by MrBill » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 10:44:57
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'A')ll my measly investments have taken a hit recently, but I'm hanging on to them. Silver is down, Evergreen Solar is down, land is even down. Let's see, what's left? Well the sun is shining, so my solar investment is making money on the house. Every shower the kid takes is heated by the power of old sol. I guess I can't complain too vociferously.
Dollar for now, until the dust settles and then maybe back into some cheaper commodities, like natural gas, or take a look at foreign currency plays like ruble investments? Will re-assess as soon as get my feet back under me and hope that these margin calls slow to a trickle otherwise fund raising will become a full-time job instead of a nice business trip to Frankfurt, Munich and Vienna to see friends and chat that I planned it to be! ; - )
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he only saving grace for the greenback may be the lack of safe-haven alternatives -- and that hardly amounts to a resounding vote of confidence in the currency.
The most attractive safe-haven currencies tend to be from countries running current-account surpluses. That, said Bernard Connolly, global strategist at Banque AIG in London, rules out the most liquid dollar alternative: the euro.
A mismatch of competitive and noncompetitive economies, the 12-country euro zone also includes retrograde governments which run huge current-account deficits of their own.
The Swiss franc, the usual place to park money in times of risk, is a better bet -- but a much smaller market.
Dollar gains a flight to liquidity, not quality
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by Anthrobus » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 10:55:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')I think they call it a Broad Cross Market Selloff, but in all honesty it was telegraphed well in advance. Remember all those posts about central banks removing liquidity and raising rates?
right. I sold my small package of stocks in a sense of urgency a few weeks ago. The stocks rose still a few points in the coming weeks, then began the actual selloff.
It was really written on the wall. My scenario was a rising oil price, lower dollar, higher interest rates, housing market crash and a selloff at stocks + higher gold, inflation preassure rising constantly in the coming years. I had a quite doomerish vision then.
But now gold is sharply lower, the dollar gaining against the €, no news from the housing market crash, oil price stagnant, interest rates only slightly higher. Everywhere talking of inflation fears instead.
Have i done the right thing from mostly wrong expectations?
The mouse, i`ve been sure for years, limps home from the site of the burning ferris wheel with a brand new, airtight plan for killing the cat.
J. D. Salinger
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by MrBill » Wed 14 Jun 2006, 03:47:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'W')ell, anyway. 550 and 10 look like pretty big support points for Gold and Silver to me. Be real suprised if we just blew right through them. I think long term bulls should be very happy to buy Silver between 10 and 11. Feel sorry for any liquidity providers in the Silver market. Must be vicious trying to execute trades for these funds. I do understand the point about position liquidation due to margin calls in other markets. No doubt that has exacerbated the move in commodities.
Measuring back from 2001 in the silver, I get a 0.382R from $4 area to $15 area as being around $10.50 and the 0.500R as being near $9.50, although based on the momentum it might easily go back to the 0.618R of $8.10 or so? Therefore, would look to buy between $9.60 and $8.25 if that is the way you're bent?
Measuring back from 2001 in the gold, I get a 0.382R from $260 to $730 area as being around $540 and the 0.500R as being near $490, but unlike the silver there seems more support and a pullback to the 0.618R of $430 seems highly unlikely? One would think that $500 would be a big psychological level for the bulls? Then they would double their money when it spikes to $1000? ; - )
Crude is down, down, down and I am the biggest loser! No, I have not lost any money, but I could not pull the trigger yesterday and get short. So much for discipline!
On the daily chart using 21-day moving averages and trading envelopes that are 2-standard deviations from the mean, the bottom end of the range should be $67.78 in the WTI. Would look to buy OTM options with a SEPT maturity at that level for some upside protection.
On the futures, there is a long-term channel support line coming in at around $65.00 on a move through support at $66.88 moving average. It depends on today's inventory nos. with the Brent contract maturing this week and WTI next week. If there is another large build in gasoline (f/c +1.40 mio bbls) then this would be the 7th week in a row and be enough of a bearish factor to drop us back into the $65-70 range instead being an excuse to buy? Certainly the Iran and Iraq risk factors have subsided somewhat and there is no support coming out of the other commodities at the moment. To put it another way, if not now, then when?
Today's DOE forecasts are
Crude f/c -700K bbls to 346.6 mio bbls
Gasoline f/c +1.4 mio bbls to 210.3 mio (+4.9% YOY)
Distillates f/c +1.25 mio bbls to 120.7 mio bbls
Refinery Runs f/c +0.4% to 91.40%
But just to put it in context, according to the IEA, 85% of growth in demand came from non OECD countries, so perhaps it is worth keeping Chindia growth prospects in mind rather than obsessing on US centric numbers?
Worldwide demand 84.9 mpbd. Increase in demand according to the IEA
2003 +2.0%
2004 +4.1%
2005 +1.3%
2006 +1.5% or 1.24 mbpd
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by MrBill » Wed 14 Jun 2006, 08:46:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drew', 'Y')ou know Mr. Bill, despite our respective woes I love this stuff!!!
All week the sheeple in the office are going 'oh my god the sky has fallen'
That is somewhat amusing anyways....
Drew
$2 trillion is a lot of dosh, but if we start to truly unwind, I think this is only the start of a deflating bubble, which may spread to housing values next. Perhaps emerging markets, commodities and junk bonds only got hit first because they are the most liquid?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
The month-long slide in global stocks has wiped out at least $2 trillion in wealth, leaving investors few alternatives to preserve their holdings aside from bonds and money markets.
Investors have been dumping stocks, commodities and emerging market assets on growing concerns that economic growth will suffer from higher inflation and interest rates.
"It is essentially one consistent story worldwide, starting here in the U.S. There is a fear that the Fed's repeated commitment to limiting inflation demonstrates a willingness to risk economic activity," said Christopher Low, chief economist at FTN Financial in New York.
Stock markets have been punished since the U.S. Federal Reserve raised interest rates for 16th time in a row on May 10 and issued a hawkish statement saying it may need to do so again to fight inflation. Investors had expected some sign of an end to the tightening cycle.
Global markets have suffered since, and strategists show little agreement about how deep and how long the sell-off will go. Bonds have been the most direct beneficiary of the equities route, with benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasuries <US10YT=RR> staging their longest rally of the year since mid-May.
Global equity meltdown costs investors $2 trillionSo far our stock is down about 35%, so nearing the 0.382R I warned about in April of 2004, as I wrote out our hedging strategies to protect ourselves against such an eventuality (1 standard deviation = 68%), which I saw happening in the next 18-months. So far this down move has wiped about $500 million off our balance sheet, about equal to last year's gains, and in the past two days I have made over $75 million in margin calls.
Not very pretty, but at least most of my bank lines are still open for the time being. Goldies is the exception. They are closed to new lending. I can imagine their emerging market and commodity risks are HUGE in any case? To be honest, this was a good shake-out and has made some Russian stocks very attractive, but it would be okay with me if we stopped falling now. I am starting to get nervous! If we have to start making cash margin calls, I can imagine a lot of traders will be up against the wall and then it could get really ugly.
Well, at least it sharpens up the old survival impulses. The blood was getting too thick for a while and forgot what volatility really meant? Everyone is always happy when they are long, the market is going up and they are right.
To put it in context, if you were long gold at $300 an ounce, you're still comfortably in the money, and if you're long above $600, well it was a strategic position in any case, and we're just getting started in a bull commodity cycle that is likely to last 10-15 years right?
Tried to go long crude down below $6700 in the Brent today, but not making new highs. Maybe just some shorts taking profit ahead of today's numbers? Market seems to be coming off now even before NY comes in, as the rally was not broad based and more commodity specific, so not enough to scare any bears in any case!
The backwardation has all but disappeared between the July and August gasoline (HU) contracts in a sign that the complex is no longer as bid, and as the premium for ethanol enhanced RBOB has been somewhat reduced - $2.1625 vs. $2.0550. The gasoline inventory nos. may hold the key this afternoon as the crude either follows other commodities and metals or diverges on its own fundamentals here?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')xxon has purchased 80 portable generators for its retail sites in the event of power outages. It is also wiring about 200 gas stations along evacuation routes and near hospitals to accommodate big generators to keep gasoline flowing, and had added 130 backup generators to run fuel terminals and pipeline operations.
But the widespread devastation following Katrina scuttled some industry efforts to restore operations, even when companies were prepared for the task. In several cases, local authorities or the Federal Emergency Management Agency confiscated pumps and generators for emergency medical purposes, delaying the reopening of major pipelines carrying fuel from Gulf Coast refineries to Midwest and Northeast markets.
"One of the biggest problems last year was confusion," said Red Cavaney, president of the American Petroleum Institute, noting that in some cases it was unclear who had control of certain generators.
Companies may be able to do little to prevent the same thing from happening again, according to the National Petrochemical & Refiners Association, which notified its members that Louisiana law grants a parish president authority to commandeer supplies in a disaster.
[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={6158127A-AABF-41D3-976E-25E3C17F28C3}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Higher costs, more backup systems are legacies of Katrina, Rita[/url]
How ridiculous is that? Companies can hardly prepare for disasters if their back-up generators and emergency supplies can be commandeered by a local official? Then they will be blamed for not being prepared and, of course, from profiteering from higher gasoline prices. Rubbish! No matter the market frets about geopolitical and storm related supply interuptions!
Lastly, keep your eyes on today's CPI
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')conomists polled by MarketWatch are expecting a 0.4% rise in headline inflation and a 0.2% rise in core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices. That would push the year-over-year inflation rate up to 4% from 3.6%, and elevate the year-over-year core rate to 2.4%, above the Fed's so-called comfort zone.
Source: Reuters
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
by MrBill » Wed 14 Jun 2006, 10:00:23
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Anthrobus', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')I think they call it a Broad Cross Market Selloff, but in all honesty it was telegraphed well in advance. Remember all those posts about central banks removing liquidity and raising rates?
right. I sold my small package of stocks in a sense of urgency a few weeks ago. The stocks rose still a few points in the coming weeks, then began the actual selloff.
It was really written on the wall. My scenario was a rising oil price, lower dollar, higher interest rates, housing market crash and a selloff at stocks + higher gold, inflation preassure rising constantly in the coming years. I had a quite doomerish vision then.
But now gold is sharply lower, the dollar gaining against the €, no news from the housing market crash, oil price stagnant, interest rates only slightly higher. Everywhere talking of inflation fears instead.
Have i done the right thing from mostly wrong expectations?
The problem may be at least partially
Your timing. If your research was constantly rising inflation in the coming years, then you should not be surprised about higher interest rates which are a central bankers natural response, but also what kicked the legs out of the commodity rally as higher interest rates usually lead to lower growth. And if your time horizon is the coming years, then a 6-week retracement should not spook you out of your strategic postions.
Therefore, your other problem may be managing your expectations adn making sure your assumptions are realistic. It is not consistant to expect higher inflation and lower housing prices generally, as houses like gold are real assets, that are inflation protected in so far as people still have jobs and can meet their mortgage payments. Yes, you can have global inflation and regional housing corrections, but that is getting more specific and then you need to employ more specialized trading strategies.
At least in the short run, interest rates are up more in the USA versus other countries, so that alone is a dollar positive, disregarding the negatives of America's fiscal imbalances in the long run. Therefore, to benefit from that trade, you really need to buy spot and sell forward via a cross currency foreign exchange swap.
If you look at higher interest rates, higher inflation, higher oil prices, weaker dollar, falling stock market, etc. then it helps to do a multiple regression analysis using historical data and see how correlated these markets really are with one another. If you're not doing that type of homework then it is just a shot in the dark based on a few headlines that journalists in their infinite wisdom think are important. They are usually behind the curve. Normally, a market moves, then journalists note that the market has moved, and they try to find out why?
Of course, we all have to rely on public sources of information, but I like to look at the prices and make up my own mind what is happening BEFORE I read anyone else's research to make sure I am getting it before I am influenced by someone else's take on events. I set-up a spreadsheet and check the same markets every morning. I see what is up, by how much and then see what markets are leading and which are likely following. I also collect a lot of data by hand to make sure I am not just looking at charts and headlines without absorbing the information. Others may be able to glance at their screens and take it all in, but I have to write it down before I absorb the information. This is one of my daily routines.
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I am your greatest helper or your heaviest burden.
I will push you onward or drag you down to failure.
I am at your command.
Half of the tasks that you do you might just as well
Turn over to me and I will do them quickly and correctly.
I am easily managed; you must merely be firm with me.
Show me exactly how you want something done.
After a few lessons, I will do it automatically.
I am the servant of all great people
and the regret of all failures as well.
Those who are great, I have made great.
Those who are failures, I have made failures.
I am not a machine but I will work with all its precision
Plus the intelligence of a person.
Now you may run me for profit or you may run me for ruin.
It makes no difference to me.
Take me, train me, be firm with me and
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Be easy with me and I will destroy you.
I am called Habit!
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Trading PsychologyDo not be discouraged. These markets are kicking a lot of butts. Some hedge funds and professional money managers have either taken a defensive stance or have exited the market for the time being as they cannot manage the volatility. This is a sea change in economic environment. Perhaps the biggest since Bill Clinton, the Dot.con bubble and 9/11, so it creative destruction at its finest.
"A trader lives willingly with the vagaries of the market and of life."
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')oulette is a series of statistically independent events, and outcomes cannot before cast even with a perfect knowledge of the past. In blackjack, the current hand is influenced by proceeding hands, and ananalysis is possible. Clearly, commodity prices are more like blackjack than roulette. The next movement in price is influenced by preceeding moves. Whenever a price changes it has :
a) Moved further from or closer to cost.
b) Moved further from or closer to value basis other alternatives.
c) Changed the willingness of market participants to take risk.
So, if trading is a game, then it is most definitely not like roulette. It bears no resemblance at all to an aggressive individual choosing to take unpredictable, speculative risk. Trading is not even like blackjack, eventhough the risks in both are manageable via careful analysis. This is because an individual will voluntarily chose to take on the risk of a new hand of cards, whereas a company will not chose to take unnecessary risk, but will instead carefully manage risk that it must take to carry on its daily business. Furthermore, one highly numerate individual can successfully analyze the evolving odds in a game of blackjack, but to get to grips with all the complexity of the commodity markets takes a team................
If trading is like a game, it is more like rugby than blackjack, but rugby played by professionals because that is what they do for a living.
Even so there is still one subtle difference. The rules say that players lose games. Cargill has been successfully trading raw materials for more than 140 years, and it’s still fun. Our team of professional traders see risk as an opportunity, not a threat. We play to win!
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.