Thursday, January 3, 2008

Gold soars to 28-year record of $850 U.S.

Gold soars to 28-year record of $850 U.S.
Gains $22.10 per ounce on oil, weak greenback
January 03, 2008

Business reporter

Happy days are here again for gold bugs as the price of bullion finally broke the $850 (U.S.) record set nearly 30 years ago – and the industry sees it heading toward $1,000 an ounce in the coming months.

"It's unquestionably going to be a golden year," said analyst John Ing of Maison Placements Canada Inc.

The first trading day of 2008 began with a bang for bullion as the spot price jumped $22.10 in New York to close at $857 an ounce.

It's all thanks to a decidedly sluggish outlook for the U.S. economy, which hurt the greenback yesterday. Gold and the U.S. dollar tend to move in opposite directions.

Other commodities joined the party yesterday – including record highs for oil and platinum – along with a boost in copper and silver prices. Though gold stocks have been slow to follow gold's rise, the sector on the Toronto Stock Exchange rose 7.5 per cent with companies including Barrick Gold Corp. and Kinross Gold Corp. enjoying the ride.

Bullion's rise comes on the heels of an increase last year of more than 30 per cent. Last November, it almost hit its old 1980 record before an anticipated correction before Christmas.

"It's a resumption of last year's rally," Ing said.

"The next target is $1,000 an ounce, which is quite realistic in the first part of this year."

He pointed to strong supply-and-demand fundamentals, including the scarcity of new gold deposits globally along with voracious demand from China and India in the midst of one of the hottest bull markets ever for all things metallic.

Bullion is also widely considered a safe haven in which to weather currency storms and uncertain times, and these days that qualifies.

Last week's assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has only increased worries on the geo-political front.

"The recent rise in gold is a combination of things. The U.S. is entering a recession and that has increased (expectations) of interest rate cuts," said analyst Craig Stanley of Desjardins Securities.

Extending last year's weakness, the U.S. dollar fell again yesterday against the euro and the yen after a new report showed U.S. manufacturing unexpectedly contracted last month.

The U.S. news follows last week's spate of housing figures also indicating a slowdown.

That in turn caused investors to hedge against both inflation fears and the expected continuing decline in the U.S. dollar by flocking to gold.

Stanley says gold has also been helped by the fact that big producers such as Barrick and Newmont Mining Corp. have unwound their controversial hedge books – the strategy of forward selling to protect against a falling gold price – signalling confidence in the metal.

Gold may have surpassed the old spot price closing record, but analysts note that in inflation-adjusted terms, $850 (U.S.) an ounce would be $2,200 in the current marketplace.

When gold last hit a record on Jan. 21, 1980, it was propped up by many of the same things as today: the weakening U.S. currency and higher oil prices. Times were also turbulent with the hostage crisis in Iran and the Russian invasion of Afghanistan.

Gold faced tough times after that peak, sliding into a bear market through most of the following 20 years as investors turned to stock markets and the U.S. dollar, with inflation falling to historic lows. Gold has since rallied, rising every year for the last seven years.

Is Oil Supply At Its Peak?

Is oil supply at its peak?
JEFF ZELEVANSKY/REUTERS
Traders work in the crude oil pit on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange on Jan. 2, 2008. Geopolitical worry and demand concerns vaulted oil prices to a record $100 (U.S.) a barrel on the day.
Some market watchers say the end of increases in conventional crude output already at hand
January 03, 2008

Energy Reporter

"The peak in oil production does not signify `running out of oil,' but it does mean the end of cheap oil, as we switch from a buyers' to a sellers' market." – Energy Bulletin's "peak oil primer"

It's the summer of 2006. Osama Bin Laden warns the United States against becoming involved in Somalia. Mexicans elect a new president. And the international community strongly condemns North Korea for its testing of long-range missiles.

But only one event during this time could go down in the history books as forever changing the course of industrialized economies. The summer of 2006 is when the average amount of crude oil pumped out of the ground reached about 85.7 million barrels a day, according to the International Energy Agency.

That, say many followers of "peak oil" theory, is about as good as it's going to get.

And with spot oil surpassing the symbolic $100 (U.S.) mark yesterday for the first time, before easing slightly to close in New York at $99.62, more market watchers are asking: Has global production of oil hit a wall?

"You never know you're at peak until after the fact," says Jeff Rubin, chief economist of CIBC World Markets.

But with 18 months behind him, Rubin is increasingly convinced the days of easy, plentiful oil are gone. Even if December data show record production in the fourth quarter of 2007, there's growing consensus that, at the very least, oil supply has reached a plateau.

"I just don't think we're going to see increases in conventional oil production any more," Rubin says. "I think (peak oil) is here."

So do citizens of a local group called Post Carbon Toronto, created in 2004 to "learn about peak oil and its consequences."

The group holds a public meeting every month, and has for more than three years, to discuss what the city and country can do to avoid the local impact of what they believe is a certain global energy crisis.

Their concern is understandable. Peak-oil theory suggests that once we've passed peak production, rising demand combined with declining output will cause oil prices to soar, perhaps dramatically as the potential for conflict escalates in many oil-producing countries.

Daniel Lerch, author of Post Carbon Cities: Planning for Energy and Climate Uncertainty, says knowing the exact date of peak oil isn't what's important.

"What matters is that oil prices will become volatile and progressively higher when demand increases and supply can't keep up."

If panic sets in, many contend the situation will spark a global depression.

Only those regions that wean themselves substantially from fossil fuels, by switching to emission-free energy resources such as renewables and nuclear, will be able to weather the economic storm.

Hence the name "Post Carbon Toronto."

After meetings, this diverse group of "peakists" – retired academics, former city politicians, engineers, scientists and even one restaurant manager – often go to a nearby pub to passionately debate the issue over a beer. In between meetings they continue the dialogue through an email list, allowing the sharing of information and forwarding of magazine and newspaper articles that add evidence to their belief that peak oil is here.

"Even if the optimists are right, their peak prediction of 2030 is scary enough," says Jim Lemon, 78, a retired geography professor from the University of Toronto who has been following the peak oil debate for roughly a decade.

Lemon, like most moderate peakists, doesn't count so-called unconventional oil when discussing peak theory. He knows there's lots of hard-to-get petroleum in oil shale deposits located in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming, and in Alberta's tar sands.

At issue for him is the black gooey stuff that made the Beverly Hillbillies rich – the "black gold" or "Texas tea" that bubbled out of the ground after a stray bullet from Jed Clampett's shotgun struck ground.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries currently account for about 40 per cent of this easy oil, and the debate centres on whether countries such as Saudi Arabia can, as they claim, increase their output at will.

"The OPEC countries are very secretive about what they've got, and that's part of the problem," says Lemon, adding that retired oil-industry workers from the Middle East often debunk reports coming out of OPEC. "They're all saying the same thing: It's not as good as what we're saying officially."

Peakists also get their information in other creative ways.

According to Lemon, "some guy upstairs over a bakery in Geneva" has eyes on the ground that count each day the number of oil tankers leaving the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow and highly strategic passage that carries one-fifth of the world's oil supply.

But even the "official" scenario is beginning to change. The International Energy Agency, which over the years has been relatively optimistic about oil output, was uncharacteristically gloomy in November with its latest outlook.

"Although production capacity at new fields is expected to increase over the next five years, it is very uncertain it will be sufficient to compensate for the decline in output at existing fields and meet the projected increase in demand," the agency said, declaring a trend that could threaten the world's energy security.

MP Dennis Bevington, the federal New Democratic Party's energy critic, is worried that the Canadian government isn't taking peak oil seriously enough. In November, he made a statement in Parliament that called for public discussion of the issue, and emphasized the need for a national energy strategy that anticipates the coming energy crunch.

He calls it "disturbing" that most members of Parliament have been silent on the issue, even as oil prices dance around the $100 mark. The government is "telling a lie," he says, when it links the country's energy future to the tar sands and other dirty and expensive sources that, by many estimates, won't compensate for steady declines in conventional oil production.

Many oil analysts and executives are quick to point out new finds in the Gulf of Mexico, such as Chevron Corp.'s Jack 2 well about 430 kilometres southwest of New Orleans. The ultra-deep-water well is said to have anywhere from three to 15 billion barrels of recoverable oil-equivalent reserves.

A similar deepwater find off the coast of Brazil, about 7.2 kilometres beneath the ocean's surface through sand, rock and salt, could produce up to eight billion barrels. But Bevington says ultra-deep-water wells are costly, risky and take a long time to develop.

"These areas that require intensive, long-term investment of capital and engineering, like the tar sands, just can't develop fast enough to fill the gap that this easy conventional oil we've been living off for the last 100 years has been supplying," he says.

"You could say, you're crazy, there's lots of oil out there in the world, but it's so hard to get now, the ability of these industries to mobilize the manpower and equipment in this already overcharged energy industry is very difficult."

Besides, says CIBC's Rubin, headline-grabbing "finds" such as Jack 2 don't tell the whole story. "Jack means nothing in the grand scheme," he says. "What people have to realize is that we lose several Jacks every year to depletion."

Meanwhile, a number of individual oil giants are showing signs their own production has peaked, including Shell, BP, Conoco-Phillips and ExxonMobil. Many have lost their rights to develop in countries such as Venezuela, shrinking both the market and opportunity for growth.

It's why, as far as Rubin is concerned, BP broke its promise not to invest in Alberta's oil sands at risk of tarnishing its green image. It's also why major consolidation in the oil sands is inevitable, and could be Canada's biggest business story in 2008.

"The world is getting smaller and smaller for these guys," says Rubin. "When you're schlepping through barrels of sand to get a barrel of oil you're into the bottom of the 9th here. This isn't exactly low-hanging fruit, but where else is there to go?"

The effects of peak oil won't necessarily plunge the world into depression, but higher and higher energy prices will change the way we do business. Rubin suggests there will be a reversal of globalization trends, such as a return to regional economics.

"Distance is going to start costing on a scale never seen before, at least not in the context of post-war economies," Rubin says.

"So that's bullish for somebody in the Holland Marsh.

Search The Web