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Ares
10th February 2012, 10:43 AM
Gasoline deliveries reflect recession and growth. The recent drop in retail gasoline deliveries is signalling a sharp contraction ahead.

Mish recently posted some intriguing charts depicting a significant decline in gasoline consumption. Then correspondent Joe R. forwarded me this stunning chart of gasoline retail deliveries, from the U.S. Energy Information Administration: (EIA)

http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/gasoline-deliveries2-12.jpg

As Joe noted, this data is interesting because it is un-manipulated, that is, it is not "seasonally adjusted" or run through some black-box modifications like so much other government data.

Retail gasoline deliveries, already well below 1980 levels, have absolutely fallen off a cliff. Is the plunge inventory-related, i.e. are storage facilities so full that retailers are simply putting off deliveries?

Though I don't have data on hand to support this, I know from one of my correspondents who is in the gasoline distribution/delivery business that gasoline is very much a "just in time" commodity: gas stations are often close to running out of fuel when they get a delivery. Stations aren't holding huge quantities of surplus gasoline; that's not how the business works.

Given the absence of "extra storage" in gas stations (and the fact that the number of gas stations has fallen dramatically since 1980), it is reasonable to conclude that retail delivery is largely a function of demand, i.e. gasoline consumption.

Even if you dismiss the recent plunge as an outlier, the declines in retail gasoline deliveries are mind-boggling. If you look at the data from 1983 to 2011 on the link above, you will note that delivery declines align with recessions.

For example, deliveries jumped from 50.1 million gallons per day (MGD) in November 1983, when the nation was emerging from the deepest postwar recession then on record, to 58 MGD the following November (1984).

Deliveries steadily rose to a peak of 67.1 MGD in July 1998, declined marginally in the 2001-2 recession and then surged to 66.8 MGD in August 2003. If we just look at one month--say November--then we see that deliveries remained in a remarkably consistent channel from 1994 to 2008, between 54 MGD and 63 MGD, with the higher numbers occuring in the "peak bubble years" of 1998 and 2003.

In 2010, gasoline deliveries declined to the low 40s--literally falling off the charts. In November 1983, deliveries were 51.1 MGD; in November 2010, they were 42.8 MGD, and in November 2011 they were 30.9 MGD.

Does this reflect higher fuel efficiencies in the U.S. vehicle fleet? To examine fuel efficiency and other macro-trends, I assembled some charts of fuel efficiency (courtesy of the Early Warning blog) and a graph of employment, a commonly used proxy for economic activity/growth.

Let's start with some basic data about population and vehicles. There are 254 million passenger vehicles registered in the U.S. Some percentage of these are classic cars and other vehicles that aren't driven much, but nonetheless the number of vehicles that are in regular use is large.

U.S. population in 1983 was approximately 234 million. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates the current population at 313 million.

Vehicle sales declined from a record 17.4 million in 2000 to 11.5 million in 2010.

People are driving less: The Road... Less Traveled: An Analysis of Vehicle Miles Traveled Trends in the U.S.. (2008)

Driving, as measured by national Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT), began to plateau as far back as 2004 and dropped in 2007 for the first time since 1980. Per capita driving followed a similar pattern, with flat-lining growth after 2000 and falling rates since 2005. These recent declines in driving predated the steady hikes in gas prices during 2007 and 2008. Moreover, the recent drops in VMT (90 billion miles) and VMT per capita (388 miles) are the largest annualized drops since World War II.

Here are two charts of U.S. employment which show two periods of strong expansion: in the late 1990s and in 2002-08.

http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/employment2-12.jpg
http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/employment97-11a.gif

If the number of jobs were correlated to gasoline deliveries, then we would expect deliveries to be close to those registered in 2003 and 1999, since the number of jobs has declined to the levels of those years.

Instead, we find deliveries are dramatically lower:
November 1999: 59 MGD
November 2003: 63.8 MGD
November 2010: 42.8 MGD

Once again, this is not an outlier: deliveries for all of 2010 were between 42 and 46 MGD, compared to deliveries in the high 50s/mid 60s in 1999 and 2003.

There are all kinds of other things that influence the number of miles driven, but there is little evidence that any one factor can account for a 47% drop in retail gasoline deliveries. For example, it is well-known that the U.S. economy has shifted to a digital, service economy in the past 30 years, and since more people can "consume" (via shopping at amazon.com, etc.) and "produce" (work from home) without driving, then it makes sense that people are driving less.

But if we examine the data, it's difficult to attribute the massive recent drops to people ordering stuff online or working from home more. After all, people were working from home and ordering stuff online in 2003, when gas deliveries reached 63 MGD, and in November 2006, when deliveries were 58.8 MGD.

Deliveries in November 2011 were 30.9 MGD, a staggering 47% decline.

What about fuel efficiency? here are two charts from the Early Warning blog. They show a significant increase in the 1980s, but only modest improvement through the 1990s and 2000s.

If we use the same year as in the employment analysis, 1999, we see there was a 6% rise in efficiency from 1999 to 2010. This would suggest 6% of the decline in gasoline deliveries can be attributed to increased efficiency. But what about the other 40% of the decline? That cannot be attributed to higher efficiency.

http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/fuel-efficiency1945-2005.png

http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/fuel-efficiency2-12a.jpg

I've marked up the first chart to show the secular trends in efficiency and employment.

http://www.oftwominds.com/photos2012/gasoline-deliveries2-12a.jpg

There are no data-supported broad-based drivers for dramatically lower gasoline consumption other than austerity and lower economic activity. The code-word for "austerity and lower economic activity" that is verboten in the Mainstream Media is "recession." Indeed, if you examine the EIA data, the only causal factor that has backing in the data is recession--or if you prefer, austerity and lower economic activity.

Then there is the price of fuel. People have to go to work, pick up the kids, get their meds, etc., and few urban centers in the U.S. have mass transit systems that are up to the task of replacing autos. So most Americans have what we might call non-discretionary driving. But as the price of fuel rises, people find ways to lower their discretionary driving by combining trips, shopping less often, shortening or eliminating vacations, etc. Enterprises reduce costly business travel with teleconferences and other digital technologies.

Data supports the notion that high oil prices lead to recession. For example, Chris Martenson recently made a compelling case for this in Why Our Currency Will Fail ("Note that all of the six prior recessions were preceded by a spike in oil prices.")

Household income doesn't rise just because oil is climbing in cost, and so the extra money spent on fuel is diverted from other consumption or saving (capital accumulation). Higher fuel costs lower household capital formation and reduce consumption/economic activity.

Oil has been elevated for months, kissing $100 and rarely dipping below $90/barrel. Do higher oil costs explain the decline in gasoline consumption? Once again, they undoubtedly influence consumption, but that cannot explain the 40% drop in consumption. After all, when oil spiked in 2008 to $140/barrel, deliveries only dropped by a few million gallons: from 58.8 MGD in July 2007, before the spike, to 54.8 MGD at the point of maximum pain in July 2008.

The cost of oil has declined sharply from mid-2008, yet consumption has tanked from 54.8 MGD in July 2008 to 42.4 MGD in July 2011. That's a hefty 21% decline.

What other plausible explanation is there for the decline from 42.4 MGD in July 2011 to 30.9 MGD in November 2011 other than a dramatic decline in discretionary driving? That 27% drop in a few months in unprecedented, except in times of war or sharp economic contraction, i.e. recession.

If we stipulate that vehicles and fuel consumption are essential proxies for the U.S. economy, then we can expect a steep decline in economic activity to register in other metrics within the next few months.

Such a sharp drop would of course be "unexpected" given the positive employment data of the past few months. But as the data above shows, employment isn't tightly correlated to gasoline consumption: gasoline consumption reflects recession and growth.

In other words, look out below.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-why-gasoline-consumption-tanking

Spectrism
10th February 2012, 11:35 AM
Eventually, there will be statistics that they cannot hide and will not be able to explain if all their previous stories (lies) are true. You can only fake it for so long. It is like eating imaginary food. You can convince yourself that you are not hungry because you just ate a full turkey dinner with all the trimmings. After a couple weeks, your clothes don't fit and your muscles weaken. After a couple more weeks of imagining food, you begin to stumble and spend most of the time reclined.

Keeping with the metaphor, we have been rationing our food and dividing it up. The producers have been losing significant pieces of their labor fruits and non-producers have not felt the consequences of an idle body not eating. So the result is that all have been weakened while denying the trend and direction we are all travelling.

mick silver
10th February 2012, 12:08 PM
i just dont see it . we are selling more gas right now then we were last year at this time . just dont see this

Ares
10th February 2012, 12:20 PM
mick silver,

You wouldn't see it if you are the reseller of said gasoline. These statistics are going off from the refiners who make gasoline. America became a net exporter of gasoline for the first time in 60 years.


Measured in dollars, the nation is on pace this year to ship more gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel than any other single export, according to U.S. Census data going back to 1990. It will also be the first year in more than 60 that America has been a net exporter of these fuels.
Just how big of a shift is this? A decade ago, fuel wasn't even among the top 25 exports. And for the last five years, America's top export was aircraft.

The trend is significant because for decades the U.S. has relied on huge imports of fuel from Europe in order to meet demand. It only reinforced the image of America as an energy hog. And up until a few years ago, whenever gasoline prices climbed, there were complaints in Congress that U.S. refiners were not growing quickly enough to satisfy domestic demand; that controversy would appear to be over.

Still, the U.S. is nowhere close to energy independence. America is still the world's largest importer of crude oil. From January to October, the country imported 2.7 billion barrels of oil worth roughly $280 billion.

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/story/2011-12-31/united-states-export/52298812/1

mick silver
10th February 2012, 12:26 PM
U.S. has relied on huge imports of fuel from Europe in order to meet demand ........... when did we do this

Ares
10th February 2012, 12:29 PM
U.S. has relied on huge imports of fuel from Europe in order to meet demand ........... when did we do this

All through out the 90's and early 2000's when our consumption peaked. During that period refineries couldn't keep up with the demand so we had to import it from Europe.

vacuum
10th February 2012, 01:13 PM
Looks like a lot of conjecture on why gas consumption is dropping, but no solid answers.

Glass
10th February 2012, 02:01 PM
well stuff has to be delivered to the stores so people can fight over them and trample each other. Can we correlate road transport activity to gasoline consumption?

Gaillo
10th February 2012, 02:32 PM
Interesting correlation with the Baltic Dry Index... no? ???

My guess is that it's ALL goods related. As Ponce accurately observed: "No exports, no recovery".

osoab
10th February 2012, 02:41 PM
Interesting correlation with the Baltic Dry Index... no? ???

My guess is that it's ALL goods related. As Ponce accurately observed: "No exports, no recovery".

I thought BDI was mostly for the raw material, like iron ore and potash not finished products.

Gaillo
10th February 2012, 02:42 PM
I thought BDI was mostly for the raw material, like iron ore and potash not finished products.

In my mind, there's a DIRECT link between raw materials and finished goods... if the movement of the first goes down, you can BET the 2nd will follow. This is ESPECIALLY true in this modern age of "just in time" manufacturing/delivery/inventory management.

Errosion Of Accord
10th February 2012, 03:16 PM
Natural gas and coal are getting crushed too. The reasons are varied such as warm winter weather, maxed out stockpiles in Europe, plus a shitty economy. I track coal because I'm in the industry. In the fall/winter of 2007 and on through 2008 you could see the recession building and by 2009 the stockpiles at power plants were at or near their max. Well the stockpiles are maxing out as we speak and to power companies are starting to turn away the coal baring trains and selling them on the spot market. I think this also correlates with the Baltic Dry Index tanking... I guess what I'm saying is watch out below. The only positive to this is that a real recovery requires cheap fuel.

palani
10th February 2012, 03:24 PM
Historically I put 25k-30k miles a year on a car. Last year I put on 8k. This year it will be half that.

Glass
10th February 2012, 06:36 PM
As Ponce accurately observed: "No exports, no recovery".

Good point. Down here they are arguing in the media about whether there is any need or point in having an manufacturing industry (we dont' atm) if all it was going to do was export stuff. Why does anyone need to export stuff?? It's an intelligence defying discussion IMO.

Golden
10th February 2012, 07:43 PM
Good point. Down here they are arguing in the media about whether there is any need or point in having an manufacturing industry (we dont' atm) if all it was going to do was export stuff. Why does anyone need to export stuff?? It's an intelligence defying discussion IMO.

I demand bananas.

At peak I owned 9 vehicles. Today 0. SHIFT!

Gaillo
10th February 2012, 11:07 PM
I demand bananas.

At peak I owned 9 vehicles. Today 0. SHIFT!

Shit Hit In Fan The?

Sounds like English translated to German, then to Chinese, then finally back to Swahili! ;D