Well I have decided to switch from wordpress to blogger. Here’s my new website :
http://investing-advice.blogspot.com/
Stay tuned to Profits from financial markets!
Well I have decided to switch from wordpress to blogger. Here’s my new website :
http://investing-advice.blogspot.com/
Stay tuned to Profits from financial markets!
Recently, Warren Buffett said that the US was already in a recession, and I totally agree with him.
Buffett said that the United States is already in a recession and added: “Perhaps not in the sense that economists would define it” with two consecutive quarters of negative growth.“But the people are already feeling the effects,” said Buffett,”It will be deeper and last longer than many think.”
There are 3 main reasons behind this recession :
When people spend more money on food and oil, they will have to spend less on other consumerable goods.
Take a look at the consumer confidence survey :

Many stocks in these industries are already trading near their 52 week lows while they continue to absorb the high costs of oil.
American Airlines (AMR) is at $6.32. Its 52 week low is $6.00 while its 52 week high is $29.32.
Delta Air Lines (DAL) is at $5.50. Its 52 week low is $5.37 while its 52 week high is $21.80.
Federal Express (FDX) is at $86.83. Its 52 week low is $80.00 while its 52 week high is $119.10.
Although many analysts believe that the credit crunch is easing, they are still taking write downs and I believe that it will continue for some time
It seems that an economic slowdown during the 2nd half of 2008 seems increasing likely.
Read this if you are unsure where oil prices are going next.
After the recent surge in crude oil prices, experts and analysts alike seem to have different opinions about where oil prices are headed next.
On one side, there are those who claim that speculators have drove oil prices too high and have caused a bubble which will burst sooner or later
Others simply point to demand and supply imbalances as a reason for the spike, and they think that oil is going to go even higher (Goldman Sachs’ Arjun Murti think its going to $200 in the next 6-24 months)
With of these “Experts” are correct?
Actually, both are correct to a certain extent, depending on the time frame you are looking at.
Here is my prediction :
In the short run : Oil will continue to surge higher and higher, until it reaches a peak, where it will fall back to around $100.
In the long run : Oil will resume its climb to $200 and then to $300
1) Currently, oil is trading at $132. Greedy speculators will continue to fuel this spike until it peaks at $150 to $200 (The prices that T.Boone Pickens and Arjun Murti gave for oil) , where people will start taking profits.
2) Once it peaks, everyone will be trying to get out of their oil positions, and oil prices will drop as fast as it as risen, consistent with the bubble theory.
However, I wont call it a bubble bursting because there will be a strong resistance at the $100 level, since there is a real demand for oil. (i.e. If oil falls to $99, traders who really need oil will snap it up at that price)
Oil will continue to try penetrating below the $100 level, but it will ultimately fail
3) Once the mania has subsided, demand and supply imbalances will return to the market and continue oil’s spike
For your information : I do have stocks in Oil ETFs (DBO), and I am waiting for oil to reach its peak before exiting my position and then snapping up cheap oil at around $100
There seems to be no limit to how high oil prices can go.
On Thursday, crude oil reached $135 briefly, before settling around $131. Oil has increased dramatically over the few months, and Goldman Sachs analyst Arjun Murti recently advised that crude oil could reach $200 within 6 to 24 months.
According to The Economic Times,
Murti, 38, now a managing director at Goldman Sachs, first came to the fore as far back as 2003-2004 when he predicted that oil prices would breach $80 a barrel when it was still in the 30s. He was sneered at. He was mocked again when he predicted in 2005 that it would double from $50 to $100 before the end of the decade.
Is the rise in oil prices due to fundamental economic reasons, or is it simply a bubble caused by speculators?
Before investing in crude oil, lets review both sides of the argument
There is more and more speculative activity, especially from pension funds and other large institutions.
I just visited www.nymex.com, and it says on its website that the Total Exchange Volume (Not just volume for crude oil) is 1,830,281 for 05/23/2008*
According to Bloomberg,
Electronic volume for Nymex’s crude oil, natural gas, gasoline and other energy products rose 30 percent to 772,567 a day last month
Take a look at the volume for Light, Sweet Crude Oil, taken from NYMEX :
|
Year
|
Daily Average
|
Annual Volume
|
| 2008 (April) | 536,837 | 44,557,489 |
| 2007 | 482,246 | 121,525,967 |
| 2006 | 283,080 | 71,053,203 |
| 2005 | 237,651 | 59,650,468 |
| 2004 | 212,382 | 52,883,220 |
| 2003 | 181,748 | 45,436,931 |
| 2002 | 182,718 | 45,679,468 |
| 2001 | 149,028 | 37,530,568 |
| 2000 | 148,123 | 36,882,692 |
In 2006, the daily average volume is 283,080. In 2008, its 536,837, almost a twofold increase.
Surely, the world’s population could not have doubled in 2 years!
What we can clearly tell from this is that more people are trading crude futures, and we can also infer that speculative activity is increasing, which supports the bubble theory. ( An excuse that OPEC uses for not increasing oil supplies)
Nevertheless, the main reason for the increase in oil prices is not due to speculators, but there are other fundamental reasons.
5. Possible sanctions on oil-exporting Venezuela
As a result, crude oil inventories are down by 5.4 million barrels from last week, according to the EIA.
As long as these supply disruptions are not dealt with, and the US dollar continues to depreciate (It will continue to depreciate in the long run), oil will continue to rally, no matter what speculators do
Jeff Rubin, Chief Economist and Chief Strategist at CIBC World Markets sums it up well :
“Even at $133, demand hasn’t been reined in, and without a real raise in supply we think it’s ultimately going to go over $200 a barrel.”
Before investing in crude oil, do remember that short term corrections are possible (perhaps even down to $80), but in the long run, oil prices will shoot up