The consensus view is wrong. Adam Rosenwag argues on Macro Voices that the market's dismissal of oil as a relic ignores a geological reality: U.S. shale, the engine of global supply growth for 15 years, peaked in October 2024 and is now rolling over.
His thesis hinges on contradictory data. The IEA forecasts a surplus, but global oil inventories remain flat - a sign demand is higher than official figures admit. The production cliff mirrors the North Sea peak in 2003 and the U.S. conventional peak in 1970, both of which preceded massive price surges.
"Oil is currently the most hated asset class in the world. Sentiment has reached COVID-era lows despite balanced physical fundamentals."
- Adam Rosenwag, Macro Voices
Peter St Onge, on his podcast, provides a contrasting view of recent American resilience. He notes U.S. production surged by 4 million barrels daily, exports nearly doubled to 8 million barrels, and revenue grew from $100 billion to $300 billion. This surge, combined with reduced Chinese demand, offset the bulk of a recent supply shock from the Strait of Hormuz.
St Onge warns the reprieve is temporary, as global reserves drop by 3 million barrels a day. Rosenwag contends the long-term bull case is structural, arguing energy stocks now make up just 2.3% of the S&P 500 versus a historical average of 12-14% - a valuation disconnect reminiscent of gold being labeled a barbarous relic before its 1999 bull run.
The surprise isn’t political disruption, but geological exhaustion. The shale supply cliff has arrived.

