Deflating The Oil Glut: First Supply, Then Demand

 | Jun 23, 2015 12:21AM ET

They call it an oil glut for a reason.

There is too much oil in the system today. The U.S. fracking revolution has added four million barrels of oil to the global supply per day. But that’s just the U.S., and that’s just since 2009. Since 1996, it’s gone up about 15 million worldwide.

As the world economy has slowed, oil production has ramped up. How could that not end badly?

The crisis has emerged in the past year as oil fell from $115 to $43. Even today’s $60 levels threaten to dismantle many oil producers. Most can’t keep up with the leading producers like Saudi Arabia that operate at absurdly low production costs.

So many look to news that the oil rig count is droppin g as a sign that oil will return to triple-digit levels. They think producers will re-inflate the bubble, and soon.

Let me be clear: Oil will not rise above $100 for the next decade or longer… and I continue to predict that it will fall to $10 to $20 in the next several years ahead. That’s because much of the oil industry today is built upon a mirage.

When oil crashed from $147 to $32 in a matter of months in 2008, the artificial recovery eventually propped it back up to $115 by 2013. This was thanks to QE and global stimulus.

This and the falling yields on junk bonds helped launch the “fracking revolution” in the U.S. Yields fell from as much as 10% down to 5.5%, and drillers swept this up to fund their operations while investors threw $1 trillion-plus into the enterprise.

Thanks to the conditions of a drugged-up global economy, the U.S. has shifted (temporarily) from a leading importer of oil to a leading producer. But as I said, other countries have added to the glut.

Russia has added four million barrels to daily production since 1996. China and Canada together have added 2.5 million in that time. And since 2002, Iraq and Saudi Arabia have added another two million each. Just see the chart: