by MrBill » Thu 07 Dec 2006, 05:18:54
Up, down, and then sideways. That was the market's reaction to yesterday's release of DOE inventory figures. A summary of the numbers is:
crude -1.1 mio to 339.7 mio bbls
gasoline -1.1 mio to 200 mio bbls
distillates -400k to 132.4 mio bbls
heating oil -1.5 mio to 57.6 mio bbls
which you have to admit looks like draws across the board or not? supply and demand numbers were no better...
refinery use rose 2.4% to 90.5%
gasoline demand up 1.6% to 9.26 mbpd
distillate demand (diesel & heating oil) +6.6% to 4.33 mbpd
total demand increased 1.7% to 20.98 mbpd
so much for higher prices curbing demand?
the only nugget of negative news was that imports also climbed 541k to 10.3 mbpd
while product imports dropped slightly by 81k to 2.92 mbpd
hence the market's first reaction, which was to rally on an apparent drop in inventories in the face of strong demand. however, the rally was short-lived and forecasts of above average temperatures eventually won over the day, and the market settled back into a tight range, down somewhat on the week, but not totally erasing the gains of last week's strong move up.
technically we need to stay above $60.40 in the WTI to keep the bulls happy and resistance is quite strong at $64.80. with refining margins slipping under $10 per barrel and mild weather in the forecast there is a tangible risk that we might also grind lower until next week's inventory data either confirms a consistant drawdown in stocks and/or the weather turns noticably colder?
on the calendar is the OPEC meeting starting tomorrow. we already know the hawks are sharpening their talons and favor deeper, longer lasting cuts to output, but let's face it, so far this band of brothers have only delivered about 500k bpd of their planned 1.2 mbpd reduction in production. they will have to follow through with some enforcement amoung their members or risk losing what little credibility they still retain with the market. especially as Russia is gung-ho to produce and export as much goo as they can and are still signalling growing exports for the balance of 2006 and into 2007. their spigots are stuck open wide to fill any shortfalls from potential shortfalls elsewhere. its a bummer when observer status does not translate into towing the OPEC party line.
but what I really wanted to talk about is currency manipulators, and you know who you are? that is right, you China. and yes, you too Japan. shame, shame, shame. did you really expect you could shift the burden of the world from the America to Europe while you go merrily on exporting your way to prosperity? well, so far so good, so I guess I cannot blame you for trying?
however, with the EURJPY hitting 154.18 yen and EURCNY touching 10.4725 yuan, I guess sooner or later your trading partners, and not just the US, eh, are going to start to protest.
what do BRIC countries all have in common? that's right, they are all growing quickly. one good reason is that they do not feel obliged to play by any rules and can pretty much do as they like with impunity. WTO is a toothless dragon as we all know. your sanctions will just lead to my sanctions, and by the time the paper pushers in geneva figure out who's lying your industry will be dying, so why bother? environmental standards are for chumps. who cares what kind of degradation we create, so long as we grow quickly? its the jobs first, at any cost, economic policy. but investors love us, so who's going to change?
India. man you have to love their sense of humor. they proposed capping oil prices because high energy prices are bad for growth and eventually would hurt producers as well if countries like India did not keep growing quickly lifting millions out of poverty. that would be great if we were not talking about finite resources. but we are. all those millions, because using the word billions sounds like I am exagerating, extra workers and consumers producing stuff so that India can grow quickly are using up other stuff, like commodities, base metals and energy, which surprise, surprise is making them more expensive.
but India, with all their trained university graduates, some of the best in the world, still has policy makers stuck in the socialist-interventionist 60s when Calcutta was a byword for abject poverty and also a poster child for UNICEF because if I have to see flies on one more crying baby I am going to puke my snap, crackle and pops all over the breakfast table. so what do they do instead? yes, that is right, in order to ration demand and make sure energy is not wasted, they have decided once again to lower retail prices for gasoline and diesel in India, subsidized by taxpayers, but as they do not collect many taxes, ultimately by debt taken on by the state and flogged to western investors who are buying into that whole BRIC story.
and how will it end? yes, India will still be poor, despite pockets of excellence, and armchair liberals in the west, probably logged onto their laptops right now, surfing the cyber world on the look-out for social injustices, will tell us, or at least someone, twenty years from now that India is poor, not because of over-population and bad policy choices made today, like subsidizing energy, almost guaranteeing it will be wasted, but because greedy western investors with the help of the IMF and World Bank (never blame the ADB) trapped India in a downward cycle of poverty because oil is priced in dollars.
nevermind that oil producers think the dollar is too weak, and Iran wants supply contracts in euros, apparently this weak dollar thing is bad for consumers as well? yes, that is right. somehow a weak dollar ends up costing oil importing countries more money and making their dollar debt more expensive to service? don't ask me, I am not a trained economist, and I do not even play one on the internet, but that is the standard line of argument in the ethernet. dollar hegemony is the root of all evil. not consumption. not excessive debt. not over-population. but something called a washington consensus. neo-cons, when they are not too busy fighting foreign wars, have explicitly told countries like India to waste money on nuclear warheads. while subsidizing energy imports, and hoping against hope, that this will somehow result in better allocation those scarce resources, that this desperately poor country needs to lift millions out of poverty, and at the same time cut their reliance on expensive imports of foreign oil. no wonder your average villager decides to plow this year's surplus earnings from a good harvest into gold jewelry.
here is a game you can play at home. its called blame the market. take on more debt than you can ever hope to repay. live beyond your means by extremes. promise your wife and kids that everything is fine, so there is no reason to plan or save for the future because things will always get better. then when it does not happen. blame the market. your friends will enjoy playing this game as well. it is easy to learn and fun for the whole family.
now pretend you're a government and not just a plain, ordinary household. you get to make all the rules and pass as many laws as you want. no one can stop you. not even the UN! let's see them try to stamp all over your sovereign state? HAHA! you're the boss of your country. now run it like you did your household. tax and spend. or better yet, spend and borrow. then there is no pain. by no one. you'll be popular. don't listen to anyone who says otherwise.
always justify your decisions by repeating the following mantra, we need to tax, spend and borrow because it is lifting millions of people out of poverty. or if you're not yet a poor country, you might try justifying every decision by saying, we're a rich country and we can afford all these programs. of course, we do not want to pay for them, so that is why we borrow the difference.
now remember. you made all the decisions and all the rules and laws to enforce those decisions. so if it all blows up in your face, look surprised at these unforeseen events, and repeat after me, its all the markets fault! HEHE. Isn't that easy? And fun, too.
but you do not want to drone on and bore your audience all day long, so occasionally you'll need to spice up your speeches with a little variety on the its the markets fault spiel. for that you can borrow a page, its okay, I asked him already, from our socialist friend, Fidel Castro. blame the US, eh, instead. or both. if you don't believe this can work, then you do not really understand the blame game, yet. for proof that this is a perfect strategy just ask Chavez. why he is looting his country right now, stuffing his and his cronies pockets full with illgotten gains from unaccounted for oil & gas revenues, and all along he is proclaiming, loud enough to distract even the most ardent public auditor of the state's finances, that it is America's fault! and only, he, Chavez, can lead a bolivar revolution to stop those neo-con bullies and their washington consensus.
and the people believe him. afterall after more than seven years in power, he has delivered a few hundred million dollars in basic services that you might expect from a government. nevermind the revenue from that lost one million barrels per day that is in a slush fund directly controlled by Chavez, and not in the central bank, where one might see it and count it? let's see, math was never my strong point, but $60 per barrel, less production costs, let's round it down to $30, multiplied by one million, by 365 days, and then again by seven years is how much again? I give up, but it must be at least a few hundred million give or take? where did the dough go, Hugo? and they say, don't cry for me Argentina! I guess not, when taxpayers in Venezuela have to foot the bill to buy defaulted Argentenian bonds just to piss off uncle sam and prove that latinos are masters of their own house.
of course, this is a never ending story, so expect those same armchair liberals who are moaning and complaining about India being in the shitter due to IMF, World Bank, dollar hegemony and greedy western investors to also cast their penetrating gaze southwards, past that north-south divide, not just east-west anymore, and see that despite being an oil exporter that venezuela is also a victim of the market.
yes, that amazing, maleable market, it can be made to fit any crisis you can create. just use your imagination. if man had not found a use for petroleum then we would not have all these problems. and afterall man only bothered to find a use for petroleum, which was safely buried in the ground and under the sea, because, duh, the market demanded it. there was an unmet need for cheap, plentiful energy, and the market was there to fill-it.
but don't worry, there is no problem that the market can create, that an even bigger government cannot solve. just ask india? we can pass laws to penalize any company that successfully finds more petroleum, while capping prices to make sure everyone has access to cheap, plentiful energy, to support growth, to lift millions out of poverty. well, that and by manipulating our currencies so that everyone grows faster than average and becomes richer than the next country. stupid market anyway! you're no match for big government.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.