Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Don't do this meself - rather sceptical about gambling, BUT - watching the price over the last 6 - 8 weeks has made me wonder:
1 If TPTB actually understand that $80 - $100 is the next fall over, and
2 OPEC wants as much as they can get
Then - buy at around $60 and sell at around $70 should see everyone more or less even? There appears to be spare capacity, (don't care if it's in instantly available shut - in's, or SPR's, or tankers parked outside Portsmouth - it seems to be available if the price gets a bit silly. Conversley, if the price goes a little too low for the producers, it seems like a slight restriction on production can soon remedy that. I do know and accept that this is a tremendously simplistic view, but hell, am only a crusty old hippie anyhow. Seems to me like this precise price control business has been going on for decades, only now, (in light of last years little hiccup to around $150.00), we are right on the very edge of keeping up the pretense?
Is there really enough stocked up in tankers, (who's crews - according to the Beeb - are creating the entire economy for small sea-side towns while they wait for prices which would enable them to off-load and go home?)
Regards,
Mitch
1 If TPTB actually understand that $80 - $100 is the next fall over, and
2 OPEC wants as much as they can get
Then - buy at around $60 and sell at around $70 should see everyone more or less even? There appears to be spare capacity, (don't care if it's in instantly available shut - in's, or SPR's, or tankers parked outside Portsmouth - it seems to be available if the price gets a bit silly. Conversley, if the price goes a little too low for the producers, it seems like a slight restriction on production can soon remedy that. I do know and accept that this is a tremendously simplistic view, but hell, am only a crusty old hippie anyhow. Seems to me like this precise price control business has been going on for decades, only now, (in light of last years little hiccup to around $150.00), we are right on the very edge of keeping up the pretense?
Is there really enough stocked up in tankers, (who's crews - according to the Beeb - are creating the entire economy for small sea-side towns while they wait for prices which would enable them to off-load and go home?)
Regards,
Mitch
Mitch - nb Soma
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
Not seen any price predictions on here for a while.
Tomorrow we're into the last third of 2009. It seems to have been a short year, what with the weather being bad here for the last two months.
Anyways, punters, what price will the ticker say on 1st December 2009 and/or 1st March 2010?
Tomorrow we're into the last third of 2009. It seems to have been a short year, what with the weather being bad here for the last two months.
Anyways, punters, what price will the ticker say on 1st December 2009 and/or 1st March 2010?
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Ok, I'll biteemordnilap wrote:Not seen any price predictions on here for a while.
Tomorrow we're into the last third of 2009. It seems to have been a short year, what with the weather being bad here for the last two months.
Anyways, punters, what price will the ticker say on 1st December 2009 and/or 1st March 2010?
I've got a feeling that the price will remain pretty steady around the $70 mark. Not falling very far below $65 and not rising above $80.
Unless we have a miraculous recovery between now and then of course.
-
- Posts: 2525
- Joined: 22 Nov 2007, 14:07
I think it'll go up to about $90 if current trends continue (china), after which I expect it to plummet back down to at most $50.syberberg wrote: Ok, I'll bite
I've got a feeling that the price will remain pretty steady around the $70 mark. Not falling very far below $65 and not rising above $80.
Unless we have a miraculous recovery between now and then of course.
I had originally suspected that we'd be down to about $30 again but the chinese are filling up their strategic reserves.
The American strategic reserve is full to the gunnels.
Does Europe have one?
Do we get a recovery yet?
These are the big questions.
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
That explains the party on the horizon in this photo which I took the other week:Bandidoz wrote:Yeah - "Tanker City", offshore from Lowestoftfifthcolumn wrote:Does Europe have one?
http://www.dogsticks.org/cgi-bin/photos ... gi?id=8148
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."
There's still plenty of time for me to be wrongemordnilap wrote:I see the oil price (on the ticker at least) seems to be behaving as predicted.
The main, realistic, threat to my prediction is the severity of the coming winter and how quickly can the spare capacity be brought online to cover any increased demand for heating oil?
-
- Posts: 1939
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Milton Keynes
Oil took a bit of a dive yesterday, and is still falling today. Anyone know what's driving it? The only thing I can think of is that it's the recoveryless recovery which we're having (BDI is also headed down now after looking like it was finding a plateau),
Peter.
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
Higher than usual imports to the US last week leading to an unexpected rise in 'onshore' storage.
Short term fluctuations in the price are impossible to rationalise, because too many players are trying to game the market. The price has been $70 +/- $4 for most of the last three months. To me that suggests powerful forces have control of the market and want a price high enough to sustain oil field investment and low enough to avoid crushing demand any further. A rational policy.
Anyway, this can only continue so long. Soon the fundamentals will take over, and either we will be flooded with oil, or the price will rise again. Take your pick. Probably within the next 3 months.
Short term fluctuations in the price are impossible to rationalise, because too many players are trying to game the market. The price has been $70 +/- $4 for most of the last three months. To me that suggests powerful forces have control of the market and want a price high enough to sustain oil field investment and low enough to avoid crushing demand any further. A rational policy.
Anyway, this can only continue so long. Soon the fundamentals will take over, and either we will be flooded with oil, or the price will rise again. Take your pick. Probably within the next 3 months.
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
ODAC wrote:Oil prices fell this week in response to higher than anticipated inventories and weak US economic data. Some commentators predict that prices may fall further in the short-term as crude inventories continue to outpace demand. If so, it is only likely to exacerbate existing investment challenges.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact: