Spekulatius Posted Saturday at 04:51 PM Posted Saturday at 04:51 PM 12 minutes ago, Marco Van Basten said: Can they be buried underground? Yes, but it takes longer and is more expensive. The substations are large and I don’t think they can be simply put underground and hence still could be targets. They can be hardened against drone attacks.
SharperDingaan Posted Saturday at 06:14 PM Posted Saturday at 06:14 PM 1 hour ago, Marco Van Basten said: Can they be buried underground? Not much point when the pipe itself, and oil storage facilities are all above ground. Pipe just changes the egress point; if that egress is subsequently blocked, the pipe becomes 'shut-in' and pretty useless. Also keep in mind that the much touted Iran/US MOU is not the end of the war either, it is just a temporary cease fire and rounds of nuclear negotiations at some targeted future date. Other than rotation, it is unlikely that most of the US task force and aircraft are returning home anytime soon. SD
Stuart D Posted yesterday at 12:27 AM Posted yesterday at 12:27 AM (edited) Change of tune from chevron CEO, now saying oil markets might now be ok until September. Edited yesterday at 01:05 AM by Stuart D
ratiman Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago (edited) If we get a 60 day window why wouldn't everybody scramble to top up their inventory? We might go right back to a blockade after 60 days and presumably China and US won't be drawing down SPRs during the 60 day window, if anything they will be building them back up. So if that is the case why wouldn't oil go UP if there's a deal? Edited 12 hours ago by ratiman
TwoCitiesCapital Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago (edited) On 6/2/2026 at 8:00 PM, Blake Hampton said: I agree over the long-term. But what about deflation? "History tells the story. In the United States, we have had decades of good growth without inflation—in the 1950s and early 1960s, and again in the 1990s through the early 2000s. Those years of stability were also marked by eight recessions, mostly quick, that posed no risk of deflation. Only once in the past century, in the 1930s, have we had deflation, serious deflation. In 2008-2009 there was cause for concern. The common characteristic of those two incidents was collapse of the financial system." — Paul Volcker, Keeping At it Add to that list 2020 since Volcker died in December of 2019. The hallmark of a systemic credit crisis is extreme deflation. The only asset you can count on not collapsing in price during a crisis like that is cash. There's a reason deflation hasn't happened since the Great Depression and that inflation was the escape valve (devaluing against gold and then mass austerity of personal consumption to rebuild savings and investment in the war effort). Once we found Keynesian religion, and realized we could just print our way out of any mess (or default against the obligations of a hard currency), we did. I used to think along the same lines as you - that debt was deflationary. And it is - for anyone who can't print their own currency. But we're the latter and currently have forced buyers of the USD regardless of how much we print (at least for now), so deflation aint going to happen. On 6/13/2026 at 7:30 AM, SharperDingaan said: It takes a lot longer than a year to build new pipe, and the terminal infrastructure required to accommodate it. Most would assume 24-30 months minimum, inclusive of upgrades, testing, and line fill. SD Not to mention that other infrastructure in the area has been damaged/destroyed by Iran and nothing says new infrastructure wouldn't be under similar threats. I don't know what the right price for oil is - but if we could hit $150/barrel in 2008, I don't see why $150/barrel today is out of the question. It would still be a significantly lower inflation adjusted top from 2008, comparable to the Russia/Ukraine episode, and reflects the ongoing supply shock, the increased insurance premium, AND that nations will need to rebuilt some level of inventories even if traditional drivers of demand fall off. If oil wasn't going to head higher, I don't know why we're doing all of these reserve releases and jawboning trying to prevent it. I think it's clear that the price has been artificially suppressed and the only questions are by how much, and for how long, and how high will it go when that suppression stops. Edited 7 hours ago by TwoCitiesCapital
Dalal.Holdings Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/iran-threatens-to-pull-out-of-talks-after-israel-strikes-beiruts-outskirts-d0390e22 Quote Trump said the Strait of Hormuz would be reopened on Friday, indicating in a social-media post the time was needed “for purposes of mine removal.” In an earlier post, Trump said that Iran’s restrictions on shipping in the Strait and the U.S. naval blockade on Iran would be simultaneously and immediately lifted.
Gregmal Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Oils still 20% higher than pre war and ...."oil hasn't gone up"...
Blake Hampton Posted 12 minutes ago Posted 12 minutes ago We made a deal with Iran. Whoopee fucking ding dong.
Blake Hampton Posted 2 minutes ago Posted 2 minutes ago 7 hours ago, TwoCitiesCapital said: There's a reason deflation hasn't happened since the Great Depression and that inflation was the escape valve (devaluing against gold and then mass austerity of personal consumption to rebuild savings and investment in the war effort). Once we found Keynesian religion, and realized we could just print our way out of any mess (or default against the obligations of a hard currency), we did. I used to think along the same lines as you - that debt was deflationary. And it is - for anyone who can't print their own currency. But we're the latter and currently have forced buyers of the USD regardless of how much we print (at least for now), so deflation aint going to happen. Money in our economy is primarily credit. When there is a run on the system, and the means for originating credit come to a halt, deflation is the only outcome due to the money supply rapidly shrinking. 2008 and 2020 were both instances of the Federal Reserve and Treasury racing against deflation in order to stave off collapse of the financial system.
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