We need a new poll. Traded as low as 102.06.
Once the first digits hit 102.XX then new poll.

Within 20 cents of telling Ace that he was wrong about oil never getting below $102/barrels ever again.

Probably any decent news on Ike or elsewhere or more strengthening of the US dollar and we go below $100.

I thought that Ace had one of the more reasonable crude oil price curves for oil, increasing by perhaps $20/bbl per year as supply dropped further and further behind demand.

What his crude oil price curve did not capture, and what noone can fortell, is what the undulating plateau will look like. I would say that we have definitely entered the undulating plateau period.

I also recall that Skrebowski reported that crude oil would be in the $60 to $80/bbl range. My model showed $90/bbl, but I am sure that like my model, Skrebowski's model did not factor in a crash in the housing market which caused investors to put their money into commodities, including oil, and a slide in the dollar's value.

What is likely to happen is that investors are investing away from commodities now, but that they will likely reinvest when oil becomes a "hot item" again, thus driving up oil prices once again.

So I would think that the crude oil price curves like those of Skrebowski and Ace represent an average price for crude oil moving forward, but that its price will undulate below and above that average price.

Retsel

Went back and checked
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4397#comment-392132

It is average monthly price will not go below $102 ever again.

So that will all of September or all of October to set the monthly price below $102 before Ace gets a reminder to eat crow.

Looks like Ace has OPEC on his side

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=aph4v20TXX6E&refer=e...
Oil Rises After OPEC President Calls for End to Overproduction

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil jumped in New York as OPEC President Chakib Khelil called on members to stop producing more than the group's set quota, a move that would reduce supplies by 520,000 barrels a day.