by MrBill » Mon 05 Mar 2007, 10:14:45
Hello All. Please note that all my markets are very busy for me at the moment. Therefore, I do not have time to respond to all personal emails or make detailed explanations. Thank you for your patience. Good luck. MrBill.
Comment from GS.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ndustry cost inflation continues to support long-dated oil prices
Energy market unaffected by the large sell-off in equities While equity markets plunged last week with the S&P500 selling off 3.5% on Tuesday (a seven standard deviation event), the energy markets were remarkably unaffected. In fact, the oil market showed a fairly steady increase in prices driven by the continuing tightening of market fundamentals. Although the proximate cause of the sell-off in the equity markets remains difficult to identify, weak economic activity data in both the housing market and the durable goods sector in the context of an optimistic equity market likely played some role in the correction. The buoyant outlook for growth in the equity markets before Tuesday's sell-off stood in sharp contrast to the energy markets where net speculative long
positions, which tend to increase with the market's growth outlook, remain well below their long-term average.
Industry cost structure inflation and expensive alternative energy sources continue to lend strong support to long-dated oil prices
Long-dated oil prices have proven to be exceptionally resilient during the oil market downturns of the past six months, having largely held above US$60/bbl. This resilience has been rooted in the strong support from the ongoing cost inflation in the energy industry, which continues to raise the cost of bringing energy on-stream and sustains higher oil prices. An analysis of the sustained pace of cost inflation in the oil industry and the consequent pressure on oil companies' balance sheets vis-a-vis lacklustre production expansion and increasing investment uncertainty suggests that high long-dated prices are strongly needed to support the necessary investments in the industry. In addition, expensive alternative energy sources and technologies such as fuel ethanol, oil sands and GTL will increasingly be needed to relieve demand pressure on oil supply, lending further support to
long-dated oil prices.
Source: GS, March 5th, 2007
EURJPY is down like a rock with NO support in sight. Please re-read the technical levels I gave last week. EURJPY at 150, 148 or 146 certainly looks possible right now.
Was surprised given the strong close to the week and crude started off so weak? But precious and base metals are also down on the back of the slower global growth story.
Also the dollar is up. EURUSD is lower. This is not a dollar sell-off. This is all about the yen carry trade and the riskier assets getting hit first. Contagion still has a chance to spread, but yields on the 10year UST are still compressing. 4.45-4.47% today.
For my part I have margin calls to make. Not nearly as much fun as trading. But have to keep my liquidity. And this rout is not over yet. So speak to you when I can. Cheers.
UPDATE: yep, yep, yep.. the rout continues.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude Oil Falls for a 2nd Day on Signs of Slower Demand Growth
Crude oil fell for a second day in New York on speculation global economic growth will slow, curbing fuel demand.
Stocks in Europe and Asia dropped after a global slump wiped out $1.8 trillion in world market value last week. The selling began in China, the world's second-biggest oil consumer. Crude oil sank close to $10 a barrel in December 1998, when falling demand in Asia left a glut of oil on the market.
I have one of my biggest business trips next week.... this rout could not have come at a worse time. Just before we pitch Russian tier II and private equity markets in front of potential investors. And perhaps worse..... just before bonuses are announced! It is like 2006 just went up in smoke!! ; - ))