by MrBill » Tue 23 May 2006, 03:16:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he price of crude oil seems to be in a very tight range $67-$69. So its hard to see why we have so much volatility in energy equity prices, at least based on the prices of the underlying commodity(sweet light crude).
The FT times had an interesting article about derivatives and how large derivative positions by major banks and large hedge funds have been causing wild market swings.
Unfortunately I wonder for this period whether we have a break with reality between energy equities and energy prices. The story on the demand and supply end seems to be good for energy stocks.
I wonder how long this disconnect can last?
Think it is quite normal. For example, crude fell from $75 to $67.60 or about 10%, but this would not necessarily translate into a 1:1 10% fall in shares. As an oil company may have assets that are attractive at $30-45 a barrel, so the difference between $67.60 and $75 is just icing on the cake for them.
Or in the case of Russia, the government actually caps the prices paid to oil companies there, so they do not benefit (much) from higher oil prices, except to say, as western oil company shares go up, so do their Russian counterparts, but again not necessarily 1:1. That is why if you expected higher commodity prices you might buy the futures, but if you thought prices would remain strong, but not necessarily make new highs then it might be better to own the underlying shares of the mining or energy company?
Also, in general, emerging markets as an asset class took a tumble. They got hit by the prospect of lower demand for commodities and higher interest rates, but also the spreads on emerging market debt were extremely tight to start with. Investors were not pricing in the risks properly while the sun was shining and when it got cloudy they all headed for the exit at the same time. Turkey was on the of first markets to get a case of the jitters after that G7 communiqué saying that the dollar was perhaps overvalued.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Chicago Board Options Exchange's Market Volatility Index <.VIX>, a key barometer of investor fear, spiked to a near two-year high on Monday, as worries about inflation and rising interest rates weigh on U.S. stocks.
The clamor for options sent the VIX as it is called, which tracks projected stock market volatility embedded in near-term Standard & Poor's 500 <.SPX> options, up more than 10 percent to 19.00. The index hit a new peak of 19.62 earlier in the session, its highest level since August 2004.
"The risks are high as the uncertainty around interest rates remains unclear. So investors are scrambling to buy puts to lock in any remaining gains they have from the Spring rally, said Herb Kurlan, president of Vtrader Pro, a San Francisco-based online trading firm.
I think it is too early to say this was the correction. We may still see lower prices in commodities, emerging markets, etc. However, I was wrong on the crude yesterday. Should have stuck with the reading off the trading envelopes which showed the price of crude near support at $6745? I kept a tight stop loss, but was still surprised to see how quickly it bounced back up? Latent demand? We may see crude & products decouple a little from other commodity prices now, and start to trade off their own supply & demand plus geopolitical risk premia? We just took out $70 here, so see the next resistance level at $71, which is the 21-day moving average.
China to hike domestic prices by 10-13% which will cut somewhat into demand as in India where the state has indicated they can no longer afford to subsidize imports with cheap pump prices.
EUR/USD = 1.2850, GBP 1.8865, USD/JPY = 111.10 neither higher nor significantly lower.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'L')ONDON (Reuters) - It's a problem for investors when equities tumble on worries about inflation and higher interest rates. Where are they going to put their money -- bonds?
Cash has suddenly become a hot item as previously high-flying assets such as stocks, emerging market debt and commodities have suffered in a harsh global sell-off.