commodities like oil is that while they can be
acutely volatile because of supply and demand and political events,
long term their price is a function of the technology needed to create
them and the state of inflation in the denominating economy. As a
baseline commodity prices go up in line with inflation. So in a
country with high inflation commodities become currency and as any
gold fan will tell you, dollars are priced in ounces of gold, not the
other way around.
Oil can be seen as a good example of this idea. Dollars are
priced in barrels of oil, not the other way around. You can also say
that implicit in the whole definition of a commodity is that it is
something fungible with money.
It is an interesting metaphor because since 2005
there has been a lot of U.S. inflation. So right now, $1 back in 2005
is worth $1.57 in 2023. You need 57% more money to buy you the same
stuff in 2023 than you did in 2005. That sobering, but let’s look at a
chart of oil:
The oil chart adjusted for inflation
CREDIT: ADVFN
When I was a child I noticed that in a boom
everyone cared about the environment but no one cared about the
economy and that when a recession appeared no one cared much for the
environment and everyone worried about the economy. Should this
pattern repeat this time around then oil will lose the tarnish of
the recent past. This will be great for oil stocks. Then there is
the question of consumption. It was fashionable to predict that oil
was going to become an orphan commodity eschewed by all, a bid-less
energy source no one would tap. This always seemed ridiculous to me
but it was a heartfelt idea which was embraced by many and saw oil
companies on the back foot for years. The call now is, is this all
about to change?
Countries need to grow, if they are to keep up
with their democratically granted and mandated spending. They need
to be adding as much valuable “real” GDP as possible as their
figures are currently stacked with phony public sector GDP, which
will not pay for the retirement of armies of public servants
dreaming of their feather bedded dotage. Cheap energy and lots of it
is needed and none of the new tech yet has the flexibility or
infrastructure to deliver it.
However, it doesn’t take a bull oil case to do the job,
inflation has already loaded the price cannon, a shift away from
energy abstinence will only increase the price tension.
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
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