Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
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Oil price is on its way down again so hopefully the price at the pumps will follow after rising from 115.9 to 117.9 recently.
I've been meaning to keep a record of the per barrel price and the pump price to see how long the delays are in price movements but haven't got around to it. Nice to do but I've got better things to do!
I've been meaning to keep a record of the per barrel price and the pump price to see how long the delays are in price movements but haven't got around to it. Nice to do but I've got better things to do!
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
Oil bounces sharply after US quells hints of an interest rate rise, and presumably the dollar falls sharply. A rate rise in any major currency is now impossible as it would trigger major bankruptcies and rapid financial collapse in cascade. We will end up with hyper inflation because the banks cannoit risk deflation. Oil prices will start rising when demand recovers and supply falls, probably before year end, and this will trigger a rapid inflation and unrest as the next round of austerity starts to bite.
Enjoy the feel good whilst it lasts !
Enjoy the feel good whilst it lasts !
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Zero Hedge: Dollar Flash Crashes: Currency Pulverized As Dollar Implodes After ClosePS_RalphW wrote:Oil bounces sharply after US quells hints of an interest rate rise, and presumably the dollar falls sharply.
One of the troubles of an automated trading system is the potential for flash crashes.
Another problem is that they can be rigged - for such outcomes
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
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- adam2
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Crash, implodes, and pulverised are somewhat alarmist terms to use for a change of 1.5% in the relative values of currencies.raspberry-blower wrote:Zero Hedge: Dollar Flash Crashes: Currency Pulverized As Dollar Implodes After ClosePS_RalphW wrote:Oil bounces sharply after US quells hints of an interest rate rise, and presumably the dollar falls sharply.
One of the troubles of an automated trading system is the potential for flash crashes.
Another problem is that they can be rigged - for such outcomes
Especially after normal trading hours when volumes traded are less and prices therefore more volatile.
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And today's contribution from ZeroHedge -
There's a great message here for the UK fracking scene, where costs will be much higher than for Bakkan owing to more complex geology and tighter environmental control. The message is that the industry is running a Ponzi scheme that will never turn a profit.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-03-1 ... alert-none
There's a great message here for the UK fracking scene, where costs will be much higher than for Bakkan owing to more complex geology and tighter environmental control. The message is that the industry is running a Ponzi scheme that will never turn a profit.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-03-1 ... alert-none
- emordnilap
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So they'll have to be subsidised by the taxpayer. That's the way it works, isn't it?biffvernon wrote:There's a great message here for the UK fracking scene, where costs will be much higher than for Bakkan owing to more complex geology and tighter environmental control.
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
A rather crowded Cromarty Firth this afternoon:
I counted a total of around nine rigs and a couple of service vessels in the Firth undergoing or awaiting service as I came over the Cromarty Bridge today. Never seen that many in at once.
If they're in the Firth, they're not working. But if they're not working I suppose they may as well be in the Firth!
I counted a total of around nine rigs and a couple of service vessels in the Firth undergoing or awaiting service as I came over the Cromarty Bridge today. Never seen that many in at once.
If they're in the Firth, they're not working. But if they're not working I suppose they may as well be in the Firth!
Engage in geo-engineering. Plant a tree today.
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- biffvernon
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Lifting Iranian sanctions puts downward pressure on oil price:
http://www.theguardian.com/business/201 ... e-exporter
http://www.theguardian.com/business/201 ... e-exporter
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BG Full Year Resultsvtsnowedin wrote:Any details about the recoverable reserves these two had in hand? Considering the pace of new discoveries working fields with a known production end game should be worth a lot more then leases in undrilled areas.raspberry-blower wrote:Shell buys BG for £47 billion. More mega merges to come?
From quite near the end of the report:
Proved 3,612 mmboe
Probable 2,913 mmboe
Discovered resources 6,279 mmboe
Risked exploration 4,212 mmboe
Total reserve 17,016 mmboe
Shell reserves total proved reserves 13.1 billion boe
That is what is quoted in Shell's report - they have been known to have told the LSE porkies before about their reserves...
Shell Q4 results 2014
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
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SO 13 plus 4 equals a nice boost to their reserves. That is probably the real value in the deal.raspberry-blower wrote:BG Full Year Resultsvtsnowedin wrote:Any details about the recoverable reserves these two had in hand? Considering the pace of new discoveries working fields with a known production end game should be worth a lot more then leases in undrilled areas.raspberry-blower wrote:Shell buys BG for £47 billion. More mega merges to come?
From quite near the end of the report:
Proved 3,612 mmboe
Probable 2,913 mmboe
Discovered resources 6,279 mmboe
Risked exploration 4,212 mmboe
Total reserve 17,016 mmboe
Shell reserves total proved reserves 13.1 billion boe
That is what is quoted in Shell's report - they have been known to have told the LSE porkies before about their reserves...
Shell Q4 results 2014