James Kunstler James Kunstler: A Law-Abiding Bull Market by Dan Denning The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, January 31, 2006 Dan Denning discusses James Kunstler's recent book, The Long Emergency: Surviving the Converging Catastrophes of the 21st Century. ------------------------- - How high could crude oil go? Bill Browder of Hermitage
Capital Management comes up with a nice specific number,
- "Have as much as you want." The sell-off of undesired
goods and,
- The big three moves of late and the men that broke them
or you right here...
------------------------- Eric Fry, reporting from the suburbs of New York's Westchester County... Last night, your editor's 7-year old son Ethan, asked his father, "Daddy can I please have a bag of 'Goldfish?'" "If you want, sure," your editor answered. "But I don't think you'll like that flavor. See, it says 'Burstin' BBQ Cheddar.' These aren't the ones you normally eat." "I know," Ethan replied. "But we're out of the regular ones." "Alright...Go ahead." "Thanks, Daddy." About an hour later, your editor returned to the kitchen to find an open, uneaten bag of Burstin' BBG Cheddar Goldfish resting immediately behind a handwritten sign...The nearby photograph captured the scene for posterity. 
Rather than throw the undesirable Goldfish directly into the trash, Ethan chose to "shop them around" to the rest of the family. Eventually, he found a taker in the form of his older brother. Throughout the latter years of the 20th century, the market for crude oil operated much like Ethan's sign. "Have as much as you want," OPEC, Exxon and the rest of the world's oil producers seemed to be saying. Indeed, as the oil price plummeted below $12 a barrel in 1998, the world's producers seemed to be moaning: "Please take this stuff off our hands." But those days are long gone...and gone forever, according to Dan Denning, editor of Strategic Investments. "Have as much as you want" has yielded to "Take whatever you can get." This new reality contains many life-altering implications, Dan suggests, along with one very clear investment implication: A long-term bull market in crude oil. "Buy the dips!" Dan advises... --- Advertisement ---
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Scientific breakthroughs, for example, have already enabled us to extract "syncrude" from Alberta's tar sands. Future breakthroughs might enable us to extract oil from Colorado's oil shale in an economically and environmentally viable manner. Clearly, the road to innovation will be paved with high and rising energy prices. Unfortunately, according to Kunstler, global fossil fuel consumption is already bumping up against the earth's physical limitations. He writes:
"It is assumed now that human beings, prompted by the market, will employ ingenuity to discover a substitute for oil and gas, once the price starts to ramp up beyond the 'affordable' range. This assumption is apt to prove fallacious because it ignores the fact that earth is a closed system, while the laws of thermodynamics state that energy can't be created out of nothing, only changed from low entropy to high entropy, and that we have already changed the half of our oil-endowment that was easiest to get into dispersed carbon dioxide, which is now ratcheting up global warming and climate change, which might well put the industrial adventure out of business before human ingenuity can come up with a substitute for oil. The solar energy stored for millions of years in oil will now be expressed in higher temperatures, more severe storms, rising sea levels, and harsher conditions for the human species, which, despite its exosomatic technological achievements, remains a part of nature and subject to its laws. James Kunstler: Entropy Is Inevitable I'm not so sure that I agree with Kunstler's grim prognosis for humanity, but I do find the central elements of his argument pretty compelling, almost irresistible. In a closed system, nothing can prevent entropy. (This is why all closed political systems like communism die. Without new inputs – energy, ideas, resources – they cannot sustain themselves). So given that the Earth is essentially a closed system, physically speaking, what is the way out of Kunstler's dilemma? Well, maybe there is no way out. But if there is one, it is the variability of human thought. Is it not possible that we might find better ways to use the hydrocarbons that remain? Or devise more practical ways of using renewable energy resources? Yet, as Kunstler points out, human thought is also constrained by the laws of physics. For example, Man cannot, through intense thought and clever innovation, convert a Bassett Hound into a Boeing 757...or a pile of computers into pile of caviar. Nor can clever thought replace the one trillion barrels of crude oil we have already extracted from the earth's crust...but it can lead to the more efficient use of our finite natural resources. James Kunstler: Forced Innovation Even so, continuing to innovate does not preclude the possibility of $100 oil...or $263 oil, as one professional investor recently predicted. In fact, the two go hand in hand. It seems a pretty safe bet that we will innovate ONLY if/as/when hydrocarbon fuels become unbearably expensive. How high could crude oil go? Bill Browder of Hermitage Capital Management comes up with a nice specific number, $262. Browder and his team outlined six scenarios where oil could spike. An article at CNN.Money.com reports: "To come up with some likely scenarios in the event of an international crisis, his team performed what's known as a regression analysis, extrapolating the numbers from past oil shocks and then using them to calculate what might happen when the supply from an oil-producing country was cut off in six different situations. The fall of the House of Saud seems the most farfetched of the six possibilities, and it's the one that generates that $262 a barrel. "More realistic—and therefore more chilling—would be the scenario where Iran declares an oil embargo a la OPEC in 1973, which Browder thinks could cause oil to double to $131 a barrel. Other outcomes include an embargo by Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez ($111 a barrel), civil war in Nigeria ($98 a barrel), unrest and violence in Algeria ($79 a barrel) and major attacks on infrastructure by the insurgency in Iraq ($88 a barrel)." Browder's name sounded familiar to me. And then I remembered. Back in 2001, when I recommended Gazprom to my Strategic Investments subscribers, Browder was about the only Western analysts who understood the importance of Russian natural gas to Europe's economy. And Browder was years ahead of everyone in realizing that energy would be viewed by governments as a strategic asset, and used as a policy weapon. Other people are catching onto the theme now. Did you notice Saudi Kind Abdullah paid a visit to China this week, with all his critical oil and defense ministers in tow? Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said, "China is one of the most important markets for oil and Saudi oil is one of the most important sources of energy for China." Sounds like a strategic partnership in the making, no? Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said, "There is a great deal of understanding between the two countries on all issues, including the Middle East, Iraq, and the Iranian nuclear program." I bet there is. The Saudis don't need customers. But they do need protectors. And who better to court than a rising economic and strategic power? Furthermore, China and Saudi Arabia may have more in common than China and America. Both China and Saudi Arabia are run by unelected elites who are free to set a national energy policy and favor certain national oil companies (please don't send me e-mail that the same is true of the U.S. with Bush, Cheney, and Halliburton...believe me, I'm aware of the irony) Writing on the growing importance of national energy companies as instruments of national grand strategy, Pam Boschee of Offshore Magazine states, "It is possible that NOCs [national oil companies] may gain the upper hand as geopolitical forces become increasingly critical. The influence of combining political, economic, security, defense - and petroleum - may indeed create a volatile concoction." Indeed, which is one more reason why the bull market in crude oil will last until we figure out a way to live without the stuff. The Laws of Physics would not have it any other way. [Joel's Note: Every time a light is switched on somewhere in the world, another drop of oil is gone forever. There is no denying that supply is diminishing. Any one of the scenarios that Dan cites above could see us looking back on the days of $65 oil with fondness as it skyrockets upwards. So what to do? Dan Denning's Strategic Investment newsletter keeps you on the money with news on oil, housing and a host of other macro-economic insights. You may not be able to change the laws of physics, but you can at least be prepared for the outcomes. Learn all about staying ahead right here: Strategic Investments http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/DRI/EDRIFB05 --- Advertisement ---
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