Nat Gas
Global Stocks Rebound, US Stocks To Reopen Back In The Green For 2015 As Oil Halts Slide
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 06:58 -0500Santa Claus is cutting it close: after stocks closed down yesterday, and just fractionally red for the year, the jolly old gift-giver (who now has activist investors breathing down his neck) has just three trading days to push if not stocks then the market into the green for the year. And so far, so good, with US equity futures rising by 8 points or 0.4%, on the back of some modest renewed Dollar strength but mostly on oil, which after yesterday's big slide, has managed to stem the decline and is up fractionally, just under $37, along with other commodities if not copper, which falls for second day.
Global Stocks, Futures Continue Surge On Lingering Rate Hike Euphoria
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2015 06:59 -0500- Aussie
- Boeing
- Bond
- Brazil
- Centerbridge
- China
- Conference Board
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Fed Fund Futures
- Fitch
- fixed
- Germany
- Gilts
- High Yield
- Housing Starts
- India
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Nat Gas
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Norges Bank
- Philly Fed
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
- Yen
Heading into the Fed's first "dovish" rate hike in nearly a decade, the consensus was two-fold: as a result of relentless telegraphing of the Fed's intentions, the hike is priced in, and it will be a "dovish" hike, with the Fed lowering its forecast for the number of hikes over the next year. Consensus was once again wrong on both accounts: first the rate hike was far more hawkish than most had expected (see previous post), and - judging by the surge in Asian, European stocks and US equity futures - the "market" simply is enamored with such hawkish hikes which will soon soak up trillions in liquidity from the financial system.
Chesapeake Bonds Plummet To 27 Cents Of Par After Company Hires Restructuring Advisor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2015 20:18 -0500Chesapeake has hired restructuring advisor Evercore "to shore up its balance sheet as commodity prices extend their decline." This means that Evercore will seek to further slash its debt, almost certainly be equitizing a substantial portion of it, and handing it over as equity in the new company to CHK's bondholders. As a result the company's 2023 bonds, which were trading at par as recently as late May, just rumbled to a record low 27 cents on the dollar.
Futures Resume Slide After Oil Tumbles Below $35, Natgas At 13 Year Low; EM, Junk Bond Turmoil Accelerates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2015 06:51 -0500- Across the Curve
- Australia
- Barclays
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Foreclosures
- Global Economy
- High Yield
- Iran
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Lehman
- Monetary Policy
- Nat Gas
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Precious Metals
- RANSquawk
- RBS
- Recession
- recovery
- Renminbi
- Yuan
- Zurich
With just 72 hours to go until Yellen decides to soak up to $800 billion in liquidity, suddenly we have China and the Emerging Market fracturing, commodities plunging, and junk bonds everywhere desperate to avoid being the next to liquidate.
Turkey's Trump Card: Erdogan Can Cut Russia's Syrian Supply Line By Closing Bosphorus
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 21:00 -0500Now that Russia has hit back at Turkey with economic sanctions designed to punish Ankara for the brazen downing of a Russian Su-24 near the Syrian border last Tuesday, the ball is back in Erdogan's court. Unless the autocrat President plans on shooting down another Russian warplane, Turkey's options may now be limited to diversifying away from Russian gas or closing the Bosphorus strait through which Moscow resupplies its forces at Latakia.
Oct 9 - FOMC Mins: Fed Held Off On Hike Amid Worries About Low Inflation
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/08/2015 16:54 -0500News That Matters
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Aug 28 - Fed George: Prepared for Rate Hike, Despite Selloff
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/27/2015 18:28 -0500News That Matters
What Is The Difference Between An ISIS Terrorist And A Freedom Fighter: "Appropriate Vetting"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/08/2015 14:31 -0500As we reported yesterday, in addition to Turkey and Saudi forming an alliance to topple Syria's despised anti-Qatar nat gas pipeline leader, Bashar Assad, the US has now begun training and arming Syrian rebels. But how will the US know it is arming Syrian rebels, aka opposition "freedom fighters" and al-Nusra or Islamic State jihadists who will promptly turn around and use the same weapons and training against the US? The answer: "appropriate vetting." No, really.
The Stage Is Set For The Syrian Invasion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2015 23:49 -0500One week ago, when reporting on the latest bizarre plan presented by the Pentagon, namely providing Syrian rebels (but only the moderate ones, not the jihadists like al Nusra, or, well, ISIS) with B-1B Bomber air support in their attacks on ISIS, when we wrote that this "means in the coming weeks and months look forward to a surge in false flag "attacks" blamed on the Assad regime, aiming to give Obama validation to expand the "War against ISIS" to include Syria's regime as well." We didn't have long to wait: in an entirely unsourced Time article written today by Aryn Baker, the Middle East Bureau Chief, the stage for the second attempt at invading Assad regime is finally set.
HAS OIL FOUND A NEW RANGE OR IS THIS TEMPORARY?
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 02/04/2015 08:44 -0500How can traders position the oil trade in the current environment?
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Market Wrap: "It's Turmoil" - Overnight Gains Wiped Out, Futures Trade Below 2000 On SNB "Shock And Awe"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2015 06:56 -0500To paraphrase a trader who walked into the biggest FX clusterfuck in years, "it's total, unprecedented market turmoil." So while the world gets a grip on what today's historic move by the SNB means, which judging by the record 13% collapse in the Swiss Stock Market shows clearly that the SNB market put is dead and the SNB may be the first central-banking hedge fund which just folded (we can't wait to see what the SNB P&L losses on its EURCHF holdings will be), here is what has happened so far for anyone unlucky enough to be walking into the carnage some 2 hours late.
Euro, Crude Crash Resumes; US Stock Futures Slump On Grexit Fears; China Soars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2015 07:00 -0500The new year is not even a week old and already the volatility fireworks are off, as well as the continued commodity derisking. But while for now US stocks continue to be an island oasis in a turbulent global sea where GDP forecasts decline every single day, the same can not be said about either the Euro, which after crashing overnight to a 9 year low, and rebounding briefly, has continued to decline and is now once again flirting with a key support level, this time 1.19, last reached during the May 2010 first Greek bailout. The catalyst, as usual, Greece which may or may not be leaving the Eurozone shortly, as well as ongoing bets on ECB QE following this morning's regional German inflation data which declined once more and now hints at outright deflation in Europe's strongest nation.
Here Is Citi "Explaining" In 2006 Why Soaring Oil Prices Don't Impact Consumption
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2014 10:19 -0500"We have heard constantly that oil will slow consumption down as it eats into disposable income. But it remains a conundrum to many that consumption has remained robust, despite oil prices remaining high. What’s going on? We don’t see a conundrum. As we wrote about in September (The Global Investigator, Is Oil Relevant for Equities, September 2 2005), in the plutonomy countries, the rich are such a massive part of the economy, that their relative insensitivity to rising oil prices makes US$60 oil something of an irrelevance. For the poorest in society, high gas and petrol prices are a problem. But while they are many in number, they are few in spending power, and their economic influence is just not important enough to offset the economic confidence, well-being and spending of the rich."
Nat Gas Tumbles Below $3 For The First Time Since 2012, Plunges 30% In 2014
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/26/2014 10:35 -0500For the past few months, the one silver lining to the energy complex - with crude oil plummeting to levels not seen since 2009 - was nat gas, which soared to the mid-$4s in early November on expectations of a brutal polar vortex for the second year in a row sending heating demand surging. Well, so far the "harsh" weather, which was blamed for the epic collapse in the US economy in Q1 has not materialized, and all those buyers of natgas contracts have been scrambling to sell all of their exposure afraid they may suffer the same fate as their crude trading brethren. End result: as of moments ago, nat gas finally slide under $3, the first time it has done so since 2012!
Putin Signs New Military Doctrine: Names NATO, US As Main Foreign Threat; Test Fires New ICBM
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/26/2014 09:06 -0500Last week, after the unanimous passage of the Ukraine Freedom Support Act of 2014 in Congress we wrote that "World Awaits Russian Response As Obama Makes "Lethal Aid" To Ukraine Legal." We didn't have long to wait: one short hour ago, Putin adopted an updated version of its military doctrine, which "reflects the emergence of new threats against its national security" and which names both the NATO military buildup on Russia's borders, as well as the US and the destabilized situation in some regions (read Ukraine) as the main foreign threats to Russian security. The doctrine update also, for the first time, put protection of Russian national interest in the Arctic (read oil and nat gas) among the key priorities for Russia's armed forces. In other words, Putin is not only not backing down, but has once again explicitly warned NATO that any western action, either in Ukraine or elsewhere, will have a proportional response.



