ChooseLiberty
Member
- Joined
- May 30, 2007
- Messages
- 2,509
There's a lot of discussion on the price of oil, supply/demand and inflation.
Here's an easy way to look at it -
You're really talking about two things S/D Oil and S/D US dollars.
Let's look at approx the last 10 years and assume there is a form of "real" money - gold.
In late 1997 the peak $ price in West Texas Intermediate was about $27 and gold was about $400. So about .07 oz of gold bought a barrel.
In late 2000 that same ratio peaked at .14. So the price of Oil doubled relative to gold.
Currently the ratio is about .16 approx the same as 2000, but the price of WTI in $ has gone from about $27 in late 1997 to about $140 current. This is approx 5X.
So an easy approximation is that the S/D for WTI has doubled while the effect of $ inflation accounts for the other 3X. And the S/D effect for WTI made it's adjustment in the late 90's, while the inflation effect has occured since 2000 as the US gov/Fed flooded the banks and economy with $, mostly after 2001.
Comments?
Here's an easy way to look at it -
You're really talking about two things S/D Oil and S/D US dollars.
Let's look at approx the last 10 years and assume there is a form of "real" money - gold.
In late 1997 the peak $ price in West Texas Intermediate was about $27 and gold was about $400. So about .07 oz of gold bought a barrel.
In late 2000 that same ratio peaked at .14. So the price of Oil doubled relative to gold.
Currently the ratio is about .16 approx the same as 2000, but the price of WTI in $ has gone from about $27 in late 1997 to about $140 current. This is approx 5X.
So an easy approximation is that the S/D for WTI has doubled while the effect of $ inflation accounts for the other 3X. And the S/D effect for WTI made it's adjustment in the late 90's, while the inflation effect has occured since 2000 as the US gov/Fed flooded the banks and economy with $, mostly after 2001.
Comments?
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