Re: The deflation case: caught, gutted, poached and eaten
Originally posted by FRED
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- It is against my nature to be making the kinds of musings I have posted in the past few days. My investing method is to buy what is cheap and hold it until it is dear. Many of the oil positions I hold today were purchased back in 1999 and 2000 when everyone was ga ga over tech, and nobody wanted petroleum. However, the vigilance bordering on paranoia description is exactly how I feel for the first time this decade.
- To be clear, I do not expect the Fed to be able to engineer a "serious and sustained decline in oil" or any consumed commodity. My concern is Central Bank reaction to a near term parabolic overshoot that is not driven by fundamentals, but is purely a short term financial "event". No matter how well the rationalization is presented, wheat limit-up EVERY DAY in a week is no longer being driven by fundamentals. This is money smelling blood. If, for example, bond holders are hedging with commodities, they will not hesitate to close those hedges if there is any hint the Fed decides it needs to deal with skyrocketing grain and gasoline because of public and political considerations. This is, after all, an election year...and powerful as Wall St is, they cast only a small number of the total votes in November.
- The absolute change is not important. A steady doubling of oil over the next, say four years that supports the US led Alternate Energy Bubble will be tolerated, and perhaps even quietly welcomed. A doubling of oil by the end of this summer, in concert with a collapsing US$ is a political nightmare. The latter will prompt a Fed and global Central Bank response IMO, before it gets to that extreme. It's all about first-derivative, rate-of-change.
- The thesis of a "new political arrangement with the west" is intriguing. The benefit to the GCC producers is the security of high revenues to fund their massive social programs that the unrepresentative governments here must have to keep everyone happy. Entitlement expectations are growing very, very rapidly. Inflation is rampant. Subsidies for everything from petrol to baby food are expanding rapidly. A collapse in oil prices would be potentially devastating to social stability, and the political grip the Ruling Families hold. Now that the threat from Saddam has been permanantly removed, there may be a new symbiosis, along the lines you suggest, developing between the Gulf states sub-set of OPEC and the west/USA, that is less military and more economic in nature?
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