America’s Oil Boom Is a Fraud

Guest Post by Bill Bonner

PARIS – We promised to end the week with a bang!

You’ll recall that Fed policy always consists of the same three mistakes… 1) Keeping interest rates too low for too long, resulting in too much debt; 2) Raising interest rates to try to gently deflate the debt bubble; and 3) Cutting rates in a panic when stocks fall and the economy goes into recession.

Well, here comes the Big Bang: Mistake #4 – rarely seen, but always regretted.

Mistake #4 is what the feds do when their backs are to the wall… when they’ve run out of Mistakes 1 through 3.

It’s a typical political trade-off. The future is sacrificed for the present. And the welfare of the public is tossed aside to buy money, power, and influence for the elite.

Apocalypse Now!

Every debt expansion ends in a debt contraction. Stocks crash. Jobs are lost. The economy goes into reverse, correcting the mistakes of the previous boom.

Investors see their money entombed. Householders await foreclosures. The authorities scream: Apocalypse Now!

The more the feds falsify price signals in the boom, the more mistakes there are to correct. For example, this week, a report in The New York Times described the big mistake in the shale oil boom.

You’ll recall that it turned America from a big importer of oil to a major exporter… and revived much of the heartland with big fracking projects in woebegone regions of Texas and North Dakota.

The shale oil boom was even credited with having scuttled the oil market, which dropped from a high of around $130 a barrel in mid-2008 to under $30 in late 2016, thanks to so much new supply.

But guess what? The whole boom was fake. It didn’t add to wealth; it subtracted from it. Accumulated losses over the last five years tote to more than $200 billion, with $36 billion lost in the Bakken shale fields in North Dakota alone.

Had credit been priced properly, it never would have happened. From The New York Times:

The 60 biggest exploration and production firms are not generating enough cash from their operations to cover their operating and capital expenses. In aggregate, from mid-2012 to mid-2017, they had negative free cash flow of $9 billion per quarter.

These companies have survived because, despite the skeptics, plenty of people on Wall Street are willing to keep feeding them capital and taking their fees. From 2001 to 2012, Chesapeake Energy, a pioneering fracking firm, sold $16.4 billion of stock and $15.5 billion of debt, and paid Wall Street more than $1.1 billion in fees, according to Thomson Reuters Deals Intelligence. That’s what was public. In less obvious ways, Chesapeake raised at least another $30 billion by selling assets and doing Enron-esque deals in which the company got what were, in effect, loans repaid with future sales of natural gas.

But Chesapeake bled cash. From 2002 to the end of 2012, Chesapeake never managed to report positive free cash flow, before asset sales.

Turkeys Fly

Of course, the same thing could be said of the trillion-dollar companies, Amazon and Apple, whose market capitalizations are largely the result of cheap credit.

And it could be said of the whole tech sector – with its outrageous inputs of capital into companies that have never made a dime.

Or it could be said of emerging markets, which have managed to suck up the loose change spilling out of the financial industry. They promised slightly higher yields, and now, they owe far more than they can pay.

It could also be said of Silicon Valley carmaker Tesla, which now has an estimated $10.5 billion in debt – despite never having made a profit…

Or of the entire stock market, where trillions of dollars in cheap capital have produced very little real return.

“When the wind blows hard enough,” say the old-timers, “even turkeys fly.”

The wind never blew as hard as it did from 2009 to 2018. And overhead now are so many plump, money-losing birds that we suggest you take cover.

Mistake #4

But that’s just the beginning… As the turkeys fall to Earth, the Fed’s reputation is called into doubt. Its manhood is questioned. Congress and the Trump administration, too, are roused to action!

The feds will make the rational choice (for them). They will go for broke.

That is, they will do things that cause you to go broke… while the insiders continue to get rich, following the tried-and-true remedy of Mistake #4 – the refuge of scoundrels and the last resort of jackasses from Zimbabwe to Venezuela.

The essence of Mistake #4 is “printing” money – lots of it – to cover soaring deficits, prop up failing enterprises, reflate markets, rescue sinking households, save the bankers, reward the cronies, and keep the zombies from running wild in the streets.

All this money-printing will spark inflation… which will soon be blazing-hot.

The Fed, of course, is duty-bound to keep prices “stable.” But in the end-of-the-world hysteria, we predict the Fed will “print”… and worry about price stability later.

“When someone is trapped in a house fire… you try to get them out,” the feds will say. “We’ll worry about the fire insurance later.”

Two-trillion-dollar deficits?

Maybe more.

A breathtaking infrastructure boondoggle. A “space force” so far out that it is quickly lost somewhere beyond Mars.

New trade wars to protect U.S. industries from fair competition. A “guaranteed income” for everyone.

Bailouts… Subsidies… Grants… Contracts… Spend, spend, spend. “It’s good for the economy!”

Oh… and new controls on banking and cash… and perhaps gold and even bitcoin… closing the doors to prevent people from escaping the burning building.

Our advice: Run, don’t walk, to the nearest exit now.

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20 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
September 8, 2018 6:53 am

“It could also be said of Silicon Valley carmaker Tesla, which now has an estimated $10.5 billion in debt – despite never having made a profit…” I’m actually growing quite fond of Bonner. His zest for life leads me to believe he’d be fun to have around. But he’s not real good at looking around corners. Tesla is only a month away from being a permanently profitable company. They have doubled their output of cars in just one quarter. That’s not a typo. 10 billion in debt is reasonable for a company that’s going to be approaching 20 billion dollars a year, gross.

starfcker
starfcker
  Administrator
September 8, 2018 8:03 am

Accountants don’t run companies. This one thought he should be able to. So Musk bounced him on his ass. He’s already been replaced

Anonymous
Anonymous
  starfcker
September 8, 2018 12:26 pm

It’s hard for an accountant to plead ignorance on fraudulent accounting in court. They have CLEs, all kinds of certs. They can easily lose it all, event though the accounting rules are called “Generally Accepted Accounting Principles,” they can’t step over the line to fraud.

Ignorance of the law is a mitigating factor. An accountant would be thrown to the wolves, as Elon shrugs his shoulders and say “I’m a big picture guy, not a numbers guy.”

The same thing can be said of Elon’s pot smoking on Joe Rogan. I’ve never seen someone so uncomfortable in handling a roach. This is about Elon’s half baked defense (in his own mind) that he can bamboozle a court into thinking that “well, he was high on cannabis and mushrooms at the time he tweeted his “funding secured” stock manipulation tweet. It won’t work. At best it shows him as out of control, but not ignorant.

If only I could use that as a drunk driving defense. “Well officer, I ran over that guy on the sidewalk because I was drunk at the time, I wasn’t in my right mind.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
September 8, 2018 12:27 pm

JR Wirth by the way. Looks like it defaulted to Anonymous.

Maggie
Maggie
  Administrator
September 8, 2018 9:31 am

I swear I saw a little blurb on the news about Elon Musk sitting smoking a big fatty during an interview with someone (Rogan?) who was also toking on a doobie.

Really, this guy holds the solution for all our energy problems?

They sounded like a bunch of idiots I used to know who sat and listened to this and stared at their hands waiting for enlightenment.

One of Elon’s big brainy engineers has a daughter in AWACS. She was an ART too, who worked for Nick when he was the NCOIC of training.

Maggie
Maggie
  Maggie
September 8, 2018 9:40 am

got it

Watch Elon Musk smoke a joint with Joe Rogan

steve
steve
  starfcker
September 8, 2018 7:16 am

Truly Starfckr you are a riot. When Toyota and Honda etc start pumping out EVs that are 2X as good at half the price where will Tesla be? In the toilet. It’s in the toilet now, it just the turd hasn’t’ been flushed yet.

Steve in PA
Steve in PA
  steve
September 8, 2018 1:55 pm

I think this will be better than a Honda or Toyota and will cut right into the Tesla market segment. Most of those buyers don’t purchase a Honda or Toyota.

https://www.theverge.com/2018/9/4/17818836/mercedes-benz-eqc-suv-ev-specs-photos

BL
BL
  starfcker
September 8, 2018 10:01 am

Hopium is a powerful drug.

Aquapura
Aquapura
September 8, 2018 10:12 am

While I agree that the fracking oil boom has not been profitable and fueled by cheap credit the oil is actually real. Just foolish to pump it at under $100/bbl.

Wip
Wip
September 8, 2018 11:41 am

The author says to run to the exits.

Where are the exits?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Wip
September 8, 2018 12:07 pm

Beans, Bullets and Bullion.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
September 8, 2018 12:13 pm

Just one more symptom of the Fiat Genie.
This one has had political payoffs for the MIC. Governments are being toppled and civil unrest ginned up with oil prices this low.

RT Rider
RT Rider
September 8, 2018 12:42 pm

I think it has been a deliberate deep state policy to hold down oil prices, as the ESF lost the ability to control prices through the futures market. Since price is set on the margin, they have increased supply sufficiently, albeit a great cost and losses, to drive prices down from an inflation perspective, to manageable levels. So the debt needed to make this happen is relatively small compared to the the cost savings for imported oil. They have access to enormous, off-book, dark pools of funds to rig any market they want, including other commodities.

The ESF and Fed have actively interfered in futures markets, across the commodity spectrum, for years now. You can’t print money at the rate and quantity that they have done over the years and not have severe price inflation. The other factors that helped them enormously are off-shoring jobs, importing cheap labor, and importing low cost goods from third world economies. Of course, it also helps to disable the function of the greatest inflation indicator, gold, and doctor all government economic statistics, including CPI.

Lack of wage growth, or income, has been compensated for by cheap credit, which is keeping this cheap shit, consumption economy rolling – at least up to now.

JR Wirth
JR Wirth
  RT Rider
September 8, 2018 12:56 pm

Fracking does make money with 1) the right well and 2) the right price of oil and 3)a good distribution network. Luckily, for #3, unlike the thin gay man Obama, Trump is letting new pipelines go through. Two new ones will be in service next year in TX alone. Who was making a killing transporting all this fracked oil by rail? Warren Buffett (Norfolk Southern). So with new pipeline in place, the delivery costs will be mitigated. This country is more rigged than when the “robber barons” were putting wreaths on their heads at dinner parties.

Fracking companies have to be valued on a case by case basis and analyzed well by well. Since Wall Street banks are LAZY and have generally laid off good analysts (not sales people) no one really knows which ones will survive when credit contracts, as it’s doing, but there will be survivors.

We need a good credit contraction. We haven’t had a good one since 1981. This one will be worse, and there will be a lot of kindling. Then our economy can go back to REAL jobs, not these faggotty ones in bloated HR departments.

starfcker
starfcker
  JR Wirth
September 8, 2018 1:16 pm

Nice comment, JR. I like fracking, too.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
September 8, 2018 8:30 pm

“They ” have to print. They are riding a tiger and don’t know how to get off.

JR Wirth
JR Wirth
  Overthecliff
September 8, 2018 9:41 pm

That’s a given. I’m talking about after they print, and turn the place into a smoldering ruin.