Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
Research Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsResearch Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic

'Squawk Box' Guest Warns of $12-15-a-Gallon Gas

big_bad_buff

New member
'Squawk Box' Guest Warns of $12-15-a-Gallon Gas
Robert Hirsch, an energy advisor, says CNBC morning show prediction was a citation of the 'Dean of Oil Analysts.'

By Jeff Poor
Business & Media Institute
5/21/2008 3:38:13 PM

It may be the mother of all doom and gloom gas price predictions: $12 for a gallon of gas is “inevitable.”

Robert Hirsch, Management Information Services Senior Energy Advisor, gave a dire warning about the potential future of gas prices on CNBC’s May 20 “Squawk Box”. He told host Becky Quick there was no single thing that would solve the problem, due to the enormity of the problem.


“[T]he prices that we’re paying at the pump today are, I think, going to be ‘the good old days,’ because others who watch this very closely forecast that we’re going to be hitting $12 and $15 per gallon,” Hirsch said. “And then, after that, when oil – world oil production goes into decline, we’re going to talk about rationing. In other words, not only are we going to be paying high prices and have considerable economic problems, but in addition to that, we’re not going to be able to get the fuel when we want it.”

Hirsch told the Business & Media Institute the $12-$15 a gallon wasn’t his prediction, but that he was citing Charles T. Maxwell, described as the “Dean of Oil Analysts” and the senior energy analyst at Weeden & Co. Still, Hirsch admitted the high price was inevitable in his view.

“I don’t attempt to predict oil prices because it’s been impossible in the past,” Hirsch said in an e-mail. “We’re into a new era now, and over the next roughly five years the trend will be up significantly. However, there may be dips and bumps that no one can forecast; I wouldn’t be at all surprised. To me the multi-year upswing is inevitable.”

Maxwell’s original $12-15-a-gallon prediction came in a February 5 interview with Energytechstocks.com, a Web site run by two former Wall Street Journal staffers.

“[Maxwell] expects an oil-induced financial crisis to start somewhere in the 2010 to 2015 timeframe,” Energytechstocks.com reported. “He said that, unlike the recession the U.S. appears to be in today, ‘This will not be six months of hell and then we come out of it.’ Rather, Maxwell expects this financial crisis to last at least 10 or 12 years, as the world goes through a prolonged period of price-induced rationing (eg, oil up to $300 a barrel and U.S. pump prices up to $15 a gallon).”

According to associate of Maxwell at Weeden & Co., Maxwell is out of the country and currently unavailable for comment.

Maxwell’s biography on the Weeden & Co. Web site said he “has been ranked by the U.S. financial institutions as the No. 1 oil analyst for the years 1972, 1974, 1977 and 1981-1986,” according to polls taken by Institutional Investor magazine.

“In addition, for the last 17 years he has been an active member of an Oxford-based organization comprised of OPEC and other industry executives from 30 countries who meet twice a year to discuss trends within the energy industry.”

Although Maxwell’s prediction is for the long-term, not everyone supports high-end predictions, even in the short-term. CNBC contributor and the vice president of risk management for MF Global (NYSE:MF) John Kilduff said on “The Call” May 7that he expected gas prices to drop following the Chinese Olympics, as China’s economic boom slows down.
 
Prices are set by investors on the oil futures market.

Price gets too high, people stop buying, prices fall.

Supply and Demand. Prices are high, because people keep buying.

All this talk is just b.s. to fill up media coverage. I'm not worried one bit.

r
 
don't worry about, we'll just build cars that run on electricity. then we can build alot more nuclear power plants. so this way instead of pollution from your exhaust pipe, we'll have a shit load of toxic waste hanging around for millions of years.
 
Full of crap. I think oil will head back to $100 by sept. and $80 by turkey day.


Oil is in a bubble right now with 20-30% premium just from speculation.

US consumer has been wounded by high gas prices and is pulling back right now. Watch for the next inventory numbers, last weekend kicks off the summer driving season and if consumption is down specualtors will be heading for the door.

Why? Becuase the US is the biggest most wasteful user in the world of oil. China isn't even in the running. The US pulls back and there will be plenty of oil to go around.

Refineries are a different subject.
 
What's inevitable is the fact that the oil is on its way out and this may be the begining of the end for oil. Economies will change if prices are so high where is not economically fisable to use oil any longer. Oil companies like ppl to be in a frenzy so prices can go up and with that more profits...LOL

I expect solar energy to take off shortly along with other new ideas.
 
Solar is making really good progress right now and is about 10 years from wide spread adoption. Problem is transportation. Gas and diesel will still be big because they are the easiest to use.

The US has something 200 years of coal and huge nat gas deposits off the southern east coast.

You ever think we're better off pumping all of the middle east oil out before we use our own supply? Once that oils gone they have no economies. They're trying to create economies but places like Iran are F'ed. welcome back to the middle ages guys. LOL.
 
Varga said:
What's inevitable is the fact that the oil is on its way out and this may be the begining of the end for oil. Economies will change if prices are so high where is not economically fisable to use oil any longer. Oil companies like ppl to be in a frenzy so prices can go up and with that more profits...LOL

I expect solar energy to take off shortly along with other new ideas.

Non-Reliance on gasoline for society - is probably 100-200 years away.

We'll all long be gone before someone finally invents something to turn an engine efficiently on something else other than oil.

Oil is like 94% efficient. No other chemical on the planet is even close - and hippies aren't going to allow splitting of atoms in cars anytime soon.

r
 
Razorguns said:
Non-Reliance on gasoline for society - is probably 100-200 years away.

We'll all long be gone before someone finally invents something to turn an engine efficiently on something else other than oil.

Oil is like 94% efficient. No other chemical on the planet is even close - and hippies aren't going to allow splitting of atoms in cars anytime soon.

r

No but natural gas is efficient. You can burn natural gas in the cars and split atoms for the electricity that you lost buy converting natural gas to a transport fuel.
 
Creepusmaximus said:
Full of crap. I think oil will head back to $100 by sept. and $80 by turkey day.


Oil is in a bubble right now with 20-30% premium just from speculation.

US consumer has been wounded by high gas prices and is pulling back right now. Watch for the next inventory numbers, last weekend kicks off the summer driving season and if consumption is down specualtors will be heading for the door.

Why? Becuase the US is the biggest most wasteful user in the world of oil. China isn't even in the running. The US pulls back and there will be plenty of oil to go around.

Refineries are a different subject.

I think the refinery shortage is a misconception. Why do you need more refineries if you are at peak oil production?? Why would you need more refineries if oil consumption is going to go down as you predicted and refineries are not running at peak rates right now??
 
billfred said:
No but natural gas is efficient. You can burn natural gas in the cars and split atoms for the electricity that you lost buy converting natural gas to a transport fuel.

Nat. Gas prices can rise the same way with demand. and Gasoline is still way cheaper - and hippies won't allow atom splits in cars (like the technology exists) - so back to square one we go.

r
 
Top Bottom