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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
Ready for $262/barrel oil?
By Nelson Schwartz, FORTUNE senior writer
DAVOS, Switzerland (FORTUNE) - Be afraid. Be very afraid.
That's the message from two of the world's most successful investors on
the topic of high oil prices. One of them, Hermitage Capital's Bill
Browder, has outlined six scenarios that could take oil up to a
downright terrifying $262 a barrel.
The other, billionaire investor George Soros, wouldn't make any specific
predictions about prices. But as a legendary commodities player, it's
worth paying heed to the words of the man who once took on the Bank of
England -- and won. "I'm very worried about the supply-demand balance,
which is very tight," Soros says.
"U.S. power and influence has declined precipitously because of Iraq and
the war on terror and that creates an incentive for anyone who wants to
make trouble to go ahead and make it." As an example, Soros pointed to
the regime in Iran, which is heading towards a confrontation with the
West over its nuclear power program and doesn't show any signs of
compromising. "Iran is on a collision course and I have a difficulty
seeing how such a collision can be avoided," he says.
Another emboldened troublemaker is Russian president Vladimir Putin,
Soros said, citing Putin's recent decision to briefly shut the supply of
natural gas to Ukraine. The only bit of optimism Soros could offer was
that the next 12 months would be most dangerous in terms of any price
shocks, because beginning in 2007 he predicts new oil supplies will come
online.
Hermitage's Bill Browder doesn't yet have the stature of George Soros.
But his $4 billion Moscow-based Hermitage fund rose 81.5 percent last
year and is up a whopping 1780 percent since its inception a decade ago.
A veteran of Salomon Bros. and Boston Consulting Group, the 41-year old
Browder has been especially successful because of his contrarian take;
for example, he continued to invest in Russia when others fled following
the Kremlin's assault on Yukos.
Doomsdays 1 through 6
To come up with some likely scenarios in the event of an international
crisis, his team performed what's known as a regression analysis,
extrapolating the numbers from past oil shocks and then using them to
calculate what might happen when the supply from an oil-producing
country was cut off in six different situations. The fall of the House
of Saud seems the most far-fetched of the six possibilities, and it's
the one that generates that $262 a barrel.
More realistic -- and therefore more chilling -- would be the scenario
where Iran declares an oil embargo a la OPEC in 1973, which Browder
thinks could cause oil to double to $131 a barrel. Other outcomes
include an embargo by Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez ($111 a barrel),
civil war in Nigeria ($98 a barrel), unrest and violence in Algeria ($79
a barrel) and major attacks on infrastructure by the insurgency in Iraq
($88 a barrel).
Regressions analysis may be mathematical but it's an art, not a science.
And some of these scenarios are quite dubious, like Venezuela shutting
the spigot. (For more on Chavez and Venezuela, click here.)
Energy chiefs at the World Economic Forum in Davos downplayed the
likelihood of a serious oil shortage. In a statement Friday, Shell's CEO
Jeroen Van der Veer declared, "There is no reason for pessimism." OPEC
Acting Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo said "OPEC will step in at
any time there is a shortage in the market." But then no one in the
industry, including Van der Veer, foresaw an extended run of $65 oil --
or even $55 oil -- like we've been having.
It's clear that there is very, very little wiggle room, and that most
consumers, including those in the United States, have acceded so far to
the new reality of $60 or even $70 oil. And as Soros points out, the
White House has its hands full in Iraq and elsewhere.
Although there are long-term answers like ethanol, what's needed is a
crash conservation effort in the United States. This doesn't have to be
command-and-control style. Moral suasion counts for a lot, and if the
president suggested staying home with family every other Sunday or
otherwise cutting back on unnecessary drives, he could please the family
values crowd while also changing the psychology of the oil market by
showing that the U.S. government is serious about easing any potential
bottlenecks.
Similarly, he could finally get the government to tighten
fuel-efficiency standards and encourage both Detroit and drivers to end
decades of steadily increasing gas consumption. These kinds of steps
would create a little headroom until new supplies do become available or
threats like Iran's current leadership or the Iraqi insurgency fade.
It's been done it before. For all the cracks about Jimmy Carter in a
cardigan and his malaise speech, America did reduce its use of oil
following the price shocks of the 1970s, and laid the groundwork for low
energy prices in the 1980s and 1990s. But it would require spending
political capital, and offending traditional White House allies, and
that's something this president doesn't seem to want to do.
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