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Newsletter 15: June 3, 2008

Whither the price of oil?

Peak Oil may be in the future but Peak Oil Awareness has arrived.  I expect Time and Newsweek cover articles on Peak Oil any week now marking the official top in oil awareness.  It has already made the covers of The Economist and Business Week, the leading indicators for magazine covers.

When WTI hit an intraday high over $135 a barrel everyone on the planet not personally involved in an earthquake, cyclone or primary election paid full attention.   Apparently, this price level is high enough for a significant number of consumers to say, “I’ve had enough - it’s time for action.”  The decline in U.S. gasoline sales of about 4% y/y and the sharp shift to fuel efficient car sales tell us that many Americans have been saying just that since oil crossed the $100 threshold (although unseasonably cold weather in the Mid-west could be part of the reason for the decline in gasoline sales).  

Perhaps more significantly, some poorer countries that have been sheltering their populations from high oil prices through price controls and/or subsidies are deciding to let prices move more freely.  Taiwan has done so.  Malaysia and India are likely to do so.  Pressure on other Asian and South American countries to do so will build both from budgetary concerns and from pressure on them by OECD countries who believe the entire world must take their cue from the price of oil to change behaviors.  China will probably be a holdout longer than others.

For energy investors the nearly vertical price chart of oil in May has focused attention on the question: will the beat go on?   Or is $135 at least a temporary top?  That question and the outlook for longer dated oil are addressed below, but first a report on how the portfolio fared in May.

A Pretty, Pretty, Pretty Good Month

The price of oil and the direction of the stock market are the two primary determinants of the Energy Investment Strategies portfolio.  So it is not surprising that in May the portfolio enjoyed its largest monthly gain ever, 16.6%.   The year to date gain is 26.6%.  (Was this a 65th birthday present to me from the Universe?)  This performance was substantially assisted by the portfolio’s options-on-futures strategy which gained by 48% for the month and is up 189% YTD.  The stock portion gained by 10.2%, outperforming its benchmark OIH (oil service) portfolio’s 7.6% gain and the more diversified IYE’s 3.7%.  The Standard and Poor’s 500 was up 1.5% in May but still is down 4% YTD.

The futures strategy, as you may know, was put in place to reduce one of the risks of having a stock portfolio highly concentrated in energy stocks - the risk that the oil price could go so high that it would spook the economy and the general stock market so forcefully as to cause all stocks, including energy stocks, to fall sharply.  At times during oil’s recent ascent from below $50 in January, 2007, to over $135 last month we have seen evidence of a negative stock market reaction.   But in May, while the oil price became almost vertical for a while, stocks managed to hold their own and even gain a bit. 

Thus, the net result for the EIS portfolio in May was that its futures position became an an effective offensive weapon as opposed to simply a defensive tool.   The success of the options-on-futures strategy has made it a far larger part of the total EIS portfolio so I am starting to break out reporting on it separately, at least to the extent of noting above how the the futures and the stocks have each performed.

Readers may remember that last month I opined that the price of oil may have reached a short term peak.  During May I tried to hedge the portfolio in accordance with this belief, but as the forward price momentum spanked me every time I did it, such hedging actions became limited.  Ultimately my hedges did not prevent the portfolio from benefiting from most of May’s rise in the oil price. 

Now my conviction that the oil price has temporarily peaked has become even stronger.  Consequently the EIS futures strategy is full hedged.  The analysis leading to this conclusion follows. 

What Happens Next?

At the start of 2008, I predicted that crude would trade in a range of $80 - $115 this year, later amended to $120. That was a boldly bullish expectation at the time, so the fact that my price target has already been surpassed by so much so soon is an indication of oil’s very unusual move so far this year.   I’ve always said that in the short term, the price of oil can do anything and while that’s still true, my sense is that the nearly virtical rise in oil means that a pullback is overdue and therefore $135 is more likely than not to stand as a high water mark for a while.  “A while” is a technical term meaning 6 - 18 months. 

I say this for a number of reasons.  One rule of thumb is that commodities that rise sharply tend to reverse when put in the media spotlight.  I do not remember a media spotlight any brighter than it is today with regard to oil. 

Another is the imminent activation by Saudi Arabia of their new Khursaniyah field that should add 500 kb/d to production.  Another is the continuing growth in Iraqi crude which reached 2.5 mb/d last month, a post-invasion record.  And, while anything could happen in Nigeria, there seems to be at least as much upside potential as there is downside at this point.

A major consideration I think is the little noted impact of Queuing Theory on oil supply and demand.  There is no question but that the enormous oil price increase over such a limited time - up 2.5 times in just 16 months - should cause supply to increase and demand to decrease.  However, both demand and supply are subject to Queuing Theory which is a mathematical expression of the phenomenon we observe on a crowded highway when the front cars start to move but the rear cars must sit still for a while. 

Oil supply and demand is very much impacted by Queuing Theory, as one can easily imagine.  I discussed above some of the demand reductions happening in the U.S. and the time delay we see in that playing out.  The trend has only just started and it is occurring in other developed economies as well.  In many less developed economies the price mechanism has been aborted by subsidies and controls which are just starting to come off, as was also discussed above.  All of these delays are part of Queuing Theory at work. 

In terms of supply increasing, the high oil price is causing the reactivation of previously capped oil wells.   It will continue to cause increased attention to working over old fields.  There is a huge amount of oil left in the ground that at higher prices and with improved technology can be recovered.  In fact “oil bears” and some peak oil deniers use these old-field reserves as one of their primary arguments for saying that oil supplies will increase far more than is generally understood. 

Well, this phenomenon takes time to happen.  There are severe equipment and manpower shortages in the energy world.  A lot of challenging and difficult  things have to happen before the price incentive begins to work to bring increased quantities of oil to the surface.   But happen they will, in time.   Thus it is reasonable to expect that over the next year or two, natural oil field decline rates may be reduced as more investment is made in exploiting old fields.   In fact, we may well see oil supply increasing just as the oil price becomes “soft” - at least, compared with $135 a barrel.  That is the Queuing Theory at work. 

Megaprojects

Finally, I think we must pay more attention to the people who have been assembling data on oil field megaprojects, a bottom-up attempt to quantify the amount of new oil supply that will come on the global market each year for the foreseeable future (about seven years) from projects around the world.  As readers know, one of the guiding principles to my investment philosophy has been Chris Skrebowski’s work on megaprojects.   Simplifications are by definition distortions, but my very simplified understanding of his work is that a fair amount of new oil will come on line in 2008 and 2009, lesser amounts for the three next years, and very little after 2013. I mentioned this last month and suggested that oil megaprojects may increase oil supplies for a couple of years but now I would like to look more closely. 

A much larger group of people, many whom post on The Oil Drum, are working on a Wikipedia-based megaprojects analysis.  Their estimates, shown below in thousands of barrels per day of new oil flows added during a given year, are a lot larger than Skrebowski’s.  Here is what they see going forward:

image

For the sake of comparison, they say added flows in 2007 were 3,314 which was fairly typical of the five years prior to 2008.  Skrebowski in 2006 published his estimated numbers for the three years 2008 - 2010 as follows:

image

What to make of such enormous differences between Skrebowski and the Wikipedia people?  One interpretation is that the Wiki people have a more recent and intense effort and thus have simply picked up a lot more data than Skrebowski did and therefore their numbers are more accurate.   One problem with that idea is that we are now 5 months into 2008 and the price of oil is certainly not saying that new oil flow has doubled compared with last year.

A better interpretation, I think, is that the Wiki people worked off of historical corporate and other public announcements of expectations of production.  These announcements are likely to have over-estimated reality in two ways.  First, the actual flows in the initial year are likely to be far smaller than the ultimate flows that the announcements probably referenced.   Second, there have been far longer than normal delays in new capacity coming on stream because of equipment and personnel shortages.   It is entirely possible that Skrebowski, a professional oil analyst, pre-edited his estimates to account for these factors.

Trying to square this circle, I have adjusted the Wiki numbers by taking 35% off the flows in each year and adding those quantities to the flows two years later. Then, to account for the decline of these new fields, I have taken 5% of each year’s new production and used that amount to reduce production starting three years later.   There is no adjustment for any possible optimism included in the original public relations announcements.   Here is how these numbers come out:

image

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What about decline?  CERA says the global decline rate is 4.5%, which would be about 3.4 mb/d per year.  Others have estimated higher amounts.  Matt Simmons recently stated that he expects to see decline rates of 10% - 15%, rates that seem to be occurring in Mexico’s Cantarell field. It seems likely to me that as fields age, the global decline rate is likely to increase.  Therefore, I have projected it out starting at 4.5% and growing by .5% per year to reach 6.5% in 2015.  That translates to the following declines:

image

Does all this have any possible significance?  Well, first of all it does not predict new oil flows with any accuracy.   On the other hand, I think it has a lot of value as a general predictor of what sorts of changes in flows we might well expect over the next seven years, remembering that most major projects have seven years of visibility before production flows begin.   

What it says to me is that flows through 2011 may well be significantly higher  - by 1 to 1.5 mb/d - than they were during the past few years.  Then, at some point after 2012, they are likely - as Skrebowski has also forecasted - to fall off a cliff.   It suggests that new flows may substantially exceed declines for 2008 and possibly for the next five years if decline rates do not increase over that time.

On the other hand, the apparently healthy-looking net oil flows in 2010 and 2011 should be measured against the likely gains in oil demand by that time.  Let’s remember that demand in 2008 and probably 2009 should be somewhat diminished by reactions to the rapid price increases we have just seen - delayed according to Queuing Theory.  So the new oil flow increases in 2008 and perhaps 2009 would come against reduced demand increases.  Instead of demand increasing by 1.5 - 2 mb/d as in the recent past, it may increase by only 1 mb/d or less for the next year or two.  The IEA has already reduced their 2008 expected demand increase to 1.3 mb/d.

Thus, we may well see a respite in oil prices over the next year to two years.  I doubt that means oil would go much below $100 because I suspect OPEC would reduce supplies if that were to happen.  But we could well have a year of two of oil moving in a fairly tight range of $95 - $125.  Then after a year or two, demand will pick back up.  In three years, demand may be increasing at rates closer to 2 mb/d, particularly if prices are fairly level over the next year or two.  Combine that with declines that will be increasing, perhaps to 4 mb/d in three years and it is easy to see that prices could begin escalating in 2010 or 2011. 

But what is abundantly clear from the above numbers, regardless of what happens in the next few years, I think, is that starting sometime between 2011 and  2013, the world is going to experience a true oil supply crisis.  I am not the first person to make this observation.  Skrebowski has said the same thing.  Charlie Maxwell has said the same thing.  It seems clear that Matt Simmons would agree, as certainly would Boone Pickens. 

All these people know far more than I do about what I’ve been discussing.   I think what is remarkable is that a reasonable massaging of the best publicly available data can allow an analyst like myself working alone and without a long background in oil to come to the same conclusion - that a true oil crisis is within view. 

I’m not in the business of forecasting societal breakdowns or human tragedies.  If I were, however, I think the numbers we’ve been discussing here would cause me to pay a lot of attention. 

Is This Analysis Actionable?

I think it is.  I have adjusted both my equity and options-on-futures positions to de-emphasize oil for the short term.  In the futures account I have hedged the long term options with short term short positions. 

While I’ve not discussed natural gas in this letter, my sense is that gas is likely to outperform oil over the balance of the year.  Thus I have shifted assets into gas in both equities and the futures strategy. 

If the oil price stabilizes or declines from here as I forecast that should have positive implications for equities associated with global trade.  Thus I have maintained positions in shipping companies TBSI and DRYS and a few domestic railroads, all of which benefit from the need for countries like China to import grains and coal from long distances and from the general business of international trade. 

I also have a large position in SQM, a Chilean mining company with an outstanding portfolio that includes inputs to fertilizers and drugs, and, importantly, produces lithium.  This is the best way I know to play the enormous trend toward hybrid electrics and all-electrics that will use lithium-ion batteries.  Interestingly, SQM’s iodine is also used in solar thermal electrical generation, anther energy related trend that I believe will be huge.   It is disconcerting (looking forward) that SQM’s stock has risen so far and so fast.  On the other hand, SQM is a very unusual company in that every one of its products is in huge demand now and appears headed for much greater demand in the the future.  I recommend their annual report to you.

Interesting Times Are Here

And you know what that means.  Let’s keep our seat belts fastened, automotively and financially, as this interesting future unfolds.   Thank goodness for the blessings that life bestows in the meantime.   Not the least of which is offered - as my special treat for you this month - below.  Maxwell seems to like his parents garden, don’t you think?  And guess what?  He’s coming to visit us in New York very soon!   And then we’ll have him close by all summer in Crested Butte!

 

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Best wishes,

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More on this topic (What's this?)
Oil up $10 a barrel so far today
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"Why Oil Prices Must Fall"
Read more on Oil Prices at Wikinvest

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15 responses so far ↓

  • 1 fred poppe // Jun 3, 2008 at 8:04 pm

    It’s a well thought out scenario. Subsidies are being reduced globally. Major magazines covers full of oil. The public up in arms. Politicians pandering to the masses. Change of administration. Interesting times. After spending and profiting the past 3-4 yrs. in energy equities it’s hard to let go. Is Hedging with an ultra short ETF like DUG the answer? Oil service companies should’nt be effected as much by the price of oil, especially deep water drillers like RIG - but they are. - Anyway as a newcomer to your blog I do appreciate your sharing of wisdom and thoughts.

  • 2 Jack be Nibble // Jun 3, 2008 at 8:21 pm

    Mr. Kingsdale,

    So what happens to the first cars that exist the log jam?

  • 3 James A. (Jim) Stehr // Jun 3, 2008 at 9:02 pm

    Jim, I’m not only pleased with your article and your very helpful website, but I’m even more pleased to see that you have your priorities straight with closing emphasis on your beautiful grandson. Ahh, ultimately what it’s all about IMHO! Congratulations!

  • 4 paultaut // Jun 3, 2008 at 9:53 pm

    The first cars will be scrapped and used to build cars incorporating
    newer technologies.

    I do not have a clue where funds will be found to allow this to happen. There is no market for SUV’s and trucks presently. More GOV. intervention in the form of Tax credits?

    Oil prices dictate prices of drillers, new tech., all alternatives. They move in tandem. On the other hand, the refiners should benefit the most since the crack spread will widen dramatically.

    The biggest problem with Oil Sands is that new money has to be invested daily to keep the process going. It is essentially a mining process. Crude declines will seriously erode output from that arena.

    If alternatives are not subsidized, the potential rate of return will be diminished and spread farther into the future causing the deferment of projects and stock prices as well.

    But the most important thing (my opinion), is that just like the riots relating to food, riots relating to escalating refined product prices will occur in countries like India,Thailand, Malaysia,Indonesia, etc. and the subsequent attempt to appease will reoccur.

    What has really changed? Recognition, yes. Demand, yes. Supply, no. Someone said that the Saudi’s had a new field coming on line shortly, so what. Will they increase supply in the face of declining oil prices or just use it as leverage in the Cartel’s pecking order?

    So, while demand destruction is certainly occuring, supply can easily be reduced to stop the decline. It is in Opec’s interest to maintain prices above the costs needed to fund current appeasement projects internally, to extend the life of their reserves and to increase their exposure to non-oil related industries. They have just begun.

  • 5 paultaut // Jun 3, 2008 at 9:59 pm

    One other thing, weather, the first tropical storm of the season has come and gone without incident but another formation is already forming in the Atlantic.

    What will another hit to the Gulf do to oil prices this particular year.

  • 6 hughowens // Jun 4, 2008 at 5:05 am

    Yet another concise tidy summary of the modeling work by Skrebowski and the Wiki megaprojects analysis which TOD readers are well familiar with but Jim’s ability to “massage” the data with changing variables is what is instructive. Jim seems to ever be self effacing but it’s the generalists like Jim and perhaps Simmons and Pickens who see the big picture so much better than the specialists. Thanks again Jim.

  • 7 chip // Jun 4, 2008 at 7:05 am

    Yesterday’s stats about car sales outpacing truck sales for first time since early 90’s and GM’s acknowledgment that their shift to small-economy cars is permanent really signals peak oil has arrived..it validates peak oil and in typical fashion,a less than nimble US Manufacturer has missed the boat by 2+ years.The momentum for alternative energy worldwide is unstoppable and I’m happy to report [based on my research] that the US leads that investment in both dollars and installs.There are 1.000’s of US companies immersed in alt.energy and I hope Moores law of doubling capacity-productivity every 18 months can apply to this real and burgeoning field.The next billionaires will emerge from the field of alt.energy.It is 100x bigger than the internet and every evolution-revolution that has preceded it.

  • 8 Jack be Nibble // Jun 5, 2008 at 5:09 am

    Mr. Kingsdale,

    What happens if the “first car” to leave the log jam is a stock investor who thinks that the herd is going to bail and that investor decides to hedge or short, or even get out by going to cash? I’m thinking that you are useing the “queuing theory” as a rational to cover your long term bet based on the idea that there will be a temporary change in price due to the herd’s awarness. In essence, you are say, still a cow but not a bull and don’t wish to be a bear. I am of the thinking that long term, which should be defined as in the life time frame of the investor’s own life, should be considered in months rather then years. And when you take positions in futures you are declaring you’d rather not own your position up front. This lack of desire to own up front displays doubt.

  • 9 Tommy Atkins // Jun 6, 2008 at 10:47 am

    Jim:
    I must be missing something here, Jim. You started out good but then you did two things: 1) your numbers don’t match your conclusions; and 2) you neglected the demand-side altogether. If I take the supply-side numbers and simply subtract the annual declines from the annual additions, I get positive numbers for 4 years, then negative, meaning that supply will increase for 4 years, then decline. But if you subtract the demand increase (even limited to 1mb/d per year, less than the current IEA forecast), we’re totally in the red- by almost 5mb/d in 2010 alone. Even using the more optimistic Wiki numbers, we still go negative by 2010. And if you also use the IEA’s 1.3mb/d annual demand increase (more likely if we’re looking at two years of supply surplus), you’re about 2.5mb/d short in 2010 and then really go down fast. So bottom line looks like best case is two years of relief followed by trouble in 2010. If Wiki is overly high, we’re in trouble already.
    Tom

  • 10 Jim Kingsdale // Jun 6, 2008 at 11:10 am

    Well I did say that oil could do anything in the short term, but I certainly did not expect it to prove me so right about that and so WRONG about the short term direction that I foresaw. The market is ever humbling. Jim

  • 11 Jim Kingsdale // Jun 6, 2008 at 11:32 am

    Tommy, my method of adjusting the Wiki supply estimates was three-fold. First I adjusted new supply each year by reducing it by 35% and secondly by adding that 35% in to the supply number two years later. The idea is not that the projects do not exist, nor that they are overestimated. Rather that they are simply delayed.

    Finally I adjusted for declines by assuming that starting 3 years after a given year’s new production that number will decline by 4.5% each year. So in year 4 there is an adjustment for the decline in year 1’s production and in year 5 there is an adjustment for years 1 and 2, etc.

    However, in reviewing the numbers I see that I also took 4.5% off of each year’s production in the year of its production. This is not a big number and does not change my conclusions, but it was a clerical mistake.

    Let me repeat for emphasis that the numbers are not intended to be taken as meaningful in a literal sense. They are only intended to give us a general idea of trends and rough measures of quantity.

    So my bottom line was not that a supply crunch will come in 2011 or 2012 or 2013. Rather that during the period of a couple of years from now we should see some bump in supply capacity but then it should tighten more in 2010 and fall off a cliff sometime around 2013 or 2014 (Skrebowski’s projection).

    There other thing to remember is that this is only a “megaprojects” analysis. It does not take into account political events or greater or lesser degrees of hoarding or sudden increases in decline rates (for example from a fall off at Ghawar, perhaps), or even major changes in demand that could occur during any of the years covered by the projection.

  • 12 Jim Kingsdale // Jun 6, 2008 at 11:35 am

    One other thing: neither supply nor demand are cumulated. The analysis is only of the change in supply and demand each year. The idea is to determine whether supply is getting more or less adequate by year, not on a cumulative basis.

  • 13 Tommy Atkins // Jun 6, 2008 at 12:46 pm

    Ah, but accumulation is important, especially because of the demand-side. Even without accumulation, using your numbers from above: (Wiki-Adjusted) less declines less increased demand (at only 1mb/d per year), you’re negative right off the bat in 2008 (4268-3400)-1000 = neg 432kb/d. Accumulation is important because by 2010, demand increases by 3 to 4mb/d. And if supplies actually do rise significantly the next two years (as in the unadjusted Wiki numbers), the IEA’s higher demand increases are probably more accurate. In fact, they could be low (as they usually are). So in 2010, you’ve got (4268+3795+4626) less (3400+3870+4350) less (3 x 1300) = negative 2.831mb/d. If the Wiki estimates are right, things are much better, not going negative until 2011. But if Skrebowski is right, we’ll be 1.5mb/d short in 2008!

  • 14 Tommy Atkins // Jun 6, 2008 at 4:02 pm

    …And another thought. I’ll concede accumulation a little on the demand side IF demand exceeds supply (it’s hard to make a case for accumulating negatives), but the one that I think is the key is the decline curve. Everything else has risk on both sides; geophysical decline has only negative risk. (OK OK, I’m discounting the faith-based technology gods). But the bottom line is that if supply is constrained by, say, geopolitical risk (like war), then every year you lose some supply, the decline curve is still working against you. Regardless of recession, depression, or any short-term slackened demand. You still slide down the decline curve. And unlike the geopolitical declines, you can’t ever get this back. So when demand returns, you’re permanently in a hole. I have an Exxon chart from a couple of years ago that showed 4-6% decline worldwide for the total of oil and gas. That’s a steep slope. And it DOES accumulate. Every two or three years, you lose the entire output of KSA or Russia. Just where do you think we’re going to make that up? Tupi? PetroBras now says they underestimated the development cost a bit. They say it will cost a quarter of a TRILLION dollars to develop it. Bush may have found that kind of money to fight for Iraqi oil, but BRAZIL? Not anytime soon.

    So I think all the risk factors are working against us. Sure, prices will drop if we slip into a deep recession. Short term. But we’re still sliding down the decline curve. Sooner or later, the hole gets pretty deep.

  • 15 Mark L. // Jun 6, 2008 at 4:10 pm

    Jim,
    As always, thanks again for your insight. As a new investor, learning the ropes, I can’t thank you enough for enlightening my mind and being a catalyst for my investment strategies.
    A question… I agree that a correction is over due and that more and more people are becoming aware of the critical nature of our energy supplies. However, I don’t understand your thinking why you have pared back so heavily your Alt Energy portfolio position. It seems that so much of what I read and hear on the streets is focusing on Alt Energy and ways to save money on energy bills. More and more people and businesses are aware of the energy crisis - pretty tough to ignore when the cost is over $100 to fill up a tank anymore. Alt Energy, is becoming a central theme around the water cooler (along with American Idol! - ha!). If society is becoming more aware of the impending energy crunch will there not be more and more emphasis placed, tax credits, R&D, new businesses, ideas, larger Cap Exp towards Alt forms of Energy? It seems this should be a time to build upon our positions. Are we overbought in this sector?

    Thanks again for your investment perspective. From the other side of the Rockies.
    Mark

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