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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

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 21 May 2007, 15:40:37

One more comment:

Sometimes you can use statistical analysis to detect market highs. I have not figured out a hard and fast rule yet, but here are the steps so far:

1. Compute the 100-day moving average, and the 100 day moving standard deviation.

2. When the daily closing price exceeds the 100-day moving average by more than 2 standard deviations, then that means the market is getting over heated and it is time to start watching for a correction. Reasoning: This indicates a powerful rally situation and it is normal for there to be a pullback when the market gets overheated.

There are several examples of this condition, but the indicator is not infallible. From August 12-21 2005, this condition was present, but you would have had a hard time to pick out an entry point because a category 5 hurricane was headed toward New Orleans. April 19-21 2006 was marginal: If you had deep pockets you could have made some money but probably would have been stopped out a week or so later. October 8-11 2004, this situation was present and the market cooperated by going down 9 points over the next couple of weeks.

Anyway this indicator at the moment is about 1.50, It would have to get up around 68 or 69 for there to be an outright overheating signal.

The same indicator sometimes works in reverse for markets that have gotten oversold. At times, this indicator has exceeded -3.0 standard deviations, and this has been at least an indicator that the market has stabilized, and sometimes, a sign that the market is ready to go long.

Anyway, watch out for this condition.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 22 May 2007, 04:01:19

I use trading envelopes (TE) all the time. They are reliable, but not infallible. Sometimes the market simply pulls back slightly and then continues in the same direction like last year when we were between a $60 and $69 range and then we broke that and eventually tested $78.40.

However, I use a 21-day moving average and usually 2-standard deviations from the mean. I had been buying OTM puts and calls when the daily price got to 2-standard deviations away from the mean and setting the strike price at 1-standard deviation away. The theory being that at 2-standard deviations away it was over-bought or over-sold and that there would be a 68% chance on average that the 1-standard deviation strike would be tested on the correction.

Well, it worked 5 out of 6 times, but that once I got caught when the range shifted and my put expired worthless. Ironically, my courage was up after five successful tries, so my sixth deal was larger. Oops! ; - )

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U').S. gasoline inventories probably rose for a third week last week as refineries ramped up production of the motor fuel for summer.
Gasoline inventories increased 1.5 million barrels in the week ended May 18 from 195.2 million barrels the prior week, according to the median of responses by five analysts before an Energy Department report this week. All of the analysts expected a gain. Gasoline futures fell 0.64 cent to $2.4013 a gallon in New York today.
``Gasoline is once again falling off early in the week in anticipation that refineries are ramping up output,'' Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citigroup Global Markets Inc. in New York, said in a note.
Refineries probably operated at 90 percent capacity last week, up 0.5 percentage points from the week before, the survey showed.
Gasoline demand typically peaks in the summer when some people drive to holiday destinations.
Inventories of distillate fuel, including heating oil and diesel, probably rose 1.5 million barrels from 119.8 million barrels the prior week, the survey showed. Crude oil supplies were probably unchanged at 342.2 million barrels.

Source: Bloomberg, May 22, 2007
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 23 May 2007, 09:50:51

In addition to the tight fundamentals of the gasoline market at the start of the summer driving season soon we'll all be keeping a close eye on the weather satelite photos on the national hurricane's web pages.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') As many as five major hurricanes may form in the Atlantic Ocean during the 2007 as warmer-than-normal sea temperatures provide energy for the storms, U.S. government forecasters said.
The season, which formally begins next week and ends in November, may yield 13 to 17 named storms and as many as 10 of them may reach hurricane strength, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Hurricane Center said in its forecast today. Weather systems reach Category 3, or so- called major strength, when winds top 111 miles per hour (179 kilometers per hour.

The Atlantic Basin is in a 20-year period of above-average tropical activity as ocean and atmospheric conditions spur storm formation. Experts are predicting an average of 16 named storms and four major hurricanes this year, based on the historical cycle and warm water temperatures, which can provide fuel for formation.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forecasters overestimated last year's near-normal season,
when 10 storms and five hurricanes took shape, and underestimated 2005's record-breaking season, when Hurricane Katrina caused more than $80 billion in damage. Last year, three weather systems struck the U.S., including Ernesto, which caused more than $100 million in damage in North Carolina and Virginia.


Source: Bloomberg, May 23, 2007

Some relief expected in today's inventory release numbers. Crude weakened off yesterday as cash spreads on refined gasoline conracted in some US geographical markets.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U').S. gasoline inventories probably rose for a third week as refiners bolstered fuel output before the Memorial Day holiday, a Bloomberg News survey indicated.
Gasoline stockpiles increased 1.2 million barrels in the week ended May 18 from 195.2 million barrels the prior week, according to the median of responses by 17 analysts before an Energy Department report this week. Sixteen of the analysts expected a gain and one said there was a decline.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Refineries operated at 90 percent of capacity, up 0.5 percentage point from the week before, according to the survey. Refinery maintenance occurs in February and March as the heating season wanes. Units are upgraded before the summer when gasoline
consumption peaks.
Crude-oil supplies rose 600,000 barrels from 342.2 million the prior week, according to the survey. Eleven of the analysts expected supplies to increase, four said there was a decline and
two forecast no change.
Inventories of distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil and diesel, rose 1.3 million barrels from 119.8 million last week, according to the survey. Sixteen of the analysts said that stockpiles increased and one forecast a decline.

Source: Bloomberg, May 23, 2007

But prices are high by historical measures. However, the FTC can find no wide spread price gouging by the industry.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ecord-high U.S. gasoline prices appear to be due to refinery outages, increased demand and decreased imports, the Federal Trade Commission said.
``The lion's share of the recent increase in gasoline prices appears to be attributable to three factors: refinery outages, increased demand for gasoline and decreased gasoline imports,''
William Kovacic, a commissioner with the FTC, said in written
testimony to a House Energy subcommittee today.
He also said in a footnote that the commission's staff is examining bulk supply and demand conditions for gasoline and diesel in the Pacific Northwest, ``following up on observations of anomalous pricing patterns affecting multiple cities over the past year.''


Source: Bloomberg, May 23, 2007

The S&P Energy Index (GSPE) hit a new high this week of 527.38, but is off slightly on profit taking. Benchmark oil company stocks like XOM are also off their highs, but very strong. As are integrated producers like COP as well as oilfield service companies like SLB. Refiners such as SUN and VAL are still up on wide crack margins and weak WTI prices.

I debated selling some more shares up here, but then I would be underweight energy overall. A quick trading profit is nice, but that is not where I want to be long-term, so I will stick with a smaller long position and then look to add to it later when energy stocks retrace. Not that it looks like there is much extra refining capacity coming on-line in 2007, so it may just be wishful thinking. Still, discipline, discipline - don't chase it, wait for it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')e continue to recommend a long position in WTI timespreads


We continue to expect WTI timespreads to tighten

We believe that WTI timespreads will continue to strengthen owing to an expected rebound in refinery runs in the US Mid-continent and reduced Canadian crude supplies in the region, which will likely lead to a decline in Mid-continent crude oil inventories. Crude oil inventories in the Canadian Enbridge pipeline system have already started to show sharp declines (see
Exhibit below), which suggests that Cushing inventories are also likely to draw going forward. Consequently, we are rolling forward our WTI timespread trade recommendation by one month and now recommend buying the July 2007 WTI contract and selling the September 2007 WTI contract. Since we first recommended our long WTI timespread trade on March 30, 2007, the trade has gained $0.73/bbl.


Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
May 22, 2007
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby Mechler » Wed 23 May 2007, 22:34:35

I dumped my DOW short ETF today because I've been getting a feeling that the market mentality is starting to resemble that of the '99 and '00 tech run-up. Of course, as we all know, that ended badly and this might, too.

This article today added to my suspicions:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')EW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Yep, it's official. Even your grandma is getting bullish about the stock market. And that's as good a reason as any to be prepared for a pullback.

Because, as any good contrarian will tell you, the time to get out is when everyone else is in.

Uh oh. The individual investor is back

So, it would seem that getting out of the short was a bad idea. Except that (in my optimistic, naive, greedy way of thinking?) like the tech bubble - there may be a lot of money to be made before things turn bad.

It also seems that the public is becoming more and more interested in energy companies because we hear everyday how they're raking in money hand-over-fist and the stocks are relatively cheap.

So, energy stocks could see a big surge this summer? Or, like oil production, are they near a peak?

Who knows...so I took half off the table today with two of my stocks which have run-up nicely the past weeks.

Any other thoughts on state of the market and energy sector?
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 24 May 2007, 06:18:41

Crude inventory numbers out yesterday. The market pulled back briefly on what looked like builds in stocks, but then took off again as demand was strong as well. As the WTI rolled off the board the July futures month took the front month contract higher into positive technical territory.

The July Brent is now comfortably above $70 per barrel and stable. This is not just a spike higher followed by a correction. The market is learning to live with oil north of $70, which most likely means a test of the previous high of $78.40 (in the WTI that is). last year of course the WTI was trading at a price premium to Brent.

A breakdown of the inventory numbers are here.

Crude +2 mio to 344.2 mio bbls vs. +0.6 mio f/c
Gasoline +1.5 mio to 196.7 mio bbls vs. +1.4 mio f/c
Distillates +0.5 mio to 120.3 mio bbls vs. +1.2 mio f/c
Heating Oil -0.9 mio to 35 mio bbls

Net/net a slight build in stocks of +1.1 mio bbls, so not that eye popping to be honest.

Imports +560k to 10.89 mbpd
Product imports -677k to 3.58 mbpd

Refinery use +1.6% to 91.1%

Gasoline demand +1.2% to 9.36 mbpd
Distillate demand +2.6% to 4.17 mbpd
Total demand +2.2% to 20.80 mbpd

So demand trumping a slight build as high headline pump prices do not seem to be affecting demand for motorists as they head into the May long weekend and the start of the summer driving season.

Mechler, as to your question, we think the market is overbought here. And as a result we have either sold too early or missed parts of this latest rally.

I still have a small core energy company stock position, but I favor the refiners and the oil service companies. I also have names like Citigroup and GE which to be honest have not outperformed this past several months, but they are also a hedge against USD exposure as they generate significant revenue outside of the USA.

The rest of my stocks are mainly German. They have performed well this year, and again it cuts my USD exposure, which I think is prudent in the long run. Plus I have just plowed some extra cash into property here that I converted from USD into CYP. The CYP is locked into the EUR and Cyprus will adopt the EUR on January 1, 2008. In effect it is now EUR risk. So I have cut my total USD exposure by 2/3 to 3/4 over the past year starting below $1.2000 and up to $1.3000 or so.

I will not be getting back into the US stock market until prices come down. And European prices are already too high. So after consolidating some of my positions to take some money off the table I am patiently waiting for the world to blow up. If not on schedule then I will have to look to buy something else to hedge myself against money supply growth and asset price inflation. Not perfect, but I do not know what else to do?

UPDATE: An excellent take on real returns
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')onsider the S&P 500, for instance. According to Thornburg, the 11.7% annualized total return for the index over past 20 years through 2006's close fades considerably after deducting for a variety of monetary abrasions that cut into investors' take.
Indeed, the annualized 11.7% for the S&P 500 falls to 6.5% after investment management fees, dividend and capital gains taxes and inflation, according to Thornburg. The dynamic is at work in other asset classes too. Again using Thornburg's numbers, we're told that annualized total returns over 20 years are smaller than they appear. In particular,

* small cap stocks (as per the Russell 2000) fade to 5.9% from 10.9%
* foreign stocks (MSCI EAFE) drop to 3.5% from 8.4%
* long term government bonds (20 year Treasuries) slip to 2.1% from 8.3%
* commodities end up with a negative 0.9% from a nominal 3.1%.


Perhaps the most astonishing evolution is the one assigned to single family homes. The nominal 4.8% return posted over the 20 years through the end of last was sliced to a measly real return of 1.2% after taxes, fees and inflation, according to Thornburg.

Source: HARD FACTS & NET RESULTS
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby cube » Thu 24 May 2007, 16:03:18

I'm feeling sore because this has been a slow month for me. I've been trying to jump on a contract and failing.

missed out on:

1) Mexican peso - long
2) soybeans - long

I can forgive myself for the soybean fumble (since that movement came out of nowhere) but I'm kicking myself in the rear for letting PXM07 slip. The last week of April showed a good "buy signal" according to my models but I wasn't paying attention until the opportunity was missed.

lesson learned for this month ---> must pay attention *smacks forhead*
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 25 May 2007, 08:37:15

Heading into a long weekend it should be relatively quiet again. As usual this time of year the focus is on gasoline stocks. Unrest in Nigeria and concerns over Iran are back in the headlines. A repeat of summer 2005 & 2006 in this respect.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Crude oil may rise next week on
concern that there will be more cuts to Nigerian supplies and the
nuclear standoff between the United Nations and Iran will
intensify, threatening shipments from the country.

Nigeria is losing more than 800,000 barrels a day of
production because of violence, kidnappings and damage to oil
facilities. The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta
has increased attacks since the presidential election in April.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo will hand over power to
Umaru Yar'Adua on May 29.
President George W. Bush said yesterday that the U.S. and
its allies must increase pressure on Iran for defying UN orders
to halt its nuclear program. Iran has the second-biggest proved
oil reserves and is the second-largest producer in the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.


Source: Bloomberg, May 25

I thought this was interesting in a general kind of way. Not really new information, but these kind of questions come up on peak oil dot com about global imblances, so it is appropriate to post articles talking about them. Basically, we/collectively often blame the USA for global imbalances, often forgetting that one person's current deficit is another's surplus. One's trade deficit is another's surplus. You cannot have one without the other.

Anyone that has read my comments over the past two years knows that I rigorously fight a running battle over these issues to get them a) right, and b) look at underlying causes versus just the symptoms. I am not a coward and I do not need others to fight my battles. Never the less is nice to find articles that do support my own opinions. Then I do not feel so lonely! ; - )

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')ani Rodrik poses an important question on his blog:

“If forced to choose between a world in which developing countries are growing rapidly but there are global macro imbalances associated with it, and one in which current account imbalances are smaller but there is less growth in poor nations--which one would you pick? I would go for the first.

Of course, the essential point is that we have to get the right mix between these two objectives. Arguably, we have sacrificed macro balances too much in the last few years. But as we go about redressing this, we better not forget the role that the level of the real exchange rate plays in developing nations, and not become too enamored of floating.”

I do believe, as I think Dr. Rodrik does, that we have sacrificed global macro balances too much over the past few years. And, like Dr. Roubini, I also worry that rapid reserve growth is creating a ever-larger internal imbalances in many countries. Two examples: China’s stock market and dangerously low (negative actually) real interest rates in most oil exporters.

I am not sure that countries like Russia and Brazil who attract very large capital inflows (in part because of interest rates than are higher than US rates) but just use the resulting inflow to add to their reserves are really doing much for their growth either. In effect, they are borrowing from abroad at a loss to build reserves they no longer need. Funds parked in central bank reserves are not invested in the local economy; they instead are lent back to the US and Europe.


Russia’s reserves increased an incredible $14b in the first week of May. Brazil’s reserves are rumored to have increased – counting off balance sheet intervention through the sale of reverse swaps – by something like $15b in the first two weeks of May and Brazil is still in the market. Those are big numbers. Reserve growth in the emerging world now seems to running at a $100b a month pace, if not slightly higher.

As Martin Wolf notes, it is hard to square that kind of reserve growth with the argument that the emerging world currently floats.
I am not sure there is much risk that emerging economies will become too enamored with floating any time soon.

We have really just been in a range since mid to late Marchwith two to three tests to the top end of the range and two good tests to the downside in crude. Although crude has been in a range, especially WTI versus Brent, RBOB gasoline certainly has not been.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Gasoline futures rose on concern U.S.
refineries may not be able to increase production enough to meet
rising demand from motorists, as this weekend's Memorial Day
holiday kicks off the summer driving season.
Demand for gasoline last week was up 1.2 percent from a
year earlier, a U.S. Energy Department report yesterday showed.
Refineries used 91.1 percent of nationwide capacity, up 1.6
percentage points from the week before. A ConocoPhillips
refinery in Louisiana is shut after a power failure, and Valero
Energy Corp. shut a gasoline unit at a Texas refinery.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline futures have increased 47 percent this year and
are up 9.3 percent from a year ago.
The margin, or crack spread, earned by refiners for turning
three barrels of crude oil into two barrels of gasoline and one
of heating oil rose $2.625, or 11 percent, to $26.313 a barrel
today, based on New York futures prices. On May 17, it reached
$30.479, the highest since at least 1989. The margin averaged
$10.942 during 2006.
The national average pump price for regular gasoline rose
0.6 cent to a record $3.227 a gallon yesterday, AAA said today
on its Web site. Gasoline has climbed 9.3 percent since last
year.

Source: Bloomberg, May 25

What is needed is more refining capacity and that is not likely to happen in 2007 or 2008. The other side of the equation, which is unease over supply due to places like Nigeria and Iran cannot also not be solved easily, but I think OPEC needs to show some goodwill and open its taps a little.

Like an overflowing bathtub with a plugged drain, adding more OPEC supply to world markets in the absense of refining capacity to turn it into transport fuel is probably not going to dampen prices. At least it did not help in the summer of 2005 in the run-up to Katerina/Rita/Wilma weather damage related spikes. Never the less, not opening up the taps may exacerbate the problem in a nervous market. Perhaps better to err on the side of caution.

On the US housing market (part of this posted elsewhere today). Sorry no link.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he trigger for this latest round of sales was the US Census Bureau’s disclosure that 1) an annualised 981,000 new homes were sold in April (from 844,000 in March), well above the market’s expectations of 860,000, and 2) that the supply of unsold new homes had fallen from 8.1 months’ worth of sales in March – the peak level in the current housing slump – to 6.5 months. But not enough attention was paid to the fact that to unload that quantity of homes, sellers had to drop their asking price substantially. The median price of the homes sold fell from $257,600 in March to $229,100 and the average price from $324,700 in March to $299,100. Lower home prices have a potentially adverse impact on economic activity through wealth effects on consumption and through homeowners’ diminished ability to escape burdensome mortgage obligations by refinancing.


Source: ResearchStrategy@Standardbank.com

I am not saying I have schadenfreude, but of course I thought housing price increases in the past 5-years were absolutely insane. I cannot help but feel they needed to come down.

What would gasoline prices be this summer if the US economy was hitting on all cylinders? Hmm?

Well, take care and enjoy your long-weekend. Drive safe. Don't be a statistic. I am working on Monday. No rest for the wicked or those that work for Russian investment companies. Take care and all the best. Cheers.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Fri 25 May 2007, 17:25:21

Ah the waxing and waning of commodities! Luckily I bought some outrageously expensive RIM. Seriously, those commodities go up, they go down. Hopefully the trend reverses itself! My Cef.a is down below what I paid the last time, as is my U and NXY. Que Sera Sera... The Rim has gone up 3k since I bought it a month ago so I'm not really complaining since overall I am nicely in the black (well up three percent year to date ). Oh yes, more folks are jumping into the BCE fray, so I should do OK on that too when a deal happens. On it I'm revenue neutral. I missed out on some big gains this year, that's what fear will do to you.

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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 29 May 2007, 05:01:18

A new partner for the new ME oil exchange (and still no IOB)....
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Dubai Mercantile Exchange Ltd., a venture between the Dubai government and the New York Mercantile Exchange Inc., sold a 30 percent stake in the bourse to the state-managed Oman Investment Fund.
The Dubai, United Arab Emirates-based exchange will start
trading Omani crude oil futures contracts on June 1, it said in an e-mailed statement today.
The New York Mercantile Exchange, or Nymex, the world's
largest energy market, announced the formation of the Dubai
trading platform together with the Dubai government in June 2005.
The exchange aims to provide Asian sour-crude to consumers,
such as refiners and airlines, and offer alternatives to benchmark prices for West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude, both of which are higher quality ``sweet,'' or low-sulfur, crude.


Source: May 28 (Bloomberg) --


.... but lots of predicted growth. Of course the source is not identified....it wasn't me though.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Oil revenue across the Persian Gulf states will reach $3 trillion over the next 10 years, Asharq al- Awsat reported, citing an investment banker.
The projection is based on an average oil price of $40 a barrel and at current production levels, the newspaper cited Ziad Makawi, chief executive officer of Algebra Capital Investment, as saying.


Source: May 29 (Bloomberg) --

That's a whole lot of petro-dollars that are going to need recycling! Oh where, oh where will they flow? More manmade islands?

And in the meantime there is 'another' Great Game afoot.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Iran, whose government is holding talks with the U.S. on the future of Iraq, is ready to develop oil fields located in its neighbor to prevent western powers from benefiting from them, a group of lawmakers in Tehran said.
Iran has the capacity to develop ``at least 10 oil fields in Iraq,'' Kamal Daneshyar, the head of the energy committee in parliament, told Shana, Iran's oil ministry press agency.
Such cooperation will help restore stability and security in Iraq while preventing other countries, including the ``occupiers,'' from seizing that opportunity, Javad Sa'dounzadeh, a member of the same energy committee told Shana today.
The Islamic republic, which fought an eight-year war with Iraq that left more than 1 million people dead in the 1980s, has increased ties with its neighbor since the fall of Saddam Hussein four years ago. The countries signed a preliminary agreement in
July 2005 to build a pipeline to carry Iraqi crude oil in exchange for Iranian fuels. The accord has not moved forward since.
A U.S. envoy told his Iranian counterpart today that the Islamic Republic must stop arming militias in Iraq, during talks on Iraqi security in which officials from the U.S. and Iran had the highest-level contact between their two countries in 27 years.
Source: May 28 (Bloomberg) --

And if you cannot beat the NOCs then why not join them.... or at least find out how to work with them?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation energy ministers plan to study the impact that state-owned oil and gas companies is having on trade and investment, according to a draft communique.
The 21-member body, including China, the U.S. and Russia, will set up a working group to assess how to cooperate with state-owned companies,
according to the draft statement obtained by Bloomberg News in advance of the final communique later today.
Ministers from APEC, which accounts for 60 percent of global oil and gas demand, are meeting in Darwin, Australia, to discuss energy security and minimizing harmful emissions. The group's
dependency on oil imports is set to rise at a time when governments led by Russia and Venezuela are seizing oil assets
from private companies.

``It's a problem that private, international oil companies find it difficult to develop reserves,'' Claude Mandil, the International Energy Agency's executive director, said in an interview today. ``Partnerships of state-controlled and private oil companies are needed, but the way to cooperate hasn't been invented.''
BP Plc's Russian venture lost a court case yesterday over its license to a Siberian gas deposit with enough fuel to supply Asia for five years, allowing Russia's government to regain control of the field as early as this week.
Petroleos de Venezuela SA, Venezuela's state-run oil company,
said on May 14 that it plans to take control of 18 oil rigs currently operated by multinational corporations in order to reduce drilling costs.

`More Expensive'

``We're seeing increased competition for the world's oil reserves, and with the large number of national oil companies
around in Asia it really is becoming an issue,'' said Gavin Wendt,
senior resources analyst at Fat Prophets Funds Management in
Sydney. ``It's making it more expensive for commercial, private and Western companies to do deals.''
The APEC ministers will also encourage member nations to ensure sufficient investment in refinery capacity to meet demand,
to facilitate freer trade of oil products and to develop contingency plans in the event of disruptions to supplies, the draft says. Members should also promote energy-efficient transport and alternative fuels, improve energy efficiency and develop cleaner energy technologies, it says.
``We encourage APEC economies to adopt a broad range of
measures designed to enhance security of supply and promote fuel- efficient transport and the uptake of viable alternative fuels,''
the draft says.
Dependence on imported oil in APEC will rise to 52 percent
in 2030, from 36 percent in 2002, the draft statement says.


Nuclear Safeguards

APEC nations will also be encouraged to consider setting up a regional body to coordinate the efforts of the member countries' nuclear safety authorities, the draft says.
The draft statement omits any reference to greenhouse gas
emissions trading, in line with comments yesterday by Australian
Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane, who said there were no formal
plans to discuss a regional trading plan.
APEC energy ministers expressed a ``very strong desire'' to
cooperate in general on reducing carbon emissions, Macfarlane
told reporters yesterday.
The APEC nations, which account for more than $19 trillion
of GDP, or more than 56 percent of the world's total, need
investments of about $6 trillion to meet energy requirements
through 2030, the group estimates.


Energy Goals

To help mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, the energy ministers will encourage the 21 member nations to set goals and
plans for improving energy efficiency across industries. By joining forces with the International Energy Agency, an adviser to 26 oil-consuming nations, APEC will develop efficiency indicators that help all the member nations set out energy-saving plans and review progress, the draft says.
``We direct the working group to strengthen efforts to share
information on energy efficiency policies and measures, identify effective energy efficiency approaches and review progress toward efficiency goals,'' it says. ``We direct the working group to further advance collaboration with other international energy forums including the IEA.''
The 21 APEC members are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile,
China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, the U.S. and Vietnam.


Source: May 29 (Bloomberg)

So APEC members will transfer $3-6 trillion to OPEC members (Indonesia is in both groups) and spend up to $6 trillion to develop energy sources over the next 20-years or so? Well, seeing how $19 trillion per year of GDP depends on it, I guess what choice do they have? A cost of doing business. Or is that the cost of staying in business? ; - )
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 29 May 2007, 05:05:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('drew', 'A')h the waxing and waning of commodities! Luckily I bought some outrageously expensive RIM. Seriously, those commodities go up, they go down. Hopefully the trend reverses itself! My Cef.a is down below what I paid the last time, as is my U and NXY. Que Sera Sera... The Rim has gone up 3k since I bought it a month ago so I'm not really complaining since overall I am nicely in the black (well up three percent year to date ). Oh yes, more folks are jumping into the BCE fray, so I should do OK on that too when a deal happens. On it I'm revenue neutral. I missed out on some big gains this year, that's what fear will do to you.

Drew


Well, at least you can fall-back on your successful acting career, Drew? ; - )
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Tue 29 May 2007, 09:46:57

Hey, I married Tom Green!

Doesn't that count for a little recognition too?

:-(



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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 30 May 2007, 03:52:56

Drew, I wish I knew who Tom Green was, but I don't? ; - )

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ymex Crude Drops $2 On Nigeria Crude oil futures dropped more than $2 to close just above $63.00 as the inauguration of a new president in Nigeria and historic talks between the U.S. and Iran eased worries over supplies from both major OPEC producers. The July crude contract on the NYMEX fell $2.05 to $63.15 a barrel. Oil traders (took) the risk premium out of the market, said Phil Flynn, an energy analyst at brokerage Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago.The two biggest areas of perceived threats to oil supply (Nigeria and Iran) seem less risky today that they did on Friday.
Source: PruBache broker note

Crude prices are down significantly here already this week. RBOB also declined as more supply comes online. While oil company shares are also starting to feel the weight of lower prices.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Crude oil was little changed in New York after plunging with gasoline yesterday on speculation U.S. refiners raised operating rates to an eight-month high and increased fuel stockpiles for a fourth week.
A U.S. government report tomorrow will probably show the nation's below-average gasoline stockpiles gained 1.4 million barrels, or 0.7 percent, last week, according to a Bloomberg News survey of 12 analysts. June gasoline, which expires tomorrow, fell more than 10 cents a gallon yesterday.
If ``gasoline inventories start to rise going into the summer here, that could be a potential short-term negative for the oil market,'' said Leo Mariani, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in Austin, Texas.
Crude oil for July delivery was at $63.16 a barrel, up 1 cent, in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 1 p.m. in Singapore.
The contract settled at $63.15 a barrel yesterday, down $2.05, or 3 percent, from the end of last week. The exchange was closed for floor trading during the Memorial Day holiday on May 28. Trading the past two days was combined into a single session for settlement purposes.
Gasoline stockpiles in the U.S., the world's biggest oil consumer, held 196.7 million barrels on May 18, or 7 percent less than the five-year average for the period, the U.S. Energy Department said last week.
Demand peaks June through August as summer vacations put more cars on the road. Memorial Day marks the start of the summer driving season.

``Hype''

``There was a lot of hype going into the weekend,'' said Mark Waggoner, president of Excel Futures Inc. in Huntington Beach, California, who was buying gasoline yesterday. ``We will see a build but we will probably see demand up as well. In the weeks to come we're going to see a big pick up in demand.''
U.S. refiners probably used 91.6 percent of their plant capacity last week, based on the analyst survey, the highest late since Sept. 22. Daily gasoline production rose by 667,000 barrels the preceding four weeks.
Gasoline for June delivery was at $2.2980 a gallon today after tumbling to $2.2979 yesterday, a 4.4 percent decline from the end of last week. The more actively traded July contract was at $2.2050, after falling to $2.1934 yesterday, down 5.1 percent from May 25.
``I don't think this is going to last very long,'' Excel's Waggoner said. ``When the numbers come out, everyone is going to be looking at the demand and the imports. Right now there's no way the refiners can keep up with demand.''

Fuel Demand

Demand, based on deliveries from refineries, averaged 9.36 million barrels a day in the four weeks ended May 18, or 1.2 percent more than a year earlier, the Energy Department said last week. Production rose to 9.2 million barrels a day that week, the highest this year.
Valero Energy Corp., the largest U.S. refiner, began the process of restarting the fluid catalytic cracking unit at its McKee refinery near Sunray, Texas, according to a filing with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. The catalytic cracker was shut May 24 for maintenance.
While summer fuel concerns have driven recent oil price moves, geo-political risks to supplies from Nigeria and the Middle East will support prices longer term, RBC's Mariani said. That will likely keep West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark grade, between $60 and $65 this year, he said.
U.S. oil stockpiles held 344.2 million barrels on May 18, 7.6 percent more than the five-year average for the period. The 1 million barrel-increase analysts are forecasting will take inventories to their highest since June 23.
Rising U.S. stockpiles have tempered gains in New York oil futures the past three weeks when renewed violence in Nigeria pushed Brent prices to a nine-month high.

Brent, Nigeria

Brent crude oil for July settlement was unchanged at $68.13 a barrel today on the London-based ICE Futures exchange, after falling 2.3 percent yesterday. Yesterday's decline narrowed Brent's premium over the Nymex contract to $4.98 a barrel from a record $6.54 on May 24. The spread was at $4.97 today.
The Brent contract fell 3.4 percent this week after oil workers in Nigeria, Africa's biggest producer, ended a two-day strike and the nation's new president was sworn-in without new attacks on oil facilities.
``There was an easing of supply concerns from the termination of the Nigeria strike and news of the restart of U.S. refinery operations,'' said Chikako Inoue, an analyst at futures broker Taiheiyo Bussan in Tokyo.
President Umaru Yar'Adua promised to bring ``urgent attention'' to the nation's impoverished Niger Delta, and asked militants to end the violence in the region, the nation's biggest oil producer, the Associated Press reported.
Attacks on facilities in the area in the past year cut Nigeria's daily output by more than 600,000 barrels a day, or 25 percent.


Source: May 30 (Bloomberg)

The Russian RTS is in a free fall at the moment. Down 11% year to date after touching a new high at 2008 it looks like it will retrace to 1700 or lower. Mostly due to the legal uncertainty caused by Russian courts overturning commercial contracts and the problems that causes foreign investors. Of course, having no clear succession plan post-Putin in 2008 does not help at all!

UPDATE on Russian markets:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '*')** THOUGHTS ON RUSSIA: UGLY & MURKY... ***

* Local cash leaving mkt moving into MENA region in good size.
* Local sentiment rolling over on already U/W energy names...
-Our trading desk has been noting this -ve feel for 3 mos now.
* Long locals have held this mkt +385% over 3 years...and that's
just the past 3 years (since Jan 2004) from RTS 525 to 2000.
* Locals starting to discount 2008 election uncertainties.
* Mkt off 11% YTD...have we seen redemptions yet? Will we?
* Western money still buying cheap assets but getting run over.
-When do they throw the towel in? Do they? Macro still best in
the world arguably, crude holding very well, what's catalyst?
I think fickle investors or a change in oil tax regime, until...


Source: ML trading desk

This move out of Russia seems country specific and so far has not spilled over into other emerging markets. Although the Chinese stock index is down 6% today on the back of tax hikes in China.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Asia
NKY -0.96% Topix -0.35% Hang Seng -1.02% Shanghai -6.08% Taiex -0.84% Kopsi -0.83% ASX -1.35% Stocks fell after Chinese government triples stamp. Listed brokerage firms were unsurprisingly hit hard Citic -10% Hong Yuan Securities -10%. Hong Kong was also dragged lower with China Mobile -0.6% and China Construction Bank -1.5%. China's largest offshore oil explorer Cnooc -3.1% Woodside -1.3% Inpex Holdings -1.9% on decline in crude oil. Autos weaker Toyota -0.8% Honda -0.7% as investors worried about state of industrial production figures. Sumitomo Metal +2.3% Daiichi Sankyo +1.2% after both announced share buy backs.
Source: ML Early Call, May 30

GS is still constructive gasoline spreads in the longer term on the back of strong demand and geo-political uncertainties.

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

US motor gasoline demand remains resilient, as expected

WTI continues to disconnect from the rest of the oil complex

Crude oil prices rallied last week with Brent reaching a 9-month high of over $71.00/bbl during intra-day trading, on the back of tightening global fundamentals and renewed concerns surrounding Nigeria and Iran. Further, despite the rebound in US motor gasoline production, US retail motor gasoline prices continued to soar last week, setting a new record of $3.25/bbl. In
sharp contrast, WTI crude oil prices remained under considerable pressure, reaching a record low spread to Brent of -$6.54/bbl on Thursday as the signs of recovery from the prolonged refinery outages that have plagued the US Midwest this spring have not yet translated into a sustained draw on crude oil inventories, especially in Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point of the WTI NYMEX contract.

Gasoline demand growth consistent with price changes

US motor gasoline demand growth remains resilient despite the record high US retail motor gasoline prices and soft economic growth environment in the United States. This has renewed concerns about the reliability of the official demand data. In our view these concerns are unfounded as gasoline demand growth continues to be driven by year-over-year price changes, which have averaged a modest 5% in the past four weeks, rather than price levels, which have reached record highs.

Price pull-backs since last summer helped to lower fuel efficiency

The fact that US gasoline demand has grown more than vehicle miles traveled in the first three months of this year reflects lower aggregate fuel efficiency following the price pull-backs at the end of last summer and the beginning of this year as well as the normal statistical difference between the two series.

Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
May 29, 2007


UPDATE on European equity markets.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')uropean shares weakened in early trading on Wednesday after an overnight sell-off in the Chinese stock market rekindled fears of a repeat of February's global equity market sell-off, with miners BHP Billiton and Lonmin losing ground.

Fears that Chinese stock markets could face a sharp correction after authorities in Beijing tripled duties charged on stock trades in a bid to cool speculative activity and head off what many believe is a runaway equity-market bubble pressured Asian stocks overnight.

"With the Shanghai stock exchange closing down 6.5%, European bourses were needless to say adversely affected," noted David Buik at spreadbetting firm Cantor Index.

European investors could fear that, just like in February this year, a sell-off in the Chinese stock market could prompt losses in other global equity markets.
Source: [url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={CF8F6C52-7EEF-49DE-A0C6-0376CFC51D1B}&siteid=nbi]European shares weaken after Chinese tax move[/url]
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby drew » Wed 30 May 2007, 23:54:16

Mr Bill, you're missing too much Hollywood 'culture' on the other side of the pond...

Tom Green is certainly no one of note that's for sure. His main claim to fame is marrying my avatar.

Sadly, I think he's canadian like us.

Other things he's done on camera include sucking milk from a cow's teat, and trying to get Mike Bullard to open up a bag of road kill he was nice enough to bring onto the stage of Mike Bullard's show.

I can't believe they broke up.

They were perfect for each other.

You can probably tell I have way way too much time on my hands!

P.s., my indian friend found me a pipe lead. Need to check it out, it's local.

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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 31 May 2007, 04:32:12

Hollywood culture? Sorry, leaves a bad taste in my mouth! ; - )

DOE inventory numbers released today due to the long weekend.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')UESSTIMATIONS: DJ crude + 0.3 dist + 0.5 gasoline + 1.0 runs + 0.5%. Wachovia crude + 1.0 dist + 0.7 gasoline + 0.75
Source: NYMEX floor broker

WTI is in a range now since March. My guess is that we will see another test to the downside around $60 per barrel before another try at the topside perhaps on weather related events during the hurricane season.

UPDATE:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U')S Preparing For A Very Active Hurricane Season
U.S. federal agencies are preparing for a very, very active hurricane season, the deputy director of the Minerals Management Service said. The hurricane season for the Gulf of Mexico officially starts Friday, and the National Weather Service is predicting between 13 and 17 named storms, three to five of which may become major hurricanes.
Source: PruBache broker

But then I like symmetry in my charts, so that is more like, gee wouldn't that look swell? 3 tests to the top, 3 tests to the bottom of the range. Versus hard headed analysis. However, it does make sense from the perspective of well-supplied domestic markets where refining capacity is the issue not crude, and the bigger geo-political risks are not in Cushing, Oklahoma.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Attacks on oil facilities and kidnapping of oilfield workers in Nigeria has halted production of more than 600,000 barrels a day, more than a quarter of output from Africa's biggest oil producer.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc's Nigerian venture began to restore 150,000 barrels a day of Bonny light crude oil production yesterday following an attack on pipelines on May 29. Villagers raided the Bomu Manifold, a gathering point for crude flowing to the Bonny export terminal. Production was briefly halted and no damage was incurred, Shell spokesman Precious Okolobo said.
The facility was also raided May 10, halting 170,000 barrels a day of output and prompting Shell to declare a delay on exports for May and June.
Nymex prices are discounted to world benchmarks and are unlikely to fall below $62 with peak demand and the hurricane season approaching, Altavest's Hartmann said.
Source: Bloomberg, May 31

I wish I could add some commentary to this headline, but I cannot explain it either?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Japan's Oil Imports Fall 14%; 12th Month of Declines

Japan, the world's third-largest oil consumer, said crude oil imports fell 14 percent in April from a year earlier, declining for a 12th consecutive month.
Source: Bloomberg, May 31
Huh? How is Japan's economy growing at 4-5% at the moment, and its consumption of oil has fallen significantly for a year now? Must be on reduced re-exports of refined products to Asia as S.Korean and Chinese re-exports replace Japanese sales, but of course, I have no information to support that claim? Do you suppose they are sitting on large oilfields in Hokkaido and just haven't told anyone, yet? "Don't tell the Yankees, they'll just re-invade us! Better not tell Peking either! " ; - )

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Asia
NKY +1.08% Topix +1.48% Hang Seng +1.30% Shanghai -1.13% Taiex +0.70% Kopsi +1.89% ASX +1.35% Declines in China couldn't stop Asian bourses hitting fresh highs after the Fed predicted growth will pick up in the worlds biggest economy. Exporters were strong as a result with Sony +1.5% Samsung +0.9% Honda +1.4%. Chinese brokerages were hit further from yesterdays news Citic Securities -6.6% but it was not alone as China Yangtze Power came off 7.6%. Announcement of Marius Kloppers as replacement for CEO Goodyear at BHP was enough to see the stock +2.1%. Also in Australia the country's biggest listed building manager Investa +15%Source: ML early morning call

Boy, expectations of lower interest rates to come AND a pick-up in economic growth in the USA? Well, it just doesn't get any better than that for the stock market. The S&P 500 hits new high of almost 1519. The S&P Energy Index (GSPE) also recovered some lost ground to close higher. Happy days are here again. Why stocks look almost cheap now? Not if you're invested in Russia or China I suppose though where markets are still under pressure.

Elsewhere in the Asian Century.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Hyundai Heavy Industries Co., the world's largest shipyard, and a subsidiary had a record month of ship contracts in May on rising demand for container vessels and oil tankers.
Orders rose to $3.3 billion, including $700 million at Hyundai Samho Heavy Industries Co., Ulsan, South Korea-based Hyundai Heavy said today in an e-mailed statement. That exceeded the previous high of $2.4 billion set in March last year.
Shipping lines need more vessels to bring raw materials to China and take finished goods to the U.S. and Europe. The value of contracts for the world's biggest shipbuilders will probably surpass last year's record. About 90 percent global trade moves by sea.
``Experts expect continued growth in the container-shipping market,'' Hyundai Heavy said in the statement. ``This is backed by increases in international trade and freight rates.''
China's exports rose 27 percent in April, and the World Bank estimates that global trade volumes may rise 7.7 percent this year.
The 12-member Transpacific Stabilization Agreement, a group of shipping lines that handles about 70 percent of trade across the Pacific, has said container shipments to the U.S. from Asia may grow about 10 percent this year.
In the first five months, Hyundai Heavy and Hyundai Samho received a combined $8 billion in vessel orders, achieving more than half of this year's target of $13.7 billion. Shipbuilding accounts for half of sales at Hyundai Heavy, which owns 95 percent of Hyundai Samho.
Shares of Hyundai Heavy gained as much as 7.3 percent to a record 315,500 won and traded at 314,500 won as of 12:44 p.m. in Seoul. The stock has more than doubled this year, making it the best performer among the 50 largest companies in South Korea's Kospi index. Source: Bloomberg, May 31

Hard to believe that after the Second World War that Canada had the second largest merchant navy in the world, and were one of the world's largest shipbuilders. Where did we go wrong? Heck, we're even on both the Atlantic and Pacific! My guess is unions, high taxes and neglect with not enough soft-support from successive Liberal governments that did nothing to promote ship building or even in maintaining Canada's Navy or Coast Guard. We coulda been a contender? Oops, no wonder they call it the Asian Century! ; - )
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 31 May 2007, 09:07:05

Gas OPEC news
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'K')apital View - Equity
In brief…

Gazprom, Independent Gas Producers

Russian gas producers responded with cuts in production to lower consumption both in domestic and external markets due to warm weather last winter and current weather conditions. This can be deemed as the first move toward creating a “gas OPEC.”

In an interview, CEO Vagit Alekperov said that production cuts by LUKOIL and other independent companies should not exceed 8% of planned volumes and expressed hope that this measure will be necessary no longer than until 3Q07. At the same time, the Gazprom press service announced a 4 bcm cut in gas output from 561 bcm to 557 bcm. In 2006, Gazprom consolidated output was 556 bcm. Gazprom emphasized that these measures will include not only lower production, but also a “significant decrease” in gas extraction from underground storage.


Source: Investment Group Kapital, May 31, 2007

Now that IS interesting...in'it?
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby cube » Fri 01 Jun 2007, 01:56:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')..
Hard to believe that after the Second World War that Canada had the second largest merchant navy in the world, and were one of the world's largest shipbuilders. Where did we go wrong?
...
Being a strong supporter of the free market I hate to admit that YES it's true, "sometimes" governments do make good decisions.

South Korea is not exactly a free market economy...there is a huge dose of government intervention. In a nutshell this is how the system works. The government tries to guess what the "next big thing" will be and divert the nation's resources into subsidizing such industries. Shipbuilding is one of them. At the time the decision was made shipbuilding was not exactly a "sexy" business ---> who would of known?

Right now the south Korean government is investing/subsidizing high speed internet and wireless communications. You can think of this as their equivalent of the "Apollo Project". Rumor has it there is no such thing as a cell phone "dead spot" in south Korea! 8)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 01 Jun 2007, 03:42:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '.')..
Hard to believe that after the Second World War that Canada had the second largest merchant navy in the world, and were one of the world's largest shipbuilders. Where did we go wrong?
...
Being a strong supporter of the free market I hate to admit that YES it's true, "sometimes" governments do make good decisions.

South Korea is not exactly a free market economy...there is a huge dose of government intervention. In a nutshell this is how the system works. The government tries to guess what the "next big thing" will be and divert the nation's resources into subsidizing such industries. Shipbuilding is one of them. At the time the decision was made shipbuilding was not exactly a "sexy" business ---> who would of known?

Right now the south Korean government is investing/subsidizing high speed internet and wireless communications. You can think of this as their equivalent of the "Apollo Project". Rumor has it there is no such thing as a cell phone "dead spot" in south Korea! 8)


Canada, like a lot of social democratic countries in the 1960's & 70's, got hooked on Keynesian economics and wealth re-distribution policies that basically said, financial discipline doesn't matter, and that we are already rich enough now, so we have to solve everyone's problems for them. Quite a disaster it turned out to be.

More than a quarter of a century on the wrong road, and the problem is that many in Canada are still fiscal liberals at heart. Even in my own family, who are conservative supporters, they still believe the government can solve all our problems by throwing money at them.

Whereas I am a firm believer that you can have any social programme - a cradle to grave welfare state if you want - so long as you can pay for it. That means generating the economic surplus today and not borrowing from future generations to pay for it later.

So we ended up throwing taxpayer money at social problems - are they all gone now? No. While the Asian Tigers subsidized industry by building infrastructure to make themselves more competitive. And they succeeded to a large extent even if they also have social problems to contend with as well.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 04 Jun 2007, 08:01:58

On Russian markets. A good place to look for clues to emerging market stability, and, of course, as Russia produces as much oil at the moment as Saudi (with a fraction of the reserves) its role in geo-political supply stability.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')June 2007–May 2008: entering a volatile election period

Russia is entering into a crucial, but potentially jittery 12-month period. Two events are set to dominate the country’s political calendar: Russia’s parliamentary elections, tentatively scheduled for 2 December 2007, and the presidential election, slated for 2 March 2008.

By May next year, we should see a new dawn over the Russian political landscape and a new political set-up that will determine Russia’s policy between 2008 and 2012 and possibly up to 2016. Moreover, we believe that the results of the parliamentary and presidential elections are far from preordained and that the devil will be in the detail. The results of the December parliamentary elections are only marginally important; it is the outcome of the presidential election that will be crucial to market sentiment.

The effects of the Russian election on the stock market

Russian elections tend to increase volatility in the Russian stock market. Experience to date suggests that investing in the 12 months ahead of a Russian presidential election tends to be more profitable than investing in the 12 months afterwards. Moreover, if there is a global sell-off, it is not unthinkable that the Russian government might use budgetary funds to purchase shares in the leading Russian blue-chip stocks to support prices.

Two key questions: will Putin go and who will replace him?

The evidence suggests that President Putin will not change the constitution to give himself more time in office and will step down, allowing a new president to succeed him in March 2008. Currently, the leading candidates to take over from Mr Putin as President are Sergey Ivanov (first deputy prime minister for industrial policy) and Dmitry Medvedev (first deputy prime minister for national projects).

Political stability to benefit energy, construction, machinery

Both candidates appear to be closely affiliated with the Putin presidency and we would expect either of them to provide continuity and stability. We expect the following sectors to benefit from political continuity: energy (Gazprom, UES, the OGKs), nuclear, heavy machinery, aircraft building, shipbuilding, automotive, construction and road building.

Longer term, it is fundamentals, not politics that matter

The shape and outcome of the parliamentary and presidential elections will either strengthen emerging Russian democracy and, with it, the investment climate, or significantly weaken them both. We expect the transfer of power to take the form of a ‘managed transition’ rather than be one of surprises. Political news flow is likely to dominate the stock market in the short term, though we believe thatmarket fundamentals will prevail in the longer term.

Investment Strategy

Ten observations on Russia’s election year

1. The Russian election year starts in June 2007 and runs through May 2008.

2. Russia’s elections matter enormously both on the Russian domestic political front and to the West.

3. Russian presidential elections have typically led to increased volatility in the stock market. If history is anything to go by, the stock market is likely to perform better in the months prior to the elections than afterwards.

4. The results of elections are far from clear or preordained.

5. The results of the December 2007 parliamentary ballot are only marginally important.

6. President Putin is not likely to change the constitution in his favour to give himself another term in office and is expected to step down, allowing a new president to succeed him in March 2008.

7. The new president is likely to be elected from among Mr Putin’s close aides.

8. We are likely to see continuity between the regimes and we think that those sectors providing diversification from oil are likely to benefit.

9. President Putin is generally expected to stay on in the Russian political arena.

10. Mr Putin is unlikely to run for president again in 2012 and such a move would likely only take place if there were a significant deterioration in the economic and political situation.

Consensus expectations

�� In the December parliamentary elections, the pro-Kremlin Unity Party is expected to win a majority, followed by the Communists and Liberal Democrats.

�� President Putin is not expected to change the constitution and is seen stepping down and making way for new president in March 2008.
�� One of the two current front-runners, Sergey Ivanov and Dmitry Medvedev, is expected to be named heir apparent by President Putin and be elected.
Source: Merrill Lynch Investment Strategy, June 4, 2007

And this broker's note from Eric Kraus of Truth & Beauty fame on recent Russian developments.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ENDNOTE:

Many of our readers have expressed concern as regards the future of Russian relations with the West. It remains our positions that the deterioration of these relations is primarily the fault of the
Western powers, and to no small extent, of the press.

That said, we are dealing with a reality - relations are at pretty
much a 20-year low ebb. We are relatively unworried. It has never
been Russia's destiny to emulate the West. She is simply too
different. Different in history, different in outlook, different in
aspirations.

Perhaps there would be fewer misunderstandings if Russians were
yellow, with Asiatic features. The West seems to have no difficulty
comprehending that the Chinese are profoundly different. Perhaps, despite their physiognomy similar to the average European, the Russians are no less so.

In any event, at least the financial consequences are likely to be
exceedingly small. Russia has now reached a point where the West is obliged to treat her as an equal - a full member of the global trading system, and a vital part of the energy equation
"and the rest is just literature..."

We are equally gratified by the outcome of our bullish call on
global markets and bewildered by the recent underperformance of the Russian equity market. Given the superb macroeconomic fundamentals, as well as the very strong performance of Russian debt, real estate, FDI and private equity markets, we are not overly worried.

The market has been hit by a combination of IPO overload and poor
sentiment. Having gotten oversold, as we go to press, the pendulum now appears to be swinging back. We find that the current market presents a compelling buying
opportunity.
Source: Eric Kraus, Anyatta Capital

But then again he has always been bullish on the Russian story, so his views are not to be used for market timing type trades other than to always buy on dips! ; - )
Last edited by MrBill on Mon 04 Jun 2007, 08:23:59, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 04 Jun 2007, 08:11:09

Colonial pipeline closure caused prices to spike higher according to my floor broker.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')olonial Pipeline Co. said Friday that gasoline mainline operations between Atlanta and Greensboro, N.C., will not resume later in the day as expected. The entire span of the gasoline mainline, or Line 1, was shut Tuesday morning for a system integrity check following a report from a landowner of a gasoline odor along the line's route.
"The pace of the work to replace a small section of the (gasoline)
mainline does not indicate that Line 1 will restart as earlier projected," company spokesman Steve Baker said in a recorded
message. A shift of gasoline flow to the distillate mainline at the Atlanta junction on Wednesday afternoon allowed the company to resume Line 1
Source: NYMEX floor broker note.


But the spread between WTI & Brent continues to defy normal trading patterns. Any program traders that were trading off historical patterns would have been killed this year as Brent went to an unprecedented $5-6 per barrel premium to WTI from its normal $1-2 per barrel price discount.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ecent weakness in the WTI-Brent spread has not been structural

The evidence suggests that recent weakness in the WTI-Brent spread has been driven by temporary refinery issues rather than longer-term structural shifts

Although the WTI-Brent differential narrowed over the week, the extreme weakness in WTI prices relative to Brent as well as to other global crudes in recent months has raised the question of how much of this weakness is short term in nature - owing to refinery maintenance and disruptions in the US Mid-continent - versus structural in nature - owing to longer-term shifts in production and imports in particular. Despite substantial debate over this question, the evidence suggests that the recent weakness has resulted almost entirely from a near-term surplus owing to temporary refinery issues rather than from longer-term structural shifts.
Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
June 3, 2007

Is Brent or is WTI the 'real' global benchmark price? Maybe both depending on who you ask.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')lobal following

As far as which type of crude is truly the global benchmark, experts disagreed.

Alaron's Flynn was quick to point out: "Nymex crude is out of whack with the realities of global demand" and "Brent crude is more of a reflection of worldwide demand right now."

Matthew Parry, an economist at Moody's Economy.com, agreed. "Brent tends to more accurately reflect 'true market' conditions," and is "probably the slightly more widely accepted."
'WTI sometimes seems a little pre-occupied with the weekly U.S. stock [supply] numbers.'

But Darin Newsom, an analyst at Omaha, Neb.-based DTN, said that with the U.S. pegged as the world's top oil-consuming and importing nation, "it may be the Nymex market that better reflects world supply and demand."


Source: [url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={6A40FC33-6CB3-4E0C-BBF9-C941D9B7D9BB}&siteid=nbi]NY crude's out of whack, but is it undervalued?[/url]
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 05 Jun 2007, 03:26:05

This Reuters article is from May 24th, but a good summary of where we are and why?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')EMAND

While previous price spikes have been triggered by supply disruptions, demand from nations such as China and the United States is a main driver of the current rally.

Global demand growth has slowed after a surge in 2004, but it is still rising and higher prices have so far had a very limited effect on economic growth.

Analysts say the world is coping well with high nominal prices because adjusted for exchange rates and inflation, they are lower than during previous price spikes and some economies have become less energy intensive.

FACTBOX-Why oil prices are at 2007 highs



Here is a little on the world of corn, and by default bio-fuels. As an aside, I think weather related price action, although always important to the agriculturals, is a side issue when you know you're going to burn everything you do not feed.

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

Adverse weather presents risks to corn crop conditions and yield

As dry weather is forecast to persist in certain states in the US Midwest, we expect crop conditions to continue to decline in the coming weeks, suggesting downward risks to yield when the growing season comes to an end.

Weather shows increasing importance as corn growing season starts to take off

Concerns over dry weather in the US Midwest pushed corn prices to over 390 cent/bu on May 31, a 7% rise over the week. As planting is almost over and newly emerged young plants enter the growing period, rainfall is particularly important at this stage.

We see downside risks to yield and upside risks to prices

We have built a model that forecasts yield by final crop conditions, as reported by US farmers. Our model shows that final crop conditions with a trend term explain 94% of the variability in yields. However, as dry conditions suggest downside risks to final crop conditions, we expect downside risks to yield and upside risks to our fair value estimate of 398  cents/bu.


Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
June 4, 2007

In other words, supply & demand analysis will assume lower carry over stocks from season to season if analysts assume that anything not sold as food will go into bio-fuel production. This will magnify price swings from current crop year to next planting season as there is less of a cushion of year end stocks.

And this is from Standard Bank with regards to the likelyhood of the Fed cutting interest rates in 2006 still.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')e no longer see as likely a fed funds rate cut in Q4:06. But such a cut remains entirely possible given the apparent absence of inflation pressure from sources other than commodities. If, by Q4, core inflation has settled into the 2.0% range or below and the economy seems unable to advance beyond a 2.5% GDP growth pace, the Fed may well be inclined to adjust fed funds downward from 5.25%, a rate that makes sense only when inflation is above the 2% threshold and acceleration is still perceived as a threat.

That said, the economy appears poised to compensate for the unaccountably feeble 0.6% Q1:07 quarter growth rate and in the weeks ahead there will be talk only of Fed tightening (which we still see as improbable), not of ease. Moreover, we cannot assume that US Treasury yields will fall back to the levels of March and April any time soon, although we expect them to decline in Q3. Our own focus will return to the housing slump, which is still young measured against similar episodes in recent US history, to exports, whose slide of late 2006/early 2007 remains baffling and, of course, to consumption, which remains oblivious – remarkably – to falling home prices, rising interest rates and a depreciating dollar.
Source: ResearchStrategy@Standardbank.com
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