Energy & Commodities

WTI Crude Oil on the Move $112 Next Stop

The energy sector has surged during the last two months which can be seen by looking at the XLE Energy Select Sector Fund. If crude oil continues to climb to the $112 level, XLE will likely continue to rally for another few days or possibly week as energy stocks are considered a leveraged way to play energy price movements.

Another way to look at this info is through the USO United States Oil Fund. This tracks much closer to the price of oil. The only issue is that many ETFs that “try to track” an underlying commodity is in how the funds are built. They own multiple contracts further into the future which does not exactly provide us with the short term news/event driven price movements in the current front month contract as they should.

What does this mumbo jumbo mean? Well, it means funds like USO and the highly respected UNG, and VIX ETFs… (just joking about the highly respected part), fail to track the underlying commodity or index very well when it comes to short term price movements. This means, you can nail the timing of a trade, and the commodity or index will move in your favor, yet your fund loses money, or goes nowhere…

Let’s Focus on the Technicals Now…

WTI crude oil has formed a bullish ascending triangle pattern from March to May of this year. The breakout to the upside is bullish and should be traded that way until the chart says otherwise. This breakout and first pullback must hold, or I will consider it a failed breakout. So if price dips and closes 2 days below the breakout level, it will be a major negative for oil in my opinion.

The range of the ascending triangle provides us with a measured move to the upside which is $112. Typically the first pullback after a breakout can be bought. The first short term target to scalp some gains would be $109, and at that point moving your stop to breakeven is a wise decision. Trading is all about managing capital and risk, if you don’t, then the market will take advantage of your lack in discipline.

Looking further back on the chart, you can see the double bottom formation also known as a “W” formation. Once the high of the “W” formation is broken the trend should be considered neural or up.

Also note that the RSI (relative strength) has been trending higher for some time now. This means money is rotating into this commodity. This is in line with my interview this week with Kerry Lutzand my recent article talking about the next bull market in commodities and the TSX (Toronto Stock Exchange).

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WTI Crude Oil Trading Conclusion:

In short, oil has some extra risk around it. The recent move has been partly fueled by news overseas. So at any time oil could get a lift or take a hit by news that hits the wires. I tent to trade news related events with much less capital than I normally do because of this risk.

Happy Trading!

Want More Trade Ideas? Get Them Here: Www.Goldandoilguy.Com

8 Juniors Poised To Clean Up

Randall Abramson: Juniors Clean Up Behind the Elephant Hunters

Junior explorers and producers may be at the mercy of market forces, but an opportunistic management team can control its own destiny by capitalizing on industry opportunities. In this interview with The Energy Report, Randall Abramson, president, CEO and portfolio manager at Trapeze Asset Management Inc., tells the story of how one junior company cleaned up on an asset the majors overlooked. He also shares compelling oil and gas names from Canada to Tanzania.

COMPANIES MENTIONED: CORRIDOR RESOURCES INC. : LEGACY OIL + GAS INC. : MANITOK ENERGY INC. : NORTHERN TIER ENERGY LP : ORCA EXPLORATION GROUP INC. : WESTERN REFINING INC.

The Energy Report: With all the excitement over unconventional oil and gas resources these days, why are you focused on conventional exploration and production companies?

Randall Abramson: Being contrarian, when everybody’s focused on one area, we tend to focus on the other. Our largest weighting at the moment in our All-Cap portfolios is Manitok Energy Inc. (MEI:TSX). I picked up the phone one day and somebody recommended that we look at it. The majors in Alberta were all leaving for unconventional plays, and they left behind a perfectly good conventional play for a junior to come in and pick up!

gusherWhat happened was a bunch of Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM:TSX) employees had been drilling for deep gas wells in the Alberta foothills, and were bypassing perfectly good oil zones when they were looking for deep gas. That was what they were charged with in their Talisman days. Then, when gas prices declined materially in the debacle of ’08–’09, and the majors left, suddenly land prices dropped back to 1998 levels. That created an opportunity for this team of former Talisman employees to swoop in, gather up a bunch of cheap land and go after the oil they knew was there, because they saw it when they were drilling for gas in the good old days. That’s what created this conventional opportunity.

TER: How does a junior company like Manitok Energy compete in an industry dominated by oil and gas majors?

RA: Competition is somewhat irrelevant. Once you have land to exploit, it’s under a lease for a certain amount of time, and as long as you’re producing, that land is typically yours to keep until you sell it or move on. From that perspective, I’m not sure competition is relevant. In fact, big competition, as in the case of Talisman, was actually the source of Manitok’s opportunity.

Manitok has a second big opportunity for growth in an area called Entice, with a lease it acquired fromEncana Corp. (ECA:TSX; ECA:NYSE). Encana has been mostly a gas company since it spun offCenovus Energy Inc. (CVE:TSX; CVE:NYSE). It isn’t really interested in oil wells that can produce between 100 and 300 barrels a day (100–300 bbl/d). The Entice area was a case where the major had this asset for the longest time—since the 1800s—and wasn’t interested in it because it was smaller. Encana did little drilling for oil in this vast area over the years, though the adjacent areas have produced more than 200 million (200M) cumulative barrels of oil. Again, the competition is creating an opportunity for Manitok.

On the other hand, another company that we own, Corridor Resources Inc. (CDH:TSX), needs majors to participate, because it’s a junior that has stumbled into significant assets and it can’t pull them off on its own. Sometimes you’re at the whim of the majors, and sometimes you’re lucky because you get the smaller items they overlook when they’re out elephant hunting.

TER: Why is the market responding strangely to developments at Manitok?

RA: Oil and gas companies quite often are viewed as homogeneous. Investors think, “If I’m not investing in Manitok, I can invest in ‘Shmanitok.'” I think today’s analyst community is used to the unconventional play, and they like it because it’s cookie-cutter. They can see the rate of return more easily; it’s easier to quantify, to spreadsheet. Also, when something goes slightly awry or there’s a bit of noise, that tends to depress some oil and gas companies, because investors, seeing them as homogeneous, think, “I may as well go play the next one.”

Manitok had a few things go against them, which weakened sentiment toward the company. First, it had a pretty significant equity financing in the fall that satisfied a lot of demand for the shares. Then it had some disappointing well results in a noncore area. On top of that, the COO left the company and he was reasonably highly regarded as a geologist and driller. I think that created a lot of questions in people’s minds about why he left. It also created a couple of camps, because some people were behind him as well. The new COO is an operator with much more experience in bringing production on stream, having grown his previous company from 3,000 bbl/d to 30,000 bbl/d. We believe management is much stronger now.

Manitok Energy Inc., in our view, is a rare opportunity.

The acquisition of the Entice area from Encana also created some uncertainty about the direction of the company, because before that Manitok was focused solely on its Stolberg area. All of a sudden, this new area was introduced that people didn’t know much about. There was also some downward guidance in Q3/13 because the company wasn’t pulling fast enough on production. Even though Manitok announced it was back on track in Q3/13, sometimes the market shoots first and asks questions later, and selling begets further selling.

A number of things have temporarily kept a lid on the stock. As positive results keep coming out, both from Stolberg and the Entice area, Manitok should look very different as people get more comfortable. Recent positive indications from the initial five wells at Entice give us even more confidence in this area, where there’s potential for more than 50 new pools of oil. Between Stolberg and Entice, the company should have a sizable drilling inventory for years to come.

TER: What is your recommendation and your target for Manitok?

RA: Our target today is $4.50. Our target valuation by year-end is $6. We would look for something closer to an $8 mark over the next three years. The stock is around the $2.20 mark today. The reserve-based NAV, including land, was around $3.80 at the end of March. That $3.80 would include zero value beyond land value for the new Entice area, and understates the value of Stolberg.

The going rate on the market today for Manitok’s peers is about $68,000 per flowing barrel ($68,000/bbl), and somewhat higher if you look at what private market transactions have brought. You can use those metrics quite easily on the barrels Manitok is producing today. Manitok’s exit guidance for 2014 is more than 7,000 bbl (7 Mbbl). You can easily see value of more than $6/share. Manitok, in our view, is a rare opportunity. The company has a rapid growth rate, industry-leading well results, high internal rates of return (IRRs), high netbacks, only a modicum of debt and plenty of room for further growth, yet it trades at a large discount to its fair value—in fact, bizarrely, it’s the cheapest of its peers.

TER: Northern Tier Energy LP (NTI:NYSE) is an independent, downstream, energy master limited partnership (MLP) with refining, retail and pipeline operations that serve the Petroleum Administrative for Defense District (PADD) 2 region of the United States. What’s your recommendation for Northern Tier?

RA: I think Northern Tier is getting closer to fair value. There is still probably 10% or 15% upside there, particularly if its large owner, Western Refining Inc. (WNR:NYSE), which owns close to 39% of the company, decides it wants to have the rest of the company for itself, to unlock significant value. This transaction could diversify Western Refining by geography, end-markets and feedstock, and allow a cash-flow boost in Western Refining’s own MLP by adding Northern Tier’s significant assets in retail, pipeline and storage facilities.

TER: How does the cyclical nature of the refining industry affect Northern Tier’s earnings?

RA: I think Northern Tier is a bit of a standout. There is a shortage of refinery capacity within the U.S., which makes the refining industry less cyclical than it used to be. And Northern Tier should be even less cyclical than the group because there’s a more pronounced supply/demand issue in its region. The company should also have better margins: It gets a Bakken feed of light oil, and at the same time there’s a significant shortage in its Minnesota backyard, which allows it to get a better margin when it sells the refined product. Northern Tier also has some vertical integration because of its ownership of the retail downstream.

TER: Corridor Resources Inc.’s share price is up more than 300% over the last year. What’s driving that?

RA: One of the key ingredients is that natural gas prices themselves have been rocketing up to where they sit today, just shy of the $5 per thousand cubic feet ($5/Mcf) range from as low as $2-and-change a year ago. That’s attributable to storage inventory dropping as the number of gas rigs has plummeted, and to the fact that we had a disgusting winter. Demand has also been up because there has been switching from coal to gas for economic reasons, although, bizarrely, it’s been going slightly back in the other direction recently because of the change in prices. But the carbon footprint issues have put upward pressure on the natural gas price.

At the same time, what’s really helped Corridor, specifically on the gas price front, is the higher gas price in its specific market, which is the U.S. Northeast, as it sells into the New England area. There’s been a tremendous shortage there. Gas refineries and natural gas plants were lying idle on the coldest days of the year simply because they couldn’t get enough product.

There isn’t enough pipeline capacity coming into New England right now. Corridor ships its gas through the Maritime Northeast Pipeline into New England. It has already locked in US$11/Mcf for a good part of next winter. That’s been a huge change for Corridor, to be able to lock in those prices and to start capital spending again in a significant way both at its McCully Field, which is its main field, and its Frederick Brook shale field.

Orca Exploration Group Inc.’s Tanzania pipeline is now more than 70% complete.

Corridor also took on partners for exploration and production on Anticosti Island in the Gulf of St. Lawrence: the Québec government and Maurel & Prom (MAU:EPA), out of France. Corridor has about 22% of the Anticosti play. The partners will put in the money to drill on that property over the next couple of years. We think anticipation of that event and the event itself have helped propel the share price. Anticosti Island is a shale oil project similar to what we’ve seen in the Utica Shale. It still requires some work to assess the viability of the project, but on the holes that the company has looked into thus far, the core samples look exactly the same as what we’ve seen in the Utica. Corridor should be drilling and doing more work through the rest of 2014 and 2015 to determine flow rates.

Corridor has two other properties, one called Old Harry, offshore Newfoundland and Québec, and Frederick Brook, the shale property. Those two fields need partners because they require tens, if not hundreds, of millions of spending to bring them to fruition. But they are massive projects.

What’s amazing about Corridor is that it’s still trading, in our opinion, below the breakup liquidation value of the company. If you took the land value, the value of existing production and the value of its compression gas plant, and sold those off, you’d probably get more than the share price today. Because that’s not going to happen, we still believe that we’re getting those megaprojects for free. The company has no debt and about $35 million ($35M) in cash on hand.

TER: Corridor has one producing property in New Brunswick. Is that shale gas or conventional gas?

RA: Most of it is conventional, but there is a little shale gas on the Hiram Brook zone, which is on the company’s McCully property. Underneath the Hiram Brook zone, Corridor has discovered a zone called the Frederick Brook, and it’s one of the most prolific shales in North America. It’s more than 1,000 meters thick.

The problem for Corridor has been that it requires $100M–150M to begin developing it, and the company needs a partner to pull that off properly. Repsol-YPF S.A. (REPYY:OTCPK) has an LNG import facility nearby that it has been talking about converting into an import/export facility. That would create instant demand for Corridor and others’ gas in the region, not just to sell into the Maritimes and into the Northeast of the U.S., but also to Europe and elsewhere. That can be done at a much lower cost than what we’re seeing with export facilities in Louisiana or on the coast of British Columbia.

TER: Are the protests against fracking in New Brunswick threatening Corridor’s operation?

RA: I don’t think they’ve had an impact on Corridor because Corridor operates away from metropolitan areas. The protesting has led to more stringent regulations. That’s a positive. To think that we’re not going to have fracking at all is somewhat ridiculous because, again, circling back to conventional versus unconventional, this isn’t the Beverly Hillbillies anymore, where the oil gurgles up to the surface. (Although, with Manitok, that’s exactly what’s been happening with its conventional rarity.) With Corridor, its rock has to get fracked. That’s the case with most unconventional formations, which means most of the formations and reservoirs that exist today. Fracking is just reality.

TER: What’s happening with Orca Exploration Group Inc. (ORC-A:TSX.V; ORC-B:TSX.V)?

RA: Orca is extremely neglected. I think there might be two analysts who follow the company. The company is domiciled in Tanzania. That puts it out of sight, out of mind. And the company has struggled with a number of issues.

Orca was supposed to have a pipeline built in the country to allow higher deliverability of its own gas, as its gas fires more than 50% of the power in the whole country of Tanzania. That pipeline was delayed and delayed, and finally broke ground in fall of last year. The pipeline is now more than 70% complete, and is scheduled to be commissioned this time next year. But the government of Tanzania has been in shambles. It has not been paying its own bills, which means TANESCO, which is the national utility of the country, has been behind in paying Orca and others who supply it. But Orca has received some money back.

The World Bank has now entered to help the country. Tanzania got a second tranche recently of about $100M, so Orca should see its share of that over the next month or so. There should be further dollars to come. As we see it, everything’s actually improving now. The government has established a very capitalistic national energy policy. It’s talking about having completely liberalized markets by the end of this year. There is an election at the end of next year. If this power situation isn’t sorted out—because Tanzania has been dealing with significant brownouts for years now—I think the government is going to struggle to get reelected.

I think a lot of market participants want to see everything looking rosy before they participate. Meanwhile, the company has more than $1 per share of cash on hand at the moment and another $1 per share of working capital above that. You’re essentially getting the rest of the business for free. The rest of the business has approximately $12 net present value using a 10% discount rate from the third-party engineer reserve value. There’s arguably $14 of value and a $2.30 share price. There’s no debt.

TER: What are some other companies you’re excited about?

RA: We like Legacy Oil + Gas Inc. (LEG:TSX). It’s a mid-cap company with just over a billion dollars ($1B) of market value in the Saskatchewan/Dakota area. It’s an unconventional play and has essentially batted 1.000 on its drilling. I think last year it went 99% because it missed one, but in the most recent quarter it hit them all.

What we like about Legacy is its high netbacks. It’s virtually all light oil, with a high IRR. It trades at about a 20% discount to its asset value. We see that changing over the next 6–12 months as the company makes accretive acquisitions or gets the balance sheet more in line with what the market would like to see. In the meantime, Legacy is growing its fair value. This is not a small company. This is a company that has forecast an exit rate of about 24 Mbbl/d production for this year.

TER: Any parting thoughts for the investor with money to spend?

RA: Oil prices obviously go up and down because oil is a commodity. But oil is not iron ore, it’s not copper and it’s not nickel. Those other commodities are much more cyclical in nature. Demand for oil rarely goes negative, like copper or nickel or iron ore would. I think that allows oil and gas companies to look more like any other company.

I think we’re in a sweet spot right now. We’ve got ever-rising demand. If you look at the non-OECD nations, there’s substantial growth in demand. And demand is greater than supply. Storage inventories are dropping way below the five-year average, which means that consumption is rising faster than production. That means the prices for products that the Orcas and the Corridors and the Manitoks of the world sell are likely going higher over time. If you’ve got a company with terrific production growth, a decent balance sheet and a high IRR—and the price of what it’s selling is going up at the same time—that’s a pretty good recipe for success, especially if it’s already undervalued even at $85/bbl oil, like a Manitok and a Legacy.

TER: Thank you very much for your thoughts.

RA: My pleasure.

Randall Abramson, CFA, is CEO and Portfolio Manager of Trapeze Asset Management Inc., a firm he cofounded in 1999 shortly after founding its affiliate broker dealer, Trapeze Capital Corp. Abramson was named one of Canada’s ‘Stock Market Superstars’ in Bob Thompson’s Stock Market Superstars: Secrets of Canada’s Top Stock Pickers (Insomniac Press, 2008). Trapeze’s separately managed accounts are long/short or long only, and have either an all-cap orientation or large cap-only mandate via the company’s Global Insight model. Abramson graduated with a bachelor’s degree in commerce from the University of Toronto in 1989, and his career has spanned investment banking, investment analysis and portfolio management.

Want to read more Energy Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Manitok Energy Inc., Orca Exploration Group Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services. 
3) Randall Abramson: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Manitok Energy Inc., Corridor Resources Inc., Orca Exploration Group Inc., Northern Tier Energy Inc. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent. 
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

 

Oil Update: The Iraqi Crisis

 Right after the Iranian Revolution and their oil embargo in 1980 the oil supply disruptions from Iran caused oil prices to spike. This was one of the main causes of a severe U.S. recession. Inflation and interest rates went to double-digits.

Over 30 years later, unfortunately, the conflicts in the Middle East are worse.

Last week Sunni militants seized control of major cities in northern Iraq.

A group called the Islamic State of Iraq al-Sham is behind the latest attacks. ISIS, as the media calls the group, came across the Syrian border last Tuesday, captured the city of Mosul and may be looking to close in on Baghdad.

Kurdish nationalist forces also took control of Kirkuk as Iraqi government forces apparently fled.

Below is a map of the area of conflict:

061814-img-01

Islamic extremists, in particular ISIS, would like to redraw the Middle Eastern borders that the British and French established.

According to the Wall Street Journal, they would like to establish an Islamic state from the coast of Syria through Iraq, which was recognized in the seventh century, after Mohammed’s death.

The current crisis could cause disruptions to oil supplies.

Iraqi Oil Production &
Proved Oil Reserves

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Iraq has about 141billion barrels of proved reserves.

Below is a chart of Iraqi production:

061814-img-02

Iraq production has increased dramatically thanks to their abundant reserves, global capital, workers and technology. They produce about 1% of their proved oil reserves per year.

Yet, for the amount of oil they have, they are relatively small oil producers.

By contrast, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the U.S. has about 27 billion barrels (equivalent) of proved reserves. But we produce about 4 billion barrels a year, close to 15% of our proved reserves.

We are the No. 2 petroleum producer in the world.

The world uses about 90 million barrels per day of oil, so the Iraqis’ share of global supplies is only about 4%. Other world producers could make up the difference.

The Chinese buy about 50% of Iraqi oil and are major investors in Iraq. They have outbid and out-negotiated other investors, including the U.S.

In fact, the Chinese have been the main beneficiaries of Gulf War II.

Other major investors in Iraq include the British, Russians and the U.S.

The Global Oil Supply Could Lose Its Current Surplus

Below is a chart about the spare capacity from OPEC:

061814-img-03

The spare capacity is basically the output of Iraq. So if we have total supply disruptions, this would cause nervousness in the oil markets … and they would continue to spike.

Below is a longer-term trend picture for Iraq.

061814-img-04

At the beginning of Gulf War II, production fell to about 1.5 million barrels per day. This means the surplus would be about 2 million, and that is still too small.

The rest of the oil producers in the world could make up the difference if there are more supply disruptions.

Unfortunately, a disruption — or multiple disruptions at once — could occur at any time due to more terrorist attacks on supplies in the Middle East and Africa, maintenance issues, weather (including hurricanes), oil spills and worker strikes, among other reasons.

But don’t expect producers to go down without a fight. There are some silver linings to be found, particularly for energy investors.

The oil boom of Northern Iraq’s Kurdish oil is an optimistic development after the end of Gulf War II.

Northern Iraq and the Kurds

Iraq is basically divided among three groups: the Shiites, Sunnis and the Kurds in the north.

The Kurds have a lot of oil (it’s estimated they have 45 billion barrels and 10 trillion cubic feet of natural gas). And so far they are defending their territory.

The Kurds claim they have 190,000 troops and are committed to keep the ISIS out and to keep oil flowing.

Reports from different sources say that ISIS has between 4,000 to 14,000 troops.

The Northern Iraq/Kurdish territory is semi-autonomous of Baghdad. Recently the Kurds sent 2 million barrels to Turkey to go to global markets.

Also, at this point, it’s not believed ISIS wants Kurdish territory (again, please see the map at the top of this issue).

Regardless, ISIS is certainly making waves with each move it makes right now.

Past Oil Spikes

Below is a long-term chart for oil:

061814-img-05

As we can see from the chart, after each spike, prices fall quicker than the rise.

Below are the causes of the spikes on the chart:

  1. Gulf War I
  2. 9/11 and fear of oil disruptions
  3. Gulf War II
  4. Hurricane Katrina
  5. For decades, there were always global oil surpluses, except for oil embargoes and wars in the Middle East. By the early 2000s and with strong demand coming from China, global oil producers had a difficult time keeping with global oil demand.

The gap between oil demand and production from 2004 to 2008 shrunk from “abundance” to a “very small surplus” of about 2 million barrels a day.

This made oil markets nervous, and caused risk premiums in oil prices to rise.

Also, notice that volume surged. Trend-followers and momentum players jumped on rising prices, exaggerating the trend in oil prices.

Demand fell in 2009, and a surplus in oil increased. But we may be back to a very low surplus, and risk premiums are rising again because of the crisis in Iraq.

Will trend-followers exaggerate the rise in oil prices, as they have in the past?

The next resistance is about $110, and then round numbers would be potential resistance levels: $120, $130, etc.

The $150 level is the last historical high, and would be major long-term resistance.

If prices went to $150, we could expect a global recession, and oil prices would fall again because of lower demand.

The conflict in the Middle East was in full bloom when I started my investment career 34 years ago. The religious civil wars among Muslims in the Middle East that started about 1,400 years ago will probably be around in another 34 years and beyond.

Here in the near term, the Kurds will likely keep the oil flowing, and the momentum traders will continue keeping things interesting in the oil markets. And I’ll be looking for ways to help you to profit, so stay tuned to this space each week for my updated outlook.

Sincerely,
Dan Hassey

 

P.S.  Recently, my colleagues James DiGeorgia and Geoff Garbacz modified a little-known military technology to predict the direction of the stock market with pinpoint accuracy.

Doing so has allowed their newest trading system to achieve a remarkable 95% winning percentage this year. Click here to see how they did it >>

 

 

Prepare for $4 Gas While You Still Can

 

  • GasPriceTimes were tough when a gallon of regular fetched $3.58 last year… Are you ready for $4 per gallon and more? We show you how to prepare…
  • Think it’s unlikely? $4 gas is in the cards, says Matt Insley, and sooner than you think. It’s all because of the “Middle East Effect”…
  • Then, Byron King explains how the U.S. struck shale oil at just the right time. Yes, the Middle East might be going up in flames… and oil prices will head higher… but that doesn’t mean you can’t carve out a slice of America’s New Age of Wealth for yourself…

Peter Coyne, explaining the chances of $4 dollar gas…

“I just really think that something could be done about the gas prices,” Natalie Hay told her local Orangeburg paper in South Carolina last year as she stood at the pump.

Thanks to still-pricey gas, this ordinary woman had canceled her Independence Day travel plans because she had to pinch pennies.

“I understand everybody has to make a profit,” Hay humbly explained, “but… these gas companies mark record-making profits yearly and the working people are struggling.

“Us working people gotta live.”

Jimmy Weathers, one of “us working people” from Bowman, S.C., agreed. “They need to get on down,” he told the same reporter. With a Ford pickup, Weathers gets 11 miles to the gallon. Maybe 12, if he’s lucky.

That means he needs to consolidate his trips… and stay at home a lot more. He’s essentially lost his freedom. “I am on disability,” he explained, “and I can’t afford to go anywhere.”

Perhaps you can empathize.

If not, a third motorist, Dan Brown, who was from out of town, felt a little differently.

Today, gas prices are lower than in 2008 yet slightly higher than in July 2013.

Coming from Asheville, N.C., where prices had been even higher, he threw in his perspective. “I think they are pretty low,” he said of South Carolina’s gas prices. “It is not as bad as it has been.”

Brown had a point, too. At the time the three talked to reporters, in July of last year, U.S. gas prices averaged $3.58. That was bad enough. But at their peak in 2008, the average was $4.12.

Today, gas prices are lower than in 2008 yet slightly higher than in July 2013. At writing, a gallon will cost you $3.68 on average. Again, that’s bad. But perhaps you should count your blessings…

Because there’s a good chance prices will head back to $4 by the end of the year.

For your editor, it roughly means his ol’ bucket — a 2004 Honda Civic — will cost him at least 12 bucks more per month to drive. And our fiancee’s Audi SUV will cost an additional $20 per month. And it only goes up from there. We’re overjoyed at the thought. How about you?

By way of background, oil prices have been rising over the past week. This morning, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate fetches $106.91. The proximate cause, if you haven’t see it on the internet, is Iraq’s descension into worse-than-normal chaos.

It’s the same old Middle Eastern story — Sunnis vs. Shiites — just different characters. ISIS, or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, a group too crazy even for al-Qaida, has been blitzkrieging Iraq. Approaching Baghdad one captured city at a time.

That gets us back to $4 gas and your wallet…

ISIS, or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, a group too crazy even for al-Qaida, has been blitzkrieging Iraq.

“While the U.S. only receives about 300,000 barrels of Iraqi crude per day,” explains senior petroleum analyst atGasBuddy.com Patrick DeHaan, “the concern is about the other 3 million or so barrels per day that Iraq pumps, which could be at risk of disruption.”

To give depth to DeHaan’s statement, Iraq was the world’s seventh-largest oil producer in 2013. And it’s the third-largest oil producer in OPEC. To illustrate Iraq’s importance to world supply, in 2012, the International Energy Agency released its “World Energy Outlook Special Report for Iraq.”

In it, the IEA forecast that by 2035, the price of oil would have to be $215 per barrel (about $140 in real terms) — even if Iraq increased its production by 176%, from nearly 3 million to 8.3 million barrels per day. If that’s accurate and production is disrupted, $4 gas will be the least of your worries.

Historically, Iraq’s production is sourced from two oil fields in particular — Rumaila and Kirkuk. For now, neither has been captured by ISIS.

But if they do fall to the rebels — or at the rate things are going, when they fall to ISIS — you’ll once again see what our dynamic resource duo, Byron King and Matt Insley, have dubbed “the Middle East effect.”

At that point, you’ll wish you had invested ahead of time…

To see what we mean by the Middle East effect, just look at the price of oil since 2011, keeping in mind the myriad turmoil in the region:

REC 07-25-13 Update

“$4 gas could easily be in the cards,” explains our own Matt Insley. “In fact, if Iraqi oil production goes offline because of sectarian violence or if oil supplies are disturbed for other reasons, you’re in for an oil price nightmare.”

He’s talking about $150… $200 or even $220 per barrel.

“Think back to 2008,” Matt reminds you. “Back then was the last time we saw $150 oil. And gas prices topped $4.”

“But wait,” we hear you pleading… “You spent all of last week reckoning about the U.S. energy renaissance. America’s experiencing a ‘New Age of Wealth,’ isn’t it? Oil and gas is flowing… That means the price at the pump should fall.”

And you’re half correct. Thanks to fracking for shale oil, the U.S. has indeed ushered in a New Age of Wealth. But that won’t lead to lower gas prices.

“Gasoline prices aren’t buffered by U.S. production at all,” explains Matt. “Unlike raw crude, U.S. refiners can and do export gasoline. So if oil war breaks out, domestic producers will win… and so will domestic refiners like Valero (NYSE:VLO) and Tesoro Corp. (NYSE: TSO)… but you, the little guy, will lose out.”

That is, you’ll lose out if you don’t protect yourself. And you should do everything you can, because no one, not the government or U.S. energy producers, is going to do anything to keep domestic gas prices low. Want to know what to do?

Here’s your solution: The first thing you should do is simply get out of the way. Dump any company that depends on cheap oil to build or ship or stockpile their warehouses.

Sure… oil’s price movement could be different this time around, obviously. But you’re much better off getting ready before a historic moment… than you are trying to catch up after it’s happened.

After you’ve taken the necessary steps to get ahead of an Iraq shock, please read on for Byron King’s analysis on U.S. fracking. He explains why despite radical Islam and the Oil War, it’s your best hope for outsized returns…

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS — a violent Islamic fundamentalist group — has been taking over Iraqi cities slowly but surely. So far, none of Iraq’s major oil production is in harm’s way… but that could soon change. Byron King details the situation and gives you his insight for how to prepare your portfolio ahead of this “Oil War”…

Thank God for Fracking

 

I’m sure you’ve seen the news. Radical Islamist armies are marching towards Baghdad, slicing through Iraqi government troops like a hot knife through butter.

Iraq is breaking apart. As if recent, U.S. policy fiascos in Libya, Egypt and Syria were not enough, the wheels are now coming off the proverbial bus in Iraq, site of so much blood and treasure spent in the last decade. Loss, loss and more loss.

Tragedy unfolds before us. U.S. policies across the Middle East are coming undone. In Washington, U.S. officials are panicking, and — characteristically — there’s talk of U.S. airstrikes against Islamists.

With that in mind, the Middle East “Oil Wars” scenario I’ve been outlining since 2007, is clearly playing out, very much along the Shiite-Sunni fault lines that I described here in the Daily Reckoning for the past several years.

At the same time, closer to home, the Age of Wealth scenario my partner Matt Insley and I have predicted is unfolding as well. U.S. oil prices are at their highest levels in well over a year. We live in a global oil market, and far distant events can drive prices upwards in the U.S. and Canada. For example, look at the chart for U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) blend.

DR 06-16-14 Turmoil-580x470

Looking at the chart, not even the bitter cold and snow of this past North American winter moved oil prices up to where they are now. But the Middle East heating into turmoil? Well, that’s a camel from a different stable.

Meanwhile, share prices for energy-consuming industries — airlines and more — are down, on the prospect of higher fuel prices. On the other hand, domestic oils and oil service plays are up. Again, it all fits our energy investing thesis, which is to keep your net worth away from “too much” Middle East exposure.

Sooner or later, it’s all going down over there. As I watch what’s happening over there, I’m inclined to think it’ll happen sooner rather than later. But there’s good news.

The U.S. has entered its New Age of Wealth — which gives you an opportunity to invest and profit despite Middle Eastern mayhem.

Fracking — the key to the U.S. energy renaissance — is the culmination of decades’ worth of technology improvements in the energy biz. That is, just pressuring rock with fluids — classical “fracking” — has been around for nearly 70 years. But horizontal drilling now makes it possible to expose many thousands of feet of hydrocarbon-bearing rock to the magic of super-high pressure.

In the “olden days” of vertical drilling, the drill bit might penetrate 30, 50 or even 100 feet of “pay” rock.

In other words, in the “olden days” of vertical drilling, the drill bit might penetrate 30, 50 or even 100 feet of “pay” rock. That was good back then, but can’t cut it today.

Nope. Today, with geo-steering drill-bits, and very precise placement of the well bore within a formation, an operator can gain access to literally miles of exposed rock face, deep down. Then come the “stages” of fracking, which release the oil and gas. Yes, it’s complex technology, and not all that many companies can make it work.

When you step back, new technology includes better computers, software and algorithms. Better math, physics and geophysics. Better directional control. Better drill bits. Better drilling fluids. New power technology, such as “top drive” drilling systems. Better metallurgy for drill pipe, and even “coiled tube” drilling with metal that bends more easily than you might suspect. Better valves and pressure control. All that, and more.

We’ve covered it all — and even highlighted the companies that deliver this cutting-edge tech — like Halliburton, Schlumberger and Baker Hughes to name just a few. The U.S. has come a long way.

Remember back in 2005 or so? U.S. conventional oil output was heading down fast, in seemingly irreversible decline. Then the directional drilling and fracking revolution happened, in the sense that it began to kick into higher gear. By 2007, the oil industry was adopting the new tech at a fairly good clip. Since about 2008 — in the wake of the financial crash, as a matter of fact — U.S. oil output has soared.

DR 06-16-14 OilProduction-580x470

Indeed, since about 2008, U.S. oil output is up by over three million barrels per day, while output in the rest of the world has been flat or declining. So U.S. fracking has added significant daily oil output to world markets, equivalent to a fair-sized nation in, say, the Middle East.

Also consider that, in most other oil producing nations, internal demand is increasing; which means that amounts available for export are falling. So more and more U.S. oil is making up for less and less overall oil available on world markets.

Thus, in a world with less oil available for international trade, the U.S. is growing its output. And that’s why I say, “thank God for fracking,” which really means “thank God for new tech.” Without fracking — and the tech behind it — we’d be in a world of hurt.

Let’s return to the Middle East, which may still cause us a world of hurt because the place is collapsing before our eyes.

How bad will things become? Not long ago, for example at the Platts Conference in London, several speakers made favorable references to how Iraq would soon ramp up oil production and exports. This will serve to meet growing global oil demand, and moderate prices in years to come. Right?

Well, this week I saw imagery of Islamists chopping off the heads of captured Iraqi government soldiers. Thus, I began to discount that optimistic prediction by the speakers at Platts.

We live in a world that runs on oil. Much of that oil supply is at risk, due to the above-noted “Oil Wars” scenario.

Looking elsewhere, I’ve heard predictions that Libya will eventually get back to being a major world oil exporter. Then, at the Offshore Technology Conference in Houston last month, former Shell Oil CEO John Hoffmeister pointed out that Libyan rebels have managed to seize and hold Libya’s oil exporting terminals.

“Libyan forces possibly could retake those oil terminals,” noted Hoffmeister, “but to my understanding of chemistry, hydrocarbons don’t work well with exploding rocket grenades and tracer bullets.” In other words, if the Libyan troops attempt to retake the oil sites, Libya risks blowing up critical infrastructure, such that it will take years to rebuild, if that happens at all.

Here’s the bottom line. We live in a world that runs on oil. Much of that oil supply is at risk, due to the above-noted “Oil Wars” scenario. Here in theDaily Reckoning, I’ve discussed the situation for many years. I’ve focused investment ideas on investing “around” the looming storm, as much as that’s possible.

Still, here in the U.S. — and Canada, to be sure — our energy industries have developed technology to pull hydrocarbons out of seemingly impermeable rocks. It’s the right tech at the right time in history. Just in time, as things are turning out. We are blessed, if you care to look at it that way.

Perhaps some wonderful politician, somewhere, will stand before a teleprompter and give a fine speech. Perhaps that fine speech will move souls, to the point where peace and love breaks out, and the world enters a new era of harmony. That, and oil prices will fall. Perhaps; but don’t bet the ranch on it.

Instead, keep your eyes peeled for the furies of war. Unless you’re very elderly, you have NEVER seen the kind of carnage that’s about to sweep across entire swaths of the world. To use a different form of godly analogy, Mars wants to be paid — in gold, blood and oil. Invest accordingly… and keep your your eyes peeled on these pages — because we saw it all coming, years ago.

Regards,

Byron King
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. “If the regional spillover results in a significant supply disruption in Iraq or elsewhere,” an analyst from one of Europe’s largest banks said, oil “could spike briefly to $150.”

But get this — my research says that prices could head much higher than $150. I guarantee you won’t hear a forecast like this in the mainstream, but I think it’s a lot closer to reality. Click here for my latest price target and information on the Middle East’s meltdown.

Click here to learn how to make 416% gains like this type of situation has returned in the past. You’ll never have to feel the pain at the pump again.

About Byron King

Byron King is the managing editor of Outstanding Investments and Energy & Scarcity Investor. He is a Harvard-trained geologist who has traveled to every U.S. state and territory and six of the seven continents.

 

Water: Explosive Investment Potential

images“One of the most mis-priced assets on the Planet.” – Richard Bookbinder of Terre Verde Capital Management

Richard says there are more than a 1000 companies an investor can look at. Areas to look at are in pumps, compressors, dams & infrastructure engineering, water delivery & utilities. – Editor Money Talks

“The coming battles for water” – Peter Grandich

Peter chose this  3 minute video HERE to bring investors up to date on this investment opportunity.