Quote:
Originally Posted by TakeFive
It's also good to remember that the U.S. comprises (only) about 25% of the world energy consumption. The average consumer is a direct beneficiary of today's lower gas prices. Think of the savings to the airlines, for example.
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Not if they don't have employment. All of the fake growth we have seen in this country since 2008 has been powered by that very graph you reference; however, this fracking boom is about to collapse. I am sure you understand basic economics. Getting 2 dollars for something that costs 5 is not economical. That is what our shale bubble is. Up to 1/3 of recent capital expenditures in the US have been tied, in some way, to the energy sector and its from borrowed money expecting oil prices to stay high. Its bigger than the housing bubble. We are more or less fucked. I hope you all enjoyed the ride. At least we got some towers out of it.
Most drillers are leveraged over 6 to 1 in debt, hoping prices stay high. You will see bankruptcies ignite in the drilling industry. Where do you think all the good paying jobs in the states have come from recently? Do you think they will keep paying?
States without shale have lost over 400,000 jobs while shale states have gained more than 1.3 million since 2008. The shale powered energy boom has masked the real economic outlook which is grim. Lower gas prices below the shale bottom line is NOT GOOD FOR AMERICA! That bottom line is around 80$ a barrel. We are currently sitting at 49$.
I hope I am clear. Get ready for another 08. Look at any market graphs of bonds and oil prices and you will see a very nice corollary to those most recent events we hoped would never return.
It gets worse... Most shale fracking wells lose 90% of their production capacity within the first few years. Production is going to rise in the short term keeping prices down (not good) since we are still drilling, but exploration and permitting has already tanked. If prices stay low, new fracking will cease due to bankruptcies/lack of capital and in a few years we will be out of production, so to speak. I am not saying I support fracking. In fact I believe its short sighted. Not to mention it will leave us with a massive cleanup job; however, I am just relaying the facts. All fracking has done is buy time, but not much.
Peak oil is real, its happening now, but its just playing out a little differently than expected.
#peakoil
I hope you heed my warning. Just make sure you are ready for another downturn, which in my mind, will be worse than 2008. Unless oil prices march back up, which is unlikely given Saudis recent moves and our general economic health, our boom is about to bust. As the economy retracts so will oil demand, keeping prices down, making all these great shale fields we have economically unfeasible.
Its not the end of the world, but its going to suck.
Believe me, I hope I am wrong.
Good luck and happy new year!