Based on its energy (BTU) equivalent, the price of natural gas has historically been about one-sixth the price of a barrel of oil. Currently, it trades at a much steeper discount (around 1/20th), making it arguably the most undervalued commodity in the last 50 years.

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Analysts are now looking beyond U.S. shale to a concept of 'Global Shale,' with Argentina's Vaca Muerta as a dynamic new frontier. Its rock quality is considered better than the Permian basin, allowing for lower break-even costs and creating a scalable, low-cost source of future supply.

The spike in 1970s oil prices was a direct reaction to the U.S. abandoning the gold standard. Oil-producing countries were no longer being paid in gold-backed dollars, so they raised prices from $3 to $40 per barrel to compensate for the currency's rapid loss of purchasing power.

A record harvest of corn and soybeans, coupled with lower demand from China, created a surplus of turkey feed. This supply chain effect directly lowered input costs for farmers, resulting in a significant 14% Thanksgiving turkey price drop for end consumers.

Contrary to bearish sentiment, oil demand has consistently exceeded expectations. The market's weakness stems from a supply glut, primarily from the Americas, which has outpaced demand growth by more than twofold, leading to a structural surplus and significant inventory builds.

While controversial, the boom in inexpensive natural gas from fracking has been a key driver of US emissions reduction. Natural gas has half the carbon content of coal, and its price advantage has systematically pushed coal out of the electricity generation market, yielding significant climate benefits.

A potential price collapse will be averted by the market's own circular logic. Sub-$60 prices will stimulate an extra 500,000 barrels per day of demand from price-sensitive regions while simultaneously forcing high-cost non-OPEC producers to shut down production, creating a natural market equilibrium.

The market has a natural floor. For U.S. shale, a WTI price of $47 represents a zero-return level where drilling and completions halt. For Russia, a Brent price below $42 means operators face negative margins, forcing well shut-ins and providing a backstop against a complete price collapse.

Beyond the well-known semiconductor race, the AI competition is shifting to energy. China's massive, cheaper electricity production is a significant, often overlooked strategic advantage. This redefines the AI landscape, suggesting that superiority in atoms (energy) may become as crucial as superiority in bytes (algorithms and chips).

Unlike more volatile shale production, large-scale offshore projects from Exxon in Guyana and Petrobras in Brazil are sanctioned years in advance. This provides analysts with a highly reliable and visible pipeline of new, low-cost barrels, cementing the forecast for a sustained supply surplus.

As energy producers exhaust "Tier 1" locations and move to deeper, lower-quality "Tier 2" shale formations, the water-to-oil ratio increases significantly. This dynamic creates an organic growth tailwind for water disposal companies, ensuring volume growth even if overall oil production in the Permian Basin remains flat.

Natural Gas Sits at Its Cheapest Level in 50 Years Relative to Its Energy Value Against Oil | RiffOn