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Beached Whales and Economic Omens
Laguna Beach, California
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
- Peak Oil: "Now Accepted as
Inevitable"
A gigantic harbinger for
the dollar and energy,
What's in your portfolio? 4
companies to consider and
more...
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Eric Fry, while watching the stock
market go up, reports...
Today's edition of the Rude Awakening is a bit
longer than usual. (That's because we think it's a bit better than
usual). So instead of presenting a lengthy preamble, we'll dive right
in...
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Beached Whales and Economic Omens
By Byron King
Beached whales may have nothing to do with the
world's exhaustible supply of crude oil...or inexhaustible supply of
dollars. But I see a connection...an ominous connection.
On recent trip to California, I grabbed a copy
of the Los Angeles Times that featured a page-one photo of a massive
beached whale. The poor critter was a female blue whale. The carcass was
about 80 feet long and tilted the scales at nearly 100,000 pounds –
making her one of the largest animals in the world.
It is difficult to say how old she may have
been, but certainly north of 50 years is a safe bet. Apparently, this
whale was migrating along the coast of Southern California when a
massive object, probably a cargo vessel, struck her.
The impact crushed numerous bones, including
ribs and vertebrae, damaged her nervous system and caused significant
internal hemorrhaging. There is evidence that the vessel dragged the
whale through the water for some distance. Eventually, the whale
succumbed to the injuries, died and washed ashore near Ventura, Calif.,
just northwest of Los Angeles.
As the L.A. Times noted in a companion article,
"In Ventura County on Friday, lookie-loos parked by the roadside to take
photos of the dead whale and give their children an up-close, if somber,
look at a colossal example of an endangered species. An Amtrak train
stopped on tracks across the road as the engineer took a photo with his
cell phone and passengers goggled out the windows."
Indeed, I suspect that the sight of a dead whale
brings out the "lookie-loo" in most of us. Almost everyone in our modern
era lives their life in houses and office buildings, moving about in
cars or trains or airplanes, walking about on concrete or asphalt
surfaces. But in its death, the sight (and, if you are near enough, the
smell) of a beached whale brings the natural world back into our
consciousness with a certain shocking level of reality. A dead whale is
Mother Nature's way of getting in your face.
The death of this particular whale also brought
the financial world into my consciousness with a certain shocking level
of reality. There is actually an old school of thought, for example,
that regards the discovery of a beached whale as a sinister
portent...and so it may be.
Let's start with a bit of background...
In the 17th century, the English writer Thomas
Hobbes (1588-1679) published numerous works that laid out much of the
template for modern political philosophy. Among the most famous works by
Hobbes was Leviathan (a fancy word for whale) – doctrine for the
foundation of societies and legitimate forms of government, in which the
state is portrayed as a whale-like monster.
In Leviathan, Hobbes articulates the necessity
of a strong central authority to avoid the evil of discord and civil
war. According to Hobbes, any abuses of power by this authority are
acceptable as the price of peace. The sovereign must control civil,
military, judicial and ecclesiastical powers. Hobbes argues that the
sovereign has the authority to assert power over matters of faith and
doctrine, and that if he does not do so, he invites discord.
The use of the term "leviathan" by Hobbes was no
mere random choice of words. Whales are large, beastly creatures that
were reputed to swallow men whole (Jonah comes to mind). And according
to Leviathan, life in the raw state of nature is "solitary, poor, nasty,
brutish and short."
So let's play a little game. Let's
imagine that beached whales actually portend some kind of bad luck or
grim event. What grim event, therefore, might the beached whale in
Ventura County, Calif., portend? Allow us to suggest a couple of
possibilities: Oil higher; dollar lower.
Oil and Energy
Oil has climbed to a record-high $82 per barrel.
Why is the price rising?
The Peak Oil paradigm is beginning to gain
traction. I have discussed Peak Oil extensively and often in my
investment letter, Outstanding Investments. I have taken quite a bit of
heat for this view – from many quarters – but I have stood with the
concept through thick and thin.
And now, if you still don't want to hear it from
me, no less an authority than America's first Secretary of Energy and
former Director of Central Intelligence James Schlesinger recently noted
at an international conference on the subject of energy, "The battle is
over, Peak Oil is now accepted as inevitable, and the debate only
becomes as to when."
This is a remarkable statement, coming from one
of the most "inside" of U.S. political insiders. Here are the long-term
trends that you should expect to see:
· Oil prices will generally remain high, and
trend higher
· There will be little to no growth in exports, outside of the former
Soviet Union, and even Russian oil will be more expensive and
problematic, for numerous political reasons.
· Oil supplies will be precarious and subject to disruption by weather
events, natural disasters and fourth-generation warfare aimed at
"systemic disruption" (e.g., ongoing sabotage to Mexican pipelines or
Nigerian petroleum infrastructure)
· New discoveries will trail consumption. The global oil industry will
extract at least three barrels of oil equivalent for every "new" barrel
it finds via discovery or reserve growth.
So looking ahead, oil and natural gas in the
ground, as booked reserves or realistic and exploitable resources, is
more and more valuable. It also means that oil service companies with a
lock on technology and the operational skills to create technological
systems for extracting hydrocarbons are also more and more valuable.
Thus, if you have refrained from accumulating
stocks in the hydrocarbon or oil services sectors, you are now missing
the boat. The Outstanding Investments portfolio has some great oil and
service companies, like Apache (APA: NYSE ),
Halliburton (HAL: NYSE ) and Superior Energy Services (SPN:
NYSE ), that should appreciate well over the next several
years.
At the same time, our alternative energy plays,
like Kaydon (KDN: NYSE ), have also done well in recent
months. That is because in the coming energy environment, in which
traditional forms of hydrocarbon energy are scarce and expensive, things
like wind and geothermal power will offer more and more relative value.
The Feeble Dollar
Yesterday, the gold price jumped to a new
27-year high of $740 per ounce, as the dollar flirted with new all-time
lows. Gold's strength highlights the ongoing decline in the value of the
U.S. dollar via chronic, gross and ought-to-be-criminal monetary
mismanagement. For example, on Tuesday, Sept. 18, the U.S. Federal
Reserve cut its key federal funds interest rate by 0.5%, as if the big
problem of the U.S. economy in recent years has been not enough cheap
credit.
The Fed rate cut, as expected, made many Wall
Street traders happy and goosed the stock market indexes. According to
the Fed, "Developments in financial markets since the committee's last
regular meeting have increased the uncertainty surrounding the economic
outlook."
Signaling that it might cut rates more if
necessary in months ahead, the Fed announced that the central bank would
"continue to assess" the economic outlook and "act as needed to foster
price stability and sustainable economic growth."
But the Fed action also caused an immediate
spike in the prices for gold, silver and oil futures. So evidently, some
savvy players understand that temporarily cheaper dollars are not
necessarily good for the long-term health of the U.S. currency or
economy, and this understanding is reflected in things with intrinsic
value like precious metals and energy fuels.

Even former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has
stated that he believes that we will see double-digit interest rates at
some time in the future in order to salvage the long-term value of the
dollar. Too bad he did not take some of his own medicine while he was
running the show. In other words, the great challenge to the U.S.
economy going forward will not be how to encourage more indebtedness.
The great challenge to the U.S. economy will be to maintain some overall
level of solvency within the broad economy and avoid widespread national
insolvency in an era of unprecedented levels of debt.
Back to That Whale
So let's get back to that whale on the beach in
Ventura County. Within a few days of its discovery, the wildlife
biologists had examined it and learned whatever they could discern from
the necropsy. And for reasons of public health, the authorities had
towed the carcass to an isolated spot on a different beach for as
respectable a burial as is possible when using bulldozers. RIP, blue
whale. The omen came, the omen passed.
But at Outstanding Investments, we know an omen
when we see one. Do not let this whale perish in vain, dear investor.
Beware the false prophets of the conventional
media who tell you that everything is fine and that there is plenty of
oil ("if only we would drill in such-and-such locale," goes the
refrain), or that the dollar is sound. You need to understand that the
energy supply of the U.S. -- and the rest of the developed world -- is
in a precarious state. We cannot just drill our way out of it. And you
need to know that the situation with the U.S. dollar, the world's
reserve currency, is quite tenuous. We cannot just borrow and spend our
way out of it. The government and monetary authorities, the "leviathan"
of Thomas Hobbes, have overplayed their hands, abused their powers and
are slowly but surely wrecking the long-term value of the dollar.
Sure, things may just drift along for a while
like a dying cetacean hit by a cargo ship on the high seas. But sooner
or later, the trends will manifest themselves and you will be glad that
you have a portfolio filled with energy stocks and precious metals. As
the old whalers used to say, "Thar she blows."
[Joel's Note: Byron has chocked
his Outstanding Investments portfolio with exactly the kind of energy
and precious metals stocks that will prove a boon for his readers when
the Peak oil/dollar debacle hits the proverbial fan. If you haven't yet
read his report on wealth insurance gold investing, I suggest you do so
now. Read on here:
Outstanding Investments: Wealth Insurance
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Rude Endnote : Over her in the
Middle East, where they have a surplus of dollars and a good deal of the
world's remaining oil and gas supplies, speculation is growing over
whether GCC countries will decouple from the once-almighty buck.
Kuwait, the third largest Arab oil producer, was
first cab off the rank back in May when it announced it would drop its
dollar pegging in an effort to control its "inflation importing." The
Kuwaiti Dinar now aligns itself with a basket of currencies, including
the pound and the euro.
According to Arabian Business, "Rampant
speculation that the Gulf states are looking to revalue their currencies
has pushed (UAE) dirham bids to a five-year over recent days." Over in
Saudi, the value of their currency, the riyal, is the strongest it's
been since 1986.
High inflation in the Gulf region (thanks to
their dollar pegging) and the fact that only marginal adjustments were
made in rates here after the Fed dropped by 50-basis points has fueled
the speculation.
A report issued by the Saudi British Bank (SAAB)
stated, "An expected change in the currency regime will take place only
if the dollar weakens at an alarming rate and is sustained over the
medium term."
The dollar weakening at an alarming rate? Who
ever heard of such rubbish? Oh, yeah...Thanks Mr. Bernanke.
Cheers,
Joel Bowman
Rude Awakening
aussiejoel@the-rude-awakening.com |