Editorial on oil by IBD and sammy
Hat tip to reader sammy Title: Are We Really Running Out of Oil? This post might give the Peak Oilers pause. Arctic Abundance found originally at USGS. It has become…
Hat tip to reader sammy Title: Are We Really Running Out of Oil? This post might give the Peak Oilers pause. Arctic Abundance found originally at USGS. It has become…
…real numbers, instead they brought rhetorical rubber knives to an economic gunfight. Faced with the reality that Trust Fund depletion was not projected until 2041, well after the peak impact…
…famous to me) 2005 “Perfect Storm” prediction, I gave four reasons why the US economy was heading for disaster: 1) Higher oil prices caused by Peak Oil. 2) An asset…
…peak for this indicator was November, two months before the January peak in industrial production. This data series is showing a decline that looks fairly normal for the last few…
…PWU peaks 7/1954, 2 month delay Recession 8/57 to 4/58, PWU peaks 7/1958, 3 month delay Recession 4/60 to 2/61, PWU peaks 7/1961, 5 month delay Recession 12/69 to 11/70,…
…energy. As the authors conclude keeping in mind peak production issues and the declining output of Saudi’s fields: “From a long-term sustainability viewpoint, this conclusion carries a powerful implication. If…
…the peak of the housing cycle to an impact on the overall economy. For the current cycle, it appears housing sales peaked in July 2005. Best Regards, CR Calculated Risk…
…makes one wonder if the world’s oil extraction is actually at or near its peak (often referred to as the Hubbert Peak), or if instead we’re currently just seeing a…
…prices fall by an average of about 30%. The bigger the price boom in the period leading up to the peak, the bigger the fall in prices after the peak….
…lasting more than a few months, visible in industrial production, employment, real income and wholesale-retail sales. A recession begins just after the economy reaches a peak of activity and ends…