Skeptic Guy
Raccoon Death Squad Leader
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2006
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- 6,990
diggy doesn't post here anymore.
Below $68 a barrel.![]()
OPEC just announced that they are reducing production by 1.5 million barrels per day.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008\10\26\story_26-10-2008_pg5_10Brent North Sea crude slumped to $61 per barrel, the lowest point since March 2007. New York’s light sweet crude tumbled to $62.65, which was last seen in May 2007.
Help me out here: how sensitive to gas prices is the consumer economy? I have wathced the past six weeks of crashing and burning with the same disquiet as many others, but all the while I have marvelled at the decoupling of the gas price baseline while all else went awry.
Arguably not all that much. After all, a fourteen-fold (1400%) rise in oil (I know that retail petrol did not go up that much--perhaps it quadrupled at the most) was something of a stern test, no? CPI inflation (headline rate including food and energy) did not get higher than about 5.5% y/y and is probably falling back now.Help me out here: how sensitive to gas prices is the consumer economy?
One (not the only) fuel--> food link is a) oil became more expensive, b) more policy backing was given (at least in the US) to maize-ethanol production, c) corn got a lot more expensive, d) demand for food substitutes for corn increased, e) prices of corn substitutes went north as well.What has me a bit confused is the correlation between food, fuel, and consumer discretionary income that keeps money moving in an economy.
just thinking said:It appears to be very sensitive, as it surrounds us daily. Not only gasoline, but home heating fuel, airline fuel, labor intensive equipment fuel (machinery), non-aviation transportation fuel for food and other commodities (public and private) ... the list goes on and on.
In economics, as in medicine, getting a second opinion oft leads to being just as confused as previously.Arguably not all that much.
Fourteen fold? Francesca, over what period of time did that take place? From 1973 to now? I am puzzled over what you are telling me. From fifty dollar per barrel to about one hundred and fifty, or so, in the past three years was a three fold increase in raw material. Clarification, please?After all, a fourteen-fold (1400%) rise in oil (I know that retail petrol did not go up that much--perhaps it quadrupled at the most) was something of a stern test, no? CPI inflation (headline rate including food and energy) did not get higher than about 5.5% y/y and is probably falling back now.
Not being an economist by trade, I am not all that familiar with models that explore the synergistic effects of these sorts of inter related products and markets. Food prices going up was, IMO, a significant problem for the global economy, not just in selected spots, as I understand the Economist's past year's worth of articles on the topic.One (not the only) fuel--> food link is a) oil became more expensive, b) more policy backing was given (at least in the US) to maize-ethanol production, c) corn got a lot more expensive, d) demand for food substitutes for corn increased, e) prices of corn substitutes went north as well.
Yes, I get that, with a non trivial impact on land use, agricultural capacity, reserves, and thus food prices and food base product futures markets. I sense a synergy, but don't feel very confident in how valid that is.The case for alternative energy doesn't diminish as oil depreciates by the way. Oil producers, losing revenue from undiversified supply, actually have a greater incentive to develop stuff like sugar-cane ethanol.
Yes, with an unknown environmental and domestic agricultural secondary effect. As I understand it, the sugarcane based ethanol is far more energy in/energy out efficient than, for example, corn or palm oil.I seriously doubt that Brazil is ratcheting that down right now.
I had not considered that issue. Thanks.In several countries that have subsidised retail petrol prices, there is an additional means to do this because the subsidy saving boosts available fiscal support for alternatives.
From 1999 (USD10/bbl) to mid 2008 (USD145). The rise was less measured in some other currencies but still dramatic.Fourteen fold? Francesca, over what period of time did that take place?
Well I pointed to why the rise in energy price produced broad appreciation of food crops, due to the knock-on effects of substitution. The damage to nutritional standard of living is greater the lower average income is and the less able government is to subsidise food. So in some poor countries with rubbish public finances (like Bangladesh) it has literally been a killer (and of course in war-torn badly governed third-world states).Food prices going up was, IMO, a significant problem for the global economy, not just in selected spots
Correct. However not everyone grows sugar cane.As I understand it, the sugarcane based ethanol is far more energy in/energy out efficient than, for example, corn or palm oil.
None IMO. The fall in the dollar against other currencies (since 2002--G7, since about 2004--Asia) did not reduce the confidence in US assets (or sovereign debt) at all. I consider almost everything I read during this period, and now, about "the demise of the dollar" to be balls.I am wondering at how much impact dumping dollars had in our latest financial slump.
Just wondering here: Is the sudden drop in gas prices related in anyway to speculators being unable to cover their bets when the credit crunch hit?
[ . . . ] want diggy's plan get out of debt. And buy oil in thestock market for the long term.[ . . . ]
[ . . . ] If the public gets on the oil band wagon, now thats a scary thought.. 300 to 400 dollar oil in just months. [ . . . ]
UR kidding me , what kind of critical thinker are you??? you seem to be very closed minded to make coments like that. Do some research on oil.And . . . investors selling oil futures because they don't want so many of them any more.
Sensationalism, not critical thinking.
They can sell oil futures all day at $130 and people are buying them.. cause if people where not buy they would go down. [ . . . ]
[ . . . ] I never owned oil till it was like 50 bucks/barrel..But im still buying at 125, so i guess im the speculator..or fundamentalist [ . . . ]
Originally Posted by diggy70 said:[ . . . ] I never owned oil till it was like 50 bucks/barrel..But im still buying at 125, so i guess im the speculator..or fundamentalist [ . . . ]
Or the one left holding the bag.