Results 21 to 30 of 31
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07-25-2008, 02:36 PM #21
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
No one has suggested that we need to switch our entire infrastructure over to alternative energy sources immediately or that it would even be possible to do so. Only that we need to BEGIN immediately. It will take years to completely switch over, and we need to start now. My argument is that lifting the ban on offshore drilling and drilling in ANWAR will do almost nothing to ease that transition. Those resources, if brought completely on line, would amount to a small fraction of our total energy usage. You could affect the energy market in the same positive way by switching an equivalent small percentage of our energy use to an alternaive source. It would take years to gain any benefit from new offshore leases or ANWAR leases, so I think it is practical to think we could switch an equivalent fraction of our energy usage to an alternative in the same time frame.
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07-25-2008, 03:10 PM #22
OPSenior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
I don't see how you can state that when just having Bush lift the Presidential ban dropped the price of crude by $15 per barrel.
Originally Posted by dragonrider
Originally Posted by dragonrider
Once again, the numbers speak for themselves.
Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
Have a good one!:s4:
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07-25-2008, 03:44 PM #23
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
I can state it bacause I do not believe the price dropped in response to Bush lifting the Presidential ban.
Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
If you read the article you linked to for those numbers. It says that of that 85.9 billion barrels of crude that MIGHT be held in the outer continental shelf, 75% is already in areas being actively drilled or open to exploration. The ban affects possibly 21 billion barrels that MIGHT be there. It's not worth it.
Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
Your article also had this to say:
I'm thinking that if we got started now, maybe we could have a better solution in place by 2030 wthout endangering our coasts to tap the last 25% of our estimated reserves.In addition, offshore oil exploration is slow and costly.
If the federal government opened California's coast to drilling tomorrow, the first exploratory wells probably wouldn't be drilled for at least six years, Medlock said. Bringing newly discovered oil fields into full production would take longer.
That means any new oil wouldn't arrive on the market until midway through the next decade, at the earliest. The process is slow enough that the Energy Information Administration, the statistics branch of the U.S. Department of Energy, estimated last year that opening the coasts to offshore drilling would have no significant impact on oil prices before 2030.
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07-25-2008, 10:09 PM #24
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
Lowered the price didn't it?
Originally Posted by epxroot
Although this is only band-aid.
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07-25-2008, 10:38 PM #25
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
Someone has got to explain to me how this futures market works and how it affects today's spot price. I thought the whole point of futures contracts was to accurately know the future price of a commodity based on future supply and demand predictions, or eliminate the risk of not knowing. How does runaway speculation affect that? Why would anyone buy a futures contract saying "I agree to buy a barrel of oil next year for $130 dollars" if predicted supply and demand say a barrel should only be $70 next year? How does that work? Seems like the market would just correct that out pretty quickly. And if supply and demand say that today a barrel should go for $70, then how does a futures contract for a future barrel of oil change today's price? I don't see how that works at all.
Originally Posted by daihashi
I know I don't know enough about how future's trading works, but it seems like bubbles would not be such a big problem and would rapidly self-correct, and I definitely don't see how it affects today's price.
I am thinking that today's high price is probably NOT due to some kind of futures bubble that has somehow added a 40% premium onto the supply-and-demand price of oil. That just seems like such a huge market distortion for such a heavily traded high-volume commodity that it would have to collapse.
Does anyone know how this works and can explain it to me?
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07-25-2008, 11:24 PM #26
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
When oil supplies dwindle and they forsee a demand in oil going up, it'll drive the price of oil futures. Since oil is a non-renewable resource, there is expectation that the price would continue to go up. Oil futures sends signals to the physical market because after all, it's correlated. If speculators think that they'll be less supplies, they'll continue to increase the value of oil as a commodity, making it a profitable investment.
When there is news that increases the oil supply, the wagers go from up to down. The futures market is simply that speculation. Bush temporarily changed the expectations.
Though the futures market effect on oil price is limited, but none the less apart. It's not a long-term solution, a simple band-aid.
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07-25-2008, 11:32 PM #27
OPSenior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
The top CEOs of U.S. companies such as AMR Corp.'s American Airlines, Delta Air Lines Inc., Continental Airlines Inc. and US Airways Group Inc. this week asked their customers to press Congress to rein in speculation, which they say could contribute between $30 and $60 a barrel to current oil prices trading near $140.
Originally Posted by dragonrider
Free Preview - WSJ.com
From what I've heard on t.v. and read there are MANY oil tankers off our coast at the present time filled with crude that's already accounted for or bought through speculation. Since this is removed from the supply side we have our increase. I guess there are many firms putting their retirement funds into this since it is so much of a money maker at this time. Let congress vote in a measure to allow drilling and these people will run for the hills.:thumbsup:
Do a google search on "Oil Speculation"....maybe you can find some better info than this on the subject. If so, please share for the rest of us!:thumbsup:
Have a good one!:s4:
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07-25-2008, 11:48 PM #28
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
Some people are claiming that there is a $60 dollar premium on the current price of a barrel because of speculation. Even oil producers are saying that. So that does not make sense to me. If it curently costs say $50 to make a barrel, and a producer can sell it for $60 and make money, then if that producer's competitor says to a customer "I'm charging $120 based on futures speculation," that first producer would jump in and say, "Holy crap! A $60 premuim for speculation! Screw that! I'll GLADLY sell you all the oil you can take for $70 and still make DOUBLE what I usually make!" The current spot market should correct and track a lot more closely to supply and demand than to allow such a huge markup based on futures speculation. It would seem like the only way you're going to make money in futures is to know what the price really is going to be. I mean it does you no good at all to agree to buy a barrel at $130 next year if the price is really going to be $60. Unless this really is a true bubble and people are just passing the overpriced contracts on to bigger and bigger suckers, until the bubble pops, and someone is left holding a poisonous 130-dollar contract to buy 60-dollar oil.
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07-26-2008, 04:25 AM #29
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
yeah yeah yeah just you wait!!! how great the bush managed to make it drop lol! it it will rise again!
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07-26-2008, 01:24 PM #30
Senior Member
McCain credits Bush for drop in oil price
Instead of dropping the price of oil only, maybe they should drop the amount of ethanol in gasoline so that my car and the others affected by it will stop running poorly...
but per every 20,000 gallons of gas, it must be nice to have an extra 2,000 to sell again...this ethanol crap is b/s that's what I'm worried about...it's getting harder and harder to find a station with pure gas
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