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Spain IS Greece After All: Here Are The Main Outstanding Items Following The Spanish Bailout Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/09/2012 14:52 -0400 Bank Run Bond Bridgewater CDS Creditors European Central Bank Eurozone Germany Greece Gross Domestic Product Ireland Italy National Debt Nationalization Portugal Sovereign Debt After two years of denials, we finally have the right answer: Spain IS Greece. Only much bigger. So now that the European bailout has moved from Greece, Ireland and Portugal on to the big one, Spain, here are the key outstanding questions.   via Spain IS Greece After All: Here Are The Main Outstanding … Read more

Oil Hysteria: The Resurrection of Peak Oil

It would be great if I’m wrong but chances are we’ll see prices for crude hit $140 before we see $80 barrels again….After hovering around $103 a barrel for the past week, light, sweet crude had jumped to over $107 a barrel on the Nymex (and Brent over $117 a barrel).  Let’s take a step back and try to understand why this is happening……

The situation in Libya is looking like a shit-show. Pro-Gadhafi forces have pushed back rebel forces, in spite of the coalition-imposed no-fly zone.  Plus the reports of British Ops & the CIA tearing it up in Libya, doesn’t make matters any better.  And let’s not forget about the geopolitical unrest in Syria, Yemen and Bahrain.

The situation in Libya raises a broader, far more concerning set of questions. If it can happen in Libya, why not in Saudi Arabia, where the government is still essentially tribal in nature and will not be winning any prizes for their human rights record anytime soon. Women are still not allowed to drive. Take their 12 million barrels/day off the market, even for a few days, and the geopolitical implications are large, very large (despite the fact that the US imports only 2 million barrels a day from the mid east).Having said that, Canada is now our largest foreign supplier, followed by Mexico and Venezuela (I’ll save my opinions on Chavez for a later date). But oil is a globally traded commodity, and if you prick the supply line in one place we all have to pay. Remove Saudi Arabia from the picture, and the results could be catastrophic, for China first, but for ourselves as well.

While unlikely, if the US keeps demand relatively flat through the use of new alternatives (which there are a great deal of), new conservation efforts and a growing economy, China promises to eat up all of this increase. That my friends, is when the sushi hits the fan. I think oil could easily hit $300/barrel by 2020.

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