Consumers And Volatile Oil Prices

2009-01-15
By

Consumers across North America daily check the wildly fluctuating prices of gasoline at their favorite neighborhood stations. Magically, prices change at all those pumps in unison. Just as strangely, pump prices have not dropped in step with the currently defeated price of crude.



Price of crude oil today floats around USD$35 per barrel, down severely from a high of over $147 only months ago. You don’t require a calculator to realize that the current price is now at approximately 24% of it’s high which is not reflected in your wallet’s hemorrhage as you fill-up. You drive off disillusioned and frustrated, but you feel less anxious than you did following your recent summer fill-ups during the oil speculation frenzy. You hear rationalizations like, “OPEC contracting its output by 2.2 million barrels per day,” or you read global demand is expected to shrink by about, … well it doesn’t matter, you just know that you and millions of gasoline consumers are at the front line of this commodity’s future. What can you do? What will you do?



It would be easy to blame oil industry conspiracies for the wild ride of oil pricing. Reality is that stakeholders directly or indirectly connected to the industry are simply doing what is necessary to extract as much money as possible out of their respective positions. Each is being human. Expectations of high returns currently includes “hoarding.” At least this is the prevailing clairvoyance of astute speculative bets. Keep that one in mind. 



To shatter more assumptions and agitate matters further, hoarding has exacerbated the impact of refinery output reduction. Refiners had curtailed operations, contemplating drops in demand. The resulting confusion ignited volatility in prices to frenetic levels. Such volatility is not constructive to the overall long-term health of the exploration and refining sectors of the industry. Uncertainty in oil prices is also not therapeutic to an ailing economy.



Crude reserves are bursting the capacities to contain them onshore to the point where storage availability has become scarce, and oil filled tankers are sitting afloat offshore, awaiting a more favorable price day. This is a calculated measure to apply pressure on the outcome of pricing speculation. This strategy expects a global economic recovery. Should that not occur, the tactic hopes that a depletion in refined oil might eventually bring back prices of $60 or even $70 per barrel. These are the price levels that many oil resource dependent economies require if they are to escape overwhelming deficits. How can a Middle East monarch possibly retain power over a semi-suppliant population, building palaces, ordering 400-foot yachts, and over-fitting Airbus A380s on $35 oil? Can’t do it. Something or someone has to give. 



Here we are in the middle of a cold winter, yet consumer demand for oil continues to drop. Diligence with home thermostat settings has had a direct impact on consumption. “Travel” reduction has also cut a deep gouge into supplier assumptions. Overall reduction in consumption of all goods affects the price of oil negatively, and consumers should remain vigilant. They should all maintain their current frugal attitudes toward accumulation of all things not grown in soil. 

The speculative bets made against the consumer, may turn to bite the hands that placed them.

The OPEC cartel and other oil producing nations will continue to be conflicted. They are each competing for a piece of the consumer’s oil dollar. Since each barrel of oil finds its own independent path to market, the Saudi barrel will always seek a position on the delivery system ahead of the Venezuelan barrel, which will itself attempt end-runs on the Nigerian barrel coming across the ocean. Current prices have also macerated attitudes like those of Venezuelan Strongman and part-time Latin American hero Hugo Chavez, who is now soliciting help (read begging) from the major oil companies he not so long ago demonized and seized assets from. Evidently there is no persuasive Spanish translation of the adage about “burning bridges” he is familiar with.



The outlook on oil prices may be uncertain, however, there is one enduring certainty world markets can rely on, … the consumer will persist as the arbiter of good taste on conscientious consumption. The consumer will continue to command oil price trend direction. Should current tendencies persevere, and consumers stay the course, chance will be infinitely more accommodating to the reality of an economic recovery within the next eighteen months.

 

 

James Raider writes The Pacific Gate Post

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221 views

  • Squiggy

    Excellent post. I hope you continue here. Thanks.

  • http://www.evensolifegoeson.wordpress.com Dabir Dalton

    So much for the theory of supply and demand affecting the price of oil and gasoline which conservatives use to justify the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">continuing financial rape</span> of the American Consumer by their buddies in big business…

  • Squiggy

    Care to elaborate Dalton? His article proves the truth of supply and demand. Demand is down, supply is up. Price is down.

    Or didn't you read it?

  • http://www.evensolifegoeson.worldpress.com Dabir Dalton

    If you were telling the truth Squiggy the price of gasoline would either still be falling or would have stabilized and yet where I live the price has stopped falling and has begun to edge back up sometimes as much as a dime a day…

    So like I said so much for the theory of supply and demand…

    BTW what do feminists and conservatives have in common? One would think very little until one considers that both groups promote hatred and while feminists promote the financial rape of the male gender…Republicans Conservatives actively promote and justify the financial rape of both the male gender by the family court system and of our society at large by big business…

  • Squiggy

    Dabir, your shallow knowledge of economics is showing.

    The price of oil is down because supply is up. If that were the only factor in gasoline prices, then gasoline prices would still be at historic lows. But guess what? It's not.

    The price of gasoline has inched back up (to over a third of what it was, fyi), because the refineries are busy trying to keep the Yankees from freezing to death. Those New Yorkers, and Mainers, and Connecticutters(?) have this weird little habit of burning petroleum in their furnaces. As we haven't built a new refinery in forever, we don't have special "heating oil" refineries. They can only make ONE type of fuel at a time. So half the refinery capacity is being used for something else, and can't be used to make gasoline, or diesel. In other words, Dabir – THE SUPPLY OF GASOLINE IS DOWN! Open your eyes, learn something, and stop with the knee-jerk crap.

    And as for your statements concerning conservatives, speak for yourself! You telling me that I believe what I don't believe is just stupid. You want to be a part of the MRM, then stop trying to piss off the other half. Iow – Grow up.

    *sigh*

    It gets so old having to re-teach basic stuff every time there's a new crop of leftists graduating from college.

  • http://www.dapoet59.wordpress.com Dabir Dalton

    Squiggy I personally do not what to be a part of the MRM because1) I'm too much of an independent thinker 2) I don't abide tyrants, intellectual dishonesty or the bigotry that both liberals and conservatives promote…And as long as the current leaders of the MRM continue to embrace back stabbing conservatives I will never support the MRM with either my time or money…

    Walk the walk Squiggy or don't bother to talk the talk…

  • Squiggy

    Just as I thought. In "libspeak" independent thinkermeans you think with Democrat talking points.

    You either think exactly like the latest Democrat memo, or you're evil. If you are a Democrat, you might be forgiven (with proper supplication). If you are a Republican, you will be destroyed (and if the Dems have publicly forgiven you, it will be especially painful).

    And by the way, you didn't comment on my "analysis" of your lack of economic knowledge. You need to, otherwise you prove what I've just said about leftists (oh sorry – I mean "independent thinker".

  • Squiggy

    Oh, yeah. If you don't want to be a part of the MRM, why are you coming to an MRM website?

  • scott

    I think he meant MSM, not MRM






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