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Trader's Corner 2007

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Where will WTI crude be on DEC 31st 2007?

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

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

Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Thu 27 Sep 2007, 04:11:59

The biggest bubble in history? Imagine 34.5-acres in the middle of the desert, almost worthless in 1931, or 1946 for that matter, now trading for $1.2 billion. That is a $19.672.131 increase in price every year for 61-years or $570.207 per acre every year since 1946. Who needs to gamble in Vegas? Real-estate was a sure bet!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Mobster Benjamin ``Bugsy'' Siegel, a member of the Meyer Lansky crime organization, popularized Las Vegas in 1946 when he opened a hotel named The Flamingo, the nickname of his girlfriend, dancer Virginia Hill.

Elad Group, the owner of New York's Plaza Hotel, paid $1.2 billion in May for a 34.5-acre site where it plans to build a $5 billion hotel and gaming complex.

Property values in Las Vegas rose 44 percent in the third quarter of 2004, driven by speculators and the lowest borrowing costs in four decades. It was the biggest U.S. gain recorded by Ofheo in 22 years.

As homebuyers descended on the desert city, it changed the way Americans look at real estate, said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial Inc. in Chicago. After Las Vegas, the investment boom spread across the country from Florida to Arizona and California, Swonk said.

``The city that gave us gambling gave us house gamblers,'' Swonk said. ``Buying a home became like buying a stock on margin, with no money down.''

Almost half of Las Vegas home sales in 2005 and 2006 were to people who intended to resell quickly for a profit, according to data compiled by Fannie Mae, the world's largest mortgage buyer. Nationally, investment purchases accounted for 28 percent of sales in 2005, the peak of the housing boom, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Sin City, as Vegas is called, had 24,341 single-family houses on the market in August, up 19 percent from a year earlier, and 6,221 condominiums, a gain of 23 percent, according to the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors. Both were records.

The median price of a condominium dropped 8 percent from a year earlier to $190,000 and the single-family median fell 3.9 percent to $299,900, the Realtors said. Nationally, the single- family median was unchanged in August from a year ago and the condominium median rose 2.1 percent, according to data reported yesterday by the National Association of Realtors.

Source: Sept. 26 (Bloomberg)

Somehow, as stock markets soar on the prospect of another 25 basis point cut in Fed funds, I don’t think that lower interest rates are going to gently unwind this and other housing bubbles?

But maybe it is just me trying to rationalize why I am sitting on the sidelines here?


UPDATE: other things that make me say, hmm?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')hevron knows this better than most. To land Unocal, Chevron had to fend off China National Offshore Oil Co. in a nasty bidding. Even Congress got involved, declaring Unocal's reserves American - even though most of them happened to be in Asia.

Nothing much has changed since then. Securing oil remains the core dilemma facing every oil company. Finding it is getting harder and the price is getting higher. And Chevron needs crude as much as happy investors to stay in the game. Without it, buybacks cannot sustain its share price.

Striking that balance in a non-renewable commodity market is going to be tricky.
Source: [url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={74ADAA78-64AF-4C58-AA50-BE699B77BC02}&siteid=nbi]Shareholders as default investment[/url]

A higher share price now also helps senior management to cash out near the top as well... and tomorrow?
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby Mechler » Thu 27 Sep 2007, 12:19:02

Mr. Bill,

Since RIG and GSF were brought up - what are your thoughts on the oil services sector at the moment. SLB has been my big winner, but now looks expensive (well, it has looked expensive for a while).

Regardless, I'm more interested on long term views of these companies. I know we've discussed it before, but is this sector poised to gain the most if the PO scenario plays out? Especially versus oil companies that are struggling to maintain reserves?

Basically, I'm looking for an investment versus a trade. Any insight?

Thanks as always,

Mech
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby Offshore » Thu 27 Sep 2007, 18:36:41

I know I'm not Bill and I eagerly await his responses but I have to chime in on this since it's my favorite subject.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mechler', 'w')hat are your thoughts on the oil services sector at the moment. ...

I know we've discussed it before, but is this sector poised to gain the most if the PO scenario plays out? Especially versus oil companies that are struggling to maintain reserves?

Best sector you can possibly be in. Dr. Stephen Leeb wrote a book called The Coming Economic Collapse and he went back and studied market returns in the 1970s when America peaked. He found that in the 1970s oilfield services stocks had the second highest real returns after gold bullion. Oilfield services stocks even outperformed gold mining stocks, independent oil exploration and production companies, and integrated oils. However he suggests that drillers outperformed gold bullion since they were the most leveraged of the oil companies. Drilling is a no brainer: RIG.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')LB has been my big winner, but now looks expensive (well, it has looked expensive for a while).

I wouldn't sell it ever because it is the so-called "gold standard" but I agree with you at 20 times earnings the stock is expensive on an absolute basis as well as on a relative basis when you consider that HAL only trades at 13 times earnings.

Can't go wrong with RIG or HAL imo.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby Mechler » Thu 27 Sep 2007, 21:36:44

Thanks for the response, Offshore. All input is welcome!

I read Leeb's book that you mentioned. I wish I had read his first, which, from what I've heard, said many of the same things but much earlier in this energy bull run.

My question about HAL is why they have lagged so much? A lot of negative press? They've certainly had their share. Also, pardon my rookie question, but if RIG and GSF are merging (it wasn't a buyout?) will one stock/company cease to exist and one will remain? Or will the combined company have some new name (TransGlobalMegaCorp :P )?

Another question for all - is there a huge market meltdown looming? Should we be taking profits and waiting on the sidelines? Even for a long term investment, I would like to avoid buying at the relative top.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby gswarriors4life » Thu 27 Sep 2007, 22:46:55

Hi Mr.Bill,

Sorry, don't mean to get in the middle of the current oil services conversation but for the new merged RIG entity, would the share price calculation somehow be affected by the dividend payout?:


GSF post merger (undiluted)
market cap = $49.31 billion (at market prices)
shares = (290.20 x 0.7) + (225.32 x 0.5) = 315.80 million
share price = $156.14

Thanks.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby gswarriors4life » Fri 28 Sep 2007, 00:23:15

Hey Mechler,

To answer your question about HAL and why its lagged VS SLB or RIG or GSF,
i think is mainly because Its earnings haven't grown as quickly.

Regarding RIG and GSF, yes, they will become 1 company and will become one mega corporation trading under the symbol RIG.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Fri 28 Sep 2007, 05:24:30

Thanks for the comments. Very much appreciated. As for RIG/GFE dividends after the merger they will be just one dividend from RIG. GFE will cease to be.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n the cyclical stock basket, Haase likes Transocean Inc.
(RIG 113.81, +2.29, +2.1%) , a company with a fleet of deep-water offshore oil rigs utilized by oil companies. Shares of the stock recently made up about 3.5% of the portfolio's total holdings.
"Demand is extremely strong to get these rigs," Haase said. "There's no way to get oil in this water depth other than these rigs."

Interest from oil companies to drill in these waters will remain high as long as oil prices stay firm, he says. And until more of the rigs are available for use, the stock will continue to be a good opportunity, he adds.

"What kills a cyclical industry is new capacity," Haase said. "Five years from now, a lot of capacity is coming in. At that point, when that happens, it's 'game over.' Wait for the next cycle."

Source: [url=http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid={2D73D2A0-B0AC-47E4-BF4E-5445AE1DA5AA}&siteid=nbs]Starting at the top[/url]

As for SLB it is not really how high it can go because no one can accurately predict 'the next Tulip Mania'. It is currently trading at a P/E of 28 versus annual growth of 15% and versus its peers at P/Es 16-20, so it is expensive against any measure. Can it go higher? Of course, the Shanghai Index is currently trading at a P/E of 50. That is you will re-coup your intitial investment in 50-years (maybe, but that's in 2057 and I expect 2030-2050 to be crunch time - post peak oil decline + peak population). Or you need earnings, not sales or revenues, but profits to improve much sooner.

However, +70-71% YOY is a darned good run. If you compare that to a global economy that is expanding at approximately 5% per annum it is a fine performance. If earnings growth is expanding at 15% per year then it will take another 5-years for growth to catch-up to RIG's current stock price. But it is not really how high can this stock go, but how low can the US dollar sink?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ith the U.S. government fast approaching its current $8.965 trillion credit limit, the Senate on Thursday gave final congressional approval of an $850 billion increase in U.S. borrowing authority.

The Senate voted 53-42 to raise the debt ceiling to $9.815 trillion, the fifth increase in the U.S. credit limit since President George W. Bush took office in January 2001. The U.S. House of Representatives approved the higher debt limit earlier this year as part of the overall budget resolution and the legislation now goes to Bush for his signature.

Source: Congress agrees to raise U.S. credit limit

The Fed has abandoned a strong dollar policy and its fight against inflation, while the US government votes to pile on even more unservicable debt. I can smell $1.5000 against the euro coming. By that time the French will be storming the ECB's Bastille! While Italian industry will be in a death spiral due to cheap Chinese imports in knock-off luxury goods, textiles and fashion.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')oordinated intervention has been rare since the 1985 Plaza Accord, when central banks in Europe, Japan and North America stepped in to depreciate the dollar.

Japan unloaded some 35 trillion yen in 2003 and 2004 to stem yen appreciation but hasn't intervened since.

The Fed and European Central Bank have been more reticent, though both acted with Japan to prop up the euro in 2000 when it hit a record low at $0.8225, 30 percent below its value at inception in 1999.

But after breaking above $1.40 this last week, several European officials, including those from EU heavyweights France and Germany, have been arguing that the high exchange rate threatens the region's economy.

Indeed, a weaker dollar is not just an issue for the United States. German manufacturers, for instance, consider it a threat because it makes their goods, priced in euros, more expensive.

Crucially, though, no European Central Bank officials have echoed those comments. That wasn't so in 2004, when ECB chief Jean-Claude Trichet called the euro's rise above $1.30 "brutal" and "unnecessary."

Source: THE SAVING GRACE OF GLOBAL GROWTH

I would love to see that. Imagine coordinated central bank intervention to prop up the US dollar while the printing presses in Washington are running around the clock and the Fed is lowering rates against a backdrop of a slowing economy and tapped out consumer. Good luck with that. Old George Soros would have to come out of retirement and make another bundle betting against the central banks.

Central bank intervention only works when it is well-timed and actually supports the underlying fundamentals. I.e. the US economy and its finances are strong, but external events have somehow made its fair value out of whack. I am sorry, but that is clearly not the case at the moment. The only thing supporting the US dollar was higher interest rate differentials and those are now shrinking.

EU's Almunia says worried by dollar's fall

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') When it came to paying credit card bills in the second quarter, consumers improved, according to the report.

"Not surprisingly, customers may feel helpless when faced with a mortgage reset they can't afford, but they still want to keep up with other payments," said James Chessen, chief economist at the American Bankers Association. "People need to pay for gas and their cars so that they can get to work."

Many consumer loans are bundled into "asset-backed" securities, and sold to investors including institutions, pension funds and mutual funds. Further economic slowing might drive late payments higher, hurting the value of these securities.

source: Late payments rise on home equity credit lines

UPDATE: is it just me or does anyone else see the disconnect between the willingness of homeowners to walk away mortgage repayments and the willingness of investors to buy MBS debt?



Sure the US is churning out more exports now, but how many Boeing Dreamliners can OPEC oil producers buy? And even then record exports at the moment do not even cover the US import bill due to a weak dollar making oil priced in dollars more expensive as measured in a basket of other currencies.

Ironically, petrol-dollar recycling is supposed to prop up the US dollar as oil exports priced in US dollars get recirculated into USD denominated stocks and bonds. Well, so much for theory. That's right up there with using your credit card to pay your mortgage because you have run out of income. Who wants to buy US bonds while inflation, and therefore the prospect of higher interest rates to come, is rampant and US dollar devaluation is eroding your capital gains? That is a losing trade and then the Fed has the gall to scold investors for being complacent about risks and not demanding enough yield premium to compensate themselves for the risks. Well, how about real interest rates of 3% net of inflation as compensation?

But all that money being created by central banks around the world to either support economic growth or sterilize their foreign exchange receipts has to flow somewhere. And that is making all assets far too expensive relative to their fundamentals. Like $83 oil, $740 gold, 10-y UST with a yield of just 4.5% and the Shanghai Index up 166% YTD. Why not oil field service companies with P/Es of 28? Double your money every 1.03 years. That's one way to stay ahead of inflation! ; - )

UPDATE: Gonzalo Lardies, a fund manager at Banque Privee Edmond de Rothschild SA in Madrid,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '`')`What's happening shows once more that the market is very irrational in the short term. The worry is that if the Fed has to
cut rates it's because the economy is a cause for concern.

``The most important thing in the U.S. is consumer spending, which accounts for almost 70 percent of gross domestic product.
So naturally if economic conditions deteriorate then company earnings will suffer too.

``I think it's more coherent to interpret a further interest rate cut as a negative sign about the state of the U.S. economy. That isn't always the perception on this side of the Atlantic.''
Source: Sept. 27 (Bloomberg)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby PersecutedGadfly » Fri 28 Sep 2007, 15:12:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mechler', 'M')y question about HAL is why they have lagged so much?

The stock is up 35% year to date.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') lot of negative press? They've certainly had their share.

Politics. Nothing to do with the company.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby Mechler » Fri 28 Sep 2007, 15:47:46

True, true - not a bad return. But the returns of SLB and RIG were 73% and 58%, respectively, in the same 52 week period.

But, hey, I wouldn't be upset with 35%.

For the long term, would be better to go with a SLB or HAL, or spread the risk with an OIH?

Thanks!
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 05:59:26

[align=center] And now for something completely different. [/align]

I stumbled across this Economist’s Forum in the FT.com while looking at some other globalization stuff. It is a very interesting exchange of views on this topic and raises some interesting questions. Well worth a read.

Globalization - FT.com

I liked the ideas from Robert Wade and Willem Buiter better than Martin Wolf’s, and now 9-months later than these original comments were made I think that Wade’s and Buiter’s have stood the test of time and are more inline with the credit crunch that we have seen in the intervening time.

Far from robust and stabilizing, high levels of US dollar denominated debt from ultra-low interest rates kept alive by excessive money supply creation, Wade’s so-called, ‘money as debt, where money supply creation mainly limited by demand for credit,’ can be seen as causing two problems - albeit related. One is that asset prices are over-valued by cheap credit. And secondly, by removing cheap credit - either by central bank rate increases to counter inflationary pressures, or by banks and investors re-pricing credit risks - causes a funding problem for those borrowers who bought those over-priced assets.

If we saw the same high growth world market in real products and services without global imbalances then I would agree that it is sustainable from an economic, but not a natural resource depletion perspective. However, as we have seen high headline world growth only in conjunction with an excess of savings from exporters to consuming nations that are also importing capital it is clearly a case of paying consumers to keep consuming through the use of cheap credit.

The so-called ‘Japan moment’ comes as tapped out consumers can no longer afford to keep buying even if interest rates are next to zero and/or as exporters get tired of low or negative real returns on their capital and US dollar devaluation. However, this is not only a US problem as high debts and deficits in such countries as Spain, Italy and France may be masked by high German growth and a currency union, but are none the less just as real. They just have different time horizons. In the name of stability, other eurozone members may be prepared to ignore imbalances, but as they accumulate sooner or later they can no longer be ignored if they threaten that very stability.

No matter how wealthy a country is it can still accumulate unsustainable deficits if it consumes more goods, services and credit than it can produce or service. It is not a production problem, but a consumption one.

Willem Buiter’s comment about ‘a pefect lull’ of low long-term interest rates, low credit spreads and high real growth was spot on. In January, 2007, but in the intervening months we have seen at least one of those threads become unwound. That of low credit spreads. And in the absence of almost immediate central bank easing and injections of liquidity to rescue borrowers, lenders and markets in general, the re-pricing of credit risk would have been more brutal. Again if high real growth was sustainable on its own such interventions would have not been necessary or even desirable.

The weakest argument of Martin Wolf’s is that such imbalances do not have to result in higher inflation ‘provided countries are prepared to accept nominal exchange rate appreciations instead.’ This is exactly what Asian exporters and many OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers are not apparently willing to accept. So the bulk of the re-balancing has been from the US dollar to the euro zone not from those exporters of both goods AND capital.

That exports have shifted from US shores to European ones is hardly re-assuring in the long-run if cheaper imitations undermine Italian and French production of textiles, fashion and luxury goods threatening jobs, exacerbating budget deficits and reducing those affected states’ ability to service those debts within in the context of their Maastricht Treaty obligations. While instead of addressing reform of their own capital markets and domestic economies to stimulate home grown demand those exporters are instead looking for higher value assets abroad rather than low yielding government debt. That can only trigger the protectionist policies that Mr. Wolf and other contributors fear the most.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby drew » Mon 01 Oct 2007, 19:38:07

Ha, maybe you've been outed Mr.Bill....

I would have asked him first privately Rostov.

As you know there are way too many unstable people on this site!

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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 05:50:17

Hello Rostov/Drew. Sent you PMs. Thanks for your understanding.

Just some housekeeping here today. Quite busy as will leave again tomorrow, back next week. Here is the latest on the gas markets from Goldie Sachs.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Natural Gas Watch

Strength in oil prices to lend support to natural gas prices in 2008

Despite expectations of relatively ample natural gas supply this winter assuming average weather, we believe that expected strength in the oil complex will lend support to natural gas prices from current levels.

The US natural gas balance has tightened in recent months

Over the past two months, hot weather and a sharp decline in US LNG imports from record-high levels due to an exceptionally strong Asian pull on Atlantic Basin LNG supplies have tightened the US natural gas balance, reversing the surplus environment that had characterized the market through most of the summer.

We expect inventories to end the winter at comfortable levels

We expect that US LNG imports will remain below the high levels observed earlier this year in the coming months and on average in 2008. Nevertheless, as US inventories are still expected to approach capacity before the winter, the combination of lower US LNG imports relative to last year, trend increases in natural gas-fired power consumption, incremental domestic production growth, and assumptions of ten-year normal weather lead us to still expect historically high levels of US natural gas inventories by the
end of the 2007/2008 winter, but moderately below the end-March highs of recent years.

We believe natural gas prices will converge closer to oil prices

Given these inventory assumptions, we expect US natural gas prices to increase relative to oil prices from current levels, but remain modestly below residual fuel oil prices. However, expectations of a strong oil price environment-with a baseline WTI crude oil and residual fuel oil forecast of $85/bbl ($14.65/mmBtu) and $67/bbl ($10.70/mmBtu) for 2008, respectively-suggest a winter natural gas price of about $9.20/mmBtu and a summer natural gas price of $8.50/mmBtu, still well above the current forward curve.

A closer look at drivers of global LNG flows

Given the growing importance of LNG flows on spot natural gas prices, we take a deeper look at the drivers behind these flows.

Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
October 1, 2007

Which brings me to an open question for everyone before I leave. What is the situation with natural gas in relation to expected post peak oil depletion?

There will be a huge migration from petroleum to natural gas as a transport fuel, of course, but why are so many nat gas fields in essence stranded and are not even being developed?

Russia estimates it loses $13 billion a year in export revenues due to oil companies flaring off nat gas from oil wells and lack of access to Gazprom's pipeline monopoly. There are huge reserves under the Gulf of Mexico, but nobody is drilling for them. Ditto for the seas off Cyprus for that matter. Algeria has the gas, but is not developing those fields as much as it might. Other Arab states like Qatar and Saudi Arabia use it as a cheap feedstock to desalinate seawater. And fields in N. Canada/Alaska have simply been abandoned for the time being.

Could it be a case that gas is still so cheap and plentiful that producers cannot even be bothered drilling for it at the moment? And if that is the case can it be that we really do not know exactly how much natural gas is potentially available if the price were high enough to make these fields profitable to exploit as well as spur the search for new finds?

I am not saying we can replace all our petroleum needs by migrating to natural gas, but it does appear that we have not even seriously begun to tap into all potential fields and those smaller ones that are stranded at the moment due to cost or lack of infrastructure to bring it to market. Just a question? Thanks.

On another note we have been successfully rolling over massive amounts of funding needs with very little change to previous spreads over Libor. Maybe 25 basis points higher than before, but with the Fed funds cut of 50 basis points it balances out. It appears that not only can good companies still borrow competitively, but because banks are losing sales and trading revenues elsewhere in their operations that they are keen to hold onto lucrative client business where they can.

Collateralized lending/borrowing is still going on despite some investment banks that were quick to pull lines, but more questions are being asked. That is probably a good thing for real investors as opposed to wanton speculators who were over-leveraged to begin with. I think it would be way too premature to say that the credit crunch is over, it is not, but market gridlock is starting to unblock itself for some types of deals. There seems to be good appetite for equity backed repos using collars (put-call spreads), for example, and emerging markets are doing quite well. Not out of the woods for sure, but it looks like short of an out and out recession that the global financial architecture might not implode this year at least? Cheers.

UPDATE: I have not had the chance to look carefully at this Energy Game developed by The Economist, but I think it will be very educational. Energyville Challenge Game

Chevron Video on The Power of Human Energy
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Tue 02 Oct 2007, 09:06:56

Another update on oil markets. May as well post it now.

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

Facts about oil price seasonality and fund buying

Oil prices do not exhibit a seasonally-driven autumn pull- back, but rather volatility rises in the autumn due to maximum uncertainty before the beginning of winter; further, the recent rise in net spec length is being driven more by increased "gamma" rather than new fund buying.

Crude prices retrace after record week

After reaching new all-time highs last week, with Brent closing above $80/bbl on Thursday, crude oil prices retraced yesterday amid some likely fund liquidation on the back of concerns over an economic slowdown in the United States and Japan. While these renewed concerns highlight the risk of some additional fund liquidation, we believe that any resulting downward correction in prices will likely prove temporary as supply has failed so far to show any sign of significant rebound. As a result we continue to believe that global fundamentals will continue to tighten in the last quarter providing support for year-end prices at $85/bbl.

Crude oil prices do not exhibit a seasonal pattern

Despite some concerns of a possible seasonal summer-end price pull-back, September's rally illustrates what we believe is a widely-acknowledged but often overlooked oil market characteristic, namely that there is no statistically significant seasonality in crude oil prices. Instead, the seasonality is in the uncertainty, which is at its highest point in the months leading up to the winter. This uncertainty can generate sharp downward or upward moves and thus a wider price range.

Increased spec length coming from gamma, not new buying

Although net speculative length in the oil market has moved back up to the highs reached in July that ultimately precipitated a sharp August pull-back in prices as the length was unwound, this time the composition of the length is very different. Most of the increase in net spec length has been from options not outright future buying as it was in July. In addition, the open interest in call options is actually down, which confirms that most of the
increase in length is "gamma" generated, not due to new buying. As oil prices have increased, the number of long options positions reported by the CFTC has also increased, as these options become deeper in the money taking the delta on the option rise towards one.

Source: Goldman Sachs Commodities Research
October 2, 2007

The term 'creeping normality' springs to mind when headline prices of $76-79 look relatively cheap and speculative longs are being put on by specs and not take profit orders?
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby cube » Thu 04 Oct 2007, 00:08:08

*opens door and sticks head inside*

Hello, yes I am still alive. However my desire to comment has gone south just like the Dodo bird. I guess it's like when you work at a pizza shop the last thing you want to do is eat a pizza. That's how I feel about the financial markets...I get enough excitement from trading I don't feel like talking about it.

Anyways good luck and remember:
1) cut your losses short, let your profits run
2) lose no more then 10% of your equity on a trade (10% is max but less is better!)
3) do not add to a losing position
4) don't try to pick tops and bottoms, the trend is your friend
5) those who buy the news eventually end up selling newspapers (or something like that)

There's a lot more but everybody can figure it out on their own.

later 8)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby truecougarblue » Thu 04 Oct 2007, 14:01:34

I was forcefully reminded of the importance of gold this morning.

I've got just over a million shares of DPBM (pink sheet). Well, this morning they announced they've started hauling up the shiny stuff. 200% bouce on this tiny tidbit.

WOOO HOOOO!
Cougar

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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby topcat » Thu 04 Oct 2007, 17:08:29

Way to go TCB!

I posted some of my/our PM stocks last month, and am interested in hearing from others about producers and explorers stocks that they own/like.

So, let's hear it. (Maybe a new thread?)
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby truecougarblue » Thu 04 Oct 2007, 17:55:16

I've made a good amount off CDE and HL, but I trade them only, not as investments. I just like them for their volatility to amplify the moves in the gold cycle.

I'll be in for the long haul once the market gets a good correction from the credit debacle.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby topcat » Fri 05 Oct 2007, 08:16:03

I don't trade them, try to hold them unless I get stopped out.

Some of the pennies, I look at as 'options that don't expire.'

Have watched CDE on & off for awhile, have not pulled the trigger yet. Did hold HL for a year or so but bailed with most of my profits when things went south months ago.

With the pennies, do you watch MYNG? Yes, I have quite a few shares.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby truecougarblue » Fri 05 Oct 2007, 11:07:08

I have been tempted but have not pullled the trigger.
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Re: Trader's Corner 2007

Postby MrBill » Tue 09 Oct 2007, 05:31:25

I am back, but still digesting all that has happened. No firm ideas, yet, but it does look like crude is headed lower from recent highs. The S&P Energy Index has topped out this past three weeks, so any weakness in the S&P 500 will likely translate into losses in oil & gas stocks. It may be a case that all the good news was already in the market and now any bad news will cause prices to go lower. Large funds have been moving to the sidelines while put call spread have widened out as investors buy downside protection. It must be October? ; - )

UPDATE: Kazakhstan looks like it is getting ready to implode based on a steep correction in real estate and over-exposed lenders. This would throw an icy bucket of water on other EM markets. They have done quite well YTD - out performing all other assets - and especially since the Fed started cutting rates in August.

THE HORSE RACE SO FAR...
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