Alboran Energy Strategy Consutlatns

April 2023

  • Energy Musings, April 28, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

    Download the PDF

    April 28, 2023

    Bananas, Kumquats, and Today’s Inflation Problem

    Many investors believe inflation is on the run and soon will return to pre-pandemic lows. There is a history of head fakes about inflation that needs to be examined. READ MORE

    Bananas, Kumquats, and Today’s Inflation Problem

    Cornell University economist Alfred Kahn, President Jimmy Carter’s advisor on inflation and chair of the Council on Wage and Price Controls, was famous for talking about recessions and depressions as necessary to win the battle with the raging inflation of the 1970s.  He was chastised for using such scary language – remember we were not far removed from the Great Depression.  Kahn switched to calling them bananas until a banana company took offense and he changed to kumquats.  Who knew what a kumquat was?

    Politicians in Washington hate talking about recessions, let alone depressions.  But if inflation does not retreat to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target rate, people will continue suffering.  The good news: the March Consumer Price Index (CPI) for all items posted an increase of 5.0%, the smallest monthly rise since May 2021.  Energy falling 6.4% helped, with gasoline falling 17.4%, although electricity rose 10.2%.  Fortunately, the latter counts less in the index than the former.

    In the 1970s when the CPI was rising by 15%, Arthur Burns, chair of the Federal Reserve, asked his economists to develop an index that was less politically sensitive.  They came up with Core CPI which strips out the volatile food and energy components.  In March, however, Core CPI increased by 5.6%, largely attributed to an 8.2% increase in housing that represented over 60% of the total increase.  So much for getting rid of the volatile categories.  Compared to expectations, the March CPI was slightly better while Core CPI was slightly worse.  Good news or bad?

    On the bad side, since March 2021, the CPI has increased by 14.0% driven by food prices climbing 18.0% and energy soaring 23.6%.  Without those categories, Core CPI was 12.4% higher – better but not by much.  For consumers, food and fuel claim significant shares of people’s budgets but so do housing, autos, and health care expenses.  Inflation hurts, no matter who you are.

    Despite Main Street’s suffering, Wall Street cheered the CPI report.  Investment managers and CNBC talking heads rejoiced at the lower rate declaring the “end of inflation!”  They called the CPI’s steady decline since peaking at 9.1% last June a victory.  For them, the CPI is heading directly to the Federal Reserve’s 2% inflation target.  The stock market will soar.  Break out the champagne!

    At What Cost?

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

  • Energy Musings, April 18, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

    Download the PDF

    April 18, 2023

    Offshore Wind Is Hot; Rhode Island Only Got One Bid

    Is a single bid a sign of monopoly power or concern about economics of offshore wind projects? READ MORE

    Renewables Can Violate International Safety Standards

    Governments, except the Coast Guard, are waiving safety rules when shipping wind turbines. READ MORE

    Early 2023 Hurricane Outlook Is Positive

    Assuming El Niño develops, there will be slightly fewer storms, hurricanes, and days of storms. READ MORE

    EPA Takes America Back To Early 1900s

    Proposed emissions standards can only be met with transition to EVs, despite Americans’ dislike. READ MORE

    Offshore Wind Is Hot; Rhode Island Only Got One Bid

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

  • Energy Musings, April 3, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

    Download the PDF

    April 4, 2023

    It’s The Battery, Stupid! Really?

    Ford disclosed it has lost billions over the past two years on its EV business and will lose another $3 billion this year. Never fear, Ford has a plan to reach profitability in two years. Really? READ MORE

    What Happened To Oil Prices?

    The banking turmoil spawned by SVB’s bankruptcy caused oil prices to crash. Traders sold its long holding and bought short ones. As the dust cleared, oil prices recovered as demand built. READ MORE

    Here We Go Again With Offshore Wind Cost Fantasy

    The Biden administration wants more offshore wind and announced dramatically lower cost targets. Costs are rising, not falling, and only models are showing any improvement in LCOE. READ MORE

    Second European Oil CEO Assails Poor Green Energy Profits

    Shell Oil’s new CEO is recrafting the company’s business strategy. He, like his bp counterpart, recognizes that renewables earn marginal returns and the world needs oil for “a long, long time.” READ MORE

    Banking Crisis And Recession Fears Swamp Energy

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

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