Everything is limited, Income is limited for most people, consumption is limited: you can only live in one house at a time, you can only eat so much, have a finite number of cars, TV's, etc, etc. Own too many houses and the cost of maintenance exceeds value, if everyone owns many houses, they cannot be rented. The market is saturated....that's why many economists recognize the principle that population grown is the main driver of economic growth. And why nations which have stabilizing population growth are trying to stimulate birth rates through economic incentives or rely on immigration. But living on a finite planet, this is not sustainable in the long term. Given perpetual growth, at some point demand exceeds the environments ability to supply the demand.
The global market is not even close to saturation:
"The rise of the global middle class"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-22956470
The problem is that physical limits of the earth cannot support such growth. Meanwhile, the current middle class can only earn continued returns on investment, higher income, promotions, etc., if more goods and services are sold to an expanding market. Finally, production has also led to environmental damage and global warming.
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So you are backing away from the $35 prediction?
Funny that many non-investor people are already heavily betting on price of oil staying this low or going lower since the demand for SUVs and light trucks is increasing. Suckers, the lot of them!
Not really. The price of oil is not a random walk, it's based on a physical commodity with its own complicated mechanisms. Including the negative feedback mechanism I explained before.
My bet has a snowball's chance in a freezer. Also:Regarding the current action, a natural move would have been to pentetrate the previous major low of 50.55 from Jan 2007; January 2007 had a high of 60.05. Although action yesterday held above that 50.55, the violence of the reversal down leaves the seriousness of that move in doubt. It shows heavy sellers at prices over 50. That's a little negative, but maybe if oil stabilizes for a month you're bet has a snowball's chance.
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The insult aside, you seem to have an overinflated sense of your own mind's caliber. Especially since you completely ignore the fundamentals and solely focus on technical analysis.If you win, the humiliation of losing to a mind of your caliber will be extreme, but fortunately this possibility is many months away.
Market price is a pretty good thing to look at.
Consider the price action since we made our little bet. Oil went down four dollars or so to 44, then it went back up 8 dollars to around 53 (+4 on the original price), down 5 dollars back to 48 or so, back up 4 and now is back down 4. In other words it has gone up about 4 and gone down about 4 since we started. Isn't that exactly what I said? The chances of it going to x+y are about the same as it going to x-y - in this case y = 4.
The price will continue to move up and down and probe the minor highs and lows. If it probes 44 again and breaks that, your thesis is in peril. There is no law that says oil must stay above 40, 35, or whatever. There is a law that it cannot go below zero.
Your bet is saying something like you can flip a coin and it will come up heads three times in a row, I simply took the other side.
I also have told you exactly what has to happen for your bet to have a chance. Oil has to consolidate above $50 or so this month and hopefully make a move above $60 relatively soon. You would have approximately an even chance of winning if it reaches about $67.
The bigger problem is that oil production cost is close to or higher than current oil prices, and producers have operating costs and debts to consider.