Economics - Dec 1
by Staff
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There are really two closely related problems. One is reduced access to credit, making new borrowing difficult for nearly every business that requires debt. Prices for all commodities have been dropping as well. At least part of the reason for this price decline is the lack of availability of credit—many of the less credit-worth buyers drop out of the market. This leaves fewer buyers and almost the same number of sellers, so the price drops. In this post, I examine how reduced access to credit and the concomitant decline in commodity prices is affecting energy companies. The impact I am seeing across a wide range of energy companies is a decline in new investment and a stretched-out timeframe for new projects. In addition, many of the weaker companies in the energy supply chain are likely to be forced out of business by the credit crisis. When energy production is viewed for all companies combined, the below analysis suggests the credit crisis will cause the production of virtually all fuels to be in decline, relative to what they otherwise would have been. I expect production of oil will decline (in absolute terms, not just relative terms) in the years ahead. Since oil production was already on a plateau, this decline is expected to bring about "peak oil". Because of long lead times, uranium production seems likely to fall short of what is needed by nuclear power plants, within the next few years. The long-term implications of declines in energy production are very serious. Research shows that standards of living are closely tied to energy consumption. With less energy available, standards of living are likely to decline.
Some are betting that the worst is over, some believe hard times will continue beyond the next president. But is there anyone out there really able to analyze and bring solutions to this market crisis? Even Alan Greenspan (Wiki) has discovered a flaw in his ideology. If one of the great economist of our time is baffled by this financial turmoil, then where would we find credibility for answers to our current problems? How did this happen? Was it that the housing market’s lack of regulatory measures gave freedom to rampant loaning and mortgage swapping? Was it that housing values reached a peak, and the price dive took the entire country down with it? Was it due to inflation, and the faltering US currency? Many of the analyst overlooked the root the cause: The $100 barrel of oil was the slow poisoning of the world economy. When it hit the $100 mark, there was great relief that the markets were stable. What was neglected was that a market continuing to function under business models designed for cheaper resources was doomed to hit recession. The longer we stayed at expensive oil prices, the faster the turmoil was going to hit. The $100 barrel is like a punch in the face. If you get punched, it hurts like heck, but you will survive. But the barrel punches you every day it exists. After a while, you have trouble surviving getting hit, and sooner or later, you will lapse. Analogous to the financial markets, there were punches hitting people’s wallets, mortgage payments, stock portfolios, retirement funds, grocery bills, property taxes, electricity, luxury goods etc. I don't understand what Hunt means by a rise of "3,000,000 points" in the Dow Jones average. The article he cites by Mark Hulbert talks of a 889-point jump. Maybe "3,000,000 points" is just a way of saying "a lot" ? UPDATE (Dec 2) -BA
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