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Trader's Corner 2007

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Where will WTI crude be on DEC 31st 2007?

Poll ended at Thu 19 Apr 2007, 04:20:21

under $50 per barrel
5
No votes
around $55
0
0%
around $60
5
No votes
around $65
12
No votes
around $70
11
No votes
around $75
28
No votes
 
Total votes : 61

Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Thu 25 Jan 2007, 04:32:57

Some homework on energy efficiency of ethanol and energy security by Goldmans.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Policy proposals create upside risk for crude and corn

Policy proposal is aimed at reducing US foreign oil dependency

In the annual State of the Union address, US President George W. Bush called for the extension of two energy policy initiatives to reduce US dependency on foreign oil sources including a doubling of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to 1.5 billion barrels by 2027 and a 20% reduction in petroleum-based gasoline demand by 2017. The latter is to be achieved by an increase in the renewable fuels standard from 7.5 billion gallons in 2012 to 35 billion gallons in 2017 and a modest improvement in fuel economy standards to reduce gasoline demand by an additional 8.5 billion gallons (this amounts to a 2-mile-per-gallon improvement in fleet efficiency).

The net proposal tightens corn without easing the oil balance

On net, particularly in the near term, these proposals further tighten fundamentals, supporting our positive energy outlook and our constructive longer-term outlook for corn. Although the headline proposal would cumulatively reduce oil demand by 258 billion gallons by 2017, after controlling for the SPR proposal, fuel efficiency losses due to the lower energy content of ethanol, and the increased mineral oil demand used in the ethanol production process, the net reduction through 2017 would be reduced
to 15 to 110 billion gallons depending on the vehicle fuel efficiency, while the first two years of the program would actually tighten the global oil balance.


Implementation of the full proposal would be difficult

In general, policy makers in the United States are likely to continue to support these policies to some degree, in the name of energy security and environmental stewardship, even if substantial subsidies are ultimately required. While physical constraints would likely limit such an aggressive renewable fuels policy, we believe an SPR policy and some version of a renewable fuels proposal is extremely likely (our forecasts already embed 12 billion gallons of renewable fuels by 2012).
Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
January 24, 2007

Hooking back to the thread yesterday about big, powerful cars in Germany versus efficient autos we said that only physical shortages were likely to change consumer tastes not just higher prices.

Can one not see the energy security debate in the same vein? The EROEI of ethanol may be lousy, but there is scope for improvement once critical mass and economies of scale kick-in as well as the steep learning curve. We know corn is not as good as sugar cane, and we hope efforts to develop cellulosic ethanol will be an improvement on corn.

But that is dull, boring economics and not US national security. Afterall we are talking about a country that does not care one way or the other about deficits, so what is a few hundred billion more here or there?

Part of the SPR and ethanol debate, just like US foreign policy in the ME, has to be about security of supply as much as price. And clearly ethanol as a stop-gap measure has a role to play. At least in policy makers' minds.

According the GS, and many on peak oil dot com, it will not make a hill of beans worth of difference to the country's energy mix, but I think it needs to be seen in terms of bridging any short-term supply interuption rather than as a long-term solution whatever the political rhetoric used to justify it. Stationary power from coal, nuclear or alternatives used to produce liquid fuel in the form of ethanol, bio-diesel or hydrogen may not be as efficient as good old gasoline, but you can burn it for transport fuel.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Fri 26 Jan 2007, 10:26:32

Crude is rolling into the weekend on a weaker note. Refining margins slipped back to $8-9 per barrel while nat gas is under $7 per mmbtu again after I thought was a rather decent draw in stocks yesterday? Mind you it is warm and sunny here in Cyprus, so wherever there is real winter it does not seem to be phasing the sellers one iota.

But I bought a small 5 lot for technical reasons just to follow my model.

I booked tickets for skiing in mid-March, so it had better snow sometime between now and then! I missed last year completely, the first time in over 20-years, and it was a fantastic season. Now, this year, a late start and who knows with el Nino and climate change what it will look like by then? Judging by the futures market which are by their nature forward looking I guess not a great deal colder than now?

Cyprus made it into the global energy news today. There is a first! There is offshore oil & gas in the eastern Mediterranean Sea between Cyprus, Lebanon and Egypt. I know where I would be locating my onshore operations for servicing those offshore blocks! But in any case, Cyprus is divided and now that there is booty to be had the Republic of Northern Cyprus, the Turkish controlled enclave, wants its due. Typical. Just another issue to resolve or not as the case may be?

Well, Cyprus is going to need their natural gas. That is for sure. The island is suffering from a lack of rain and snow and the resevoirs are 88% empty. Oops! Another dry summer and they will not only be rationing water, but also having to burn nat gas (or coal I assume) to desalinate sea water. With the level of building activity on the island and all those new villas needing air conditioning all summer, plus the tourist hotels, and it all adds up to plenty of new demand for electricity and expensive desalinated potable water.

From what I understand from regional climate change is that the semi-arid area of N. Africa and the ME between 20 & 30 degrees north is potentially extending its range over the coming years to between 30 & 40 degrees north in latitude. That is a huge shift in climate terms. A dryer, hotter climate area extending northwards will effect southern Europe as well. Even as the glaciers are disappearing from the Alps farther north. This was an area of the temperate world where excessive heating and cooling was not absolutely necessary if houses were well-constructed. Nevermind a reduction in the agricultural productivity and/or more reliance on manmade irrigation that can cause erosion and soil salination as well. Did I mention collapsing fish stocks in the Med basin as well? About as productive in marine life as your bathtub I am afraid.

This is my Malthusian take on coal to liquids via cellulosic ethanol and/or bio-diesel. Basically, we know it has a lower EROEI than petroleum made into gasoline or diesel, but it is viable as a source - reduced efficiency, not as good as petroleum - of liquid transport fuel. And sufficient to suffice for some applications.

However, the productivity gains of switching from draught or animal power to the internal combustion engine freed up approximately 25-percent of the agricultural land from growing animal feed to producing crops for human consumption.

Now, if you take 25-percent of your annual cereal production or land out of cereal production for growing your switch grass or whatever then you lose some of all of those productivity gains when you have to burn that bio-mass via ethanol or bio-diesel as a transport fuel some of which is then used for agriculture itself.

That is assuming you cannot grow bio-mass on marginal land not currently under cultivation, but due to climate change, population growth and perhaps rising oceans you are talking about losing acreage in any case. Any bets what happens then to Sri Lanka or Bangledesh?

So the long-term trade is not just profiting from a run-up in crude oil prices, but all commodities getting more expensive from a confluence of events like population growth and climate change.

The search for energy alternatives is where the money is even if it is an elusive goal using current technologies. Simply because we have no choice. And seriously, unless you can convince a lot of people to freeze to death in the dark we will be burning coal and running nuclear power plants as we look at alternative sources of energy inputs as supplies of petroleum decline. The London pea souper will be back, but on a regional, if not global scale. And they call me a cornocopian? ; - )

All of which makes lower crude prices hard to justify. However, sometimes we need to be patient, and start building our arcs before it starts raining.

Especially, as there seems to be no such a thing as a slowdown in China's rapid growth?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Sales of oil products in China rose
by more than a third last year as the world's fastest-growing
major economy expanded 10.7 percent and strained to meet energy
saving targets.
Oil-product sales jumped 36.2 percent, the National Bureau
of Statistics said in Beijing today. Raw materials, fuel and
power purchasing prices climbed 6 percent last year and gained 5
percent in December from a year earlier, the bureau said.
Demand for fuels to run power plants and metals for use in
cars, buildings and machinery has surged, prompting China to
intensify the search for resources at home and abroad. Oil
imports rose 14.5 percent to 145.2 million tons last year, with
the cost soaring 39.2 percent to $66.4 billion, according to
customs figures.
Source: Bloomberg, January 25, 2006

But those who over-exaggerate the price of crude's importance to over-all costs to the economy should check-out the numbers out of S. Korea. A country that imports ALL of its fuel requirements.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]South Korea, which imports almost all
its crude oil, may spend 2 percent less buying the fuel this year
because of declining prices, the country's Ministry of Commerce,
Industry and Energy said.
The nation's crude oil import bill may fall to $54.8 billion
in 2007 from an estimated $55.9 billion last year, the ministry
said in an e-mailed statement today. The volume of oil imports
may increase 1 percent to 895.8 million barrels.
Crude oil prices in New York averaged $66.25 a barrel last
year and have fallen 30 percent from the record $78.40 a barrel
set July 14. Dubai crude oil prices, South Korea's benchmark,
averaged $61.53 a barrel last year and is down 8.8 percent so far
this year
.
South Korea's oil-product exports may decline 26 percent to
$15.4 billion this year, or to 235.7 million barrels, as product
prices and refining margins fall, the ministry said. A stronger
South Korean currency is also weakening price competition, it
said. Oil product imports are projected to gain 3 percent to
$11.6 billion, or to 195.1 million barrels, it said.
The country may consume 775 million barrels of oil in 2007,
an increase of 1.4 percent, as petrochemical companies expand
capacity, boosting their demand for naphtha, a chemical raw
material produced from crude oil, the ministry said.
Source: Bloomberg, January 25, 2006

Prices are down 30% from their peaks and it may save S. Korea 2% on its fuel buying needs this year? BFD! Mind you S. Korea is an important petroleum prouct exporter as well to the rest of Asia. So the net import bill has to be weighed against receipts from re-export. I am too tired to do the math. But I guess the main take-away is that with prices coming down it will not be high crude prices that derail rapid Asian growth this year.

Short of an attack on Iran or a nuclear accident somewhere 2007 is shaping up already to be a very quiet year and it is not even the end of January! What am I missing? Have I done a Donald Rumsfield and gone from "knowing what we don't know to not knowing what we don't know?"

I think it will take more than the threat of geopolitical supply cuts this year to re-ignite a bull rally in crude. Too many burned their speculative fingers last year. So we will have to see real barrels disappearing from inventories in order to see significantly higher prices. So, as Homer Simpson would say, "now, we play the old waiting game. Doh!"
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Fri 26 Jan 2007, 13:52:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')...
I think it will take more than the threat of geopolitical supply cuts this year to re-ignite a bull rally in crude. Too many burned their speculative fingers last year.
...
There's no such thing as "tenureship" in this line of business. :lol:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')...
So we will have to see real barrels disappearing from inventories in order to see significantly higher prices. So, as Homer Simpson would say, "now, we play the old waiting game. Doh!"
Maybe the Feb 1st OPEC cuts will lead to inventory reductions? maybe??? BTW ever since I have taken an interest in PO, I have noticed time and time again...the financial news media mentioning "there will be new production comming on line next year."

Here's my question.....WHERE?.....WHICH COUNTRY?

Don't get me wrong. I'm not trying to say PO is going to happen next year.....it's just ridiculously sad when a media outlet can be so vague but still maintain their respectability and their reputation. It's garbage like that which makes me NOT want to read the news.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Fri 26 Jan 2007, 14:47:24

Is tenureship a word? Why not just use tenure? I dunno.

I read today that no one believes OPEC will enforce the planned cuts on FEB 01?

I bought today at $54.45 and dumped them out again at $54.94. I did not want to carry a long into the weekend. The hourlies were supportive, but the longer trend is still down. And I wasn't convinced we would get enough cold weather to make any real dent in inventory.

I note that even Goldie Sachs seem to be caving in to a less bullish line. And they have been far more bullish than anyone else on the street.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
Commodities Energy Weekly

Refinery investments signal renewed focus on quantity


A significant overhang in products, but crude oil inventories at roughly year-ago levels

The exceptionally warm start to the winter in the United States - as well in Europe and Asia - has created an overhang of petroleum product inventories in the US, which now stand 18 million barrels above last year. The overhang of petroleum product inventories is in stark contrast to the state of US crude oil inventories, which drew heavily over 4Q2006 and are now at roughly year-ago levels.

Refinery maintenance expected to continue to increase, reaching a peak in the next two weeks

This build in petroleum product inventories is likely to slow in the coming weeks, as the normal seasonal refinery maintenance schedule peaks in early February. Already, roughly 1 million b/d of US crude oil distillation capacity is down for maintenance.

Refining capacity investments returning to quantity from quality

For the first time in five years, investments in cracking/upgrading capacity will likely surpass those in desulphurization capacity in 2007, thanks to a combined 905 thousand b/d increase in coking, hydrocracking and cat-cracking capacity, versus a 450 thousand b/d increase in hydrotreating.
Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
January 26, 2007

I have computer problems at home right now, so I think I will just leave it alone and enjoy my evening. Who knows how long this mild weather will last? Have a nice weekend and speak to you next week. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby mefistofeles » Sun 28 Jan 2007, 23:06:56

I justed the nymex and oil is almost at $56.00 . To me this probably foreshadows high summer pricing as air conditioners turn on the world over. Personally I think we could breach $80.00 ,without any geopolitical problems.

First of there is the demand story. Demand is steady in the US and its increasing at a ridiculous pace in China, India as well as the rest of ASEAN.

Europe, is energy consumption actually decreasing there, from what I have seen that's not likely.

OPEC countries are begining to consume more energy for their own domestic use. Even if they can maintain production (which is questinable in the case of Venezeula and Iraq) internal energy consumption alone will insure that less oil researches the market.

I wouldn't discount the possibility of oil dropping to $50 before summer however I think the summer peak will be greater than $78.50. How much greater its hard to say but high oil prices are bound to return by summer.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Mon 29 Jan 2007, 04:02:38

mefistofeles I do not disagree with any of your points. All are very relevant. I am unsure we will see $80 without some hurricane damage due to warmer el Nino temperatures in the GOM or some geopolitical fall-out from UN Iran sanctions, but I think you're right about the demand side being very strong.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Iran's economy depends entirely on oil sales, which account for 90 per cent of exports and a roughly equal share of Tehran's budget. Since July, a barrel of oil has fallen from $US78 to just over $US50, reducing Tehran's revenues by about a third. If the oil price fell into the $US35 to $US40 range, Iran would shift into deficit, and with access to foreign borrowing cut off by UN sanctions, the Government's capacity to continue financing foreign proxies would quickly run out.
How the Saudis plan to put oil squeeze on Iran



Also, production in Mexico dropped 500K bpd in 2006. It will no doubt slip even more in 2007.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')exico's largest oil field, the
Cantarell, recorded a drop in daily output drop of half a
million barrels last year, the Wall Street Journal said today,
citing data from the Mexican government.
Oil output is declining faster than expected, the newspaper
said. The development could threat Mexico's finances and worsen
U.S. attempts to diversify oil supplies, the Journal said.
Production at Cantarell fell to 1.5 million barrels in
December from 1.99 million barrels in January, the Journal said.
For the whole country, oil output was just below three
million barrels a day in December, down from 3.4 million barrels
at the beginning of 2006, the newspaper said. That was the
lowest production since 2000, the Journal said.

Source: WSJ/Bloomberg, January 29th, 2007

The Mexican government's policy of stripping 60% of PEMEXs revenue for general budget expenditures and not putting enough back into the company for exploration and development is one factor in Mexico's falling oil & gas production as well as the age of Cantarell. PEMEX did announce some cooperation with Petrobras for some offshore exploration and deep water drilling in the GOM, but Mexico's constitution bars foreign ownership of oil & gas assets in Mexico.

PEMEX like PVDSA has been poorly managed and starved of cash to reinvest for years and of course this is what happens. Older fields go into steep decline, while newer fields are not replacing them as well as pipeline leaks and other lack on maintenance mean that oil & gas are wasted. This is not peak oil per se, but you can clearly see how such mismanagement exacerbates oilfield decline.

Colder temperatures have kept the heating oil complex strong and nat gas is also back above $7 per mmbtu. This is supporting crude up near $56. I would have been better off keeping my long going into the weekend, but now will have to look to buy on a dip. Which by itself is strange as COT reports show shorts increased last week.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')edge-fund managers and other large
speculators increased their net-short position in New York
crude-oil futures in the week ended Jan. 23, according to U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.
Speculative short positions, or bets prices will fall,
outnumbered long positions by 8,499 contracts on the New York
Mercantile Exchange, the Washington-based commission said in its
Commitments of Traders report. Net-short positions rose by 6,467
contracts, or 318 percent, from a week earlier.

Source: Bloomberg, January 29, 2007

Russia, or Gazprom that is, appears to have done a U-turn with regards to foreign participation in major oil & gas projects there. This may be due to political pressure stemming from the EU being very uncomfortable with their over reliance on Russia as their primary energy supplier given some interuptions to the Druhzba Pipeline cutting through Belarus early this month.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')AO Gazprom, racing to develop
natural-gas reserves, may allow Chevron Corp. and four rivals to
help develop the largest untapped deposit in Russia, giving them
a second chance to join the project.
Gazprom invited Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Norsk Hydro ASA,
Statoil ASA and Total SA to work on the Arctic Shtokman field,
Deputy Chief Executive Officer Alexander Medvedev said in Davos,
Switzerland today. Gazprom says Shtokman holds 3.7 trillion
cubic meters of gas, enough to meet U.S. demand for five years.
``Reserves are the great prize, and Gazprom will determine
the terms of the deal,'' said James Fenkner of Red Star Asset
Management. State-run Gazprom, which originally planned to allot
stakes in Shtokman to two or three companies, called off the
competition in October, saying it wouldn't share ownership.

Source: Bloomberg, January 29, 2007

[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={C002A81D-5101-4DB8-A15D-C692879E8DE4}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Russia's 'petro-confidence' could lead to a fall[/url]

From that list you will notice that BP and XOM are missing. COP of course owns 25% of Lukoil already, so I am surprised to see them being invited into a project by Gazprom. I can only conclude on the flimsiest of evidence that Lukoil and therefore by extension COP are making the right noises in Russia's political inner circles and therefore are on the Kremlin's most favored list.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
The oil division of Russian energy giant Gazprom is planning to build a refinery in Armenia to process oil coming from neighbouring Iran, a Russian newspaper said yesterday.

The plan would involve pumping oil into Armenia from the Tabriz region of northern Iran along a 200km pipeline, then transporting the refined oil products back into Iran by rail, the Kommersant daily said.

"We are looking into building a refinery in Armenia, but we cannot give details for the moment," Natalya Vyalkina, a spokeswoman for state-controlled Gazprom Neft, said.

Kommersant quoted analysts as saying that the project would be "essentially political" since the high transport costs involved would bring little economic profit.

Russia has close economic ties with Iran and is building a nuclear power station in southern Iran. Moscow long resisted the imposition of UN sanctions over Iran's nuclear programme. Russia plans refinery for Iranian oil

Perhaps in the run-up to Presidential elections in 2008 there was already enough uncertainty surrounding Mr. Putin's successor, so the Kremlin felt it necessary to calm capital markets and avoid investor fright leading to FDI flight. However, it is clear that any new projects will include Gazprom and/or Rosneft as partners and they, not the foreign companies, will be dictating the terms of cooperation. Still, a bone is better than nothing for the multis that are finding themselves increasing shut-out from national oil companies and their reserves.

[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={9D27DE29-6096-46E8-BC8C-7C2AD2EB7D70}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Big Oil earnings set to slow after years of growth[/url]

And speaking of XOM. They, like many here on peak oil dot com, see no potential for ethanol as a replacement for petroleum. At least at today's prices using today's technology.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Exxon Mobil Corp., the world's largest publicly traded
energy company, considers ethanol irrelevant as a solution to an
addiction that forces the U.S. to import two-thirds of its oil.
No ``viable, meaningful business proposition'' exists for Exxon
in ethanol, Senior Vice President Stuart McGill told investors
at a Jan. 17 conference arranged by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
``The nature of the science as it stands today and the
technology involved requires significant forms of subsidies and
mandates to make a lot of sense,'' McGill said in New York,
dismissing an industry that counts Microsoft founder Bill Gates
and David Rubenstein, co-founder of the Carlyle Group, the
private equity firm, among its biggest enthusiasts.

Poor Substitute

Ethanol, after almost doubling in price in five years, is
falling as prices for corn, the main raw material for the fuel
in the U.S., reach the highest in a decade. Crude oil has
tumbled 29 percent from its July record to $55.83 a barrel, as
of 10:19 a.m. Singapore time, cutting gasoline prices. Oil must
be above $70 for ethanol to be profitable, according to research
by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
Source: Bloomberg, January 29, 2007

Although some investors like GS do feel that ethanol margins have fallen too far and are bound to recover.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')o produce 35 billion gallons of ethanol would require all of this year’s corn crop. To produce enough plant material for renewable fuels on top of current production would require, by one estimate, another 40 million heavily subsidized acres. Agribiz is, of course, delighted.

Foreseeing the likely possibility of spikes in food prices, as the ethanol plants compete with the cattle for corn, or spikes in the price of fuels whose use is government-mandated, the president would give the secretaries of Agriculture and Energy the power to waive or change the fuel standards.Ethanol’s hollow promises


The US dollar is at a 4-year high against the yen as it touches 122 yen this morning in Asian trading. The dollar is also up against the euro at $1.2900. A stronger dollar along with higher crude prices may convince OPEC producers not to cut production in February. However, this remains to be seen as well as how well the cartel can enforce discipline. I am not 100% sure where US dollar strength is coming from, but I note it has also clawed back some gains from Sterling as well. Perhaps it was just oversold and this is more of a technical correction than a change in dollar sentiment? Base and precious metals are also down in sympathy with a surging dollar.

UPDATE on stronger dollar.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he selling yesterday pushed the yield on the 10-year Treasury up sharply, closing at around 4.87%, the highest since last August. The notion that the economy will stay fairly robust has apparently taken root in the hearts and minds of bond traders and planted the fear that rates may rise before they fall. For the fixed-income set, that's reason enough to become defensive.

But while the trading floors focused on the 10-year Note seem to have blinked in deference to the growth-will-be-stronger-than-expected crowd, there are no signs of capitulation (yet) over in Fed funds futures pits. Looking at the array of contracts expiring in coming months, one theme is clear: the popular bet at the moment is a Fed that will hold rates steady at 5.25% for the foreseeable future. That's been the bet for some time now, based on recent history in Fed funds trading, and it appears to be the consensus view for pricing Fed funds through the summer.THE BOND MARKET BLINKS
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Mon 29 Jan 2007, 09:04:32

Crude is dumping today after briefly touching highs. At least from a technical perspective this reverses the bullish picture that was emerging. Take profits on longs after the weekend? A stronger dollar? Metals also sharing the pain? In any case, it has pretty much been one way action today.

Here is an article I enjoyed reading. Think of all those jobs connected to the hydro-carbon economy as you read about impulse purchases connected to the simple act of buying gasoline.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hen I first got interested in oil it was the far-away places that supply our oil that dazzled me: Venezuela, the Middle East, Africa, Alaska, even Texas seemed alluring and mysterious. I wanted to get on a drilling rig or glop through the muck in Azerbaijan. But when I started to write about the culture of oil, I realized I had to address the culture at our end of the pipe too, which meant hanging out in gas stations.
Life at the Pump

MonteQuest did a good article about Gas Hoarding in another thread where he talked about the changing retail landscape surrounding Texaco and other gasoline retailers and how their business model has changed over the years. This article fits in nicely with that one. Enjoy.

Also, I did not know where to post this link, so I will just stick it in here.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')If you spend more on oil, doesn’t that leave you less to spend on something else? Why don’t other prices come down, or not rise as rapidly? It’s a complete fallacy to suppose that the rise in the price of oil, or of other commodities, has had any significant effect on inflation.” --Milton Friedman, 1974

“The problem is not, as President Carter asserts, a lack of confidence. The problem is rather that the public is very confident that the government will produce inflation and will mismanage the economy. We do not need more confidence in bad policies. We need better policies.” --Milton Friedman, 1979

THE WORLD ACCORDING TO MILTON

I particularly like that last quote. If I was not so hooked on my quote from Frederic Bastiat - on Government as being an end in itself I might have even adopted that quote from Friedman as my own signature line. But I do not want to dilute my message. So the original stays. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 03:05:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')..
Life at the Pump
...
ohhh that was a GOOD read. If there was ever such a thing as the top 10 best stories ever posted on this site that would definitely be on the list.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 10:18:11

Finally, at last some information about China's plans for its SPR, although even these are sparse in detail.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')hina has begun operating its first strategic oil reserve, the Xinhua news agency reported Monday, citing an official in the National Development and Reform Commission.

"China's first strategic oil reserve has been filling with oil and begun operations, and China's plans for its strategic oil reserves are now progressing in an orderly way," Xinhua said, citing Zhu Hongren, deputy bureau chief for the economic operations bureau.

The report did not elaborate on whether the filling of the reserve had been completed or the state of reserves operations.

Strategic oil reserve begins operation in China

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')hina is the world's biggest oil consumer after the United States.

The government approved the construction of four national strategic oil reserve bases in 2004. The other three are in Daishan, also in Zhejiang Province; Huangdao, in East China's Shandong Province; and Dalian, in Northeast Liaoning Province.

It has been reported that the government plans to have a reserve of some 150 million barrels of oil.

Official statistics show China imported a record 145.18 million tons of crude oil last year, making it the world's largest oil importer after the US and Japan.
Oil reserve takes shape as tanks fill



Quite a dump in crude and products lead by the heating oil yesterday. So far today it has stabilized on news that Saudi will continue with its policy of production cuts. But the tentative correction remains vulnerable to follow through selling later in the session. The weight of the trend means any rally has to eat through a lot of resistance on the way up.

Nat gas jumped higher on the back of some colder weather forecasts. This might filter through into the heating oil complex as well.

I posted about S. European climate change a few days ago. Here is some follow-up.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')mong findings in recent drafts are that the Arctic Ocean could largely be devoid of sea ice in summers in this century; the Mediterranean shores of Europe could become barely habitable in summers while the Alps shift from snowy winter destinations to summer havens from the heat; growing seasons in temperate regions will expand, while droughts will further ravage semi-arid regions of Africa and southern Asia.
Profound climate changes in store, experts say


UPDATE: I took profit on a small long today to make up for a small stop loss yesterday, but to be honest it looks like the start of the US trading session will higher on weather and OPEC cuts as well as news surrounding Iran. However, a bird in hand for me. Have to build-up a trading cushion in the first quarter, so I can have more to risk during the summer months.

As a taxpayer, I have been following the German coal debate for years! In case you missed it here is another nail in the coffin for expensive, subsidized coal. However, with the phase-out of nuclear this just increases Germany's reliance on oil & gas from Russia and other former CIS countries. A political trade-off.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he conservative daily Die Welt welcomes the decision to phase out German coal mining: "At first glance the planned phasing out of coal mining doesn't seem to fit with current times: the price of natural resources is increasing to record levels throughout the world. Oil, gas, coal and ore have become valued luxury goods that bring undreamed-of prosperity to countries with ample supplies. Instead of phasing it out, these countries are increasing extraction. Only Germany is going in the opposite direction. After phasing out nuclear power, it now wants German coal mining to be a thing of the past. However, it is a long overdue step.

"German coal mining is not cost-effective in the foreseeable future. While the coal in German mines is up to 1,000 meters below ground, mining in Australia can take place in open pits. The price differential is enormous: imported coal costs €60 per ton, while that in Germany costs €200. And coal doesn't play a significant role in energy policy any more: It accounts for only around 5 percent of energy needs -- of no importance for national energy security. That is why it is incomprehensible that the SPD had wanted to allow coal mining to continue indefinitely.

"Taxpayers have ploughed around €130 billion into German coal mining since the start of the coal crisis 50 years ago.
Good Riddance to Coal Mining
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 16:03:15

Yikes!.....this has to be a record.

I think today's price action is absolute proof that you don't necessarily need a hurricane or something get blown up in the middle east to have a massive 1 day rally.

However I don't think prices will hold at $57.....it will probably drop a little on profit taking.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 16:12:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'Y')ikes!.....this has to be a record.

I think today's price action is absolute proof that you don't necessarily need a hurricane or something get blown up in the middle east to have a massive 1 day rally.

However I don't think prices will hold at $57.....it will probably drop a little on profit taking.


F-me! That hurts. Long and impatient. Too quick to take a profit. Ouch! That was quite the rally. Okay, tomorrow let's look at it again.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Wed 31 Jan 2007, 07:03:09

A dramatic run-up in crude prices yesterday lead by heating oil and natural gas on persistant colder weather and surrounding news that Saudi was prepared to cut further to sustain higher oil prices.

However, Iran related rumors may also be playing their role. The rapid reversal in prices from Monday's sell-off would have also caused record numbers of short sellers to cover those shorts.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he United States “could be using its two air force bases in Bulgaria and one at Romania's Black Sea coast to launch an attack on Iran in April," the Bulgarian news agency Novinite claimed. Commenting on the report, The Sunday Herald wrote that the U.S. build-up along the Black Sea, coupled with the recent positioning of two U.S. aircraft carrier battle groups off the Straits of Hormuz “appears to indicate that U.S. President Bush has run out of patience with Tehran's nuclear misrepresentation and non-compliance with the U.N. Security Council's resolution.”
'US poised to attack,' claims Bulgarian agency

I don't know? The wife of a very good friend of mine leases all US military property in Europe for the US Army. They have bases all over as well as periodically closing some while opening others. Romania and Bulgaria are members of NATO's Partnership for Peace and as such train with NATO and US forces. This may or may not have anything to do with plans for Iran.

A quick look at a map of the Black Sea and you can see that although Romania and Bulgaria are closer to Iran than, say, Ramstein, Germany, where the US Airforce is, for a few targeted raids I doubt the distance would be a deciding factor. For one, they would still have to fly over or around Turkey, which was denied to them during the second Gulf war, and secondly, if they can fly direct from Ramstein to Kabul then Tehran is actually closer.

The Persian Gulf is certainly closer for any planned attack. I don't think that is the issue. The issue is the political fall-out and isolation of America following an attack not supported by the UN, Russia, China or anyone else except for the Israelis for example.


not unrelated link, but interesting none the less
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
At a meeting with President Vladimir Putin in Shanghai last June, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did not mince words when discussing what he termed cooperation "in fixing both gas prices and flows in the interest of global stability."

Since then, Moscow has successfully managed to evade the issue. But the blunt approach seems to have taken the Kremlin aback. At any rate, no high-level response followed.

That is further proof that Moscow is unable and unwilling to accept Khamenei's proposal.

Saying yes to a gas cartel with Iran would mean Russia changing camp to become an opponent rather than a partner of the West, and not only in energy terms.

But saying no is not very fitting either. First, Tehran may take such behavior as a deadly insult, undermining further friendship and cooperation.

Second, Moscow risks losing its unofficial status as Iran's defender. The Kremlin needs that status no less than does Tehran, because it adds to its international prestige and allows it to play a stabilizing role in the developing conflict.

Source: Vedomosti Newspaper, Moscow, January 31, 2006

A build-up of American forces in central-eastern Europe is therefore more likely related to NATO related training than any attacks on Iran. But each event has a probability attached to it, and I guess sanctions against Iran are part of that risk premium.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')nventory Forecasts

Today's Energy Department report will probably show U.S. distillate supplies, including heating oil and diesel, fell 2.1 million barrels last week, based on the median estimate from a Bloomberg News survey of 13 analysts. Stockpiles held 142.6 million on Jan. 19, 9.4 percent more than the five-year average for the period.

Gasoline stockpiles probably gained 1.8 million barrels, according to the survey, the seventh straight increase. Supplies held 220.8 million barrels last week, 2.9 percent above the five- year average.

Refineries operated at 87.4 percent of capacity, unchanged from the week before, according to the survey responses. Refineries in the week ended Jan. 19 operated at the lowest since November.

OPEC, which agreed to cut daily output by 1.2 million barrels in November, is due to cut a further 500,000 barrels a day starting Feb. 1 to stem rising stockpiles. About 775,000 barrels of the initial cut was in place in December, according to a Bloomberg News survey of traders and oil companies.
Oil Falls From Four-Week High on Signs of Ample U.S. Supplies



There has been very little follow through after yesterday's move higher. We stopped just short of $57 in the WTI and have since backed off 25-30 points. This may be because Europe is afraid to take it too high before the US comes in, sellers coming in to take profit on overnight longs and/or some position squaring ahead of today's DOE inventory releases.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Wed 31 Jan 2007, 16:44:33

I guess I need to replace the batteries in my crystal ball. :lol:

I had a grin on my face this morning going short and watching the price move down.....however halfway thru I lost all of my "paper profits" just as quickly as I made them as prices made a U-turn. ouch!

some serious yo-yo action today.

1st down then up.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Thu 01 Feb 2007, 05:58:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I') guess I need to replace the batteries in my crystal ball. :lol:

I had a grin on my face this morning going short and watching the price move down.....however halfway thru I lost all of my "paper profits" just as quickly as I made them as prices made a U-turn. ouch!

some serious yo-yo action today.

1st down then up.


I sold yesterday, got squeezed on a rally, but then took profits ahead of the numbers as the price fell. A couple of minutes later it was even lower, and I was kicking myself for buying back my short too soon. Thankfully, I did, as we then saw another large rally, which I am perplexed about to be honest?

There was a large draw, -2.6 mio bbls in the distillates, including the crucial heating oil, that was larger than expected. But that should have been more than offset by increases in crude +2.7 mio bbls and gasoline +3.8 mio bbls. Some of that no doubt is also due to stronger seasonal demand for heating oil, but nat gas is still quite low $7.70 per mmbtu, and winter for all intents and purposes is about half-over depending on what Punxsutawney Phil says in February?

On the other hand, there were still quite a few headlines regarding Saudi and OPEC cuts in February as well. And I am sure some hold-outs from the short selling side last week gave-up yesterday and added to buying demand from hedge funds who are testing the waters again, now that it looks like we have established the lows at or near $50 per barrel in January.

On the technical side I see that on the long-term weekly charts we are still officially in a downtrend with resistance in the WTI between $58.70 and $59.30. Just under the psychological $60 according the the 13- and 21-week moving averages that acted as pretty good buying support during the big rally that ended last summer.

On the short and medium term charts the hourly and the daily chart are pointing northwards. Daily support is between $54.52 and $54.16 on 13- and 21-day moving averages in what looks like the third wave of either an ABC correction to the down move or a bottom and the start of a 12345 move higher. It is still to early to tell until resistance is taken out on the topside or a new down trend emerges. In any case, third waves are good places to be if you follow the trend as usually they are quite resilliant, longer and steeper than the first wave.

However, refining margins are likely to weaken further as demand for heating oil peaks and supplies of gasoline look more than adequate going forward. Total crude demand is flat at 20.25 mbpd, but GDP figures of 3.5% for Q406 were supportive going forward, although we cannot expect the Fed to cut rates anytime soon. The FOMC held fast at 5.25%, while seeing inflationary pressures from continuing high demand for commodities in the near future.

I would like to sell crude here at $57.75-58.00. The hourly is bending over like a branch with too much wet snow weighing it down. It worked yesterday, briefly. However, I am going to be cautious here as yesterday's secondary rally was quite unexpected by me, and therefore I am a little nervous there may be more to this rally than I am seeing? Speak to you later.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Thu 01 Feb 2007, 10:26:40

I was cleaning up my web browser today and stumbled across this link I must have saved last summer? Read it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')EAR V. FUNDAMENTALS IN THE OIL MARKET
Crude is king when it comes to bull markets in the 21st century. The price of a barrel of oil in New York futures trading has climbed some 280%, as of last night's close from January 1, 2002. As bull markets go, this one's been extraordinarily profitable for those who've ridden the wave. This year alone, crude's ascended by more than 30%, based on the near-$80-a-barrel mark set earlier this month. But every wave crashes, eventually, even one that's driven by a potent supply/demand profile that drives the oil market.
FEAR V. FUNDAMENTALS IN THE OIL MARKET



For some reason I was thinking of the Barbara Streisand/Robert Redford movie, The Way We Were, while reading this article.

I remember having many of the same thoughts and feelings last summer as were expressed in this Capital Spectator article. In hindsight it looks all so terribly obvious?

I guess it just goes to prove the old maxim that the fundamentals are always clearest at the top and at the bottom of the trend.

Market Watch made a typo mistake today and wrote: "Crude holds above $68." I dunno maybe it is a prediction? ; - )

Maybe not? You might also want to take a look at this blog on the state of mortgage backed securities and other sources of nuclear fall-out. I thinking back to Seahorse's comments on the US housing market in December. Read for yourself and decide.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')urning to the subprime industry, once again I heard from my friend who has been staggeringly accurate. He continues to feel that things are about to really get worse. In an email to me, he wrote: "Scratch and dent loans are killing everybody. Bids that were 92 or 93 are now low to mid-80s. It is a bloodbath, and is pressuring even strong companies to buckle. NO ONE is making any money in the market right now. We are at a point of no return for many. The next two weeks will be wild."

I've been in the investment business over 25 years, and again, I have rarely seen someone so accurately call a turn in the market as he has done. Remember, we are just now witnessing a change in lending standards, and these will ripple all through the lending food chain, though thus far only small changes have occurred.
Tanta on "Scratch and Dent" Loans

Mind you as I understand this is written by Fleckenstein, a perma-bear in the same league as Roubini, so you may take it with a healthy dose of salt.

I am starting to see the pop-up type ads for credit companies offering zero interest for 6-months for switching credit card balances to pay-off those Christmas bills, or should I say, instead of paying-off those Christmas bills?
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Fri 02 Feb 2007, 10:45:30

Sure, crude eventually closed lower yesterday night, but only after quite a significant spike to the topside during the New York time zone. Enough of a rally to keep the daily chart expanding upwards at least from the technical side even though the close was weaker.

Maximum pain for minimum gain is not a lot of fun. Either you have to play with such small positions to ride out the volatility, and then the small gains are not worth it. Or you have to take big risks and hope your timing is perfect.

My timing has not been perfect as of late. No wonder with Europe quiet and the large moves originating first late in the NY session. By that time it is almost cocktail hour here.

Still, with more cold weather on its way, and continued news surrounding Iran I think we will likely end the trading week on a strong note.

Speaking of Iran an up to date primer on events there is always useful.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Four things you need to know
1)Sunni vs. Shi'ite
2)Where is Najaf?
3)What is Ashura?
4)Who is Muqtada al Sadr?
US Pours Gasoline On A Raging Inferno (Again)

But in terms of economic activity we would expect that with strong forecasted growth in Chindia and Asia in general as well as a better outlook for the US based on Q406 GDP figures that base metals might be stronger.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Base metals reinforce the view of a "happy slowdown" in global growth

Base metals, not energy and agriculture prices, signal a "happy slowdown" scenario in global economic growth

Over the past two weeks, commodity markets have rallied by nearly 10%, erasing nearly all of the year-to-date losses. However, most of this recent rebound in commodity prices has been driven by the energy and agriculture sectors, which we will argue do not provide significant insight into the current economic environment. In sharp contrast, base metals, which are more often seen as reflecting global demand growth, continued to decline over the past two weeks.

The slowdown in metals demand growth was in line with the Goldman Sachs Global Leading Indicator

Since early December, base metals have fallen over 10% (greater than the 6% overall decline in commodity prices). A modest slowdown in metals demand has allowed copper inventories to more than double from their lows. This suggests that the severe physical shortage of metal was eventually alleviated and the scarcity premium was reduced, and that it was not the case that a dramatic decline in final demand was underway.

Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
February 2, 2007

So as we end the week and start a new trading month the outlook is not so clear. No emerging events to jump on, but more of a see-saw back and forth. In this situation one should stay with the underlying trend. A rally on the daily charts with support at $54.47/54.62 that runs into weekly resistance at $58.81/59.35 in the WTI. But a significant move below $57.50 on the hourly charts may simply discourage weak longs from risking their luck over the weekend.

There is not a lot of news value in this link, but some might find it interesting in general. Have a nice weekend and speak to you next week. Cheers.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut the futures markets as whole are showing that "they don't necessarily react to the news of the day, but what futures events are being priced in," he said.
"We don't know the news that the market is looking at to determine the underlying fundamentals -- it could be any number of things," he said, noting that a good way to find out would be to study the spreads, the price differences between different futures contracts.
[url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={7090F484-EE2E-49AB-B08F-94102F7E13AB}&siteid=mktw&dist=nbi]Why commodities march to a different drummer[/url]
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Fri 02 Feb 2007, 16:04:12

The market is always full of surprises. I thought today was going to be a sleepy day. It certainly looked that way. That is until the last hour of the trading day.

until next week

BTW - forgive me for stating the obvious but I think we are no longer in a bear market. :wink:
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Fri 02 Feb 2007, 16:39:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'T')he market is always full of surprises. I thought today was going to be a sleepy day. It certainly looked that way. That is until the last hour of the trading day.

until next week

BTW - forgive me for stating the obvious but I think we are no longer in a bear market. :wink:


umm, it looks like this market has Iran written all over it?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')inter arrives and energy prices rally

cold temperatures, exceptionally cold forecasts and unwinding of the impact of "negative gamma" lend support to prices
US temperatures turned substantially colder than average this week, driving up heating fuel demand and overall energy prices. On Tuesday of this week alone, crude oil prices rose $2.96/bbl (5.5%) while natural gas prices surged 82.3 cents/mmBtu (11.9%), with the onset of colder temperatures and weather forecasts calling for an exceptionally cold first half of February. The recent US weather forecasts are calling for 25% colder-than-normal temperatures over the first two weeks of February. Also lending support to prices was the unwinding of the impact of "negative gamma" that had pressured prices sharply lower in recent weeks.

We are raising our 3-month, 6-month and 9-month NYMEX natural gas price forecasts to $6.70/mmBtu, $7.00/mmBtu and $7.70/mmBtu, respectively

The cold forecast for the first half of February will likely motivate an
extra 150 Bcf in inventory draws through an increase in heating-related demand, which could potentially bring end-of-March natural gas inventory levels down to 1550 Bcf from our previous forecast of 1700 Bcf. As a result, we have raised our natural gas price forecasts. It should be noted, however, that 1550 Bcf is still a relatively high end-of-March level. Therefore, we still expect natural gas prices to decline below residual fuel oil prices.


source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
February 2, 2007

A very strong close to the week for sure. Constructive on the technical side, but do not ignore those weekly moving averages and the selling pressure on the topside at the resistance levels mentioned earlier today.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o as we end the week and start a new trading month the outlook is not so clear. No emerging events to jump on, but more of a see-saw back and forth. In this situation one should stay with the underlying trend. A rally on the daily charts with support at $54.47/54.62 that runs into weekly resistance at $58.81/59.35 in the WTI. But a significant move below $57.50 on the hourly charts may simply discourage weak longs from risking their luck over the weekend.



Ta.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Mon 05 Feb 2007, 03:55:50

A quick update. Crude is higher after a strong close on Friday. However, I expect some profit taking today on the announcement this morning that OPEC will wait till March to guage the impact of their previous cuts before making any decision to cut supply further.

A pullback to $58.50 in the WTI is quite likely. $58.00 is possible. That is $5780 and $5750 in the Brent. Nat gas is steady at $7.65-70, but lacking momentum from this cold weather to push higher. Probably because by many estimates winter is already half-over and stocks are adequate to see us through.

Good luck and speak later. Cheers.


Energy producers.....
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussian President Vladimir Putin has strongly denied claims that Russia is using its energy resources as a lever to put pressure on other countries, BBC reports.

He was addressing the world's media at his annual news conference in Moscow on Thursday.

Mr Putin said Russia's energy deals with Ukraine and other neighbouring countries "benefit the consumers" and "experts understand this".
Putin Hits Back at Energy Critics

energy transporters,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia's president said the country would look for ways to reduce its dependence on transit nations in oil and gas exports to Europe.

Russia's state-run pipeline monopoly Transneft [RTS: TRNF] will increase the capacity of oil terminals at the Baltic port of Primorsk, near St. Petersburg, Vladimir Putin said in an apparent reference to the pricing and tariff difficulties, in particular with neighbors Ukraine and Belarus.

"I have given instructions to the government, and Transneft has started work on expanding terminals in Primorsk by 50 million metric tons [366.5 mln bbl]," the president told a Kremlin news conference.

Russia, which supplies more than 25% of Europe's oil and gas, mostly via Belarusian and Ukrainian pipelines, is also leading a project to build the Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea as a direct link to Germany.

In a move that has angered Russia's neighbors.....
Russia to seek less dependence for energy transit


.... and clueless consumers.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s the world awaits tomorrow's release of the highly anticipated "Climate Change 2007" report from Paris, new research commissioned by EnviroMedia Social Marketing indicates most Americans don't understand the connection between their own electricity use and global warming.

"More Americans have no idea what fuels their electricity than those who can name any particular source — either correctly or incorrectly," said EnviroMedia CEO Valerie Davis. "If you don't know leaving the lights on likely means you're burning more coal than you need to, you probably don't realize just how much your household decisions contribute to global warming."

EnviroMedia's survey, conducted by Opinion Research Corporation January 11-14, asked 1,015 Americans, "When you turn on your light switch, what fuel is the source of your electricity?" Thirty-five percent said they don't know, while another 23 percent simply said their electricity comes from electricity or the electric company. Only 16 percent cited coal, America's primary fuel source for electricity.

"The disparity between awareness of coal as a source of electricity and the fact that half our electricity in the U.S. is powered by coal is pretty telling," said EnviroMedia President Kevin Tuerff. "We realize that coal's an abundant and relatively inexpensive fuel source, but Americans must do more to slow global warming by wasting less electricity and choosing renewable power when they can."
Most Americans Don't Get Connection Between Electricity, Climate Change

UPDATE from China with regards to their SPR
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')1:28 05Feb07 RTRS-China plans new crude port at strategic store site
BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - China has approved construction of
a new crude port expected to handle 15 million tonnes per year of
oil, at the site of its second set of strategic oil reserve
tanks, the country's top economic planner said on Monday.
A unit of state-owned oil trader Sinochem is funding the port
at Aoshan in Zhejiang province, the National Development and
Reform Commission said in a statement on its Web site
(www.ndrc.gov.cn).
The same company is building the nearby tank farm, due for
completion at the end of 2008 and designed to hold 5.0 million
cubic metres, or 31.5 million barrels, of oil.
The port will have 300,000 tonnes of capacity -- enough for
very large crude carriers to dock -- the statement said, without
giving details of when it would start receiving oil.
China has been secretive about its plans for filling and
managing its strategic reserves, which it aims to build up to 100
million barrels by the end of next year.


The commission has also approved construction of a new
250,000 tonne capacity port for crude and refined oil products at
the site of the first storage tanks in nearby Zhenhai. It is
expected to receive around 7.5 million tonnes of oil a year.


BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - PetroChina's <0857.HK> Dagang unit
is adding a hydrocracking facility and storage tanks, part of an
ongoing expansion plan as it awaits firm news to build a joint
venture refinery with Russia, industry officials said on Monday.
The Dagang refinery, in the northern port of Tianjin, has
been shortlisted as a potential partner for a
proposed 200,000 barrels-per-day (bpd) refinery with Russian
state giant Rosneft <ROSN.MM>, officials have told Reuters
.
The plant is due to complete a 1-million-tonne-per-year
(20,000-bpd) hydrocracker in October, a facility that strips
sulphur and produces premium quality fuels, to match its newly
upgraded crude distillation capacity, said an industry official
close to the plant's expansion works.
"Dagang has been picked as one of the possible sites for the
Russian joint venture. But that will come on top of the expansion
works the plant is carrying out now," said the official.
Dagang doubled its primary crude distillation capacity to
100,000 bpd late last year.
It has also started building depots at nearby Tanggu, with
capacity to store 650,000 tonnes (4.7 million barrels) of crude
oil and refined fuels, said the official, without giving a
timeframe for completion.
Russia's Rosneft and CNPC, parent of PetroChina, agreed a
year ago to invest around $2 billion in building a 200,000-bpd
refinery and hundreds of petrol stations in China, but the
parties have yet to announce a concrete plan as to where and
when.
The refinery eyes Russian oil via a massive pipeline linking
East Siberian oilfields with China's northeast, a project which
has started, with 2008 the target date for the first flow of oil
.
China will be laying a pipeline within its border to connect
with refineries mostly operated by top oil and gas firm
PetroChina.
Local media reported last week that China had started route
surveys for the 965-km pipeline from Mohe County at the
Chinese-Russian border to Linyuan county, Daqing city, and aimed
for a 2008 start.
For now, the Dagang refinery processes locally produced crude
from the nearby oilfield with the same name. Its crude throughput
was steady in 2006 versus 2005 at about 3.5 million tonnes,
70,000 bpd, said the official.

Source: Reuters3000, February 5, 2006

UPDATE no. II.... something I missed? Oops.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]More important, a reporting error announced by EIA Jan. 3 suggested U.S. crude inventories may have taken a nose dive in the final weeks of 2006 with the data off by as much as 10.5 million barrels. Usually a reporting error works its way through the data over several weeks, but the upshot was U.S. petroleum inventories were not quite as plush as the plummet in prices would have had people believe.

The start of 2007 saw an onslaught of selling that sent crude prices plummeting nearly $6 per barrel in the first two trading days of the year despite fundamentals that had not undergone a structural shift. The same factors that sent petroleum prices surging through the past four years were still intact: a robust global economy provided the underpinning for demand for raw and industrial materials, which thus far has shown no signs of slowing; non-OPEC supply growth had failed to meet market expectations; demand growth has consistently surprised to the upside; and Iran and Western nations were still at a stand-off over the Islamic Republic's pursuit of nuclear capabilities.
Crude Oil: It is All in the Numbers
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby pup55 » Mon 05 Feb 2007, 23:10:03

COTS

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think we are no longer in a bear market.


Mr. Bill and Cube:

I am thinking we are at a kind of emotional tipping point at the moment. When we first posted this table about two weeks ago, the large traders had just about capitulated and turned long. I do not think the process has completely finished. We are seeing some resistance here at 60 or so.

This period looks kind of similar to last May when the big rally started. But I would say if the large traders go long (the green line), you had better be ready to go with them.

Note: Far be it from me to give any investment advice, especially commodity advice. Just making an observation.
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pup55
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