by 68Camaro » Sat Jan 23, 2016 7:56 am
That's not a new theory and I wouldn't say it's theory; it's fact that when oil-dependent revenues decline that those dependent on that revenue must either pump more, borrow more, sell assets, or reduce spending (which creates a related cascading effect). (Or for those few that can do this, print money.) That's basic economics. But it's way more than that though; the price of oil is both a definitive symptom of a stressed global economy as well as a stimulus to a decline.
The current bump back up into the lower 30s from 27-28 is a dead cat bounce - the short sellers are loving it because they can lock down profits and exit their positions. Long-term, the price has to continue to drop until someone cries uncle. The demand for it isn't there. Transportation use is down. Secondary use (plastics) is down. Pumping is up. Storage tanks and ships are topped off and full. The place to be (I suspect) in the short term is tank manufacturing - I haven't checked to see if this has happened but they must be going balls to the wall 24/7 to build new tanks - (and they won't be able to keep up).
The price will soon reverse again and fall, fall, fall. Until enough people stop pumping that the supply stabilizes, and at this point I think enough damage has been done that we're going to see oil prices depressed for a number of years, oil-related businesses continue to go bankrupt for years.
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