Exxon
Frontrunning: January 21
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2015 07:38 -0500- 8.5%
- Australia
- Bank of Japan
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- BOE
- Boeing
- Canadian Dollar
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Corruption
- Councils
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Davos
- Dollar General
- Dreamliner
- European Union
- Evercore
- Exxon
- Ford
- France
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Henderson
- Hershey
- Hong Kong
- Housing Starts
- India
- Iraq
- Japan
- Keefe
- Mars
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Nomura
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- ratings
- Regions Financial
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Verizon
- Volvo
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Obama Targets Income Gap in Address That Shapes 2016 Election (BBG)
- Republicans Reject Obama’s Main Economic Proposals (WSJ)
- Senate’s Shelby Says White House Bank Tax Is Dead on Arrival (BBG)
- Is Dollar Next? Investors Reassess After Swiss Shock: Currencies (BBG)
- Bank of Japan Cuts Price Forecast, Maintains Record Stimulus (BBG)
- Pound Weakens After BOE Policy Makers Drop Call to Raise Rates (BBG)
- Putin not flinching on Ukraine despite economic crisis (Reuters)
- Indonesia will not make public full preliminary AirAsia crash report (Reuters)
- Party Hasn't Stopped for Russians at Davos Even With Ukraine Sanctions (BBG)
At Last The ‘Experts’ Wake Up To Oil
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2015 19:10 -0500We see far too much complacency out there when it comes to interest rates, in the same manner that we’ve seen it concerning oil prices. We live in a new world, not a continuation of the old one. That old world died with Fed QE. Just check the price of oil. There have been tectonic shifts since over, let’s say, the holidays, and we wouldn’t wait for the ‘experts’ to catch up with live events. Being 7 weeks or two months late is a lot of time. And they will be late, again. It’s inherent in what they do. And what they represent.
The Mystery Of The Missing Consumer Analysts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2015 17:15 -0500Over the past 30 days sell side analysts that cover the Energy sector have been busy cutting their earnings estimates to reflect plummeting crude prices. They’ve snipped an average 3% from their Q4 2014 numbers for the 10 largest cap names, and slashed 19% off their 2015 whole-year estimates. Common wisdom has it that these reductions should shift over to the both Consumer sectors – Staples and Discretionary – driving estimated there higher. That isn’t happening. Over the same 30 day period, the analysts that follow the largest names in these groups haven’t moved their estimates for either Q4 or 2015 by even 1%.
Frontrunning: January 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2015 07:42 -0500- Australia
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- BBY
- Best Buy
- China
- Citigroup
- dark pools
- Dark Pools
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Dollar General
- Evercore
- Exxon
- France
- General Motors
- GOOG
- Insider Trading
- Jaguar
- Kraft
- Medicare
- Merrill
- Middle East
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Norway
- OPEC
- Porsche
- Private Equity
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SL Green
- Tender Offer
- Transparency
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Earnings Pessimism Jumps as Oil Threatens S&P 500 Growth (BBG)
- It’s Amateur Hour in the Booming Chinese Stock Market (BBG)
- France mobilizes 10,000 troops at home after Paris shootings (Reuters)
- European Stocks Gain With S&P 500 Futures While Oil Drops (BBG)
- Nasdaq Looks to Operate Dark Pools for Banks (WSJ)
- This Guy Called Bonds in ’14. You Listening This Time? (BBG)
- Paris attacks boost support for Dutch anti-Islam populist Wilders (Reuters)
- OPEC price war in Asia intensifies as oil falls below $50 (Reuters)
The Crunch Continues: WTI Tumbles Under $49, 10Y Dips Below 2%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2015 06:56 -0500Same slide, different day, as the crude crash continues, with both WTI and Brent tumbling to multi-year highs, below $49 and $52 respectively. This happened despite the news overnight that China is accelerating 300 infrastructure projects valued at 7 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) this year, suggesting that China will focus more on fiscal policy than monetary easing, which in turn led to much confusion in the SHCOMP, which fluctuated up and down for the day several times before finally closing unchanged. There was no confusion about the stops slamming USDJPY, and its Nikkei225 derivative which tumbled 3%, sending Japanese Treasury yields to fresh record lows. Record low yields were also seen in Germany, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Finland, France (and many other places), which in turn forced the US 10 Year to finally dip back under 2.00%. In fact, taken together, the average 10Y bond yield of the U.S., Japan and Germany has dropped below 1% for the first time ever, according to Citi.
Babson Capital 1987 Redux: "What Goes Up Must Come Down"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2015 15:11 -0500"most investors take a relatively short-term view and assume that what has happened most recently will continue. They fail to recognize that economic and market forces are always working to press companies (and whole industries) back toward their respective grooves... companies rarely perform way above the industry average or way below it indefinitely. There is a constant tendency to regress toward the mean..."
Drilling Our Way Into Oblivion: Shale Was About Land Gambling With Cheap Debt, Not Technological Miracles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2014 15:00 -0500The shale patch can exist in its present form only if it has access to nigh limitless credit, and only if prices are in the $100 or up range. Wells in the patch deplete faster than you can say POOF, and drilling new wells costs $10 million or more a piece. Without access to credit, that’s simply not going to happen. That’s about all we need to know. Shale was never a viable industry, it was all about gambling on land prices from the start. And now that wager is over, even if the players don’t get it yet. So strictly speaking my title is a tad off: we’re not drilling our way into oblivion, the drilling is about to grind to a halt. But it will still end in oblivion.
Why The US Is About To Be Flooded With Record Oil Production Due To Plunging Oil Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 15:44 -0500One would think that plunging oil prices and the resulting mothballing (or bankruptcy) of the highest-cost domestic producers would lead to a collapse in US oil production. And sure enough, if looking simply at headline data like the Baker Hughes count of active rigs in the US, then US oil production grinding to a halt would be all but assured. However, what will actually happen, even as the highest-cost producers and those with the weakest balance sheets are taken to their local bankruptcy court, is that as Bloomberg reports, the US is - paradoxically - set to pump a 42-year high amount of oil in 2015 "as drillers ignore the recent decline in price, pointing them in the opposite direction."
Frontrunning: December 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 07:45 -0500- Australia
- Barclays
- China
- Citigroup
- Corruption
- Daimler
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Exxon
- Ford
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Henderson
- Johnny Cash
- Keefe
- Merrill
- Nikkei
- North Korea
- Obama Administration
- Private Equity
- Quantitative Easing
- Reuters
- Swiss Franc
- Switzerland
- Toyota
- Transocean
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Whiting Petroleum
- Icahn, Paulson Suffer Large Losses as Energy-Related Bets Sour (WSJ)
- Oil Investors Keep Betting Wrong on When Market Will Bottom (BBG)
- U.S. to sell final $1.25 billion shares of Ally Financial from bailout (Reuters)
- Ally Financial Gets Subpoena Related to Subprime Automotive Finance (WSJ)
- Russia's parliament rushes through bill boosting banking capital (Reuters)
- How a Memo Cost Big Banks $37 Billion (WSJ)
- ECB considers making weaker euro zone states bear more quantitative easing risk (Reuters)
- How the U.S. Could Retaliate Against North Korea (BBG)
Frontrunning: December 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/15/2014 07:57 -0500- Apple
- Australian Dollar
- B+
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Barclays
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bill Gross
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Devon Energy
- Empire State Manufacturing
- European Central Bank
- Evercore
- Exxon
- Ford
- France
- Ginnie Mae
- Global Economy
- Global Warming
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Housing Market
- Japan
- Kilroy
- LBO
- Lloyds
- Meltdown
- Merrill
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- Nuclear Power
- Obamacare
- PIMCO
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- Stress Test
- Switzerland
- Transparency
- Tronox
- Willis Group
- Yen
- Yuan
- Sydney Siege Sparks Muslim Call for Calm Amid Backlash Fear (BBG)
- Oil Spilling Over Into Central Bank Policy as Fed Enters Fray (BBG)
- Biggest LBO of 2014: BC Partners to acquire PetSmart for $8.7 billion (Reuters)
- Tremble algos: the SEC has hired... "QUANTS" (WSJ)
- When the bubble just isn't bubbly enough: There’s $1.7 Trillion Locked Out of China’s Stock Rally (BBG)
- Oil price slide roils emerging markets, yen rises (Reuters) - may want to hit F5 on that
- Libya Imposes Force Majeure on 2 Oil Ports After Clashes (BBG) ... and will resume production in days
- Amid Crisis, Pimco Steadies Itself (WSJ)
Should You Believe What They Tell You? Or What You See?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2014 21:15 -0500- Apple
- Auto Sales
- Black Friday
- BLS
- Bond
- Central Banks
- Channel Stuffing
- China
- Conference Board
- Consumer Confidence
- Corruption
- CRAP
- Deficit Spending
- Exxon
- Federal Deficit
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Ford
- Foreclosures
- Free Money
- High Yield
- Iran
- Japan
- JC Penney
- keynesianism
- KIM
- Madison Avenue
- Mexico
- National Debt
- New Home Sales
- Nuclear Power
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Saudi Arabia
- Sears
- Simon Johnson
- Student Loans
- Totalitarianism
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
- White House
Sometimes I wish I could just passively accept what my government monarchs and their mainstream media mouthpieces feed me on a daily basis. Why do I have to question everything I’m told? Life would be much simpler and I could concentrate on more important things like the size of Kim Kardashian’s ass... The willfully ignorant masses, dumbed down by government education, lured into obesity by corporate toxic packaged sludge disguised as food products, manipulated, controlled and molded by an unseen governing class of rich men, and kept docile through never ending corporate media propaganda, are nothing but pawns to the arrogant sociopathic pricks pulling the wires in this corporate fascist empire of debt.
The American Miracle Idea Of Energy Independence Is Crumbling
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2014 13:19 -0500The American miracle idea of energy independence is fully reliant on a shale patch that went over $100 billion deeper into debt every year for years running just to produce that not-so-miracle. Take away 40%+ of what revenue it did take in, and there is no independence left. All that’s left is fracking fluids in your drinking water, and a few trillion in debt that the Big Kahuna lenders will seek to unload upon the real economy.
It Wasn't Only China: Here Is What Else Is Crashing Overnight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2014 07:15 -0500- Abu Dhabi
- Aussie
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- CDS
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hyperinflation
- Italy
- Kuwait
- Mexico
- New Normal
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- OPEC
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- recovery
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- SocGen
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- Wholesale Inventories
It wasn't just China's long overdue crash last night. In addition to the Shanghai Composite suffering its biggest plunge since August 2009, there has been a sharp slide in the USDJPY which has broken its uptrend to +∞ (and hyperinflation), and around the time Chinese gamblers were panicking, the FX pair tumbled under 120, although since then the 120 tractor beam has been activated. Elsewhere, the Athens stock exchange is also crashing by over 10% this morning on the heels of news that the Greek government has accelerated the process to elect the next president and possibly, a rerun of the drama from the summer of 2012 when the Eurozone was hanging by a thread when Tsipras almost won the presidential vote and killed the world's most artificial and insolvent monetary union. And finally, the crude plunge appears to have finally caught up with ground zero, with ADX General Index in Abu Dhabi plunging 3.5%, also poised for the biggest drop since 2009. In fact the only thing that isn't crashing (at least not this moment), is Brent, which did drop to new 5 year lows earlier under $66, but has since staged a feeble rebound.
US Shale Under Pressure From More Than Just Low Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2014 13:34 -0500Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, has come full circle in Denton, Texas after a controversial ban on the practice entered into effect on Tuesday. Denton is one of several cities located on top of the massive Barnett shale formation, regarded as the birthplace of modern fracking. The ban, while incomplete, gives strength to what is a growing anti-fracking movement in the United States.
Here Is Oil's Next Leg Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2014 17:02 -0500Perhaps those sub-$50 Bakken prices tell us pretty much where global prices are ahead. And then we’ll take it from there. With 1.8 million barrels “that nobody needs” added to the shale industries growth intentions, where can prices go but down, unless someone starts a big war somewhere? Yesterday’s news that US new oil and gas well permits were off 40% last month may signal where the future of shale is really located. But oil is a field that knows a lot of inertia, long term contracts, future contracts, so changes come with a time lag. It’s also a field increasingly inhabited by desperate producers and government leaders, who wake up screaming in the middle of the night from dreaming about their heads impaled on stakes along desert roads.


