Title: Mcgowanjm Wire 2012 Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Feb 26, 2012 Author:Various Post Date:2012-02-26 09:15:13 by A K A Stone Keywords:None Views:1373686 Comments:2390
Post Fri Jun 01, 2012 8:48 am by mcgowanjm Re: 2012 Bilderberger Meeting
Post Fri Jun 01, 2012 8:48 am by mcgowanjm The problem with being rich and powerful is that you become disconnected from reality.
No one is there(see Jeff Zuckerberg for details) to tell you different. Yes men is all you see.
You don't know your policies have failed until the guards are no longer at their posts. And then it's too late.
The enemy is at the gates.....The Non Linear is at hand.....
The market was anxious going in to the NFP print but once the dismal data point hit, things deteriorated rapidly.
Being in produces pleasurable effects in our brains, and being out produces real, physical pain. Further, our brains have evolved to make us want to seek status in our tribes, and to prefer immediate gratification over distant, theoretical considerations that might limit our consumption. (For an excellent, evergreen essay on this subject, see Nate Hagens post on The Oil Drum, Fleeing Vesuvius.)
The mere threat of being on the outs with ones tribe can be enough to make us avoid thinking independently and rationally about issues like peak oil and climate change.
In 2003, Browne struck an $8 billion deal with a group of billionaires to form TNK-BP, the biggest single investment in post-Soviet Russia. Successful Move TNK-BP was Brownes most successful move, giving BP the biggest Russian presence among the worlds largest oil companies.
Difficult Relationship While profitable, the investors in the TNK-BP venture have had a difficult relationship.
In 2008, Dudley, who was then CEO of TNK-BP, was forced to step down and left Russia after a dispute over company strategy. Last year, the billionaires took BP to arbitration after they cut TNK-BP out of a deal to explore Russias Arctic with state-run OAO Rosneft.
One of the Russian shareholders, Mikhail Fridman, resigned as CEO this week, casting renewed doubt on the future of the business. The board hasnt met this year because shareholders cant agree on a third independent director.
It seems rather that BPs hand has been forced, said Colin McLean, CEO at SVM Asset Management. I dont think this is happening at BPs choosing. As long as they dont get a bad price, it draws a line under what doesnt appear to have been handled well before.
[quote] The result will likely be a sharp reduction in foreign crude imports into Houston but also may lead to a localized glut of light sweet crude as most Texas refineries are set up to optimally process heavier grades of oil.
But [b]the Ho-Ho reversal[/b] will also feed into the pressure on Gulf Coast crude prices in Louisiana by further upsetting the balance there. [b] The deepwater barrels that cannot get onto a pipeline heading into Texas will face price pressures on their way to market from the new light barrels on Ho-Ho as well as the expected increase in Gulf of Mexico output.[/b] Of course, nothing here means that the Gulf Coast will experience anything like the massive discounts seen at Cushing in recent years [/quote]
The deepwater barrels that cannot get onto a pipeline heading into Texas will face price pressures on their way to market from the new light barrels on Ho-Ho as well as the expected increase in Gulf of Mexico output.
Here. Let me help....
The deepwater barrels that cannot get onto a pipeline heading into Texas will face price pressures (to match Brent) on their way to market (Europe, Asia, Anywhere but the US Mainland;) from the new light barrels on Ho-Ho as well as the expected increase in Gulf of Mexico output.