Re: Saudi gets SLAPPED ! (Oil going to $100?)
Sound observations, as usual, lake. But I will gently disagree with the highlighted line above.
The picture attached to this post was taken by me in the Permian Basin of Texas last Thursday. Five of the six rigs drilling on this pad are visible (the sixth was behind me on the other side of the lease road). This operation is not being conducted by some overleveraged, private-equity-owned, independent exploration company. This is the largest US headquartered multinational. One of the other US multinationals has stated it intends to triple its production from the Permian by 2023, from development on its existing acreage. It is not possible to describe the scale of what is going on here; you really have to see it first hand.
This is what the USA is so good at. Global disruption at the intersection of cutting edge technology and the world's largest, deepest financial market. These rigs are now capable of drilling 10,000 foot horizontal sections, dynamically steering the drill bit in real time the whole way.
THIS is what has allowed the USA to apply sanctions to multiple OPEC members and forcibly remove significant oil production from Venezuela, Iran and others from world markets. Something that would have been unthinkable just a decade or two ago.
The USA was the dominant oil producing nation when it inherited the mantle of reserve currency holder from Britain. So I would question that it needs to remain as heavily militarily engaged in the Middle East as a condition of maintaining that status. I think Martin Armstrong's observation is correct - the amount of money used in trade transactions, including oil, is small compared to investment and Central Bank currency reserve flows globally. And that situation has only been amplified with the enormous growth in global liquidity at the hands of all of our Central Banks since 2008, that is concentrating in financialization of every imaginable "collectable" asset on earth - and that would include Tesla stock and Softbank fund units.
At some point support for the increasingly odious Saudi regime is going to become politically untenable in D.C. It is the Saudis that were at the centre of 9/11. It is Saudi money that represents the greater threat to the USA because of its enormous funding of terrorism. I suspect it is going to take a) a more coherent domestic energy policy, b) an acceleration in the "electrification" of the US economy, and c) a far more astute, capable, less chaotic, President and Administration, before the USA will have the political courage to pull the rug out from under the Al Saud clan (you and I both know the regime cannot survive without US & UK military support; every Saudi Prince that holds status as a "fighter pilot" is going to bail out on their private jets to the safety of the Intercontinental Hotel in Geneva at the first sign of any real conflict). But I think it is coming. And I think it may be during MBS' turn at the wheel. Iran has always been the more natural ally of the USA than Saudi.
The world reserve currency will be the one that provides the avenue to the financial and physical assets with greatest legal and political security. As some of the world's most odious regimes band together to try to counter the political and military influence of the USA, I don't see the US$ being displaced from that status for a very, very long time. Even if there comes an Asian currency bloc, led by the RMB, I don't see the outflow of capital and people from that region to a safer haven stopping. It might even accelerate.
I am also not optimistic the Euro currency bloc can quickly recover from the feckless policies it has been following (for the exclusive benefit of Germany) either - chronic double digit youth unemployment across much of western Europe for years on end is not a recipe for success.
Originally posted by lakedaemonian
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The picture attached to this post was taken by me in the Permian Basin of Texas last Thursday. Five of the six rigs drilling on this pad are visible (the sixth was behind me on the other side of the lease road). This operation is not being conducted by some overleveraged, private-equity-owned, independent exploration company. This is the largest US headquartered multinational. One of the other US multinationals has stated it intends to triple its production from the Permian by 2023, from development on its existing acreage. It is not possible to describe the scale of what is going on here; you really have to see it first hand.
This is what the USA is so good at. Global disruption at the intersection of cutting edge technology and the world's largest, deepest financial market. These rigs are now capable of drilling 10,000 foot horizontal sections, dynamically steering the drill bit in real time the whole way.
THIS is what has allowed the USA to apply sanctions to multiple OPEC members and forcibly remove significant oil production from Venezuela, Iran and others from world markets. Something that would have been unthinkable just a decade or two ago.
The USA was the dominant oil producing nation when it inherited the mantle of reserve currency holder from Britain. So I would question that it needs to remain as heavily militarily engaged in the Middle East as a condition of maintaining that status. I think Martin Armstrong's observation is correct - the amount of money used in trade transactions, including oil, is small compared to investment and Central Bank currency reserve flows globally. And that situation has only been amplified with the enormous growth in global liquidity at the hands of all of our Central Banks since 2008, that is concentrating in financialization of every imaginable "collectable" asset on earth - and that would include Tesla stock and Softbank fund units.
At some point support for the increasingly odious Saudi regime is going to become politically untenable in D.C. It is the Saudis that were at the centre of 9/11. It is Saudi money that represents the greater threat to the USA because of its enormous funding of terrorism. I suspect it is going to take a) a more coherent domestic energy policy, b) an acceleration in the "electrification" of the US economy, and c) a far more astute, capable, less chaotic, President and Administration, before the USA will have the political courage to pull the rug out from under the Al Saud clan (you and I both know the regime cannot survive without US & UK military support; every Saudi Prince that holds status as a "fighter pilot" is going to bail out on their private jets to the safety of the Intercontinental Hotel in Geneva at the first sign of any real conflict). But I think it is coming. And I think it may be during MBS' turn at the wheel. Iran has always been the more natural ally of the USA than Saudi.
The world reserve currency will be the one that provides the avenue to the financial and physical assets with greatest legal and political security. As some of the world's most odious regimes band together to try to counter the political and military influence of the USA, I don't see the US$ being displaced from that status for a very, very long time. Even if there comes an Asian currency bloc, led by the RMB, I don't see the outflow of capital and people from that region to a safer haven stopping. It might even accelerate.
I am also not optimistic the Euro currency bloc can quickly recover from the feckless policies it has been following (for the exclusive benefit of Germany) either - chronic double digit youth unemployment across much of western Europe for years on end is not a recipe for success.
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