Wednesday, December 24, 2008

The Perfect Gift

I'm a Boxing Day baby. In my youth, some of my peers were jealous that my birthday landed on the only concurrent pair of statutory holidays. It was definitely great, but not because I get double the gifts. In fact, I'd usually get one combined gift for Christmas and my birthday. Some people assumed it was a bigger agglomerate gift (so to speak) to combine the two events. That assumption often proved wrong--my brother would get the exact same gift even though his birthday is in the spring. The only difference between my present and his was that his card didn't have the 'Happy Birthday' appendage written on it. For a brief time, I felt like I got shafted every single year...

photo by Kasia [cc license]

Now that I'm older, I realize that what I thought I wanted was often an illusion. The bubble was created by the people trying to convince me I needed stuff I probably never autonomously wanted. Unfortunately for Detroit, even the most brilliant advertisers can't persuade people they need a Hummer right now. If you ask me what I want now, I may still mull over the usual suspects. I'm a Toronto Raptors fan; but watching their games is painful enough as it is. I don't think I'd enjoy seeing a Chris Bosh Fathead on my dining room wall every day. I don't need something to provide me with 10 seconds of entertainment like a Tickle-Me-Elmo doll. It would just end up feeding the black hole some people call 'the basement' anyway (anyone who's ever seen my Mississauga basement knows what I'm talking about). I do have a small wish-list of course, but I prefer to keep that one to myself. That's because if Santa Claus, a genie, government or anyone else decides to grant all my wishes, then I'll have no motivation left to work for anything.

Alas, here is my guidance for finding me the perfect gift this holiday season. It's tailored specifically to me, but I suspect it can apply generally to quite a few other adults as well.
  1. If you find the perfect gift and it fits within your budget, I will very much appreciate your bestowal.

  2. On the other hand, if you have no idea what I want and need to ask me what I want, chances are I don't need it and will get by fine without it. Do not feel the need to get me something for the sake of gift giving.

  3. If you feel the exigency to give me something material, get me a cheap card and write something in it. If you're really frugal, you can make your own card out of paper and I'll appreciate it just as much, if not more. The best gifts always have intangible value.

  4. If you feel absolutely compelled to spend money, and you have no idea what I may want, here's the fail safe: ask me to send you a list of charities. As a follow up, I'll send you a list of about five charitable organizations that I consider to be well managed, deserving, underfunded and serving a cause that I feel connected to. You can choose one (or several) from the list I provide, and donate your earmarked gift budget to it. Just let me know to whom and how much you donated and I'll have the peace of mind in knowing that no Wal-Mart employees were harmed in giving such a gift. As an added bonus, you'll get a kickback from the tax guys.


Happy Holidays and Happy New Year.

And don't forget, You're Smarter Than You Think. Kent Carter.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

You're Smarter Than You Think: Part 4

Unlocking Your Potential


I've tried to reinforce that you are likely more intellectually capable than you may think. Unfortunately, I can't offer too many answers to the question of how to maximize these intellectual capabilities (if I could, I think I'd be rich). Instead, I've compiled an brief list based on multiple robust studies and what has historically been effective for many people. I'm sure the list will continually grow as we build better bridges to ply the gap between intangible psychology and pseudo-tangible cognitive neuroscience. In the meantime, here is my rudimentary list:

  • A wide variety of balanced activities help expand the mind. This includes activities like sports, music and other extra-curricular activities. I already talked about TV and video games as they relate to children, but even in adults their use for entertainment purposes should be minimized. There are many educational TV programs and video games, but on average even the most academic ones tend to be more of a hindrance to learning compared with other activities. That said, there was a recent contestant on Jeopardy who said that she learns her facts from television documentaries and almost never reads books.

  • In mathematics, repetition has proved very effective when it comes to improving performance. This is the basis of programs like the Kumon method. I do not generally endorse Kumon as as I think it's math fixation lacks cognitive balance. In principle though, these types of mind exercises (crosswords, puzzles, brain teasers, etc.) are all very effective.

  • Adequate sleep improves short term memory and concentration. That could mean that, pulling an all-nighter to study doesn't necessarily improve performance in the exam that follows. That said, this is only a rule of thumb as adrenaline can reverse some of the effects of sleep deprivation on a temporary basis (i.e. prior to a major exam). Caffeine helps prevent drowsiness but does very little for memory and concentration. Generally speaking, recreational drugs are bad for the intellect and some even cause permanent and irreversible brain damage.


Opening Your Mind

Albert Einstein has acquired the reputation of being one of the smartest minds of the 20th century. He rejected the assumption that time and space are absolute, and postulated the special theory of relativity. Not surprisingly, even the most respected scientists initially thought the idea that time was relative rather than absolute was nonsense. It was not until several years later when Einstein's abstract theory was considered proven by a celestial event that it became openly accepted by the scientific community. Among other things, Einstein's work produced the world's most famous equation, E=mc2, and eventually gave us the ability to recreate the energy of the sun (nuclear fusion/fission). Later in life, Einstein, like many of us, allowed age and experience to become a barrier to openness of thought. Although he was one of the scientists that helped develop quantum mechanical theory, he had notable difficulty accepting one of the philosophical consequences of it (a probabilistic universe rather than a deterministic one). Einstein was better than most in that he gave this consequence due consideration before saying he was "convinced that [God] does not play dice" with the universe.

Quite often people dismiss an idea as being stupid before giving it any real consideration. Unfortunately, this approach deprives them of a potential learning opportunity. That doesn't mean all ideas are good ones; it simply means all ideas need due consideration before they are dismissed. Even the least capable people can have great ideas and the brightest of people can come up with stupid ones. In response to a question, one of my old teachers once joked, "You're ask a really stupid question for such a smart student. [comedic pause] I'm just kidding... you're not that smart." On the other hand, let me end te final installment with an idea that will always be sincere:

You're smarter than you think.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

You're Smarter Than You Think: Part 3

Learning How To Be 'Smart'
Up until this point, I haven't defined what I mean by the word smart. First, I will define intelligence: it is both the ability and capability to learn, comprehend, retain and process information via cognitive function. Note that there is a subtle but important difference between ability and capability. Ability relates to a current skill. Capability has an emphasis on potential and is future-oriented; a young person, for example, can still be considered intelligent even if his adult counterpart currently holds more wisdom and knowledge. This is analogous to how a young sports professional in his rookie year compares his veteran counterpart. We tend to associate the word 'smart' with current intellectual ability rather than capability; with current knowledge rather than potential. I suspect this is because while ability is quantifiable, capability can be very difficult to measure. IQ tests are designed to measure intellectual ability and not capability, which is why they require age adjustments. Even in this capacity IQ tests remain imperfect as they are good at measuring some types of brain functions and not very good at measuring others. Just because a toddler can't solve a complex differential equation now, it doesn't mean he or she can't in the future.

Some people use the analogy of the brain being like a muscle. The brain is of course physiologically very distinct from a muscle, but the key similarity is that both can adapt and grow to meet the demands of external stimuli. This is why the sports professional does weight training: to optimize muscle tone, strength and response. When the analogous response happens in the brain, cognitive psychologists call the process learning.

Neuron Gila interaction by Khazaei(cc)

It's quite astonishing how often people can lose sight of the fact that humans have the prodigious capability to learn. I had a grade three teacher who told my mom on parent's night that she could tell I was "not very smart." She was categorically right; and because she was right, she had a job as an educator to facilitate learning and help make myself and my peers smarter. Recently, The Lens (CBC) aired a documentary on the Arrowsmith School called "Fixing My Brain". The school's curriculum is designed to help students overcome learning disabilities by focusing on cerebral learning and pattern recognition exercises rather than traditional academic fact-based learning. Skeptics of the Arrowsmith program voiced their opinion of the program in this documentary as being unpractical with few demonstrable results. The the efficiencies of the program's methods undoubtedly need to be subjected to scrutiny. At the same time, traditional north American schools can also be criticized in the way they deal with learning disabilities. Currently, students diagnosed with a learning disability are given very lenient time-frames to complete assignments, tests and exams. This is conceptually unpractical at best and excessively magnanimous at worst. On the other hand, the objective of the Arrowsmith program is to resolve the student disability rather than providing the students with a crutch for the rest of their lives (whether it meets this objective or not is not for me to say). In either case, constructive criticism of the existing methods is both necessary and productive, but to question the ability of the children to learn and improve their intellectual ability is fundamentally wrong.

People with learning disabilities (LD) are sometimes misunderstood for people low intellectual capability, yet the two are considered mutually exclusive. Instead they are people who have trouble accessing the traditional learning pathways. Dyslexia (trouble reading and writing), dyspraxia (neural motor skill dysfunction) and ADHD (a nonstandard LD that interferes with learning nonetheless) are some examples of neurological disabilities and disorders, which are considered by neurologists to be independent of intelligence. As I said in my last post, television and video games can increase the probability of a child developing severe learning disabilities, and this increased risk is proportional to the amount of the child spends doing these activities.

It is also important not to become unduly fixated on the idea of learning disabilities or to use them as an exonerating excuse for everything. Many conditions can lead to a medical diagnosis of multiple cognitive incapacities. Improper nutrition, insufficient sleep, psychological depression, drugs and alcohol, emotional stress among many other things can lead to creating an atmosphere where learning is effectively disabled. In poor neighbourhoods, where children go to school hungry, virtually every child effectively has a learning disability although they are rarely diagnosed. Parents and educators alike need to shine the spotlight on how to harness capability rather than find reasons to excuse disability.



In part 4, I will talk about the world of intelletual possibilities that can be opened if we are able to optimize our intellectual capability to learn.

"Fixing my Brain" will be re-aired on Tuesday December 30 at 10pm EST on CBC Newsworld.

video
Video Promo: "Fixing My Brain"
[1:02 min]

The Arrowsmith School will also be looked at in another CBC documentary called "The Brain That Changes Itself", which will air at 8pm on Thursday November 27.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

You're Smarter Than You Think: Part 2

In The Beginning
The first conspicuous opportunity for us to learn starts at birth. Never again does learning happen at such an accelerated pace than in the first few months when a newborn begins to uncover the world through the perceptive stimuli of his or her environment. While developing the senses of sight, taste, smell, hearing and touch, the newborn begins to learn how to consciously interact with this environment beyond the subconscious brilliance inherited through the parental genetic fingerprint.

Baby in Hand by Aldo Risolvo

According to Dr. Robert Titzer, a California-based infant researcher "[t]he natural window of opportunity to learn opens at birth and begins to close at the age of four." In an article written by Matthew Coutts, Dr. Titzer recommends to parents that they should be reading to their babies by the time they are 3 months old (article).

Unfortunately, the National Post article overshoots the purpose of the early-reading recommendation. It's not meant to mold the baby into a child prodigy; it's to give the child a good start to life the same way that a parent focuses on good post-natal nutrition. A newborn is a sponge for the knowledge that their surroundings offer and they will learn considerably more from a used children's book than they will from a Baby Einstein DVD. Unlike the DVD, the book allows the child to interact directly with the learning tool at his or her own pace. Furthermore, the action of reading helps strengthen the communication bond between parent and child in a way that the unilateral television-based visual tool will not do. An increasing number of studies directly link television to decreased learning ability in addition to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and other learning disabilities. The challenge for most parents is finding the time to read because television is a very effective distractor for babies thus freeing up time in a busy parent's life. This also implies that the parent needs to significantly reduce and ideally eliminate the hours he or she spends watching television, which is by no means an easy lifestyle change to make. There are some who believe that television is exploited by the elite and wealthy as a means to keep people from moving up into higher socioeconomic classes in a globalized world where the opportunity to learn and gain knowledge is so widely accessible. Proponents of this theory note that many highly educated parents do not let their children watch any television at all. Literacy rate is a strong indicator of economic wealth and while even the poorest neighbourhoods in the United States now have television, they also have alarmingly low functional literacy rates. This digression to the connection between television, literacy and socioeconomic wealth is another topic in itself.

Taking a step back to when a newborn first opens his or her eyes, this moment is the only time in a person's life when intellectual capacity exists in a way that is effectively unaltered by the external environment. Psychologist Cyril Burt termed this intellectual capacity 'innate general cognitive ability'. It is essentially the genetically inherited capacity to gain intelligence. Unfortunately, we have no way to measure this quantity and thus there is no way to determine how smart one can realistically become. What really matters though, is that babies are nurtured to make optimum use of the available learning channels.

Coming up in my next post, I will define the 'smart' adjective in 'You're Smarter Than You Think.'

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

You're Smarter Than You Think: Part 1

In my June post, I predicted why Barack Obama would be the 44th president of the United States, and at the end of that post, I said that I would discuss his flaws and strengths in detail in a later post. In the spirit of political rhetoric, I will 'refine' this promise: such a posting will be indefinitely suspended due to the over saturation of media coverage on the subject of Barack Obama.

The McCain 'straight-talk express' translation: I don't think anyone needs or wants to hear any more about Barack Obama right now. Anyone wanting to know more about him, his ideals or his policies can (and will) consult the multitude of media on the subject including--but not limited to--the two books he has authored.



photo by allieTM

Introduction

So instead of talking about Obama, I will use the former Vice Presidential candidates as an introduction to my next topic, a series of posts I call "You're Smarter Than You Think".

Contrary to popular belief, Sarah Palin is not unintelligent. Clearly she has not spent an inordinate amount of time studying political science. For example, she could not name any supreme court decisions other than Roe versus Wade (nor can I, but both of us could learn). Lack of political knowledge could make a legitimate case that Palin was not quite ready to assume the role of vice president, but it says little about her raw intelligence. Her former counterpart, Vice President-elect Joe Biden, has become an expert at giving the public the illusion of political knowledge. He certainly does have political knowledge, but the number of times he misspeaks is quite worrisome if one assumes he makes policy decisions based on this flawed knowledge. In some university and college multiple choice tests, the examinee is penalized marks for incorrect answers. In such a test, I'm not sure Joeseph Biden would score any higher than Sarah Palin on the political science front. It's really quite amazing how many of these smart-sounding people get themselves into positions of responsibility. They make themselves sound smart to create the illusion that the are smart. They often find themselves saying that they are smart, perhaps because they are compensating for their fear that they are not smart enough. The "You're Smarter Than You Think" series is not intended for these types of people who think they are smarter than they are. It is intended for those who underestimate their capability and never reach their full potential as a result.

I was able to predict the winner of the election because of the poor fundamentals of the economy in addition to the low voter confidence in the incumbent party and not because I'm smarter than anyone else. Most people that know me are aware that I'm terrible at remembering names and birthdays, I can't solve a Rubik's cube, I'm not even 'smarter than a 5th grader', let alone a Jeopardy contestant. These facts should not limit myself (or anyone else) from doing anything I want to do in order to be successful. Knowledge is often misunderstood for intellectual capacity. The next series of posts will build on the story of why you very well could be smarter than you think.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Perfect (Financial) Storm

Perfect Storm: a critical or disastrous situation created by a powerful concurrence of factors. [Mirriam-Webster's Online Dictionary]


Storm Clouds by CoreBurn / © Some rights reserved.
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license



Many people had given dire warnings about the serious problems the economy would be facing. Some even knew it would extend far beyond the United States. But few predicted the severity, scope and timing simultaneously, because of the complex commingling of the events. With hindsight, things become that much clearer.

Three factors--all of which were major contributions--were the reason why the world economy is now facing a global economic downturn of this level of severity. Any of the three occurring on their own would not have caused as much damage as we will now see in the coming months. All three are of course interconnected, but few specialists knew enough about one, let alone three to accurately predict the damage that this storm would cause.

The Road: Questionable Lending Practices
There was of course, Fannie, Freddie and the irresponsible lending practices promoted by government coalitions with free markets. This built a road that led to the edge of a cliff had been construction for decades only to be completed by about 2005. Warren Buffet who is often lauded as the World's best value-oriented investor, divested his entire position in both Fannie and Freddie all the way back in 2000. Buffet said he felt "uncomfortable with certain aspects of the business." It's also clear that many Washington insiders knew a problem was brewing here. In 2006, several Republicans (including John McCain) sent a letter to the majority leader which warned that "if regulatory reform for housing-finance government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) is not enacted this year, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole." The list doesn't end there, many others knew about fundamental flaws and an inappropriate risk profile for these quasi-government enterprises.

The Vehicle: Energy Price Shocks
Then there was the lack of a stable and sufficient energy supply (particularly oil), which served as the vehicle that had also been assembled over the course of several decades. Peter Tertzakian had some very impressive and accurate foresight with regards to oil 'breaking' the economy. In his 2005 book, he says that the world economy would stop, "'firing on all cylinders' in 2007," and in 2008, "a confluence of events [would force] the public and our nations' leaders to finally realize how vulnerable [the economy] had become [to oil prices]." He goes on to predict a plunge in SUV sales and automaker mergers, acquisitions and consolidations we are now seeing (his forecast calls for Toyota partnering with or buying GM). What he didn't foresee is how high gas prices would catalyze a collapse in suburban home values. With this, the assumption which was held by so many now troubled financial institutions--that home prices always go up--also failed.

The Fuel: Monetary Policy
Lastly, there was the fuel: credit money. Because markets are based on a fiat currency (based on a perceived value) rather than the gold standard (based on intrinsic value), the system is subject to bubbles, sometimes resulting very large corrections (the gold standard has its own drawbacks of course, which is why the two standards have been swapped many times throughout history).

Instead of going into too much into detail about how the world moved from the gold standard to a system of credit, I'll give a brief synopsis here (google it if you want to know more). Following the World Wars, the United States was in a very strong economic position (much like China today), as it was spared widespread damage on its own shores while Europe's infrastructure had been devastated. The country was extremely productive relative to other countries and awash in natural resources. Because they were in a position to lend money for the rebuilding of Europe, they formed the Bretton Woods Agreements (1944/1945). Essentially, the U.S. pledged to maintain a stable dollar by pegging its currency to gold, and all other currencies were in turn pegged to the United States Dollar. Several decades later, when the U.S. started to become a borrower rather than a lender as well as overextending itself with several wars, the hybrid gold standard to become incredibly unstable. It was officially abolished in 1971 and all major currencies were subsequently unpegged from the USD by 1976. No politicians in any of the major economic power had the political leverage to go back to the gold standard because fiat money allows for inflation and inflation makes the economy look good. Instead, national banks pledged to control inflation using imperfect price inflationary indicators, such as CPI and later core inflation.

It's not hard to see from the chart that soon after the gold standard was abandoned, the bubble era had begun. Deflation is considered political suicide and therefore the market corrections are always artificially stopped by government (meaning the problems simply build upon themselves). Former 2008 Republican presidential candidate Congressman Ron Paul can offer more on this subject, but the point is it hasn't worked.



It was not oil that was in a bubble at $147; it was the entire economy that was overvalued (homes, cars, equities, etc.). It was not price manipulators, speculators pushing oil prices upward but merely investors moving money from U.S. dollars into commodities to hedge against global inflation. This is why neither gas prices nor equities rooted in these commodities increased by nearly the same amount. Ironically, we now call this a "credit crisis".


In The End: A Terrible Concoction
As I've said, any one on its own, the flawed road, the vehicle or the fuel, doesn't really present instantaneous systemic danger. Had gas prices stayed low, consumer sentiment may have stayed high and home prices may not have plunged with Americans reconsidering the value of homes situated in very distant suburbs. Had monetary policy been better managed, oil prices would have increased more linearly rather than exponential volatility shocking markets (unlike the oil shocks of the 1970's, 2008 had no major supply squeeze). All three would still have presented a very serious threat individually of course, but the "perfect storm" as Bernanke puts it, is why the economy has weakened far more than many of the partitionary experts had predicted. I would caution that conditions are likely to continue to get worse even if global financial markets can be stabilized. Political instability has become one of the spillover effects and history has shown it is very difficult to maintain peace in the case of poor countries (or bankrupt ones). And yet I remain optimistic for the future, because after the storm, nature always rights itself. Always.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

The Black Gold Sands

Image: Terry Bain [cc]

Barring a complete catastrophic collapse of the global economy and credit markets (which happens not to be overly improbable), the Canadian oilsands will remain in a relatively strong position despite correcting oil prices.

In the absence of a breakthrough scientific discovery like cold fusion, there exists neither a viable alternative fuel source for oil, nor a likely prospective one in the near future. It certainly isn't impossible, but a cold-fusion type of discovery is highly improbable. The Manhattan programme and Apollo project are often cited as major scientific investments yielding results; but neither one required the kind of infrastructure overhaul that would be required to reduce demand for fossil fuels. With rising energy costs, nuclear, wind, solar and the other alternatives to fossil fuels will all become more competitive with oil. In fact, from a price-energy perspective, $100/bbl crude oil is already fiscally disadvantaged compared to its alternatives. One joule of oil priced at $100/bbl is even more expensive than the same amount of energy produced from wind energy. Residents of Hawaii paid 24 cents per kilowatt hour for their electricity because oil is the primary fuel used for electricity generation in the state (the cost of electricity produced from wind is on the order of 14 cents/kWh). The only reason oil remains so prominent is that it happens to be convenient (batteries are not well-suited to power cars) and current infrastructure, which will take decades to update, necessitates it.

A common mistake people make is to think that the rate of change of the consumer electronics industry can be replicated in the energy industry. The reason consumer electronics can evolve so quickly is mass (or lack thereof). Replacing a 20 ounce cell phone requires considerably less work than replacing a quarter-ton vehicle. This is because a cell phone has relatively little total intrinsic value in the materials used, which is in part why many electronics become cheaper as the become smaller (for example, a 1 GB flash card now costs less to make than a 1 GB magnetic hard drive).

How Long Will It Take?
In terms of energy substitutions, the change from wood to coal took 75 years. The change from coal to oil took 100 years. Natural gas took even longer because of the extensive pipeline infrastructure that was needed to accommodate it--in fact, over 28 trillion cubic feet of natural gas associated with oil wells has been discarded in the U.S. alone since 1936 (U.S. Department of Energy). The gas is simply burned at the wellhead or vented to atmosphere without capturing its useful energy because the pipeline infrastructure would cost more than the potential revenues from selling the gas. This does not happen much anymore in North America, but continues in places that have no market for natural gas such as deep offshore production and some middle eastern oil producing nations. Liquification of natural gas (LNG) and gas hydrates are emerging alternatives to pipelines, but both are expensive because of the energy inputs involved.

Transportation Industry
The transportation industry uses about 50% of the world's oil. The United States has about 250 million automobiles. Even if automobiles that didn't use fossil fuels were available today at a competitive price, it would take 9 years to replace most of them (9 years is the mean age of these vehicles, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

Electric vehicles can't be competitively priced today without making significant infrastructure changes. Batteries that meet the range requirements for American automobiles are simply too expensive. Also, too many steps in the electrical conversion process make it an intrinsically inefficient way to turn wheels. The figure above shows potential paths to turning the wheels of motorized land-based transportation. Each step loses energy due to thermodynamic constraints (the fewest number of steps are often the best route). Ethanol and other biofuels have a lower energy density than hydrocarbons as well as other significant challenges (discussed below). Heavy trucks are nowhere close to using alternative fuel sources and the aviation industry does not even know of a potential alternative to jet fuel.



1970's Lessons Learned?

Those who are old enough to remember the oil shocks of the 1970's and early 1980's can recall long lineups at gas stations and the economic chaos it caused. It prompted everyone to rethink the dependency of crude oil because of the economic impacts it had on oil importing economies around the globe. The first crisis occurred in 1973 when the Arabic members of OPEC imposed an oil embargo aimed at countries that gave military and political support to Israel. A resolution was reached between OPEC members and the United States in early 1974, but the shortages it created would leave prices elevated for several years. In 1979 another crisis occurred the Shah of Iran was exiled. Oil production from Iran would fall 75% in the next two years as a result of political instability and the resultant war with Iraq. Over the next several years however, other countries were able to fill the supply gap as a result of higher prices. Virtually every oil consuming nation devised an energy strategy in light of these price shocks. It would be left up to the policymakers to see these strategies through to completion as an oil glut ensued and very cheap energy prices left the general public unconcerned about energy independence for the rest of the 20th century.

United States Strategy
Project Independence was a vision of President Nixon which never got much traction because of extensive costs. Another reason American politicians did not to want to reduce oil consumption was that at that time, the United States was the largest producer of crude oil in the world, meaning that oil production was a very large part of the domestic economy (U.S. oil production peaked just a couple years earlier in 1970). Instead, strategic political measures were favoured such as a strategic alliance with the Saudi's as well as military efforts to ensure unimpeded flow of oil from the producer nations.

France's Strategy
In response to the same crisis, France decided to invest heavily in nuclear energy over a period of 15 years. Today, France leads the world in Nuclear Energy production, and even exports electricity from its nuclear plants to surrounding nations such as Germany. This now leaves them in an economically advantaged position compared to its European counterparts; however, oil consumption per capita only decreased by about 35%. This is because the substitution was only made for electrical power generation and they did not attempt to replace oil the transportation industry (this would have taken much longer and have been much costlier).

Brazil's Strategy
Brazil actually did decide substitute foreign oil in its transportation industry following the oil shocks of the seventies. They used sugarcane ethanol to do it and this conversion took them 30 years to reach a degree of energy autonomy. Flex fuel vehicles are mandated to use the E25 blend of 25% ethanol, 75% gasoline; some can even use E100 (almost pure ethanol). The United States tried recently to model Brazil's strategy, but it is failing for two reasons:
  1. Brazil is a developing nation and its average citizen consumes 1/5th of the liquid fuel that the average American does. It can't be scaled up in an overpopulated world without creating serious food shortages, as we've already started to see.

  2. Brazil intersects the equator, meaning considerably more energy is available for the process photosynthesis that ultimately creates the energy used in the biofuels. This is why sugarcane ethanol yields about 8 times the energy required to produce it, while corn ethanol in the continental U.S. hovers around breaking even (optimistic scientists say 1.5 while pessimistic ones say 0.7). This means that for every gallon of diesel a farmer uses to cultivate corn, the amount of ethanol can be processed from the crop contains no more energy than a gallon of diesel--but the farmer can still make money provided subsidies are paid by the government.


Where Prices Will Go From Here
Now it's quite possible (but not probable) that oil could return to $40 a barrel depending on the depth of the global recession (some have even forecasted $10 oil). Even if prices did fall below $40 a barrel, such low prices will not stick once the recession has ended. Sector-specific inflation has increased the cost of production quite dramatically. Production and labour costs are out of control and the cost of production for new oilsands projects now sits between $80 and $120 a barrel. This is far too high for receding demand, and it may need to deflate and correct itself along with the rest of the global economy. This will present short-term challenges and if oil did fall to $10 or $20/bbl, this unlikely scenario would certainly mean layoffs; but even so, long-term supply will remain under pressure. The other supply issue surrounds peaking production in the worlds largest oil fields as I discussed in the past. Saudi Arabia's spare capacity (oil it can produce during shortages) is now limited to sour heavy crude, which only a few refineries in the world can handle.

One problem with projections about the Canadian oilsands ultimate recoverable oil estimates is that they often assume demand for this commodity will remain unchanged through 60 years. Instead, its likely that the oil which is hypothetically recoverable at today's prices will simply be left in the ground. This is analogous to the way many coal reserves remain in the ground from when coal was partially substituted for oil. My best guess is that it will take at least 25-30 years to significantly reduce global dependency on oil. The change is happening though, and Fort McMurray could easily end up being Detroit north if city planners aren't smart about economic development of the future. In the transition period from this now disadvantaged fuel, the oilsands should remain profitable. If not by a windfall, then at least by a small margin.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

The White House of Cards

The problem with foreclosures is that often times the pledgor is not cognizant of the severity of the problem until it's too late. It happened with millions of Americans who lost their homes. It happened with large institutions like Bear, Fannie, Freddie, Lehman and Wachovia. Now it is happening with the U.S. government.

Many financial advisers continue their rhetoric about a pending recovery of the U.S. economy, as it 'always does'. As mentioned in earlier posts, the U.S. economy is structured on cheap oil, which despite the crisis, still does not exist right now. In USD terms, oil is still more expensive than it was a year ago. Either the financial advisers don't get it, or they are lying the way Enron executives lied to their shareholders while funnelling their money out the back door. I suspect it is the former. Following weeks of market turmoil, record low auto sales and continuing record high oil prices, Citigroup finally began recommending to investors to sell shares in GM and Ford this week after their shares fell 82% and 67% in the last year. At least they made their statement sound eloquent:

"[W]e believe the risk-reward balance [on automaker stocks] has tilted decidedly negative on both absolute value and relative value versus underperforming suppliers," -Citigroup investment note.
Thanks Citi for the timely advice. Neither Ford nor GM has had a profitable automotive division in over 6 years. Better late than never I suppose.

Many had hoped that swift approval of the bailout plan would restore confidence in the U.S economy. Such an effect has yet to be seen as even the hopeful are growing skeptical. Hank Paulson said it will not prevent all bank failures--which are likely to resume their course now that the short selling ban has ended. Violent and sometimes even more damaging aftershocks continue to ripple worldwide as the USD is still the most widely held currency. The only stable asset right now is gold (it appears moderately unstable because of the gyrations of the currencies in which it is valued). Few signs of a bottom can be seen yet and confidence continues to slide.

Anyone who has been overseas recently knows that the once universal US dollar began to fall out of favour by merchants for other currencies over a decade ago. Unfortunately most Americans have never been overseas and don't even understand what is happening with their 401k's. Even the presidential candidates appear naive (or perhaps it is merely election rhetoric). They appear to think that they can solve the 'crisis' by investing in the economy (cutting taxes, fixing health care, energy independence spending, gas tax holidays, and so on). Unfortunately, it's probably too late for that, as they don't have any more pre-approved credit to invest. They would have to borrow it from foreign investors (or print it and make the USD worthless). The flaw that proved fatal for many of the failed institutions was the assumption that they could always raise more capital, if required.

House prices will always go up, storied institutions can always raise debt, and foreign investors will always buy up U.S. treasuries. The first two cards have already fallen. With foreign investors fleeing, the U.S. government needs to prove to its lenders that it will not default and is serious about paying back its debt rather than running deficits indefinitely. Serious action could take the form of pulling out of Iraq as quickly as humanly possible--this would likely split the country in three and destabilize the region, but the U.S. economy is pretty unstable itself if anyone hasn't already noticed; furthermore, as Alan Greenspan notes, Iraqi oil production has only now recovered to pre-war levels, so staying longer is unlikely to result in significant cheap oil supply anytime soon. It would also be wise to pull out of Afghanistan as soon as possible and negotiate a deal with the Taliban--this may not be in line with offical public policy; but as John McCain said, unofficial policy is often quite different from public policy. Most importantly, they need to sit down with the leaders of economic powerhouses and negotiate a set of terms to repay their debt and stabalize confidence. The first two cards have already fallen, if the third were to fall, it would get ugly. Barack Obama talks about hope and change. Let's all hope someone understands the severity of the problem and is willing to make the change required to avert a catastrophe.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

America's Fundamentals

A Fundamental Subprimer:

1938 - Fannie Mae was created under President Roosevelt as a government entity to provide liquidity to the housing market in the wake of the Great Depression.

1968 - Fannie Mae was pseudo-privatized by President Johnson to remove it from the federal budget. To make this privatization feasible, the company was made exempt from taxation and oversight. To ensure competitive market, Freddie Mac was created in 1970 to perform essentially the same role. Critics say they had no incentive to pay down debt because (1) they were exempt from reporting financial difficulties to the public, (2) they were backed by government as GSE's, and (3) house prices always go up. The effects of President Johnson's overall policy were swift and disastrous (link).

1970 - President Nixon continued tradition by signing the Emergency Bill on Housing, a bill designed to inject "as much as $10 billion a year into the sagging home construction industry." White house construction quotas were still not being met, so interest rates continued to be artificially subsidized. (St. Petersburg Times - July 25, 1970)

2002 - President Bush releases the Home Ownership Policy Book.

The stated mandates of this policy include
  • home ownership targets, with a focus on minority home-ownership,
  • a $440 billion increase in the financial commitment made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to fund mortgages,
  • incentives for other mortgage lenders and
  • tax credits and down-payment assistance for new and prospective homeowners
2005 to 2008 - The growing American housing bubble bursts. Financial markets around the globe suffer as a result, especially in late 2007 and the first three quarters of 2008. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are put under conservatorship in September, 2008.

September 19, 2008 - In response to market turmoil, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announces a plan to buy the toxic assets that were plaguing markets. Critics say it emulates the tradition of creative accounting--moving garbage around in the hopes that it won't start to stink until it becomes somebody else's problem. They say Henry Paulson has just named himself CEO of a new enterprise called Hermie Max. Supporters say they have finally taken the first step in accepting responsibility for these problems.

Obviously, last week's developments in the mortgage crisis have been developing for some time. But it is by no means the only problem the U.S. Economy is facing. In fact, many of the problems have been exacerbated by others which are not mutually independent from the credit crisis.

=====================================================

John McCain has refined his position that the U.S. economy is fundamentally strong to saying that American workers are the fundamental strength of the economy. Many take issue with both claims. The following is a disquisition as to why.


The Myth of The Hardworking American
As a generalization, the hardest working Americans are actually the landed immigrants. They believe in working hard to obtain 'The American Dream'. Although they are often unable to reach this dream, because of either lack of education or lack of credential recognition, they continue to work hard to ensure their children can live out their dreams. Unfortunately though, nth generation immigrants (children of landed immigrants and their children) often lose this value of hard work. They tend to feel they are entitled to the American Dream rather than believing it is something they have to work for. They believe the living in America is a birthright rather than a privilege. In a lot of ways, they are technically correct--but that doesn't help labour productivity.

How hard Americans work in absolute terms is not really all that important with respect to the fundamental economy. What really matters is how hard the American citizen works relative to citizens other countries around the world. There is no question that labour unions have done very great things for the working class. However, in well-established societies, unions have basically become an extension of government and their value at present is now rather questionable. In American society today, government already mandates minimum wages as well as reasonable and safe labour conditions. The only purpose left for unions is to squeeze every bit of corporate profits out of the corporation for more benefits and higher pay. Competitive compensation is good, but union practices now make western business uncompetitive in increasingly globalized markets. They have actually caused job loss rather than increased employment. Meanwhile, developing nations were able to produce goods and services without the excessive labour costs exasperated by entitlements and labour unions. There was a very lengthy period of time when this labour cost discrepancy did not matter much for the western world. That's because the west held something more valuable than work ethic: knowledge. The concentration of literacy, education and knowledge in the western world meant that while Dollar Store items were 'Made In Taiwan', expensive technological items like cars and computers were still 'Made In America'. With globalization, the Internet, and other technologies, knowledge is more widely accessible than ever before. Computer science jobs are now being outsourced to India. Japan has taken over the automobile manufacturing industry. In China, the automobile industry is rapidly gaining ground although it is currently still in the 'pathetic' phase at this point. Critics who think they will never be able to make cars suitable for the western world should note that the same thing was said of Japanese automobiles when they first entered the industry. Relative to the American worker, productivity of the developing nation labourer is closing in fast. This is part of the reason why U.S. GDP growth has been declining over the years, while it has been increasing rapidly in developing nations like China and India.


History Does Not Side With US
Many advisers are saying now is the time to make long-term investments in the U.S. economy because markets are undervalued. This is likely true, and markets are indeed likely to be higher in 12 months than they are today. These advisers are saying to look at history as proof that the markets will recover; that markets have always recovered from downturns in the long run. This idea that history is a key to the present is very important--but they are using a panoramic lens instead of taking the 360 degree view. The panoramic lens goes back to the start of the twentieth century; the 360 degree view goes back to the first dominant human civilizations. Dominant superpowers have always overextended themselves to the point that their decline of power becomes an inevitable conclusion. This doesn't necessarily mean the American Empire* will go the way of the Roman or Ottoman Empires; but it may go the way of the diffused and diluted British Empire. Some historians think this happens because the intrinsic rigid nature of empires leaves them incapable of adapting to change.

*Many Americans are reluctant to call the America an empire, and prefer the term 'superpower'. I suspect this is because of stigma surrounding the fact that no empire in history has ever maintained its hegemony status for more than several centuries. Ultimately though, it will be up to historians to decide on an appropriate title for America's global influence.

The Swinging Pendulum
Turning the focus back to the economy at present, most analysts estimate there is still another 6-18 months before the fundamentals of the United States housing market hit bottom. The reason, they say, is an excess inventory of homes and historically low federal lending rates poised to rise in the coming months when the economic outlook improves. Confidence in U.S. markets has been shattered and it will take some time to repair. Money is on the sidelines and everyone is blaming it on the regulators, greed, and white-collar criminals. By 'everyone', I include those who would normally call themselves libertarians and 'ultra-free-market-capitalists'. They concede that Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and AIG were too big to fail and in need of a government bailout. They will give very serious consideration to Paulson's plan for two reasons:

  1. By not moving toxic assets to the taxpayer balance sheet, it could cause a depression. All but the most idealist free-marketeers will accept government intervention if this scenario proves realistic.

  2. The credit rating of the U.S. is being eroded. If the government doesn't bail out China and the other creditors that hold the bad debt, then the foreign creditors will stop lending the U.S. money. It would be like trying to refinance a mortgage after declaring bankruptcy--creditors don't lend to clients who don't repay prior debts.
This is a sign that the ideological pendulum is swinging from right to left, and it is now poised to swing too far to the left. Regulation is a necessary part of markets; but only to provide stability and sustainability in an otherwise chaotic 'free-market'.

Under-regulated markets lead to volatility and unpredictability, while over-regulated markets lead to predictability and stagnation. Growth is good, and so is predictability; it's just a matter of finding the desired balance of the two. The swinging pendulum should be stopped somewhere closer to the center rather than the extremes where it was, and where it is now headed. When the Republican presidential nominee says "the regulators were asleep" and wants to dismiss the SEC commissioner for not regulating markets more, this is rather disturbing for the growth side of the equation.


Debt and Deficits
In defence of George W. Bush--the 9/11 hero that has now fallen out of favour with the American public--his policies are now, like those of most presidents at the end of their terms--more responsible since he doesn't have to worry as much about political backlash. He has threatened or tried to veto virtually all of the fiscally irresponsible bills put forth by a democratically-controlled congress (mostly to no avail). None of the recent bailouts were part of the budget.

Bail Out RecipientGuaranteed (Public) Debt
Bear Sterns$30 billion
Freddie, Fannie$200 billion1
AIG$85 billion2
'Toxic' Mortgage Nationalization$700 billion
Big 3 (GM, Ford, Chrysler)$25 billion3
Total$1.04 trillion

Notes:
  1. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae could cost taxpayers much more or less, no one really knows yet as this depends on how many more defaults there are.
  2. AIG was made to sound like a great deal for taxpayers. The balance sheets of AIG aren't public but there is an unlikely scenario that taxpayers could profit and actually get a good deal. Note that free market enterprises would not capitalize on this potential 'bargain' given the high degree of risk. $27 billion of the 'loan' was reportedly used within a day of the takeover.
  3. The big 3 deal is currently being lobbied to U.S. congress. GM is most desperately in need of these funds and some think the figure could be as much as $50 billion.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office states in a 2007 fiscal report that "The government is on an unsustainable fiscal path." It is their job to be alarmist, as this department is meant to hold congress accountable. But even if the debt projections are reduced by an order of magnitude, the picture still doesn't look pretty. This is on top of government deficits that are expected to be US $500 billion (excluding bailouts) for 2008 and only slightly less in 2009.
Neither presidential candidate has a realistic policy platform. Both tax increases and spending cuts are required just to stop the deficit, let alone reduce the $10 trillion federal debt. This figure excludes health care and social security entitlements that are expected to increase in the coming years.

In Canada the health care entitlements are an even bigger problem because of a public health care system. The baby boomers will begin reaching the standard retirement age of 65 in 2011. Health care costs will continue to rise as they have been in recent years and perhaps this rise will become exponential with the aging population blip. At some point in the very near future, Canadians will need to decide between privatizing health care and raising taxes. As the fiscal surplus is gone, there is simply no alternative; but at least in Canada the problem is not compounded by an increasing trade deficit as it is in the United States.


GDP Against Black Gold
America is addicted to oil. Furthermore, it's domestic supply continues to decline meaning it needs to export an increasing amount of wealth to feed it's addiction (see 500 billion dollar problem). As this happens, the U.S. GDP begins to work like the mirror image of oil prices. There aren't too many people left that believe the price of crude oil will go back to $40 a barrel. Given the current level of energy dependence, a sustained price of $40/bbl or less is the only likely way for the American GDP to grow at the same average annualized percentage this century that it has over the last century. This doesn't mean I think the economy can't still grow, but the higher the oil price, the more stagnant it will become. And right now at least, oil prices and the economy are in lock-step--as the economic outlook of the largest oil consumer appears strong, oil prices rise; when economic outlook is weak, prices fall. I can't see how the United States economy can be considered fundamentally strong with oil priced over $100 for each barrel.

It is for this reason of course, that energy independence (or more accurately reduced foreign oil dependence) is now such a hot topic. From this perspective, offshore drilling will help. Though as parties debate how much it will help, oil from this source won't hit markets for at least another ten years. Contrary to popular belief, there is no technological fix to America's energy dependence problem. Any realistic political fix to this problem would need to focus on facilitating revolutionary social change. Most of this required change relates to an incredibly powerful and convenient device called the automobile. There are 250 million registered passenger vehicles in the U.S., more than 8 for every 10 people. The transportation industry consumes half of America's oil, yet no feasible fuel exists to replace gasoline as oil prices rise. The much-hyped alternatives have some potential, but none will result in a seamless transition from oil.

Natural gas
If a T. Boone Pickens-type plan were implemented, NYMEX natural gas prices on the continent would double to approach or exceed prices in Europe. Driving range between refuelling of natural gas-powered vehicles is considerably reduced. While the U.S. has more recoverable reserves of natural gas, they are not that much more, and it would also turn Russia into the new Saudi Arabia.

Ethanol
Brazil's sugarcane-based biofuel model can't be scaled up to meet the transportation requirements of the United States, especially using corn-based ethanol. This fact only became apparent to some legislators when corn and grain prices began to skyrocket to unprecedented levels due to artificial biofuel subsidies.

Hydrogen
This fuel is not an abundant natural resource as it does not exist in its elemental form anywhere on Earth. Currently, most industrial-use hydrogen is generated from steam reforming of natural gas (CH4 + 2H2O → CO2 + 4H2). Hydrogen can also be split from water using electricity but the process is thermodynamically inefficient--it requires considerably more energy input than a fuel cell will ultimately output. This is why hydrogen fuel cell development has been slow.

Conservation and Fuel Efficiency
Gains here are limited, and the more significant gains come at a price--automobiles that are more expensive and unaffordable. First-generation hybrids (those that don't plug in), are a good example of this.

Electricity
The electric car in its current form can't replace the automobile. They simply don't have the speed or range to meet the current social requisites of America. Batteries just aren't amenable to energy storage the way liquid fuels are. No one had to kill the electric car in the conspirator sense some have suggested. The Chevy Volt is a plug-in hybrid that will to come close to meeting social requirements with an optimistic 2010 production date, but at an estimated cost of $30-40 thousand apiece. GM's Vice Chairman Robert Lutz says that hybrids will never be as cheap as gas-powered vehicles for one simple reason: they require two power-trains instead of one. Instead of trying to meet the social requisites, the auto industry should focus their efforts on creating and marketing electric cars as 'urban utility vehicles' rather than as standard cars.


Given that technology will not provide a seamless transition from oil to other fuels in the transportation industry, Americans will be required to undertake social change. In terms of social lifestyles, what energy independence means is not that air travel, trucks and gasoline-powered cars will disappear completely. However, it does mean that the "soccer mom" who drives three kids to extra-curricular activities in different corners of the city in an H3 Hummer will cease to exist. She will find different activities closer to home without compromising the developmental opportunities of her children. Many people, including policymakers, find this new reduced dependency on the automobile very difficult to visualize because it requires a change in the way we think about transportation. This is why it will likely take 40-50 years before any significant degree of U.S. energy independence is reached, perhaps a decade or two less with political facilitation. And yet, the wheels for this have already been set in motion with the collapse in the sales of gas guzzlers and material reductions in air travel (the gas guzzlers of the skies). High gas prices also served as a catalyst in the collapsed assumption that 'house prices always go up', particularly in distant suburbs requiring excessive commute times. In time, the white picket fence will fall out of the American Dream. Unless the world can continue to produce oil at well over a thousand barrels a second, these changes will continue. Unfortunately for the United States, it continues to lose its grip on oil production, which means the change must be financed from within, and this will hurt GDP and growth as a result.


In Brief
As the western countries continue to lose their monopoly on knowledge, the higher work ethic will allow developing nations to continue to steal market share in terms of productivity for goods and services. As America's domestic supply of natural resources continue to decline, and the overpopulated world continues to consume them at an unsustainable rate. An incredible amount of energy will need to go into a structural change in the American way of life. As this happens, the U.S. will continue to lose its grip on control of strategic resources in countries like Venezuela, Iraq and Nigeria. Even domestically, resistance exists to the exploitation of coal and offshore oil reserves because of concerns about the environment. All of this means America's public and private debt is likely to continue increasing to the point where America will not own itself anymore, its foreign creditors will. Government will become incapable of acting on behalf of its citizens as it will become forced to appease its creditors. Useful work will go towards change, and repaying debt, and it is this that will circumvent growth. This is why the fundamentals of the U.S. economy are not all that good.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Fed buys AIG (courtesy: the American Taxpayer)

I was watching the news today. A headline topic was the proven link between elevated levels of Biphenol A (BPA) in the urine of the adults studied, and an elevated risk of heart disease and type-2 diabetes (full story). An expert on the show noted that the link was not a chemical one and the exact source of BPA in those tested was not determined by the study. It basically proves that we should avoid ingesting BPA (which we already knew). He recommended consumers minimize drinking from polycarbonate bottles and eating from PC-lined food cans. PC is the very hard plastic used in Naglene bottles. As a rule of thumb, if it isn't hard, it probably isn't PC (look for the number 7 or the label 'PC' in the recycling triangle).

Now for the funny part:
As he said this, images of margarine containers, disposable plastic water bottles and other soft plastic food containers were shown. None of the containers shown were BPA-bearing plastics. In plastics, BPA is only used to manufacture polycarbonate (PC) and as an antioxidant in polyvinylchloride (PVC). The products that were shown are made from polyethylene terephthalate, low/high-density polyethylene, polypropylene and polystyrene (PETE, LDPE, HDPE, PP and PS respectively). Other than PVC, which is not generally used in food/drink items, and PC, none of the other plastics are manufactured using BPA!



In other news..


[Image courtesy of Clarke]


In exchange for up to $85 million in federal loans, the U.S. government will receive a 79.9 percent equity stake in the company.

According to the press release,
"The Board determined that, in current circumstances, a disorderly failure of AIG could add to already significant levels of financial market fragility and lead to substantially higher borrowing costs, reduced household wealth, and materially weaker economic performance."
Instead of a disorderly failure, this announcement ensures and orderly failure as the company's assets are slowly liquidated until the loan is repaid. Extremely large free market equities have now received full or partial bailouts from the U.S. Treasury (Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's saviour), The U.S. Federal Reserve (AIG's saviour), and soon U.S. Congress (General Motors' saviour).

To be precise, Freddie and Fannie were not explicitly free market enterprises. Instead, they were implicitly guaranteed companies otherwise known as GSE's (Government Sponsored Enterprises). This was their fundamental flaw. Investors said they were taught in 'investing school' (whatever that is) that theoretically speaking, the entities had the risk of treasuries but the reward of equities. If that sounds too good to be true, that's because it is and always was. While others share the blame, this structural flaw took the lead in granting so many irresponsible sub-prime loans and now results in a cascading effect we are seeing in financial markets around the world.

All this is meant as a primer for my next topic: The Swinging Pendulum--and while change is good, the swinging pendulum is decidedly not a good thing.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Captain Planet (aka T. Boone Pickens)

Note: This post relates to the "Pickens Plan". If you are not too familiar with the plan, please go to PickensPlan.com to read about it first.

When T. Boone Pickens unveiled his energy independence crusade for America, some people were a little skeptical. After all, he's an oilman, and oilmen are reputed to be selfish capitalists. Many people claim his motives are not pure. He refutes the claim that his plan stands to benefit himself more than the American public with the assertion that he's made enough money. At 80 years old, with a estimated net worth of US $3 billion, his claim seems reasonable. He has also donated millions to philanthropic causes in the last 3 years. Yet it's unclear why George W. Bush wouldn't listen to his causes after he donated millions to Bush's 2004 presidential campaign and its affiliates. It's also hard to ignore the fact that he has a pretty big monetary stake in the companies that stand to benefit most the plan.


The Big Stakes...

  1. Clean Energy (NASDAQ: CLNE)
    It's no secret that Pickens is the "largest shareholder" in the "largest provider of natural gas for transportation in North America.." Obviously, this company stands to benefit from his plan more than any other, and positive news coverage has driven the stock skywards. Since the 'Pickens Plan' first made news in July, shares in Clean Energy are up about 70%. It outperformed its peer companies by a very large margin. The United States Natural Gas Fund (AMEX: UNG), was down 45% over the same period. The TV spots for the Pickens Plan double as advertising for this company and have probably already paid for themselves on the basis of stock valuation. It likely helped land a big contract in the State of California this month (link). Fantastic!


  2. Mesa Power, LLP
    This private energy company owned by T. Boone Pickens has already invested US$2 billion in building a wind farm along the Texas Panhandle near Pampa, Texas. The next U.S. president could make public funding available for alternative energy sources. Pickens will do his best to put Mesa Power on the receiving end of these funds as wind power isn't yet competitive on the free market.


  3. Mesa Water Inc.
    Mesa Water is a group that represents"Texas Panhandle landowners, led by Boone Pickens". The company recognizes that many areas in the United States face very serious water shortages, meaning clean water will become an increasingly valuable commodity like oil. It hopes to drill for water from the Ogallala Aquifer (an aquifer is akin to a really big underground lake) and pipeline it to markets in Texas as early as 2021. The part of the aquifer that Mesa Water wants to exploit is located underneath the Texas Panhandle, where a wind farm is being built by another company (Mesa Power, LLP). There is one problem however,
    [The Ogallala source water] is "stranded" because without production facilities and a delivery infrastructure to other parts of the state there is no market for it.
    Pickens has a duel-use plan to use land obtained in the wind corridor via Mesa Power and also to install water pipelines via Mesa Water. Speculators say he was unable to buy all the land he needs to build a pipeline (landowners can be a pretty big headache) and will need the government to arbitrate (i.e. force) these land sales.

Pickens is lobbying the U.S. government for subsidies and allowances on all three fronts (wind power, vehicular natural gas and water). He's killing 3 birds with one stone. Right now, Pickens' greatest exploit is the American people for their irrational exuberance in the idea of U.S. energy independence. While motives may not be all that pure, his flair for innovation is something to be admired.



Why the quirky title you ask? Does anyone remember the show "Captain Planet"? "Earth! Fire! Wind! Water! Heart!" All Mr. Pickens needs is an ignition source for his natural gas, and he has it all...


Move over Al Gore, "I am Captain Planet!"



More reading?
  1. Investors Have A Big Thirst For Water

  2. Shortage of water forces tough decisions [California]

  3. Crisis feared as U.S. water supplies dry up

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Hurricane Update

There have been many predictions about what the price of crude oil will do as a result of Hurricane Gustav, which is expected to make landfall very close to where hurricane Katrina did. Gustav is also expected to make landfall as a category 3 storm (Katrina had been a category 5 but weakened to Category 3 before making landfall).

Idle Production
Currently, nearly all oil production in the area is shut in, with all personnel evacuated. According to Bloomberg, "96 percent of offshore oil output and 82 percent of gas production" is currently idle. The Gulf region produces a quarter of U.S. domestic oil production and 14 percent of natural gas production. Nearly all operations personnel have been evauated while many refineries and piplines in the area have also been closed.


A couple of days of reduced supply isn't enough to raise prices significantly. The large price spikes in 2005 were due to the damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina that took months to fix, rather than these temporary shut-ins. It's also quite likely that this increased idling simply means oil producers are better prepared and less damage will ensue from the hurricane season this time around. Any production lost due to downtime and minor damages can easily be replaced with oil from the strategic petroleum reserve, which was intended for--and only capable of--replacing temporary and unforeseeable supply disruptions like Hurricanes (rather than to stabilize normal market price volatility, a purpose some people thought of it earlier this year).

Up Or Down?
Sixteen economists polled last week were split almost evenly three ways (I don't recall which poll). About one third said prices would simply fall after the hurricane passes. Another group said prices would remain about the same. The last third of these economic experts said prices could rise significantly. Prevalent Canadian economist Jeff Rubin of CIBC's World Markets thinks gas prices could hit $1.75-a-litre if this year sees "[a]ny replays of the 2005 hurricane season". Ultimately though, what happens will depend on Mother Nature (or global warming for those who speculate that this is the case). Many others think this scenario is unlikely.

Inflation Outlook
If the most active part of the hurricane season does create major disruptions to energy supply in the Gulf, the resulting increase in energy prices could kill the plans of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank to hold rates steady this year. Ben Bernanke expects to see inflation moderate from an annual pace of 5.6% in July if oil prices remain relatively low compared to their all-time highs of $147-a-barrel. The Fed does not want to raise interest rates until some parts of the "financial storm" passes, which include the housing crisis and credit crunch, high commodity prices and a low greenback.

My Prediction
I'd say there are several indicators that show the markets are comfortable with a crude oil price in the $110-$120-a-barrel range for the next couple months, with some spikes possible. Even with a spike, a repeat of Katrina is unlikely and therefore the odds are that the price won't stray too far outside this range, up or down. It also seems like a stable and sustainable range as an OPEC official has said his organization will cut production if oil falls below $85-a-barrel (Iran has less clout but their oil minister wants OPEC to set this floor at $100); on the high end, airlines and car manufacturers start failing if oil goes above $150-a-barrel (Zoom airlines failed last week with oil below $120). My prediction also translates into gas prices in the range of $1.15 to $1.35 for the fall, depending on what the loonie does relative to the greenback.

Meteorologists are about as good as predicting the weather tomorrow as energy analysts are at predicting crude oil prices next week, even without a hurricane. It seems we'll just have to wait and see how these factors come together. At least the one certainty is that the loss of human life this time around won't be anywhere near as bad, assuming that lessons were learned from Hurricane Katrina.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Some News and Anecdotes

A Thousand Barrels A Second

"Beginning [in 2006], and over the course of the next 5 to 10 years, increasingly volatile energy prices are going to affect how you live and what you drive, not to mention the economy, the environment, and the complexity of the geopolitical chess match being played out for the world's precious energy resources... we are in the midst of volatility, right on the cusp of a break point that will change the way governments, corporations, and individuals exploit and consume primary energy resources, especially crude oil."
This an excerpt from Peter Tertzakian's book A Thousand Barrels A Second. I strongly recommend this book as you only need to get through the first page to see that the former oil industry "foot soldier" and energy analyst knows what he's talking about.

Anecdote: The New York Times followed up on my news tip with Jad Mouawad's lead business story, As Oil Giants Lose Influence, Supply Drops. I sent in the tip following my post "Big Oil: 2nd Quarter In Brief".


The Olympic Spirit

Usain Bolt raised eyebrows with his come-from-nowhere gander into the title of "world's fastest man". Three months ago, he raced in his first adult international competitive 100m event. The morning of the Olympics he woke up at 11, ate some chicken nuggets, watched TV, ate lunch, more chicken nuggets, then jogged his way into a new world record and gold medal in the 100m. He could have run faster were it not for his pre-finish celebration and an untied shoelace. This may seem suspicious, but even if he had used performance enhancers a good pharmacist knows how to circumvent drug testing; we may never know whether or not he really did wake up one day realizing he's the worlds fastest person. If he ran clean, it would be nothing short of impressive. Or maybe he wanted to run clean but someone slipped something in his Chicken McNuggets. Either way, the Olympic spirit and excellence more than offsets the less desirable sides of the games. 'Communist' China has thus far hosted the games without anywhere near the level of controversy many of the alarmists and human rights extremists had predicted. Canada topped its Athens podium count with 13 medals.


Anecdote: Simon Whitfield made an impressive come-from-behind sprint in triathlon, nearly clinching gold but finishing with silver. I could feel his pain in the closing kilometers of the run. "It hurt, it really hurt..." said Whitfield. But with 300m to go and 40m behind the leading pack of three, he threw away his cap, summoned some energy from deep within, and commenced his sprint to the podium. He even took the lead before Germany's Jan Frodeno stormed back to rain on the party, leaving Whitfield with the silver.



Freddie and Fannie Fall Off The Tricycle

Mortgage guarantor Freddie Mac had mixed success with a high-yield debt sale today. Freddie Mac was able to raise over $3 billion in capital. Shares fell another 6% in addition to yesterday's 25% plunge. The likelihood that the mortgage GSE's will require explicit taxpayer backing is a bit of a psychological self-fulfilling prophecy--as investors are told by analysts not to invest in these companies, it makes it very difficult for them to raise capital. As a result, they must do so by offering a very high yield incentive (as was the case in today's sale). The premium will keep them afloat for longer, but it also hurts longer term profitability, which is why equity shareholders continued their sell off. Inflation data from the past week did not help, as it raises speculation that the Fed may need to raise rates sooner rather than later--a move that would likely force Freddie and Fannie to seek public funding if a rate increase were factored in this year.


Anecdote: Last week, I tried to warn a handful of naive investors on the Google Finance discussion board who thought they were getting a bargain on the shares of Fannie Mae (NYSE:FNM). I pleaded with them to cut their losses and move on. Unfortunately they thought I was a hedge fund manager trying to use psychology to maliciously drive down prices. In retrospect, I should have tried to explain that I did not hold any short positions (my investment knowledge is not advanced enough to take short positions). I have no financial stake in Fannie or Freddie whatsoever--I was simply trying to advise them to donate their money elsewhere. Instead the poor souls lost 30% already since then.



photo credits:
Oil Barrel byblizzy73
Birds Nest by Theo W L Jones
Tricycle by iMorpheus

Sunday, August 3, 2008

$80 Oil In 2008???

Well, I promised some good news in the next post so here it is: It has recently come to my attention that energy market funds have become all the rage in light of all the attention energy prices have been getting. These investment vehicles are engineered to follow the price of crude more closely than any oil company or trust does. They are essentially hedge funds, which are designed for companies that genuinely need to minimize risk exposure to ensure predictable profits. The airline industry is a good example of an industry that needs to hedge itself against the price of oil. Were it not for hedging, many airlines would be in much worse financial shape.

FundSymbolLaunch Date
US Oil Fund LP (ETF)USOApril, 2006
US Natural Gas Fund LP (AMEX)UNGApril, 2007
12 Month Oil Fund LP (AMEX)USLDecember, 2007
US Gasoline Fund LP (AMEX)UGAFebruary, 2008
US Heating Oil Fund LP (AMEX)UHNApril, 2008

The problem is, that these funds (and I suspect many others around the globe) are available to everyday investors. NYMEX crude oil contracts require minimum trade increments of 1,000 barrels at a price of $13,000 each. Not too many small investors would want that kind of exposure in such a volatile market. These energy funds allow investors to effectively buy oil in much smaller basket increments (on the order of one barrel or even less). Since the funds I've listed (and I suspect many others) only originated recently (end of 2007 to early 2008), it's quite possible that they have added considerably to a speculation bubble that has yet to really burst.

While I do not in favour of excessive government interference in free markets on the grounds that they do not and can not lower long-term prices, I do believe that it can help moderate short term prices as well as stabilize volatility. Yet the commodity exchanges are already heavily regulated and there is little indication that more price controls are the answer. Price volatility has been very high with massive ups and downs in the past year, which is certainly an indicator that speculation is trumping fundamentals. As I said and continue to say, market bubbles will eventually always burst, but unfortunately they can often leave deep scars in the process. I think there is a very real possibility that the price of oil could continue to correct itself downwards by as much as 30-40% in the coming months.


Ed. Note: I just checked oil prices this morning (Monday, August 4) and they have tumbled below $120 (down $4) in intraday trading.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Big Oil: 2nd Quarter In Brief

Two-thousand eight second quarter corporate results were released in the past two weeks. I reviewed the numbers for the oil supermajors (with market capitaliation above $100B US): Exxon Mobil, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron, Total S.A. and Conoco Phillips.

Average Second Quarter production Rates (mboe/d)*
Major2008200720062005
Exxon Mobil2,3932,6682,7012,468
Royal Dutch Shell3,1263,1783,2533,526
Chevron2,5402,6302,6692,421
Total S.A.2,3532,3232,2902,506
BP3,8303,8044,0184,112
ConocoPhillips1,7501,9102,1301,540
Totals15,99216,51317,06116,573
Year-over-year change-3.16%-3.21%+2.94%

The highlights are as follows.
  • Profits were robust (as expected) due to high oil prices.

  • Production rates fell (not quite as expected) despite record capital expenditures.

  • All but two saw production decreases from the same quarter last year despite the fact that oil prices doubled in the same period.

  • The average year-over-year production drop was over 3% in each of the last two second quarters.
These are the unadulterated numbers. The production drops are under-reported because the companies only highlight production within their control and downplay production drops from the 'Chávez-factors'. For example, in Exxon Mobil's 2008 Q2 press release:

On an oil-equivalent basis, production decreased 7% from last year. Excluding impacts related to the Venezuela expropriation, the Nigeria labor strike and lower entitlement volumes, production was down 2%.
Also downplayed is the effect of asset sales; the reality is that most of such sales are mature fields that already in decline and are no longer material to the company. It seems that while global reserves have edged upwards, our ability to get them out of the ground under free-market conditions is quickly deteriorating, even with oil at record prices. Expropriation of reserves by state-governments is likely why oil prices have increased so rapidly: free-markets are losing control of production to countries like Venezuela, Russia and China. This is very bad for free-market pricing. So far at least, demand destruction has not appeared to offset the bullish market forces including resource nationalization, geopolitical instability and exponential production declines. The entire independent oil & gas industry tells the same story. I'm not predicting $300/bbl oil yet, but I wouldn't fault anyone for holding on to crude oil futures in light of this data.

There is one more recurring theme. Nearly all the refinery and gasoline distribution divisions were the least profitable and in some cases lost money. Exxon Mobil now plans to exit the gasoline distribution market citing very weakening margins. This is bad news for gas prices which have yet to increase by the same percentage as crude oil.

*mboe/d = Thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day. Natural gas volumes are converted to an oil-equivalent basis at a ratio of about 6 mcf:1 boe.