Crude Oil is Dead

Quote from talknet:

I think 5% or 10% of "Oil money" from gulf countries goes to Taliban and Al- Qaeda as financial help.

"Oil money" is used for developing multi-billion dollars "Dubai real estates". I think 5% or 10% of "Dubai Real estate money" also goes to Taliban and Al-Qaeda as financial help.

It is very important that Crude oil always remains at $15 or $20 per barrel, so that minimum finance is available to Taleban & Al-Qaeda from "Oil money".

Make sure that your tin-foil hat is strapped on tight.
 
Quote from athlonmank8:

here we go again....you and your crazy ass assumptions

What you think and what the market does are two separate things.

Quote from l2tradr:

Make sure that your tin-foil hat is strapped on tight.
I think some people here have invested in "Dubai real estates" and now they are not willing to accept the "Bitter truth"

Majority of Dubai developers and investors are from USA and Europe. By helping develop Dubai real estates, USA and Europe are digging their own grave with their own hands.

Dubai is a "Hub for illegal activities and terrorist finance"

My sincere request to Worldwide people. DO NOT help terrorists by investing in Dubai.
 
Quote from talknet:


It is very important that Crude oil always remains at $15 or $20 per barrel, so that minimum finance is available to Taleban & Al-Qaeda from "Oil money". [/B]

Wow. Insanely dumb. How much was crude from 98 to 01 when they were planning and then executing 911?

While I think oil prices do have a bit more to fall, and am now convinced of it because stock turd says it will surge, the price will make new highs in the next 5 years
 
Quote from Optional:

While I think oil prices do have a bit more to fall, and am now convinced of it because stock turd says it will surge, the price will make new highs in the next 5 years
Goldman Sachs Expects Crude to Fall to $30 Early Next Year

Dec. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its forecast for oil prices in the first quarter by half to $30 a barrel as the global economic slowdown curbs consumption.

Crude demand will fall by 1.7 million barrels a day in 2009, analysts Jeffrey Currie and Allison Nathan said in a note dated yesterday. Goldman previously expected West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark oil, to average $62 in the first quarter.

The worldwide economic decline has reduced consumer spending and weakened demand for fuel. Demand growth in China and other non-member states of the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development is “on the cusp of a sharp deceleration,” the analysts said.

Crude has fallen for five straight months since trading at a record $147.27 a barrel, as countries including the U.S., Japan and Germany have entered recessions. Goldman Sachs forecast in July that oil would recover to $149 by the end of this year because consumer demand was “restrained, but not destroyed.”

The continuing slump in oil prices spurred the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut output for the first time in two years when it met in October.

OPEC will need to lower production by an additional 2 million barrels a day next year, combined with a 600,000-barrel- a-day reduction by non-OPEC countries, to “rebalance” the oil market, Goldman Sachs said. The group next meets Dec. 17 in Oran, Algeria, and will probably agree on further cuts, according to OPEC oil ministers including Algeria’s Chakib Khelil, Qatar’s Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah and Venezuela’s Rafael Ramirez.

North Sea Brent

Goldman Sachs expects U.S. oil futures to average $45 a barrel next year, down from $80 previously. In May, the bank forecast an average price of $148 a barrel for 2009. North Sea Brent crude will average $28.50 in the first quarter, it said.

The International Energy Agency yesterday forecast global crude consumption next year of 86.3 million barrels a day.

Oil for January delivery traded at $45.06 a barrel, down 6.1 percent, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 12:20 p.m. London time.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20602099&sid=aQjCBWe8uEFI&refer=energy
 
very funny.

buy and store as much as oil as you can.

oil demand is inelastic.




Quote from talknet:

The 4 million barrels per day cut announced by OPEC in past 2 months did not help Crude Oil price to rise/soar.

The GM and Chrysler bail-out news did not help Crude Oil price to rise. GM & Chrysler are heavy-car manufacturers & their cars consume lot of gas. Also worldwide consumers have not increased Oil consumption now inspite of Crude Oil reaching $40.

Today Crude Oil did not soar from "high - tensions" in Israel - Palestine conflict and India - Pakistan conflict.

Crude Oil is DEAD and will never go above $25 per barrel
 
Quote from talknet:

Crude Oil is Dead

Quote from tradersboredom:

very funny.

buy and store as much as oil as you can.
The Dead should be buried and not stored.

REST IN PEACE CRUDE OIL
 
Quote from talknet:

there are alternative fuels such as Electric cars, Biofuel & others.
A New Zealand passenger plane has completed 2 hours test flight partly powered by vegetable Oil.
 
Quote from NY0BScalper:

Who cares?

just trade the damned thing

suck moves


You got it.
Sick moves is right - even using spreads.
Happy New trading Year.
 
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