Volkswagen Soars 30% On Profit Upgrade, Plan To Dethrone Tesla https://t.co/S18e2SI4Ci
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 16, 2021
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Volkswagen Wants to Challenge Tesla
Illinoisans pay the highest state and local taxes in the nation
Illinoisans Are Over-Taxed, New Study Confirms https://t.co/nYzq9p8i0Y
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 16, 2021
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
RETIREMENT POINTS
from MarketWatch
Fort Walton Beach, Florida
Though it also has sugar-sand beaches and azure waters, Fort Walton Beach often gets overlooked in favor of its better-known Gulf Coast neighbors, Pensacola and Panama City. But this town has plenty to offer residents including fishing and world-class beaches; museums like the Emerald Coast Science Center, with a robotics exhibit and a hurricane simulator; and “a laid-back island spirit,” writes AARP. The cost of living here is 6% below average for the nation, according to Sperling’s Best Places; the median home costs around $150,000, according to Zillow (Z); and the state of Florida has no personal income tax. The biggest downside: Summers are brutally hot and humid.
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Nestled on the shores of Lake Michigan, this “bustling” waterfront town boasts former fishing shanties that have now become restaurants and shops, though “the Great Lake’s long vistas, busy marinas and legendary waves — people actually surf here — are the main attraction,” AARP writes. Real estate is cheap (the median home is just over $100,000, according to Zillow) in this town of fewer than 10,000 residents, and the cost of living is well below average, according to Sperling’s. However, the biggest nearby city (Milwaukee) is a full 55 miles away and temperatures in the winter are regularly below freezing.
Abilene, Texas
Median homes here cost around $150,000 and there’s no income tax throughout the state, but Abilene is more than just cheap living. This “old West charmer” is “authentically Texan, with lots of boots, hats and barbecue joints,” AARP writes. “But it’s also “a fabulous town for foodies…while outstanding steak, barbecue and Mexican food are a given, there are also three Thai restaurants and an excellent wine bar called the Mill.” To some, Abilene may feel like it’s in the middle of nowhere (Dallas is more than two hours away), but, as Sperling’s points out, “The town has a good set of arts and cultural amenities for a town its size, and has been recognized for its use of the arts to preserve and revitalize the historic district.”
Bristol, Virginia/Tennessee
Bristol, which spans both Virginia and Tennessee, is “culturally fantastic,” says AARP’s Hickey -- with plenty of venues to see country music, myriad churches and volunteer opportunities and one of Nascar’s most popular venues, the Bristol Motor Speedway. It’s also known for its plethora of outdoor recreation (there are dozens of miles of hiking trails), she adds. Other perks are the climate, which is moderate, and the cost of living, which is 18% below average; however crime here is slightly higher than average, according to Sperling’s.
Cañon City, Colorado
The great outdoors is the big draw in Cañon City, which borders the Arkansas River and has myriad options for hiking, fishing and rock climbing, Hickey says. Plus, the city boasts more than 250 days of sunshine per year -- all the better for enjoying the great outdoors — and lacks the suburban sprawl and traffic of other Colorado destinations, she says. The cost of living here is nearly 10% below average homes are relatively affordable. However, some retirees may be put off by the city’s remoteness. (It’s roughly an hour from Colorado Springs and more than two hours from Denver.)
from MarketWatch
Fort Walton Beach, Florida
Though it also has sugar-sand beaches and azure waters, Fort Walton Beach often gets overlooked in favor of its better-known Gulf Coast neighbors, Pensacola and Panama City. But this town has plenty to offer residents including fishing and world-class beaches; museums like the Emerald Coast Science Center, with a robotics exhibit and a hurricane simulator; and “a laid-back island spirit,” writes AARP. The cost of living here is 6% below average for the nation, according to Sperling’s Best Places; the median home costs around $150,000, according to Zillow (Z); and the state of Florida has no personal income tax. The biggest downside: Summers are brutally hot and humid.
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Nestled on the shores of Lake Michigan, this “bustling” waterfront town boasts former fishing shanties that have now become restaurants and shops, though “the Great Lake’s long vistas, busy marinas and legendary waves — people actually surf here — are the main attraction,” AARP writes. Real estate is cheap (the median home is just over $100,000, according to Zillow) in this town of fewer than 10,000 residents, and the cost of living is well below average, according to Sperling’s. However, the biggest nearby city (Milwaukee) is a full 55 miles away and temperatures in the winter are regularly below freezing.
Abilene, Texas
Median homes here cost around $150,000 and there’s no income tax throughout the state, but Abilene is more than just cheap living. This “old West charmer” is “authentically Texan, with lots of boots, hats and barbecue joints,” AARP writes. “But it’s also “a fabulous town for foodies…while outstanding steak, barbecue and Mexican food are a given, there are also three Thai restaurants and an excellent wine bar called the Mill.” To some, Abilene may feel like it’s in the middle of nowhere (Dallas is more than two hours away), but, as Sperling’s points out, “The town has a good set of arts and cultural amenities for a town its size, and has been recognized for its use of the arts to preserve and revitalize the historic district.”
Bristol, Virginia/Tennessee
Bristol, which spans both Virginia and Tennessee, is “culturally fantastic,” says AARP’s Hickey -- with plenty of venues to see country music, myriad churches and volunteer opportunities and one of Nascar’s most popular venues, the Bristol Motor Speedway. It’s also known for its plethora of outdoor recreation (there are dozens of miles of hiking trails), she adds. Other perks are the climate, which is moderate, and the cost of living, which is 18% below average; however crime here is slightly higher than average, according to Sperling’s.
Cañon City, Colorado
The great outdoors is the big draw in Cañon City, which borders the Arkansas River and has myriad options for hiking, fishing and rock climbing, Hickey says. Plus, the city boasts more than 250 days of sunshine per year -- all the better for enjoying the great outdoors — and lacks the suburban sprawl and traffic of other Colorado destinations, she says. The cost of living here is nearly 10% below average homes are relatively affordable. However, some retirees may be put off by the city’s remoteness. (It’s roughly an hour from Colorado Springs and more than two hours from Denver.)
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Equity is the net on any asset that you own.
Equity = Assets - Liability. Investors and potential buyers measure the value of an asset by its equity.
There is also shareholder's equity, stocks that represents ownership in a business. Anothet name for ownership shares is stock.
Equity = Assets - Liability. Investors and potential buyers measure the value of an asset by its equity.
There is also shareholder's equity, stocks that represents ownership in a business. Anothet name for ownership shares is stock.
In accounting and finance, equity is the difference between the value of the assets and the cost of the liabilities of something owned. For example, if someone owns a car worth $15,000 but owes $5,000 on a loan against that car, the car represents $10,000 equity. Equity can be negative if liability exceeds assets.
In an accounting context, shareholders' equity (or stockholders' equity, shareholders' funds, shareholders' capital or similar terms) represents the equity of a company as divided among shareholders of common or preferred stock. Accounting shareholders are the cheapest risk bearers as they deal with the public. Negative shareholders' equity is often referred to as sharesholders' deficit.
For purposes of liquidation during bankruptcy, ownership equity is the equity which remains after all liabilities have been paid.This way we know.
Sunday, May 22, 2016
Interesting article from The Dollar Vigilante . . .
It was in 2010 that I overheard the term "bond vigilante" on a radio program once again and laughed for a moment, saying in my own head, Ah, yes, with interest rates at near zero or negative percent, Quantitative Easing to infinity and budget deficits in the US stretching the boundaries of belief, where are the bond vigilantes now?
And I thought to myself, "I guess the system is so far out of control now that you can't sell bonds to keep central banks or government under control as they'll just print up unlimited money to keep buying it."
I then had an epiphany and told myself, "What we need today are dollar vigilantes!"
That's what started this all...
In a sense, George Soros is a fellow dollar vigilante. An outsider who once tried to break the system... and he did.
On September 16, 1992, Black Wednesday, he sold short more than US$10 billion worth of pounds (which is just play money today but back then it was a massive amount) against the Bank of England. He was betting on its reluctance to raise its interest rates or float its currency.
One of the inspirations for our name, The Dollar Vigilante, was what used to be called the Bond Vigilantes.Okay, that was interesting to learn. But what really caught my eye was this . . .
Last seen in full force in the inflationary early 1980s, bond vigilantes were anti-establishment figures who were said to have rebelled. They had decided to keep central banks and governments honest by raising long term interest rates in the open market. They would do so whenever the authorities kept their own interest rates too low, or let budget deficits grow out of control.Read the rest here:
It was in 2010 that I overheard the term "bond vigilante" on a radio program once again and laughed for a moment, saying in my own head, Ah, yes, with interest rates at near zero or negative percent, Quantitative Easing to infinity and budget deficits in the US stretching the boundaries of belief, where are the bond vigilantes now?
And I thought to myself, "I guess the system is so far out of control now that you can't sell bonds to keep central banks or government under control as they'll just print up unlimited money to keep buying it."
I then had an epiphany and told myself, "What we need today are dollar vigilantes!"
That's what started this all...
In a sense, George Soros is a fellow dollar vigilante. An outsider who once tried to break the system... and he did.
On September 16, 1992, Black Wednesday, he sold short more than US$10 billion worth of pounds (which is just play money today but back then it was a massive amount) against the Bank of England. He was betting on its reluctance to raise its interest rates or float its currency.
The BoE finally withdrew the currency from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism, devaluing the pound sterling, and earning Soros an estimated US$1.1 billion. He was dubbed "the man who broke the Bank of England”.
And for that, we cheer(ed) him! What happened, in my estimation is that the ring of power (that's what the Lord of the Rings, by anarchist J.R.R. Tolkien was all about) is so strong that no one can be uncorrupted by it.
Anyway, George was called to Buckingham palace to see the Ring Master herself, the Queen of England. That must have been quite a conversation. Afterwards, George became a ring wraith. He started his foundation and became the leftist power he is today.
He became part of the New World in other words.
These days he clearly functions at the highest (public) levels, overthrowing countries to support the coming global order. And he raises funds to support organizations like Black Lives Matter to keep the people divided and chaotic. The more social turmoil there is, the easier it is to manipulate people and even whole societies. That's how globalism is achieved.
SO WE MEET AGAIN
Now we meet George again. Not as a dollar vigilante but as a wring wraith and fellow gold buyer. He's heavily long on gold and short the US stock market.
He's plunging into gold buying 19 million shares from Barack Gold valued at over $260 million. He's purchased 1.05 million shares of the SPDR Gold Trust ETF and doubled his short-sell on the U.S. S&P 500 Index.
You can see the dramatic sell-off of long equity holdings here:
And for that, we cheer(ed) him! What happened, in my estimation is that the ring of power (that's what the Lord of the Rings, by anarchist J.R.R. Tolkien was all about) is so strong that no one can be uncorrupted by it.
Anyway, George was called to Buckingham palace to see the Ring Master herself, the Queen of England. That must have been quite a conversation. Afterwards, George became a ring wraith. He started his foundation and became the leftist power he is today.
He became part of the New World in other words.
These days he clearly functions at the highest (public) levels, overthrowing countries to support the coming global order. And he raises funds to support organizations like Black Lives Matter to keep the people divided and chaotic. The more social turmoil there is, the easier it is to manipulate people and even whole societies. That's how globalism is achieved.
SO WE MEET AGAIN
Now we meet George again. Not as a dollar vigilante but as a wring wraith and fellow gold buyer. He's heavily long on gold and short the US stock market.
He's plunging into gold buying 19 million shares from Barack Gold valued at over $260 million. He's purchased 1.05 million shares of the SPDR Gold Trust ETF and doubled his short-sell on the U.S. S&P 500 Index.
You can see the dramatic sell-off of long equity holdings here:
Monday, November 30, 2015
I have been writing for years that we are NOT heading for a period of high inflation. You are getting this idea from some other site. Search this site for "hyperinflation".
You do not buy bonds to hold until maturity. You hold them for capital appreciation when rates fall. In recessions, 30-year T-bond rates fall.http://bit.ly/1HzNZuk Investors make profits. --Gary North
You do not buy bonds to hold until maturity. You hold them for capital appreciation when rates fall. In recessions, 30-year T-bond rates fall.http://bit.ly/1HzNZuk Investors make profits. --Gary North
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
August 4, 2015
Vilnius, Lithuania
Vilnius, Lithuania
On April 2, 2001, the price of
gold closed the market trading session at $255.30.
And that was the lowest price that
gold has seen ever since.
In US dollar terms, gold closed
the 2001 calendar year higher than it did in 2000. Then it did the same thing
again in 2002. And again in 2003.
In fact, after reaching its low in
April 2001, gold closed higher for twelve consecutive years-- something that had
never happened before in ANY financial market with ANY asset.
Then came a correction; the price
started falling, and gold is now on track for 2015 to be its third down year in
a row.
What’s incredible is that, despite
its history of gains, and 5,000 years of tradition behind it, gold is rapidly
becoming one of the most widely despised assets.
But before we pronounce it dead
and write the final gold eulogy, however, let’s consider the following:
1) Nothing goes up (or
down) in a straight line. After 12 straight years of unprecedented
gains with any asset class, it’s not unusual to have a meaningful correction.
(Just imagine how severe the
correction in stocks will be. . .)
And like all frantic booms which
go way past sustainable levels, corrections also overshoot fair value.
This correction in the gold market
could easily last for several more years, with prices potentially well below
$1,000.
But then we could just as easily
see another massive surge all the way past $2,000 and beyond.
That’s the nature of these
markets-- to be extremely fickle (and highly manipulated).
Even over a period of a few years,
the market can show about as much maturity as a middle school lunchroom,
complete with pubescent gossip and inane popularity contests.
But it’s rather short-sighted to
completely lose confidence in an asset that has a 5,000 year track record
because of a few down years.
2) The gold price shed nearly 5%
after the government of China announced recently that they owned 1,658 metric
tons of gold.
This amount was lower than what
many investors and analysts had been expecting, and the price of gold dropped
as a result.
My question- since when
did anyone start believing official reports from the Chinese government?
Seriously. The Chinese have a
vested interest in understating their gold holdings.
They know that doing so will push
the price of gold LOWER, which is exactly what they want.
China is sitting on trillions of
dollars in reserves right now, a portion of which they’re rapidly trying to
rotate OUT of US dollars.
So it’s clearly beneficial to the
Chinese government if they can sell dollars while they’re strong and buy gold
while it’s cheap.
And if they can push gold to
become cheaper, even better for them.
3) Remember why you own
gold to begin with.
Gold is a very long-term store of
value. Notwithstanding a few down years, gold has maintained its purchasing
power for thousands of years.
Paper currencies come and go. They
get devalued, revalued, and extinguished altogether.
How much would you be able to buy
today with paper money issued by the 7th century Tang Dynasty? Nothing. It no
longer exists.
Or a pound sterling from 1817?
Very little. It’s barely pocket change today.
Yet the gold backing up that same
pound sterling from 1817 is worth over $250 today (165 pounds).
Even in modern history, the gold
backing up a single US dollar from 1971 is worth vastly more than the paper
currency that was printed 44 years ago.
But even more importantly, aside
from being a long-term store of value, gold is a hedge--a form of
money that acts as an insurance policy against a dangerously overleveraged
financial system.
How much will your dollars and
euros buy you in the event of real financial calamity? Or if there’s a major
government default or central bank failure?
No matter what happens in the
financial system--whether it collapses under its own weight, or cryptofinance
technology revolutionizes how we do business--gold ensures that you’re
protected.
4) Resist the urge to
value gold in paper currency. We all have this tendency--we invest in
something, and then hope it goes up in value.
But that’s a mistake with gold.
It’s a hard thing for some people to do, but try to stop yourself from thinking
about gold in terms of its paper price.
(It’s also important to remember that there’s a huge disconnect between the ‘paper price’ of gold, and the physical price of gold.)
Remember, gold is not an
investment; there are plenty of better options out there if you’re looking for
a great speculation.
So the notion of trading a stack
of paper currency for gold, only to trade the gold back for a taller stack of
paper currency misses the point entirely.
5) Having said that, if you find
it too difficult to do this, and you catch yourself constantly refreshing the
gold price and checking your portfolio, you might own too much.
Listen to your instincts; if
you’re always feeling frantic about the daily gyrations in the market, lighten
your load.
Don’t love anything that won’t
love you back. Stay rational. Own enough gold that, in the event of a crisis,
you will feel comfortable that you have enough ‘real savings’… but don’t own so
much that you’re constantly worrying about the paper price.
Until tomorrow,
Simon Black
Founder, SovereignMan.com
Simon Black
Founder, SovereignMan.com
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
The Explosion in Elderly Workers
Retirement? What retirement?
Some choose not to retire at 65, but others can't because of financial reasons.
Things are changing in America, and outside the tech sector, where government regulations have a difficult time catching up, the changes are not for the better.
Some choose not to retire at 65, but others can't because of financial reasons.
Things are changing in America, and outside the tech sector, where government regulations have a difficult time catching up, the changes are not for the better.
Monday, March 9, 2015
U.S. Homeownership Rate Declined Last Year to 64.5 Pct, the Lowest Since 1994
People are scared out of their wits about buying a house now. As can be seen from the chart, they weren't when prices were soaring and interest rates were much higher.
I am generally not a fan of buying a house for investment purposes, but given current prices and the very low mortgage rates, I consider it an ideal time to buy (Don't get an adjustable rate mortgage, get a fixed rate--lock in these rates before they climb.)
I am generally not a fan of buying a house for investment purposes, but given current prices and the very low mortgage rates, I consider it an ideal time to buy (Don't get an adjustable rate mortgage, get a fixed rate--lock in these rates before they climb.)
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Foreign Holders of US Debt
This is a pretty good
chart. I had no idea that Brazil would be #6 or that Belgium was anywhere
in the group, logging in at #3. Shocking. Until I learn what it
means. Nor did I realize that Japan was one of the leading holders of US
debt. Interesting. From Business Insider through Bob Wenzel at Economic Policy Journal.
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Monday, January 19, 2015
US Interest Rates Bottomed in 2012
The
recent dip in interest rates have caused many to hold the view that interest
rates are now at new lows, but this is not the case. The bottom on 10-year
Treasury securities, for example, was more than two years ago on July 25, 2012.
You can't know precisely what the future holds, but given the amount on money the Federal Reserve has printed since the 2008 financial crisis and the likelihood that price inflation indexes will show strong acceleration once oil prices stop falling, there is a strong possibility that the July 2012 low in interest rates was indeed a significant bottom and that rates are now in the early stages of a multi-year climb.
You can't know precisely what the future holds, but given the amount on money the Federal Reserve has printed since the 2008 financial crisis and the likelihood that price inflation indexes will show strong acceleration once oil prices stop falling, there is a strong possibility that the July 2012 low in interest rates was indeed a significant bottom and that rates are now in the early stages of a multi-year climb.
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Monday, January 12, 2015
Gary North Reviews Oil at $55 a Barrel
Shale Oil: America's Emergency
Reserves
Gary
North - January 12, 2015
With
oil around $50 a barrel, fracking becomes problematic. Here's why.
North
Dakota needs an oil price of around $55 per barrel at the wellhead
and a fleet of about 140 rigs to sustain production at the current level of 1.2
million barrels per day, the U.S. state's chief regulator told legislators on
Thursday. . . . Breakeven rates for new wells, the level at which all drilling
would cease, range from $29 in Dunn county and $30 in McKenzie to $36 in
Williams and $41 in Mountrail. These four counties account for 90 percent of
the drilling in the state.
But
Flint Hills Resources' posted price for North Dakota crude was just $32,
Helms said, compared with almost $49 per barrel for WTI. Wellhead
prices, which are roughly an average of the two, are around $40
and have been falling since the start of this year.
Even
before prices hit these minimum levels, drilling will slow sharply. The number
of rigs operating in the state has already fallen to 165, down from 191 in
October, according to the department. . . .
To
keep output steady at 1.2 million b/d for the next three years, the state's
producers need a price of $55 rising closer to $65 in the longer term to
support a fleet of 140-155 rigs.
Helms'
projections confirm North Dakota's oil output will start to fall by the end of
the year unless prices rise from their current very depressed level.
When
we see the price at $50, this is not the price that producers get in the shale
oil belt. We tend to forget this. Or maybe we never knew.
Second,
shale-oil output falls like a stone. In three years, the party is over.
Unlike
conventional projects, shale wells enjoy an extremely short life. In the Bakken
region straddling Montana and North Dakota, a well that starts out pumping
1,000 barrels a day will decline to just 280 barrels by the start of year two,
a shrinkage of 72%. By the beginning of year three, more than half the reserves
of that well will be depleted, and annual production will fall to a trickle. To
generate constant or increasing revenue, producers need to constantly drill new
wells, since their existing wells span a mere half-life by industry standards.
In
fact, fracking is a lot more like mining than conventional oil production.
Mining companies need to dig new holes, year after year, to extract reserves of
copper or iron ore. In fracking, there is intense pressure to keep replacing
the production you lost last year.
On
average, the "all-in," breakeven cost for U.S. hydraulic shale is $65
per barrel, according to a study by Rystad Energy and Morgan Stanley Commodity
Research. So, with the current price at $48, the industry is under siege. To be
sure, the frackers will continue to operate older wells so long as they
generate revenues in excess of their variable costs. But the older
wells--unlike those in the Middle East or the North Sea--produce only tiny quantities.
To keep the boom going, the shale gang must keep doing what they've been doing
to thrive; they need to drill many, many new wells.
Right
now, all signs are pointing to retreat. The count of rotary rigs in use--a
proxy for new drilling--has fallen from 1,930 to 1,881 since October, after
soaring during most of 2014. Continental Resources, a major force in shale, has
announced that it will lower its drilling budget by 40% in 2015. Because of the
constant need to drill, frackers are always raising more and more money by
selling equity, securing bank loans, and selling junk bonds. Many are already
heavily indebted. It's unclear if banks and investors will keep the capital
flowing at these prices.
As
David Stockman has repeatedly written, the shale oil boom is in fact a gigantic
bubble that has been created by the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve
initially pushed down interest rates through quantitative easing. But that
easing has ceased, and interest rates are still falling. We have to understand,
falling rates now are a function of fears of recession, which is now looming
worldwide. There is a move into bonds, including treasury bonds, because people
are afraid of the setback that is facing the world economy. We should not blame
the Federal Reserve for today's low interest rates in the United States. Low
interest rates In the United States today are a function of expectations
regarding the world economy.
So,
the shale oil bubble has led to a rapid depletion of American oil stockpiles.
The fracking revolution is not a revolution; it is a bubble. It is a bubble
that is dependent upon strong growth in the demand for oil. But this strong
growth does not exist in the United States. On the contrary, there has been a
contraction of demand for oil in the United States. Consumption is falling. We
are finding ways to conserve oil. "Oil consumption in the U.S. has fallen
by over 8% since 2010, and the shrinkage in Europe is far greater than that.
Meanwhile, China and India have not proven nearly as voracious as
forecast."
Output
will not fall. At the margin, oil from existing wells is still profitable. Sunk
costs are gone. They no longer influence the decision to pump.
When
prices drop, however, almost all conventional wells keep pumping. That's
because the variable cost of lifting the crude is still far lower than the
prices it fetches on the world market. Ten-year old wells often have variable
costs of just $20 to $30 a barrel, so their owners keep on producing at prices
of $60 or $80, even though it would require $100 oil to generate a good return
on their total investment. In other words, what they spent to drill the well
becomes irrelevant. All that matters is the cash they can generate over and
above what's required to suck out the crude every day. "What drives the
business is the marginal cost, not the total cost," says Ronald Ripple, a
finance and energy business professor at the University of Tulsa. "Even at
low prices, the production is still contributing something to cover the upfront
investment."
As
a result, the global supply of oil is what economists call
"inelastic." Even if prices crater, the oil majors and sheiks keep
pumping more or less the same quantities. They'll only stop when prices drop
below the variable cost--and for most wells, they seldom sink that far.
For
fracking, the breakeven point is higher. so, there is no long-term hope for a
revolutionary breakthrough in the United States regarding oil.
From
time to time, we see articles about the huge increase of oil production in the
United States. The people who write these silly articles think that fracking
and shale oil are long-term solutions to the energy crisis. Wrong! All we are
doing is depleting the supply of oil that we had in the ground. This supply of
oil could have served as a backup for a major oil crisis, when oil prices move
upward relentlessly. This is the true value of shale oil: stored in the ground.
It is like a gigantic emergency oil reserve. But because of Federal Reserve
policy, and because of today's incredibly low rates of interest, our shale oil
reserves are now being consumed. This is the biggest misallocation of capital
resources that is going on today in the USA. The United States is consuming its
oil reserves. This would not have happened if the Federal Reserve had not
entered the capital markets in 2008 and quadrupled the monetary base.
Any
time that you see an article about peak oil theory's having no verification,
and an appeal is made to the expansion of oil production in the United States,
you can be sure that the guy writing the article knows nothing about fracking,
shale oil, and the half-life of shale oil wells. He is just some guy spouting
off.
If
there is a breakthrough technologically in some other area of energy production
besides oil, then the shale oil boom will have bought us some time. But that is
all it has bought us. Time. It has not solved the peak oil problem.
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