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Trader's Corner 2006

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Where will the price of WTIC oil be on December 29, 2006?

Less than $50
3
No votes
Around $55
4
No votes
Around $60
7
No votes
Around $65
15
No votes
Around $70
58
No votes
More than $80
101
No votes
 
Total votes : 188

Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby seahorse2 » Wed 13 Dec 2006, 15:56:44

My two cents worth regarding the chances of a soft landing in the US housing market - it won't be soft. First, when the pundits on t.v. talk about a soft landing, I think they mean soft for the banks. This real estate market is going to be hell on the builders and subcontractors; whether or not that bleeds over to hell on the banks and companies like Home Depot, I don't know. However, from personal experience doing construction law, we are now only seeing the beginning of the downturn; therefore, its impossible to declare a soft landing when the bankruptcies and foreclosures are only beginning. We aren't even close to the middle yet. In my area of the world, many small builders are out of business, several filing bankruptcy, one of the largest builders gone, and many more on the way. The banks are only beginning to foreclose on entire subdivisions that the builders are walking away from, therefore, the fallout can't be known. I don't see how the banks can come away unscathed with all these bad loans hitting their books and them filing suit to take over properties that either won't sell or aren't finished yet. If they won't sell for the builders, they won't sell for the banks, not at the price of materials in them. People will take hits, lots of them. Give this real estate market at least a year before any predictions of what type of landing is made.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Thu 14 Dec 2006, 05:31:14

seahorse wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')y two cents worth regarding the chances of a soft landing in the US housing market - it won't be soft.


I cannot disagree with you because you are much closer to it than I am?

Just a question? Forget prices for a minute. What is pent up demand for real-estate prior to this bubble that made affordable housing unreachable for many would-be buyers?

What is the latent demand if unemployment does not increase significantly; if interest rates come down in 2007; and if house prices moderate? Will it take significantly more than six months to a year to churn through the existing supply of unsold homes?

The US population is growing through immigration and a higher natural birthrate. Therefore, demand for housing is also growing. Much of that growth may be at the bottom of the housing ladder, but it still creates demand in the middle and at the top as homebuyers trade-up.

It is important because employment is the biggest indicator of new housing starts, and new housing starts is the best leading indicator of economic activity. The UK and Australia have managed to come off the boil without a major recession or dramatic fall in home prices as has The Netherlands, so a crash in the USA may be coming, but it is not inevitable?

I am looking to buy property in Alberta right now, and for me prices there are dependent on commodity and energy prices as well as the strength of the US economy. What happens in the housing market south of the border in 2007 is therefore of prime importance to my own decisions. Thanks.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby seahorse2 » Thu 14 Dec 2006, 13:38:53

In my area, the NW Arkansas area, a bank did a study which said there is a 6 year supply of ready to build lots and homes on the market, assuming demand stayed constant. So, we have serious oversupply here. This means, building will and is stopping, meaning the builders, subs are going out of business and laying people off. Already, there is some suggestion that many of the hispanic workers are leaving the area, bc they were doing lots of the labor.

Here's some examples of what I'm seeing personally:

(1) Our offices represents a material supply company in a foreclosure suit brought by a bank to foreclose on 40 homes, none of which have sold, many of which are not completed. The bank and all the other material suppliers will be arguing the lien isssues for at least 6 months to a year, meaning best case scenario these finished and unfinished homes will just sit there. Then, no matter who has lien priority, the homes have to sell, but at what price? Just bc you have a lien, doesn't mean you will get your money back if property values drop.

(2) I represent another plumbing wholesaler. I have filed two $160,000+ liens for plumbing materials against two different subdivision that are finished, but lots aren't selling. Mine are one of many liens.

(3) I'm defending a small builder who owes over $1.2 million on different lots and homes he was building. Foreclosure trial set for next week, there is no defense, just going through the motions.

(4) A marble company I represent has seen its sales drop by over half for two months in a row now (averaged $40k a month, now to $20k month). He called today to ask me about filing bankruptcy (which I don't do debtor bankruptcy). He is laying off some employees and trying to keep his doors open. One of his competitors shut there doors last month.

I do not know how the banks will have a "soft landing." I note that a local VP of a bank here has filed bankruptcy on a bunch of businesses and homes he had been doing the last few years. In my opinion, this is just getting started.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 06:23:50

Thanks for giving some color commentary behind the data. Very much appreciated. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby cube » Mon 18 Dec 2006, 14:51:40

hmmm?.....It seems that the Iran nuclear drama has fallen of the edge of the world into obscurity. I guess that's how financial "news" / entertainment works. Much like a soap opera a story is first introduced, then over-exaggerated, and finally either ends in a anti-climatic fizzle or a dramatic bust. Luckily for America and the rest of the world, the neo-cons are now on the defensive.

My prediction for 2007:

We'll hear MUCH less of Iran and more so of other factors that could effect the oil markets.....crude oil inventory numbers perhaps? Granted maybe such stories may not generate the same amount of sensationalism (not that the media doesn't thrive on that *sarcasm* :roll: ) but who knows maybe crude inventories might actually *gasp* be more significant? :wink:
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Tue 19 Dec 2006, 05:24:30

Looking forward. Looking back.

It is almost year-end here. Time to review events in 2006 and think about 2007.

We are still struggling here with a mild winter that is causing the market to be soft, but several factors lead me to believe this is rather temporary. However, first, let's recognize that in the absence of a BIG event like another Katerina/Rita/Wilma, or a disaster/terrorist strike in the Straits of Hormuz, that multi-year price increases are succeeding in bringing more supply onto the market.

So the global surplus will grow to 2-3 mbpd from 1-2 mbpd in the absence of dramatic, concerted and sustained supply cuts from OPEC. Keeping in mind that the US dollar is under pressure, so some may be tempted to keep pumping to make up for a drop in purchasing power per barrel by exporting more drums. The worldwide demand increase for crude in 2007 may be around 1.5-1.7%. Not bad when you think that annual growth is about 4-5% in GDP terms with trade increasing by almost 7% per year. At some level high prices must be filtering down into efficiency gains. I know, hard to believe, but there you have it.

The fly in the proverbial ointment is as usual geopolitical events. I think that Russia is a big question mark here as we can pretty much assume that when it comes to producers like Iran, Iraq and Nigeria that it is SNAFU. Whereas you cannot count on those three oil stooges, so far Russia has been coming up with the goods. But the horizon is dark as I have to believe that Russia's energy policy is to maximize insider shareholder gains versus re-investing that wealth into better infrastructure. That means Russia as a reliable producer and exporter becoming more not less like PVDSA or PEMEX.

This is not to say that Russia will not continue to be an important player, as a swing producer and the main supplier of energy to the EU, but that they have consciously chosen to freeze out foreign participation and have conducted consolidation in the Russian oil patch not in the name of efficiency and transparency, but to concentrate operations in fewer hands and make transactions more opaque. That translates into more uncertainty and thus a higher risk premium. In this respect, 2007 will be another interesting year for foreign investors in Russia.

Also, resource nationalism was a large theme in 2006 in places like Equador and Bolivia as well as ongoing problems in the Niger Delta, so I expect those problems to persist so long as energy prices remain high and the spoils from re-distribution of existing assets are higher than the gains from new exploration and development. C'est la caca as the French would say.

Even in Canada the politics of envy are in play due to the easy money being made in the energy sector as different levels of government are eager to increase their overall take even at the expense of choking the flow of black gold.

Here I must say, oil companies have not helped their own cause. Exempt royalty payments until capital costs are recovered is not a carte blanche to ride rough shod over Canadian taxpayers. Entertainment, bonuses and travel are NOT capital costs. Clearly, Provincial and Federal governments are correct to demand clarification over what is and what is not considered a capital investment or a sunk cost into future development, and not a blank cheque for greedy companies to export low value added synthetic oil south of the border for refining elsewhere while paying pennies to the government. Checks and controls are essential to a functioning free market to make sure it is a fair market.

But regardless moves on income trusts in Canada, and the threat of carbon taxes aimed squarely at energy producers as opposed to energy users, are worrying question marks over investment and therefore over future production in the Canadian oil sands even as mild weather continues to eat into cash flows from natural gas operations. Those may be temporary concerns, but all investment decisions are made in the present with long-term payoffs and future consequences.

Never the less, OPEC has probably taken 50 mio barrels off the open market since its first production cuts and this is starting to show-up in the weekly inventory numbers where we have seen draw downs these past few reports. And demand on the other side has remained relatively buoyant given the slowdown in America. Not withstanding Seahorse's comments about the state of the union south of the border, and the housing market down there, the forecasters still call for 'a soft-landing' and several cuts in benchmark interest rates by the FED. That will be the red flag to watch for going forward. Any downward revisions to housing starts, building permits, construction spending or property values may be continuing proof that the landing will be harder than expected or that a recovery will not be quick in coming.

As Cube mentioned, we may be more focused on crude inventories than on geopolitics in 2007 than 2006, but my feeling is that oil markets will concentrate on macroeconomic indicators like the overall housing sector when judging how strong demand will be in the next six to 12-months.

Just as an aside looking at forward-looking indicators. It has been said many times on these boards that we will probably miss peak oil as it passes us by, and it will only be apparent looking back. I have to agree. I think for many Canadians and Americans that zenith was in the 1970s already. Incomes are still rising, but what those incomes will buy is dropping. Even though I work harder and made mostly the right decisions like education and to save and invest rather than spend my standard of living as measured by what I can afford to easily buy is lower than my parents.

Peak oil realization is when you think that no matter how hard that you work that your standard of living will not on average be any better than your parents, and may instead be more similar to your grandparents. And, of course, your children and grandchildren also can no longer expect on average to have it even as good as you did. A pretty sobering thought.

Yes, our individual choices do matter, as we still have to make the most of the time, money and resources that we still have to provide for our own and our family's future, but the tide is against us due to global population growth and declining natural resources. I think for me that is why I try so hard to understand the events unfolding around me. It is not about making money or being right about the markets, but about preparing for an uncertain future. I hope on average I can be correct in my predictions 60-percent of the time, and then use that small advantage to my best use. If not, perhaps I can just minimize the fallout from my poor judgment. In either case clearly thinking about it is half the battle. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby DoubleD » Wed 20 Dec 2006, 01:28:06

Nice recap Mr. Bill.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Tue 26 Dec 2006, 06:23:58

After an aggressive sell-off in crude on DEC 22nd ahead of Christmas, and one assumes position squaring for year-end, we have a bounce today in Asia and in Europe as Iran makes it clear they WILL use oil as a weapon in their dispute with the West over their right to develop nuclear technologies. Still, muted trading here on Boxing Day, so we may or may not see follow through tomorrow once the major market participants return. At the moment trading around the $63 area in Brent and WTI, which is at the top end of recent ranges.

Not new news, but a recap on Russia and resource nationalization in general.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') The larger message from Russia concerns developing nations, which collectively harbor the only real potential for new energy discoveries. Unfortunately, the lesson seems to be that it's okay to nationalize energy projects. That is, nationalize after private oil companies spend billions locating and developing the opportunities, as Shell did in Russia. Then, when it's clear that there's gas and oil to be had, the state will take over.

The example in Russia for private, for-profit oil companies isn't encouraging when it comes to making fresh capital committments for investing in new energy projects. What's true for Russia will be true for other regions of the world where the rule of law resides on even shakier ground.

The problem all of this carries for the West is that the main opportunities for increasing oil production reside in Russia and other nations where political risk is high--and rising. After reading the news today, it's hard to imagine the major oil firms will find new inspiration for sinking billions of dollars into projects in faraway lands that run the risk of being snatched away at the 11th hour.
ANOTHER KREMLIN VICTORY IN ENERGY

Energy uncertainty means additional risk premia in prices. Happy holidays! ; - )
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Wed 27 Dec 2006, 10:43:29

Today a Federal Minister vowed that Athabasca oilsands would go nuclear despite loud protests from the UN. The IAEA is to investigate dual use technology over fears Albertans may turn to bomb making destabilizing the entire area. Canada has never signed the NPT.

The matter will be refered to a Security Council vote, but China and Russia along with France have so far refused to comment on whether they would support sanctions against Canada, a member of the so-called coalition of the unwilling.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t is only a matter of time before Canada builds a nuclear power station to help extract oil from the massive tar sands in northern Alberta, the federal natural resources minister said in an interview published on Thursday.

Gary Lunn told the Sun chain of newspapers he wants Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. (AECL) -- which builds Candu nuclear reactors -- and a private Alberta company to form a partnership to build a power station.

"It's not a question of if, it's a question of when in my mind," the Sun quoted Lunn as saying. "I think nuclear can play a very significant role in the oil sands. I'm very, very keen."

AECL and Energy Alberta Corp. say nuclear power is the obvious way to produce the massive amounts of super heated steam needed to extract oil from the tar sands.

Opponents say nuclear power stations are too expensive and have a patchy operating record in Canada.

Lunn's ministry said in October that about 80 percent of Canadian crude oil production in 2020 was expected to come from northern Alberta's oil sands, double the current contribution.

Alberta to go nuclear

In response the news Saskatchewan threatened a uranium blockade against the rebel Province over what it sees as its blatant attempts to control the region through low taxes and a business friendly environment.

An apparent olive branch was offered by the Wild Rose Province to its opponents when its new Premier Steady Eddie vowed "that its nuclear power plans are and would remain entirely peaceful and be used only to generate electricity." A pledge some in the natural gas producers lobby found incredulous at best. "Alberta has a 100-history of making promises in order to win concessions from the Feds only to break them at the last minute", said their spokesperson in reference to Alberta's support for a reduced roll for the Canadian Wheat Board giving Prairie wheat and barely producers the same rights as their central Canadian counterparts to market their grain as they see fit. "This clearly breaks a commitment that Alberta made to Saskatchewan and Manitoba grain farmers back in 1919." he added.

British Columbia has not ruled out going nuclear "if Alberta makes the first move" according to the press secretary at BC Hydro, a major player in the western power market. No one in Victoria returned calls.

Meanwhile, in unrelated news. Probably to placate angry Saskatchewan wheat farmers. Ottawa promised to waste more taxpayers' money with its dubious plans to phase in ethanol and bio-diesel over 'the next several decades' two percent at a time. Ottawa has a history of taking baby steps instead of boldly implementing policies, unless it means taxing oil & gas revenue or registering guns where its track record is better established.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') $345-million federal announcement requiring more gasoline to be made from corn and other crops will do little to cut pollution and is really a farm-subsidy program, critics say.

The package will require so-called biofuel content of 5% in gasoline by 2010 and 2% in diesel fuel and heating oil by 2012, Environment Minister Rona Ambrose and Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl said yesterday in Saskatoon.

The package includes $200 million to subsidize new factories to produce ethanol, biodiesel and other biofuels, and $145 million for research and development.


Many see Alberta's move to go nuclear as yet another provocation over their independent energy and natural resource policies. Plans have been muted of setting up an Alberta oil bourse, the so-called AOB, to trade crude oil and natural gas electronically in Canadian dollars. An obvious threat to US dollar hegemony that has observers on both sides of the 49th parallel nervous.

However, plans to locate the AOB in Provincial capital have run into problems with Calgary also insisting on an oil bourse if Edmonton gets one as well. Their own SAOB plans are said to be still under consideration, but questions remain whether such an exchange should be an open outcry or an all electronic energy bourse. And whether the Province can afford one or two such trading platforms to promote north-south rivalry. According to unnamed sources that could not be reached for comment a final decision should be made by March 20th, 2007, whether or not Alberta will cease selling oil & gas in US dollars and switch to sales in Loonies only.

In anticipation of the opening of the AOB 'some time' in 2007, Air Canada has announced direct flights from Edmonton to Heathrow, London, the home of the International Commodity Exchange. A move that follows hot on the heels of British Airways unveiling their own plans to fly direct from London to Calgary. The timing has some insiders speculating that the planned AOB is just a matter of when, not a matter of if.

The USA has not ruled out force in dealing with any renegade Provinces that challenge the greenback's dominant role in international oil sales, and may retaliate by ripping up NAFTA as well as baring Canadian passport holders from unrestricted travel within the USA including Alaska and Hawaii. Some neocons hinted darkly that cross border sales of the popular Dodge minivan might also come under closer scrutiny were Alberta to break the codex of dollar supremacy. A move that some Federal politicians see as blatantly unfair, saying it was 'not right' to punish a whole country for the irresponsible actions of one Province.

1 US dollar = C$1.1600
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby drew » Wed 27 Dec 2006, 12:51:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'T')oday a Federal Minister vowed that Athabasca oilsands would go nuclear despite loud protests from the UN.


Hey Mr. Bill , Merry Christmas!

It's nice I didn't sell that Cameco.

I really don't see what choice we have but nuclear in the tar sands. Declining gas stocks, and various customers clamouring for more and more of the increasingly scarce resource. It only makes sense too to go nuclear; why take a high value energy source and essentially make it into a low grade oil?

Of course we could just stop the environmental nightmare that is going on up there, but that's not likely is it?

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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Thu 28 Dec 2006, 03:31:10

Drew wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')f course we could just stop the environmental nightmare that is going on up there, but that's not likely is it?


Not unless you can convince a lot of current consumers of fossil fuels including oil, gas & coal to give them up and go back to shivering in caves with no heat or light?

UPDATE:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia and Belarus are locked in a battle over natural gas prices that could see Russia's state-run gas monopoly Gazprom turn off the taps to its neighbor if it doesn't accept price hikes by January 1.
The spat threatens to damage relationships between the long-time allies and to disrupt supplies to other European countries.
Sounds familiar? A similar dispute last January saw Gazprom briefly cut off supplies to the Ukraine after the latter balked at price increases. The move disrupted deliveries to Gazprom clients in the European Union and reminded the global community of how vulnerable consumers are to a sudden break in energy supplies.
The fear of damaging its reputation as a supplier spurred Russia to restore the gas supply after three days but it still faced accusations of using its energy as a political weapon.
[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={BDC875D8-1254-4E5B-8667-CDA268910DF6}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Russia, Belarus locked in spat over gas prices[/url]

The problem being mainly that Belarus really has nothing to offer that Russia needs or wants. Why subsidize an ally that has nothing to offer in return when you can sell that same gas into the EU for a higher price and use THOSE sales as leverage into downstream oil & gas as well as power projects in western Europe? Expect these conflicts to get worse as the energy world realligns into those that have resources and those able and willing to pay for them. The middlemen and the charity cases are likely to be frozen out, literally.

p.s. two of my colleagues DO come from Minsk, and they are both young & attractive, so it is not like Belarus has nothing to offer. And I do have sympathy for these countries. Too bad about guys like Aleksandr Lukashenko who are running these countries like a personal feif instead of a social-democratic country in Europe.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby gt1370a » Thu 28 Dec 2006, 13:24:18

Does anybody have a good insight on what is driving the current oil price? On the bullish side we have:

(1) Weakening dollar - and may further weaken if recession leads the Fed to lower interest rates
(2) Large inventory drops - another 7.4 million barrels this week
(3) Gasoline below average inventories
(4) Growing risk premium in the Middle East - sanctions on Iran and the oil price drops $4?
(5) OPEC cuts

On the bearish side we have:

(1) Mild weather
(2) Large natural gas inventories
(3) Crude inventories still above average
(4) Low projections for demand growth; possible recession (although unclear whether this will happen and how oil demand will be affected)
(5) Slightly high inflation might drive interest rate hike?
(6) OPEC spare capacity?

I guess I'm just surprised that the recent action in the Mideast hasn't built back in ~$10 risk premium - one would think that given the risk there that very high inventories would be desirable.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby cube » Thu 28 Dec 2006, 17:14:35

Maybe a bit early but happy new years everybody.

Aside from that I don't have much else to say......see you next year. 8)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 04:02:36

gt1370a wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') guess I'm just surprised that the recent action in the Mideast hasn't built back in ~$10 risk premium - one would think that given the risk there that very high inventories would be desirable.


You made some good points. I guess delete or validate even one or two of those bullish or bearish factors and the price would be either $50 or $70.

It may seem trite, but price = function ( supply + demand ), so all those factors you mentioned are the reason we are currently at $60.

RE Iran. I think it is abundantly clear that the market has had ALL of 2006 to mull over the possible implications of Iran's nuclear activities.

Basically, WHY does a country that does NOT even have one nuclear reactor need to enrich nuclear fuel on an industrial scale? It is MUCH cheaper to just buy the needed fuel on the open market from a willing supplier, like Russia. But that IS the point. Iran does NOT need nuclear fuel because they do NOT have any nuclear power plants. They WANT to tinker with weapon quality plutonium or whatever it is that makes bombs go boom. It is quite plain and simple and anyone that does not get it by now is an idiot!

But this is not about me and Iran. Or Iran and I, as the case may be. This is about $60 oil. The market is simply bored silly with threats from Iran. If that translated into actual reduced supply that would be another story. So until Iran turns off the taps expect the market to call their bluff. Russia and China as well as France have already publicly made it clear that they do not support any real sanctions, so it is business as usual.

Part of the big rally in 2005 and 2006 was all hype in any case. Commodities as a new asset class hedge fund type stuff! In the summer of 2005 if some refinery operator went to take a crap and did not answer his telephone the market jumped a dollar a barrel on a shitty little 100 thousand barrel a day refinery being off-line. Then when the real deal happened, Katerina/Rita hit, the market actually went down afterwards! So much for rational markets.

So many members at peak oil dot com had hard-ons from that one! Their doomer porn was posting up to the minute satelite photos by the hour as it advanced in the gulf and speculating how bad it would be. What a climax! Shutting down the Straits of Hormuz or a terrorist attack on Saudi Arabia's oil infrastructure may actually make them cum prematurely! ; - )

But you can only maintain that hype for so long. The fact is that high prices are bringing non-OPEC supply online to such a degree that OPEC feels compelled to try to cut its own production to defend current prices. Plus they may be worried about a weaker dollar to boot, and they are trying to maintain their purchasing power parity. Hey, who can blame them?

In the meantime, here we are! Today is the last trading day of the year. The price of WTI is currently $60.50 per barrel. Brent is the same. I think that the market may try to push the price below $60 for year-end? Certainly, later in the day, it will get very thin as players close their books and go home. This means that a few dedicated traders could push the price around to suit their own position ahead of year end. I doubt they can push it $2-3 per barrel, but under $60 is certainly possible. A close below $63.20 is a net loss year on year and may signal the end of the multi-year bull rally. Under $60 per barrel is just adding insult to injury.

Happy New Year, Cube! All the best for 2007!!
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby gt1370a » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 11:14:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '[')b]Basically, WHY does a country that does NOT even have one nuclear reactor need to enrich nuclear fuel on an industrial scale? It is MUCH cheaper to just buy the needed fuel on the open market from a willing supplier, like Russia. But that IS the point. Iran does NOT need nuclear fuel because they do NOT have any nuclear power plants. They WANT to tinker with weapon quality plutonium or whatever it is that makes bombs go boom. It is quite plain and simple and anyone that does not get it by now is an idiot!


I could buy a scenario where Iran realizes their own oil production is diminishing and a global peak may be at hand, so they want to develop the technology to be a nuclear fuel supplier to the world and also to provide electricity to keep their own population happy. Apparently there is a lot of uranium in Iran and maybe they just want to have a vertically integrated process. The problem I have is that they are investing in heavy water reactor technology as well as uranium enrichment. The canadian Can-du reactors use heavy water, but the benefit from that is that you can use natural uranium. A heavy-water, high-enriched reactor is a plutonium factory like at Savannah River or Hanford. Bushehr is a light water reactor but they have a heavy water facility, I think called Arak.

So anyway, you think Iran is basically like the Nigeria/Iraq factor - unless something dramatically changes, it's already factored into the price?

Can I ask your opinion then on the $20 drop in the oil price a few months ago? I don't really buy into the concept of "speculation" with oil - there is a difference between speculating and hedging risk, right? So it seemed like the price run-up to $78 was mainly based on purchasing to hedge against risks from hurricanes and conflict in the Mideast (including Iran and Iraq but also the Israel war going on at the time), and that explains why prices kept rising even as inventories went up (the whole point of hedging against the risk was to build up inventories as a cushion). When those risks evaporated, so did the $20 premium, and prices have stabilized even as inventories returned to normal or slightly below. But if you see it differently I'd like to know what you think...
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 12:18:27

Wow, keeping me busy right up to the last minute here! Oh well, I am off for the first week of January in any case. My year is all but over.

Well, in the summer of 2005 inventories kept increasing everyweek as well while prices continued to climb on potential geo-political supply concerns that never materialized and some destructive hurricanes that did.

I think some of the wall of speculative capital invested into commodities was positioning for a repeat of the summer of 2005, and when it did not happen, once some of those longs started selling to lock-in profits, they found out that there were not that many natural buyers. And all of a sudden that $20 risk premium looked like far too much.

I do not get any special reports like Platt's unfortunately, and due to Chinese Walls my own company also does not supply me with any detailed supply & demand forecasts. Therefore, I rely pretty much on public information like anyone else. However, my feeling from looking at the forward curve is that the market was in a very strong contango indicating that physical markets were over-supplied. The forwards were trading at or over the full cost of carry.

That tells me there was no shortage and why likely the natural buyers were not there on the way down. They also knew there was no physical shortage. In otherwords it was speculative buying by the paper traders. Once that reversed it was into a vacuum. Think Amaranth and other funds who's long bets all of a sudden looked a lot less attractive. We had inter-month spreads of $1.50-2.00, and as wide as $4.00, between the first and second months. So front months had a lot of long speculation in them, but physical buyers were in no hurry to take delivery.

The key was Iran. What I suspect, and this has been confirmed to me after the fact from a British colleague of mine in Germany, that the decision to invade Iran, or make a preventive strike against their nuclear activities, was on the table for discussion. I think that the heads of major investment banks either have close personal contacts or friends in government as well. No one is going to aggressively short the market if an invasion is imminent.

Apparently it was discussed and the powers that be decided against it. And once the word got out about it, formally or informally, the price of crude collapsed like a house of cards. Once they got the unofficial green light, I am sure that the investment banks and brokers aggressively sold into any strength, while the hedge funds tried to lock-in gains. The buyers would have been the slow and dimwitted or the contrarians looking for the bounce that never came.

Now the reason I suspect this is how it happened is because my friend also spoke to one of his buddies that works in the government in the UK and that is what he confirmed. It was on the table, talked about and then a decision was made not to strike Iran. I assume they asked Isreal also not to provoke an incident. All it would take is a few phone calls between ex-college roommates in New York and Washington and the word would get around pretty quickly. And it did. The largest move in 16-years. Hardly a coincidence in my opinion.

As for me, I was simply gutted. My own models were 100% short. I sold several times and got stopped out. Then it would be down $1.50 or $2.00. I would wait for the bounce that never came, and then it would drop another $1.50 or $2.00, until I was sure I had missed the move lower. And then down it would go again. I felt like I was sleeping through history? In the end, I made peanuts when my models should have ensured I made buckets! In trading, he who hesitates is lost!

That is why I have pretty much been on the sidelines this past two months. One, I was away, and two, I did not have any strong ideas. My models were sending mixed signals as well. So I just sat on my hands waiting for some sort of after the fall pattern to emerge. And here we are. Year-end and it is $60.25.

Fortunately for me, energy company shares have outperformed crude futures. The S&P energy index is off its highs, but still a strong close for the year. Russian shares are up even more since their swan dive in August and September. So it was not a bad year, it just could have been a lot sweeter had I followed my models and shorted the market in size up in the mid-$70s!

So I hope that helps a little? I am not changing any positions heading into the new year. I am still long my energy companies. And I sold dollars and bought some more euros today. Just in case. As it is I am off for the first week of January. Back around the 8th after the Orthodox holidays.

I would just like to wish everyone a healthy and prosperous new year, and thank you for all your comments this year. Good luck and God bless. See you next year!
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby cube » Wed 03 Jan 2007, 13:15:36

This will be my last post for this thread.

My next post will be in --- "Trader's Corner 2007"

:wink:

WOW...what a difference. You guys may remember exactly 1 year ago on this day...crude prices were rocketing higher on the mere mention of the word Iran. As of this writing it has tumbled $2 from yesterday...ouch!

Is this a "hint" of what the general mood for the rest of this year will be like? Only time will tell.

I guess we're starting a tradition here at PO....It's time for another poll:

what do you think the price of crude will be in December? :-D
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby mefistofeles » Wed 03 Jan 2007, 21:24:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')OW...what a difference.


You're right but personally I more optmistic/pessimestic depending on your point of view.

When I saw prices in my mutual fund shares go up it really reminded me that eventually there will be a correction.

Now that we are in that correction I think we're going to hit bottom soon and be looking at clear upward momentum for oil prices.

I admit its nothing more than a gut feeling but I feel that both declines and gains are not infinitely sustainable and when you have one the other surely isn't very far behind.

Also if we look at the situation regarding the fundamentals of energy you realize that low energy prices are nothing more than a foreshadow of higher prices. Why? Because when prices are low fewer rigs/holes or drilled, meaning that less supply comes to market. Its basic supply and demand when prices fall producers produce less.

Also if we look at the global energy situation more and more well heads are required to produce the same amount of energy versus a few years ago. This is especially true with North American LNG. At least that's the impression I get from reading the stuff on this website. If we don't have enough drilling exploration activity guess what happens to prices.

Another factor of course would be the sanctions against Iran which seem to be hurting Iran's petroleum exports. This will certainly bode ill for Iranian OPEC production, also let's not forget declining Venezeulan and Mexican production.

From a personal perspective I have seen China and all the fancy cars and bikes the Chinese are using, I can assure that they are in no hurry to go back to bicycles. Also there is incredible pressure on wages in China, obviously not a formula reduced Chinese energy consumption.

I live in Southern California and can tell you that alot of people are still driving their SUV's and still have their marathon commutes. Traffic is still insane in Southern California so from this side of the world I can assure everyone here that if there is demand destruction it certainly isn't occuring here.

Anyone who even reads this website on a regular basis shouldn't even worry about declines in the price of oil. We all have the facts and figures and some vague idea of whats coming.

Its been nearly fifteen years since I paid $1.00 a gallon for gas and doubt that it will ever happen again. Peakoil is here and we have to use this "breather" to stock up on energy mutual funds and stocks or whatever else we may need to do.

The day of peakoil will come,if it hasn't passed us by already and we will know that we were right.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby MrBill » Tue 09 Jan 2007, 04:48:02

Welcome to 2007 everyone! Wow, what a dump we have seen in the first week of the year!! Totally unexpected on my behalf. Both my calls - not to sell my energy stocks, and to stock up on euros early - were both off the mark. Oh well, it is a new year!

I am going to let this thread die and start Trader's Corner 2007 now. But first just to recap the voting for 2006.

The closing price was around $61.00 for year end. About 3% said around $60, so I guess those are the winners. 11% said between $60 - 65, which is where it did trade in the last month of the year. The 3% that said between $50 - 55 were just a week too early. Here we are! Fully 84% who guessed between $70 - 80 were caught up in the bull rally. Hats off as we did touch $78.40 on the way up, but the hype could not sustain the rally. The year end close more closely reflected supply & demand fundamentals. Mind you weather, as always, played an important role in the weaker close. Thank you to everyone for participating. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2006

Postby mefistofeles » Fri 12 Jan 2007, 05:49:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')elcome to 2007 everyone! Wow, what a dump we have seen in the first week of the year!! Totally unexpected on my behalf. Both my calls - not to sell my energy stocks, and to stock up on euros early - were both off the mark. Oh well, it is a new year!


In light of global warming its not too hard to see why prices have crashed. I was visiting the CES show here in Las Vegas and talked to some people from Wisconson they only had one day of snow. Its the same temperature in New York as it is in California so its not hard to see a huge buildup in global inventories. I also talked to a former co worker from Sweden and he told me they haven't had any snow.

The more interesting question is summer. I live in California and we had one day where the temperature actually hit 110 degrees. I've been told that temperatures in Vegas hit 125 degrees.

With so many air conditioners in China and the US and global warming I think summer rather than winter will become the critical energy period. I think its no coincidence that we hit $78.00 a barrel in August.

As far as energy prices are concerned we should really be prepared for $40 or $90 a barrel oil. Although personally speaking I'm more entrenched in the $90 camp than the $40 camp.
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