by MrBill » Mon 04 Sep 2006, 02:47:55
Making hay while the sun is shining or pumping black gold while the price is high....
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia, the world's second-largest
oil supplier, boosted output and exports in August from the same
month of 2005, after prices jumped to a record in July.
Average daily oil output rose 2.8 percent to 9.76 million
barrels a day during the month, or 41.27 million tons, from 9.50
million barrels a day, compared with a year earlier, according to
the Energy and Industry Ministry's CDU-TEK unit.
Exports advanced to 5.40 million barrels a day, a 10 percent
jump from a year earlier, and up slightly from the 5.38 million
barrels a day shipped abroad in July.
Source: Bloomberg, September 4th, 2006
Bush & Co. simply will not do anything that jeapordizes growth in the short-term, no matter what the long-term consequences, something you should keep in mind when it comes to fighting inflation at the expense of the health of the housing market.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Bush administration hasn't
dropped its objection to a nationwide cap as a means of cutting
U.S. greenhouse gas emissions even as states impose limits, the
chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality said.
``There is great power in market-based approaches such as
caps and trades,'' James Connaughton said in an interview in Hong
Kong on Sept. 2. ``It's just a question of if it's the
appropriate tool at the appropriate time when it comes to CO2,
and our policy judgment to date is it's not.''
Source: Bloomberg, September 4th, 2006
Crude continues to fall as crack spreads remain narrow and unleaded/RBOB trade at a substantial discount to heating oil, which seems like a buy to me, but then again summer driving season is officially almost over as of tomorrow and we cruise into the Fall period with adequate stocks. Some storms on the horizon, but even hurricanes are losing their shock value as the market becomes a little more complacent about potential supply disruptions. As mentioned above, Iran is increasingly yesterday's news until there is some consensus over what the world should do with its prodigal child. Expect a lot of jawboning, but talk is good. Better than the alternatives. Should be a quiet day ahead, but just the fact that the market sold-off ahead of a long weekend does not bode well for the bulls entering the new month.
Do people even understand what fungible means?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')hina's economy is expected to overtake the U.S. economy as the world's largest in 25 years, if current growth rates extend into the future, said Gary Dorsch, editor of the Global Money Trends newsletter.
The Energy Department forecasts that China's oil demand will increase by almost 500,000 barrels per day in 2006 -- that's 38% of the total growth in world oil demand. It already climbed from 1.8 million barrels per day in 1980 to about 6.4 million barrels per day in 2004, according to U.S. government figures.
"From China's standpoint, there is no question that they will need the oil some time in the future, and that is what is driving them on to do a deal," said Perry.
On the other hand, Chavez may be "trying to trade oil for world political influence," he said
[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={DB6E298C-9F76-42D3-B14D-7A8FB6FD42F0}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Venezuela and China -- a troubling alliance?[/url]
Any oil that VZL sends to China is a net loss for VZL as China is not set-up to refine their heavier, sour grades of oil like the US is. At the sametime, China will want a discount for the poorer grade, while wanting something back for its own investments in VZL production capacity improvements. At the same time, every barrel that VZL sells China frees up another barrel somewhere else for the open market.
World Supply = Global Demand at Price X Chavez can give the US a black eye by selling their oil elsewhere and by giving it away at below market prices to their neighbors, but in the long run that only hurts VZL. Banana Republics run by Tin Pot Dictators. It always ends the same way. The Bolivar Revolution is a smoke screen for the exploitation of VZL oil wealth for the benefit of Chavez and his cronies, while buying the needed friends and support in order to make sure no one interfers.
Reality check and the limits of an unreformed UN
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Actually, in an earlier era Chinese nationals would not have served in an observer mission in Lebanon, and the People’s Republic would have taken a pass on the whole subject. But China now aspires to play an active role on the global stage, which is why it sends skilled diplomats like Wang Guangya to the U.N. That’s the good news. The bad news is that China’s view of “the international order” is very different from that of the United States, or of the West, and has led it to frustrate much of the agenda that makes the U.N. worth caring about. The People’s Republic has used its position as a permanent, veto-bearing member of the Security Council to protect abusive regimes with which it is on friendly terms, including those of Sudan, Zimbabwe, Eritrea, Myanmar and North Korea. And in the showdown with Iran that is now consuming the Security Council, and indeed the West itself, China is prepared to play the role of spoiler, blocking attempts to levy sanctions against the intransigent regime in Tehran.
Enjoy your Labor Day weekend, comrades.