An Oil Panic in Plain Sight
– Hurricane Katrina smashes “Energy Alley,” a concentrated 
area of oil production in Gulf of Mexico that supplies 
about 35% of America’s domestic oil.
– White House says oil will get cheaper, but makes hush-
hush plans to increase the Strategic Petroleum Reserve by 
42% to ONE BILLION barrels of crude. Why are they so eager 
to add to the SPR when oil prices are high?
– Saudis reveal they won’t be able to meet oil demand – 
first time EVER they’ve admitted the awful truth
Hurricane Katrina delivered a devastating blow to America 
even before it slammed into Louisiana. The Massive storm 
smashed through “Energy Alley,” a concentrated area of oil 
rigs off the coast that supply about 35% of America’s 
domestic oil production and 20% of its natural gas. It 
damaged much of our nation’s oil production.
At the same time, workers rushed to shut down the offshore 
Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, which processes loads from 
tankers too large for mainland ports. The LOOP is the 
nation’s largest oil import terminal, handling 11% of U.S. 
imports. And refiners shut down more than a million barrels 
a day of production as they braced for the impact from the 
monster storm. Those refineries will probably be out for at 
least two weeks, setting the stage for a potential gasoline 
shortage.
Panicked oil traders are pushing oil prices over $70 per 
barrel. And now for the really scary part. A devastating 
hurricane strike at America’s oil and gas operations in the 
Gulf of Mexico is just one of the major forces that could 
send oil to $80 … $100 … $150 a barrel. Other forces 
that could send oil prices surging are potentially much 
more serious…and permanent!
The Saudis are the “central bank of oil,” right?  So how 
come the central bank is scrounging for loose change under 
the couch cushions?
Earlier this month came news that Saudi Arabia hired five 
Rowan jackup oil rigs for drilling offshore oil wells on a 
three year contract. Those rigs are currently under 
contract in the Gulf of Mexico, so that means Saudi Arabia 
outbid somebody to get those rigs – and rig rates have 
already run up to obscenely high levels – 30% to 50% more 
than a year ago.
Drilling for oil underwater is very expensive. You’d expect 
the Saudis to be drilling out their cheapest oil first. 
Don’t they have a desert full of this stuff? So why are 
they suddenly digging deep for underwater oil, and willing 
to pay a premium to do it?
Unless… maybe the Saudis don’t have as much oil as they 
say they do.
We already know that the Saudis have confessed that OPEC 
won’t be able to meet western oil demand in 10 to 15 years. 
I’m starting to think they might come up short a lot sooner 
than that.
Are the Saudis lying? Well, at least it seems like they’re 
not telling the whole truth. What’s more, I believe there’s 
a whole lot our own government isn’t telling us. I’ll get 
to that in a moment. First, some ugly facts…
· The world uses a BILLION barrels of oil every 12 
days.  Do we find a billion barrels of oil every 12 days? 
NO!  In fact, if everything goes perfectly, we’ll find just 
30 million barrels of oil in the same time period.  If 
things go badly, we’ll find less.  Much less.
· The global depletion rate runs at least 5% a year, 
perhaps much higher , as once-reliable sources of oil are 
in serious decline. Oil production in Britain fell the 
steepest of any country last year, with production in the 
once-prolific North Sea falling by 10% (230,000 barrels per 
day) last year … Production in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay has 
fallen 75% from its peak in 1987 … Iraq’s oil production 
is still half of what it was before the war …Mexico’s 
production is declining so quickly it will have to start 
importing oil in the next 10 years!
· The U.S. Energy Information Agency has fallen in line 
with the International Energy Agency and admits that oil 
demand will exceed supply starting in the fourth quarter of 
this year. Total world demand is expected to be 86.4 
million barrels per day, according to the EIA, while total 
world supply is expected to be 85.4 million barrels per 
day. The EIA ups the ante by saying there will be a 
shortfall in the first quarter of 2006 as well.
Publicly, the White House urges calm and predicts that oil 
prices will retreat from their current high levels. But 
privately, the U.S. government is quietly planning to add 
to existing oil reserves at a furious pace.
Squirreled away in new energy legislation is a directive to 
increase the Strategic Petroleum Reserve from 700 million 
barrels (70 days’ supply of imports) to ONE BILLION 
BARRELS. They’re adding to the SPR when oil prices are sky-
high. What are they afraid of? 
A confidential source in the Department of Energy gave me 
the scoop on the addition to the SPR. This stunning new 
directive was placed inside the 1,724-page Energy Policy 
Act of 2005 without any fanfare whatsoever – it’s hidden in 
plain sight. And the mainstream media is too busy going to 
beltway cocktail parties to notice. 
This 42% jump in reserves is so huge, the government 
doesn’t even have a place to put it all – yet. The plan is 
to fill the SPR to capacity with a minimum of market 
disruption or undue influence on the market, blah-blah. If 
you’re planning to fill the SPR when oil is over $60 per 
barrel, you aren’t planning on getting that oil on the 
cheap.
I don’t know what is motivating the Bush administration to 
boost petroleum reserves. But I do know that two oil men 
are in the White House right now.  They probably have 
access to raw data on America’s oil fields – including 
depletion rates – that the rest of us don’t. Again, what 
are they afraid of?  I’m certainly not going to buy the 
“don’t’ worry, be happy,” line peddled by the White House.
Still, there are plenty of people still willing to push the 
government line. An analyst recently quoted in a Bloomberg 
story tried to push the idea that oil is still cheap, 
explaining: “A barrel of Starbucks latte would cost you 
$1,500, compared to a barrel of crude, even at $66 a 
barrel.”
Ri-i-i-i-i-ight! Starbucks coffee is a luxury – that’s why 
they can charge so much for it. Is oil a luxury? Not right 
now. But it might be down the road.
I believe we’re careening toward a good ol’ fashioned oil 
panic. I believe the government knows a lot more than it’s 
letting on. And I believe anyone who doesn’t invest for the 
coming energy emergency is a bloody fool.
The time to take action is now. Today’s energy crisis is 
transforming the world – from geopolitics to the financial 
markets to the gas pump to the production cost of almost 
every product we consume on a daily basis. 
That’s why I’ve just created an in-depth Energy Crisis 
Report. I outline the FOUR FORCES bearing down on energy-
dependent America, forces that could wash over our economy 
like a tsunami. I lay out the six likely consequences of 
the next oil shock. And you’ll learn about the ten energy 
companies you should add to your portfolio immediately – 
plus, a popular stock you should sell or avoid at all 
costs.
| Friday | Thursday | This week | Year-to-Date | |
| DOW | 10,413 | 10,463 | 19 | -3.4% | 
| S&P | 1,208 | 1,212 | 3 | -0.3% | 
| NASDAQ | 2,130 | 2,138 | 9 | -2.1% | 
| 10-year Treasury | 4.10% | 4.17% | -8.00 | 4.05 | 
| 30-year Treasury | 4.32% | 4.36% | -5.00 | 4.27 | 
| Russell 2000 | 654 | 655 | 5 | 0.3% | 
| Gold | $431.40 | $436.90 | -$6.30 | -1.4% | 
| Silver | $6.74 | $6.74 | $0.00 | -1.1% | 
| CRB | 331.19 | 323.23 | 14.09 | 16.6% | 
| WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $69.81 | $67.20 | $3.68 | 60.7% | 
| Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.29 | JPY 110.61 | -1.11 | -8.5% | 
| Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2217 | $1.2231 | 67 | 9.9% | 
| Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7861 | $1.7964 | 151 | 6.9% | 
                            	        
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