riptides
Super Star Member
My retirement plan is to hit the lottery or keep working till I die. Which ever comes first.

... except for what is created by government. Get rid of them ....
Eddie
It is interesting to me that through this thread no one has mentioned the consequences of peak oil on retirement planning. We as Americans consume 25% of the worlds energy resources and have based our whole economic structure on abundant and cheap energy supplies. Those conditions for sustainability much less growth are rapidly dwindling. I have been keenly aware that peak oil is the most pressing problem that we face since I started studying it's effects on our lives in 1997. It will change everything. It now appears that world oil production peaked at 84 mbd in 2004. Please study up on this subject as the future assumptions you are counting on may change radically.
For how many decades have the so called experts been telling us that oil supplies or dwindling? Yet, every year, and sometimes it happens a few times in a year, new, MASSIVE oil reserves are discovered. We know of more oil in the planet today then we knew of thirty years ago. The biggest problem with oil supply is that the politicians are putting barriers up to stop it from being drilled and refined. There is no energy shortage except for what is created by government. Get rid of them and we can build nuclear plants, clean burning coal generators and cheap gasoline. Since they limit the supply, the price will always remain high.
Eddie
I always chuckle when I read something like this. Firstly, the most important source of energy is the sun and it is pretty evenly distributed, based upon the size of your land mass. It is essential in all aspects of life including the formation of hydrocarbon fuel. Every other form of energy pales in comparison. My father was a petroleum engineer for Sohio (Standard Oil of Ohio) from the early 50's until the mid 80's. He used to say that well less than 5% of the hydrocarbon fuel stock was in the form of oil. It also comes in the form of tar sand, shale and coal. Sohio was the most "crude poor" of the oil refiners in the US buying most their oil in the middle east. They acquired the rights oil shale properties in Wyoming and in the mid 60's decided to develop a process for converting oil shale into gasoline, so my father treked off to Wyoming for two years on the project. They did, but it was way too expensive. Back then oil prices were fixed at less than $3 a barrel
Here is the kicker, the US and it allies have enough oil shale resources to equal all of the known oil reserves and all of the oil ever pumped out of the ground thus far. The tar sand reserves in Alberta are twice the size of oil shale resources, and coal resources world wide are practically astronomical.
I don't deny that we shouldn't wean ourselves off of hydrocarbon fuels (I hate sending any of our resources off to middle eastern despots), and waste less energy, but it isn't time to panic. As far as retirement planning - invest in enegy producers both old, and new.
The point again is cheap and abundant and as conventional oil reserves decline unconventional oil will not take its place. If unconventional oil was an easy solution we would not import a barrel of oil today.
Virtually all of my wealth was invested in stocks and remains so today. Stocks have provided the best long run return and the best return for any ten years period that you care to chose, for retirement type savings. Many investmetn advisors say that you should switch to fixed income investments as you get older. My philosophy is a bit different. I have always felt that if you stay invested in stocks, the additional wealth accumulation over time will more than compensate for market downturns like the one we are experiencing now.