| The Casey
Files
I recall asking my father, many years
ago, his opinion on some matter of world affairs. He was a man of broad
knowledge and experience but few words-at least when he was talking to
me. His answer was: "It's all a matter of economics." Cryptic, in that
it didn't answer anything, but profound, in that it answered everything.
A couple of years later I asked him
another question, on another big topic. His answer was: "It's all a matter
of psychology." Both answers were absolutely right, of course, and equally
applicable to every field of human action.
It would be so much neater if I could
just leave it at that but, at about the same time I received the "psychology"
answer, I was talking with a Sgt. Major Max Trujillo about a related question.
Max was quite philosophically inclined, especially for someone with his
background. His answer was: "It's all a matter of semantics."
The fact of the matter is that all
three answers are correct, depending on the circumstances you are confronted
with.
Which brings us to the following
essay by Dave Forest, editor of our Casey Energy Speculator. As you’ll
read, he has come across some interesting data that suggests that politics
may have more to do with the recent pullback in oil prices than meets the
eye.
And, as we all know, politics is
just an extension of psychology.
Doug Casey
Who’s Keeping Oil Down?
Oil had energy investors reaching
for the Tums the last few weeks.
After crude tagged a record intra-day
high of $78.40 on July 14, it drifted lower through the end of summer and
on August 29 closed below $70 for the first time since June 20. On September
4, the sell-off accelerated: WTI closed at $68.60 and continued falling
throughout the week, finally bottoming below $61, a price that hadn’t been
seen since March 10.
Along the way, it helped pull the
TSX Venture Exchange—which tends to live and die at the hands of energy
and resource stocks—down more than 10%.
So, what happened? Mainstream financial
media blamed crude’s tumble on everything from Iran playing nice with the
U.S. to a so far hurricane-less hurricane season in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.
But any intelligent observer can see that the fall was too hard and too
sudden to be caused by these factors alone.
More than anything, this sell-off
looked like it was caused by seasonal and technical factors. Crude is almost
always weak in the fourth quarter, and the price had gotten ahead of itself
in recent months—not surprising, given Israel and Lebanon going to toe-to-toe.
But the timing of oil’s decline also
coincides with another event: U.S. mid-term elections. Although these two
things sound unrelated, oil and politics in fact go hand in hand. In fact,
there is an eye-opening correlation between U.S. president George Bush’s
popularity and American gasoline prices over the past four years. As the
chart below shows, the higher the price at the pump, the more people think
of Bush as a chump.
.
.
Which begs the question: with elections
looming, might the Republicans be trying to bring down oil prices (and
therefore gasoline costs) in an attempt to cull favor at the polls?
While we’re generally skeptical of
conspiracy theories (after all, if the government can’t deliver mail on
time, how could it organize a large-scale covert action?), it’s a known
fact that the feds have several mechanisms by which they could nudge crude
lower.
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve,
for one. Release of crude from this stockpile helped push oil prices lower
last fall in the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Another lesser-known influence on
oil prices is the “crack spread.” This is the difference between the price
that oil refiners pay for crude and the price they receive for the gasoline
they produce. Put another way, it’s the profit margin that refiners make
on their products.
Currently, the crack spread is at—in
the words of the U.S. Energy Information Administration—“unusually low
levels.” This means that refiners are selling gasoline for little more
than the cost of the oil they purchase. This makes no sense from a business
perspective… generally in such a situation, refiners would simply up the
sales price of their gasoline, improving their margins.
However, it does make sense if the
refiners are purposely attempting to keep a lid on prices.
Why would these companies voluntarily
take lower profits? There’s no way to know for sure, but it’s a certainty
that the White House and Big Oil are close friends. Witness Dick Cheney’s
ties to Halliburton, and George Bush’s background in the Texas oil patch.
Might the Republicans be calling in a favor from their refinery manager
pals, asking them to keep gas prices down until November 7 has passed?
Of course, there’s no way to prove
this. But for energy investors, it’s worth considering. If gasoline prices
are being artificially depressed, we can expect a rebound during the last
few weeks of the year. Which—judging from the historical relationship between
gasoline and crude—would lift oil prices, and therefore oil stocks. If
such case does present itself, now might be the time to buy oil producers,
many of which are selling at fire sale prices. This is a story we will,
naturally, continue to follow in the pages of the Casey Energy Speculator.
Don’t miss the follow-on story, as
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