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Peak
oil be damned, hedge fund manager Jim Chanos is betting against oil companies
because they are not replenishing reserves.
Please consider Jim Chanos Shorts
Oil Majors, Ford Shares, Hasn’t ‘Played’ BP
Jim
Chanos, the hedge-fund manager who made money betting against Enron Corp.,
said he is short- selling shares of large oil companies because investment in
drilling and exploration is eating up their cash flows.
The founder of Kynikos Associates Ltd. said in a Bloomberg Television
interview from his office in New York that his bearish calls on
“some” energy companies, which he declined to identify, pre-date
the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico. That
incident led to the largest oil spill in U.S. history and sent BP Plc shares
down 49 percent through yesterday.
“If you look at their cash-flow statements relative to their income
statements, you will see companies that haven’t replaced reserves in
years, and haven’t seen any increase in revenues in years,” he
said. “They’re borrowing their dividend. They’re in effect
liquidating.”
Chanos said he’s adding to short-sales of Ford Motor Co. as the
second-biggest U.S. carmaker will struggle to compete against General Motors
Co. United Auto Workers, the union that owns holdings in GM and Chrysler
Group LLC, may favor those companies over Ford when negotiating upcoming
labor contracts, he said.
“It’s going to be very interesting to see how it is that the
union, which controls the employees -- and I contend these entities are still
run for their employees and retirees more than the shareholders -- are going
to look in an environment going forward, where the UAW is a major equity
holder in some of the other entities,” the investor said. “It
adds a new dynamic to the twist.”
Inquiring
minds might be interest in a short Bloomberg video
with Chanos.
GDP, Standard of Living, Geopolitical Tensions
My friend "BC" offers the following opinions...
Energy
companies will be hit by both demand destruction of the product they sell but
also the falling Energy Return on Investment (EROI) at peak production,
reducing their ability to reinvest in capacity and exploration to sustain or
increase reserves.
Because of Peak Oil, there is no mathematical possibility that China-Asia can
achieve anything close to a Western per capita energy density, GDP, and
standard of living without causing a dramatic decline or collapse of the Western
economies.
The more Asians and others decide to compete with the Western economies for
energy resources, the more likely Westerners will resort to desperate means
to manage or try to prevent decline or collapse.
The post-Oil Age decline will not be a single collapse event. Rather, we are
more likely to see a kind of stair step decline, like a ball bouncing
downstairs, with increasing volatility of supply and price shocks from a
positive feedback effect, reducing the very long-term trend of real GDP, per
capita GDP, and population growth to 0% and negative.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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