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BUSINESS

Doomberg reveals hidden oil glut

Saturday, May 16, 2026 · from 4 podcasts
  • A secret global oil surplus - led by China burning 3.5M barrels daily in hidden stockpiles - blocks price spikes despite war risks.
  • UAE’s OPEC exit and US gas glut mean oil could crash to $50, not spike to $150 as feared.
  • Trump’s gas tax holiday is theater: war already tacked $1.50 onto every gallon.

The Iran-Israel conflict hasn’t triggered an oil shock - and that’s the problem. While Trump warns the ceasefire is at “one percent” survival and Kuwait exports hit zero, prices stubbornly refuse to spike. The reason, according to analyst Doomberg on BTC Sessions, isn’t market failure. It’s a massive, unrecorded oil glut.

China alone burned through 3.5 million barrels per day in pre-war inventories, effectively shorting the panic. Doomberg calls it a “secret tsunami” - a hidden buffer that’s prevented the $150 oil many traders bet on. Even with Iran expanding its claimed control over the Strait of Hormuz by 200 kilometers, and Saudi production down 25%, the system hasn’t broken. The mental model of scarcity is obsolete.

"Before the conflict, the world was awash in a secret tsunami of oil. China reduced imports by 3.5 million barrels a day by burning through unrecorded stockpiles."

- Doomberg, BTC Sessions

The UAE’s exit from OPEC after 58 years compounds the oversupply. Peter St Onge notes the move was driven by frustration over Saudi-imposed production caps that idled a third of UAE capacity - a $40 billion annual loss. With OPEC’s export share down from 90% in the 1970s to just over half today, the cartel’s pricing power is crumbling. Doomberg now forecasts oil could fall to $50 by year-end if war subsides.

Meanwhile, US natural gas production hits 110 billion cubic feet daily - so much surplus that it’s sometimes given away free in the Permian Basin. This undercuts China’s coal-powered AI infrastructure, giving North America a structural energy edge. But the benefit is lopsided: while the S&P soars on AI and semiconductors, the median American took zero flights last year.

"Going long on oil means betting against a US government that needs low energy prices for the midterms. The disproportionate returns are gone."

- Doomberg, BTC Sessions

Trump’s proposed federal gas tax holiday - saving 18 cents a gallon - is political theater. The war has already added $1.50 to every gallon, with California at $6.15. The administration’s real focus has shifted to legacy: talk of annexing Venezuela and striking deals with China for EV plants. But the market sees through it. The real story isn’t escalation - it’s the quiet collapse of oil’s old power structure.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

Part Two: H.L. Hunt: The First Elon MuskMay 14

  • By the start of World War II, H.L. Hunt personally owned more oil reserves than all the Axis powers combined. This fact underscores the Allied resource advantage.
  • He opposed U.S. entry into WWII but reversed course when he realized war profits were tax-free due to oil depletion allowances. He then arranged a safe military commission for his son Hassie in Washington, D.C.
  • In 1946, Hunt broke an East Coast coal strike by supplying 85% of the region's fuel needs with his non-union natural gas, demonstrating his market control.
Also from this episode: (11)

History (7)

  • H.L. Hunt opened his first cotton plantation in 1912, inspired by his father's romantic tales of the South, but quickly learned it was unprofitable without exploited labor.
  • His most valuable early trait was not persistence after failure, but his side business: Hunt ran a gambling parlor and prostitution operation in Arkansas. His FBI file notes he won his first oil lease in a card game or bought it with criminal proceeds.
  • Hunt was a serial adulterer who cheated on his first wife, Lyda Bunker, by 1917. He later bigamously married a waitress, Frania Tye, in 1925 without divorcing Lyda, fathering children with both women.
  • He was a neglectful father who repeatedly gambled his family's security on oil speculation, leaving them destitute for months. His eldest son, Hassie, felt personally rejected by him.
  • Hunt's fortune was built on the Daisy Bradford No. 1 oil field in East Texas, which he leased from prospector C.M. Joiner. It became the world's largest producing oil field, ending his boom-bust cycles.
  • Hassie Hunt suffered a psychotic break in 1945, destroying furniture and screaming about betrayal by the Rockefellers and his father's enemies. His sister Margaret told H.L. Hunt, 'You destroyed Hassie.'
  • Life magazine named him the richest man on Earth in 1948 with an estimated net worth of $263 million, equivalent to about $3.5 billion today.

Politics (4)

  • Hunt envisioned a utopian libertarian state where votes in elections were weighted by how much tax a citizen paid, a system critics called fascism-adjacent.
  • To promote his ideology and avoid taxes, he founded Facts Forum in 1951, a 'nonpartisan' media outlet that was a tax-exempt vehicle for right-wing propaganda. It received an estimated $5 million per year in free airtime.
  • Facts Forum laundered its talking points by polling its members and sending the results to newspapers as legitimate public opinion surveys, a pioneering propaganda tactic.
  • Despite his wealth, Hunt was a poor public speaker. He hired former FBI agent Dan Smoot as a spokesman to front Facts Forum programming, which exploited the FCC's Fairness Doctrine to get free broadcast time.

5/12/26: Trump Says Ceasefire On Life Support, Trump Desperate Gambit On Gas Prices, UFO Files BreakdownMay 12

  • Kuwait exported zero barrels of oil for the first time since the Persian Gulf War, and Saudi production is down 25%. Sagar warns this pushes the global oil market toward catastrophic shortages or price spikes.
Also from this episode: (14)

Politics (11)

  • Sagar argues Trump's Iran policy is frozen between capitulation or escalation, mirroring the strategic failures of Vietnam and Iraq. He says diplomatic talks have deadlocked, pushing Trump toward military options.
  • Iran has expanded its claimed territorial control over the Strait of Hormuz, extending the area 200 kilometers to each side of the strait's apex according to a Bloomberg report. This significantly widens Iran's declared maritime jurisdiction.
  • Emily notes the UAE has been secretly conducting attacks inside Iran using US-equipped weapons, including an April strike on an oil refinery on Lavan Island. This reveals deeper Gulf state involvement and a desire to escalate the conflict.
  • Sagar connects Trump's foreign policy obsession to a presidential pattern of seeking legacy abroad when domestic consensus is hard. He cites Obama pivoting to Gaza and Ukraine, and Bush to nation-building, as Trump fixates on Iran.
  • Trump claims he is considering a process to make Venezuela the fifty-first state, a move Sagar links to 19th-century American imperialist expansionist sentiments, like the failed attempt to annex the Dominican Republic under President Grant.
  • Emily states the Pentagon's lowball estimate of Iran War costs is $25 billion, roughly equal to the annual federal revenue from the gas tax. She argues this shows a warped prioritization of spending.
  • Sagar predicts Trump will strike a deal allowing Chinese EVs to be built in the US within five years, motivated by Chinese investment pledges and Trump's desire for domestic job announcements.
  • Sagar argues the recent UFO file release lacks earth-shattering evidence, serving more as theatrical transparency. He says the interesting aspect is what the government chose not to release, which whistleblower David Grusch claims is being blocked by the DIA and CIA.
  • Emily says the UFO discussion has become a feeding frenzy that obscures truth, making it impossible to separate limited hangouts from real information. She notes establishment politicians and scientists joining the fray further muddies the waters.
  • Sagar points to newly released 2024 military UAP videos, including one over water near windmills and another showing a craft with no visible propulsion. He cautions most cases are camera flares or technical glitches, but rigorous review is needed.
  • Sagar and Emily agree lasting government transparency requires legislation, not executive orders. They cite the JFK Records Act and the Epstein bill as models, noting such bills can survive administrations and include prosecutable mandates.

Business (3)

  • The federal gas tax suspension Trump is pushing would save drivers eighteen cents per gallon. Emily notes the national average gas price is $4.50, with California at $6.15, Michigan at $4.71, and Illinois at $4.97.
  • Sagar explains California's unique vulnerability: a third of its oil comes from the Middle East, and two major refineries closed recently, cutting a fifth of its fuel capacity. Asian fuel imports have also slowed sharply.
  • Global oil stockpiles fell by 4.8 million barrels per day between March 1 and April 25, exceeding any previous quarterly drawdown. Sagar warns the system is approaching the minimum operational oil needed to keep refineries running.

Lavish vs Doomberg: The Shocking Risks in Oil & MicroStrategy No One Else SeesMay 12

  • Doomberg argues oil prices remain subdued despite Middle East conflict due to a massive pre-war global supply glut and China reducing imports by three million barrels per day.
  • Doomberg claims the UAE's exit from OPEC was a condition for a US dollar swap line bailout, a move that strengthens a US-Israel-UAE bloc against other Gulf states aligning with China and Iran.
  • Lavish sees a K-shaped US economy where wage earners struggle with real inflation and record delinquencies, while the asset-owning class thrives and stocks hit all-time highs.
  • Doomberg cites data that the median American took zero flights last year, illustrating a stark divide between the capital and labor classes.
  • Doomberg states the US produces 110 billion cubic feet of natural gas daily, vastly exceeding pre-war Russian exports to Europe of 15 BCF/day, creating a cheap, dominant energy advantage.
  • James Lavish is less concerned about MicroStrategy's debt, citing high conviction in Bitcoin's appreciation and manageable liabilities of $1B in 2028 and $3B in 2029 against a $66B Bitcoin treasury.
  • Doomberg forecasts oil could fall to $50 per barrel by year-end if the Middle East war ends, releasing trapped supply into a market already facing a demand-destroying glut.
  • James Lavish expects Bitcoin to challenge or exceed its all-time high by year-end, driven by macro monetary trends and conviction in its long-term store of value thesis.
Also from this episode: (3)

Society (1)

  • James Lavish dismisses the Michigan Consumer Sentiment index as unreliable, citing its survey of only 600 predominantly left-leaning individuals.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Doomberg views MicroStrategy's common stock as risky due to senior claims on Bitcoin by $15.2 billion in bonds and preferreds, arguing equity holders rely on perpetual share printing to service debt.

Politics (1)

  • Both analysts agree the fiscal and monetary response to any future crisis will involve massive money printing, debasing the dollar and driving assets like gold, silver, Bitcoin, and quality equities higher.

Ep 172 Weekly Roundup: GOP Could Redistrict 40 SeatsMay 11

  • St Onge states the United Arab Emirates left OPEC after 58 years, tired of OPEC's production caps that idled a third of its capacity, costing the nation $30-40 billion annually.
  • He claims OPEC's share of global oil exports fell from nearly 90% in the 1970s to just over half today, weakening its pricing power. A full cartel collapse could drop oil prices to $40-45 and gasoline to $2 per gallon.
Also from this episode: (10)

Politics (10)

  • Peter St Onge says the Supreme Court ruling on gerrymandering could immediately shift 18 House seats to Republicans, with a long-term swing of 30-40 seats, moving the House from being Republican one-third of the time to almost half the time.
  • St Onge cites Axios analysis showing the ruling could yield six new Republican seats in Texas, four in Florida, two each in Alabama and Georgia, and flip four battleground seats, leaving at least six Southern states with no Democratic districts.
  • He argues in states Trump won against Kamala Harris, Democrats hold 69 congressional seats, but Republicans hold only 39 in states Harris won, creating a 30-seat disparity. 538 estimates a 40-seat swing if all states redraw aggressively.
  • St Onge says 4.5 million people have lost SNAP benefits since last July due to tightened rules, but another 30 million recipients are either scamming the system or do not genuinely need assistance.
  • He cites USDA data showing 14,000 SNAP beneficiaries own luxury cars like Ferraris and Bentleys. St Onge claims fraud consumes roughly one in four SNAP dollars in states that report honestly.
  • St Onge notes SNAP enrollment exploded from 3 million in 1969 to 45 million when Obama left office. He argues 80% of current recipients may not need aid, based on Massachusetts's enrollment jumping from 3-12% of residents 25 years ago to 15.4% today.
  • He states the European Parliament's 'Democracy Shield' would create a censorship body that already oversees the takedown of 80 million posts monthly, with an independent study finding up to 99.7% of those were legal.
  • St Onge claims European authorities arrest over a thousand people per month for speech violations. He cites a UK think tank estimating thought crime policing consumes 650,000 hours annually while 90% of violent and sexual crimes go unsolved.
  • He argues Argentina's President Javier Milei cut housing costs 70% in two years by eliminating rent control and deregulating leases, which tripled rental listings and brought 200,000 vacant units to market.
  • St Onge contrasts this with New York's 1.4% vacancy rate and 50,000 vacant apartments whose owners refuse to rent, despite 165,000 families waiting for housing. He notes St. Paul's rent control crashed building permits by 80%.