How to Profit from Peak Oil, Investor Opportunities of a Lifetime
Commodities / Oil Companies Dec 21, 2011 - 03:55 AM GMT With resource stocks extraordinarily  cheap, 321energy.com Founder Bob Moriarty calls them "an opportunity of a  lifetime," in this exclusive interview with The Energy Report. However,  investors need to steer clear of the dangers of derivatives. Moriarty explains  how the hypothecation hobgoblins associated with these instruments can sneak up  on investors and zero out accounts in a flash.
With resource stocks extraordinarily  cheap, 321energy.com Founder Bob Moriarty calls them "an opportunity of a  lifetime," in this exclusive interview with The Energy Report. However,  investors need to steer clear of the dangers of derivatives. Moriarty explains  how the hypothecation hobgoblins associated with these instruments can sneak up  on investors and zero out accounts in a flash. 
 The Energy Report: Peak  oil has returned as a popular topic of conversation, and you've been talking  about it for some time. Are we really in the era of peak oil, with oil  production diminishing? Or do we just lack cheap oil?
The Energy Report: Peak  oil has returned as a popular topic of conversation, and you've been talking  about it for some time. Are we really in the era of peak oil, with oil  production diminishing? Or do we just lack cheap oil?
  
  Bob Moriarty: It's both. We've reached the peak of oil production, which  doesn't mean we're going to run out of oil, but we've run out of cheap oil. When  the Saudi oil fields opened in the 1940s and 1950s, their return on investment  was $350 per barrel. When OPEC formed in 1959, they were profitable selling  Saudi oil at $0.10 a barrel. The cheap, high-grade, high-quality oil is all  gone now, and the days of finding giant oil fields with high-grade oil that was  relatively inexpensive —such as Ghawar in Saudi Arabia and the Cantarell off  Mexico—are gone. They're history. 
  
  With the resources in the tar sands of Canada, we're going to have oil for  another 100 years of production, but it's very expensive. It's very dirty, with  a number of political issues in focus, such as the Keystone XL pipeline to the  United States. Production will be problematic.
  
  TER: Besides the tar sands, oil appears to be available offshore both in  North and South America.
  
  BM: Yes, but these projects carry ferociously expensive costs. Some of  the wells BP was drilling a year and a half ago, going 25,000 feet (ft) deep,  cost hundreds of millions of dollars each. 
  
  TER: You mentioned that the Canadian tar sands probably hold enough  oil—albeit expensive to extract and dirty—to last 100 years. Meanwhile, the  U.S. sits atop some major natural gas fields, and natural gas is unbelievably  cheap right now. Why aren't oil-powered vehicles and other machines being  converted to run on natural gas?
  
  BM: Natural gas is handy for some things. It's used in a lot of power  generation. It's very valuable to replace heat or coal or diesel. But you  couldn't power an aircraft with natural gas under any circumstances; it simply  wouldn't work.
  
  Gasoline and oil are very portable and very cheap. You can go to the hardware  store, buy an inexpensive container and carry around five gallons of oil or  gasoline. To get the same amount of energy from natural gas probably would cost  $1,000 for a container. All kinds of technical and temperature issues make  natural gas ineffective as a portable energy source.
  
  TER: So if natural gas is not the solution, we're stuck with the more  expensive alternatives. And if it's dirty and expensive, what are the economic  implications of getting oil from the Canadian tar sands to the U.S.?
  
  BM: Dirty is expensive. And when you start talking about getting the  oils from the tar sands to the United States, which is the major market, you  run into all kinds of issues. Politicians and lobbyists will spend years  delaying the pipeline until their personal agendas are satisfied.
  
  TER: Senator Mitch McConnell called the Keystone XL Pipeline, which is  proposed to carry tar sands oil from Canada down through the U.S. to Texas for  processing, the single greatest "shovel-ready" project in America. He  said it's ready to go, but Obama doesn't want to deal with it until after the  2012 elections. In an era when we need oil and people need jobs so badly, why the  political slowdown?
  
  BM: Every organization and every government official has an agenda, and  not necessarily your agenda. You and I may want the tar sands oil as soon as  possible and as cheap as possible. Obama has his own agenda—to get reelected.
  
  TER: There also have been discussions about building a pipeline across  Canada to bring it to Vancouver and potentially ship it to China. In terms of  an investment opportunity, what does that mean for the tar sands oil producers?
  
  BM: There will be a lot of investment opportunities. The question is  when. The longer the transportation issue—a pipeline—is delayed, the more  expensive it will be to operate and lower the return on the investment will be.  Ultimately, though, I think there's a good chance that Canada will decide that  China and Japan and Asia are better, more dependable markets than the United  States.
  
  TER: Over what timeframe do you suppose that pipeline will be built?
  
  BM: We are facing some pretty serious economic issues right now. Should  we go into a depression soon, which is my belief, the decrease in energy demand  could kill this project and others for years.
  
  TER: But your writings suggest that you're interested in some  Canada-based energy companies based on what you consider their good potential for  return. Don't these companies face the same margin squeeze with the prospect of  higher transportation costs?
  
  BM: Not at all. The tar sands are in a pretty inaccessible part of  Canada. The junior companies I deal with have access to pipelines, refineries  and major markets, so it' won't affect them.
  
  TER: Would demand come to them first as lower-cost producers, and help  their profit pictures?
  
  BM: Of course. It would be a very good thing for them. Everything that's  bad for one group is good for another.
  
  TER: What are some other companies with good prospects?
  
  BM: Two juniors I'd like to talk about are doing a really excellent job.  A few months ago the stock of Aroway Energy  Inc. (ARW:CVE) was $0.32 a share. It's doubled since then, and it's another  easy double from here. It "should" probably be worth $1–$1.20 a share  right now. These guys have done a bang-up job. They're producing 669 barrels a  day at Peace River in Alberta.
  
  TER: Is your analysis of what the stock should be worth just based on  Aroway's current production times the barrel of oil equivalent (boe) price in  the marketplace?
  
  BM: Yes. Oil fields are actually relatively homogeneous, so people can  know on a daily basis what a barrel in the ground or barrel of production is  worth.
  
  TER: What's the other company you wanted to mention?
  
  BM: Blackdog  Resources Ltd. (DOG:TSX.V) just finished a well within the past couple of  weeks. Its stock is at $0.40 a share and the company has about 26 million  shares, so market cap of about $10 million (M). Based in Calgary, Blackdog  could be $1 a share easily.
  
  TER: Aroway has projections to increase production over the next 12-months.  Is Blackdog producing yet or just drilling and exploring? 
  
  BM: Blackdog is doing exactly the same thing as Aroway, producing and  exploring. It's just a little bit earlier stage. The company is producing  something like 150 barrels a day now, but literally has wells coming into  production as we speak.
  
  Production is critical, because the world's financial system is blowing up and  counterparty risk is enormous. If you're not invested in something real, you're  going to wake up and find yourself poor.
  
  TER: Could you expand on that counterparty risk and the concept of  investing in something real to minimize investors' chances of waking up poor?
  
  BM: With the collapse of the major global commodities broker MF Global  at the end of October, up to $2.5 billion worth of its customers' money  evaporated. Investors as financially sophisticated as Trends  Journal Publisher Gerald Celente went to bed rich and woke up to  worthless accounts.
  
  Some very important concepts, hypothecation and re-hypothecation, are involved when it comes to derivatives,  which are financial instruments that gain their value from something else.  Suppose that you open a commodities account because you expect the price of  gold, silver or oil will go up. You deposit $100,000 margin and buy a contract  for gold, silver or oil. Let's say things go wrong because of hypothecation,  re-hypothecation and counterparty risk.
  
  Here's what happens with hypothecation. The broker-dealer usually goes to a  bank and borrows money to loan you. But in this scenario you put up twice as  much as the margin required, so he doesn't even loan money to you. Regardless,  you are required to sign a statement saying you will allow the broker-dealer to  hypothecate the account. This pledges everything in your account to the bank.  Broker-dealers borrow money from the bank at, say, 3% and loan it to customers  at maybe 6%. That's how they make money. In this scenario, the problem is that  the broker-dealer created a risk for you that never occurred to you. If the  broker dealer reneges on the loan, the bank can demand all the assets you have  deposited even if they are in your account and you don't owe anyone anything.
  
  With re-hypothecation, the broker-dealer can take money from a number of  customers—let's say $1B from 10,000 customers—and buy something like Greek  one-year bonds that are paying 352% today. The broker-dealer pledges your  assets against that bet. That gets really slick, because if the Greek bonds  actually pay 352%, he or she pockets that money. But if the bonds blow up—which  some people have been predicting for years—you lose all your money.
  
  TER: Is this true on any bank account?
  
  BM: It's true of any margin account. If you open a margin account with  Schwab, put up $1M and buy $500,000 worth of securities, you're not using  margin but you've still signed that agreement. You can wake up one morning and  find all your money gone.
  
  For years and years I've been saying that derivatives of this magnitude are not  sustainable in a rational economic system. We have a $64 trillion (T) world  economy, and we're basically up to $708T in derivatives. You cannot have $708T  in derivatives unless most of it is fraud.
  
  MF Global was defrauding its customers and its customers didn't even know it.  There could be another 100 MF Globals out there. At the end of the day, a lot  of brokerage accounts will blow up and people are going to go to bed rich and  wake up poor. The danger today is not buying Aroway or Blackdog and seeing the  value of your stock cut in half. The danger is that your broker will blow up.
  
  TER: Is it fraud because investors don't know about the hypothecation  and re-hypothecation? That they don't know what's being done with their money?
  
  BM: That's correct. Literally until weeks before MF Global's collapse, I  think on the books they were showing $70M being used for re-hypothecation when  in fact it was $6.5B.
  
  TER: Why such a big gap?
  
  BM: The way they do the books creates that gap. Greece and Italy and  Spain got into the EU because JP Morgan and Sachs cooked the books by leaving  their assets on the books and moving their liabilities off the books. Jon  Corzine moved $6.5B in liabilities off the books and nobody realized they had  enormous exposure, and when the financial system in the EU blew up it took  $6.5B of MF Globals' money with it. What's really scary is that nobody's in  jail is because all of this is perfectly legal—a scam, but a legal scam. If  they make money, they keep it; if they lose money, you pay.
  
  TER: This is easy money with no risk for brokers.
  
  BM: Exactly. And the danger is somebody at Schwab or E-Trade or Merrill  Lynch or 100 other institutions can go out and do the same thing tomorrow. It's  just as legal. They can speculate on something like Greek bonds paying 352% and  some fool will think that's a good deal.
  
  TER: Wow. That's a very compelling argument and it certainly underscores  your point of buying real assets.
  
  BM: But if you go out and buy shares of Aroway or Blackdog, you may want  to get a share certificate in your name in your hands because you can count on  some stock brokerage accounts to disappear in the same way the Gerald Celente's  hundreds of thousands of dollars disappeared. You're at enormous risk if you  have a margin account with any kind of a broker.
  
  TER: Do you run the same risk in a non-margined account?
  
  BM: In theory, no; in practice, yes.
  
  TER: And what's the practice?
  
  BM: The practice is that $708T in derivatives, probably 80% of which is  fraud, and nobody but me, Jim Sinclair and maybe Jim Rogers understands the  potential risk. In theory, there's $210T in debt in the world and $150T in  assets. I think in practice there's up to $400T worth of debt and the system is  going to blow sky-high. Our financial system is on the precipice of an  absolute, total collapse. And it's going to be catastrophic to the wealth of most  people. This is the most serious I have ever been about anything. Derivatives  are a giant casino. It's a crap game. It's all fraud.
  
  Back in 1997 the head of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)  was extremely concerned at the size of the derivatives market and battled to  get regulations in place to control it. The head of JP Morgan, as well as  Robert Rubin, who was Treasury Secretary and the head of Goldman Sachs, and  Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve, all fought her. She lost. By  2002 derivatives had grown to $100T, and clearly were going to blow the system  sky-high. Now—and these numbers are really staggering—the Bank for  International Settlements reports that derivatives grew $107T between January  and July of this year. That's 18% in a six-month period, which means  derivatives are growing about 40% a year.
  
  TER: Now that you have everybody shaking in their boots, let's shift  gears a bit. One of your articles equated peak energy to peak food. Earlier you  reminded us that we're not about to run out of oil, but cheap oil is a  different story. Is it the same with food? That we aren't going to run out of  food, but the days of cheap food are history?
  
  BM: Exactly. And when the cost of food goes up the costs of the  additives literally goes down in relative terms. Let me give you a perfect  example. It takes 81,000 calories of energy to produce 75,000 calories of  energy in the form of ethanol—for a net loss. It has to be subsidized.  Regardless of the conditions, production of ethanol is a net loser. The U.S.  government has literally been bribed by corn producers and big food companies,  doling out subsidies for the production of ethanol that drove corn prices up  literally all over the world.
  
  I went to a vegetable market in Guyana, for instance, that was selling four  really scrawny ears of corn for $5. That's a result of these silly practices in  the United States. Increases in the prices of corn and wheat throughout the  Middle East triggered the Arab Spring. I think three billion people in the  world survive on less than $2 a day, so when the cost of food goes up 50%—as it  has in the last year—many of those who were marginal before are starving now.  That leads to revolutions.
  
  TER: You've been big on potash. Because potash in fertilizers helps  increase food production per acre, do you think potash is due for another  run-up in price?
  
  BM: Potash is a form of energy. Food is a form of energy. To make more  food you need more energy and you need more potash. There are enormous potash  deposits, basins of sedimentary deposits—basically a variation of salt—that  date back tens of millions of years. We know where they are. They're easy to  drill. A lot of people are going to make a lot of money in potash.
  
  You can bet on some things in the short term and others in the long term. I  don't think anyone would conclude the cost of energy is going to go down over  the long term, because there are no cheap energy sources. There is no magic  bullet. So the cost of food is going to go up.
  
  Real safe investments for 5, 10 or 15 years would be food, potash, water, oil  and natural gas. Good shorter-term investments would be anything real—gold,  silver, platinum and anything that you can actually hold in your hand.
  
  TER: According to John Williams of ShadowStats, inflation is running around  11% if fuel and food are included. Where's the upside if you're looking at  investments in potash, oil and such that could play out in five to 10 years and  you're dealing with double-digit inflation?
  
  BM: I love it when something goes down in price. I love it when shoes or  socks or coats or boats or airplanes go down in price. I don't have any  particular problem with it when a stock I really like goes down in price,  either, because it makes it possible to buy more. So I think the fact that  potash is down now in relative terms is wonderful.
  
  TER: So suppose you buy potash on sale at today's prices. It's not worth  anything unless you can sell it, so when would you expect a return on that  investment? Five years?
  
  BM: No, no, soon—three months, six months, a year.
  
  TER: Because your underlying assumption is that the costs of energy and  food will go up in the near term, how do you recommend playing the potash  market dynamic?
  
  BM: I think any potash company would be a good investment right now.
  
  TER: When we chatted at the Hard Assets Conference in San Francisco you  mentioned being intrigued by another potash company in addition to those you've  been following for some time.
  
  BM: Yes, North American Potash Developments Inc. (NPD:TSX.V;  RNGTF:OTCQX; 3OZ:Fkft) just released drilling results this month. It had a  3,450-foot rotary drill and core hole on its Lisbon Valley property in Utah,  and reported 15 ft total thickness and 10.4% potash at 2,600 ft deep, which is  very good. There were two potash beds; one was 19 ft and one was 24 ft. Two  different holes, one was 5 ft at 13%. Those are good results. That's going to  be an interesting story. Because the potash was laid down as water evaporated,  it doesn't take many holes of it to be good.
  
  TER: So this company is basically going after a deep-shaft type of  potash versus an open pit?
  
  BM: No. Actually it's in-situ leaching. The right kind of potash can be  leached in place by pumping hot water down, bringing the brine to the surface,  spreading it out in big pads to air-dry, and then just harvesting it with scoop  loaders. It's a very cheap way of doing it.
  
  TER: How does that compare to the other companies?
  
  BM: Well, Passport Potash Inc. (PPI:TSX.V; PPRTF:OTCQX) has been  doing a lot of drilling and is finally coming out with some results. The issue  there is not technical; it's management and communications. They simply have to  release more information. Eventually they'll start telling the story. I have  discussions with management about what they do well and what they do poorly, and  what Passport's done poorly over the last year is communicate.
  
  TER: You said that any potash company would be a good investment right  now. What are some more names?
  
  BM: They're easy to find. Buy the potash companies because they've been  hammered like gold stocks, silver stocks and other resource stocks. Buy  resource stocks, anything in resources—water, energy, food and land. The  resource stocks are cheaper in real terms now than they were at the bottoms of  the market in both 2001 and 2008. They're extraordinarily cheap. I think it's  an opportunity of a lifetime.
  
  TER: You're not the only one to say that. People are talking about  precious metals and rare earth metal stocks all being on sale—large ones,  juniors, pretty much the whole sector. Would you say the same thing of oil and  gas?
  
  BM: Yes. But here's the deal in terms of the global economy: All these  people are swinging at this giant piñata loaded with nitroglycerin. One day  soon, somebody's going to hit the piñata and when that happens, you want your finances  under control. I would recommend against having a margin account with any  broker under any circumstances right now unless you're prepared to write off  100% of your investment.
  
  TER: Any other thoughts you'd like to leave with our readers?
  
  BM: We're at the most dangerous time financially in the world's history.  There are enormous risks. A lot of people are going to lose a lot of money.  This is not a time for speculation or borrowing. It's time to head for the  bunker. It's time to be aware of what's going on financially. And it's time to  be especially conservative.
  
  Convinced that gold and silver were at their bottoms, and wanting to give  others a foundation for investing in resource stocks, Bob and Barb Moriarty brought 321gold.com to the Internet 10 years ago, and later added 321energy.com to cover  oil, natural gas, gasoline, coal, solar, wind and nuclear energy. Both sites  feature articles, editorial opinions, pricing figures and updates on relevant  current events. Before his Internet career, Moriarty was a Marine F 4B pilot  and O 1C/G forward air controller with more than 820 missions in Vietnam. A  captain at age 22, he was the youngest naval aviator in Vietnam and one of the  war's most highly decorated. He holds 14 international aviation records, and  once flew an airplane through the Eiffel Tower's pillars "just for  fun."
  
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  DISCLOSURE: 
  1) Karen Roche of The Energy Report conducted this interview. She  personally and/or her family own shares of the following companies mentioned in  this interview: None.
  2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The  Energy Report: Aroway Energy Inc. and Passport Potash Inc. Streetwise  Reports does not accept stock in exchange for services.
  3) Bob Moriarty: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following  companies mentioned in this interview: Aroway Energy Inc., Black Dog Resources  Ltd. and Passport Potash Inc. I personally and/or my family am paid by the  following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by  Streetwise for participating in this story. 
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