by MrBill » Mon 20 Aug 2007, 04:43:29
Markets have generally opened on a positive note this week. Asia is up 3-4% while Europe starts up 1-2% after America's 2% gain on Friday.
The S&P Energy Index (GSPE) touched 485 on Friday, just short of our 480 target before rallying to 520 where it is now (+7%). However, it is still under key resistance levels, so at least from a technical perspective these are selling levels.
In general, refering to the chart above, classify this as the Bull Trap phase of the market. Two reasons that the market may gain a little more before sliding again are a) August 15th is over, the date when investors had to signal whether they would withdraw money from their mutual and hedge funds at the end of September, and b) the discount rate cut by the Fed and other CBs willingness to lend to aid liquidity means that until the end of Q3'07 we do not have anymore inputs until the Fed meets again in September.
My guess is a stronger tone to the market this week, but I will use this rally to lighten up on some stocks that seem to be perennial under-performers. I may be wrong, but if we slide again, I would sooner have a smaller, core portfolio of stocks I like in the longer term than just some value traps that will drag me down. Better to have a fresh head if we go south again.
There is a base of support for Brent at $69 and $70 in the WTI. I think that can give way sooner or later. Still targeting $68 and eventually $65 in the crude.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')The fundamental to fund-liquidation tug-of-war continues
Prices generally unchanged since last week
The energy complex is trading up today along with other assets in response to the Federal Reserve's Board unexpected discount rate cut, in addition to the emergence of the first real storm threat to energy production this year as Hurricane Dean heads towards the US Gulf of Mexico. This price action, however, follows a week characterized by a tug-of-war between tight fundamentals and fund liquidation, leaving prices not far from where they closed last Friday.
While downside risks remain, current dip is a buying opportunity
Although the recent Fed move may begin to restore investor confidence and, in turn, calm the recent volatility in the markets, the biggest risk to the oil market has been and continues to be fund liquidation against a back drop of very strong underlying fundamentals. We believe that further liquidation could cause WTI prices to drop to the mid-$60/bbl level given the large remaining net speculative length in the market. However, due to the strong
underlying fundamentals, we believe that these liquidation-driven pull backs will likely be short-lived and represent increasingly attractive buying opportunities. We maintain a $73.50/bbl 12-month-ahead price forecast and believe risks are substantially skewed to the upside relative to this forecast, even in a weaker demand environment.
US refining system vulnerable to weather-related disruptions
As the first hurricane of the season threatens energy production in the Gulf of Mexico, the oil market seems to be focusing for the first time on the potential for weather-related supply disruptions. At the same time that the expected above-normal hurricane season enters its most active phase, the US refining system is particularly vulnerable to weather events given the extremely low level of product inventories and the fact that the system is still recovering from the string of outages that has been plaguing it since
March.
Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
August 17, 2007
I have gotten a lot of mail recently. Sorry, if I have been slow to respond...
Just posting what was a response to one private message FWIW.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E').On and BASF are absolute must owns for the long-term because of their strategic partnership with Gazprom, and as gate keepers to the European wholesale natural gas market via the new under sea pipeline between Russia and Germany in the Oestsee. E.On is in the domestic power industry, while BASF is both a refiner and a chemical producer.
Under normal circumstances these should be good entry points for both stocks. The DAX 30 has been beaten down to 7378 having tested the bottom end of the range at 7208 before Friday's rally after the Fed cut the discount rate.
BASF is near its support at 89.36 euros now at 90.33. E.ON is off its support at 112.70 and is now near 118.23 euros. It has not been sold off as badly as some other energy stocks on the back of subprime woes in the USA. So if these were normal circumstances these might appear to be good values. However, I think we are in the midst of a bull trap and after a brief rally this week that we will resume our overall move lower in global stock markets. I intend to use the rally to lighten up on a few stocks that I perceive to be value traps. I will not sell my E.ON or BASF here, but neither will I add to those positions.
I do not own Gazprom, yet, because Russian stocks look like they have room to fall, and Gazprom is surrounded by political uncertainty with regards to Presidential elections in Russia in 2008. Gazprom is a Kremlin asset and we simply do not know who will be calling the shots next year. And if Russian and international investors need liquidity to fund themselves then this is a large cap stock that can be sold off relatively quickly if need be. That makes it vulnerable to an overall move lower in emerging markets. As a Russian Blue Chip it makes up a significant chunk of Russian asset allocation in many model portfolios.
But again I see E.ON and BASF as long-term plays on European natural gas and energy security as well as a proxy for Gazprom itself.
Good luck.
And I nominate this story in The Washington Post this weekend for... I don't know... educated professionals that spend up to a half million dollars on a condo, but have no real financial plan, yet they believe they 'deserved' a nice home, and when it does not work out as they planned they fall back on the old 'nobody teaches you this in school' excuse. Pathetic.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Also, with the real estate market then booming,
Could we have lived farther from the District for less money, perhaps allowing us to get a less risky mortgage? Yes. Could we have continued to rent, waiting, perhaps, for the market to even out and our salaries to increase? Yes. But we already make nice livings. We pay taxes in the highest bracket.
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I asked Glassman about our options. I told him that it seemed the best one was something totally out of our control -- a recession. If the economy really tanks, it would likely cause interest rates to fall sharply, meaning that lots of people would lose their jobs, but my wife and I could refinance our house at a much lower rate. Obviously, my wife and I do not want anyone to lose a job, even if it would help us, but isn't it bizarre that one of the ways to get out of a risky loan is for other people to suffer?