by pup55 » Thu 18 Aug 2005, 09:46:44
Yesterday is just the kind of day that drives you nuts if you are a commodity trader.
You have a strong uptrend, going on for the last week or two, plus have a bullish report come out that says inventories are shrinking and refinery utilization is dropping because there are so may outages, etc. so you go long,and the market drops like a rock and you are stopped out of the market. At 1000 barrels per contract, the average little guy commodity trader with a $2500 account got his whole account wiped out yesterday.
There are several things going on:
First of all, the simplest answer is that people decided to take profits. This market had run up 20% in about two weeks, so people took some money off the table.
Secondly, you have to remember that you are in the same market as the Govt of Saudi Arabia, the Govt of Russia, Dow Chemical, who has to buy feedstock, plus large speculators, hedge funds, etc. These guys hold many hundred simultaneous long and short positions at any given time, and are always looking for an opportunity to swing the market one way or the other to make a fast buck. So, in a market like this, where there are relatively few players, pretty easy to cause a stampede by dumping some oil on the market, then buy it back two dollars cheaper a day or two later. This is a common practice in the "less liquid" markets like cotton.
Thirdly, as Leanan pointed out the other day, we are approaching the option expiry date for September (the "triple witching hour") and so the people that use options to protect themselves against the price falling will have their options expire, and so they have to get out of their September contract at some point. So, some of this probably aggravated the stampede somewhat. The volume for the October contract was about twice as much as for the September at this point. But, the October did not fall quite as much.
Fourthly, it is too much a coincidence that the market takes this drop on the same day that Saudi comes out with some glowing press release saying they are going to increase their production by X amount over the next two years. So, if you are Saudi, it is easy for you to do this press release, then simultaneously dump a lot of oil on the market, the price falls, the business section of the paper the following morning says "remain calm, all is well", and all of the CEO's say "see, this oil crisis is just overblown, business as usual". The problem with this strategy, of course, is that it will only work for so long.
Fifthly, maybe there is some sense to the ostensible reason that was mentioned earlier: Maybe the economy really is slowing down, and people don't need the oil.