Agents of Change

Last month I attended the Oil and Money conference in London.  I used to attend fairly often but this was the first time in a few years.  Oil and Money is not a large conference but it has high-level speakers and is normally at its best during uncertain times – but not this year. 

The speakers generally include Chairmen/CEOs of major participants in the international oil and gas industry and this year was no exception.  Speakers included top executives of Shell, Total, BP, OPEC, Qatar Petroleum, the four largest oil traders, and others of similar stature.  Such a roster is expected to present some bold forecasts, significant announcements, controversial viewpoints, and food for thought and at Oil and Money it usually does. 

This year it was apparent early on that these organizations are not defining the conversation and they know it.  Most of the commentary was how these organizations will respond to trends and events of which they are not the driving force.  These large organizations have become responders; not initiators and it is apparent they do not know what they will need to respond to next.  They are not leading the industry into new supply, marketing, or pricing relationships; they are not coordinating with political efforts to establish stability in areas of weak, ineffective, or corrupt governments or upheaval or conflict; nor are they leading technological advance.  

As I have noted before, the oil and gas industry is in a period of transition.  As the largest component of international trade it is subject to numerous cross-forces imposing tensions and uncertainties: Trade conflicts; political conflicts between the US and Iran, Russia, and China; unreliable data; critical elections in several countries evidencing fundamental political re-alignments; a booming US economy coupled with slowing European and world economies; resentment of the international finance and monetary system and pricing of oil in US dollars; unstable, corrupt, or lack of government in several major oil-producing countries; an increase of US production by nearly 6 million barrels per day since 2006; and an affiliation of OPEC with Russia and other non-member oil-producing countries. 

Uncertainty regarding the effects of all this was evident at the conference in the range of oil price forecasts for 2019 ranging from $65 per barrel (Vitol) to $100 (Trafigura).  Comments indicated confusion as to what will happen and how these organizations should respond; no one proposed any actions they or anyone else could or should take to establish stability and reliability of prices and supply. 

A major disruptive event which these large organizations are just starting to come to grips with is the increase of US oil production, its persistence, and the resilience of the domestic US oil and gas industry.  The return of the US to the top rank of oil producers was referred to in introductory comments as the “Return of the Jedi”.  Although some large companies are becoming significant participants in the horizontal-well, hydraulic-fracturing development boom of very tight reservoirs they did not develop the methods nor initiate the Tight Oil revolution.  They are now trying to understand it and figure out what to do about it.  To know ahead of time what these companies would talk about in October 2018 one should have attended the Enercom Oil and Gas Conferences in Denver in 2011 to 2013.  That is where independent US oil and gas operators present their plans. They created the Tight Oil revolution and are still driving it. 

The other major Agent of Change affecting the industry is the Trump Administration.  Conflicts, disagreements, sanctions, interest rates, and trade disputes affect major oil and gas producer countries, importer countries, consumers, businesses, independent and midstream operators, refiners, and third-world economies.  Recent election results in several countries and a prolonged slide of oil prices below WTI $50/bbl have compounded uncertainties regarding the near-term course of the industry. 

President Trump planned and announced a sanctions program for Iran that would reduce their oil exports “to zero”.  He pressured Saudi Arabia and other OPEC producers to increase production to soften the effect of taking Iranian exports out of the market.  After they did so, just before the deadline he issued waivers to China, India, and six other countries.  These countries purchase more than 80% of Iranian exports; Iranian production will not be reduced as much as expected.  The increased production which was not needed thus caused a perceived “glut” of oil on the market and rapidly falling prices.  The waivers also made China a customer of Iran; they had quit importing American oil in response to Mr. Trump=s trade dispute.  The US industry lost a customer to Iran. 

The result of all this is that both oil-consuming and oil-producing economies are whipsawed by volatile pricing of the largest commodity in international trade – which will inevitability dampen economic growth.  With its current high rate of oil production the US is in a strong position to revise its oil supply and price relationships and now is the time to do it.  The WTI price dropped to $50 only six weeks after many forecasters were worried it would be more than $100 by year-end. 

The US oil industry, by more than doubling oil production in the last 10 years made the US the world=s largest producer, ranking with Saudi Arabia and Russia, and gave Mr. Trump a strong geopolitical, economic, and political tool. 

His reaction is to tweet:

“Oil prices getting lower.  Great!  Like a big Tax Cut for America and the World.  Enjoy! $54, was just $82.  Thank you to Saudi Arabia, but let’s go lower!”

Mr. Trump has done many good things for the US economy and some difficult things which are overdue in foreign policy but this tweet indicates Mr. Trump is getting very bad advice from people who do not understand the oil business.  Probably economists or political campaign consultants who think a long term strategy is to the next election.  These would be the same advisers who think it a good idea to draw down Strategic Petroleum Reserves to manipulate prices.  

First, he is mixing up WTI domestic prices and Brent international prices.  Second, after the domestic oil industry has done him a great favor he wants to repay them by driving them into bankruptcy and stiffing their creditors who paid for the drilling.  Third, taxation is a power reserved for governments to raise money supposedly for the common good and payment is compulsory.  Buying oil products is based on individual choices regarding usage and is voluntary. It is no more a tax than the cost of food.  Some economists claim it is similar to a tax, however, and the Tax Cut comment indicates they are likely a source of his bad advice.  Fourth, by forcing prices down he will stifle investment, curtail drilling, and production rates will decline to the point of oil shortages – probably in 2 to 3 years – and Mr. Trump will see oil at $150 per barrel before the end of his second term.  At that point the Saudis will be remembering the double-cross over Iran early this month and will offer him suggestions where he might find sympathy; they have long memories about such things. 

Oil industry policy objectives of an American President should be to establish reliable and adequate supplies at stable prices; not increase volatility in an already volatile and temperamental market place for a significant and necessary commodity and drive your own industry and allies into insolvency. 

It is not unusual for American presidents to get bad advice, particularly about the oil business.  The advice he is getting is reminiscent of the policies initiated by the US Government in response to the Arab actions in the 1970s.  As Henry Kissinger noted:  “The structure of the oil market was so little understood . . . . . the never-never land of national policy making . . . .”.   Forty years later, we are still living with the results of those bad policy decisions; we do not need any more..

It is no wonder major players in the industry are now at a loss how to plan for the future and had little to say at the Oil and Money conference.  They seemed to know something would happen but did not know what it would be.  One cannot rationally predict impulsive actions based on bad advice.  Any firm predictions or comments would be negated – and have been.  They could not have predicted waiving the sanctions, a $25-per-barrel oil price drop, double-crossing the Saudis, US production continuing to increase, or a US President undermining the US industry.

Summer: Calm Before the Storm?

Summer is not technically over until morning on the 22nd of September this year at my location but culturally it always seems that summer lasts from Memorial Day weekend until Labor Day.  The leaves are turning and therefore it seems summer came and went but nothing changed much.  MacBeth might observe it was full of sound and fury signifying nothing.   The oil markets are still uncertain and bad data are searched for any indication of where oil prices are headed tomorrow.  Oil prices were up nearly $4 per barrel in two days this week evidently based on a large draw from US storage (following a small draw) and concerns over the effect of Iran sanctions.  Then they went down and then up again. 

Analysts continue to debate whether market moves are caused by the possibility of Iran going out of the market by stopping exports, or not, or by some unknown amount, new tariffs, old tariffs, Volt sales figures, Elon’s whiskey and weed show, birth rates, Chinese oil imports, trade disputes, Venezuela’s oil shipments to Cuba, Hurricane Florence, etc., etc.  President Trump is still doing his best to keep markets guessing.  Extensive oil market prognostications in business and financial press reach no consensus.  Oil prices fluctuate without clear direction.  The oil price goes up one day and down the next.

The oil market is the largest international market and operates without clear and accurate information with trading of the last marginal barrel determining the price of every barrel of oil worldwide.  The only thing worse was when all oil was traded on a spot market with no reporting.

Is this any way to run a modern economy? 

In late 2014 OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, attempted to maintain market share by increasing production during a period of oversupply to force prices down and drive American shale drillers out of business.  Many companies declared bankruptcy but the strategy failed to decrease US production as much as it reduced OPEC revenues.  After two years the Saudis and OPEC, with Russia and other non-OPEC producing countries, abandoned the strategy and cut production to increase prices.  This production cut was largely successful; oil prices increased from the $35 to $40 range to the present $65 to $75 range.

With higher prices American shale drilling recovered and continues even more efficiently to increase US production.  US oil production doubled during the last dozen years and delayed a world supply shortage – much to the surprise of governments, OPEC, Russia, China, banks, other financial organizations, and the industry itself.                        

Other trends are overwhelming the rate of US production increase, however, and a crude shortage is expected in 1 ½ to 3 years.

In 2014, when OPEC forced prices down, worldwide surplus production capacity was about 2.5 million barrels per day (b/d), mostly in Saudi Arabia with a little in Kuwait and the UAE, in a 96 million b/d market. 

The severe reduction of oil prices caused a dramatic reduction of worldwide investment in large supply projects, as shown on the plot published by CIBC.  Many projects worldwide were cancelled or postponed thus severely reducing new supplies of oil coming onstream in the next 3 to 7 years. 

Worldwide demand is now about 100 million b/d and continues to increase about 1.5 million b/d each year, so the OPEC plus Russia production cuts have been reduced.  With US production increasing by about 0.9 million b/d, historic world production declining 5% to 7% per year, and investment in new projects diminished, it becomes apparent shortages will develop in late 2020 or 2021, if not before.  As with all commodity markets for which prices are determined on the margin in open trading, small imbalances cause large price changes. Thus, significant oil price increases can be expected in 1 ½ to 3 years.

So when looking back over the summer, although one can conclude no big changes took place one can also detect tensions developing in the markets.  The oil market is approaching balance and balances are always unstable – unless outside forces impose rigidity.

The feeling of increasing tension in the oil market is enhanced by impending sanctions regarding Iran to become effective in November.  These sanctions will remove nearly 2 million b/d, mostly exported to Asia, from world supplies.  The sanctions against Iran affect not only the oil markets; they spill over into other aspects of international relations. 

The tensions in the oil markets are augmented by tensions building in international affairs, trade, financial markets, and politics toward disruptive events:  Europe expanded too fast into former Soviet-dominated areas followed by NATO.  Britain is headed out of Europe, Italy is thinking about it, Greece may get kicked out, and Hungary wonders why it is in it.  NATO expansion antagonized Russia to take aggressive actions in Ukraine and relations with Turkey have soured.  Similarly the US overextended with invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, caused confrontations it did not need, and has nothing to show for them except instability in both places.  US relations with Russia are unclear; Russia is obviously not a friend but also need not be an enemy. 

Other trends continued during the summer.  US confrontation with China intensified.  It became apparent China is self-serving in everything it does; it is an adversary, not an amiable trading partner.  The confrontation with China is characterized by tariffs and a trade war which, combined with confrontations with Iran, Russia, and North Korea and attendant sanctions, is dragging along various allies and neighbors.  US foreign and trade policies have needed revision for some time; because we waited so long it is causing considerable disruption in our international relations. 

These tensions in markets and international affairs are intensifying and converging just as the US prepares for the most contentious and disruptive midterm election in years.  The lead-up and follow-up to that election will be characterized by levels of acrimony and antagonism which could render the US government non-functional.  This could be a situation which anyone who remembers the effect of Watergate in the 1970s does not want to repeat – the costs of the failures of the US Government in international affairs at that time are still heavy on us and the oil markets today. 

As we come out of this period, the US must establish new and revised policies which it can maintain, support, and protect for a protracted period.  The United States must decide what it needs for the prosperity and protection of its citizens and decide what it needs to do to secure those needs.

With increasing US oil production and a booming economy, the US is now in a position to establish a position of economic and military strength from which to conduct trade and foreign affairs for the next several decades.  Oil is the largest component of international trade and one which causes conflict and economic dislocation with shifts of supply and demand balance and extreme volatility of prices.  But this position of strength will not last; the US should now establish long-term supply and market agreements for stability and reliability of oil supply and price.  The disruptive effects of price volatility on the economy can be minimized.   Oil supply should be taken out of US foreign-policy considerations. 

Target Oil Price

So now we know?  Well, maybe not.  Front page headline on this weekend’s Wall Street Journal: “Saudis Push for Oil at $80 A Barrel”.   For several decades Saudi announcements to which one paid attention were in Vienna; others not so much. This article is a bit strange; not what one expects from the Journal.  It is datelined Dubai and does not report an announcement.  It says that “Saudi Arabia is maneuvering to push oil prices up to at least $80 a barrel this year shifting away from its longtime role as a stabilizing force in global energy markets.”  This rather long article offers no source for this statement or how current Saudi actions are a shift of roles.

The Saudis historically have not been too subtle on their choices of oil prices or their reasons.  They want a price high enough to maintain a healthy investment level for the industry but not so high as to kill demand for products.  They do not want it so low the rest of the industry goes out of business and their own income is lower than they need to maintain their own economy, culture, and governmental programs – they know that will lead to shortages and sudden spikes to economically de-stabilizing levels.

We have witnessed both extremes in the last dozen years.  As shortages developed in the first decade of this century, prices levitated to more than $100 per barrel which attracted massive investment and an oversupply at the same time as a financial crisis caused a drop in demand and drew governmental attention to other forms of energy.  With that high price, supply increased significantly and demand decreased followed by a sudden price drop of more than 60%.  That caused investment cuts for new fields and widespread bankruptcies of companies in the business of developing oil and gas fields.  Thus the stage was set for another shortage and sudden price increase and another disruptive cycle.

The Saudis are in the business for the long term; oil price is a major determinant for their government budget and thus their military capability, civil tranquility, and foreign policy success.  Volatile prices are disruptive to their long-term planning and stability.  They much prefer a stable price to keep the industry healthy and their revenues steady without killing product demand.

For several decades the Saudis seemed to favor an oil price around $75 /barrel.  During the price drop in late 2014, when the price approached $75 the Saudis announced they would not cut production to maintain that traditional level.  But they later realized that was a mistake so they re-initiated long-standing policies of production constraint with other members of OPEC to bring prices back up to that level.  This policy should not surprise us or be considered a major policy shift.  If they have now induced some non-OPEC members, particularly Russia, to join them in production constraints that is also not a major policy shift; only a more widespread application of the same strategy they have followed in the past.  Likewise, if the preferred price is now $80, that is not so much different from their historical $75.

This is a price range which seems to fit with industry practices as well.  Exploration and production company bankruptcies have decreased significantly, the industry is actively developing new production, and capital budgets are increasing.  Many new projects which were postponed are now being considered for resumption.  The industry is healthy and demand is still increasing so this price level is not killing the industry on one hand or demand on the other.  To stabilize the situation, the Saudis are negotiating with other participants to extend the production constraint commitments from a few months to several years.

The question becomes: If the Saudis have a stable price objective, can they achieve it and maintain it – with a little help from their friends?  Can they fine-tune supply and demand in a nearly balanced market with prices determined by bidding on open exchanges?

During the 1970s, Saudi Arabia became the swing producer.  In a period of supply surplus, they decreased production to maintain price until they decided not to lose their market share further and refused to lower production any more to maintain prices for other producers.  The large supply surplus then became evident and caused a significant price drop in 1986.  Following that price drop, prices were stabilized by the Saudis imposing production quotas on themselves and their OPEC partners.  Prices fluctuated around $18 /bbl for the next 20 years as the large production capacity surplus was worked off.  Price stability could be maintained much more easily during a protracted period of surplus than currently with supply and demand in near balance and fluctuating quickly from surplus to shortage with small variations of supply or demand or both.

The current trend of increasing prices was achieved by OPEC members curtailing production and inducing other producers to join them.  In addition, production is declining in some OPEC members, particularly Venezuela and Angola, Libya varies, and Nigeria is a wild card.  Of particular importance, the Saudis have reached out to Russia, another of the top three producers but a non-OPEC member, to join them in the current production constraints – and they have.  Thus, the Saudis are curtailing production in much the same manner as they did after the 1986 price crash only this time they are joined by other than just OPEC members.  The curtailment has been effective in reducing storage volumes which is considered an indication that the market is no longer operating with a production surplus.

The Wall Street Journal notes that “By aiming to force prices even higher (from $74 to $80), Prince Mohammed is stepping away from a compact that has defined the kingdom’s foreign relations for decades – offering stability in oil prices in exchange for security assistance from the US and other big energy consumers.”  The article also notes that “The strategy isn’t without risks, as higher prices could test the Saudi monarchy’s warm relations with the Trump administration”.  These are strong statements but seem to have no basis in the current Saudi policies or in anything reported in the article.  It is not clear how Saudi current actions are a change of strategy, a new strategy is not defined, nor why it is risky.

The Saudis are offering stability of oil prices at or near traditional Saudi preferences and the US and the Saudis are still aligned against Iran, the US is still selling arms to the Saudis and advising their military.  As noted, the production-curtailment strategy is the same as followed before to maintain prices at a reasonable mid-range level; the only difference is that the Saudis have more partners than before and are trying to put production constraints on a longer-term basis. No big changes; one hopes policy makers do not read the article.

 

Converging Trends

23 April 2018

Oil prices reported from trading on open exchanges in a worldwide fungible market vary over a range of approximately 10% largely based on exchange traders’ perceptions of the importance of “builds” and “draws” of oil storage.  Storage data are micro-analyzed with respect to amount and timing.  Storage in Cushing, Oklahoma, the basis of trading contracts on the NYMEX has an outsized influence but is only about one-half of one percent of the world’s storage and is determined as a small difference of two large numbers, each of which is inaccurate and corrected a few months later.  Nevertheless, these bad data are combined with conjecture, fantasies, and rumors regarding value of the dollar, bombings in the Middle East, driving habits of millennials, electric car sales, ice sheet melting, Kim’s missile tests, Chinese teapot refining volumes, Palestinian riots, Saudis letting women drive, Comey’s memos on phony dossiers, and Russian birth rates to fine-tune oil trade pricing decisions.

The oil industry itself is more influenced by long-term trends, however.  Periodically, political and economic trends converge with technological developments to cause fundamental transitions in the industry, its business relationships, oil markets, and oil prices.  Such profound convergences and transitions happened at the turn of the 20th century, in the early 1930s, in the 1970s associated with the Arab Oil Embargo and other perceived political disruptions, and late in the first decade of the current century.

Around 2005 to 2006, world oil demand reached the world oil industry=s production capacity for the first time in history putting upward pressure on oil prices.  At about the same time, technological improvements in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, which were used successfully to develop the Barnett Shale gas field in Texas, were adapted to develop Bakken oil resources in North Dakota.

Following the financial crisis of 2008-9, the Federal Reserve injected liquidity into the US banking system (a program known as Quantitative Easing, QE, a term worthy of SNL) and maintained low interest rates.  The US Congress passed a bill, known as Dodd-Frank, to cripple banks and restrict their activities.  Under these conditions, an acceptable investment was oil drilling.  Access to low-cost capital, increasing oil prices, and effective development technologies for low-permeability oil reservoirs combined to stimulate independent US oil companies to develop resources which had been previously uneconomical.  An oil boom followed.  US production increased by about 4 2 million barrels per day; a disruptive event which surprised many parts of the industry and quite a few governments – including our own.

In August 2014, the Federal Reserve ended QE and triggered an oil price drop from the $100-$110 range.  In late November, as oil prices reached the mid-70s, Saudi Arabia, perceiving a threat to its market share by increasing US production, announced it would not cut back its production rate to maintain oil prices.  Evidently the Saudis believed they could survive a period of low prices better than American Ashale drillers@ and thus maintain their market share and stop further American production increases for the cost of a short-term revenue decrease.

In the event, oil prices continued to drop well into 2015.  US production increased until mid-2015 because of hedges and the wonders of Chapter 11; it did not start to decrease until mid-2015, one year after the initial price drop.  With US production increases, world production capacity exceeded world demand.  By late 2015, this excess capacity was generally estimated at about 1.5% – which the press immediately labeled a “Glut”.  After about two years of reduced revenues, the Saudis decided US drillers would not quit so they organized a production cut by OPEC members and drafted Russia and other non-OPEC members to join them.  This group, known as OPEC+, agreed to cut oil production by slightly more than the “Glut”; 1.8 million bbls/day, to support prices.  Compliance with the oil cut was surprisingly high; oil prices increased by about 65% to the $65 to $70/bbl range for a 1.8% production cut.  Even dictators and despots can understand the benefits of that – especially with the Russians involved.

Several trends are converging again – partly in response to these events, general economic trends, volatility and unpredictability of oil prices, and perpetual turmoil in the Middle East.

  1. Capital budgets were reduced significantly after the oil price drop in 2014-15 for all non-Atight@ oil or gas development.  Worldwide, many large projects were postponed; after re-activation, these projects typically will need 4 to 6 years to reach full production.  Non-US oil production capacity is declining, not increasing, and OPEC+ has constrained production about 1.8 million bbls/day.  US oil production is increasing nearly one million bbls/day each year.  World demand is increasing about 1.5 million bbls/day each year.

Various storage reports now show storage volumes approaching the five-year average storage volume which was the original objective of the OPEC+ group production constraints.  The press is now touting The End of The Glut.  Of course, the five-year average storage now includes about 3 ½ years of increased storage since the beginning of The Glut – but never mind.

With these trends, demand will reach world production capacity in late 2020 – 2021.  As oil shortages develop with marginal pricing in open markets prices will increase rapidly over the next 2-4 years.

  1. With a worldwide fungible oil market, supply and demand in near balance, and prices determined by open bidding for marginal barrels, small variations from oversupply to shortage cause extreme price volatility.  Volatility of the price of oil, the largest commodity in international trade and a vital component of a modern economy, is undesirable to investors, oil companies, governments, industrial and commercial users, and consumers; everybody but traders.

New marketing and price determination relationships and procedures will evolve to establish long-term price stability.  Several large international industry traders are already in discussions to establish such relationships.  Saudi Arabia and Russia are discussing long-term (ten- to twenty-year) cooperation to adjust production rates to market demand for price stability.  (This was a practice followed in the US, led by the Railroad Commission of Texas, for forty years from the early 1930s to the early 1970s).  As these relationships mature for ever-increasing amounts of production, volatility will increase for non-participants.  It behooves one to establish such relationships soon.

  1. The Middle East shows no signs of becoming stable and peaceful.  The US is becoming frustrated and weary trying to help it become so with nothing to show for its efforts and costs.  Hallucinations about a Middle East populated by Jeffersonian democrats finally have faded.  The US needs to re-direct its foreign policy, diplomatic,  intelligence, and military efforts to other parts of the world and other concerns.  The US currently is in a strong position to work with neighboring countries and take oil out of the equation of its Middle East considerations.

 

The oil industry is entering a period of structural transition with the convergence of these trends.  It is an opportune time to initiate or expand investment in the industry and establish positions and relationships to take advantage of the coming changes.  One can also hope that Mr. Trump’s recent tweeted perception about oil prices “artificially too high” and oil “all over the place” is soon corrected and does not become the basis of policy.  It is a time for the US Government to analyze conditions accurately and to make policy on a clear understanding of current trends; it has a record of bad policy-making from lack of understanding.

 

Where We Are

16 March 2018

Last week was CERAWeek 2018 in Houston.  This is widely considered one of the most informative and critical meetings of the year of ministers, executives, financiers, bankers and other participants in the international oil and gas industry.  Representatives of the IEA and the US EIA reiterated their expectations of increasing US production for several more years with several years of production plateau followed by a slow decline. These predictions provide a basis for Trump Administration plans to establish US Energy Dominance announced by President Trump in June 2017 and repeated in the National Security Strategy in December 2017.

Several commentators made more conservative predictions with lower peak production rates and shorter flat production plateaus.  Of interest was that these commentators were all CEOs of companies actively developing tight oil reservoirs.

Nevertheless, it is expected US production will increase in 2018 and 2019 and OPEC plus Russia will curtail their production to maintain, possibly increase, oil prices.  By 2020 it is expected world demand will have increased enough to eliminate production surpluses, which are only about 1.5%, and put upward pressure on oil prices by 2020.  Capital investments were cut dramatically throughout the industry in 2015 and have been at a low level since then; many large projects worldwide were postponed.  The industry will probably not be able to re-activate large projects and increase production quickly enough to meet increasing production shortages.  With the current pricing system, bidding on open markets for marginal barrels, as an oil shortage develops prices will increase suddenly and significantly.  If the US is to establish a revised, stable, supply and price system it has a short, two-year window to do so.

CERA Week, as it often does, caused a lot of comment about peak oil demand, peak oil production, and when, and at what level, each will take place.  A lot of this requires differentiating between “conventional” and “unconventional” oil and how “unconventional” oil is so much more expensive than “conventional” oil.  Upon questioning “unconventional” seems to be anything produced with a new technology – so I assume that also includes most of the twentieth-century oil produced by wells drilled with rotary drilling.  Also, I note that as of this writing, “unconventional” oil is priced based on WTI at $61/bbl or about 4.6% of an ounce of gold.  In 1970, “conventional” oil was priced at about 7.4% of an ounce of gold.   So much for the idea that “unconventional” oil is so expensive – or that today’s oil price is so high, for that matter.

Also last week, President Trump kicked over the prevailing international trade system by establishing tariffs on US imports of steel and aluminum.  He also made it clear this was a first step; the US would revise its international trade relationships. These actions caused quite a storm of criticism and objections in Congress, by various commentators, in the domestic and foreign press, and by foreign governments as breaking the international free trade system, crippling globalism, damaging the liberal international global order, and starting a trade war.

A little investigation reveals that so-called international free trade is not very free, however.  Despite claims by the press and globalists, many of our trade partners have had barriers to trade from the US for years and we have done nothing about it.  Globalization benefits are largely at the expense of the United States.  The liberal international order is not so equally applied to all parties and is crumbling due to attacks by Russia and China with little pushback from so-called supporters.

What is even more obvious is that a trade war is already underway with little opposition from our side; we are the sucker here.  Other countries have trade barriers to imports from the US which have not been reciprocated by the US.  Examples are: 25% taxes on imports of US automobiles to China and 2.5% taxes on imports of Chinese cars to the US; 10% tax and 19% VAT imposed on US cars imported to Germany and 2.5% tax on German cars imported to the US.  Nevertheless, in a show of blatant hypocrisy, Angela Merkel and Xi Jinping were two of the loudest complainers about the steel and aluminum tariffs as being against the free trade system – which they have been violating for years at our expense.

China is obviously trying to establish an alternative system of trade, finance, and infrastructure which it will dominate.  Despite rhetoric from Xi Jinping at Davos and elsewhere about China being a benign and friendly partner, China’s actions, as a Communist socialist dictatorship, show it will dominate, coerce, humiliate, and oppress participants in its system.  Its trade barriers are impregnable and its technology theft is extensive. It restricts investment and ownership of assets by foreign companies in China but enjoys open investment environments elsewhere. But China is not a friend; a fact the world is slow to realize.  Over the last 25 years or so globalization advocates seemed to think that if the world reached out to China it would become a friendly, benign, open society and join the existing global order.  People claimed the world was flat, that the world had accepted democracy and history had ended, and we would all go off together into the sunset singing Coca-Cola commercials.  Those ideas were naïve to start with; China is run by the Communist Party, a particularly repressive form of socialism and it is more and more apparent that Xi Jinping has consolidated power and intends to rule China as a dictator. He just re-established a commissariat to further tighten his grip and suppress the population.  China’s reality is becoming evident; even The Economist, not the quickest responder, is wondering how they got it so wrong about China.

Mr. Trump exempted Canada and Mexico, our two closest neighbors and trading partners and participants in NAFTA, from the tariffs.  He also reached out to Australia to discuss an exemption.  He made it clear that he is not against trade but that it must be reciprocal and “fair for both sides”; one-way or asymmetric barriers are not acceptable.  Mr. Trump made it clear he is willing to negotiate trade relations and exemptions with anyone and everyone and will favor friends and allies. What is to complain about here?  This attitude toward trade policy should not be a surprise; it was expressed in the National Security Strategy in December and in his Davos speech in January.

It is obvious the main target of revised trade policies is China but other asymmetric relationships will also receive attention.  China and Russia were clearly identified in the National Defense Strategy report (available only in an unclassified summary) published in February as rivals or competitors. Our extensive long-term trade with China and sponsoring them into the WTO was ill-advised; it has mostly served to make China rich and transfer our technology to China to be used against us.  A bad idea.

The tariff action and the ensuing negotiations demonstrate waning Wall Street influence on Administration policies.  No doubt investment bankers were probably influential on the tax reform considerations with their deep understanding of the US economy.  But investment bankers have not been long-term strategic thinkers since about 30 years ago.  Up until then, investment banking firms were partnerships and the firms managers were partners with their clients in investments.  They took a long-term viewpoint and were careful about the welfare of the US as the environment in which they did business.  About 30 years ago the firms went public and their leaders became corporate managers.  They are paid high salaries and collect exorbitant bonuses annually for short-term profits.  They do not share in losses, however, and therefore tend to take on riskier investments with potential for high profits.  Investment bankers have become short-term quick-profit thinkers without long-term strategic viewpoints; trade policy is a long-term strategic issue.

It will be interesting to see how the trade deals play out.  Instead of going to each of our trading partners to try to negotiate fair and equal trade conditions with each of them one-by-one, Mr. Trump has put all of them in the position they have to come to him to solicit exemptions and make concessions to get them.

Taking actions to balance trade relationships could also lead to establishing an oil supply and price system with a few friends and neighbors which could take us out of the business of maintaining oil supply systems for other parts of the world.  New technologies are already being developed which could bring many more billions of barrels of oil to commercial production within our own borders and with a few neighbors. We should take this opportunity, when our domestic industry is in a strong position, to establish a reliable oil supply and stable price system for ourselves.

How We Got Here

The oil industry and oil market and supply systems are in a period of transition.

This can be stated with confidence because strong opinions and policy recommendations are presented in a wide range of media without consensus.  Analyses, predictions, and observations are presented in foreign policy journals, the financial press, stock investment “special reports”, television interviews, and government reports.  Many of these are by people with little or no contact with, participation in, or other involvement with, the oil industry such as free-lance journalists, Ivy League professors, think tank fellows, bankers, stock newsletter writers, and government bureaucrats.

The predictions offer a wide range of outcomes.   The EIA predicts a long period of plateauing high US production rates and President Trump believes this will lead to US Energy Dominance.  Others think production will decline significantly in the near future for various reasons.

Oil price forecasters try to analyze the effects of oil and oil product supply and storage variations, dollar strength, Chinese demand, the stock market, OPEC production constraints, Middle East unrest, North Korean threats, birthrates, electric car ownership, refinery efficiencies, interest rates, internet shopping, buying habits of millennials, Federal Reserve actions, and God only knows what else.   The results of all these prognostications cover a wide range.  Analyses and predictions by industry participants or those with sophisticated econometric models seriously analyzing data also present a wide range of results.  Undertaking one’s own analysis soon leads one into a snarl of too many uncertain, unpredictable influences on the oil markets and oil prices for confident predictions.

So the oil markets can best be described as: Confused.  And the outcome of this period of transition is uncertain.

In many ways, this period is reminiscent of the period from the early 1970s to 1983, a previous period of confusion, upheaval, and transition in the oil markets and oil pricing which led to significant changes in the oil industry and US foreign and economic policy.  At the risk of this commentary being a bit long, an examination of that period, what led up to it, what happened, how it ended, and what the results were can offer some insight into the current situation.

Although the triggering event for the oil market turmoil in the 1970s is generally perceived as the Arab Oil Embargo of October, 1973, several converging industry and economic trends in the late 1960s set the stage to put an end to the oil market and pricing system and common oil industry business model which had been in place since the early 1930s.

In the early 20th century the concurrent widespread adoption of the internal combustion engine and invention of rotary drilling for development of deep, high-rate, high-pressure oil fields to meet the growing fuel demand caused a period of chaotic, unrestricted oil field development and uncertain, highly variable supplies and prices.  In the early 1930s, several states declared martial law in the oil fields and established systems to regulate oil field development and drilling.  Drilling permits were required, well spacing requirements were imposed, and production rates were constrained to meet demand – a process known as proration whereby state authorities received monthly nominations of oil purchases from pipeline and refining companies and allocated those purchase volumes  to individual wells for production.

The common oil company business model was the integrated company which explored for and produced its own oil fields, processed its oil in its own refineries, and sold the products through its own marketing outlets.  Some flexibility was established between companies to buy and sell oil with each other to accommodate logistical and transportation facilities and to buy oil from small independent producers.  Although some of these integrated companies were quite small, around 30 to 35 were considered majors.

A priority concern of management was to have enough production to maintain refinery operation at full capacity.  Therefore, the companies maintained approximately 12% to 15% surplus production capacity to use in cases of unexpected events such as field accidents, pipeline or other transport interruptions, or periods of low exploration success.  Forecasts of field production and reserves were a primary management tool and considered critical competitive information and highly confidential.

United States production capacity far exceeded domestic demand in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s – through the Depression, World War II, the Korean War, and the post-war growth period.  With the rapid growth of the US, European, and Japanese economies in the post-war period, however, demand grew dramatically.  International sources of crude were discovered and developed, mainly by seven companies, known as the Seven Sisters:  Standard of California (Chevron), Standard of New York (Mobil), Standard of New Jersey (Exxon), Texaco, Gulf, British Petroleum, and Royal Dutch Shell.   The first four of these companies owned Aramco, the British were dominant in Iran, Iraq, and the Gulf States, Gulf operated in Kuwait.  The first four were also active in Southeast Asia and Latin America, Shell was active in the US, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.

Despite the rapid increase of demand in the post-World War II period, international oil companies maintained surplus production capacities in the 12% to 15% range and continued to operate under the integrated company business model.  Because these companies refined oil they themselves produced they were in effect buying the oil from themselves.  This meant they established their own crude prices and paid in dollars – or pounds.  During the 1950s growing international production capacity in low-cost countries meant foreign oil could be supplied to the US at a much lower cost than domestic production.  The Eisenhower Administration, in a Cold War confrontation with the Soviet Union and fresh memories of the strategic World War II importance of domestic US oil production, realized the threat of flooding the domestic market with cheap oil and established oil import quotas to protect the domestic industry.

Quickly after WWII, the Soviet Union separated its economy, and that of its satellite countries in Eastern Europe (the “Soviet Bloc”), from free interchange with the rest of the world behind what Churchill dubbed the “Iron Curtain”.  China was taken over by a Communist government and also isolated itself.  The Soviet Union was a large oil producer and China produced enough for its own needs but neither participated in the world market until the early 1990s and the following discussion concerns only the rest of the world until then.

As noted above, during the late 1960s, several trends converged to end this market and price system:

1. US demand approached US production capacity and exceeded it in late 1968 or 1969.  This was not widely recognized due to the cushion provided by the imported oil.  US  demand exceeded US production capacity plus the import quota by late 1970/1971.  This was manifested in various ways, e.g.:  President Nixon lifted all state proration of production on wells in Federal offshore waters in December, 1970.  Import quotas were increased and then removed.  American companies re-directed their exploration and growth budgets to international projects to take advantage of higher prices and lower costs.

2. Second-tier American integrated and independent exploration and production companies moved into international operations in areas not dominated by the Seven Sisters such as the North Sea and Libya.

3. The cost of the Vietnam War and other economic pressures eroded confidence in the US dollar.  The Bretton Woods international finance and currency system established after the end of WWII weakened.

Moammar Qaddafi had taken over Libya.  He demanded an oil price increase from Occidental Petroleum Corporation, a new company and the largest producer in Libya.  To strengthen his position in negotiations with Qaddafi, Oxy Chairman Armand Hammer asked for support from the larger majors in the form of oil supplies if Oxy were cut off from Libyan supplies.  In their arrogance, they refused, and Oxy therefore agreed to a higher oil price.  The larger majors were then rewarded for their refusal to help Oxy with demands for similar price increases by the Middle East governments where they operated.   The US Government, in its naivete, refused to support American companies in these negotiations effectively ceding control of the markets and prices from American companies to the producer countries – one of the great shortsighted foreign policy blunders.

Perceived weakness of the dollar caused many foreign governments to increase redemptions of their dollar reserves for gold.  In response, President Nixon closed the “gold window” in August 1971, thus terminating US policy of redeeming dollars for gold.  The resultant drop of dollar value stimulated further demands for oil price increases from Middle Eastern governments, particularly Saudi Arabia.

The Watergate Scandal increasingly dominated the attention and activities of the Nixon Administration.  Henry Kissinger, as National Security Adviser and then Secretary of State, was untouched by the scandal and thus became the main American official dealing with international affairs.

Suddenly in this period of demands for oil price increases and tensions between oil companies and host governments Egypt and Syria invaded Israel in October, 1973 (the Yom Kippur War).  Israel fared badly for the first four days, used large amounts of ordnance, and lost many planes and tanks.  The US re-supplied Israel who turned the war around and defeated both its attackers.

In response to US support of Israel Saudi Arabia embargoed Saudi oil supplies to the US.  Other Arab countries quickly joined them.

At the time, I was on the petroleum-engineering faculty at the Colorado School of Mines.  We all had worked for major integrated oil companies and we knew how they operated.  Our reaction was:  “The Arabs are going to embargo oil to the US?  So what?”  We knew the companies had plenty of excess capacity and other sources and would re-route tankers; the embargo would have little effect on availability of supply in the US.  Little did we know how lack of understanding in Washington of the oil industry and its supply and market system would turn this empty gesture into a major economic, political, and foreign-policy event.

The United States Government believed the embargo would cut oil supplies to the United States and severely cripple the US economy and thus considered the embargo a major and immediate threat.  Kissinger energetically set about negotiating a cease-fire to end the fighting, then a peace settlement.  By that time, US Government alarm had spread to the press and the public panicked over fears of a shortage of gasoline.  Everyone headed to gas stations to fill the tanks in their cars and the gas stations promptly ran out of gas.  The Government and the public believed that confirmed a lack of oil.  The producing countries increased oil prices again significantly; the public blamed the oil companies.

With the embargo turning into an Energy Crisis I tried to determine what caused it.  We had an extensive network in the industry and I started calling producers and refiners in various parts of the world – and found no shortage of oil.  I then reviewed announcements during the previous five years of worldwide exploration successes; contract awards for pipelines, offshore platforms, and other major projects; and drilling programs to ascertain if a supply shortage was pending.  That review indicated rapid supply growth could be expected; the spread of second tier majors and independent E&P companies internationally was very successful at discovering and developing new supplies. Conclusion:  The Energy Crisis was in the misperceptions of the Government and press who teamed up to agitate the public which then caused the only shortage with a run on the gas stations.  The Crisis became self-generating.

Kissinger then negotiated the end of the embargo.  In the negotiations, he renewed the US guarantee of Saudi security initially granted by President Roosevelt in 1945.  The Saudis agreed to end the embargo and to purchase US Treasury bonds with their profits and foreign currency reserves.   In effect, this meant they would sell oil only for US dollars thus creating what is known as the Petrodollar.

The Saudis then were free to continue to increase oil prices and their ownership of Aramco until the price had increased from about $2.50 to $15 per barrel, about 6-fold, and the American companies were out of Aramco and the name was changed to Saudi Aramco.  Other producing countries followed.  The erroneous perception of the impact of the embargo by the US Government thus resulted in loss of control of the international oil industry, oil markets, and oil prices by the Seven Sisters causing one of the greatest transfers of wealth and loss of power in history.

Kissinger later realized the results and I repeat his comments:

“The structure of the oil market was so little understood that the embargo became the principal focus of concern.  In fact, the Arab embargo was a symbolic gesture of limited practical importance. “ and  “the embargo was an inconvenience and an insult; it did not hurt us significantly.”  He also refers to the “never-never land of national policymaking” with respect to expectations of oil availability. 

With the loss of any controlling oversight, the oil industry then became a disorderly free-for-all developing new supplies as fast as possible to take advantage of the much higher prices while the US Government was passing laws and regulations to deal with an oil shortage which did not exist.  With loss of market management by the large integrated companies, oil was traded in individual batches, frequently tanker loads, with prices negotiated between buyer and seller for each transaction; the spot market dominated.  Oil traders, about 60 to 80 of them, became the critical links in these transactions.  The most prominent was Marc Rich, who had been a trader for Phibro.  He established his own trading company and became known as the King of the Spot Market; he seemed always able to find supplies and arranged transactions for anybody and everybody.

In 1979, the Iranian Revolution removed the Shah from power and shut in Iranian production for a short time.  Prices increased again and gas lines returned but it quickly became apparent plenty of oil was available and the second Crisis was short-lived.  By the early 1980s we estimated that worldwide surplus production capacity was nearing 30% but prices continued to levitate.

The US Government had passed multiple Energy Acts, imposed 55 mph national speed limits, allocated gasoline to gas stations, established multiple levels of pricing for domestic crude production, increased mileage requirements for new cars and many other counterproductive rules and regulations which dis-incentivized development of domestic US production.  Most of these were canceled by President Reagan when he took office in 1981.  The results of some government actions are still with us, however:  Publicly traded companies were required to report oil and gas reserves and future income therefrom, the Department of Energy was formed and oversees several national laboratories and energy research programs, and the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was established.

In November, 1982, at the Oil and Money conference in London, Rosemary McFadden, head of the New York Mercantile Exchange, announced the NYMEX would start open trading of contracts for 1000 barrels of West Texas Intermediate oil in tanks in Cushing, Oklahoma.  Trading started on March 30, 1983.  After a couple of years to work out the bugs and establish confidence in the trading, the NYMEX trading price became the benchmark price commonly quoted.  A worldwide fungible market with open pricing was thus established; the last trade on the NYMEX determined prices worldwide.  NYMEX trading was followed by contracts for North Sea Brent crude trading on the ICE in London and Brent became the common quoted price in international transactions.

With price determination by open trading, the large surplus production capacity quickly became apparent; prices softened and then crashed in early 1986.  To maintain stable prices, OPEC established a production quota system which, although with some cheating, worked reasonably well and maintained oil prices within a band for 20 years as the surplus capacity was worked off.   This was during a period including the US Savings and Loan crisis; the end of the Cold War and the Soviet Union; the first Gulf War; market instability and the Asian currency crisis in 1998, and the 9/11 attacks.

The Soviet Union ended at the end of 1991.  In 1993, China became an importer of oil.  Russia and several former Soviet republics were, and are, significant oil producers and China has become the world’s largest oil importer.  These countries entered the world’s free-trading oil markets after long periods of separation with little disruption of the markets or prices.

US production steadily declined for this entire period and US oil imports steadily increased.  The US became increasingly dependent on foreign sources of crude oil in a worldwide fungible market with prices determined on open exchanges.  The US also became responsible for maintaining those sources of supply from an unstable part of the world.  The US became entangled in unending Middle East conflicts with ongoing military commitments.

The integrated oil company business model was no longer needed with oil traded on open markets with quoted prices.  Integrated companies gradually went out of business; only two of the large American majors are left:  Exxon and Chevron (although some include Conoco Phillips).

In the mid 2000s world oil demand reached world production capacity for the first time in history, putting upward pressure on prices.  Concurrently, operational techniques of horizontal drilling and multi-stage large hydraulic fracturing techniques were combined to develop gas reservoirs commercially which had theretofore not been profitable.  In response to increased oil prices, the techniques were adapted to oil reservoirs.  US oil production grew quickly and has nearly doubled.  With reduced demand, US imports have decreased by more than 80%.

As mentioned earlier, a certain group of forecasts predict US energy independence for a sustained future and others predict imminent rapid decline.  As someone once remarked, however, predictions are really tough – especially about the future.  What we can say confidently is that the US is in a strong position currently to establish new supply and pricing relationships and remove oil supplies as a guiding factor from its considerations of its involvement in the volatility and conflicts of the Middle East.  This is a period of turmoil and transition similar to the 1970s; this time our policy decisions should be based on careful consideration of actual oil industry conditions and requirements.

Foundational Policy Issues

Gentlemen:

Some of my interlocutors initiated discussion of some underlying issues related to my various commentaries and policy recommendations.  These discussions generally relate to two foundational subjects:  First, how much government should be involved with commercial transactions of private enterprise companies and, specifically in our case, in the international business of our oil companies.  Second, whether I favor free trade or isolationism and how United States foreign policy and trade policy should interrelate.

My comments have been with regard to the oil industry but because the oil industry is such a large and critical part of international commerce and geopolitics these two areas of discussion expand our considerations to a wider scope.  These two subjects are fundamental to considerations of government general policies regarding business within which the oil business is a critical but not the only participant.  In this commentary I offer my thoughts on these two subjects so it is a bit longer than normal.  I hope you find them of interest for your holiday reading.  As usual, all responses and comments from you are welcome.

Government Involvement with Private Enterprise Commerce

I have discussed characteristics of international oil supply, market, and pricing systems and enumerated causes and nature of misperceptions which in turn cause (1) oil price volatility in open markets and (2) confrontational and counterproductive geopolitical policies for unstable parts of the world.  Also I have noted the US is now in a constant state of conflict with various adversaries in different parts of the world, some of our own making, and can expect to remain so for the foreseeable future.  This condition is contrary to the rather naïve presumption at the end of the Cold War that the world would enter an era of benign relations among all nations which would accept US lecturing, hectoring, and brow-beating as to how they should run their economies, finances, gender relations, government agencies, trade, elections, human rights, and various social practices.  Not surprisingly, the other nations of the world did not welcome the US telling them what to do and the results range from resentment to animosity.  A big area of negative consequences from our meddling is the Middle East.  Our interfering presence there has been justified as necessary because it is a major source of oil.

I suggested the US establish an alternative long-term reliable and sustainable oil supply and market system in the Western Hemisphere with negotiated long-term stable predictable prices.  I made the point that implementation of such a system would necessitate dealing with other countries’ governments and companies and would therefore require a coordinated effort between the US Government and US private-enterprise oil companies.

So questions have arisen as to how much I advocate US Government involvement in the oil industry, energy policies, and the general economy.  The US Government has many noteworthy actions and activities; some affect all activities such as standardizing weights, measures, and time and others affect primarily commerce such as the Patent Office.   All these provide an environment in which commerce can function efficiently; some of these were required by advancements in transportation and other modernizing developments.

Some government actions have been critical to development of unconventional oil and gas resources.  I have been asked what I think are the most important of these.  The first, of course, was Thomas Jefferson buying the Williston Basin, Powder River Basin, DJ Basin, and a few others and, of course, Louisiana from Napoleon.  The second was Madison sending Andrew Jackson to New Orleans to make sure the British did not take over all that, and third, Polk admitting Texas to the Union and then fighting a war with Mexico and acquiring parts of Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, and California.  These were all important preliminary steps by government; Aaron Burr tried to do it with private enterprise and that did not work out.

Government policy was that these areas needed settlement and economic activity, so it undertook a unique philosophy regarding getting its resources developed – it gave them away to people who would develop them.  It gave away land to railroads if the railroads were built; it gave away mineral resources to people who mined them; it gave away farmland to people who farmed it; and the country got developed – in a hurry – and it still is.  The government established growth and ongoing revenues for itself by giving away resources and taxing the resulting economic activity.  Do not pay any attention to third-world countries who claim they are developing; they have no clue how to do it.  I have worked in several; they develop to the extent someone else does it for them.

The distinguishing feature of all that land that was acquired and then given away was that it included the mineral rights – and that made all the difference.

Private ownership of mineral resources is rare in the world.

The idea that drilling rigs, 2 or 3 miles of pipe, 40,000 horsepower, 10,000 tons of sand, and 2 million gallons of treated water can be repeatedly moved around and put on development locations in the middle of populations who do not own mineral rights has been demonstrated as unrealistic. Many countries have a high degree of sensitivity to production of oil by foreign companies even though they cannot do it themselves. Also, in many, including some parts of the US, local populations have also developed an anti-“Fracking” emotional response to development proposals; evidently stimulated by Russian propaganda campaigns.  Countries without private ownership of minerals and which have large bureaucracies requiring extensive permitting for all human behavior will not do much unconventional oil development.  Argentina may be an exception with the new Macri administration.

The US Department of Energy operates 17 national laboratories.  These labs do basic research on many subjects much of which is devoted to energy sources and development.  With the exception of those doing secret work related to national security or weapons, results are published openly. According to the Technology Transfer Act, information is given away and is therefore useful to commercial private enterprise worldwide.  Some of that work was helpful for developing the techniques of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing for development of unconventional oil and gas resources.

With respect to domestic strictly commercial transactions I think in general the Government should provide and protect property and contract rights, provide a fair and unbiased means of dispute resolution, and then pretty much get out of the way.

I think the same for strictly commercial transactions between two private enterprise entities internationally as well.  This is not the case in many international transactions involving oil, however.  Oil, as a natural resource, is owned or controlled by the host government in most countries and they use government-controlled companies as their representative in the oil business.    Transactions with these governments and companies are influenced by the fact that government positions are backed by political, military, and police power.  Private enterprise companies are no longer allowed such powers.  Adversarial negotiating strengths are therefore quite asymmetric unless a US company has US Government support which they have not had for several decades.

When such transactions reach an impasse US companies have no recourse.  The most famous example was in the early 1970s when the Saudis were negotiating with the American owners of Aramco regarding oil prices and ownership which was essentially a Saudi desire to quit honoring the original agreements.  The US Government made a point of informing the Saudis they would not support the companies.  As Kissinger (National Security Adviser at the time) noted:  “Free market theology had kept . . . the United States out of negotiations as the companies were rendered defenseless”.  Oil prices were subsequently raised repeatedly and significantly “unilaterally, without even the semblance of negotiation with the international oil companies”.  Kissinger noted the result:  “Never before in history has a group of such relatively weak nations been able to impose with so little protest such a dramatic change in the way of life of the overwhelming majority of mankind.”  He could have added “by breaking a contract”.

The Mercantilist days are over.  The British and Dutch East India Companies cannot be replicated.  Nor can private enterprise companies hire private military contractors for support in such situations (note the outcry when a private contractor proposed taking over part of the US military effort in Afghanistan).  But in the example above, the result of contentious negotiations between a private enterprise company and a government agency, ministry, or government-controlled oil company is pre-determined unless the company is supported by its own government.

I think the US needs to backup its own companies in such situations.  Such backup can be coordinated use of various aspects of foreign, financial, trade, and other policies and can be as subtle or overt and forceful as needed.  In a confrontational world, a successful strategy must use all its tools.  Without such backup our companies are not respected except for their technical and operational capabilities and that is not always enough; once the technology and operational methods have been demonstrated, the companies are vulnerable.

Establishing a new separate alternate oil supply and price system leads to several secondary considerations such as whether US companies are withdrawing from existing world open oil trading, how does that affect existing oil markets and  overall trade policies, and whether we would be confronting or conceding to Russia or China in various places.  Those and other geopolitical affects will require coordination and joint planning by government policy makers and oil company managements.

Russia is establishing an extensive network of ownership in oil and gas fields and transportation systems worldwide using quasi-private entities.  Certainly we cannot undo what has been done but we can work to dilute its effectiveness and try to constrain further acquisitions.  Russia is quietly and methodically establishing the Energy Dominance position which President Trump announced as a US policy objective last summer – but has not implemented.

Establishing an independent oil supply and market system in the Western Hemisphere could reduce, but not eliminate, US involvement in the Middle East.   We spent hundreds of billions of dollars in our misguided effort to re-build, re-organize, and bring enlightenment to a part of the world that does not want to change (on the contrary, they want to change us).   This whole effort was based on the belief that we needed to maintain oil supplies and stop terrorism.  But the oil flowed before we started, flowed during all the battles, and will flow after we leave; we got an oil surplus and price crash and we got ISIS.  We can never recover those costs with oil supplies from there and have little to show for them.

We have worn out our military with over-deployment and overuse of men and machines.  Russia and China are both developing modern militaries and we need to concern ourselves with how much life is left in old overused airframes, how many planes and ships are fully operational, and how many officers and men in all services are trained and equipped for top performance.  Obviously the Navy is having problems with ships running aground and running into other ships and pictures show those ships are rusty.  Rusty!?   To re-build, re-equip, and re-train we should break off for awhile.  Some would interpret this as US retreat and point out that Russia might step in and take a more active role there.  Some would say the Middle East and Putin deserve each other.  Let Putin and Middle East oil become a European and Chinese problem.  Our necessary involvement can be evaluated and managed more objectively with oil out of the equation.

International Trade: Free or Isolationism?

Because I have advocated establishing an alternate oil supply system separate from the current worldwide fungible market, another question is whether I am advocating isolationism.  No.  But I do not advocate free trade willy-nilly with everybody either.  Trade is a strategic tool and source of economic strength, not just a subject for economic theories.  We seem to have the idea that if we trade with another country that is not our friend they will become so.  Experience does not support that view, however, so I think we should choose our trading partners carefully.  We also need to decide how much we value implementing economic theories of efficiency and how much we value retaining strategic capabilities and independence.  Obviously we can trade with close friends, neighbors, and allies but we should not take it upon ourselves to make our enemies rich.

The most obvious example is China.  I have recounted in an earlier commentary how I was asked, in 1996, a few months before the transfer of Hong Kong from Britain to China, for a review of my opinion of what would happen to Hong Kong after the Chinese took it over.  At the time, China was a poor Communist country with a lot of people and Hong Kong was a rich center of free-market capitalism.  My answer was that we needed to worry about what happened to us after Hong Kong, with its 24/7 capitalistic, entrepreneurial business practices, managerial experience, and a lot of capital connected with the largest, cheapest labor force in the world.   Little did I anticipate that the US would empower the process with a free trade policy with China and by sponsoring China to join the World Trade Organization which it did in 2001.  To join the WTO, China was required to open its economy under many international standards. This accelerated the growth of the US trade imbalance with China.

US manufacturing dropped by about a third within 15 years.   Along with billions of dollars, we have transferred much of our manufacturing capability, technology, and skills to the Chinese and they steal what we do not transfer willingly. It has been well demonstrated that in prolonged conflicts the winner has a strong manufacturing base.   China hacks our corporations, infrastructure, and government systems, steals technology, builds its military with much of our technology, ignores our concerns over North Korea, and competes with us for resource access and now is the world’s largest oil importer.  But for some reason we still freely trade with it.  I am well aware of economic theories of economic efficiency increased by free trade but economic efficiency is of little benefit when you are strengthening an enemy and weakening yourself.

China is a Communist country.  Communism is an extreme version of socialism.  Socialism by its nature is oppressive and coercive.  Socialism cannot exist without 100% participation by the populace, therefore dissent cannot be tolerated.  In small societies, dissidents and non-compliers can be ostracized but in large societies coercion becomes necessary with varying degrees of repression, force, and brutality.  Socialist societies must be highly regulated to impose uniformity and regulations must be enforced.  Although China opened its economy to join the WTO, which allowed it to grow economically, it is still ruled politically with a firm hand by the Communist Party.  A distinguishing feature of Communism from many other forms of socialism is that it is expansionary and attempts to force itself on other societies.  With its new capabilities, China is now becoming confrontational and expansionary.

Like Victor, we have enabled a Creature we cannot control.  We can try to minimize the harm it causes us but we cannot expect it to go floating off on an ice raft.  Free trading with China has to be one of the most shortsighted policies the United States has ever implemented.

Best wishes to everyone for the holidays.  The New Year promises to be very interesting.

 

Making Policy

As we enter the holiday season we have several events of interest as to where they will take us in the oil business:  The OPEC meeting Thursday this week, November 30, at which Russia, a non-member, will probably dominate and try to establish discipline among the members to maintain production cuts; Economic results for the US which will have a strong influence on Federal Reserve considerations pertaining to interest rates at their meeting on December 16; and Chinese intentions to start an oil trading contract priced in yuan backed by gold on the Shanghai Exchange late in the month.

We can expect some changes and that, of course, leads to a review of policies and thinking about what should be done.

After World War II, an administrative structure for international financial and political relationships was formed with the Bretton Woods agreement followed with the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the UN, NATO, and eventually GAAT, the WTO, and various other agreements governing international trade, finance, and other relationships.  The United States established a strategy of Containment for dealing with the Soviet Union and coordinated financial, political, economic, foreign, and military policies with that strategy.  In the 1970s, following the Vietnam War and the Arab Oil Embargo those policies came into considerable disarray and diminished strategic focus.   Ronald Reagan terminated many of the short-term patchwork policies enacted during those years.  When asked what his strategy was for dealing with the Soviet Union he famously responded “We win, they lose”.  With that modified and re-stated strategy he established and again coordinated various social, economic, financial, foreign, commercial, military, scientific, and political policies – the various tools of the government and many of private enterprise – to achieve that objective, successfully.

It seems we had no replacement strategy after the end of the Soviet Union, however, or policies for helping the newly formed states emerging from the Soviet Union; we ignored them to find their way on their own and gloated over their humiliation.   We also ignored the emerging economic power of China and its potential repercussions.   All these new countries were naively expected to join a worldwide brotherhood of nations and benignly accept the post-WWII arrangements established and dominated by the US.

Unsurprisingly, that did not happen; the world is in a state of turmoil, change, and conflict.  International relationships and institutions in which the US has participated for decades are in a state of transition; some of them will end, some will be altered, and some new ones will form.  Power is moving from some areas of the world to others, re-aligning relationships, and altering economies.  Because of the size, critical nature, and pervasive worldwide presence of the oil business and its customers, this turmoil brings volatility and uncertainty to oil markets and prices with all their impact on economies.

A general perception is that the US is losing its leadership position.  As Charles Krauthammer commented, however, “Decline is a Choice”.   The US still leads in technological development, military capability, and economic flexibility.  The US can maintain its position but it must resolve to do so with determination, accept the realities of a changed world, build on its strengths, formulate new strategies, and adapt policies to those strategies.

International power and political relationships are in a period of change, much of the world is unstable, new non-violent forms of conflict are available (electronic, cyber, social media), and adversaries are using them.  They are testing the US and each other.  Terrorism is now ubiquitous. Wars are interminable. The United States can expect to be in a prolonged period of continuous conflict of various types which will vary from nuisance interventions and hacking to belligerent competition to active armed engagement.

Since the fall of the Soviet Union the US seems to have followed various individual financial, commercial, foreign, military, etc., policies with no overall unifying strategy.  Each of those policies is based on, and may be justified by, a narrow range of considerations; but they are not coordinated in accordance with an overall spectrum of objectives and may have widespread unexpected impact.  Policies are made seemingly with no understanding of the interconnectedness between various government policies with each other and with American business interests.

Government policy makers do not seem to realize American business activities are a major portion of American international presence and activity.  American companies normally hire local employees, contract for local services and suppliers, and interact with local companies and businesses on a daily basis.  Their management and employees typically are much more in touch with local culture, people, and the daily economy than government employees and in many countries are the only contacts locals have with Americans.  Oil companies, because of the nature of their business, generally have offices in cities and towns but also operate in rural areas and deal with a cross-section of the local society on many levels.  Americans living in and doing business in a country can provide valuable insights for formulating policy and also advise regarding policy consequences on the local economy, American companies, and our own economy. To ignore such insights is shortsighted.

Recent US policy making with narrowly limited objectives and inputs has led to instability and prolonged conflict in many areas, volatile oil markets and prices, and a world full of unforeseen, unintentional, and detrimental consequences – in short, a mess.

By Janet Yellen’s own testimony, when the Federal Reserve decided to stop Quantitative Easing in 2014 it did not consider the ramifications of the resulting 60% decrease of oil prices and the effects on alliances, economies, societies, or financial relationships of oil producing countries.  Obviously, she did not understand the international oil business; things have not changed much since the confused policy making of the 1970s.

Saudi Arabia is still trying to find its way out of the aftermath of the oil price drop.  In doing so, the King has changed the order of kingly succession, changed the direction of the economy, visited Moscow and made deals with the Russians.  After hosting his Financial Investment Initiative Summit last month and portraying a rosy investment and social future for the Kingdom, the Crown Prince is putting many of his relations and business people under house arrest and confiscating their assets.  Not all this, I am sure, was considered by the Fed when they stopped Quantitative Easing.

Over 300 US oil and gas companies have declared bankruptcy following the oil price decrease.  Did Janet think about that when she decided to end QE?

Russia is a third-rate economy with severe demographic problems.  That economy has large oil and gas components, however, and because Russian oil and gas supplies are critical to Europe and China Vladimir Putin has considerable leverage and he knows how to use it.  The oil price drop cut Russian oil revenues by about 60%.   It seems it would have been advisable to have thought beforehand about what Mr. Putin might do in response and plan our own responses and countermeasures to his actions.  Russia was already subject to various sanctions because it annexed Crimea and encroached into Ukraine.  Mr. Putin is obviously a coldly analytical and rational leader, not inclined to passivity, and punches far above his weight in geopolitical affairs.  We should have expected him to take action carefully, methodically, and effectively.

Mr. Putin has responded by attempting to reduce his vulnerability to oil price changes; he is slowly and persistently extending his influence over non-Russian oil and gas sources, transportation and delivery systems, and the countries where they are located worldwide.  He has pretty much surrounded Europe and moved into Venezuela, Nicaragua, and, of course, Cuba in our neighborhood.  He also has maneuvered himself into the dominant position for extending OPEC production quotas later this week at OPEC’s November 30 meeting – and Russia is not even an OPEC member.

In this environment, the US needs new ideas, new procedures, and clear objectives and we need major changes in the way we form and conduct policies.  To succeed in a tumultuous world, all tools of national influence, power, and engagement must be organized and used.   The US must coordinate the various policies of government with each other and with private enterprise business interests.  New policies must be formulated consistent with an overall strategy and executed by a nimble administrative system which can react quickly to a rapidly changing world.

Geopolitical policy formulation will require some fundamental considerations such as clarifying our objectives in Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Libya, and the Middle East in general.  If our actions are based on considerations of oil supply the next question is “If the United States can access sufficient oil in the Western Hemisphere, why are we continuing to direct so much of our effort, cost, time, and lives so unsuccessfully to the Middle East?” Our recent actions in the Middle East seem only to contribute to instability.

The worldwide oil supply and market system is in near balance and has been for several years.  Oil prices are determined on open exchanges by traders depending on data with margins of error greater than the margins of surplus or shortage of supply. Russia is establishing dominance over many of the supply and transport systems.  China is establishing a new trading contract priced in yuan.   The marginal pricing system leads to wide price swings amplified by rumors of expected actions by foreign unstable governments in conflict with one another and us. This price volatility whipsaws the US economy and the US oil industry.  The United States needs to establish a new supply and market system with a limited number of reliable sources, long-term supply relationships, and more stable prices.

The oil business, as the largest component of international trade and as a critical component of geopolitical considerations, needs clarity as to the direction of US government foreign policy and its political, financial, fiscal, economic, and military ramifications which define the foreign business environment to operate forcefully and confidently internationally where most oil is produced.

American oil companies, along with Canadian, British, and Australian oil companies, are private enterprise organizations; they are organized, financed, managed, and operate as such.  Because of government and societal sensitivities in most countries regarding foreign development of natural resources most of the rest of the world’s oil companies are either owned by, controlled by, or indirect agents of, their governments.  Although those companies may maintain a façade of independent commercial operation, they have the authority of their governments controlling and supporting them.  In many cases this dual role leads to conflicts of purpose for their management; business relations and normal competition thus can become adversarial.

A private enterprise company without backup support from their own government in an adversarial negotiation with one of these companies or governments will lose.   American companies do not have backup support.  The US State Department seems to make a point of not supporting US business interests under a general antipathy to private business and a stated policy of not becoming involved in commercial transactions.  Because transactions between a US company and a foreign government and company are not between two purely commercial entities, that policy needs to change.

The US will need to deal with a limited number of friendly governments and their oil companies on a reciprocally beneficial basis to establish a reliable sustained oil supply and stable pricing system.  Cordial relations and discussion on government and company levels will be required.  Establishing an effective system will require participation by both private enterprise companies and the government and close coordination between them.

In short, the US needs to clarify its foreign policy objectives, the role of the oil industry and oil markets with regard to those objectives, coordinate government action and private enterprise business activities around a unifying strategy, and support American companies in their dealings with foreign governments, their agents, and their companies.

Reality Calling; Please Answer

After the end of the Cold War, policy makers in the West seemed to relax to catch their wind following a long race.  It was generally assumed that without the overriding conflict between the West and the Soviet Union the world would enter a period of economic growth, political stability, and evolution into a tolerant, multi-cultural, diverse society of democratic governments, technological progress, and increasing wealth for everyone.  It was also widely presumed that international institutions established after World War II to regulate and administer international trade such as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Trade Organization, GATT, etc, would expand to include emerging economies in an orderly world.

The US, with an overabundance of hubris, referred to itself as the “indispensable nation” and the “sole superpower” but seemed to have no foreign policy.  It ignored conflicts in the Middle East, the rise of China, de-stabilizing trends in Latin America, and the trials of Russia and the newly-independent former Soviet republics as they struggled to establish new political and economic systems and relationships.  Without much in the way of debate or thoughtful analysis the US defaulted to a program of globalization and free trade with anybody and everybody under the general impression the world’s peoples would all march off into a happy future of equality and multiculturalism.

In many ways that is still the vision of policy makers and academicians but it has not worked out that way.  That vision has been undermined by new forces and trends, conflicts, economic crises, separatist movements, and changes of world power relationships as various parties vie for dominance.

The Bush Administration came into office with no strategy and shortly afterward the 9/11 attack dominated all foreign policy thinking.  The US embarked on a program of incoherent and uncoordinated actions with no clear purpose or long term strategy except some vague idea of stopping Terror and a fantasy that the US could turn the Middle East into a group of Jeffersonian democracies.  Sixteen years later, neither goal has been reached; if anything, things are worse.

Mostly this exposed underlying resentments of various groups within so-called “nations” for which the boundaries had little to do with Westphalian principles of establishing national borders.  The next Administration was then characterized by ambivalence, dithering, and withdrawal.  These trends culminated in the Arab Spring and its following chaos from which the US is retreating and Russia is moving in.  Foreign policy journals are still full of academic recommendations to the new Administration that the US should prop up existing international institutions, alliances, treaties, and the current unreliable and volatile international oil market, supply, and price system.

The two views of forces and trends in the world were on display the past week.

The vision of a benign, globalized, multicultural world was on full display in Saudi Arabia where the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) hosted the Future Investment Initiative (FII) and gathered a wide range of CEOs of prominent investment groups, banks, leaders of all the main international financial institutions and industrial groups, and government ministers in Riyadh; dubbed “Davos in the Desert”.   Various distinguished panels discussed the current investment climate and trends for the next several decades.  Topics included trends in technological innovation, medical and health care advances, smart infrastructure, big data, virtual reality, robotics, artificial intelligence, media and telecommunications, and retail sales and the opportunities for investment in these areas and in the societal and economic disruptions they cause.  Perceived threats to these trends seemed to be limited to inequality and climate change.  The Crown Prince announced Saudi Arabia will build an all-new city, NEOM, in the northwest part of the country near Jordan and Egypt on the Red Sea. It will be a high-technology city of technological innovation and a world financial center.

During the same week the world of competition and rivalry was also on display.  Russia continued its program of investments in oil supply and transport systems in northern Iraq, Iran, and Nigeria and helped the Venezuelans make their bond payment on Friday.  Rosneft proposed exchanging their collateral position in CITGO, the Venezuelan-owned US refining company, for interests in Venezuelan oil fields.  The Chinese announced they would begin trading an oil contract on the Shanghai Exchange around the end of the year.  That contract will be denominated in yuan backed by gold.  These actions reflect strategies of the two governments although they will be implemented by “non-governmental” organizations.

Neither of these developments seems to be receiving any attention by US policy makers.  Maria Bartiromo of Fox Business News interviewed Secretary of the Treasury Mnuchin at the FII conference.  He discussed the US budget, pending tax bills, and the new international effort to stifle terrorist financing but never mentioned the oil price or the potential effect of the Chinese trading contract.

Russia has been a major supplier of oil and gas to Europe for decades.  It has demonstrated it has no reservations about using those supplies as a political and economic weapon and its willingness to curtail them for political concessions, causing significant discomfort and economic impact.  Russia is now establishing positions of influence and control over many of the world’s oil supply and transport systems; it can be expected to use these as political and economic weapons.

In the material I have seen China has not announced the exchange rate for the yuan to gold for its new oil contract.  Nor is it expected China will back all yuan with gold but then it has had different versions of yuan before.  Nevertheless, this in effect puts an oil price in gold into play; this has the potential to affect oil markets and the value of the dollar significantly.

Because of its necessary role in modern economies and the size of its market oil has a unique and critical influence on International trade and finance.  Marimon, McGrattan, and Sargent (1) published a study showing that in markets trading in commodities or fiat money, goods with low storage costs become a medium of exchange.  For about two and a half millennia, small metal discs were commonly used.  To indicate quality and quantity of the metal, pictures of emperors and kings typically were stamped on one side and religious symbols or coats-of-arms on the other.  The United States tended toward Miss Liberty on one side and eagles on the other.

A medium of exchange for international trade must have certain characteristics besides a low storage cost:

  • Sufficient volume to provide liquidity for the size of the trading market.
  • Fungible.
  • An open market price on public exchanges.
  • Quality and quantity certifiable in a widely recognized and accepted format by independent international agencies.
  • Exchangeable or traded directly for a large number of currencies or products.

Oil meets these criteria.  It may not be convenient to carry oil around to check out at the local supermarket but for storing large amounts of wealth tankerloads of oil in the outer harbor at Singapore or some out-of-the-way ports have a certain convenience for many people; they are outside banking regulations and have some anonymity with respect to ownership.  Convertibility to gold will be an added convenience, increase its use as a medium of exchange, and undermine pricing in dollars.    Such convenience is enhanced when price increases in some media exceed storage costs.

Recently I watched congressional testimony by the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.  She was asked if they considered oil prices in their policy decisions.  She answered that yes, oil prices are watched closely because when oil prices increase they contribute to rising inflation and when they decrease they do not.  Also, when oil prices went up it was good for the oil companies but bad for consumers and when they went down it hurt the oil companies but was good for consumers.  These profound insights were the extent of her comments regarding the effect of oil prices on the economy.  No mention of how the price drop in 2014-15, caused by the end of Quantitative Easing by the Fed, collapsed the economies of Russia, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Brazil, Mexico, and other oil suppliers throughout the world or on consumer nations and the effect that has had on international relationships.  No mention of the starvation afflicting the people of Venezuela, Putin’s decision to establish a strong presence in the oil business outside Russia, Saudi arms purchases, or over 200 oil-company bankruptcies in the US.

Trading contracts for oil backed by gold will have widespread appeal; China has made it clear they intend to use this market and these contracts to disrupt current markets.  Russia already is the largest supplier of oil to China and just announced they intend to increase their sales by 600,000 bopd; and they take yuan for it.  The Saudis are also a large supplier to China.  Russia, Brazil, and Iran already have announced they would prefer to trade oil in a medium other than US dollars.  But the US seems not to be paying attention; not the Fed and not the Treasury and not the State Department.

This reminds me of an announcement at the Oil and Money conference in London in November, 1982.  A lady named Rosemary McFadden announced she was going to take control of the oil price; this after a decade of chaos in the markets following the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973-4.  She was head of the New York Mercantile Exchange and planned to start trading contracts for 1000 barrels of West Texas Intermediate Oil in tanks in Cushing, Oklahoma.  It attracted attention in the conference, and some skepticism, but not as much as many other announcements and no attention from US Government foreign or financial policy makers.

Trading started the following March 30 and the pricing system took a while to get established.  A major oil price collapse followed in 1986 and oil traded in a narrow price band for the next 20 years.  Initiation of the trading contract on the NYMEX was one of the most profound and long-lasting events in the history of the oil business and international relations and contributed to the eventual fall of the Soviet Union.  Other exchanges followed, oil is still traded on open exchanges, and, as noted above, China plans to start trading a contract.  But policy makers were oblivious at the time.  We seem to be ignoring events of similar potential significance again – at our peril.  Many people think oil supply markets have always operated as a worldwide fungible market with marginal prices in US dollars determined by open bid and always will.

Not so; disruptive forces directed by people who do not wish us well are operating in the world.  Our policy makers cannot remain oblivious; they must recognize these trends and their effects on oil and financial markets and our economy.  Americans have always been masters of change; the US must adapt to these changes and develop strategies and policies which will ensure its security and prosperity in a changed world.

(1)  Marimon, Ramon; McGrattan, Ellen; Sargent, Thomas J.: “Money as a Medium of Exchange in an Economy with Artificially Intelligent Agents”: Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 14 (1990), 329-73.  

Wanted: A Foreign Policy

The American oil and gas industry combines the use of massive capital, cutting-edge technology, entrepreneurial audacity, international economics, and geopolitics like no other.  Corporate strategy is a daily fact of life.  Companies which mostly operate domestically have increased US production by over 4 ½ million barrels per day.  This has been a boon to the US economy by reducing imports and the flow of dollars out of the country.  This production increase was an economic and political surprise and has become a de-stabilizing force in the international oil markets.  US companies which operate internationally are responsible for most new discoveries, increases of production worldwide, and most of the technological improvements which lead to growth in the industry everywhere.  US oil companies thus have a significant impact on the world’s oil supplies, markets, and prices and, due to the size and critical nature of the oil markets, also on international geopolitics and geo-economics.

But who is taking advantage of the current situation and taking action to improve their control and influence in the international oil supply and financial systems?  Recent news items since my last commentary provide the answer:

http://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/International/Why-Russia-Is-Playing-All-Sides-In-The-Middle-East.html

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-05/saudi-king-seeks-oil-pact-extension-on-epochal-russia-visit

http://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Russia-Morocco-Sign-String-Of-Energy-And-Military-Deals.html

http://oilprice.com/Energy/Natural-Gas/Russia-Gets-Foothold-In-The-Worlds-Hottest-NatGas-Discovery.html

Russia making deals in Egypt, Morocco, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Turkey, Argentina, and Israel, all former allies of the US except Libya.  Is there a pattern here?  Obviously Mr. Putin has a strategy and his companies and government agents are carrying it out.  US foreign policy seems to be adrift, however, with no defining strategy or coordinating oversight.  Each component of policy seems determined and implemented in isolation with no knowledge or consideration of its influence on a broad strategic program.

The Federal Reserve oversees the banking industry.  As noted in previous commentaries, their actions starting and stopping Quantitative Easing caused significant oil price increases and decreases; for example, the significant oil price drop in late 2014 started when Quantitative Easing was stopped by the Fed in August 2014.  Saudi Arabia did not announce they would maintain market share until the end of November and increases of storage started in first quarter 2015.  An earlier commentary also included an inverse correlation between oil price and the value of the dollar.

In March 2015 the Fed Chairman testified to Congress that she was surprised by the change in the price of oil and about 30 minutes later that she was also surprised by the change of the strength of the dollar – interrelated results of actions taken by the Fed.  The real surprise was to learn the Federal Reserve Chairman did not realize the Fed’s actions affect the international value of the dollar and the oil price.

In a country which still depends on imports for about a third of its oil needs, Treasury officials recommended selling off half the Strategic Petroleum Reserve over a period of several years to raise money for the general fund of the country; an idea which may make sense from a short-term budget viewpoint but not strategically for long-term security in a dangerous and changing world.

After the end of the Cold War the US, Europe, and international institutions seemed to embrace globalization as the means to bring prosperity and equality to the world’s peoples.  Twenty-five years later it has become apparent that such a world will not be achieved by bringing 6 billion of the world’s poor up to the standard of living of the world’s rich nations.  Equality will be achieved only by bringing everyone to the mean, which is quite low; the most prosperous societies must come down in status and wealth significantly.

This result of globalization became apparent to middle class American voters as they saw their prosperity, culture, security, and well-being eroded for an ideological objective.  The US, with Europe, slowly sacrificed the prosperity of its middle class on the altar of equality domestically and internationally.  The US has supported the phenomenal growth of China, fought fruitless wars on the other side of the world in an inconsistent fashion, and tried to convert Arabs into Jeffersonian democrats.  American voters elected the only candidate, with all his quirks, shortcomings, and idiosyncracies they thought had any chance of stopping all this.

Rejecting open unrestricted globalization as a foreign policy does not mean turning to isolationism; it does mean establishing a strategy for re-establishing and enhancing United States prosperity and security for its citizens and using trade selectively as a strategic tool.

A national strategy should direct and advise the integrated use of resources to generate wealth and the judicious and cautious use of power.  By wealth I do not mean rich; rich is having a lot of money.  Wealth is reliably having what you need when you need it.  In a dangerous world, it is sometimes necessary for a government to take forceful action to safeguard the safety and security of its citizens.  The power to do that should be used rarely and carefully but it must be available as needed.  This means the resources needed may be indigenous to the nation or externally acquired but they must be reliably accessible in a useful form on demand.   Any reduction of ready accessibility for short-term financial benefit must be avoided.

A purpose of these commentaries is to point out that during the Energy Crisis Decade of Confusion from 1973 to 1983 many us policy choices were based on lack of understanding of the oil industry and oil markets.  Many of those policies were disruptive and counterproductive and we still live with some of them.  During this current period of transition of international political, economic, financial, and energy systems we are in danger of making the same mistakes based on lack of understanding of the current oil market and price system and its interconnection with the international financial system.

The United States is a large oil producer but does not produce enough for its own needs.  Currently it imports oil purchased in a worldwide fungible market with marginal pricing quoted on open exchanges.  A significant part of that worldwide oil market and supply system is in unstable regions; it is affected by myriad participants, events, confrontational politics, and ongoing wars.  Prices reflect these events and various rumors, fantasies, bad data, and perceptions of impending shortages or surpluses.  The market and pricing are volatile and not conducive to the long-term capital requirements necessary to develop new oil supplies. Oil supplies are adequate but are not reliable with respect to either availability or price.

As a large and critical resource, oil must be considered when formulating strategy and foreign policy.  Those who make and guide US foreign policy and financial policy have the opportunity to take advantage of the unexpected strength of the American oil industry but do not seem interested in doing so.   US oil companies could be powerful tools of financial and foreign policy – and have been in the past – if their activities were conducted with any coordination as part of an overall strategy of the US Government.  They have established an unexpected advantageous position for the US in geopolitics and geoeconomics but other countries are taking advantage of it.  As an example, it is noted that large gas fields discovered in the Mediterranean offshore Israel were discovered by American companies but Russian companies are negotiating with the Israelis and likely will control the transportation of this gas to Europe.  Other countries coordinate their oil companies’ activities with government actions for strategic benefit.  Our significant competitors are using their companies to establish dominating presences in many of the oil producing areas of the world.

The US needs a new reliable and stable oil supply and market system. The United States must develop a new foreign policy which is a part of an overall set of guiding principles for the government to operate in a troublesome and uncertain world.  Individual policy components, political, military, financial, economic, and foreign, must be guided by people with an understanding of that for which they are forming policy, how it fits with other policy components, and coordinated into an overall national strategy. The national government must have a strategy overarching all these policy and strategic components.  The recent increase of US oil production and its effects in international markets puts the US in a strong position to do so; it can re-align its international relationships politically, financially, and economically from a position of strength and confidence.