OPEC
Frontrunning: December 22
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/22/2014 07:46 -0500- Australian Dollar
- Barack Obama
- Boeing
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Fox Business
- Fox News
- Hong Kong
- Insurance Companies
- Iran
- Morgan Stanley
- Nomura
- North Korea
- Obama Administration
- OPEC
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Serious Fraud Office
- Shenzhen
- Time Warner
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Police officers' slaying raises pressure on New York mayor (Reuters)
- People Call for Cooling of Racial Tensions After Murder of NYPD Officers (BBG)
- The $6.3 Trillion Frenzy That Vanquished Treasury Bears (BBG)
- China Investigates Possible Stock-Price Manipulation (WSJ)
- Citigroup Was Wary of Metals-Backed Loans (WSJ)
- UPS Turns Parking Lots Into Sorting Centers to Add Speed (BBG)
- U.S. Move to Normalize Cuba Ties Boosts Firms’ Asset Claims (WSJ)
- Meredith Whitney’s Fund Said to Drop 11% as Office Put on Market (BBG)
- Railcar Bottleneck Looms for Oil (WSJ)
US Equities Set For Record Open On Crude Commentary, Stable Russian Ruble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/22/2014 07:00 -0500There are two key events driving overnight risk prices: first, there is the Bloomberg story that "China Offers Russia Help With Currency Swap Suggestion", which was previously covered extensively here a week ago, but now that the algos have official confirmaiton they have sent the Ruble shorts into a panic short squeeze, with the USDRUB tumbling another 5% as of latest. The other key development pushing oil prices modestly higher again, is yesterday's speech by Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi who "expressed confidence prices will pick up", however not due to a drop in supply - because he made it very clear OPEC will never cut output and instead will wait for the high cost producers to exit the game - but amid improved economic growth.
Conrad Black: The Saudis Fear Western Alliance With Iran; Crashing Oil Is Their Retaliation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2014 21:45 -0500"The oil-price weapon, in the face of the terminal enfeeblement of the Obama administration, is the last recourse before the Saudis and Turks, whatever their autocues of racist rhetoric, invite Israel to smash the Iranian nuclear program from the air."
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.
Saudi Arabia Refuses To Cut Oil Output Even If Non-OPEC Members Do
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2014 12:45 -0500As even Reuters observes this morning when discussing the ongoing crude rout, "the market slide has triggered conspiracy theories, ranging from the Saudis seeking to curb the U.S. oil boom, to Riyadh looking to undermine Iran and Russia for their support of Syria." It appears said theories will continue raging for a long time, because as Saudi Arabia's oil minister who has been extensively in the news in the past couple (that means "two" as per Janet Yellen) of month explained, the biggest OPEC oil producer said on Sunday it would not cut output to prop up oil markets even if non-OPEC nations did so, in one of the toughest signals yet that the world's top petroleum exporter plans to ride out the market's biggest slump in years, and that the price of crude is not going up any time soon.
A Funny Thing Happened To Oil Prices When Nixon Killed The Gold Standard
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/20/2014 17:30 -0500For the past 150 years, crude oil prices have varied between around $10 per barrel and around $120 per barrel. For many decades, oil prices were relatively "stable" but a funny thing happened in the early 70s and everything changed - whether coincidental or causative the linkages between the oil crisis and Nixon's Gold-Standard-busting of Bretton Woods are clear in the chart below. Goldman expects continued high oil price volatility with risks skewed to the downside as the market searches for a new equilibrium... and a period of macroeconomic adjustment to structurally lower oil prices. Is oil adjusting to a new 'gold-standard-esque' normal?
5 Things To Ponder: Variegated Contemplations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 16:36 -0500Yes, it is that magical week leading up to Christmas and the subsequent low volume push into the new year. It is "magic time" as hopes are high that "Santa Claus" will come to WallStreet. "Ignoring valuation – ignoring risk – is a recipe for disappointment and is the thing that is most likely to lead investors to ruin"
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."
Futures Continue Rising As Illiquid Market Anticipates More Volatility In Today's Quad-Witching
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2014 07:04 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Saxo Bank
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Tax Revenue
- Volatility
- Yuan
Yesterday's epic market surge, the biggest Dow surge since December 2011 on the back of the most violent short squeeze in three years, highlighted just why being caught wrong side in an illiquid market can be terminal to one's asset management career (especially if on margin), and thus why hedge funds are so leery of dipping more than their toe in especially on the short side, resulting in a 6th consecutive year of underperformance relative to the confidence-boosting policy tool that is the S&P. And with today's session the last Friday before Christmas week, compounded by a quadruple witching option expiration, expect even less liquidity and even more violent moves as a few E-mini oddlots take out the entire stack on either the bid or ask side. Keep an eye on the USDJPY which, now that equities have decided to ignore both HY and energy prices, is the only driver for risk left: this means the usual pre-US open upward momentum ignition rigging will be rife to set a positive tone ahead of today's session.
The "Unequivocally 'Not' Good" Reality Of Lower Oil Prices & Jobs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2014 11:37 -0500The drop in oil prices is certain to cause some incremental unemployment in the U.S. energy industry; the question is simply how much and what that means for the American economy as a whole.
Crude Prices Pump-And-Dump After Saudi "Temporary Problem" Comments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2014 10:17 -0500Crude prices surged from $56.50 to $59 after Saudi Oil Minister al-Naimi comments that, as Bloomberg reports, the global oil markets are experiencing "temporary" instability caused mainly by a slowdown in the world economy, sabre-rattling that increased supply from regions outside OPEC (cough US cough), where oil-production costs are higher, is affecting the market. However, between his comments on no production cuts (and rising exports) and the UAE Oil Minister then confirming OPEC will not change output levels and has no intention of holding an emergency OPEC meeting, crude prices have plunged back down below $57. Energy stocks don't care though...
Futures Soar On Swiss NIRP Stunner, "Considerably Patient" Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2014 07:17 -0500- Across the Curve
- Beige Book
- Black Friday
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Claimant Count
- Conference Board
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- Fed Funds Target
- Fisher
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- Market Conditions
- Markit
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- North Korea
- OPEC
- Recession
- Shenzhen
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Yuan
After drifting unchanged for much of the overnight session, US futures exploded higher shortly after the previously noted SNB's NIRP announcement, which took place at 2 am eastern, which made it explicit that yet another banks will herd the bouncing dead cats right into new all time stock market highs, and following the European open, were carried even higher as the global "risk-on" momentum ignition algos woke up, spiking all recently depressed assets higher, including energy as Brent rose almost 3% despite Saudi Arabia’s oil minister Ali al-Naimi once again saying "it is difficult if not impossible" for OPEC and his kingdom to reduce output.
The End Of Exuberance?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2014 16:37 -0500"Back in the halcyon days of summer, it seemed nothing could go wrong; but now, ...the uncertainties presently being generated have the potential to undermine two crucial kinds of trust – that one must have in the merits of one’s own exposure and that equally critical faith in the reliability of one’s counterparties. If it does, the third great bull run of the 20-year age of Irrational Exuberance could well reach its culmination, after a rally of almost exactly the same magnitude as and of similar duration to the one which ushered it in, all those years ago."
Bob Janjuah: Forget Rate Hikes, "We May Well Need QE4 From The Fed"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2014 11:40 -0500I realise that it is not normal to have a bearish risk view for December through to mid-January. Normally markets tend to ramp up in December and early January before selling off later in January. But this year I do think things are different. One look at the moves in core bond markets over 2014, when almost everyone I talked to had been bearish bonds, paints a stunning picture. I would entitle this picture ‘The Victory of Deflation’, or (as many folks now talk about (but still generally dismiss)) ‘The Japanification of the World’. I may end up eating my words in 2015 if the US consumer does come through, but if he or she does not, then we may well need QE4 from the Fed to battle the incredibly strong headwinds of deflation around the world. And I will revert on this subject, but to me the coming ECB QE and more BOJ QE are woefully inadequate substitutes for USD Fed QE.
"Oil May Drop To $25 On Chinese Demand Plunge, Supply Glut, Ageing Boomers"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2014 10:45 -0500Most commentators remain in a state of denial about the enormity of the price fall underway. Some, failing to understand the powerful forces now unleashed, even believe prices may quickly recover. Our view is that oil prices are likely to continue falling to $50/bbl and probably lower in H1 2015, in the absence of OPEC cutbacks or other supply disruption. Critically, China’s slowdown under President Xi’s New Normal economic policy means its demand growth will be a fraction of that seen in the past. This will create a demand shock equivalent to the supply shock seen in 1973 during the Arab oil boycott. Today's ageing Boomers mean that demand is weakening at a time when the world faces an energy supply glut. This will effectively reverse the 1973 position and lead to the arrival of a deflationary mindset.... Prices have so far fallen $40/bbl from $105/bbl since we first argued in mid-August that a Great Unwinding was now underway. And there have been no production cutbacks around the world in response, or sudden jumps in demand. So prices may well need to fall the same amount again.


