|
Speculative Trading In Oil Market Is Driving Prices Higher, Not Demand
by Michael Rogan
Special to Tropical Breeze
Anyone who has attended one of our workshops or heard our radio
program has probably heard me say the often quoted — “It’s not what people don’t
know that hurts them, it’s what they do know that just ain’t so.” Consequently,
one of the most time consuming parts of my job is to research, in detail, the
facts surrounding whatever new fear is being broadcast by the single-minded
media, so that I can help lend perspective to our clients.
With this in mind, I am going out on a limb in this column to
tell you the facts surrounding today’s sky high oil prices, and why I am
certain oil prices will be much, much lower within a few years. First, you need
to have some background on the prices of oil. In the early 1970s, the first oil
embargo of that decade pushed the price of a barrel of oil above $10 for the
first time ever. By 1979, the second oil embargo pushed prices up to nearly $40
a barrel. Given that oil is a cyclical commodity, it should have surprised few
people that by 1986, only seven years later, the price of a barrel of oil had
fallen back to around $10. Not long after, in 1990, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait
and even lit oil fields on fire, with the ensuing panic driving prices back up
to over $40 per barrel. What no one seems to remember, however, is that eight years
later in 1998, prices of this cyclical commodity again dropped back to just
over $10 a barrel. Do you remember that only eight years ago, a gallon of gas
cost less than one dollar?
Now I understand that the media groupthink has reported consistently
the story that global demand for oil has risen dramatically lately, led by fast
growing countries like China,
thereby permanently changing the equation of supply and demand for oil. It has
been widely reported that high prices are here to stay. I had a hard time
believing that, so I decided to research the facts.
If oil prices had justifiably increased seven-fold in eight
years, I would have expected to see an enormous increase in global demand to
explain the price. In fact, the world’s demand for oil has risen less than 20%
— total — over the past eight years. And China,
which is growing quickly, has accounted for a smaller increase in demand in
each of the past two years. In 2005, China’s demand increased by 400,000
barrels a day, which sounds like a lot until you compare it to the 2005 global
demand of over 83 million barrels a day. And the supply of oil already drilled
and on hand today is at levels not seen since 1998. The US Strategic Oil
Reserve became completely filled this year for the first time in its history.
So if supply and demand are not the cause of the huge price
increase, it must be those greedy oil companies, with their outlandish profits,
right? Well, if you were an oil executive over the past 20 or 30 years, your
job would have been to create a business infrastructure that could operate
profitably at around $20 a barrel for oil, since that has been the long term
average price over the period. So if prices spiked suddenly to $70 a barrel,
you could not avoid making large profits. But that doesn’t mean you would have
any ability to cause that to happen, any more than you could have prevented
prices from dropping down to $10 a barrel twice in the past 20 years. So what’s
the cause?
Certainly the synchronized global expansion of the past few years
is partly responsible for all commodities becoming more expensive as global
demand increased. However, with regards to oil, it has been estimated recently
that the amount of speculative money trading in the oil market today is perhaps
1500% greater than just four years ago. As frenzied speculators moved away from
global stock markets and began searching for new gambles, apparently many
decided to bet on oil, gold, and other commodities. But it is exactly the
presence of their “hot” money that leads to my prediction of much lower prices
relatively soon. Once these gamblers decide the game is over, they will leave
in a hurry. I’m predicting $40 a barrel this decade.
But here’s the point — if I am wrong or right, it won’t matter to
my clients. As I have stated before, all of us should only make investment
decisions pursuant to achieving our long term financial goals as spelled out by
a comprehensive financial plan. The high price of oil and gasoline may cause
you to change some of your spending habits (though I doubt it), but it should
absolutely not cause you to change your investments or your long term financial
plan. Making bets with your investments based on short term trends is gambling,
and only the financially immature gamble with their financial future.
So I hope the facts have helped change your perspective. But don’t
worry, there will soon be another media “disaster” I will be able to debunk. Stay
tuned.
Michael Rogan is
president of Rogan & Associates Financial Planners, a locally-owned
financial planning brokerage firm based in Safety Harbor. He brings nearly two decades of financial expertise
to the local airwaves on the radio show, Financial Planning for Life, heard at 11 a.m. weekdays on AM 1250
WHNZ. For more information, call 727-712-3400 or visit www.RoganFinancial.com.
|