Peak Oil posts
FeedPosted Oct 23rd 2009 4:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Oil

Many investors have heard about
peak oil, the theory that argues that at some point in this century, perhaps as early as 2020, global oil production will peak, setting off a period of scarce oil supplies, and large increases in the price of crude, among other ramifications. There are camps that disagree and say peak oil is either very far away, or that it will never occur.
However, Daniel Yergin's
Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), one of the most respected research firms in the energy industry, says there's another peak that will require adjustments:
peak oil demand.Continue reading Firm says oil demand has peaked in the developed world
Posted Dec 30th 2008 6:30PM by Bryan Perry (RSS feed)
Filed under: China, Oil
Whether a novice or a pro, we all may mistakes investing.
Sadly, for many of us, 2008 proved to be a year rich with bad options and negative results -- or, as I prefer to call them, learning opportunities.
Here's a review of some of the most painful learning opportunities in 2008:
#1 Going long the specialty retailers: If you made a bet on the specialty retailers leading up to the first $600 taxpayer rebate stimulus package, you got hammered.
#2 Betting on the China bull: Several ETFs that gave investors indexed exposure to Chinese stocks saw their values get hit for as much as 70%.
#3 Buying non-durables: Seems the kitchen and bathroom stocks didn't work this time around.
#4 Buying financials: Buying the financials while the Fed was aggressively cutting interest rates was supposed to be a no-brainer.
#5 Betting on peak oil: Crude is now trading around $40 -- down $107 per barrel in less than six months. Unbelievable!
Posted May 22nd 2008 5:15PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Politics, Commodities, Oil

Coal. Detestable coal.
Politically incorrect coal.
The stuff of
Dickens' England. Black-lung disease. Strip-mining. And global warming.
Coal is the '
Rodney Dangerfield of energy forms,' because, like the late comedian, it gets no respect.
Have you ever heard of a positive association regarding coal? As a child in the United States, way back in the twentieth century, you dared not misbehave prior to the holidays, lest you get,
coal in your stocking.(No one ever spoke of a reprimand involving
'getting oil in your stocking.' No sir. Oil is considered
'black gold.')
Well, in the near future you and many others may look favorably on collecting coal, and a lot of it, if current trends continue regarding that other notable energy form, oil.
Continue reading The world's least-respected energy form experiences a revival
Posted Jan 17th 2008 4:01PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Other issues, Russia, Middle East, Venezuela, Mexico, Oil

Existing oil field output is declining about 4.5% annually, but new fields are making up for that production decline, a study by Cambridge Energy Research Associates concludes,
The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. (
Subscription required.)
The annual decline from existing fields is about 4 million barrels per day -- about the amount oil No. 4 oil producer Iran produces per day -- with new fields offsetting the loses. The study is based on data from 811 fields,
The Journal reported.
Depletion rates are one measure that oil sector analysts use to gauge current productivity, proven reserves that can be extracted, and probable future production output.
The measure also provides evidence for the ongoing debate in oil circles regarding the ultimate size of oil supplies -- with exploration bulls arguing that oil is decades away from a production top, and others, peak oil theorists, arguing that global oil production is likely to peak in the decade ahead, if not sooner. The debate is complicated by the fact that reliable production data on field-by-field production is not available from several key oil-producing nations, including Saudi Arabia, Iran, Russia, and Venezuela.
Continue reading Study says new oil field production offsetting declines
Posted Jan 8th 2008 4:22PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, India, Oil

India announced Tuesday that it wants oil sector giants
ExxonMobil (NYSE:
XOM) and
Chevron (NYSE:
CVX), among others, to bid and explore for oil and gas in the country, on concerns that oil may hit $150 per barrel,
Bloomberg News reported. India, Asia's third-largest oil consumer, does not have the technology to search for and extract oil/gas from deep waters and in remote regions, and the nation is concerned that rising energy demand and rising prices will complicate the access to energy it needs to sustain its growing economy.
Predicts $150 oil"In the next two to three years we expect prices to reach $150 a barrel," India's Oil Secretary M.S. Srinivasan
told Bloomberg News on Tuesday. "Given this scenario, we are putting in more efforts in our exploration and production.''
Oil rose $1.75 to $96.75 in mid-day trading Tuesday. Oil rose an alarming 57% in 2007 and reached $100.09 on January 3, 2008. Oil hit an all-time high, in inflation-adjusted terms, of $102.80 in April 1980.
Continue reading Fearing $150 oil, India wants Exxon, others to prospect in country
Posted Oct 23rd 2007 3:38PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Forecasts, Commodities, Oil
Insights summarizes an idea or business official making financial news, and emphasizes the impact on the typical investor.Oil industry expert T. Boone Pickens has made news again, and also generated some chatter in Wall Street circles, but this time not for an oil price prediction.
Earlier, Pickens predicted that crude oil, which Tuesday traded around $85 per barrel, would hit $100 -- perhaps as early as Q4 2007.
This time Pickens made headlines by stating to
Bloomberg News that global oil production has already peaked at 85 million barrels per day. In other words, "peak oil" has already arrived. Pickens, chairman of BP Capital LLC, spoke at a conference sponsored by the
Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas, a non-profit research group.
Continue reading Insights: Pickens says global oil production has peaked
Posted Aug 8th 2007 3:00PM by Michael Panzner (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Magazines, China, Indices, Market matters, Money and Finance Today, Technical Analysis, Oil, Housing
This week's U.S. News & World Report, (August 13) features a series of articles collectively entitled "1957 -- A Year That Changed America Culturally, Scientifically, and Politically."
In the issue the magazine "takes a look at this seminal year -- one that planted the roots for a new America." Among the reports included:
- "Eisenhower Confronts a Political and Moral Crisis in Little Rock"
- "Sen. Strom Thurmond Sets a Filibuster Record to Hold Off Integration"
- "With Launch of Sputnik, the Soviets Open a New Frontier and Ignite the Space Race"
- "John Glenn Orbits the Earth, Setting Another Record"
- "The Dodgers Move to California, and the World Follows"
- "From the Wreckage of World War II Came a Vision for a Unified Europe"
- "The Bloody Battle of Algiers Demonstrated a Terrorist Playbook"
- "Ghana's Independence Set Off a Chain of Freedom in Africa"
- "The Edsel Went From Wundercar to Laughingstock"
- "The Laser Beam Revolutionized Medicine and Industry"
Continue reading 2007: Echoes of 1957?