The U.S. Federal Reserve raise interest rates

The US Federal Reserve raised interest rates on Wednesday for the first time since 2006.

After weeks of anticipation (or are we up to years already?) the U.S. Federal Reserve ended its zero-percent interest rate policy on December 16th. Chairwoman Janet Yellen kept to the script of advertising a gradual increase in interest rates for the foreseeable future, with pundits around the world guesstimating that rates will be in the vicinity of 1.25% by the end of 2016.

 

The U.S. dollar immediately spiked higher against, well, pretty much every currency in the world. U.S. exporters bemoaned the impact a strengthening currency would have on their businesses.
9Of course, the Fed isn’t the only force at work. There is China, of course, where the “mystery meat” is turning out to be less hot dogs and more rancid horse offal. My favorite bit of new economic terror is from November when the government started to prosecute stock traders who didn’t lose money during the summer market meltdown. Not exactly the sort of activity that engenders confidence in the world’s second-largest economy.

 
Europe isn’t exactly shaping up either, although the whiffs of financial panic that accompany the Eurozone crisis have at least abated for now. Greece sinks into the morass a bit more with every passing month; even the Greek government has stopped manufacturing the fiction that a recovery will happen anytime soon. Now we have the Schengen agreement – which regulates the ability of Europeans to border-jump without document checks – under varying degrees of suspension in Hungary, Slovenia, France, Germany, Denmark, Austria and the Netherlands (and I probably missed a couple).

 

A rising dollar combined with a fading Europe and stumbling China is of course the worst possible news for commodity markets. Sure, overproduction in global oil markets (and American natural gas markets) sets the tune, but there are plenty of supporting actors. Brazilian and Australian miners – backed both directly and indirectly by Chinese money seeking any safe haven outside of China – doubled down on production facilities during the 2005-2014 boom. Now with demand stalled a reckoning is due – and that’s the best case scenario. Should the Chinese recovery prove as unlikely as I believe, the entire commodities world is in for a very dark half-decade…which just pours more energy into the dollar.

 

All told 2015 has shaped up to be a year of record U.S. inflows. When all the data is crunched, we’re looking at over $2 trillion in capital flight flooding into U.S. markets. The kicker is that even should China and Europe stabilize, this is just the beginning. The American Boomers continue their inevitable march into retirement, and alllll of their foreign holdings – the money that financed everything from subprime to the BRIC boom to the commodities swell – will be rolling back during the next few years.

 

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China, Europe, commodities, the Boomers. These are all trillion dollar questions. Or perhaps it is more accurate to say they are all trillion dollar answers that the world just hasn’t quite internalized just yet.

 

Funny thing is, the Fed has quietly started us on the road to a much bigger split. As of this week the U.S. Federal Reserve is the only central bank in the world that is tightening monetary policy. The current expansion is coming up on seven years old, making it one of our longer periods of economic growth. We are due for a recession before long. The next time the global economy contracts, the United States will be the only country in the world with any monetary tools available.

Breaking News – OPEC dissolved as a meaningful organization at their Dec 4 summit.

Rather than adjusting OPEC’s production ceiling in an attempt to raise prices, or even generate a common policy to coordinate output, OPEC instead launched a production free-for-all. No longer will there be a quota – any quota. All members can now invest as much as they want, produce as much as they want, export as much as they want. Oil producers the world over are undoubtedly shivering in terrified anticipation. The Arab states of the Persian Gulf have by far the lowest production costs in the world, and if they do truly flood the market with low cost crudes, few – if any – have a hope of competing.

 

The Saudis’ goal can be summed up quite simply – force as many high-cost producers out of the oil markets as possible. This is accurate, but it is also incomplete. Yes, the Saudis would like to force its competitors to the financial breaking point, and yes, U.S. shale is an industry that the Saudis would like to wreck. But cracking apart the American shale sector is only one of many goals, and it is certainly not the primary one.

 

First and foremost, the Saudis are targeting Iran. With the Americans steadily stepping back from actively managing the Middle East, the Saudis are finding themselves forced to deal with their Iranian adversaries themselves. In this the Saudis are poorly positioned. While Saudi Arabia has plenty of top-notch military hardware, the Saudi people have no concept of what a military culture means. Iran has 30 years of experience building up insurgent movements and has proxies sprinkled throughout the Middle East. But the Saudis know full well that such proxies are expensive, and in a game of checkbook diplomacy the Saudis simply have more income and a bigger bank account.

 

Once sovereign wealth funds and less orthodox financial caches are factored in, the Saudis have – very conservatively — $1 trillion to throw at this problem, and that’s not even counting the personal assets of the royal family. The Saudis can sustain themselves in a low-price environment not for years, but for decades. Compare that to Iran’s hand-to-mouth budgeting. For the Saudis timing is critical; America’s rapprochement with the Iranians heralds increases in Iran’s oil output (albeit not likely in meaningful quantities until 2017). Best to drive prices down now and try to bankrupt Iran’s ability to wage proxy wars in Yemen, Lebanon, Syria and Iraq as well as the internal subsides that keep Iran’s population from revolting.

 

While Iran is clearly Saudi Arabia’s clear-and-present-danger, it is far from the only target.

 

Second on the list is Russia, whose oil output has risen to a new post-Cold War high. Russia is the world’s second-largest exporter, so a friendly Saudi-Russian relationship has never been in the cards. But the rivalry between Riyadh and Moscow is about more than just oil. The two have sparred indirectly for decades over the broad swath of weaker Muslim states that lie between them, and Russia’s ongoing rivalries with the United States consistently results in Russian actions that threaten Saudi interests. Russia’s intermittent sponsorship of Iran, and Russia’s involvement in the Syrian civil war opposite Saudi Arabia’s own proxies being cases in point. No wonder that the Saudis flooded the oil markets in the mid-1980s in a (successful) attempt to bankrupt the Soviet Union. No wonder the Saudis sponsored the mujahedeen in Afghanistan to gut the Soviet war machine. No wonder that the Saudis funded the Chechen rebellion in the 1990s. And no wonder the Saudi oil minister expressly called out the Russians when forcing upon OPEC the produce-as-much-as-you can policy.

 

oilsands

 

The third target of the new policy is a bit more obvious – those high price oil producers that have eroded Saudi market share over the decades, all of which are the prime beneficiaries of Saudi Arabia’s yesteryear policies of reducing oil output to bolster prices. With very few exceptions, none of these countries have ever actually reduced output themselves, instead relying upon the Saudis, Kuwaitis and Emiratis to bear the entire burden.

 

  • Canada: the world’s highest-cost producer is likely to be the biggest loser.
  • Norway: the Saudis particularly hate how reliable Norwegian output has been the past 20 years.
  • Russia: the multi-faceted nature of Saudi Arabia’s competition with Moscow earns Russia spot in this list as well.
  • Iran: with the strategic contest heating up, Iran also earns a double mention.
  • Libya: while its production costs are not all that high, the deepening civil war there threatens to remove Libyan production from the market completely. Lower oil prices could well be the factor that forcibly devolves Libya from chaos to anarchy – and destroys the entire energy complex.
  • Venezuela: while an OPEC “ally” who has always argued for lower production levels, Venezuela has not only never willingly reduced output, its output surges are what broke the 1970s Arab oil embargo – something that the Saudis have neither forgotten nor forgiven.
  • Nigeria: like Venezuela, the Nigerians have a nasty habit of putting Saudi money where their mouth is.

 

Collectively these countries are responsible for over 20 million barrels of daily oil output, and that oil income is responsible for the vast majority of their export earnings as well as the social stability that is required to produce the oil in the first place. As the Saudi thinking goes, break even one or two of them and a vast quantity of crude will fall off the market.

 

That just leaves us with American shale. When you add in the light condensates that shale output favors that are not technically crude, U.S. oil output is now above 12 million barrels per day. Largely courtesy of shale, American imports of crude have dropped by seven million barrels per day, five million of which used to come from OPEC members. Between shale’s success and continental integration, the NAFTA trio is now only two million barrels per day of outright energy independence. And by the end of 2017 the United States will surpass Qatar, Australia and Russia to become the world’s largest natural gas exporter.

 

basin-texas

 

Funny thing is, the Saudis were convinced until very recently that U.S. shale was just a PR campaign. They didn’t really admit shale was for real until 2013, and it wasn’t until 2014 that they realized shale would not simply reshape global oil markets, but contribute to the end of the American commitment to Saudi security. The Saudis would love to put a bullet in shale’s head.

 

But that time has already passed. Sure, back in 2012 the shale producers required oil prices at $90 or more to make a profit, but after a decade of technical advancement the industry is emerging from its infancy. New technologies like multi-lateral drilling and micro-seismic are vastly improving the amount of crude produced per well while vastly reducing the per-barrel production costs. More output per well means that surface infrastructure is now comprised of fewer, larger gathering pipes rather than an expensive crazy-quilt of tiny ones. New re-fracking and re-completion techniques are resetting older wells to their original output levels – or even higher. Taken together the full-cycle break-even price for the four major shale plays – Bakken, Permian, Eagleford and Marcellus – are already below $45 a barrel. By the time these new techs fully proliferate across the industry, the shale sector’s break-even is likely to be right around $30 – and that’s likely only a year away.

 

Which would put the destruction of shale firmly out of Saudi Arabia’s reach. But that’s ok.

 

The Saudis may miss on shale, but they have a very target-rich environment in front of them. There will be plenty of casualties.

Beginning of the End – Russia and Shale Oil

This is the first in a short series that discusses recent events as they relate to the analysis developed in The Accidental Superpower. Each of these developments — and dozens more — are symptoms of an underlying change the global order.

Part 1: Shale and the Breakdowns to Come

The Russian economy is a mess. The ruble keeps plumbing new lows, lending across the country has all but stopped, sanctions (and counter-sanctions) are raising the specter of Soviet-style goods shortages, and even the Russian government now predicts 2016 will bring with it the worst recession since at least 1998.

 

Many — rightly — see the economic carnage being wrought in Russia as an outcome of the Putin government’s adventures in Ukraine and subsequent economic sanctions against Moscow. But that is only part of the story.

 

In Russia the core issue isn’t so much Ukraine as it is shale. U.S. energy output has skyrocketed and North America has already achieved functional energy independence. The consequent shockwaves through global energy markets are hiving what used to be the largest importing market — the United States — off of the global market. One consequence among many is collapse in oil prices. Russia has never — in any age — managed to maintain a strong economic structure without robust commodity export income. The ruble crash is still only in the very early stages. Cascading defaults are now inevitable.

 

Nor will the carnage be short lived. U.S. shale is – somewhat unbelievably – still in its infancy. The merging of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing technologies is really only a decade old and technological improvement is only now reaching critical mass. As of December 2015 full-cycle break-even costs in the three main U.S. shale oil basins — Bakken, Permian and Eagleford — are for the most part below $45 a barrel. Stunning new technologies are being developed, bundled into packages, and deployed as companies seek to find ways to produce more from fewer wells to save money.

 

And “full-cycle cost” is no longer a good measure of the total cost to drill a well as it includes everything from the drilling rights to the cleanup. As lower energy prices force consolidation, the remaining U.S. shale operators will acquire the single most expensive aspect of their operations — those drilling rights — at steep discounts. The dizzy year-on-year expansion in U.S. oil output is slowing, but it shows few signs of reversing.

US-Production-Crude-Oil

Base Week: September 30, 2005

More broadly, there is not a single oil producer anywhere in the world that has budgeted for an oil price below $50, with most — and most notably, Russia, Iran and Venezuela — requiring prices to be roughly double their current level. Many of these countries’ spending is so high because they have come to rely on petrodollars to fund social programs or military funding that stabilizes their political systems. While it may take some time, civil breakdowns and economic meltdowns are the new normal for a vast raft of commodity-based countries