Oil at the Crossroads: Belief or Reality?

Guest Post by Chris MacIntosh

Oil at the Crossroads

What do you do when you see the proverbial storm on the horizon? You stock up on whatever you think you’ll need which you may not be able to secure when the storm hits.

Why stock & flow matters?

In inflationary periods people stock up because they fear the loss of purchasing power. The problem with this is that at some point you run out of your supplies and you need to replenish them. How do you fix that? Well you need “flow.”

From an investment perspective you may buy a bunch of gold, for example. Then store it in your local government owned bank. Kidding, don’t do that. You store it in your safe or some such secure facility. That gold is great. It is “stock.” You’d use it when you need it, but as soon as you begin using it… well, you have less of it. The next step therefore is to have “flow. For this you’d buy gold mining companies because they represent flow. And we mean producers not some Canadian Venture Exchange listing.

So “stock” is sort of your foundation, if you will. It’s the stuff you hoard and will typically represent most anything absolutely critical that we need: diesel, propane gas, food, medicine, ammunition, copies of Insider — that sort of thing.

Ok, now forget for a minute about us wee little people and consider the above but from a government perspective. They should (if they’ve any sense) do the same thing.

They’d do this because ostensibly at least they work for the people and they are tasked with being good stewards of resources they have control over.

Joe in his wisdom has decided together with the clutch of morons, that in order to help curb the higher oil price they’ll sell oil into the market. This will dampen the price and inflationary pressures.

All good except that this is “stock.”

Depleting stock of critical energy supplies is all good, provided they are simultaneously doing everything in their power to increase “flow.” So what are they doing on the flow side of things? Well, they’re shutting down pipelines, taxing those greedy bastard oil companies, disincentivizing any additional supply.

What else is left?

Western “leaders” believe that the Saudis (and OPEC for that matter) can just turn on the taps and produce more oil or that OPEC is largely responsible for the high oil prices as they are restricting supply.

So can Saudi really increase supply by any meaningful amount for any length of time (6 months or more)? “Perhaps” not.

From the article:

Aramco, the state-owned Saudi Arabian oil giant, claims it can sustainably pump 12 million barrels a day, well above the kingdom’s OPEC+ August target of 11 million barrels. For the global economy, Saudi spare capacity is the last line of defense against more energy inflation. But apart from a few top company executives and a handful of Saudi royals, no one knows for sure whether Aramco can deliver. The rest either have blind faith in Aramco — or simply don’t believe.

Aramco has only pumped at that level [11 million barrels a day] for a grand total of eight weeks in its entire history, in late 2018 and early 2020. Now, it faces the prospect of sustaining that level or higher, for several months, perhaps even longer, for the rest of 2022 and through 2023.

Saudi Arabia has previously gotten above 11 million bpd oil production per day briefly but that was supply of oil rather than actual production (sucking virgin oil out of producing wells rather from storage).

Aramco can pull a few extra levers to deliver, rather than produce, extra crude, maintaining the illusion of higher capacity. The company maintains vast crude storage in Egypt, the Netherlands and Japan, from where it can ship more barrels. In addition, it keeps a strategic reserve of refined products in underground caverns at five locations in the kingdom. It can tap that little-known reserve, which took two decades to build, to supply its domestic market with gasoline, diesel and jet fuel for a while, reducing crude intake at its local refiners and thus freeing more for export. Secretly, that’s precisely what Riyadh did after the attack in 2019 on its large Abqaiq oil-processing center.

How long could the Saudi run at “full bore”? There are mechanical consequences of redlining an engine for extended periods.

Aramco doesn’t just use its spare capacity to meet surges in global oil demand but also, according to the IPO prospectus, to “maintain its production levels during routine field maintenance.” As Riyadh ramps up to maximum sustainable production, Aramco would be forced to run its oil fields at full throttle with little maintenance possible — a recipe for trouble. Any unplanned outages, which in normal times Saudi Arabia can conceal thanks to its spare capacity, would be catastrophic. There would be no cushion.

Regardless of the true potential production number, one thing is clear: the days when Aramco could easily pump more and more barrels are over. From now on, each incremental barrel is a struggle.

Whether or not you have faith in the Saudis, the world faces a reckoning. Reckoning in more ways than one.

We are confident that we will see oil move materially higher over the next few years. But being confident and having the courage to hold on when the market gives you a handbag in the back of your head are two different things.

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Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay

Government says our oil reserves grew by 5 million barrels last week not the decline of 73000 barrels oil traders expected. Nothing to see here /s

Brooklyn
Brooklyn

I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier. Here’s what I do…. http://Www.HomeCash1.Com

BLAnonymous
BLAnonymous

News from abroad says the UK will see (get ready) $5000 dollar energy bills this winter. I find that hard to believe as the average monthly income is $2500 per month.

http://www.ft.com/content/048c0271-75d3-4d4e-9a00-e8fd0b91

B_MC
B_MC

Back to the days of Ebenezer Scrooge and A Christmas Carol but without the happy ending….

comment image

BL
BL

B-MC, Last year their average energy cost for the winter months was $1300. Seriously, HOW can they afford $4200 to $5000 for the same winter period with huge food price increases.

I stated the other day that energy will go from a utility to a luxury here in the US, it is already a luxury for our friends across the pond if it proves to be true.

***Better buy extra cold weather gear Austrian Peter

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