Markets Flash Back to the Past || Peter Zeihan
Zeihan on Geopolitics
0:00 Hey, all.
0:00 Peter Zeihan here, coming to you from Colorado.
0:03 Today, we're going to do something a little different and talk about markets.
0:07 Don't worry, there's no trading advice in this.
0:09 I don't do that.
0:11 [sighs]
0:11 Uh but, markets have been very, very strange since the Iran war has started.
0:15 They've been gyrating, but really have not shown any understanding
0:22 of the threat that we have been facing.
0:24 We have roughly 1/4 of all uh internationally traded oil that floats
0:31 on the water that has not simply been disrupted, but is gone.
0:35 Um Even if the war were to end this second,
0:38 most of that's not going to come back on before the end of the year.
0:42 Some of it will be gone for a couple of years.
0:44 Um that's before you consider natural gas or alumina or aluminum or fertilizer
0:52 uh or the various products that come
0:53 out of gutters natural gas processing facilities.
0:56 These things These things are gone.
0:58 Uh we now have a weapon system in place that has a reliable range of 600 mi,
1:03 which is triple what they need in order
1:05 to disrupt things on the other side of the Gulf.
1:07 They are difficult to jam.
1:09 They are difficult to intercept.
1:10 And with the technologies in place and in existence at the time,
1:13 it can't be done at cost uh at any sort of reasonable cost.
1:17 Um The markets are pretending to themselves that uh we are simply
1:22 hours away from peace and going back to things as they were before.
1:27 And with every Trump troop social post, we get gyrations up.
1:32 And then, something like, say,
1:33 the United States hijacking a supertanker comes along,
1:36 and we barely get a response.
1:38 Um this degree of retardation in the markets uh makes very little sense to me.
1:46 And then, I thought about it a little bit more,
1:48 and it's because the markets being presented
1:49 with something they've never been presented with before.
1:52 You see, since 1945, we've had a globalized system where the United
1:55 States upholds what makes it all work.
1:58 And I remember that whenever I walk into a room full of finance
2:01 people explaining that the world after
2:04 1945 is based on American security guarantee,
2:06 this is something that surprises them.
2:09 Uh in the United States, the idea that economics for the US is a subset
2:15 of security is something that really never gets processed.
2:20 And the financial crowd is arguably either the top
2:23 or the second most globalized of America's industries.
2:28 So, for them, the idea that the entire underpinning of their sector is now
2:34 gone uh is something that really takes a while to get their mind around.
2:38 And so, the money keeps flowing.
2:39 So, stock markets are stable to up.
2:42 Oil prices, despite the gyrations, have been trading within a reasonable band.
2:46 And we haven't seen anything like the disruptions in oil markets like
2:50 that we saw back in 2007 at the dawn of that financial crisis.
2:55 And those disruptions were largely nonexistent.
2:58 The ones now are permanent.
3:00 So, what is going on here for real?
3:03 And what should we expect?
3:06 Well, let me give you a few items just
3:08 kind of file away in the back of your head.
3:11 Uh number one, we are seeing reduced refinery
3:15 runs across Europe and across East and Southern Asia.
3:21 This is not demand destruction.
3:23 Demand destruction is when prices reach a certain point that people change
3:27 their economic activity because they can't
3:30 afford the energy or the what product, whatever it happens to be.
3:33 That's not what we're seeing.
3:34 We're nowhere near those 2007 highs that triggered real demand destruction.
3:38 That's before you consider uh inflation index terms.
3:41 We're barely half of that level.
3:44 No, the refineries aren't slowing down operations because there's no demand.
3:49 They're slowing down operations because there's no feedstock.
3:53 We've had such a deep and ongoing disruption to energy outflows from the Gulf
3:58 that over half a trillion barrels of crude now have not been produced,
4:03 have not been shipped to port, have not been loaded on tankers,
4:06 have not sailed out of the Strait of Hormuz,
4:08 have not gone to their end destinations.
4:11 Which means that if we're seeing refinery runs reduced,
4:16 it's not just that there's not enough crude making it out of the Gulf,
4:21 it's that the crude oil reserves of the various companies and countries
4:26 are being depleted to the point that it's affecting refinery operations.
4:32 We're also seeing already reductions in things in shipping,
4:37 most notably diesel in the case of trucks in places like Australia,
4:40 China, or Europe, and jet fuel pretty
4:43 much everywhere except for the United States.
4:46 That means that these shortages aren't just a throughput issue.
4:50 They're not just a reserve issue,
4:51 it's a commercial inventory of refined product issue.
4:54 And that sort of breakdown is something we have
4:56 never seen in the post-World War II environment, not once.
5:01 And markets don't know how to price that because how do you
5:05 price a barrel of crude that is never produced in the first place?
5:09 What modern markets do is they look for price signals.
5:12 Slight changes in supply or demand
5:15 from this market or that market or that subsector, whatever it happens to be,
5:19 and then the price of crude adjust around
5:20 that, and that provides forward price signaling for things like producers.
5:25 We are not seeing that because that is not happening.
5:28 We have seen a gross dislocation of the structure of production and transport,
5:35 and they don't know how to price that.
5:37 Under normal circumstances, higher prices would stimulate more production,
5:42 but most oil fields take somewhere between 4 and 11 years to come online.
5:47 In the United States that has shrunk down because of the shale
5:49 revolution to weeks to months but that just is at the wellhead.
5:56 If you want to export crude to a world that can't get enough of it,
6:00 well, then you need export infrastructure.
6:02 And you don't do that in a day or in a month or in a year.
6:07 Which means at some point in this year,
6:10 we have a fundamental break between the reality of what's going
6:15 on in the ground with energy
6:17 and this facsimile that exists in the financial markets.
6:22 What will look on the other side of that break?
6:24 Don't know, but two things.
6:25 Number one, it's coming soon cuz we're reaching the point
6:28 there just isn't enough product to carry out normal activity.
6:31 And number two, I can guarantee you it's going to involve rationing.
6:35 And rationing is not something the market does well.
6:38 That's something that requires government intervention.
6:41 And when that happens, the question is what are markets?
6:45 What is their purpose then?
6:47 It's supposed to be about the efficient allocation of capital.
6:50 But that's not the world we're about to be in.
6:53 We're going to be in a world of absolute energy scarcity
6:57 and the financial markets arguably not going to be a player in that.
7:02 Now, whether that's a buy or a sell trade, I will leave up to you.
7:06 I don't think it really matters at this point.
7:09 One of the things that most people forget is over the long
7:12 run of global history in the period before World War II,
7:17 it was the nature of almost every market in existence to ultimately
7:21 go to zero as the foundations that allowed it to exist broke.
7:25 Well, [sighs and gasps] get ready to return to the past later this year.