Gold & Oil
By Eric Hommelberg
April 25, 2005
Gold & Oil is chapter VIII of the Gold Drivers Report. It
discusses the historical Gold/Oil ratio which suggest a price
of Gold exceeding $800 nowadays and shines a light a light on
previous oil shocks and their consequences. This is important
since the era of cheap Oil will only be found in History books
from now on. Sure, Alan Greenspan comes to the rescue every now
and then to assure us that high Oil prices are just temporary,
but unfortunately his statements contradict those of many industry
experts such as Matthew Simmons, Colin Campbell and Kenneth Deffeyes
who all claim that we're approaching PEAK-OIL at an alarmingly
high speed. It could be very well the case that PEAK-OIL is here
right now but unfortunately we've to wait a few years in order
to confirm. This chapter discusses PEAK-OIL and why it is about
to bring a nasty Oil shock in the coming years.
As we will see, previous oil shocks were a perfect call for higher
inflation figures and recession. Will this time be any different?
According to Alan Greenspan yes, he says that higher oil prices
won't be much of a problem for the economy these days and inflation
won't pop up as during the seventies. Well, energy experts such
as Mathew Simmons and Colin Campbell do think otherwise. They
make a powerful case for the end of cheap energy. The
nasty consequence of a lack of cheap energy is the end of economic
growth. Will we ever come out of a recession again for a sustained
period of time? Richard Heinberg author of 'The
Party's Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies'
doesn't think so. Matthew Simmons (energy advisor for Dick Cheney)
just uses different words, he says:
"there is not one
serious economist in this world who would say that you can have
significant economic growth without the availability of cheap
energy." END.
Simmons rules out the possibility
of cheap energy coming decades. When asked if there is a solution
to the impending energy crisis he said:
"I don't think there is
one. The solution is to pray. Under the best of circumstances,
if all prayers are answered there will be no crisis for maybe
two years. After that it's a certainty." END.
Professor Kenneth Deffeyes
(author from the book 'Beyond
Oil: The View from Hubbert's Peak' has some unpleasant news
for us as well. He says:
"So the big News
is: World Oil production has ceased growing, and by the year
2019 production will be down to 90% of the peak-level. This is
not your standard News story." END.
No standard News indeed: What
is going on you wonder? They're just a bunch of Alarmist speaking
right? Otherwise politicians and News directors would have picked
it up long time ago right? So no need to worry, all is well as
Greenspan says right? Well, lots of questions which deserves
serious attention. Time for further investigation:
Let's focus on the following issues:
1. Previous Oil shocks and
their consequences
2. Gold as a financial protection against coming Oil shock
3. PEAK-OIL and the end of cheap energy
1 - Previous Oil shocks and their
consequences.
Stephen Leeb (president
of Leeb Capital Management and editor of the prestigious newsletter
'The Complete Investor') wrote an excellent book last year called
'The
Oil Factor: Protect Yourself and Profit from the Coming Energy
Crisis'. In this book he explains how to use the Oil indicator
in order to predict upcoming stock bear markets and economic
recessions.
In an interview with Jim Puplava on the Financial
Sense Newshour Stephen Leeb says:
"It's so easy,
nothing has been a more reliable indicator for an upcoming recession
as the price of Oil. Every major bear market, every major economic
decline has been preceded by a large spike in oil prices. The
73-74 recession, recession of beginning 80's and the recession
of 2000. Oil prices jumped 80% between 1999 and 2000. Oil prices
have been the most important indicator of major economic disasters.
Whenever Oil prices rises about 80% from year ago levels, a fair
chance does exists that a recession/bear market will follow."
END.
So any sudden increase in the
price of Oil should be something to fear or at least pay serious
attention to it. Furthermore Stephen Leeb warns for the rapid
rise in the price of Oil in the face of a less rapid growing
demand. He says:
"When you are facing
rising commodity prices in the face of a declining or less rapid
growing demand, it tells you something. It tells you that you
can't count on the supply being there when needed. It tells you
that the world has changed." END.
It tells you that the world
has changed. Stephen Leeb sounds serious, maybe even a bit alarming.
What consequences Stephen Leeb expects from rapid rising Oil
prices?
Stephen Leeb says:
"Sharply rising
energy prices, similar the the 70's, will lead to double digit
inflation figures over the next 10 years. It's going to turn
the economy on its head." END.
Higher Oil prices leading to
higher inflation is well illustrated in the chart below:
But wait, the FED can fight
inflation by engineering a recession (rapid increase of interest
rates) as former FED chief Paul Volcker did in the early 80's
right?
Stephen Leeb says:
"Today, we cannot
engineer a recession. In 1980 when Paul Volcker took over the
head of the FED, he was able to say: Well, inflation is at 12%,
I don't care what it takes, I'm getting Inflation down and he
was willing to engineer a big recession.
"Today because of all that debt, that's not a policy
alternative. Sure , the FED will raise interest rates a little
bit here and there but not in such a dramatic way to create a
recession. In the face of the giant total US debt, a recession
would be a catastrophe." END.
Stephen Leeb's Oil indicator
has worked remarkably well over the last 30 years. If this Oil
indicator is going to perform as well in the future as it did
before than investors should be on high alert for possible nasty
future economic events and be prepared to take appropriate measures
in order to protect themselves financially.
2 - Gold as a financial protection
against the coming Oil shock
So why to buy Gold
when Oil prices are rising rapidly?
The reason for this is two-fold:
- Gold as an Inflation Hedge
- Gold/Oil ratio says Gold is
a screaming Buy.
Gold as an Inflation Hedge
Gold is being considered as the ultimate Inflation Hedge.
The most obvious example is of course the 70's whereby Gold really
took off when inflation kicked in.
In 1977 when inflation began to pick up steam it reached 9% by
1978. Gold followed by breaking its previous high of $200. When
Inflation hit 10% in 1979, Gold really took off skyrocketing
to $500. Excitement kicked in and a Gold rush mania launched
the yellow metal to its all time high of $850 in 1980, see chart
below:
In times of Inflation you are
losing money by holding paper money. A flight from paper money
into real money (Gold) is just a logical result.
The Gold/Oil ratio
The Gold/Oil ratio says Gold is a screaming Buy.
Over the last 30 years Gold has been trading at an average of
16-17 barrels of Oil per ounce of Gold. At the moment Gold is
dirt cheap compared to Oil and trades for about 8 barrels of
Oil for an ounce of Gold. Such extremes won't last for a long
period of time so what gives, lower Oil prices down the road
or Gold catching up?
According to Matthew Simmons we shouldn't count on cheap Oil
anymore coming decades. Let's repeat once more what he said when
asked if there is a solution to the impending energy crisis he
said:
"I don't think there is
one. The solution is to pray. Under the best of circumstances,
if all prayers are answered there will be no crisis for maybe
two years. After that it's a certainty." END.
So with these kind of statements
in mind, would you bet on lower Oil prices or higher Gold prices?
(see chart below).
OK, fine you'll say, higher
Oil prices should make a case for Gold indeed but how serious
are those people screaming about the end of cheap Oil? Should
we take their claims seriously? Why hasn't the mainstream media
hardly picked upon it? Why didn't we hear anything about it from
politicians lately? I've heard that at least for the next 30
years there should be plenty of Oil, what about that? Well, many
questions which deserves serious attention.
3 - PEAK-OIL and the End of Cheap
Energy
Alarmist preaching
a peak in oil production within a few years are referring to
studies by Shell geophysicist Dr. Marion King Hubbert. Hubbert
predicted already in 1956 that US domestic Oil production would
peak around 1970. Unfortunately Hubbert wasn't taken seriously
at all. But what happened? US Oil production indeed peaked in
1970 as predicted by Hubbert but still it took many years before
geologists were willing to admit that Hubbert was right and that
US Oil production indeed had peeked in 1970.
So based on what theory Hubbert made his predictions and how
reliable is this theory in order to predict a future peak in
world wide oil production? It goes far beyond the scope of this
article in order to explain the scientific background of PEAK-OIL
(Hubbert's Peak) , it'll just focus on its conclusions backed
up with data available for the last 100 years.
Hubbert says more or less that oil discoveries and oil production
do follow a so called Bell Curve. The production curve follows
the discovery curve with a 40 year delay.
Prof. Kenneth Deffeyes, who wrote the book 'Hubbert's
Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage,' explains
in detail the scientific background of Hubbert's theory. But
let's focus on just two important issues here:
- Oil discoveries do follow
a Bell Curve
- Oil production does follow
a Bell Curve with a 40 year delay compared to the discovery curve.
OK, but what does actual data
regarding oil discoveries and oil production tell us so far?
Could Hubbert be right?
Dr. Colin Campbell is most probably the dean among Hubbert's
followers. He worked for Texaco and Amoco as an exploration geologist
working in countries as Borneo, Trinidad, Colombia, Australia,
Papua New Guinea, the US, Ecuador, the UK, Ireland and Norway.
Later on he was associated with Petroconsultants in Geneva, Switzerland
and brought about the creation of the Association for the Study
of Peak Oil (ASPO). Dr. Campbell did a tremendous amount of research
regarding Peak-Oil and published his findings in his book 'The
Coming Oil Crisis.' His findings indeed confirmed
what Hubbert predicted so many years ago.
Let's focus first on data available regarding world wide Oil
discoveries. We'll see that the peak of Oil discoveries already
occurred in the 60's, see chart below:
Now please digest this carefully.
If Hubbert is right then the world Oil production should peak
somewhere during this decade (40 years after discovery peak).
But the problem is that you can't say with certainty that Oil
production indeed has peaked until several years after the fact.
So the only thing we can do is to analyze the production curves
of oil producing countries which had a discovery peak way earlier
than the 60's. A good example is the US which saw it's discovery
rate peaking during the early 30's. Hubbert concluded that the
US therefore should experience a peak in Oil production somewhere
during the early seventies. At the time Hubbert made that prediction
in 1956 he was ridiculed by Oil experts and economists, but nevertheless
Hubbert's prediction came true in 1970, see chart below:
So the US Oil production peeked
in 1970 indeed and declined ever since then just as Hubbert predicted.
When examining the production curves of all Non-OPEC countries
combined we'll see a production curve which matches the predicted
Bell Curve almost 100%. See chart below.
So what do we see so far:
- US Oil production already
peaked in 1970.
- Non OPEC Oil production already
peaked in the early 90's.
What does it tell us? It tells
us that the world oil production still hasn't peeked because
OPEC Oil production still hasn't peaked. So in order to make
predictions about world peak production one should focus on the
main OPEC producers.
So when will OPEC peak?
According to Bush energy advisor Matthew Simmons OPEC will peak
when Saudi Arabia peaks.
So what about Saudi Arabia? When will Saudi Arabia peak?
Matthew Simmons says:
"When Gharwar peaks
(Gharwar is the largest oil field ever found) Saudi Arabia peaks
and when Saudi Arabia peaks the whole World peaks." END.
But the problem is that Gharwar
is aging rapidly. It's one of the oldest Oil fields in production
and lots of water injection is needed in order to keep production
going. At one moment more water injection won't be able to keep
production going and Oil production will fall off a cliff meaning
the Oil field dies.. According to Matthew Simmons, the end for
Gharwar must be near. It goes far beyond the scope of this article
to specify why Matthew Simmons does think so but interested readers
can study Simmons findings themselves at:
Matthew Simmons: Saudi Arabian Oil - A Glass Half Full Or Half
Empty
http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/files/Hudson%20Institute.pdf
In February this year Matthew Simmons came out with his strongest
warning yet:
Expert says Saudi oil may have peaked
By Adam Porter
Tuesday 22 February 2005,
Energy investment banker Matthew
Simmons, of Simmons & Co International, has been outspoken
in his warnings about peak oil before. His new statement is his
strongest yet, "we may have already passed peak oil."
The subject of peak oil, the point at which the world's finite
supply of oil begins to decline, is a hot topic in the industry.
Arguments are commonplace over whether it will happen at all,
when it will happen or whether it has already happened. Simmons,
a Republican adviser to the Bush-Cheney energy plan, believes
it "is the world's number one problem, far more serious
than global warming."
Saudi oil peaking?
Speaking exclusively to Aljazeera, Simmons came out with
a statement that, if proven true over time, could herald by far
the biggest energy crisis mankind has known.
"If Saudi Arabia have damaged their fields, accidentally
or not, by overproducing them, then we may have already passed
peak oil. Iran has certainly peaked, there is no way on Earth
they can ever get back to their production of six million barrels
per day (mbpd)." END.
So Mr. Simmons tells us that
if Gharwar peaks the whole world peaks. With that in mind this
next statement from the Bank of Montreal won't make you feel
much happier either:
Bank says Saudi's top field in decline
April 12, 2005
Speculation over the actual
size of Saudi Arabia's oil reserves is reaching fever pitch as
a major bank says the kingdom's - and the world's - biggest field,
Gharwar, is in irreversible decline.
The Bank of Montreal's analyst Don Coxe, working from their Chicago
office, is the first mainstream number-cruncher to say that Gharwar's
days are fated.
"The combination of the news that there's no new Saudi Light
coming on stream for the next seven years plus the 27% projected
decline from existing fields means Hubbert's Peak has arrived
in Saudi Arabia," says Coxe, referring to data compiled
by the International Energy Association's (IEA) August 2004 monthly
report. END.
The Bank of Montreal is not
an exception, French Investment Bank Ixis-CIB isn't too optimistic
either on future Oil prices:
Will oil strike $380 a barrel by 2015?
By Adam Porter in Perpignan, France
April 21, 2005
A report prepared by energy
economists at the French investment bank Ixis-CIB has warned
crude oil prices could touch $380 a barrel by 2015.
Analysts Patrick Artus and Moncef Kaabi said in the next 10 years
demand for oil will outstrip supply by around 8 million barrels
per day (mbpd).
"If one takes into account the level of previous oil shocks
such as in the 1970's, we don't think a price level of $380 per
barrel is out of the question," they said. END.
You would probably wonder that
if this situation is so dire indeed why politicians and or news
directors don't seem to bother.
Prof. Kenneth Deffeyes says:
"My own feeling
is that editors and news directors aren't interested in another
Chicken Little story. No politician was going to run on a platform
promising blood sweat and tears." END.
But hey, still there're brave
congress man who aren't afraid to pick up the issue and to raise
serious questions. Congressman Roscoe Bartlett, Chairman of the
Projection Forces Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee,
gave an hour long presentation on Peak Oil to the US Congress
on Monday March 14:
Peak Oil Presentation in the US Congress
By Roscoe Bartlett
Mar 14, 2005
Let me mention that M. King
Hubbert looked at the world situation. He was joined by another
scientist, Colin Campbell, who is still alive, an American citizen
who lives in Scotland. Using M. King Hubbert's predictive techniques,
oil was predicted to reach a maximum in about 1995, without perturbations.
But there were some perturbations. One of the perturbations was
1973, the Arab oil embargo. Other perturbations were the oil
price shocks and a worldwide recession that reduced the demand
for oil. And so the peak that might have occurred in 1995 will
occur later. How much later? That is what we are looking at this
evening. There is a lot of evidence that suggests that if not
now, then very quickly we should see world production of oil
peak. END.
[Entire transcript can be found here:
So with the peak of world Oil
production in sight, what kind of production curve could we expect
for total World Oil production?
Dr. Colin Campbell calculates the following production curves:
Any case whether it's the high
case, base case or low case, what should be obvious is that the
end of World Oil production increase is near. A World which requires
ever increasing amounts of energy (eg China, India, increasing
world population etc) and facing a limit in increasing Oil production
simply has to face an increase in Oil prices. It simple as that.
Demand outstrips supply by a great margin coming years. Yes,
people arguing that there is still Oil left for 30 years, they
are right. The Earth contained approximately 2 trillion barrels
of Oil. We just consumed 1 trillion barrels of Oil by now so
still 1 trillion barrels of Oil to go. With current demand of
80 million barrels a day it's easy to see why people come up
with an estimate of another 30 years of Oil supply. Again, it's
not the problem of No Oil, but it's the End of Cheap Oil what
causes economic turbulence. Matthew Simmons says that Oil prices
exceeding $100 / barrel is unavoidable and that should be a wake
up call for all investors out there because the end of cheap
energy could lead to an unwelcome economic slowdown.
Highlights:
- Oil discoveries have peeked
already 40 years ago
- According to M King Hubbert
Production peaks follow Discovery peaks after approximately 40
years
- US Oil production already
peaked in 1970
- Non OPEC Oil production already
peaked in the early 90's
- World Oil production will
peak when OPEC peaks
- OPEC peaks when Saudi Arabia
peaks
- Saudi Arabia peaks when Ghawar
peaks
- Ghawar is aging rapidly and
its life expectancy isn't rosy. Matthew Simmons says that the
end is in sight
- Prof. Kenneth Deffeyes predicts
PEAK-OIL to happen in 2005
- Bank of Montreal says that
Gharwar is in already in decline
- World Oil peak production
means the End of Cheap Oil
- The End of Cheap Oil means
continuing rising Oil prices which translates itself into Oil
shocks
- French investment bank Ixis-CIB
has warned crude oil prices could touch $380 a barrel by 2015
- Previous Oil shocks were an
perfect call for recession/Inflation
- Gold is the ultimate Hedge
against Inflation
- Rising Oil prices brings the
historical Gold/Oil average way out of balance
- Historical average of the
Gold/Oil ratio suggest a price of Gold exceeding $800 nowadays
Historical average of the Gold/Oil
ratio suggest a price of Gold exceeding $800 nowadays. Please
think about that:
April 22, 2005
Eric Hommelberg
email: ehommelberg@golddrivers.com
website: www.golddrivers.com
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