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IS
$100 OIL CHEAP?
- The Casey Files -
by
Chris Gilpin
Contributing Editor, BIG GOLD
from Casey
Research
with a foreword from Doug Casey
November 8, 2007
The
depletion of the world’s cheap hydrocarbons is now a foregone
conclusion.
The
timing of when this goes from being a nuisance to a problem to a
full-blown crisis is difficult to gauge, but peak oil, as an
argument, is the correct argument. The U.S. reached its peak oil
production in 1971, and I have no doubt that the world will do so
within a generation, more than likely encouraged by more blunders
in the Middle East.
Speaking
as an investor, the question at this point is not ‘will there be
another energy crisis?’ The question is ‘how can I profit from
it?’ Below, Chris Gilpin from our Casey Energy Speculator
research team gives you a better idea of why oil prices and energy
stocks are headed higher, and how you might profit.
This
is an important time to stop and check your premises on oil,
because getting it right can be extraordinarily profitable.
Doug
Casey
Chairman
Casey Research
Is
$100 Oil Cheap? Many
market pundits wrote that $40 per bbl crude was expensive, that
$60 crude was unsustainable, that $80 crude would never happen.
But here we sit with oil over $90 and looking like it wants to
take out $100.
We
think it will, and then continue from there. Sure, crude may
decline in the short term, with the surge of summer vacation
driving behind us and with refineries reducing their intake of oil
as they gear down for annual maintenance. But the sheer
practicality of cars will keep them on the road in increasing
numbers – in the U.S., China and anywhere else in the world
where people increasingly have the means to buy one – or two, if
they can swing it. Biofuels? A joke. The timeline may flex a bit
– mid- to long-term – but the destination is clear: an energy
crisis is brewing that could dwarf the one the United States faced
in 1979-80.
On
the bright side, what’s bad for the country as a whole can be
good for you. All you need is your money in the right place.
Bunker and undisclosed location are optional. So what’s the
right place? Let’s start with the big picture – the real one.
Spot
events, like rebel uprisings in the oil fields of Nigeria or
hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, tend to trigger short-term
fluctuations in the oil market, while seasonal trends push storage
levels of crude and gasoline up and down. The main engine pushing
us toward crisis this time around is a different beast altogether.
Simply put, the Earth is running out of that magic combination of
oil that is both high quality and cheap to extract.
Twenty
years ago, a dozen fields produced a million or more barrels of
oil per day. Now there are four, and one of them, Mexico’s
Cantarell in the Bay of Campeche, is collapsing. Mexico’s
state-owned oil company, PEMEX, projects Cantarell’s output will
decline 14% per year from now on. That’s the best-case scenario.
2006 actual production from the aging field actually fell
27%!
If
PEMEX’s worst-case forecast comes true, Cantarell will soon
break below the million barrel a day, leaving the world with just
three million-barrel-a-day fields by the end of this year.
Taking
the place of these former big producing fields are deposits that
are complicated and capital intensive. The tar sands of Alberta,
oil shale in America, heavy oil in Venezuela and resources in the
Arctic: all have the potential to add significantly to the world
oil supply. They also point to the real problem. It is not a lack
of oil that will trigger the next oil crisis; it is a lack of oil
production capacity. This is a crucial distinction. Not all crude
is created equal and the long lead-time necessary to ramp up
production of such reserves prevents them from replacing the
shortfall created by dwindling conventional (read: easy and
inexpensive to extract) oil supplies.
Simply,
non-conventional oil requires a new paradigm of prices. North
Africa’s conventional oil reserves can be pumped out of the
ground for $4 per barrel. But the average cost in the tar sands is
estimated at $28 per barrel, and oil shale costs can be upward of
$40 per barrel. It doesn’t take a genius to see that the more we
are forced to rely upon non-conventional oil, the higher the
prices will have to be.
And
you know already that competition to buy that barrel is only going
up. China and India are elbowing their way onto the global stage,
and bidding for their share of Middle Eastern oil. A supertanker
of crude is as popular as a New York taxi at rush hour; everyone
is trying to wave it over their way.
We’ve
reached a turning point in terms of the supply-demand fundamentals
of crude. Even Chevron’s CEO David O’Reilly recently
announced, “One thing is clear: the era of easy oil is over.”
Will
the True Price of Crude Please Stand Up?
Your
average economist will tell you that once you correct for
inflation, crude prices reached their actual peak in 1980 during
the energy crisis spurred by the Iran-Iraq war. From April to July
of that year, a barrel of oil sold for US$39.50. Using the
government consumer price index (CPI) numbers, that record-high
price per per barrel is estimated at between US$90 – US$102 in
today’s dollars.
But
those CPI numbers are highly suspect.
John
Williams of Shadow
Government Statistics (www.shadowstats.com) is one of several
specialists who independently tracks financial data in an attempt
to provide a more honest picture of the economy. Williams
recalculates the CPI so that it is more of a continuum with its
earlier versions – unlike the government, which fiddles the
formula whenever it decides it needs to. If nothing else, undoing
the many changes in the CPI formula over the years allows us to
compare apples to apples on price inflation, rather than apples to
genetically modified pumpkins.
Track
the current CPI the way it was calculated in 1980, and today's
inflation rate is about 7% higher than the current
"official" CPI statistics. So, rather than inflation
running at less than 3% as the government would like us to think,
based on Williams' calculations it is really closer to 10%.
Casey
Research’s chief economist, Bud Conrad, has confirmed with his
own calculations that indeed this figure is a much more truthful
estimate of where inflation actually is. Using shadow stats, Bud
has calculated the oil price history using the 1980 CPI method. It
turns out that 1980 barrel of $39.50 crude is the equivalent of
over $200 per barrel in today’s anemic dollars.

In
that context, crude prices are nowhere near their all time high,
and $100 oil still looks to be quite cheap. With all that is going
on in the Middle East today, where the world still gets much of
its oil, and combined with increasingly proof – as per Cantarell
– that peak oil is upon us, the odds are better each day that
oil is going much, much higher. Especially given that oil is
currently priced in the U.S. dollar, and the dollar is headed
south in a hurry.
There
are other potential shocks to the energy market lurking in the
wings. For instance, faced with the depletion of Cantarell, how
long do you think the Mexican government will continue to allow
the unrestricted export of their country’s oil to the U.S.? We
could wake up as early as tomorrow to find a quota in place.
Energy
Stocks in an Energy Crisis
Another
way to view the big picture is to examine the weighting of
different sectors within the S&P500 over time. With his
background in advanced mathematics, Casey
Energy Speculator’s
chief investment strategist, Marin Katusa, has used this method
successfully to assess market dislocations. Simply put, by looking
at the relative size of the various components of the S&P 500
vis a vis each other in modern times, you can fairly readily see
when certain sectors are significantly out of step with historical
norms.
Viewing
Marin’s chart below, you can see the weighting of the energy
sector grew most during the 1979-80 energy crisis, reaching a
relative peak of almost 30%. Since that time, energy’s share
dropped for two decades since. Only recently, as energy prices
have rebounded, so we again see the band for energy stocks
widening again. Even so, other sectors have increased also, so
that while energy stocks occupy a larger proportion of the S&P
500 than they did in 1999, they are still far from its former
prominence.
Interestingly,
the biggest run has been experienced by the financial sector,
which has expanded from 5% to 20% in the last 30 years, catalyzed
by the expansion of credit and lax governmental monetary policies.
That trend now appears to be reversing.

It’s
also easy to see how the Internet bubble distorted the stock
market. At that time, tech stocks rose to occupy over one third of
the worth of the S&P. During the last energy crisis, the
energy sector grew to a similar size. The current weighting of
9.3% demonstrates that energy stocks have yet to make their big
run. The bull market has been good to all sectors, with only
financials starting to take a hit, but, as the burgeoning energy
crisis gains momentum, energy companies could very well regain the
status that they held in 1979-80.
It’s
also worth noting that there is a significant negative correlation
between the energy and the financial services sectors. They move
in opposite directions 79% of the time: that is, as one increases,
the other decreases very nearly four out of five times.
Mathematically speaking, that’s one robust relationship. With
financials reeling from the credit crunch, this technical
indicator shows that energy stocks are poised to advance.
Make
the Trend Your Friend
As
the petroleum age reaches a tipping point, the United States, as
the world’s largest oil importer, is in an unenviable position.
Individual investors need not be similarly disadvantaged, however.
The first step to protect your wealth is to see the prices of
crude oil and energy stocks in their proper historical context.
Ninety dollars per barrel is not a peak price, for example; it is
only a precursor of peak oil’s influence.
The
significant gains we’ve witnessed in certain energy stocks are
nothing compared to the runs we will witness as the next energy
crisis comes into full effect. Crude’s rise doesn’t rely on a
new war with Iran, or a rash move from Venezuela’s Chavez,
although any of these things could speed up the timeline. Crude
will move over $100 a barrel, and probably much further, on the
basis of simple supply-and-demand fundamentals.
On
any pull backs, smart investors should take every chance to
position themselves in energy companies that possess a strong
growth profile and the other requisites for turning undeveloped
fields into profitable ventures. Many of these companies are still
trading at a discount to their net present value, and it is these
investments that will provide the greatest leverage to energy
prices as the next crisis unfolds.

© 2007 Chris Gilpin
Contributing Editor, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
Chris
Gilpin is a member of the Casey Research, LLC. energy research
team and a contributing editor to the Casey
Energy Speculator, a monthly newsletter dedicated to
unbiased reporting on rational speculations in the shares of
small-cap companies targeting oil, gas, uranium and other energy
sources… companies with the very real potential to offer 100% or
better returns over a short time horizon.
In the November 15th edition of the Casey Energy
Speculator you’ll read a comprehensive review of the best
U.S. uranium plays… as well as a largely unknown rising star in
the energy sector (perhaps the most prospective new solution for
an energy- starved world).

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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