Oil dips below $40 — can OPEC hold the line?
posted at 8:40 am on December 18, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
Oil hit a four-year low in yesterday’s trading, dipping slightly below $40 per barrel before rising slightly to finish at $40.06. Prices fell almost ten percent, $3.54, as global demand declined in the face of a serious recession that doesn’t have an end in sight. Gasoline inventories rose in the US as demand continues to drop. In the midst of the collapse in oil markets, OPEC has promised a production cut — but can it deliver?
The OPEC cartel agreed on Wednesday to reduce production by 2.2 million barrels a day, the group’s largest cut ever, in an effort to put a floor on falling oil prices.
It is the third time producers have agreed to reduce their output in three months. Since September, members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries have pledged cuts totaling 4.2 million barrels a day, or nearly 12 percent of their capacity, a record in such a short time.
But oil futures fell more than 8 percent, or $3.54, to settle at $40.06 a barrel, on Wednesday, as the market focused on the dire state of the global economy, and many experts doubted that OPEC would manage to carry out its promises, leaving markets oversupplied in the face of falling demand. …
After riding a wave of rising oil prices for nearly a decade, the world’s top exporters are struggling in a weakening global economy, a dizzying slump in oil consumption and a sharp downfall in prices. In a move reminiscent of 1998, when oil fell below $10 a barrel, OPEC has asked outside producers to trim their production but seems to have found few takers.
OPEC has rarely gotten cooperation from its own members, let alone non-member producers, on production cuts. They’re not likely to start a winning streak now, and for some good reasons. No one foresaw the scale of this collapse, and most OPEC nations made assumptions that oil prices would go up or decline slightly at worst this year when planning their economies. When oil peaked at $147, most analysts predicted $200 per barrel oil, and the producer nations planned their spending accordingly.
Norway has already told its OPEC partners not to count on them for production cuts. Norway floats its entire socialist nanny-state on its sea of oil, and until oil crashed, they could afford it. They’ve already lost most of their planned revenue and have to make up the loss with increased volume. Venezuela has the same problem, only they sell low-grade crude and not the light, sweet crude that barely goes for $40 a barrel now. Hugo Chavez can’t keep electricity going now, and he certainly can’t afford to lose money through a production strike in the short term. He’s having enough trouble selling his crude now. Russia will cut production because it has no choice; their incompetent government has fumbled production anyway
The Arab producers might have an easier time enforcing a production cut, but even if they are inclined to forgive non-Arab producers Norway and Venezuela, they’ll have a tough time trusting each other. Saudi Arabia wants lower prices to undermine Iran, which used the “windfall profits” of sky-high oil prices to pursue nuclear-weapons research, among other things. The Saudi royal family as a dictatorship can withstand the shock of price collapse a lot better than the mullahcracy in Iran.
Investors understand these dynamics, which is why they’ve roundly ignored OPEC statements during the collapse of the bubble. First OPEC was going to hold the line at $80, then $70, and in some cases those statements came as price drops rendered their claims moot even as they spoke them. Now OPEC will be lucky if oil doesn’t hit $20 per barrel at the bottom of the market. They’ll have to sell as much as possible to keep their own economies afloat at these prices, which means that OPEC is all talk.









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There are two issues here, maybe more. First is supply and demand, and then the value of the dollar, which oil is denominated in. Over the long haul, you cannot have a depreciating dollar and a falling dollar denominated commodity price. One or the other has to give. Make your bets. Me, I just tiptoed back into oil yesterday.
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:45 AM
The law of supply & demand at work.
And still, most liberals nowadays don’t believe in it.
jgapinoy on December 18, 2008 at 8:46 AM
They have the stupidest logo in the world, that’s for sure.
Akzed on December 18, 2008 at 8:47 AM
Thanks, Ed. Made my day!
But how long will it take for the heating oil retailers to come down?
petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 8:47 AM
Approx. $1.78 now here on Long Island.
http://www.cheapfueloil.com/
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:48 AM
Hmmm, oil at $20 per barrel, how are the Muslim terrorists going to put bombs and bullets under their Christmas tree’s with oil selling so cheaply???
doriangrey on December 18, 2008 at 8:49 AM
Hey JiangxiDad… $1.59 at the Arco station just down the road from me.. Ya, San Diego County Ca. We usually have the highest gas prices in the continental US….
doriangrey on December 18, 2008 at 8:51 AM
LOL. We are about to have a similar problem with guns and butter.
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:51 AM
No, I meant home heating oil (diesel). Unleaded reg. gas is about 1.93
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:52 AM
Doh…. My bad… Maybe I should learn to read… lol…lol… $1.98…. Ouch…..
doriangrey on December 18, 2008 at 8:56 AM
meant to say “hi” too.
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:57 AM
You know you missed a lot since you’ve been gone. You won’t believe who won the Presidency. Just take a guess.
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 8:58 AM
It is pretty bad.
I hope gasoline prices continue to plummet. They next goal is under $1 a barrel!
Aronne on December 18, 2008 at 9:01 AM
Capn Ed,
Not to be a contrarian here, but once oil drops below about $40/barrel, it isn’t worth the oil companies’ efforts to get it out of the ground, and the price WILL go back up. OPEC won’t be able to stop production cuts from happening, even when they cheat each other. The jobs surrounding oil exploration and production inside and outside the US will dry up and contribute to the recession (jobs lost) in the US. I don’t think we’ll really see oil go too much lower because then no one will be exploring and no one will be producing, except out of the already established wells. And banrupting the oil business in the US will not lead to further improvement in the economy.
One funny thing about this sudden drop. Isn’t it amazing how the press reports of a looming recession, nay depression, caused the price of oil to drop so dramatically? Back in July, before there was any talk of recession except from the most contrarian of economists, oil prices were hurting us, but the economy was still chigging along. Someone somewhere was counting on the “security premium” associated with trading oil to keep the price up and milk Americans for as much as they could without strangling our economy and killing the goose which lays the golden eggs.
I just don’t believe folks in America are driving so much less, since the vast majority of petroleum use in America is for vehicles, not power generation. And everybody still needs to get to work in their vehicles. Yes, the airlines and other fuel intensive businesses may have cut back significantly, but how can that account for a drop of 70% in the price, when you know we haven’t cut back 70% in our gasoline and diesel fuel consumption. The answer has to lie outside the US in foreign consumption (I’m thinking China or Europe, maybe) and amongst the trading houses which factored in Middle East unrest to the price of oil.
Looks to me like our “blood for oil” campaign worked to the advantage of the American consumer, and against the despots of the Middle East! Bring stability and peace to Iraq, the price of oil drops? And the profits of those evil multinational companies? They are the same whether the price is high or low because they just throw their costs on the price at the pump. Now how stupid is it to say our “war for oil” was wrong? Peace for 50 million Iraqis and Afghans, a dramatic drop in terrorist violence and capabilities worldwide, and a commensurate drop in oil prices to boot.
Where do I join the neo-con adventure tour?
Subsunk
Subsunk on December 18, 2008 at 9:03 AM
Bill Cosby????
doriangrey on December 18, 2008 at 9:04 AM
I like $40 a barrel, as in OPEC should be paying us $40 a barrel to take their oil…. ;)
doriangrey on December 18, 2008 at 9:05 AM
I love it when these guys get together. They all hate each other and no matter what they agree to at the meetings; they’ll all undercut each other. On the down side, the price of oil is controlled by a bunch of crazy people.
Tommy_G on December 18, 2008 at 9:08 AM
I think the guys who designed the OPEC logo were the same guys who went on to design all the funky PBS logos of the seventies. I wouldn’t doubt it that the OPEC logo also has some heavy toned jingle to go along with it as the letters flash in animated stuff. :P
Vatican Watcher on December 18, 2008 at 9:12 AM
If Opec hadn’t gotten greedy and pushed oil prices so high, the economic slump would not be this bad, and fewer OPEC alternatives would have been developed.
OPEC is sleeping in the bed they made. I hope they enjoy it.
MarkTheGreat on December 18, 2008 at 9:13 AM
Thanks for that link. I’m hoping internet oil comes to our area soon. The way it is around here, heating oil prices are a well guarded secret. You almost have to buy it before they’ll tell you the current price. I suspect retailers are declining to make prices easily available to make comparison shopping more difficult.
Last price I paid here in Western (by God!) PA was $2.57, but that was a couple of weeks ago.
petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 9:19 AM
The price of oil has shown to have nothing to do with supply and demand but rather what investors say it should be. When oil hit $100 OPEC increased supply yet oil still went up because analysts said it would. It was a self-fufilling prophecy. Now these same analysts are prediciting $30 oil and $1.00 gasoline. No matter what OPEC does the price is going to fall to that or even below.
cadams on December 18, 2008 at 9:25 AM
I’m really sorry I listened to the media this summer and sold my SUV to by some overpriced, tin can hybrid.
Oh wait, I didn’t. Because I know the media is always wrong about everything.
But I’m sure some people did. Life’s hard when you make decisions on the advice of people with an agenda.
NoDonkey on December 18, 2008 at 9:33 AM
If you sign a contract with a heating oil co here on Long Island, it’s also anywhere between approx 2.70-2.99/gal. The link I gave you was for COD cash prices, and doesn’t include any service contract or boiler tune-up. That’s prob. worth another 20 cents/gal.
fwiw, spot wholesale heating oil prices at NY harbor is now about $1.45. That info is always easily available online. I think it’s fair to say that you should be able to purchase COD for about 40 cents over that. Again, no service contract.
JiangxiDad on December 18, 2008 at 9:41 AM
In the 25 years that I’ve been watching the economy, I’ve learned one consistently reliable fact. “Analysts” don’t know any more than I do.
Cicero43 on December 18, 2008 at 9:43 AM
Still chuckling over Bill O’Reilly’s insistance that supply and demand have nothing to do with gasoline prices.
whitetop on December 18, 2008 at 9:43 AM
They never have. The dirty little secret is that in all likelihood the oil prices we suffered were the machinations of George Soros and his Jackie Chan players gaming the hell out of the market. The United States was leveraged so hard and bid so high on oil that we were using POL storage that had not been used in years to hold the backflow.
Philly had tanks that had not been used in 20 years filled to capacity.
I think one man’s vote outweighed a lot of people’s.
sven10077 on December 18, 2008 at 9:45 AM
Bill-o the bellows is a twit on economics. He honestly thinks oil execs just go to a smoke filled room and throw darts at a dartboard.
How many angels can dance on a pinhead?
It depends on Bill-O’s tune.
sven10077 on December 18, 2008 at 9:46 AM
So why were the speculators allowed to drive oil up as high as they did? This is what caused the collapse of many of those “Shady” mortgages, the poor had to decide- pay their mortgage or get to work, to pay for anything, like food. Who thought that this country could support over $4.00 a gallon for gas? Someone thought the American Economy could handle that price for a gallon of gas…some
brilliant– corrupt CEO. I remember last summer it was stated George W Bush, could have done something to keep a barrel of oil at around 75.00 but he never did anything. The Congress, they were helpless, they couldn’t do anything about the high price of oil, and Barack Obama told us all to check the air pressure in our tires..Oh I rotated mine yesterday in case I take a trip over Christmas break/sarcDr Evil on December 18, 2008 at 9:48 AM
Wouldn’t this be a good time to restart additions to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve? Wouldn’t this be a good time to increase tax credits for domestic oil exploration?
Bugler on December 18, 2008 at 9:51 AM
Clearly the high oil prices of mid-year were not a supply problem. Just politically motivated speculation in the market to drive prices high for the election and to disadvantage Republicans is my guess.
Maxx on December 18, 2008 at 9:53 AM
I seem to recall a poster screaming that there was no justification for oil where it was. I seem to recall someone saying that it should be $20 and everyone laughed.
Maybe I should go back and check the archives. As I said before, saying ‘I told you so’ makes me angry. One of these days maybe someone will listen to what I say when I say it and not when they realize later that I was right. I’m not holding my breath though.
ThackerAgency on December 18, 2008 at 9:58 AM
$1.51 at the WaWa around the corner. And yes, Akzed, they do have the dumbest looking symbol EVER!
Tony737 on December 18, 2008 at 9:59 AM
Maxx, why would you guess it was Americans doing it? I would guess it was some Arab manipulating the market with derivatives. Somebody was making leveraged positions. This is the unwinding of that trade (whoever, or whatever state sponsored entity it was).
There is plenty of oil and always will be.
ThackerAgency on December 18, 2008 at 10:00 AM
My suspicion too. Next, George Soros and Algore will be selling windmills.
petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 10:00 AM
So why has gas gone up about 15 cents in the last week?
Bob's Kid on December 18, 2008 at 10:04 AM
Partly true, probably.
Probably also part of the problem.
If we don’t want to depend upon Canada, Mexico, or the Middle East for our oil.
I call this a plus.
Oh-but you are giving the greedy oil companies more $$./sarc
I’m not worried about oil. I’m worried about the “Carbon Credit”.
Ag people-don’t be fooled by this crap. It sounds like CRP-but it’s worse.
EPA only wanted to see what you had to say when they thought about taxing your critters-they’ll do it if you give the Carbon Credit life.
Govt. $$ is not free ag people. Wake up.
Badger40 on December 18, 2008 at 10:05 AM
Perhaps the most striking thing to me about this current event is that oil is going down in spite of the recent weakness in the dollar.
Generally with oil pegged to the dollar, as the dollar weakens, the price goes up. . . vice versa, as the dollar strengthens, the price goes down. That was sort of my explanation to myself concerning the abruptness of this fall.
But the dollar has been weak (since the fed cut rates to ZERO) and oil is still going down. This is an EXTREMELY BEARISH sign for oil. I won’t be surprised if we test the lows of the late 90′s. . . that’s 10 dollars a barrel folks.
ThackerAgency on December 18, 2008 at 10:06 AM
Could be.
I think the poor finally not being able to pay their ill-gotten mortgages is what cut the bottom out and allowed oil to start falling. Soros can weather damn near any doldrum his bankroll is that big but his back-ups were nailed when their real estate portfolio stopped gaining at the same rate. The SEC will refuse to investigate just how many of the donk’s fans made illegal gains in a gamed market but I am willing to bet that the fella who ‘fessed up to running a ponzi scheme for two decades and change ain’t alone.
regards,
sven
sven10077 on December 18, 2008 at 10:07 AM
On a lark, after my last post I Googled “Al Gore invest wind turbines.”
Lo and behold: Al Gore Eyeing Big Investment In Wind Turbines May 19, 2008
petefrt on December 18, 2008 at 10:08 AM
My wife and I have been able to afford gas (we live in the SF bay area) for the first time in years. I hope it stays low.
PolitiNOOB on December 18, 2008 at 10:11 AM
Down to 38.40 right now.
MadisonConservative on December 18, 2008 at 10:16 AM
Couldn’t happen to a scummier bunch of crooks.
Mr. Joe on December 18, 2008 at 10:16 AM
The Saudis have also been far more prudent in shaping their economy than Iran, whose only real commercial industry of note is oil. The Saudis will be hurt by plummetting prices less than than will Iran or Venezuela or even Yemen.
Saudi Arabia’s fiscal prudence allows them to use this global economic crisis to advance their foreign policy goals. Would that American political leaders would learn this principle and put it into practice…but I won’t be holding my breath.
Harpazo on December 18, 2008 at 10:19 AM
I think it’s an arial view of four mushroom clouds.
labrat on December 18, 2008 at 10:20 AM
I picked $29/bbl as the bottom about 4 months ago. People thought I was crazy. Especially since I work in the industry. I have also forecast that it will rise again dramatically once congress reimposes the drilling ban, and Iran invades Iraq and sets it sights on Saudi.
Vashta.Nerada on December 18, 2008 at 10:21 AM
It isn’t speculators. It’s worldwide consumption that is affecting supply and demand. It’s not just that Americans are driving less. Don’t you people read the news? People are buying less, driving less, consuming less—so less is being produced, and we’re using less oil. Worldwide, not just in America.
Gas went up 15 cents in the last week because speculation on OPEC’s cuts, coupled with estimates of oil supplies, drove the cost up to $47/bbl. Now it’s down to $38/bbl.
How do I know all this? Gee. I read Bloomberg News, on whose main page you can find the price of crude oil.
I can also tell you that Iran needs an estimated $75-100/bbl price for its current budgetary needs. Venezuela needs oil to be at $65/bbl to sustain its thuggery.
Gas prices in Richmond edged up about a dime in the last week. They’ll go back down. Don’t fill up your tanks, folks. Get what you need and wait a week. You’ll be glad you did.
Meryl Yourish on December 18, 2008 at 10:28 AM
“Iran invades Iraq”
The Iranian Army would have a hard time getting over its own border without tripping over their shoelaces.
Any Arab army that’s attempted offensive operations against a western military in the past century has been annihilated and the Persians won’t fare any better.
They wouldn’t set their sites on anything except Allah, if they attempt it.
Bring it on, Dinner Jacket.
NoDonkey on December 18, 2008 at 10:29 AM
If everyone, including Russia and Venezuela, agrees to cut output, they may get the price to start going back up. However if only some cut output and others stay the same, those who cut output will get screwed. This is an interesting variation of the Prisoner’s Dilemma.
BohicaTwentyTwo on December 18, 2008 at 10:31 AM
The western military will be moved out as soon as Barry can do so.
Vashta.Nerada on December 18, 2008 at 10:33 AM
I had cut down on personal/pleasure driving, when the prices were high, and continued the practice as they fell.
In my small way, I want to do my part to stick it to our enemies. You know, the ones that would love to see the U.S. destroyed.
Hopefully, these lower prices will continue, and possibly even bankrupt Iran, Venezuela, Russia, and their ilk. We could call it a Depression dividend.
ARom on December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM
Payed a $1.39 yesterday.
grapeknutz on December 18, 2008 at 10:42 AM
I’ve not yet seen any comments in re: the price of gasoline. I take note of the fact that gas prices shoot up drastically when the price of oil even thinks about moving up. Sadly, the reverse is not true. In October/November of this year, when the price of oil was at January 2008 price levels, gasoline was still over $2.00 per gallon. It wasn’t until the current inventory was used up that the country started seeing gas prices somewhere south of the Stratosphere. There is some sort of accounting mechanism within oil companies that enable them to act in such a manner.
That said, we should not get used to low gas prices. It behooves this country to start seriously weaning ourselves off foreign oil and oil altogether for anything other than freight transport.
SeniorD on December 18, 2008 at 10:47 AM
Maybe the Saudi’s can give everyone a little sand to eat with that oil.
My heart bleeds for them.
GarandFan on December 18, 2008 at 10:53 AM
Nice idea, but good luck carrying it out. Diesel and gasoline are used for people transport as well, because they are the cheapest and most efficient energy source for the task. Until a better alternative is found, they are here to stay. It sincerely doubt it will be electric or biofuels that replace gasoline.
Vashta.Nerada on December 18, 2008 at 10:56 AM
Now’s the time for O to put public funds into tapping domestic oil reserves for strategic use at the margins. We don’t have to produce all the oil we use, we just need to be able to bring additional product to the market to counter each OPEC production cut. $40/barrel oil 4-ever, baby!
shuzilla on December 18, 2008 at 10:57 AM
It went too high on the upside, it will go too low on the downside. There was no reason for oil to be at $150 in the summer and there is no reason for it to be $30. But the price of oil never has and probably never will be determined by fundamentals, but by speculation on the up or downside.
So trying to use he supply and demand argument doesn’t really work with oil. Remember oil was at $10 in 1998. It was at $150 in 2008. Demand didn’t rise by 1000% in 10 years.
So I think oil has just as good a probability to be $20 next year as it does to be $80. It truly is the roulette wheel of investments with no rhyme or reason.
angryed on December 18, 2008 at 11:16 AM
Yep, supply and demand DOES work and, of course the speculators bailed.
Oink on December 18, 2008 at 11:26 AM
So, how exactly does “drill here, drill now!” work when no one’s willing to drill anywhere because it’s a money-losing proposition?
Government subsidies, anyone?
Mal Carne on December 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM
Cheap oil is great for killing rogue nations like Russia and Venezuela. But it’s absolutely terrible for Texas and other oil producing states.
Cheap oil was the way Reagan broke the USSR in the 1980′s. He sacrificed Texas, Lousiana and Oklahoma to do so. Be careful what you wish for.
pullingmyhairout on December 18, 2008 at 12:00 PM
Now people can see how the relationship between, supply/demand/speculation work.
It is almost like rock/paper/scissors.
TheSitRep on December 18, 2008 at 12:04 PM
OPEC has the gayest logo.
Coronagold on December 18, 2008 at 12:05 PM
If this doesn’t work for OPEC it will get really ugly after Januray 20th. After The Black Caesar hops on the throne expect OPEC to do something radical like take a week or two off from production just to get the world’s attention. That won’t affect supply here that much but I guarantee the oil companies will jack up the price of gas back to $3.00/gal.
If that happens the media will face their first dilemma. Go with the doom-and-gloom style of reporting they know get ratings and make Barry look bad. Or, downplay it and tick off OPEC even more and lead some of their member states to start looking at their neighbors with designs on invasion.
grdred944 on December 18, 2008 at 12:11 PM
Enjoy it while you can. Our lousy legislators are trying to raise the price of gas here in CA.
Y-not on December 18, 2008 at 12:36 PM
Development of alternative energy sources scares the crapola out of OPEC. If you want OPEC to disintegrate, send them clear signals of massive research and development efforts into alternate energy sources when the price of oil is low, not when it’s at a peak. If you’re willing to seek another source of a good/service even when the supplier’s price is at rock-bottom, that is a huge, unmistakable message.
I happen to like the idea of NOT using gasoline to drive around. Not for any Green reasons, though. I can’t think of a better future than that of seeing the Arabs peddling oil like a beggar selling pencils on the sidewalk. The sooner we no longer have an interest in the Middle East, the better.
BobMbx on December 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM
This could not happen to a nicer group of fellas.
Little Boomer on December 18, 2008 at 1:18 PM
I am still paying 2.43 for gasoline. Diesel is going for 3.25 right now and heating oil is 3.89.
Waa.. I wish I could pay 1.50 again! And my State HAS refineries.
ugh frustrating… speculation analysts, stupid day trading wannabe’s, finacial economists via oil and gas companies, the government taxing rules and the refineries themselves… beside OPEC lower the cap on oil production are ALL problem of why Oil went High.. and now with everyone bailing.. is now sinking.
upinak on December 18, 2008 at 1:39 PM
If there is anything I have learned about cartels over the years is, they don’t quite work. The idea sounds good, but when OPEC members agree to cut production, they sign on the dotted line, then go home and proceed to cheat.
When oil is high, they can’t resist the money.
When oil is low, they can’t afford to do without.
Jeez, I love markets.
rogersnowden on December 18, 2008 at 1:53 PM
These organized production cuts by OPEC are nothing less than acts of war. Period. I cannot figure out why we still let them attack us like this with impunity, especially after OPEC had made clear its intention to drain our economy of every cent they possibly could. OPEC is an illegal cartel whose assets were gotten by stealing them in the forced nationalization waves of 50 years ago. It is about time that we put an end to this enemy of civilization.
Someday, we will get some sense and realize that OPEC is an active enemy and an arm of the arab/persian/muslim assault on the world. They lit the sub-prime fuse with their collusion to blackmail the civilized world (over a resource that OPEC countries are among the only ones on Earth who don’t really use) and will continue to attempt to harm our interests (and the larger interests of Man) so long as they are allowed. The public ignorance on this issue is beyond comprehension and the political and military cowardice exhibited by nearly all people towards these enemies is astounding.
Until we get some sense and take the gulf oil fields back from these savages, these enemies will continue to attack us through oil, complementing their brothers’ attacks with the bombs bought with the extorted oil money. The situation has been clear for all to see, for decades, but most have chosen to wear blinders.
progressoverpeace on December 18, 2008 at 1:56 PM
Inverted supply curves can get nasty–for suppliers.
Count to 10 on December 18, 2008 at 2:01 PM
Good question. That depends on how much more destruction we need in the economy before it can really grow again. Once we have shed enough deadwood, the money that would be borrowed to do this is actually better off invested in the growth of the health companies that remain.
Count to 10 on December 18, 2008 at 2:14 PM
Enjoy your cheap gas. As soon as Israel and Iran go at it, watch the speculators jack the price to $200/barrel.
keep the change on December 18, 2008 at 2:58 PM
$20-$40 a barrel. Calm before the storm.
44Magnum on December 18, 2008 at 3:46 PM
If we have brains, it will be $14/barrel after the storm. The only problem is that our Precedent-Elect and the moron Congress really want oil back at $150/barrel, so that people don’t laugh at their suicidal, anti-human environmental policies – such as the idiot messiah’s plans to bankrupt our coal industry, for starters.
progressoverpeace on December 18, 2008 at 3:53 PM
Cheap oil equals angry dictators & princes.
Angry dictators & princes equals wars and rumors of wars.
Fill your tank & gird your loins.
Dorvillian on December 18, 2008 at 8:49 PM
It could have been Middle-East driven, heaven knows Bush and the Republican Party have few friends that that part of the world. I could never guess who or what like-mined group did it, but I think it was politically motivated because of its proximity to the election.
And yes, there is plenty of oil.
Mid-this-year I posted a link to this article that in retrospect, I think nails exactly what happened. It clearly was not a supply problem.
Maxx on December 18, 2008 at 10:11 PM
Awh… sniff… sniff, some of my very favorite people, Hugo Chavez and the OPECKers, how sad, however will they make it?
Maxx on December 18, 2008 at 10:25 PM
Hugo Chavez and the OPECKers
That would be a great band name.
Maxx on December 18, 2008 at 10:33 PM