Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Recommendations

3 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

The shit is on the wing orangecrush Yesterday #1
The storage cushion is fudgy. bucolic_frolic Yesterday #2
President Bone Spurs had a plan to get out of Vietnam. Emile Yesterday #3
Daddy's not buying his way out of this one. dem4decades Yesterday #4
From another perspective cachukis Yesterday #5
there's definitely been some adaptation... but still a lot has been kept afloat by the reserves that are likely to run LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #27
No question. One of my worries is the takeover of cachukis 20 hrs ago #31
Absolutely. I totally agree on all those points. The stock market is particularly a mess IMO LymphocyteLover 20 hrs ago #32
Have invested mostly in real estate over the last cachukis 20 hrs ago #34
Why would " Diesel goes first"??? Melon Yesterday #6
800,000 to 1.2 million SamuelTheThird Yesterday #11
It's one country. Multiply across all oil producing Melon 17 hrs ago #41
Yes, but the key is how long the strait stays closed and how quickly the reserves run out LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #28
Diesel is often made from mideastern crude while gasoline is made from US crude JT45242 21 hrs ago #30
Not In The US, Though ProfessorGAC 2 hrs ago #45
Completely wrong. GreatGazoo Yesterday #7
lol@your link SamuelTheThird Yesterday #10
You ignored all the numbers to nitpick about semantics GreatGazoo Yesterday #15
Are America's strategic reserves at a 40 year low right before the summer season? SamuelTheThird Yesterday #19
Traders in Singapore, Beijing and Mumbai aren't duped by whatever Trump says GreatGazoo 20 hrs ago #36
This message was self-deleted by its author LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #29
Futures Are Not Delivery modrepub 18 hrs ago #39
"futures price contracts probably isn't a good predictor of actual future prices" -- meaning spot prices, yes GreatGazoo 15 hrs ago #42
Future Prices Are Not Necessarily modrepub 5 hrs ago #43
No. For anyone holding a March contract at $63 their price in March was $63 GreatGazoo 3 hrs ago #44
Appreciate your insight as I'm an admitted economic idiot. I can see where Exxon would be trying to "warn" Cheezoholic 23 hrs ago #21
Futures lock in a price right now GreatGazoo 21 hrs ago #22
Admittedly, Im no expert or even amateur...but SamuelTheThird 20 hrs ago #35
Since oil is sold as futures there is more profit when buyers panic about the future GreatGazoo 19 hrs ago #37
All hinging on a deal that isn't going to happen SamuelTheThird 19 hrs ago #38
Last week Exxon Mobil warned that oil inventories will fall to record low levels in coming weeks LymphocyteLover 20 hrs ago #33
Demand destruction WSHazel Yesterday #8
"one of the key reasons that Trump started this conflict was to increase energy prices"-- agree LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #25
And it's all part of the plan... 2naSalit Yesterday #9
Excellent summation. Kid Berwyn Yesterday #12
I don't think the Strait of Hormuz never reopening is going to happen, but it will not reopen without a major shock ToxMarz Yesterday #13
Agree. Thanks for the link. LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #24
Kick dalton99a Yesterday #14
MAGA does the full collapse kairos12 Yesterday #16
First the bastids want to grift off it, if they can. GreenWave Yesterday #17
But I thouight it would be open in two weeks. AverageOldGuy Yesterday #18
That's the point. Blue Full Moon Yesterday #20
Unbelievably awful LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #23
It's happening now as we speak. marble falls 21 hrs ago #26
Remember that the UAE left OPEC a few weeks ago WSHazel 18 hrs ago #40
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»If the Strait of Hormuz d...»Reply #23