by MrBill » Thu 19 Jul 2007, 04:12:02
I am not a stock analyst. So I cannot comment on each stock's underlying fundamentals. But from a top down approach the S&P500 Energy Index (GSPE) is looking about as over-bought as EUR/JPY and is long overdue for a sell-off. That does not mean the 'irrational' part of the rally cannot continue all summer until every bearish contrarian is penniless before it eventually drops. These things can and do happen. And in my case, far too often! ; - )
WTI (CL1) has been in a continuous uptrend since the week of May 13th, or 11 weeks in a row, without even a serious test of support. For me, 13 weeks is a fibonacci number, so my guess is this rally has another 2-weeks to run. It is already over-bought on the trading envelopes (TE) charts, which are the 2-standard deviations from the 21-day moving average, and CL1 is at 74.44 on the RSI. Trading envolpe resistance (TER) is at $76.
Support (TES) is at $67.33. The bottom on the channel for CL1 is at $67.40, which is also the 0.382% fibonacci retracement. So triple witching support level. My play on that given timing will be as important as not getting stopped out on a short position in the futures would be to buy an OTM put option at $69, which is TES with one standard deviation from the mean. There is a 68% chance we will hit that level from today's price. Not bad odds.
The levels for Brent are TER = $79.08 TES = $68.73 RSI = 64.13 (already seen slight correction off highs at $77.57 on July 13th)
Flies in the ointment are a weak US dollar ($1.3800) and those bullish fundamentals stemming from the unexpected drawdown in gasoline stocks this week.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')IL & GAS PRODUCERS: Market moves up on gasoline
DOE stats bullish overall given surprising gasoline draw - The DOE reported a 0.5MMBbls draw from crude oil stocks, a 2.2MMBbls draw from gasoline stocks, and a 0.2MMBbls draw from distillate stocks. The unexpected draw from gasoline inventories provided a boost to energy markets (both equities and commodities) post the 10:30am release.
Gasoline draw due in large part to 36% lower imports - Gasoline stocks decreased 2.2MMBbls last week due in large part to lower imports, but also higher implied demand and lower gasoline production. Draws were seen in PADDs 2, 3, and 5 (Midwest, Gulf Coast, and West Coast), but were partly offset by a build in PADD 1 (East Coast). Implied demand for gasoline averaged 9.7MMBbls/d last week, a level not seen since June 2005, and was up 0.5% versus the prior week and 0.3% versus the prior year.
The drop in imports to 0.9MMBbls/d vs. the prior week's 1.4MMBbls/d was mostly due to a drop in blending components; finished imports stayed flat. Production of gasoline fell for the second week in a row to 9.1MMBbls/d despite rising refinery utilization rates, but was still up 4.1% versus last year according the the 4-week MA.
Crude oil draw in line with expectations - The crude oil draw of 0.5MMBbls was in line with expectations as the market correctly anticipated that imports would recover from the prior week's levels but would be offset by higher refining utilization rates. Imports were up almost 3.5% over the prior week and utilization rates increased almost 0.9% to 91%.
Inventories at Cushing, OK decreased 0.2MMBbls to 22.6MMBbls, and were down 5.4MMBbls from their peak levels in April. However, despite lower inventory levels, the spread between WTI and Brent stayed wide last week at almost $5/Bbl.
Slight distillate draw due to lower production and higher implied demandDistillate stocks decreased 0.2MMBbls last week, in contrast to consensus expectations for a small build, as distillate production like gasoline fell 0.7% despite higher refining utilization rates, and implied demand increased 1.8% versus the prior week. Heating oil stocks, which remain at 5-year lows, decreased 0.7MMBbls, while diesel stocks, which remain at 5-year highs, increased 0.6MMBbls.
Source: Merrill Lynch's Fuel For Thought
Thursday 19 July 2007
I assume a correction in the crude would lead to a sell-off in the oil stocks as well. The oil service companies have been the last to rally, under-peforming the GSPE, and the first to sell-off. So they may get hit hardest at the first sign of a correction. The GSPE hit a high of 571.09 and last traded at 568.91. A nominal sell-off should see 535 (0.236R) or 512 (0.382R) that is near the previous low of 510.
I took a cursory look at DRQ, DVN, GSF and RIG.
DRQ $47.64 last
P/E 20.62 est P/E 18.76
21.65% YTD 16.95% YOY
TES $44.27 TER $49.50
Target price $45
looks like a buy down there. Be patient
DVN $83.04 last
P/E 13.18 est P/E 13.59
23.79% YTD 39.20% YOY
TES $76.25 TER $82.75
looks over-bought at current levels based on TER
still cheap on P/Es
a nice to own at lower levels
GSF $72.06 last
P/E 16.16 est P/E 10.02
22.59% YTD 39.34% YOY
TES $70.94 TER $75.20
looks cheap on P/Es
buy on a dip if there is a correction in crude/GSPE
RIG $107.40 last
P/E 25.17 est P/E 13.63
32.85% YTD 42.75% YOY
TES 103.54 TER 111.25
this one has a high current P/E ratio
and has already performed quite well YTD/YOY
would be nice to own at cheaper levels
but would look at DVN first
UPDATE: For me with a shrinking pool of mergers and deals to be done you have to be extremely honest with yourself as a private investor and ask youself what do you know that the private equity and industry insiders do not with their army of full-time analysts?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')NEW YORK (Reuters) - A recent run of large chemical and plastics deals has cut into the list of possible targets, leaving companies and financial firms to fish in smaller ponds.
Chemical deals are up 76 percent globally so far this year and U.S.-target deals are up 325 percent to about $37.5 billion, according to market research firm Dealogic.
With those targets snapped up, small deals will be easier than large ones, observers said.
"It's not like there are excessively large assets out there now, so by a process of elimination that's what you end up with," said HSBC analyst Hassan Ahmed.
Indeed, of the top 10 largest chemicals deals so far in 2007, seven deals have been announced in June and July including the Lyondell sale, according to market research firm Dealogic. Of the top 10 deals, only four were above $5 billion.
Fewer big fish means fewer large chemical dealsAgain, I am not a stock analyst. None of these stocks are cheap if you look at historical charts and where they have come from in terms of price. However, if you believe in the energy sphere long-term then you have to get in somewhere. The TES provides some good indications of price entery levels.
However, beware they ratchet up and down, so they are not firm levels, but moving targets. They need to be updated regularly. I just like them conceptually as they tell me whether in the short-term something is over-bought or over-sold and therefore likely to correct.
Ideally, say, if I owned 5-10 stocks in a sector, what I would look to do is sell 50% of the long at the TER, and then replace that long when the stock reaches TES. That way I am always taking profit on the stock when it is over-bought, and buying it back when it is over-sold. That rebalancing ensures my over-all portfolio improves its average over time. Of course, for that to work properly you need stocks that go up as well as down. And you have an inherent long bias, so if the market tanks you will still be long and wrong.
The frustrating part is when you take profit and it does not then dip enough to trigger a buy signal again. But at least you keep half your long. Plus it enforces discipline and avoids over trading. It may not be perfect, but it is a simple and straight forward approach.
You should build your own basket using this approach for each segment you trade because these stocks are substitutes for one another. Like Coca Cola and Pepsi. You should trade them against one another. To improve your average and reduce your variance.
Just for your guide, I back tested this approach for tobacco stocks and got much better returns and a lower variance than just owning one stock or a basket of five stocks long only. But I have not traded tobacco stocks, so it was just out of curiosity to test my idea.
Some suggestions might be
Oil & gas producers
Railway stocks
Refiners
Service companies
Power producers
Mining companies
and build a basket for each sector of say 5 stocks each. Keeping in mind that these stocks are all correlated with one another, so in order to balance that out you would need 'other' sectors not rising and falling in tandem with energy, base metals and commodity prices.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Energy Weekly
US natural gas prices face further near-term downside risk
However, we continue to believe that prices will strengthen later this year as winter weather uncertainty comes to the fore. We are therefore maintaining our 3-month and winter average NYMEX natural gas forecasts of $8.50/mmBtu and $9.00/mmBtu, respectively.
US natural gas prices have declined substantially while UK prices have spiked
US natural gas prices have moved to substantially lower levels in recent
weeks, disconnecting further from the price of residual fuel oil, the main substitute fuel. At the same time that US natural gas prices have weakened, UK NBP natural gas prices have gained considerable strength. Although these extreme price movements occurred simultaneously, the two were generally unrelated, with the former driven largely by exceptionally high inventory builds in the United States in the recent period and the latter by supply
disruptions in the United Kingdom and Norway.
UK price spike is likely to prove temporary while US price weakness may persist in the near term
Although the North Sea supply disruptions may continue to support UK prices in the near term, this support will likely prove temporary as the supply issues are resolved. In contrast, although some drivers of the large recent builds in the United States, such as weather, could prove temporary, others, such as LNG inflows, may prove more sustainable in the coming months, at the same time that the market must deal with the overhang of higher inventories
resulting from the recent weakness.
Winter weather uncertainty is likely to help reconnect natural gas prices to oil prices later this year
We believe that US natural gas prices remain vulnerable to further downside risk in the near-term, which generates particular downside risk to our 3-month price forecast of $8.50/mmBtu. However, we continue to believe that as winter nears the uncertainty of winter weather, combined with potential declines in US natural gas imports, will likely help reconnect natural gas to the oil complex, which has been increasingly strong.