A complete collapse in oil prices
Submitted by gjohnsit on Mon, 04/20/2020 - 3:10pm
I know what you are thinking: "That title is hyperbolic clickbait".
Not this time.
When I say "complete collapse in oil prices" I mean complete collapse in oil prices!
That's not a typo. That's a negative number on oil futures.
But if you only care about the spot price, check it out.
One penny for a barrel of oil.
Is this the end of the petrodollar? Or capitalism?
Comments
Maybe both?
"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11
It gets worse
New Mexico’s
Is negative too, of course. Our state budget relies heavily on the revenue. Major cuts are coming.
"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11
If it goes on long enough
it could be the end of KSA. Russia has lots of resources, KSA not so much.
We can hope that it's the end of fracking.
"The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function." -- Albert Bartlett
"A species that is hurtling toward extinction has no business promoting slow incremental change." -- Caitlin Johnstone
There's a downside too
Think 100,000 unemployed oil workers in Texas and North Dakota.
fracking is speeding up
the demise of earth
100,000 dirty jobs
is chump change
Russia is the only country in the world
that has every element on the periodic table.
EVERY element? — Hassium? Nihonium? Tennessine? Oganesson?
(There’s some crazy new names of elements in the periodic table nowadays.)
I’m old enough to remember when “mendelevium” and “lawrencium” were new — hence prone to use by Hollywood and other corporate mind-shapers when a writer needed to handwave some weak plot point with pseudo-scientific gabble.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AppliedPhlebotinum
All through my young years, I hoped such discoveries would lead to a breakthrough as good in the eyes of both G~d and humanity as nuclear bombs are evil, but no dice.
Yes. But only for a few hundred milliseconds
at most.
Long enough for Wall Street to do high-frequency trading
https://lite.qwant.com/?q=high+frequency+speed+trading+wall+street&t=web
But taking delivery when commodity futures expire could be a little problematic.
“Oops! Well, it’s gone now. But it did exist for a few milliseconds and was in there at the moment I sold it to you, trust me.”
This could be a feature
Taking delivery in commodity futures is rarely done. But, if the customer wanted to take delivery, it could be produced at the moment of delivery. It would then become the buyer's responsibility of taking it home or reselling.
I do believe this could become one of the main uses for quantum computers. Just think of the fantastic fortunes to be made. The element could be bought and sold 100,000 times before it exceeded it's use by date. The 99,999th sale could be sold to a pension fund.
We will call it the Schrödinger Pension Fund.
I was idly reading about Astatine yesterday
The freaky thing I learned was that it is so radioactive (h/l 8.1 hours) that you can’t make a sample because is vaporises itself(!)
We can’t save the world by playing by the rules, because the rules have to be changed.
- Greta Thunberg
The damn Chinese must have caused this /s
They are now taking advantage of low prices to fill up their reserves. The US oil reserve is now full and I read the US government is considering paying oil companies to leave it in the ground.
(85 million tons of oil = 700 million bbls.)
saw evidence of the salt domes
in the Louisiana bayous
used to store petroleum
another nightmare awaiting
compromise
Commentary
I worked with an oilfield support company for almost 40 years. Some of our guys stay up on the oil situation closely. A former co-worker posted this earlier today. I thought it made quite a bit of sense. (I don't think the link can be accessed by most folks, or I'd provide it. Sorry.)
I know less about economics than most of you. And...
even less about futures and commodities etc trading. I've seen several people on twitter and elsewhere suggest this would be an ideal time to nationalize the oil industry and/or push through some of the energy infrastructure parts of the Green New Deal. Like I said, Ideally.
So, how does this even happen with a multinational corporation? If anyone could give a timeline or explanation of what steps would need to be taken, in theory, to begin to wind down the fossil fuel industry, or even just say Chevr*n, I would appreciate it. Because I just don't see it happening.
How does the price of oil, as determined by the speculators and gamblers affect the bottom line of the companies that pump the oil? And what does this mean for say Saudi Arabia? Venezuela?
Thanks if you have the time.
I'll give it a shot...
First of all, this doesn't mean the oil industry is dead. It's going to take a lot more than this to kill it. Maybe military action.
What's happened is that the bottom has dropped out of demand. Look at pictures of the great cities of the world, for example:
36 Eerie Photos Of Empty Places
What do you notice? No damned cars! And some goats.
Production is dropping, but not as fast as demand, so storage has filled (where else can it go?). As noted above, this left nobody to close out the speculators' positions when the contracts expired. They had to pay people to take their contracts off their hands.
Each producer wants to be the one who still manages to sell their product in order to keep their cash flowing, letting someone else cut their production. That's the whole point of OPEC, that everybody agrees to share the pain. The lowest cost producers, like KSA, can still make a small profit with very low oil prices. Conventional wells can be shut down with very little impact beyond a loss of cash flow. Offshore oil platforms are leased, and the deep water platforms are horrendously expensive, they can't really afford to shut down. Frackers need a premium price to make a profit. The thing is, fracked wells are financed with bonds and they need cash flow to service the debt. If they don't do it, a bankruptcy court will make them do it. So they have to keep pumping no matter what the price until the wells deplete. KSA and Venezuela need cash flow to keep their economies afloat. Russia has a diversified economy, the lost oil revenue hurts but isn't fatal.
So there are limits. If demand is too high, everything is pumped at full speed but production just can't keep up, new production can't come on line fast enough, and you have to destroy demand with high prices. If demand is too low, the system can't shut down fast enough due to economic pressures, and with the lockdown you can't stimulate demand with low prices.
Is this a good time to nationalize the oil industry? Ask yourself, why on Earth would we want to? So that their losses can be socialized and the investors made whole? All the oil needs to stay in the ground forever, which means ultimately the value of an oil company is zero. Their market caps reflect a fantasy of continued operations.
How would nationalization work if you wanted to go that way? The government takes advantage of crashing oil prices and the associated drop in the price of oil stocks to buy up stock at a better price, creating money out of thin air to do so. They could call it a "market intervention to support the stock market" or whatever propaganda plays well on TV. Norway holds a controlling interest in their national oil company, they didn't buy the whole thing. You could go either way.
"The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function." -- Albert Bartlett
"A species that is hurtling toward extinction has no business promoting slow incremental change." -- Caitlin Johnstone
perhaps pay the extractors a subsidy
to keep the carbon in the ground
eliminating the subsidy to extract it
there then the people inhabiting the earth
(or oceans) above said reserves would
derive interest, easing out the extractors