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Oil at $200/barrel by December 2022?

YouSayPotato

True Freshman
Jun 4, 2021
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From Oct 17 Wall Street Journal

‘Crazy’ Bets on $200 Oil Invade the Options Market​

Traders are wagering U.S. crude’s rally to a seven-year high is just the beginning, despite a softening global economic expansion​



im-416630

The bullish trading amounts to a gamble that supply-chain disruptions and regional shortages will keep pushing energy markets higher.​

PHOTO: LUKE SHARRETT/BLOOMBERG NEWS
By
Gunjan Banerji
Oct. 17, 2021 5:30 am ET


A roaring trade in bullish crude-oil options says the 2021 energy rally is far from over.
Traders once again are betting that the U.S. oil benchmark will surge above $100 a barrel, from a recent $82, as early as December. U.S. crude, known as West Texas Intermediate or WTI, is up 10% this month, and 70% this year, but it hasn’t hit $100 since the oil crash of 2014.
Wagers across the Atlantic are even more aggressive. Some traders are betting Brent crude, the global benchmark, will hit a record high of $200 a barrel by December 2022,

End of WSJ text. FYI, $200 oil would put gasoline prices at about $ 7/gal.
 
From Oct 17 Wall Street Journal

‘Crazy’ Bets on $200 Oil Invade the Options Market​

Traders are wagering U.S. crude’s rally to a seven-year high is just the beginning, despite a softening global economic expansion​



im-416630

The bullish trading amounts to a gamble that supply-chain disruptions and regional shortages will keep pushing energy markets higher.​

PHOTO: LUKE SHARRETT/BLOOMBERG NEWS
By
Gunjan Banerji
Oct. 17, 2021 5:30 am ET


A roaring trade in bullish crude-oil options says the 2021 energy rally is far from over.
Traders once again are betting that the U.S. oil benchmark will surge above $100 a barrel, from a recent $82, as early as December. U.S. crude, known as West Texas Intermediate or WTI, is up 10% this month, and 70% this year, but it hasn’t hit $100 since the oil crash of 2014.
Wagers across the Atlantic are even more aggressive. Some traders are betting Brent crude, the global benchmark, will hit a record high of $200 a barrel by December 2022,

End of WSJ text. FYI, $200 oil would put gasoline prices at about $ 7/gal.
Please show me how this is Biden's fault or the result of any of his policies? PF1 is anxiously awaiting someone to give him proof water is wet so he can tell DG
 
Please show me how this is Biden's fault or the result of any of his policies? PF1 is anxiously awaiting someone to give him proof water is wet so he can tell DG
You’re a moron. And in other news, water is wet.

Also, sounds like we should speed up moving away from fossil fuels. 🤷🏻‍♂️
 
You’re a moron. And in other news, water is wet.

Also, sounds like we should speed up moving away from fossil fuels. 🤷🏻‍♂️
You crack me up, taking stupidity to a new level every time you post. You are really that completely stupid to think this all just happens? Have a nice day idiot.
 
Please show me how this is Biden's fault or the result of any of his policies?
Op-Ed from the same Wall St Journal:

Biden Suddenly Loves Frackers​

After waging war on the industry, Biden wants its help to reduce gas prices.​



By
The Editorial Board
Oct. 15, 2021 6:52 pm ET

im-418359

President Joe Biden​

PHOTO: BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Falling poll numbers concentrate the presidential mind, and the result can be startling. Look no further than this nominee for headline of the year from Politico this week: “ Biden team asks oil industry for help to tame gas prices.”
Stranger things have happened, but we can’t recall one. For nine months President Biden has been pursuing policies to squeeze oil-and-gas producers to limit production and eventually go out of business. Having begged OPEC in vain to boost oil production, Mr. Biden is now having to suffer the humiliation of beseeching an American industry he vilifies as destroying the planet to save the day.

***​

This is the politics of falling job approval. Crude oil prices have doubled since the November election, and this week closed above $80 a barrel. This has flowed into gasoline prices paid by voters, with the national average for a gallon up more than $1. A federal agency is warning that Americans who use natural gas for heat could pay 22% to 50% more this winter.

A Reuters report says the White House is now “speaking with U.S. oil and gas producers” about “helping to bring down rising fuel costs.” Politico adds that this “outreach” to the oil industry is “an awkward shift.” No kidding, and it’s worth going down the list of ways this Administration has tried to punish U.S. producers.



At a presidential debate last year, Mr. Biden said he would “transition away from the oil industry.” His first day in office, Mr. Biden revoked the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, which was supposed to carry oil from Canada and the Bakken Shale to refineries on the Gulf Coast. A week later he issued an order placing a moratorium on new oil-and-gas leases on federal lands and waters.

A court blocked that moratorium, but the Interior Department got the presidential message. It approved a mere 171 drilling permits on federal lands in August, down 75% from April. The Biden Administration also moved to suspend existing leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and it initiated a fresh review of Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve that could put it off limits as well. Get it—a “petroleum reserve” will be off limits for petroleum.

Mr. Biden also signed a Congressional resolution that vitiated the Trump Administration’s regulation on methane leaks from fossil-fuel production. The White House probably will replace it with a stringent standard that will make fracking more expensive.

The Administration is also unleashing financial regulators against the industry. The Federal Reserve and other bureaucracies are looking to impose new rules on “climate-related financial risk,” as a May order from Mr. Biden put it. The purpose is to close off sources of funding and raise the cost of capital for the industry, and it’s succeeding.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which oversees natural-gas pipelines, has signaled it probably will start requiring a climate study before approving even the smallest infrastructure upgrades. That will raise the bar for worthy projects, while creating costs for climate mitigation. As one sign of the regulatory gantlet, two different proposed pipelines in the past two years have won a case at the Supreme Court and then been canceled anyway.

Progressives in Congress, meantime, want to use the Democratic reconciliation bill to punish the industry by doing away with expensing for intangible drilling costs, the oil depletion allowance and more. The bill’s Clean Electricity Performance Program is expressly designed to punish fossil fuels, including natural gas. Mr. Biden and his party have sent signals that are loud and clear, in accord with the larger cultural message that fossil fuels are the new tobacco and the world doesn’t need them.

***​

 
Last edited:
Op-Ed from the same Wall St Journal:

Biden Suddenly Loves Frackers​

After waging war on the industry, Biden wants its help to reduce gas prices.​



By
The Editorial Board
Oct. 15, 2021 6:52 pm ET

im-418359

President Joe Biden​

PHOTO: BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Falling poll numbers concentrate the presidential mind, and the result can be startling. Look no further than this nominee for headline of the year from Politico this week: “ Biden team asks oil industry for help to tame gas prices.”
Stranger things have happened, but we can’t recall one. For nine months President Biden has been pursuing policies to squeeze oil-and-gas producers to limit production and eventually go out of business. Having begged OPEC in vain to boost oil production, Mr. Biden is now having to suffer the humiliation of beseeching an American industry he vilifies as destroying the planet to save the day.

***​

This is the politics of falling job approval. Crude oil prices have doubled since the November election, and this week closed above $80 a barrel. This has flowed into gasoline prices paid by voters, with the national average for a gallon up more than $1. A federal agency is warning that Americans who use natural gas for heat could pay 22% to 50% more this winter.

A Reuters report says the White House is now “speaking with U.S. oil and gas producers” about “helping to bring down rising fuel costs.” Politico adds that this “outreach” to the oil industry is “an awkward shift.” No kidding, and it’s worth going down the list of ways this Administration has tried to punish U.S. producers.



At a presidential debate last year, Mr. Biden said he would “transition away from the oil industry.” His first day in office, Mr. Biden revoked the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, which was supposed to carry oil from Canada and the Bakken Shale to refineries on the Gulf Coast. A week later he issued an order placing a moratorium on new oil-and-gas leases on federal lands and waters.
You know my post was sarcasm right? I heat with wood and have for 30 yrs using a little gas as backup but this all cuts into money people have to spend on other things . I mostly drive a VW diesel I get close to 50mpg so again not as big of a deal to me but will effect sales. If we didnt have stupid restrictions on newer diesel and let it be used to max it would be less emissions than what electric charges at combined with the environment impact of batteries. I burn wood destined for trash somewhere not cutting trees down. I recycle more due to just how I live than 95%+ of tree huggers but they don't get it.
 
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Biden's War on Gasoline. Here's the southern Indiana edition:

Jan 20, Inauguration Day - $2.20/gal
Ides of March + 20 cents = $2.40
Late March + 20 cents = $2.60
Easter + 15 cents = $2.75
Late April + 10 cents = $2.85
Early May + 15 cents = $3.00
Memorial Day + 10 cents = $3.10
Juneteenth + 5 cents = $3.15
Fourth of July + 5 cents = $3.20
Labor Day + 5 cents = $3.25
Columbus Day + 5 cents = $3.30
 
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Biden's War on Gasoline. Here's the southern Indiana edition:

Jan 20, Inauguration Day - $2.20/gal
Ides of March + 20 cents = $2.40
Late March + 20 cents = $2.60
Easter + 15 cents = $2.75
Late April + 10 cents = $2.85
Early May + 15 cents = $3.00
Memorial Day + 10 cents = $3.10
Juneteenth + 5 cents = $3.15
Fourth of July + 5 cents = $3.20
Labor Day + 5 cents = $3.25
Columbus Day + 5 cents = $3.30
Diesel flirting with 3.75 north . Always funny how it goes up harvest time isnt it? Even take the off rd discount into it.
 
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