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I noticed that the $80 Oil, Here We Come!!! article was the first to predict much higher oil prices and that The Perfect Option article was the first to claim $100 dollars per barrel.
Other more mainstream forecasters have issued similar predictions...
The Globe and Mail as reported here: Production theory could make $100 oil a reality
CIBC World Markets as reported here: CIBC sees oil at $100 (U.S.)
The IMF as reported on CNN and available here: IMF: Oil could hit $100, hurt growth
As well as Goldman Sachs reported on CNN and available here: Goldman sees oil spiking to $105
Originally posted by Thomas Crowne
Also, those who own Unocal is seriously considering the Chinese bid. If that occurs, one of the largest oil companies will be owned by the Chinese.
... anyone else see a little problem on the horizon?
When will "foreigners no longer finance our debts"?
Well since China is one of the largest holders of US debt. All those assets in dollar denominations and the flow of interest payments (also in dollars) have sent them on an investment, deal making and buying spree.
Examples:
NEWS: China National Offshore Oil Corp Re-ups Bid For Unocal
China bidding for Maytag corp and Huffy bikes
China a Leader in Scramble for Oil
So I figure that US corporations and their indentured political class have two choices. One is to hold dear to their principles of capitalist "free markets" and sell to the highest bidder. The other is to intervene in the name of "national security" with "protectionist" solutions.
If the later is chosen, I have a question.
What happens when China realises that all of those US dollars and other financial instruments it holds can't buy them what they need (like energy)? - link
news.bbc.co.uk...
Oil is set to flow from the Caspian Sea direct to the Mediterranean for the first time after a $3.6bn (£2bn) pipeline opened on Wednesday.
The pipeline has been an international effort and was built by a consortium led by UK oil giant BP, which has a 30% stake.
Other consortium members include Azerbaijan's state oil company Socar, Amerada Hess, ConocoPhillips, Eni, Inpex, Itochu, Statoil, Total, TPAO and Unocal.
news.bbc.co.uk...
The United States has given significant political support, seeing the pipeline as a way of transporting vital energy supplies out of the Caspian, avoiding alternative routes to the south through Iran, or to the north through Russia.
But Russia has been unhappy with the project, seeing it as further evidence of the West seeking to exert power and influence in an area Moscow has traditionally seen as its own backyard. [/url]
news.bbc.co.uk...
The US ambassador to Tajikistan has welcomed the opening of a Russian military base there as a key element in building stability in the region.
...The Central Asian republics of Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan - formerly part of the Soviet Union - have become US allies since the start of the war on terror.
i hear on the grapevine that bilderberg people want $250 a barrel at some point
Originally posted by smirkley
Consider instead if China decided to just drop the dollar, not worry about the interest it earns,.. and then begin just buying AND selling oil in some other fledgling currency.
Those implications, along with their manufacturing power, could ultimately change the way (and with who) the world does business.
The bid for Unocal has ["little to do with security of supply for China,"] says Derek Butter, an analyst at energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie in Edinburgh, Scotland. Instead, he says, it has more to do with China's desire to create a large corporation that ["can compete with the other international companies, and has the skills in the future to negotiate its way into large projects."]"
The bottom line, according to this alternative point of view is that China's bid for Unocal is a bid toward becoming a major oil producer with a global presence, rather than to add to China's reserves for its own personal use.
In our opinion, the Journal, while clearly listing some interesting observations is missing an important point.
China's purchase of Unocal, even if it did not lead to the diversion of natural gas toward its own borders, would give it control of the energy supply used by Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh, and Indonesia. It would also put some pressure on Japan and South Korea.
In other words, in one fell swoop, China would become the energy czar for a significant portion of South East Asia, and would gain valuable leverage with which to further its other goals, the expansion of its influence, and the ability to project its power. A scenario in which China could use its leverage to gain concessions from the four countries mentioned, including the placement of military bases, fueling stations for submarines and merchant ships, and the placement of surveillance equipment and communication relay stations in all of those countries is an easy next step to visualize.
All the while, China could also make money by continuing to sell energy to those countries by honoring existing contracts, while negotiating more lucrative ones in the future.
Indeed, the Unocal purchase can easily be looked upon as a threat to national security, especially if you live in Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Japan, or anywhere else in Asia.
Originally posted by RockerDom
China won't attack the US, and the US won't attack China. It doesn't make economic sense. China has just as much to fear from Middle-Eastern terrorism as we do, and I'm sure over the next 20 years as China slowly becomes a Democracy, they will end up fighting alongside us.
Originally posted by RockerDom
The DoD estimates that feeding a troop stationed in the US costs 150 a month. I imagine that feeding a troop stationed overseas may cost about 250 a month, if not more.
Originally posted by RockerDom
Now, let's assume that China spends much less (they are communists after all) per troop. Let's say they spend only 50 per troop, per month. And we can reasonably assume that a drafted Chinese army could mean 50 million troops. That's 500 million dollars a month just to feed them on Chinese soil. That doesn't count armor, weapons, ammo, training, logistics, etc.
Originally posted by RockerDom
China won't attack the US, and the US won't attack China. It doesn't make economic sense. China has just as much to fear from Middle-Eastern terrorism as we do, and I'm sure over the next 20 years as China slowly becomes a Democracy, they will end up fighting alongside us.
Originally posted by smirkley
$100 per bbl does seem a bit high to me for this year, for an average price, but I could easily consider $80 reasonable, based on today's futures.
China has been on a tear lately. They are buying up oil field rights right and left, they hold a large amount of US securities and debt notes, and their manufacturing ability and productivity show no signs of slowing down.
What else do you need to be the worlds superpower,... an army?