May 7, 2024
At first glance, lower oil prices seem great!  Little guys like us see a small but immediate benefit paying less at the gas pump – maybe saving the average person $5 or $10 or $15 a week.  That adds up!
BUT
“We’re in a major economic collapse on a global scale. Most people do not understand that this is the real threat we face.”
– Martin Armstrong (article  HERE )
Despite all the money creation, despite all the intense printing and digitizing of new “money” into creation, no one is buying up the oil being sold at unexpectedly low prices.  This means one of two things:
Those in control KNOW that there is a concerted effort by major powers to drive oil prices even lower and the bottom is not in yet.  They are waiting for even lower oil prices before making major purchases.  This is possible, if – for example – Saudi Arabia decided they can handle temporary low oil income in order to put new American Shale Oil producers in and around North Dakota out of business.  The new supply from the US and Canada could be perceived as a major threat to what was once a Saudi or at least an OPEC monopoly on oil supply – but the new companies in North America need oil around $80-90/barrel to be profitable.  At $50/barrel, there will be many bankruptcies in the oil sands and shale oil regions.
Here is a good article “How Much Oil Goes Missing at $50/Barrel?”  Keith Shaeffer explains how lower oil prices will kill new American oil companies.  Let’s say you run ABC Oil Company.  You have, as best as geologists can tell, 120 Million barrels of oil under your land.  Some is near the surface and cheap to drill for.  Let’s say 5 million barrels will cost $45/barrel to drill for and pump up.  For simplicity, lets say another 5 million barrels exist in the ground on your land at increasingly deeper and more expensive levels at every $5 mark, with the last 5 million barrels requiring $160/barrel extraction costs.  You want to borrow $300 million from banks to pay for drills and engineers (etc) to produce your oil and start making profits.  The bank bases your company’s potential value on the profits you could make if everything goes well, based on year end values (as of December 31.)
When Oil was at $100/barrel, all your in-the-ground oil that would cost $100/barrel or more to produce was deemed worthless.  But you still had 5 million barrels that would cost $95/barrel to obtain, they would potentially be worth 25 million dollars.  The 5 million barrels that would only cost $90/barrel could yield $10 profit and are worth $50 million.  And so on down to the best, cheapest barrels that only cost $45/barrel, yielding $55 profit and valued at $275 million.  With these numbers your company has potential profits of 25+50+75+100+125+150+175+200+225+250+275 = 1.85 billion dollars, easily justifying a $300 million loan that doesn’t seem very risky to the bank.
But at $50 oil prices, most of your oil is now unprofitable and worthless as a reserve unless prices rise.  The bank says you have just 5 million potentially profitable barrels that can be produced for $45/barrel.  A potential profit of $25 million.  Period.  Your company has lost 1,825 million dollars in potential profits, down to just $25 million, spread over however much time it takes.  Can you make $8 million/year for three years if oil prices don’t fall at all?  Sure.  Will anyone loan you $300 million to get started?  No – ABC Oil will be filing for bankruptcy.  Maybe the Saudis will buy your land cheap and then raise the price on the oil they sell.
EDIT on January 8 – the first REAL shale oil company bankruptcy just occurred – “On Sunday, a private company that drills in Texas, WBH Energy LP, and its partners, filed for bankruptcy protection, saying a lender refused to advance more money. There are many more to come.”  Full article: The First Shale Casualty
Bye Bye, thousands of jobs in North Dakota and Canada (and Texas) as these North American companies go bankrupt.  Bye bye, hundreds of jobs at refineries, and for truckers and geologists and petrochemical engineers.
In the video HERE, the Saudi say $20/barrel oil is possible – yet they are not cutting production.  In normal economics, when capitalism rules and the goal is higher profits, all producers cut production when supply exceeds demand by enough to cause such a collapse in prices.  It makes financial sense to cut supply of your product so scarcity will make those who must buy it pay more.  Since the Saudis are not cutting production, the goals are not economic but POLITICAL.  There is a tangled web of relationships involving the US, Russia, Iran, ISIS…
Even halfway around the world, deals are being cancelled and new production plans halted at current unprofitable prices.
Another possibility is even worse.  Those in control can tell a major economic depression is starting and they are afraid to spend money they may DESPERATELY need soon – with none to spare for bargain investments like half-price oil.
Every reasonable explanation points to bad economic and geopolitical problems ahead.
FWIW, I have been predicting the worst economic devastation of our lives to be in full swing by early 2016.  I believe such a crisis is described in the Bible and that it will create the crisis the Antichrist needs to seize more complete power.
If interested in the prophetic angle, please check out End Times and 2019 – and – Antichrist 2016-2019

About Author