Editor’s Note: Today, we have a
special Penny Sleuth from our commodities expert, Kevin Kerr. Editor
of two highly successful financial advisory newsletters, Kevin gives
an insightful view on today’s current commodities situation and its
outlook for the future. Enjoy…
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At $135 Oil… Are You Starting to Worry Yet?
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By Kevin Kerr
June 9, 2008
The world keeps turning and the resources
get used up. It’s really quite simple.
Despite that fact, the debates rage over
Peak Oil, Peak Food and peak everything else. It’s about as sensible
as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. So the “experts” continue
to debate whether or not resources are running low. But the evidence
is pretty clear, at least to this trader.
In the past year, we have seen the oil and
agriculture markets explode. And this could be just the beginning of
the rally, not the end, as some would have you believe. Personally, I
think we are about halfway to the new top for many commodities. That
means $200 oil (easily) and gold at $1,500-2,000. The agriculture
markets have even further to go, in my opinion.
Key commodities are becoming more and more
scarce. So we can expect to see more suffering in the poorest
countries first. Then the economic impact will work its way up the
food chain (no pun intended).
The facts are fairly grim if we look at them
closely. There is going to be less of everything. Yet there will be
more people who want those things. Let’s face it — wars have been
fought over far less.
In her famous book, On Death and
Dying , Elisabeth Kubler-Ross describes the stages of grief:
-
Denial: “It can’t be happening”
-
Anger: “Why me? It’s not fair”
-
Bargaining: “Just let me live to see my
children graduate”
-
Depression: “I’m so sad, why bother with
anything?”
-
Acceptance: “It’s going to be OK.”
In my opinion, the American public is going
through the stages of grief right now. Rising prices are just a
market-based signal that we are losing our economic and resource
abundance. As the American dream fades away, it’s like a death in the
family.
Right now, I think we are between the stages
of denial and anger. Ask yourself these questions: What do you think
when you pull up to the fuel pump and have to pay $4 for a gallon of
regular gas, or nearly $5 for a gallon of diesel? Or how about when
you go to the supermarket and have to pay $4 for a gallon of “store
brand” milk, or the same price for a loaf of “store brand” bread? Are
your emotions between disbelief and anger? Are you saying to yourself,
“Hey, what the heck is going on?” (I’m cleaning it up a bit because
this is a family-friendly publication.)
I think folks mistakenly thought prosperity
would go on forever.
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Dinner is always fun until the waiter brings
the check. Or as my colleague Byron King once said, “It’s easy to look
rich as long as you don’t ever pay the bills.”
No sector has recently hit Americans in the
wallet harder than energy. But even with those dramatic price
increases, major changes are still not happening. We have seen a very
small decrease in gasoline usage - only about 1% or so.
But while some travel may be down as costs
have gone up, the numbers are not really dramatic. No, I am not
pointing fingers. I live here too. If I looked at my own lifestyle, I
couldn’t say that I am making radical adjustments, either.
We still like to drive our big SUVs. We
still drive alone to work. Most people rarely take public
transportation (if there is any). And we love to run our air
conditioners full blast while watching the documentaries on global
warming and dying polar bears on our 62-inch plasma TVs.
Yes, we like to grumble when we fill up
those big SUVs, mostly because it’s easier to complain than make the
tough changes that are needed. We feel entitled to keep living as we
do. Hey, after all, we’ve earned it. Right?
Rather than make difficult choices, we are
in that denial stage and buy the line from the government and media
that all is well.
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The facts and the fiction often get mixed up
when discussing the issue of “Peak Everything.” Take the surging price
of crude oil. Some people (including a lot of politicians) want to
blame the traders and speculators. Other people blame farmers and
corn-based ethanol. A lot of people blame OPEC. The list of culprits
goes on ad infinitum.
The fact remains that it’s not just one
reason or another that we are in this energy disaster; it’s actually
all of these reasons and others. It’s a culmination of many years of
poor energy policy, shortsighted planning (if you can even call it
planning) and an overdose of arrogance that only superpowers can have.
It’s like a football team saying, “We’re No.
1 and will always be that way.” So the team stops training hard.
Players quit working out and coming to practice. The coaches just
relax and forget about recruiting or developing new talent. Nobody
designs new plays or bothers to scout the opponents to see what they
are up to. And then the team expects to go out into the world and
bring home the trophy every year. “Hey, we deserve it. Right?”
Or go back to the analogy of the Titanic.
The ship was state-of-the art. It was not “supposed” to be able to
sink. But now as the water rushes in and the ship is dropping lower
and lower into the sea, the cold water is hitting us all in the face.
Now our lawmakers are scrambling to plug the holes, and it’s not
working. The smart people (or maybe they were just lucky) are already
in the lifeboats.
Only time will tell if the United States can
actually move into the acceptance stage. But in the meantime,
commodities will continue to dwindle.
Regards,
Kevin Kerr
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