Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
I feel sorry for the ostrich.
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
From the BBC article:
To me, that's the key sentence - we're talking physical shortage of the resource, the price is irrelevant."Until we get more supply or demand starts to take a hit, there is no reason we can't see any number."
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
Independent trader claims $100 oil record
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/73a44d1e-b97b ... fd2ac.html
Ps bolds are mine
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/73a44d1e-b97b ... fd2ac.html
Interesting take. And probably some truth in it?Some observers questioned the validity of the price mark when it emerged that the peak was the result of a trader ? one of the ?locals? who trade on their own money buying from a colleague just 1,000 barrels of crude oil, the minimum allowed. The deal on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange was at a hefty premium to prevailing prices, industry insiders said.
Stephen Schork, a former Nymex floor trader and editor of the oil-market Schork Report, said that the price jump was due to a trader seeking his one minute of fame.
"A local trader just spent about $600 in a trading loss to buy the right to tell his grandchildren he was the one who did it,? Mr Schork said. ?Probably he is framing right now the print reflecting the trade.?
Ps bolds are mine
Very true. Otherwise the price is just pushed around by speculators, technical support and resistance levels, and big geopolitical events which might suggest future changes to supply or demand. If we go convincingly over $100, all things being equal we could quickly end up at $105 and $110. What speculators would likely do is keep buying until OPEC adds more supply (and inventories build) or there are more clear signs of a slowdown in global oil demand. At the moment no one knows if a US slowdown will matter, if China, India et al can take up the slack.Andy Hunt wrote:"Until we get more supply or demand starts to take a hit, there is no reason we can't see any number."
That's completely made my evening...if I'd known it would have been that easy I might have done it myself!Sally wrote:Independent trader claims $100 oil record
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/73a44d1e-b97b ... fd2ac.html
Interesting take. And probably some truth in it?Some observers questioned the validity of the price mark when it emerged that the peak was the result of a trader ? one of the ?locals? who trade on their own money buying from a colleague just 1,000 barrels of crude oil, the minimum allowed. The deal on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange was at a hefty premium to prevailing prices, industry insiders said.
Stephen Schork, a former Nymex floor trader and editor of the oil-market Schork Report, said that the price jump was due to a trader seeking his one minute of fame.
"A local trader just spent about $600 in a trading loss to buy the right to tell his grandchildren he was the one who did it,? Mr Schork said. ?Probably he is framing right now the print reflecting the trade.?
Ps bolds are mine
$600 for an item on every news programme tonight and to be remembered at least for a little while. Shall we chip in for $200, 1000 barrels...if we sit on them we'll get our money back in a couple of years anyway
Really? It seems highly unlikely to me that a US slowdown wouldn't reduce global demand. The US is so elephantine, consuming either directly or indirectly through imported products, approaching 50% of the world's energy. How could China take up the slack with increased demand at the same moment as US demand for Chinese production capacity was falling away?Tess wrote:At the moment no one knows if a US slowdown will matter, if China, India et al can take up the slack.
The question remains 'how much US slowdown can the rest of the world ignore or absorb, and how much time lag would there be between a US recession and a global oil demand drop.'clv101 wrote:Really? It seems highly unlikely to me that a US slowdown wouldn't reduce global demand. The US is so elephantine, consuming either directly or indirectly through imported products, approaching 50% of the world's energy. How could China take up the slack with increased demand at the same moment as US demand for Chinese production capacity was falling away?Tess wrote:At the moment no one knows if a US slowdown will matter, if China, India et al can take up the slack.
So far, every piece of poor US economic data has initially caused expectations of oil demand to weaken, but then we see western demand staying strong, inventories continuing to draw in the US, and no sign of Asia slowing their rampant growth. So now no one is sure how much of a US economic slowdown is needed before oil demand falls off and the consumerist yank of the chain is slackened. The market waits, and watches.
clv101 wrote:Really? It seems highly unlikely to me that a US slowdown wouldn't reduce global demand. The US is so elephantine, consuming either directly or indirectly through imported products, approaching 50% of the world's energy. How could China take up the slack with increased demand at the same moment as US demand for Chinese production capacity was falling away?Tess wrote:At the moment no one knows if a US slowdown will matter, if China, India et al can take up the slack.
Seems to me the demand is already there. There are consistently huge queues for diesel in China. If it arrived they'd be all to happy to take it.
Jim
For every complex problem, there is a simple answer, and it's wrong.
"Heaven and earth are ruthless, and treat the myriad creatures as straw dogs" (Lao Tzu V.i).
For every complex problem, there is a simple answer, and it's wrong.
"Heaven and earth are ruthless, and treat the myriad creatures as straw dogs" (Lao Tzu V.i).
I read a piece in Moneyweek a couple of weeks ago about the extent of the decoupling of eastern & western economies; the author concluded that Chinese growth is still utterly dependent on US (and to a much lesser extent EU) economic health.Tess wrote:The question remains 'how much US slowdown can the rest of the world ignore or absorb, and how much time lag would there be between a US recession and a global oil demand drop.'clv101 wrote:Really? It seems highly unlikely to me that a US slowdown wouldn't reduce global demand. The US is so elephantine, consuming either directly or indirectly through imported products, approaching 50% of the world's energy. How could China take up the slack with increased demand at the same moment as US demand for Chinese production capacity was falling away?Tess wrote:At the moment no one knows if a US slowdown will matter, if China, India et al can take up the slack.
So far, every piece of poor US economic data has initially caused expectations of oil demand to weaken, but then we see western demand staying strong, inventories continuing to draw in the US, and no sign of Asia slowing their rampant growth. So now no one is sure how much of a US economic slowdown is needed before oil demand falls off and the consumerist yank of the chain is slackened. The market waits, and watches.
Given that the goods produced by China are higher up the discretionary spending hierarchy (i.e. US consumers are likely to cut spending on plastic tat before cutting spending on gasoline or fuel oil), I guess it's conceivable that the US economic slowdown could bring about a slump in Chinese oil demand even before US gasoline demand is materially curtailed.
But of course, this is pure speculation and one must factor in lags in the Chinese manufacturing cycle relative to the likely speed of the onset (and ultimate extent) of a US/world recession etc. Hence the uncertainty in the markets, I guess...
Last edited by Joe on 03 Jan 2008, 09:11, edited 1 time in total.
- Totally_Baffled
- Posts: 2824
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Hampshire
Hi TessTess wrote:New WTI high: $100.09
In your view Tess do the fundamentals support this price?
This is more than double last years price (i think we were at $49.90 at the low last year).
Inventories are not in the most ideal place - but they dont seem to be that bad? (especially finished products like gasoline and distillates which seem to be recovering and within the 5 year average range?)
Although days cover is well below last year....
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/twip/twip_crude.html
God knows what the price will do if US inventories were what I would consider "low", ie below the 5 year average on oil, distillates and gasoline!
TB
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....