I stumbled into the stock market when I was hired by Value Line in 1978. That was a time when the firm was losing analysts like mad to a then-recovering, much-higher-paying brokerage industry. I ended up becoming the oil analyst in relatively short order. Natural resources and tech were my two priorities for the next six years.
Back then, the focus was all on the rise of OPEC as an economic power and the sharp increase in the world oil price from $2 or so a barrel to $30+ that the cartel had engineered. When people discussed peak oil, they either meant how high the price could go ($100 a barrel was the highest we could think possible) or when all the oilfields there are in the world would have been found and brought into production (2010-ish) was a common guess.
This all looks relatively naive in hindsight.
After going sideways for most of the 1980s, oil then began a steady rise to around $100 a barrel, after having spent a very short time at $140 in 2008, and then back to where it is now.
Today’s price is in the mid-$50 range–and the talk about peak oil has shifted from how high the price can go to whether we are at, or maybe past, peak global demand for crude.
I don’t think this is last is the right question for us as investors, though. How so?
10%-15% of the world’s oil production–and two-thirds of US output–comes from hydraulic fracturing. This is a high-cost engineering technique where the financial breakeven point is about $60 a barrel. That price ends up being, I think, a stabilizing force for oil production. If the price falls to or below, say, $55 a barrel, fracking operations begin to be shut down. Given that demand in the short term is relatively inflexible, this reduction in output causes the price to stabilize, and bounce back into the $60+ range. In my view, this yo-yo range is where we are now.
My guess is this is where we stay.
If this is anywhere near correct, we are at, or past, another oil peak–peak interest in oil as a stock market investment. Arguably, too, the two biggest variables will be price/asset value and the aggressivness of capital spending on exploration–more aggressive being a negative, I think.