Long-Term Energy Bulls Long-Term Energy Bulls: Counterpoint by Justice Litle The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, October 18, 2005 Justice Litle argues that this time around the Long-Term Energy Bulls have it right -- that "This Time It's Not Different" is countered by "Three Billion New Capitalists." ------------------------- - Justice Litle takes a stand to defend his castle,
- "This Time Is NOT Different," vs "Three Billion New
Capitalists," and
- Eric arrives back in New York with tales aplenty from
his trip to the land of high cholesterol and stylish women...
------------------------- [Joel's Note: You may remember last week I wrote about Eric's trip to France being somewhat of a sore point for your junior editor. Not only was he off to indulge in more high cholesterol entrees and experience the Parisian women's sense of 'style', but I had to hold down the fort in the meantime! I didn't feel much happier after reading the email he sent me last night: "Hey Joel, I just returned from France today and I wanted to let you know that the trip was a huge success...on all levels. I spent two fascinating days in Cannes with Dr. Richebacher, the 80-something economist who's twice as sharp as the average 40-something economist. You know, I was already worried about the U.S. economy BEFORE listening to the Doctor's frightening message...Now I'm terrified. I recorded every word of our discussions. So over the coming days, I'll be sharing the highlights...or lowlights, as the case may be. After Cannes, I headed up to Paris to conduct a little more business - not forgetting to conduct a little bit of pleasure as well. I spent most of the weekend eating my way around Paris with a friend of mine. We never had a bad meal...nor did we ever have a low-fat meal. We started every dinner with raw oysters, but the cholesterol content of each subsequent course increased dramatically. Have you ever heard of a "salade aux lardons?" It's basically a cluster of frisee lettuce with a bunch of fried bacon chunks mixed in. I ate one of those. Or what about "rillettes?" have you heard of that? It's nothing more than bits of porc globbed together with lard. I ate that too...along with lots of buttered bread, rare beef, rich cheeses and many of the other culinary delights that make France such a pleasure to tourists...and a nightmare to cardiologists. Thanks for holding down the fort during my absence. I'll be back to work first thing in the morning...after my bowl of oatmeal." O.K., so maybe I am over reacting. It's just as well he interviewed one of the world's greatest living economists while gallivanting around the French countryside. Stay tuned for this exciting interview later in the week. And next time Eric, how about an Aussie porter? Cheers, jOEL --- Advertisement ---
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COUNTERPOINT
By Justice LitleI'm firing off this response to my friend and colleague Chris Mayer's recent Rude Awakening essay, "The Other Oil Crisis." The Rude Awakening's - The Other Oil Crisis Let me start by noting that Chris and I agree far more often than we disagree. This applies to a wide range of topics, discussed over many drinks and more than a few poker hands. (We even share a taste for the same spirit, bourbon on the rocks). On the matter of oil and energy stocks, however, we part ways a bit. First, Chris pointed out that everyone knows we are in an energy bull market. On this point I am happy to agree. Outstanding Investments readers have the stunning profits to prove it. For example one of our flagship holdings, Valero (VLO:NYSE) has outperformed new economy darling Google (GOOG:NASD) in percentage terms. It is indeed true that 'everyone' knows about developing world demand, hurricanes, bottlenecks, and so forth. Long-Term Energy Bulls: Aware Too Late But the fact that everyone knows about these issues doesn't answer the fundamental question: what are we doing in response, and how fast can the problems we are facing be solved? Consider the dire situation we face with natural gas. There is simply not enough natural gas on the North American continent to meet the growing scope and scale of demand. There is plenty of natural gas in other parts of the world – huge fields in Iran and Qatar and elsewhere – but logistically we do not have the means of getting it from there to here. There are not nearly enough Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) Ports on American coasts, there is huge environmental and political opposition to building them, and even if we went on a full-scale building spree, starting yesterday, it would take years to get the necessary infrastructure in place. We do not have years, or even months. We are reaping the fruits of our lack of planning right here, right now. It's the same story with gasoline refineries. Everyone now recognizes the refinery bottleneck problem. A new refinery has not been built in the United States since 1975 or so. But how fast can we fix the problem? China has the same time constraints. They may be building nuclear reactors as fast as they can, but will those reactors make a dent in the short term? No. Awareness today is too late; we needed it five years ago. So the fact that everyone knows the scope of the dilemma doesn't mean much, because the underlying foundations of these problems have been built over a very long period of time. Like America's twin deficits, problems of this magnitude are not solved overnight... and even the best of solutions take years to deliver. The energy bull market is not a fad or a flavor of the month. It is a structural phenomenon. Chris also argues that energy bulls are foolish in saying "this time it's different." He points out that "this time it's different" is arguably the most dangerous phrase in investing. As a general matter of principle, I agree with that sentiment. It is best to have extremely good reasoning, as rock solid a case as possible, before invoking the dreaded "this time it's different" in defense of one's point of view. Long-Term Energy Bulls: Three Billion New Capitalists So are the long-term energy bulls remiss in saying it now? Do they have a counter-phrase of their own, powerful enough to challenge the dreaded "this time it's different" curse? I would argue that they do. Try this four word phrase on for size: "Three Billion New Capitalists." Roll it around your tongue a bit. "Three Billion New Capitalists." As in the combined populations of China, India, Eastern Europe, and other various developing world countries, all piling up export dollars, all seeking to ramp up domestic demand, all growing by leaps and bounds, all at once. And if you think the developing world is sucking up energy now, just wait until the consumer culture kicks in (the seeds of which are only now being sown). Sure, we've seen all this coming for a while. But the full effects simply haven't hit yet, they are only beginning to hit now, and we are woefully underprepared for the ultimate adjustment. I agree with Chris that all kinds of fascinating technological innovations are being rapidly implemented in the energy space. There is huge interest in nuclear power, and biomass, and biodiesel, and solar power, and hybrid cars, and HCCI diesel engines, and many other wonderful things. It is a relief that we are starting to wake up to this need. But truly cheap energy is still a distant dream, and will continue to be so for many years. Here is why. If we implement all the technological innovations we can dream up, and insist on all the conservation measures we can think of, this will simply reduce the price of energy from "ridiculously expensive" to "tolerably expensive" over the next decade or so. We will not get back to "cheap" for quite a long time. The demand curve is set to leave the supply curve in the dust. The only way we see cheap fossil fuel for any real length of time is in conjunction with a global recession or depression. And when global growth picks back up, so does the energy bill. Don't hope for cheap oil any time soon. We might need a repeat of the 1930s to get it. When pondering the value of technological advances, consider this: It would be physically impossible for the developing world to consume energy with the same gusto that a few hundred million Americans do. Such a pace of energy consumption, on a global scale, would not be sustainable for a month, let alone any significant length of time. And yet some version of the western lifestyle is what these billions of new capitalists are shooting for. That is why we absolutely require dramatic improvements in energy efficiency, and fossil fuel substitutions on a scale never before seen, just for these new participants to see a meaningful raise in their average standard of living. We'll need all the innovation we can get just to run in place. I am an optimist. The world's energy problems will eventually be sorted out. We will wean ourselves off the prodigious and wasteful use of fossil fuels so prevalent today, and much of the world will run on alternative sources a few decades hence. But we will not get there overnight. Infrastructure projects begun today will take years to go online. The exponential rise in demand of the coming years will swamp the more slowly accrued benefits of energy substitution and conservation. Truly radical alternative technologies will take many years to implement on a small scale, and years more to make a true dent in fossil fuel consumption. There will be more than one energy crisis in our future, perhaps many more between here and there. Shock and upheaval are historical change agents. Last but not least, consider this point in favor of energy stocks at current levels. Despite the breathless commentary of late, Wall Street has long been expecting a substantial decline in the price of crude oil. High flyer Valero (VLO:NYSE) has a price to earnings ratio of roughly eleven as of this writing. Compare this to Google's PE ratio of eighty, or Baidu.com's PE ratio of six-hundred and seventy- two. Why are many of the big energy names such as Valero saddled with such low PEs? Because much of the Street has already priced in the potential for a sharp decline in earnings, tied to their predictions for a return to cheap crude. There are multiple reasons why this prediction may not come about, even if the US consumer falls all the way out of bed. A perceived long-term stabilization of crude above the $50 level might give compressed energy stocks another rousing round of multiple expansions. [Joel's Note: So there you have it: two titans pitted against each other before you, the jury. All those contrarians that are not convinced "This Time Is Different" may join Chris and his rampaging new-look newsletter here: Capital & Crisis
Those that find the more compelling argument fronted by the words "Three Billion New Capitalists" will have more than just a hefty bank balance in common with the intrepid Justice Litle when checking out his newsletter here: Outstanding Investments
If you have thoughts on the matter you would like to see addressed, or if you have a good joke to brighten my Tuesday, email me at aussiejoel@the-rude-awakening.com Cheers, jOEL --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,348 | 10,287 | 61 | -4.0% | S&P | 1,190 | 1,187 | 4 | -1.8% | NASDAQ | 2,070 | 2,065 | 5 | -4.8% | 10-year Treasury | 4.49 | 4.49 | 0.00 | 4.45 | 30-year Treasury | 4.71 | 4.71 | 0.00 | 4.66 | Russell 2000 | 633 | 633 | 0 | -2.8% | Gold | $474.10 | $469.60 | $4.50 | 8.3% | Silver | $7.80 | $7.81 | -$0.01 | 14.5% | CRB | 332.45 | 327.64 | 4.81 | 17.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $64.12 | $62.63 | $1.49 | 47.6% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 114.93 | JPY 114.01 | -0.93 | -12.1% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2023 | $1.2087 | 64 | 11.3% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7537 | $1.7700 | 163 | 8.6% |
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