Breaking News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.
–The Euro...The New World Currency?
Andrew McKillop: US [dollar] Health Warning!
Will devaluation help energy transition?
Venezuela's Electronic News
VHeadline.com oil industry commentarist Andrew McKillop writes: No doubt
the 53 million US voters who chose G. W. Bush thought they voted for
firm rulership, War on Terror and ... who knows? ... economic
prosperity.
| And one thing is sure: if the US
[dollar] falls fast and far against the Euro,
¥en and likely not the Yuan ... then oil exporters will have little or
no choice but to fully switch to Euro pricing. |
In any case, under any scenario they surely voted for 'benign neglect'
of the US$ in its unequal struggle against the Euro, ¥en and the Yuan.
How far down the US$ goes ... and how fast the slide happens ... are
questions for crystal ball gazing, but several bottom lines come out of
all this.
For a start ... whatever happens in the 'planned devaluation' of the US$
... US trade deficits continue to grow. This is called the J-curve by
analysts, meaning that Americans go on buying things from abroad (like
oil and Chinese, Japanese or Indian goods to fill their supermarkets)
despite those imports costing more in devalued dollars, so increasing
the trade deficit for some while.
After that "while," New Economy gurus claim, the curve goes down and an
awful lot of Americans lose their jobs. The gurus keep their jobs, and a
Happy Few of the new jobless will get work producing goods to fill the
empty spaces foreign goods used to occupy on supermarket shelves.
This is the theory ... and it was tried out after the so-called 'Plaza
devaluation' in Reagan's second term, leading to the J-curve giving the
previous record high for US trade deficits. At the time, the US was only
a modest oil importer, just a few million barrels per day, and not
dependent on today's flood of imported oil, now costing the US at least
$120 billion per year, at a price of around US$45-50 a barrel ... at
$60/bbl oil imports to the US would cost near to $150 billion in a full
year.
And one thing is sure: if the US$ falls fast and far against the Euro,
¥en and likely not the Yuan ... then oil exporters will have little or
no choice but to fully switch to Euro pricing.
While the US$ still dominates world trade (about 52% of all trade is
transacted in dollars), the Euro has come from nowhere to take about 22%
of all trade transactions.
The Euro certainly does have the coverage now and volume to handle the
world's oil trade, unlike the ¥en or Yuan.
Even better for oil exporters, a switch to the Euro -- an intrinsically
stronger money than the US$ -- will, by the magic irony of world
markets, lead to a higher oil price in dollar terms!
Switching to EUR against US$ would in theory mean that a barrel of light
crude costing $50 should trade at 38.46 EUR with $1.30 for 1 EUR ... but
it will almost surely be rounded to 39 EUR.
Also, remaining users of the US$ for oil transactions ... perhaps those
Saudi princely friends of the Bush family ... will find that the dollar
buys ever less, and so they have to increase their prices to maintain
purchasing power. This ratchets up the oil price in dollars, before
being rounded up again when it is priced and traded in Euro.
The big threat however is not oil prices, in any money or currency, but
the physical supply of oil. World oil import demand is growing at over 3
million barrels a day each year.
World oil supply is growing at nothing like that rate.
This can be linked to the US$'s slide...
Too much benign neglect of the US$ by John Snow's team at the US
Treasury Dept., will turn malign very fast. As in China right now,
people are finding better, local ways to use their stacks of accumulated
US$ rather than 'recycle' them to the USA.
Since US$ devaluation will bring inflation to the USA, it is better not
to send those weakened dollars back home, as well as demand Euros when
exporting anything at all.
This will be very bad news to the US economy ... but could be good news
for the rest of the world's economy, especially on the front of Peak Oil
and structural undersupply of world oil markets.
Devaluation shock will surely slow the US economy, cutting US oil
imports.
This is important, because the big secret is that structural undersupply
is already here! Bets could be made on the oil price exceeding US$60
barrel by January or February. Other bets could run on US$75/bbl, and
even more exotic price levels (say 55 EUR/bbl) can take punters.
Earthquake damage here, civil unrest, strikes or war elsewhere, and
world oil markets are in physical undersupply.
But if the USA even cut its oil imports by 20% or 1.3 million
barrels/day, then this threat diminishes, and will only come back in
autumn 2005. A 20% cut in US oil imports would free up about two year's
oil import growth of the Chinese economy ... equivalent to only 4 months
growth of world oil imports including the USA.
And we need to buy time, enabling some reason and sanity to slip through
the censorship of the world media ... the CNN and BBC shows where the
paid Talking Head opines that we have "Forty years of oil supply
remaining."
US$ devaluation may be a salutary shock to the USA, and an opportunity
for making energy transition a real world imperative, not a freaky
slogan.
An unlikely route to USA energy transition is maybe already starting ...
through US$ devaluation ... since it is the USA that wants devaluation
They depreciated their money ... so obviously they don't have any
confidence in it ... despite printing the slogan "In God We Trust" on
every bill.
|