Trading Oil
For decades, commodity trading in Oil and
other petroleum products was a club for only the big guns. At 42
gallons per barrel, and a minimum contract size of 1,000 barrels,
the prospect of delivering oil was only for
professionals. But several changes have occurred in the last few
years to alter the scene.
Oil
Commodity prices remained stable for decades until the
explosion of the mid-70s. Political and technological changes
resulted in shortages, uncertainty and rising prices. Since then
prices have risen to over $70 per barrel and are expected to rise
from mid-2006 to mid-2007 and then decline slightly for the
following two years.
No one can predict oil prices with certainty, but there are
several large scale factors that make reasonable projection
possible.
Crude Oil Price:
Demand is rising, and is likely to continue for at least the
next few years and probably longer. India and China are both
experiencing substantial technological and cultural changes. India
in particular is embracing more elements of a free-market economy
than it ever has and the trend shows no signs of being reversed, or
reversible.
Western technology and business methods are bringing India into
the 21st century very rapidly. Along with that comes an increase in
demand for energy, primarily oil-based, in order to build new
homes, office buildings, manufacturing plants and more. Large
segments of what was once a largely rural economy are seeing the
effects. That leads to even more demand.
Demand isn't enough, of course. An individual can want anything.
But India's ability to buy those goods is increasing. With an
inexpensive, highly educated work force India is becoming the
central focus for outsourcing for Information Technology,
electronics manufacturing, communications and more. Those 21st
century businesses are expected to continue to expand for at least
the next decade. Just as one indication, broadband adoption is
growing rapidly in India.
China now has the largest mobile phone use in the world, and the
second largest Internet population. Demand for energy is increasing
there and is expected to continue for the next decade at least.
Though ostensibly ruled by the Communist Party, social forces are
eroding its effectiveness. No one can know whether repression will
ease or increase, but the flow of information is difficult to block
even for a dictatorship.
As social changes continue, business is increasing in China.
Energy demand is up. New buildings, manufacturing plants and
infrastructure is constantly being built. All those require
energy, primarily oil-based.
At the same time demand is rising, supply rates have becoming
static or declined. Temporary refinery loss, such as that due to
hurricanes, can be recovered in a few months to a year. But
North Sea oil production peaked in 2000 and has
been tapering off slowly. Until or unless political changes occur
that release the large known reserves in Alaska, substantial new
sources are unlikely to come into play. No new sources are expected
to come online anywhere in the world.
Technology is leaning more toward developing other forms of
energy, though they are not expected to be on the market for more
than ten years. Fuel-cell powered cars, which would account for
only 7% of gasoline use anyway, won't be in everyone's driveway for
some years to come.
Political pressures to forbid nuclear power, at least in the
U.S., are not expected to change. The waste disposal problem is
still a political football with no solution in sight.
Finally, new forms of oil trading mechanisms
are evolving to allow the average investor to participate in this
once-exclusive club.
E-mini futures on the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange, for example, allow for trading contracts half the
traditional size, 500 barrels. Futures and options on NYMEX (New
York Mercantile Exchange), though still at the 1,000 barrel size
require less than 5% investment, putting them within reach of all.
Commodities pools and funds (such as those from Pimco and
Oppenheimer), which allow investing fractional amounts, are
becoming more popular.
The risk/reward balance was never more favorable for the average
investor to investigate oil commodity trading.
|