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Spurred on by Financial Sense's Jim
Puplava interview of Matthew Simmons [Twilight
in the Desert], I've written about the topic of shipping and crude oil
- to varying degrees - over the past few weeks. Then this Bloomberg
report fell out of the sky:
Shipping rates drop on high oil
Wednesday, August 17 - 2005 at 10:04
Record oil prices saw supertanker bookings for oil exports from the Middle
East fall below the monthly average for 2005, which pushed shipping costs
lower, according to Bloomberg report. Shipping rates for VLCCs to Asia dropped
by as much as 45% in less than four weeks as the high price of crude hit
demand.
Now, as a background to this piece, I would like everyone to know that I
spent approximately 4 hours of a day communicating with a few professionals
in the shipping trade - discussing the merits of the last piece I wrote, A
Slow Boat to China or Hollywood Hubris? In that article I cited VLCC
[very large crude carrier or tanker ship] data as a proxy for the Baltic
Dry Index [ships that transport dry goods like iron ore or wheat for e.g.].
While the two rates [wet and dry] are highly co-related and traded in sympathy
over the relevant time span, I would like to be perfectly clear that there
is a difference - in much the same way that while the NASDAQ and DOW are
both equity indexes, one is technology laden while the other is composed
of large cap names.
*Just To Clear The Air*
While I will admit that not everyone [seemingly few in shipping] believes
the Baltic Dry Index [BDI] is capable of being manipulated [very reminiscent
of players in the gold market, eh?] the only part of my thesis that anyone
managed to poke a hole in was my using 'net new tanker [wet] tonnage hitting
the water' as a proxy for ships that would be contributors to the BDI or dry
index. While I will admit, and gave some ground, that this is an apples to
oranges comparison, its relevance in the overall context of the piece I wrote
is of little consequence since the movement or direction in rates [for both
wet and dry cargoes] was so highly co-related over the relevant time span -
namely the past 6 months.
Furthermore, the world's ability to create new ships [shipyards] is very finite.
Shipyards are not like Krispy Kreme donut franchises that are capable of immediately
ramping output to meet demand. They require large lead time to set up and establish
and order books have been "full" now for a number of years - i.e. They [ships]
can only be built and enter service in Greenspan parlance - at a measured pace.
Shipyards are [and have been] turning out ships as fast as they can - period.
The tanker stats already cited reflect incremental net increases [new builds
less ships retired/scraped] in tonnage. To suggest that an unusually large
number of net new dry bulk carriers suddenly appeared out of the woodwork -
causing a plunge in the BDI - is not consistent with the realities of ship
building.
For the most part, folks making the assertion outlined above - also contend
that China's economy is 'slowing down a lot.' My response in this regard is, "Show
me the numbers." The reality, dear reader, is there are no such numbers whatsoever,
to support this China Syndrome claim and there likely will not be [wishful
thinking, perhaps?] - so long as China continues to grow their GDP at a
9.5% clip.
So, what now strikes me as being odd is the Bloomberg report cited in the
article above.
Here's Why:
The article above emphatically states that high oil prices have hit [lessened]
demand. If this is true, why is the Washington
Times telling us that China is rationing oil?
Parts of China rations fuel
Aug. 9, 2005 at 2:47PM
China's most prosperous city of Guangzhou has begun rationing gasoline
and diesel to cope with a fuel shortage.....
Sheeple Lining Up For Gas In China. Please Sir...May I Have Some More?
A
new twist? Cars line up to buy petrol at a petrol station in Dongguan, south
China's Guangdong province, August 17, 2005. China's southern manufacturing
heartland of Guangdong is plagued by closed service stations, fuel rationing
and hours-long gas queues. (China
Daily)
Call me silly but I associate 'rationing' much more with lessening of supply,
NOT demand. So what gives? Furthermore, we know from Jim
Willie's fine piece of reporting that,
"...In March 2004, another Chinese state-owned oil giant Zhuhai Zhenrong
Corp signed a long-term agreement with Iran for liquefied natural gas (LNG).
In October 2004 a larger long-term $100 billion deal with yet another Chinese
state-owned oil giant Sinopec was cut for delivery of LNG from Iran and its
Yadavaran oilfield, which will provide 150 thousand barrels of oil per day.
One can easily conclude that China is integrally invested in Iranian energy
exploration, drilling, and production, in addition to petrochemical and natural
gas infrastructure. China is now the #1 destination for Iranian oil export...."
You see, dear reader, when I couple Jim Willie's reporting above with the
anecdotal words [below] of my shipping acquaintance I was just communicating
with - regarding world LNG [liquid natural gas] ship order books, who told
me:
"100 more LNG Ships to be built, got 300m for 1?"
Keep in mind that Natural Gas prices are at historic high nominal prices just
like crude oil and world order books are full of roughly 100 new orders [new
builds in the shipping trade] at 300 million a pop - to cater predominantly
to the Asian trade. Now I ask, does this scenario really pass the smell test
or paint a picture that Asian energy demand is waning? Well, not on my planet
- not for a minute!
So What's Really Going On?
Could China be playing games [Chinese checkers, perhaps]? Maybe and
likely, but what would make more sense in my mind is something a little more
along these lines [chess perhaps?]:
First, I would like to refer everyone back to the Matthew Simmons interview
on Peak Oil, where Simmons
states,
"[if] oil demand globally [goes] to 86-88 million bpd during [this] Winter,
that could easily exceed supply by 2-5 million bpd".[38:53]
When Jim Puplava asks if this might mean that $75 or $80 per barrel oil could
be in the near offing, Simmons replies,
"No, no, no. Oil prices could easily go up 5-10 times."
One needs to remember that the main thrust of Simmons thesis is that cheaper
fast flowing sweet crude oil will deplete first - leaving increasingly diminished
supply but proportionately more costly to extract, slower flowing harder to
refine heavier sour crude [more sulfur] as the only available supply at the
margin.
When one looks at current total OPEC output, Simmons reveals,
"If you include all of OPEC today they basically produce somewhere between
27 and 31 [million barrels per day]. And the fact that we don't actually
know that is scary.
When we juxtapose these Simmons comments against what the Chinese
themselves were saying as recently as April 05,
"... Also, Sinopec Corp. Yangzi Petrochemical refinery, which has been processing
both domestically produced and imported low- to medium-sulfur crude from
the start, is rapidly expanding processing of high-sulfur crude to cope with
increases in imports of high-sulfur crude from Saudi Arabia and other Middle
East producers...."
What the above article alludes to is China's current inability to process
larger amounts of heavier grades of crude oil. Then, after we take all of this
and consider what the Energy Information Admin. [EIA], of the U.S. government's
own Dept. of Energy has
to say,
"..Refiners therefore strive to run the optimal mix (or "slate")
of crudes through their refineries, depending on the refinery's equipment,
the desired output mix, and the relative price of available crudes. In recent
years, refiners have confronted two opposite forces -- consumers' and government
mandates that increasingly required light products of higher quality (the
most difficult to produce) and crude oil supply that was increasingly heavier,
with higher sulfur content (the most difficult to refine)..."
In spite of all of this, Saudi Arabia continues to insist that they can pump
all the oil that the world needs in spite of admissions
like the following:
Opec upgrades demand estimates
Opec says world oil demand will grow by 1.57m bpd in 2006, an upward revision
of the 30,000 barrels previously forecast, and that its supplies would have
to offset lower than expected output from non-Opec producers. China will
account for about one-fourth of total world oil demand growth next year.
Connecting Dots... It's Up, Up and Away!
The amazing thing about the facts I've gathered and highlighted above - they
are all pieces of a puzzle that are available in the public domain. Being curious
by nature, for the life of me, I cannot help but wonder why well heeled, well
connected news gathering organizations that make claims that "they report America's
business" consistently fail to connect these dots? How bout you?
I'm left with the conclusion that while China really needs the energy, they
seemingly cannot refine the crude oil available to them on the world market
- which currently happens to be heavy stuff from the Middle East. North American
refineries are known to be better able to refine heavier crude. As The
Washington Times recently reported,
"... as the world's oil thirst swells to more than 84 million barrels a
day and producers struggle to keep up, the extra supply being brought onto
the market, primarily by Saudi Arabia, is the heavy, sour variety. Not all
refiners have the equipment to process it."
This is all highly consistent with the Simmons thesis on peak oil. This is
also consistent with falling VLCC [crude tanker] rates from the Middle East
to Asia - but not due to lack of demand in China - it looks like it's all
about constricted or diminished supply from the Middle East. Who would
bother shipping oil if they could not refine it? Perhaps Matthew Simmons should
stand up and take a bow? Maybe we're already experiencing the 'thin edge of
the wedge' where Peak Oil is concerned, dear reader. Better fill 'er up now
while it's still cheap or better yet, buy a bike and a pair of ear muffs! It
might be a long cold winter.
So, at the end of the day - ask yourself if this is a story about a garden
variety market manipulation or instead one of high octane, gross negligence
and lies? In a world where, increasingly, nothing really is as it seems - they
both walk, talk and quack like ducks to me.
Honk your horn if you disagree.
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