The Commodity Investor Q&A: Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008
Apr 23rd, 2008 | By Matt Badiali | Category: Oil Investment & Alternative EnergyA recent story in the Financial Times covered the possibility that Nigeria’s crude oil output could fall by a third in the next seven years. The problem is, Nigeria is one of the top five foreign oil suppliers to the U.S.
Q: I saw that Nigerian oil output is going to fall… Doesn’t America import oil from there? What are the ramifications? – D.C.
A: The ramifications are, we could be in trouble.
A recent story in the Financial Times covered the possibility that Nigeria’s crude oil output could fall by a third in the next seven years. The problem is, Nigeria is one of the top five foreign oil suppliers to the U.S.
Here are the latest numbers from the Energy Information Administration:
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Now let me show you that same table from a scary perspective… the change in production levels from 10 years ago, and one year ago.
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As you can see, our primary oil suppliers are suffering production declines… except for Canada. The major reasons Mexico, Nigeria, and Venezuela are faltering are lack of investment and government mismanagement. The major reason Canadian production is increasing is the development of its gigantic tar-sand deposits.
So… the short answer to the Nigerian question is “yes… this is bad for the U.S., and it signals higher oil prices.” But so does the decline of Mexico’s Cantarell field and the idiotic ramblings of Hugo Chavez.
Basically, any bad news you read from these regions is just more of a buy signal for the safe, vast deposits of Canada.
Q: Did you see that a rocket hit a Japanese oil tanker in the Middle East? Will that affect U.S. oil prices? – J.S.
A: Absolutely. Attacks on oil tankers, drilling platforms, and pipelines are all too common today. That’s because they make easy targets for any group with a cause and some easily-purchased explosives. What better way to hold a country hostage than to threaten its energy infrastructure?
And now look where you’ve gotten us, J.S., we’re right back to the answer above. We’re right back to Canada.
Canada is sitting on a huge oil reserve with a “no risk” transport route to the world’s largest consumer. Caribou generally do not engage in the destruction of oil infrastructure.
Q: What oil companies will benefit most from the high oil prices? – A.L.
A: In a recent DailyWealth, I covered the benefits of investing in government-backed oil companies, like Brazil’s Petrobras. I think these are big beneficiaries of $117 per barrel of oil.
These majors have many of the benefits of investing in a “non government-backed” oil company like Chevron, except they have huge backers behind them when it comes to securing resources at less-than-competitive rates.
Brazil doesn’t entertain outside offers for its choice of offshore drilling blocks. These are some of the most promising offshore fields in the world, they’re getting more valuable by the day, and they’re reserved for Petrobras.
And let me throw this curve ball in here… natural gas producers.
While the price of natural gas has increased about 40% in the past 12 months, the price of crude oil has skyrocketed 80%.
Natural gas and crude oil can be substituted for each other in some applications, so high crude oil prices act as a magnet to draw natural gas prices higher. That’s great news for natural gas producers like EnCana, XTO Energy, Apache, Devon Energy, and Canadian gas trusts. Many of these companies are soaring right now… which tells us the market agrees with the “higher natural gas price” thesis.
Good investing,
Matthew Badiali
P.S. If you can’t tell yet, I’m as bullish on Canada as any region in the world. The bull market in oil could easily send my top Canada ideas up by hundreds of percent this year. You can learn more on the region’s best investment here.
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Matt Badiali is the editor of the S&A Oil Report, a monthly investment advisory that focuses primarily on oil as an investment from small exploration outfits, to equipment companies, to the biggest oil companies in the world. He is also a contributor to the Daily Wealth.
