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Why the “discredited” peak oil model is still the best guide to investing in oil, copper, water, and other commodities

posted on February 7, 2012 at 8:30 am
Nat_gas

Now that oil is a long way from the $145 per barrel peak it hit in July 2008 and nobody on Wall Street is predicting, as Goldman Sachs did in 2008, that oil is headed to $250 a barrel, we’re not hearing much about peak oil anymore.

The peak oil model, initially developed by oil geologist King Hubbert and which accurately predicted a peak in U.S. oil production between 1965 and 1970, says that the production from an oil field grows exponentially over time, then peaks, and finally declines. The model has been applied to individual oil fields, national oil industries, and global oil production. Back in 2008, the fiercest proponents of peak oil as a global model were predicting that the world would start running out of oil sometime around 2020.

Now that the world is awash in oil, the only people talking about peak oil are its opponents, who are dancing on what they depict as the grave of what they call a “theory” that was never worth the graph paper it was plotted on.

Well, I still think that the peak oil model is the most useful description of what we see happening in the oil industry today—even if West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, closed at a twitch under $100 a barrel on Friday, February 3. (Brent crude, the European benchmark closed at $114.58.)

And, I’d go on to say that the peak oil model is the best way to understand what’s happening to the prices of other commodities, especially copper.  (Full disclosure: I predicted that oil would go to $180 a barrel shortly before it began its collapse from the $145 a barrel high in 2008. And full, full disclosure: The only one predicting $250 a barrel oil right now is Iran, which is threatening that prices will reach that level if developed economies impose tougher sanctions on the Iranian economy in an attempt to slow or stop that country’s development of a nuclear bomb.)

And I think it’s even useful for thinking about how to invest in commodities such zs iron ore that, currently, don’t fit the peak oil model at all.

Let me explain why I still find so much value in this “discredited” theory. Read more

5 picks for energy, the once and future sector

posted on February 18, 2011 at 8:30 am
Nat_gas

On January 28, I argued that the U.S. economy is still in the early recovery stage of the business cycle, and that you should overweight your portfolio toward the stocks that do best at this point in the cycle: “Sectors that do best are usually industrials, near the beginning of the stage; basic materials; and, near the end, energy.”

 The next stage for the U.S. economy is late recovery. “Sectors that have done well in this stage include energy and, near the end of the stage, consumer staples and services.” (For more on investing for the economic cycle see my post http://jubakpicks.com/2011/01/28/where-the-heck-are-we-in-the-economic-cycle-anyway-the-answer-is-important-in-deciding-what-sectors-to-overweight/ )

See any sector that those two stages have in common? So why not overweight energy right now? several readers asked. That way your portfolio can catch the sector’s outperformance at the end of the early recovery stage and the sector’s outperformance in the first part of the late recovery stage.

That’s an excellent idea. Just be careful what energy stock you pick. The sector is a little tricky to navigate right now. I’d favor being very selective on oil stocks—most of the international majors aren’t all that attractive currently. I’d favor oil equipment and service companies right now and small oil producers that are growing production and that look like acquisition candidates over the oil majors.

And I’m going to end this post with five picks of exactly those sorts. Read more

Next week it’s oil, oil and more oil earnings. To know where the industry is going, forget profits and look at capital spending

posted on July 24, 2009 at 5:56 pm

Exxon Mobile (XOM). Chevron (CVX). Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A). BP (BP). ConocoPhillips (COP). Noble Energy (NBL) Apache (APA). Petro-Canada (PCZ). All these production companies report quarterly earnings next week.

Add in drilling equipment and oil service companies such as Smith International (SII), Oil States International (OIS) and National Oilwell Varco (NOV) and you’ve got quite a week for oil.

Move over technology, it’s time oil stocks get their fifteen minutes of fame. But what’s most important next week isn’t the topline earnings per share numbers that will grab the headlines. If you really want to see where the oil market and oil stocks are headed, concentrate on what these companies say about their capital spending plans for the rest of the year. That will tell you whether oil company CEOs think we’re seeing a real, sustainable economic recovery that will keep oil prices climbing or a temporary gusher that will dry up in a few months. Read more



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