With oil being a dominant topic in the media today, prudent investors and
speculators have capitalized on the financial fortunes presenting themselves
in this soaring commodity. Oil companies are scoring record profits and their
stock investors have been greatly rewarded the last several years.
As stock investors we continue to look for opportunities to multiply our capital
in riding the momentum of this bull market, but has this oil bull lost its
steam? Will we ever see $70 oil again like we did at the end of August? Even
at around its $57 level today it is still nearly three times what it was at
the beginning of 2002. Oil stocks would surely lose their luster if there was
a continued decline in the price of a barrel of oil.
Why the price of oil should continue to rise: Americans along with
much of the world will long remember the so-called oil panic of 2005.
After a series of powerful hurricanes pounded the Gulf Coast and came ashore
in the southern part of the United States, not only did it trigger various
tragic disasters, but it caused sizeable disruptions to our precious oil supply.
It makes one wonder though, if these storms were to have hit other parts of
the world that are not as industrialized and oil dependent as the United States,
would its global price have risen so drastically?
Maybe not, but only the layperson witnessed a drastic rise. In the
month leading up to the peak of Katrina's damage, oil did in fact increase
by about $10 per barrel. But before that month, in which nobody could yet fathom
the hurricanes' impact, oil was already trading at $60. Market forces were
well at work before the hurricanes, and oil is simply following trend as a
dominant member of the great
commodities bull of the 00's.
What the hurricanes did do is open the eyes of the everyday person as to how
valuable oil truly is in their everyday lives. And regardless of how fast oil
rises, when it starts to noticeably affect consumer finances this oil bull
will demand mainstream attention. It was at the gas pump in the wake of the
hurricanes when $3, $4 and $5 gas spurred this attention. It certainly wasn't
the magnitude of that experienced in the early 1970s, but people quickly forget
how easy it is for panic to ensue.
Interestingly, gasoline is still much cheaper to buy in America than most
other countries in the world. While I was skipping around Europe earlier this
year with my family I found that, after the poor currency exchange rate of
the mighty dollar was taken into account, it cost more than twice as much to
fill my tank in most countries. Americans would still have it good even if
gas never again went below the panic-stricken $3.00 per gallon mark.
Truth be told, the simple economic imbalance of current and future supply
and demand is what's been driving up global oil prices, not the hurricanes.
Uncertainty and instability can certainly make some noise, like such natural
disasters as hurricanes, the war in Iraq, Middle East tensions, reserve integrity,
the instability of key oil-producing governments and terrorism. But even with
this global oil demand has been on the rise, and this is the ultimate driver
of its price.
Our first chart below displays global supply and demand figures provided for
us by the Energy Information Administration (EIA). The EIA is the statistical
branch of the Department of Energy that provides a plethora of useful economic
analysis and data on domestic and international energy. The data on this chart
represents annual oil supply and demand, or production and consumption, through
the second quarter of 2005 represented in millions of barrels of oil per day.
As you can see there has been an incredible increase in oil demand over the
years. To put it in perspective, in 1970 global demand was just over 45mbpd.
Thirty-five short years later this demand has shot up by 84% to over 83mbpd
and will be at a double in the ensuing years to come.

Demand is sloping up as we live in an industrial and high-tech era that requires
energy in some form to produce and transport virtually every product we use
and consume today. Super economies in Asia are emerging and growing at a pace
so rapid that their insatiable demand for oil can barely be met. The chart
above shows supply limping along barely able to keep up with demand, but how
long can this be maintained?
If demand was to drop off then supply would be more manageable, but that is
not about to happen in the foreseeable future. According to the 2005 International
Energy Outlook (IEO), which represents the EIA's assessment and outlook for
the international energy markets, global demand for crude oil is forecasted
to exceed 119mbpd by 2025. This represents a massive 45% increase from today's
levels. And being that these are government figures I would be inclined to
tag this as a conservative estimate and would expect this number to be even
higher.
The IEO projects that of its forecasted 41mbpd increase from 2002 through
2025, 61% of the increase will occur in the transportation sector while 28%
of it will occur in the industrial sector. Those increases will be spurred
in large part by the emerging markets of China, India and other Asian countries
in which the IEO expects a combined 3.5% increase in oil use per year through
2025.
When today's and tomorrow's global demand for oil is put into the big picture
there is no relief in sight. It is no wonder supply worries are coming to surface.
Will supply be able to keep up with demand in the future, and if so at what
cost? Global inventories have been unusually low in recent years and the tightening
of supply relative to demand is always going to upwardly affect the price of
any commodity, especially one as essential as oil.
In order for supply to keep up with forecasted demand, reserves are going
to need to be tapped and capacity will need to be increased. The world, especially
the United States, is already having capacity issues and is in dire need of
new refineries. Refineries are expensive and time consuming to approve, contract
and construct. High oil prices will be the integral incentive for these refineries
to come into fruition.
As for where the supply will come from, the EIA reports worldwide proved oil
reserves, published by the Oil & Gas
Journal, to be estimated at 1.2 trillion barrels. But how easy is it going
to be to extract this oil from the ground and refine it?
Just like any other underground commodity the easiest and cheapest oil is
pulled from the earth first. As this easy oil slows down or runs dry, it becomes
more expensive to extract and refine from those reserves that are more difficult
to recover and may contain oil that is not as pure. Light sweet crude oil is
much cheaper to refine than sour oil because of its differences in viscosity
and sulfur content.
On average, it can now cost $10 - $15 more per barrel to refine sour crude
than sweet. And because the quality of the oil drilled these days is not as
good as before, we run into even further refining capacity issues. You can't
just refine any grade or quality of oil in any given refinery. In order to
convert a sweet refinery into a sour refinery it can take many years and cost
hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars. So it's not just an overall
capacity issue, it's an oil quality capacity issue.
Now if the global reserves reported are in fact accurate, this only represents
approximately 42 years of global oil supply remaining at the current annual
production rate using the 30 billion barrels produced in 2004. With increases
in production this would prove to be even less. In order for oil countries/companies
to maintain or increase production life, reserves need to be continually renewed.
It is becoming vastly more difficult for countries/companies to renew oil reserves
these days as the discovery of new oilfields is very rare.
There are also critics of this global reserves number that claim it to be
far overstated. The Middle East commands nearly 60% of these reserves and in
many of these countries there is no way to audit their reserve estimates. Many
oil professionals are highly skeptical of the quantity and quality of oil lying
in the deserts of the Middle East. Even recently Saudi Arabia has had to publicly
defend itself from scrutiny over its reserve estimates.
Global oil production going forward will become more costly and will run into
many challenges in order to keep up with demand. As long as demand continues
to dictate and even outpace supply, the only way to attain an economic balance
is for prices to continue to rise. Until alternate energy sources can make
enough of an impact on oil consumption or until they figure out how to efficiently
extract oil from the faces of teenagers, demand for oil will not subside.
Now as we mentioned earlier, oil is a finite and non-renewable resource. Quantity
and quality of oil cannot continue to rise and improve forever. There will
be a peak in global oil production at some point in the future either when
alternate energy use makes enough of an impact or more logically when supplies
diminish.
There are many schools of thought and theories about the future peak in global
oil production. A popular one is the Hubbert Peak Theory. This theory graphically
forms the shape of a bell curve in which the peak of the curve establishes
a peak in global oil production. This peak is associated with a given time
in the future in which oil production would never exceed it and is followed
by a descending slope in production until oil reserves become completely depleted.
Its creator, geophysicist M. King Hubbert, predicted with his theory in 1956
that oil production in the United States would peak by 1970. This prediction
proved to be not far off as U.S. oil production did in fact peak in 1971 and
has been gradually decreasing since. In its design, Hubbert's methodology for
the peak took into account many factors. Many of the same factors, such as
reserve estimates, demand estimates, production estimates and reserve recoverability,
are still considered in today's forecasts and theories even though skyrocketing
demand is escalating at a much faster pace than Hubbert or anybody in the 1950s
probably imagined.
Many experts believe we have already reached the global peak for light sweet
crude production, and Hubbert's prediction for an overall global peak is approximately
2008. This seems highly unlikely because of the production technology we have
today. But interestingly, many of us may still see this peak in our lifetimes.
The IEO predicts a peak in world oil production around 2030, which is probably
conservative and would lead me to lean towards a sooner date. Folks, this is
not too far off.
What investors can do about it: The fact of the matter is oil demand
is on the rise and supply and efficient recoverability will continue to challenge
this commodity's resilience. So if today's high oil prices are not enough to
curb demand, they should only continue to rise.
Chances are this oil bull has not lost its steam and there should still
be plenty of opportunities for stock investors to capitalize on it. As investors
and speculators, we need to stay on top of current global oil economics and
take advantage of the oil companies that have the best positive leverage to
an increase in the price of their underlying commodity.
In the past several months at Zeal we have centered a good deal of focus on
this ongoing oil
bull market and are identifying tools and resources on how to trade it
profitably. In addition to futures trading, stock trading presents wonderful
opportunities for investors and speculators alike to profit on this oil bull.
In addition to identifying the individual stocks primed to give us the best
returns, the timing of our trades is equally important.
In analyzing the oil-stock sector our best proxy for trading is the popular
Amex Oil Index (XOI). Since the XOI is an index that we are paying particularly
close attention to and are using to help us with our technical
trading signals, it is worth a closer look into the fundamentals of its
components and its relevance to the global oil industry.
The XOI is currently comprised of 13 major oil stocks. Our next chart below
shows where their combined annual production ranks compared to overall global
oil production. As you can see, these publicly traded giants that drill oil
all over the world consistently pump out approximately 16% of the world's oil
supply. This showcases the legitimacy of the XOI as a technically measurable
representation of the oil industry useful in gauging overall stock activity
relative to the action of its underlying commodity.

Notice in the time period above that the production rate for these companies
on a percentage basis has kept up with global supply increases. This global
production data is once again gathered from the EIA, but in order to get combined
production data and history estimates for each of the XOI component stocks,
I had to pull and extract data from their financial statements for about the
last ten years in order to sum it all up.
Scouring through these financial statements allowed me the opportunity to
pull other important pieces of data, but also reminded me of the countless
mergers and acquisitions within this industry. Nine of the major producers
have had at least one significant merger or acquisition in the last eight years.
It is easy to tell what some of them were by their current names, but some
were not so memorable or distinguishable. Either way, it was a difficult and
arduous task that seemed like constructing a family tree from scratch in order
to get all the appropriate data gathered.
The other story this tells is in order for these companies to compete globally
by maintaining and increasing overall production rates, they are virtually
forced to consolidate. This turns them into the big bad oil companies they
are today, awakening the anti-capitalist and anti-free-market dreamers to get
up in arms over the perceived power and control they think these companies
have over global oil supply and pricing.
Just like precious metals miners, these companies are positively leveraged
to the increase in price of their underlying commodity. Their overall expenses
to drill and refine each barrel of oil stay relatively fixed aside from
gradual inflationary pressures. Yet as oil prices shoot north each dollar they
go up is a dollar added directly to these companies' profits.
Oil companies the last few years have turned legendary profits which in turn
has generated great rewards for stock investors. But there's that group of
people out there that just don't take a liking to this. These folks that take
particular offense to this are simply not educated in economics and capitalism.
These are the ones that over time have blamed oil companies/countries/organizations
for intentionally colluding to artificially inflate the price of oil.
It has become sport to blame oil companies for high energy prices, especially
with record profits hitting their financials, but this is utter nonsense. Unfortunately
some of those haters happen to be running our country. And who better to blame
for high energy prices than the CEOs of these companies?
Congress recently stooped to a new low by forcing top oil company CEOs to
testify in front of the Senate Energy and Commerce Committee about their record
profits. They tried their hardest to defame, embarrass, falsely accuse and
humiliate these CEOs in front of the country.
These senators only succeeded in humiliating themselves with their lack of
knowledge of economics and how to run a business. ExxonMobil CEO Lee Raymond
tried explaining the simple economics of supply and demand to these senators
several times, but they still admittedly didn't get it. It's scary that these
public bureaucrats have policy-making power yet they don't understand simple
economic fundamentals or how private enterprises are managed.
What they can't seem to grasp is these record profits are what is needed to
help bring oil to the next generation. In addition to the billions of dollars
that need to be spent in repairing hurricane damage, oil companies have enormous
exploration and construction costs. If oil prices weren't so high and profits
weren't as large, there would be no incentive to explore for future reserves
or build the next producing oil rig or refinery.
These massive profits are mostly absorbed into the future viability of these
businesses. Ultimately the performance of these oil giants that comprise the
XOI serves as a good barometer of the health and resiliency of the oil industry.
Another product of my financial-statement research was to gather these oil
companies' reserves. Publicly traded companies listed on American stock exchanges
are required to have extensively audited reserves in order to prove their future
viability. Interestingly, even though XOI components combine for 16% of global
oil production, their combined reserves only amount to 4% of global reserves.
Many nationalized oil producers, particularly the Middle Eastern and African
countries, tend to not have the strict guidelines these companies do in verifying
and proving their oil reserves. So as we mentioned above, it will be interesting
as time goes on to see if these countries can pull the oil they say they can.
As you can see on the chart below, the XOI components have done a sufficient
job renewing their reserves thus far. With this, their average production life
has been hovering at only 11 years at existing production rates. It's no wonder
they feel pressure to consolidate.

At the end of 2004, combined XOI reserves were at 52 billion barrels of oil
(not including natural gas equivalents). These companies are producing nearly
5 billion barrels of oil per year, but if they want to maintain the 16% global
production rate, this will have to increase to over 7 billion barrels per year
by 2025. In order for this to happen and maintain a sufficient production life,
a lot of money will have to be spent in order to renew these reserves.
As time goes on proved reserves are going to be increasingly difficult to
discover, develop and refine. As production rates continue to increase, higher
oil prices seem to be the equalizer in this growing economic imbalance. Outside
of acquisitions and major discoveries, I can't foresee reserves keeping pace
with production for very much longer not only for major XOI producers but for
major organizations and oil-producing countries.
If production life starts to noticeably decline for these entities, it would
garner attention from not only the investing world but from the mass public.
In this situation the global production peak we mentioned earlier will likely
have occurred or be on the horizon.
In the mean time, investors should have ample opportunity to take advantage
of this continued bull run in oil. Oil companies have been through many bear
and bull markets. Good oil companies are almost always able to turn a profit
no matter what market environment they are in, but there are typically very
few to choose from in this case. And even if they can turn a profit, in a bear
market for the commodity investors usually won't touch the stocks anyway.
When oil prices are high though and the bull market picks up steam, stock
investors have a plethora of companies to choose from. XOI components are market
darlings, can give us help with the timing of our trades and tend to have the
least risk when it comes to oil-stock investing. But as a stock investor many
times the best stocks may not be the most obvious ones.
At Zeal we have been researching oil and gas companies both big and small
to see which may have the best leverage to the price of their underlying commodity.
We are actively monitoring hundreds of oil and gas stocks and in our latest newsletter have
deployed a round of buy recommendations to our subscribers as well as added
20 oil and gas stocks to our Watch List.
As trading signals are triggered we are layering in stock and option trade
recommendations to try to catch the next upleg of this oil bull. Please subscribe
today to our acclaimed Zeal Intelligence monthly newsletter and receive
cutting-edge market analysis and stock recommendations focused on this continuing
commodities bull market.
The bottom line is global oil demand is likely to continue to rise at a blistering
pace in the years to come. Global supply seems likely to struggle to meet this
demand creating a further economic imbalance. Higher oil prices are likely
to be in our future and producers are poised to make record profits in attempting
to meet this demand.
As stock investors our best bet is to time our trades within the bull market
cycles and choose those companies best positioned to gain as the commodity
they produce rises.