Author Topic: There Is No Gas Shortage  (Read 2097 times)

seeker_two

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There Is No Gas Shortage
« on: April 03, 2008, 01:38:32 AM »
http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/apr2008/bw2008041_945564.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index_dialogue+with+readers

Quote
But Washington, Wall Street, and ethanol and oil and gas companies want you to think there is, says automotive expert Ed Wallace

"They see speculation in the market, I see decline in global inventories. I don't think this is a big surprise, that we've had a jump in price when there has been a decrease in crude inventories." Energy Secretary Sam Bodman, Bloomberg News, Mar. 5, 2008
"It should be obvious to you all that the [gasoline] demand is outstripping supply, which causes prices to go up."  President George W. Bush, Associated Press, Mar. 5, 2008
One wonders if verifiable facts ever get in the way of this administration's statements on issues that are critical to the average American's wellbeing. After all, last time I checked, when politicians are elected to public office, or appointed, as is Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman, they must take an oath to the American people before assuming their new positions. How can they forget a sacred oath so quickly? Were they daydreaming when they took it, so it never meant anything to begin with? Maybe it's just another promise you have to make to get into office: When you're securely incumbent you can ignore even solemn oaths you took.
Obviously, the two quotes that led this article came from discussions concerning the current high price for oil on the futures market. Bodman appears to be protecting the speculators in oil, as opposed to looking after the interests of all Americans. President Bush, apparently, has never talked to the Energy Dept.'s Energy Information Agency to see whether gasoline demand is actually up. More troubling, the writer of that particular Associated Press article obviously didn't look up the EIA's numbers to verify the President's assertions. They weren't accurate.
1. There Is No Shortage
Gasoline reserves on hand are at the highest levels since the early 1990s, which is remarkable considering the nation's refineries have been cutting back on the production of gasoline because their margins have declined. In fact, average gasoline reserves on hand have risen since this past October, while oil reserves in this country have gone up virtually every week this yearand only fog in the Houston Ship Channel that kept oil tankers from unloading their crude one week kept it from being every week.
In the same Bloomberg article that quotes from Bodman's CNBC appearance on Mar. 4, he also said that it was thanks to ethanol that the gasoline problem isn't even worse. He then added that the fact that making ethanol is forcing up prices of other farm commodities, including hog and chicken feed, is "nowhere near as important as trying to relieve pressure on [gasoline] supplies."
Of course, there is no pressure on gasoline supplies in this country as of today, but Bodman's statement must have made eyes roll among the executives at Pilgrim's Pride PPC; the Pittsburg, (Tex.) poultry producer announced 1,100 layoffs on Mar. 13, closing one processing plant and 6 of their 13 distribution centers because their company's outlay for chicken feed went up $600 million last fiscal year and was on track to increase by another $700 million this year.
Here's the scorecard, in case you missed it. There's no shortage of gasoline or oil in the U.S. today, and we have near-record reserves on hand. Meanwhile the Congressional mandate for ethanol has jacked up the price of chicken feed for Pilgrim's Pride, which is the U.S.'s largest processor of chickens and turkeysby $1.3 billion. And that's for just one company processing chicken. This is what passes for acceptable to our Energy Secretary?
2. Demand Is DOWN, Yet Prices Are UP
Just so we can all get on the same page, here are the verifiable facts on oil supplies, production, and gasoline demand.
In January of this year, the U.S. used 4% less petroleum than we did a year ago. (Oil demand was down 3.2% in February.) Furthermore, demand has been falling slowly since July of last year. Ronald Bailey of Reason Online has pointed out that worldwide production of oil has risen 2.5% in the first quarter, while worldwide demand has grown by only 2%. Production is expected to increase by 3.3% in the second quarter, and by as much as 4.1% by the third quarter. The net result is that the U.S. daily buffer for oil production against demand, which was a paltry 1.5 million barrels as recently as 2005, is now up to 3 million barrels in excess capacity today.
So what is going on here? Why would our Energy Secretary say there's a supply and demand problem when none exists? Why would he say that speculators have little or nothing to do with the incredibly high price of oil and gasoline, when it's clear they do? President Busha former oilmangives the ever-growing demand for gasoline as the primary reason prices are so high, yet that notion can be dispelled with one minute of research. That's the problem with rhetoric; it rarely matches the facts.
3. Speculation is Up, and the Dollar Is Down
On the same day the President and our Energy Secretary made those foolish comments, no less an authority than ExxonMobil (XOM) Chief Executive Officer Rex Tillerson was quoted by Marketwatch as saying, "The record run in oil prices is related more to speculation and a weakening dollar than supply and demand in the market." He added, "In terms of fundamentals, fear of supply reliability is overblown."
As for the speculators, in 2000 approximately $9 billion was invested in oil futures, while today that number has gone up to $250 billion. Now, if any publicly traded company had an additional $241 billion put into its stock in the same period, its stock would rise out of sight tooeven if the company was not worth anywhere near that amount of market capitalization.
Moving on to the weak U.S. dollar as a primary cause for skyrocketing oil pricesthere is "some" truth in that statement. But consider this: The dollar has depreciated 30% against the world's currencies since 2002, while the price of oil has gone up 500%. So is it the weak dollar that has caused a 500% increase in the price of oil, or is it the extra $241 billion worth of speculation? You can make the call on that one.
Possibly just to ensure oil prices don't respond to real-world market conditions, Goldman Sachs (GS) forecast on Mar. 7 that turbulence in the oil market could cause oil to spike as high as $200 a barrel. This flies in the face of all known informationbut then again, Goldman Sachs is the world's biggest trader of energy derivatives, and its Goldman Sachs Commodities Index is a widely watched barometer of energy and commodities prices.
What Is Washington Thinking?
Rounding out the list of experts discussing our oil and gasoline situation is Bill Klesse, head of San Antonio (Tex.) Valero Energy (VLO). He spoke in San Diego a week after those comments from Goldman Sachs, the President, and Secretary Bodman. Believe it or not, Klesse said poor margins may cause Valero to sell one-third of its refinery operations; he stated that poor margins in recent months had caused planned refinery expansionswhich would have produced 500,000 more barrels per dayto be canceled. Moreover, according to a report from Reuters on Mar. 11, 2008, Klesse recently released the information that gasoline production has been curtailed in response to slowing demand.
Imagine that: Refiners cut gasoline production, yet gasoline reserves have grown to their largest since late 1992. So much for "surging demand."
Klesse also called for the government to start imposing a tariff on imported gasoline to protect U.S. refiners' profits. Protectionism? As famed economist John Kenneth Galbraith correctly said, "In America, the only respectable form of socialism is socialism for the rich."
Which takes us back to the original question: Why is Washington doing everything it can to convince us there is a shortage when there isn't one? After all, the only people they're protecting are those heavily invested in oil futuresand that's to the detriment of all other Americans.
We're Paying for What?
When it became undeniable that poor decision-making by company executives had put a respected 85-year-old U.S. institution in financial peril, why did the Federal Reserve rush in to save investment bank Bear Stearns (BSC)? Of course, we need to restore confidence in our financial institutions, but why protect the personal assets of those who were responsible for the mess? Both the corporation's officers and its board members should contribute their personal assets toward saving the bank they put in the ditchthe bank all of us are going to pay to bail out.
Instead, the Bush administration is protecting those responsible for creating yet another speculative bubble in oil futures, and is protecting investors in the ethanol industrymuch to the detriment of food-processing companies such as Pilgrim's Pride. And the net result of all this is that the prices of crude and gasoline rise ever higher thanks to a "shortage" that does not exist, while food costs are soaring thanks in part to the ethanol mandate.
The Federal Reserve lowers interest rates, but the cost of mortgages goes up six weeks in a rowand last month Bank of America (BAC) credit-card holders started being charged more than 24% interest on new purchases.
This is what they call "Republican Prosperity?" Ronald Reagan was both right and wrong when he said, "Government is not the solution, government is the problem." And government is still the problem. Instead of a fair and open market they gave us a free-for-all marketplace with no regulations at all, which lately these "bubble boys" have sent south for all of us.
One would guess that Washington missed the obvious: Protect all U.S. consumers and you're also protecting business expansion.

Ed Wallace holds a Gerald R. Loeb Award for business journalism, bestowed by the Anderson School of Business at UCLA. His column heads the Sunday Drive section of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, and he is a member of the American Historical Society. The automotive expert for KDFW Fox 4 in Dallas, Wallace hosts the top-rated talk show Wheels, Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on 570 KLIF AM in Dallas.

Comments?
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Nitrogen

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #1 on: April 03, 2008, 03:31:15 AM »
Large companies with limited competition and limited regulation would NEVER EVER defraud the American people!

Seriously though, congress has looked into gas prices multiple times and quickly determined that nothing untoward was going on.  That alone makes me think something's up.

Now I don't see this as all bad.  With gas prices shooting up, I'm hoping that it'll cause more pressure to come up with more domestic sources of fuel, as well as fuel alternatives (fuel cells, solar, cow poop, prayer, etc) as well as spurn more conservation.

When California and most of teh East Coast get sick of paying nearly $4/gal, they might decide to finally open their coastlines up to drilling, as well as allowing the state of Alaska to drill for oil in their own state.
It might also spurn some legislative actions regarding keeping more oil supply domestically instead of selling it abroad.

Now I'm not an economic genius, so I'd love some comment on this from others that are more versed in the dismal art.
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The Annoyed Man

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #2 on: April 03, 2008, 05:55:14 AM »
The FIRST step toward a solution is for .gov to use anti trust laws to bust up Big Oil. Too many mergers and acquisitions=less competition=monopoly pricing.

Manedwolf

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #3 on: April 03, 2008, 05:56:04 AM »
The FIRST step toward a solution is for .gov to use anti trust laws to bust up Big Oil. Too many mergers and acquisitions=less competition=monopoly pricing.

So you want the statist, near-Communist solution? Why not just nationalize them? Tongue

I think some people are still under the childhood impression that you can poke a hole in the ground and oil comes up. They don't realize what an incredible risk and investment every deep well is, especially the new offshore ones. If it comes up with a poor flow or not at all, they just blew $100-$300 million of the company's money with no recovery of the lost funds.

And if they don't take those risks, who will?

K Frame

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #4 on: April 03, 2008, 06:06:30 AM »
I don't really recall anyone saying that there is a gas shortage.

There's plenty of gas, it's just expensive as all hell.
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AJ Dual

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #5 on: April 03, 2008, 07:44:08 AM »
ITS ALL FUTURES MARKET SPECULATION!

That's it.

The weak dollar is contributing about 30% to the increase since 200-whatever, the other 470% in the price per barrel run-up is all commodities trading. And even if you somehow could, I dunno call out the U.S. Marines and suspend trading on the commodities exchange at gunpoint, it's a world-wide commodities market.

There is an "oil bubble", just like there was a "tech bubble", and a "real estate bubble".

I promise not to duck.

Fly320s

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #6 on: April 03, 2008, 12:50:13 PM »
I don't really recall anyone saying that there is a gas shortage.

There's plenty of gas, it's just expensive as all hell.

Agreed.

If gas is plentiful, and it seems to be, but the consumer's cost is rising, it is, what could the answer be?  Market speculation,and increased demand allowing for increased prices.
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seeker_two

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #7 on: April 04, 2008, 01:29:01 AM »
ITS ALL FUTURES MARKET SPECULATION!

That's it.

The weak dollar is contributing about 30% to the increase since 200-whatever, the other 470% in the price per barrel run-up is all commodities trading. And even if you somehow could, I dunno call out the U.S. Marines and suspend trading on the commodities exchange at gunpoint, it's a world-wide commodities market.

There is an "oil bubble", just like there was a "tech bubble", and a "real estate bubble".



Spot on.....and guess which industry is most heavily invested in the oil speculation market?....
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Nitrogen

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #8 on: April 04, 2008, 05:17:52 AM »
Wow, you learn something new every day.

Not to cast doubt on the speculation argument, but I would like to read more about it.  Any of you have any links to sources so I can read more about it?
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K Frame

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #9 on: April 04, 2008, 05:21:54 AM »
Oil has been traded on the international commodities market since the 1980s.

That means that the price is fixed by traders in market cities around the world.

A large part of commodities trading is speculation -- betting on certain things happening, or not happening -- in an effort to make profit.

The 1980s comedy Trading Places actually had a pretty good bottom level view at how speculation can fuel a run up in the price of a commodity and how "insider knowedge" can be used (abused) to take a position in the market.
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Creeping Incrementalism

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Re: There Is No Gas Shortage
« Reply #10 on: April 08, 2008, 10:09:09 AM »
From what I read of the author's creditentials at the bottom of the piece, he has no expertise in this area and isn't qualified to authoritaitvely make the judgements he does.  He appears to be a car writer, not an economist.  I'm not an expert either, but from what I know, he only appears to be partly right.

On the point of the quantity of oil produced not meeting the quantity consumed, he is wrong for the long term, at least.  He is cherry picking his data.  The EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook from last month shoes a steady increase in worldwide demand over the past five years, and a striking decrease in average OPEC surplus production over the past five years, versus the five before that.

It seems like the recent price spike is mostly from dollar devaluation and speculation.  But so what?  The market will correct itself and those who pushed the price up will pay, while we get lower gas prices.

His conclusion quoting Reagan's "Government is the problem" to mean that we just don't have the right kind of gov't regulation shows where he is coming from: big-government regulation can fix all big problems.  Sounds like the kind of guy who will vote for Hillary or Obama.

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The FIRST step toward a solution is for .gov to use anti trust laws to bust up Big Oil. Too many mergers and acquisitions=less competition=monopoly pricing.

"Big Oil" controls about 1/20th of the worldwide oil supply (the rest is owned by governments who have nationalized oil industries, except for 1/20th by Russian firms).  And furthermore, "Big Oil" is owned mostly by middle-class stockholders.  So their control of the market is miniscule, and pretty much everyone with a 401(k) is the beneficiary.  Mergers are necessary to gain efficiency and compete with the huge companies owned by foreign governments.

One more thing: In the U.S., the government collects about twice in much from taxes as the oil companies earn in profit.