Those of you who follow the oil markets know that a core bullish argument for rising oil prices over the long term is the growth in demand from overseas, most notably China and India. Those two countries alone represent 36% of the world population, so if their demand rises steadily, the logic goes, lower oil prices are a tough accomplishment.

On Monday a very telling statistic mentioned on CNBC caught my eye. I did not catch the source of the data, so we will have to assume it is correct, but take a look at this:

Barrels of Oil Consumed Per Person, Per Year:

United States: (25) Japan: (14) China: (2) India: (1)

Barring huge oil discoveries in coming decades (highly unlikely) or a dramatic shift to alternative fuels (more likely, but by no means assured), imagine where oil would trade if China and India reach 5-10 barrels of oil consumption per person annually.

As for a more short term view, I have been taking some profits in oil-producing stocks lately. The sudden move to the high 130s per barrel makes me think the risk-reward trade-off is more balanced now. The next $20 move could be in either direction pretty easily (up if we have a bad hurricane season, or down if it is mild and we get a common correction) and the recent leg higher looks a little extended to me (see the chart of the U.S. Oil Fund ETF (USO) below).


I am not getting into the short term energy price prediction game, but I think taking some profits is a good idea after such a big move, as that matches my investing discipline. Long term, it is pretty hard to justify selling large blocks of energy stocks given that we can look at numbers such as those above and see that without dramatic change, the oil bull market remains intact.

Full Disclosure: No position in USO at the time of writing.

Chad Brand

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This article has 5 comments:

  •  
    Jun 25 06:09 AM
    Exactly why are huge oil discoveries in the next decade "highly unlikely"?

    peakoildebunked.blogsp...

    The Democrats won't let us drill and the so-called "scientists" think hydrocarbons are magically and miraculously formed by dinosaurs in the Earth's crust. I can't think of one reason not to be bullish.
  •  
    Jun 25 07:46 AM
    There are no real alternatives to oil.They all use more energy than they produce.
  •  
    Jun 25 08:08 AM
    You are an astute investor. This is way overdone. You want the bullish case for oil? "Goldman said buy it" Period. Force them and the ETFs to take delivery on oil longs and we are back at $75 a barrel. And no, the oil market will NOT collapse. But no one in DC has the balls.....
  •  
    Jun 25 09:18 AM
    Raise the price and demand goes down. Nothing is more true then this.

    Long term oil will continue up but right now its overpriced.
  •  
    Jul 07 08:20 PM
    Lets see Chinese consume less oil per capita than us so the price of oil HAS to go up. They also consume far less Budweiser per capita there fore the price of beer HASW to go up in fact they consume proprtionally less beer so Bud is a better investment right.

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