Why Oil Prices Can't (and Won't) Collapse
Posted on November 01, 2012 at 06:00 AM EDT
The markets opened again yesterday after the tragic storm across the East Coast. In a world ravaged by storms, geopolitical tensions, rising demand, supply concerns, and increasing costs, it's important to know what's really driving oil prices moving forward. The most important thing you can know is that increased market volatility is not going away. The challenge, of course, is to harness these volatile forces in order to come out ahead in the future. That's the subject today. First I need to set the picture of where we are today. There has been persistent talk from the usual sources that the price of oil will collapse, along with a range of field support and midstream service providers. There is just one problem with this argument. It's just not going to happen. Don't get me wrong. I am not suggesting that the accelerating volatility in oil prices will point only in one direction, or that the trajectory is straight up. This is not going to be the first half of 2008 revisited. Rather, we will continue to experience intense movements over shorter intervals. This is what statisticians call kurtosis - greater amounts of volatility occurring in shorter cycles. Despite the overall upward trend demanded by indicators, these more compact movements will occasionally go in either direction. That means we can experience downward spikes restraining oil prices over shorter durations. Nonetheless, the overall medium-term dynamic continues to move up. This is producing what I call a "ratcheting" effect: The market prices will undergo downward pressures within a basic upward tendency. So where are oil prices going? To continue reading, please click here...