Ready For $262/Barrel Oil ?

Posted on Monday, January 30 at 12:28 by Anonymous
"U.S. power and influence has declined precipitously because of Iraq and the war on terror and that creates an incentive for anyone who wants to make trouble to go ahead and make it." As an example, Soros pointed to the regime in Iran, which is heading towards a confrontation with the West over its nuclear power program and doesn't show any signs of compromising. "Iran is on a collision course and I have a difficulty seeing how such a collision can be avoided," he says. Another emboldened troublemaker is Russian president Vladimir Putin, Soros said, citing Putin's recent decision to briefly shut the supply of natural gas to Ukraine. The only bit of optimism Soros could offer was that the next 12 months would be most dangerous in terms of any price shocks, because beginning in 2007 he predicts new oil supplies will come online. Hermitage's Bill Browder doesn't yet have the stature of George Soros. But his $4 billion Moscow-based Hermitage fund rose 81.5 percent last year and is up a whopping 1780 percent since its inception a decade ago. A veteran of Salomon Bros. and Boston Consulting Group, the 41-year old Browder has been especially successful because of his contrarian take; for example, he continued to invest in Russia when others fled following the Kremlin's assault on Yukos. Doomsdays 1 through 6 To come up with some likely scenarios in the event of an international crisis, his team performed what's known as a regression analysis, extrapolating the numbers from past oil shocks and then using them to calculate what might happen when the supply from an oil-producing country was cut off in six different situations. The fall of the House of Saud seems the most far-fetched of the six possibilities, and it's the one that generates that $262 a barrel. More realistic -- and therefore more chilling -- would be the scenario where Iran declares an oil embargo a la OPEC in 1973, which Browder thinks could cause oil to double to $131 a barrel. Other outcomes include an embargo by Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez ($111 a barrel), civil war in Nigeria ($98 a barrel), unrest and violence in Algeria ($79 a barrel) and major attacks on infrastructure by the insurgency in Iraq ($88 a barrel). http://money.cnn.com/2006/01/27/news/international/pluggedin_fortune/index.htm?cnn=yes [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on February 1, 2006]

Note: http://money.cnn.com/20...

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Comments

  1. by avatar Jacob
    Mon Jan 30, 2006 9:16 pm
    Don't believe everything you get feom CNN.

  2. Mon Jan 30, 2006 9:57 pm
    We just went through another entire election with no mention anywhere of peak oil. Peak oil will be the single defining economic factor in the years to come. It will lay waste to government budgets. As for the new oil coming on line in 2007 I am aware of no new oil fields being developed that are over 500 million barrels. Since we currently consume about 84 million barrels a day, that's less than a week’s supply.

    We are sleep walking into disaster. The lack of action by most elected governments is simply astounding and dangerously irresponsible.

  3. Tue Jan 31, 2006 12:48 am
    Another way to look at this is "is the US$ going down and oil will no longer be traded in US$ (-vs- euros???), hence its US$ price irrelevant?" It won't be traded in C$ but that may be a more relevant concern for true canadian sovereignists if this topic is still relevant?

    ---
    "We are all in this together somehow, some more than others somehow"

  4. by RPW
    Tue Jan 31, 2006 5:59 am
    Boy! Wouldn't we put a crimp in their plans if we actually started using oil EFFICIENTLY..........!

    ---
    RickW

  5. by Deacon
    Mon Feb 06, 2006 7:33 am
    RickW, please tell that to China.

    As for oil going at 262 a barrel, not likely.

    The amount of civil unrest that would cause in the US alone would stagger the imagination.

    Although it would play nicely into the hands of the BushCo fascists, wouldn't it?



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