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Teh One Who Knocks
03-04-2015, 12:20 PM
By JONATHAN FAHEY - The Associated Press


http://i.imgur.com/ih35ezF.jpg

NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. has so much crude that it is running out of places to put it, and that could drive oil and gasoline prices even lower in the coming months.

For the past seven weeks, the United States has been producing and importing an average of 1 million more barrels of oil every day than it is consuming. That extra crude is flowing into storage tanks, especially at the country's main trading hub in Cushing, Oklahoma, pushing U.S. supplies to their highest point in at least 80 years, the Energy Department reported last week.

If this keeps up, storage tanks could approach their operational limits, known in the industry as "tank tops," by mid-April and send the price of crude — and probably gasoline, too — plummeting.

"The fact of the matter is we are running out of storage capacity in the U.S.," Ed Morse, head of commodities research at Citibank, said at a recent symposium at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

Morse has suggested oil could fall all the way to $20 a barrel from the current $50. At that rock-bottom price, oil companies, faced with mounting losses, would stop pumping oil until the glut eased. Gasoline prices would fall along with crude, though lower refinery production, because of seasonal factors and unexpected outages, could prevent a sharp decline.

The national average price of gasoline is $2.44 a gallon. That's $1.02 cheaper than last year at this time, but up 37 cents over the past month.

http://i.imgur.com/h40XvbT.jpg

Other analysts agree that crude is poised to fall sharply — if not all the way to $20 — because it continues to flood into storage for a number of reasons:

— U.S. oil production continues to rise. Companies are cutting back on new drilling, but that won't reduce supplies until later this year.

— The new oil being produced is light, sweet crude, which is a type many U.S. refineries are not designed to process. Oil companies can't just get rid of it by sending it abroad, because crude exports are restricted by federal law.

— Foreign oil continues to flow into the U.S., both because of economic weakness in other countries and to feed refineries designed to process heavy, sour crude.

— This is the slowest time of year for gasoline demand, so refiners typically reduce or stop production to perform maintenance. As refiners process less crude, supplies build up.

— Oil investors are making money buying and storing oil because of the difference between the current price of oil and the price for delivery in far-off months. An investor can buy oil at $50 today and enter into a contract to sell it for $59 in December, locking in a profit even after paying for storage during those months.

The delivery point for most of the oil traded in the U.S. is Cushing, a city of about 8,000 people halfway between Oklahoma City and Tulsa at an intersection of several pipelines. The city is dotted with tanks that can, in theory, hold 85 million barrels of oil, according to the Energy Department, though some of those tanks are used for blending or feeding pipelines, not for storing oil.

The market data provider Genscape, which flies helicopters equipped with infrared cameras and other technology over Cushing twice a week to measure storage levels, estimates Cushing is two-thirds full.

Hillary Stevenson, who manages storage, pipeline and refinery monitoring for Genscape, says Cushing could be full by mid-April. Supplies are increasing at "the highest rate we have ever seen at Cushing," she says.

Full tanks — or super-low prices — are not a sure thing. New storage is under construction at Cushing, and there are large storage terminals near Houston, in St. James, Louisiana, and elsewhere around the country that will probably begin to take in more oil as prices fall far enough to cover the cost of transporting the oil.

Also, drillers are cutting back fast because oil prices have plummeted from $107 a barrel in June. And demand is showing signs of rising.

While the Energy Department reported another enormous rise in crude stocks last week, up 8.4 million barrels from the week earlier, it also reported that diesel and gasoline supplies fell more than expected. That leads some to conclude that demand for crude will soon pick up, easing the surplus somewhat.

But many analysts believe oil prices will fall through the spring, before summer drivers start to relieve the glut.

perrhaps
03-04-2015, 02:37 PM
They can put a bunch in my asshole neighbors' basement.

Hal-9000
03-04-2015, 05:21 PM
this is shit.....Big Oil only needs to build storage facilities, not refining or production. It's like saying a company budget has to remain the same year after year, rather than spend it all and increase the budget for next year.

Things finally get close to reasonable for the consumer and the oil companies are crying about a solvable problem...

PorkChopSandwiches
03-04-2015, 05:49 PM
They can put a bunch in my neighbors' asshole .

:ftfy:

redred
03-04-2015, 06:07 PM
ship some over to europe that will really piss the russians off :lol:

Hal-9000
03-04-2015, 06:11 PM
it's all part of the big lie and the oil companies need to take the brunt of their own actions...

a product that costs .09 cents to manufacture (in bulk) and they charge 3 or 4 dollars?

now you have to cut back on drilling and refining because of a glut? Well you're still importing along with making your own, so maybe the process is built to fail you mooks

Griffin
03-05-2015, 12:48 AM
apparently there is a problem with leaving it stored where it has been the past few million years? :-s

FBD
03-05-2015, 02:58 PM
apparently there is a problem with leaving it stored where it has been the past few million years? :-s

product of financialization - the fracking glut only really boomed hard because companies were allowed to borrow at stupidly low rates, which the banks are all too happy to give out since on paper the federal reserve basically told them they dont need to pay anyone interest for using their (depositors) money any longer. and of course, each buck that's paid out to a bank gets lent out as 10 more bucks....and each borrower will be on the hook should that massively leveraged loan bet go a little south, and cousin bin habeeb over here with 92 billion from his oil fields will be more than happy to bail your ass out once interest rates rise just a tiny bit and your debt is no longer serviceable.


they are pumping and pumping because they HAVE to pump, there is no other way to keep the bills paid.


and then when they fail, the larger entities buy it all up at pennies on the dollar.


rinse, repeat, find a next industry to do it with, repeat again.


eat all the resources in one petri dish, migrate and infest another.


financialization is the death knell of freedom on earth. none of this gets fixed until the heads of the international criminal cartels are rolling on the ground a la the french revolution.

Teh One Who Knocks
03-05-2015, 03:03 PM
apparently there is a problem with leaving it stored where it has been the past few million years? :-s

Someone could come along and steal it :hand:


http://i.imgur.com/Zg2jPrR.jpg

FBD
03-05-2015, 03:19 PM
Someone could come along and steal it :hand:


http://i.imgur.com/Zg2jPrR.jpg

funny irony, that....its just what the kuwaitis did to iraq, with a smile wink and nod from uncle sam, if mofo's got a problem with it, we go take his country over.