OPEC
The S&P 500 and Brent Oil are basically the Same Market
Submitted by EconMatters on 02/14/2013 05:42 -0500This is why before and during almost any major up move in markets traders go to the EUR/USD and USD/JPY funding crosses for the juice to propel the move. It all starts with the juice, that is what determines price in markets.
German Spy Agency: Geopolitical Consequences Of US Oil Boom
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/20/2013 15:10 -0500Biggest loser? China.
How Big Is “BIG”?
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/17/2013 19:40 -0500“Repression” is what Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher called “the injustice of being held hostage to large financial institutions”
The 4-Week Manipulated Move in Oil Prices is Criminal
Submitted by EconMatters on 01/10/2013 15:22 -0500Israel hasn`t attacked Iran, huge builds in gasoline products, no jump in demand, yet oil price moved up regardless...
Guest Post: The US Debt Crisis - How High Will It Go?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2013 19:31 -0500
Why must the debt grow every year? To keep the debt-servitude paradigm going. To increase economic activity in a country operating in this type of system, you need to increase the level of credit and thus debt grows in tandem. This is self serving: if debt is the “fuel” to increase economic activity, interest payments will become larger and larger, until eventually it reaches a point where debt can no longer be increased. This point is known as the Minsky moment–when there is no net benefit to extra debt. So there we have it, in our “creditopia” world, if debt does not expand, the economy cannot grow and jobs cannot be created. In order to increase debt, foreigners have to continually finance the ever growing debt by purchasing government bonds and selling consumer products to the US. In turn, the US must increase the level of consumption, decrease savings, and eliminate the threat of any nation posing a risk to the US dollar hegemony. Is this a symbiotic or a parasitic relationship? Is is certainly a relationship that cannot grow forever. It poses an economic risk for ALL nations due to the interconnectedness of the global economy.
The New Era of Oil Renaissance
Submitted by EconMatters on 12/30/2012 16:22 -0500
How does $45 a barrel oil and $2 a gallon gas sound? Expect $45 oil in the future of this renaissance.
Cushing 50 Million, Boom & Bust Cycles, US Debt & Recession
Submitted by EconMatters on 12/28/2012 09:12 -0500Enjoy your job in North Dakota while you can as in four years, those shale oil projects are no longer sustainable.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: December 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2012 07:53 -0500In a sharp turn around from the open, Italian and Spanish 10yr government bond yield spreads over German bunds trade approx. 10bps tighter on the day, this follows several market events this morning that have lifted sentiment. Firstly from a fixed income perspective, both Spain and Greece managed to sell more in their respective t-bill auctions than analysts were expecting and thus has eased concerns ahead of longer dated issuance from Spain this Thursday. In terms of other trigger points for today's risk on tone the December headline reading in the German ZEW survey was positive for the first time since May 2012 coming in at an impressive 6.9 M/M from previous -15.7 with the ZEW economists adding that Germany will not face a recession. Finally, reports overnight have suggested that Italian PM Monti could be wooed by Centrist groups which means that if he wanted too the technocrat PM could stand for elections next year albeit under a different ticket. As such yesterday's concerns over the Italian political scene have abated and the FTSE MIB and the IBEX 35 are out performing the core EU bourses. Looking ahead highlights from the US include trade balance, wholesale inventories and a USD 32bln 3yr note auction, however, volumes and price action may remain light ahead of the key FOMC decision on Wednesday.
Goldman Releases First Three "Top Trades Of 2013"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2012 07:41 -0500- Stay short AUD/NOK, opened at 5.90 on 03 Dec 2012, with a target of 5.00 and a stop on a close above 6.35, currently at 5.88.
- Stay long risk (sell protection) on the CDX High Yield on-the-run index, opened at 506bp on 04 Dec 2012, with a spread target of 450 and a stop on a close above 550, currently at 516.
- Go long the Commodity Carry Basket (Crude, Corn and Base), opened at 100 on 05 Dec 2012, with a target of 112 and a stop on a close below 94, currently at 100.
WTI Crude Oil To Test $65 Level in 2013
Submitted by EconMatters on 12/01/2012 19:49 -0500Right now the world produces more Oil than it consumes each day, and it has for the past 16 months, this trend will only get worse in 2013.
Guest Post: U.S. Shale Goes Boom, Rest Of World Goes Bust
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2012 16:53 -0500
OPEC, in its World Oil Report, said there's an overall sense that developing shale oil and natural gas could start to redefine the global energy mix. In the United States, the cartel said shale natural gas production alone grew by more than 60 percent from 2010 to 2012. For shale oil, supplies in the United States have already passed the 1 million barrel-per-day mark. Though shale reserves may ultimately be a game changer, said OPEC, outside the United States, the sector is in its infancy.
Guest Post: Putin Is the New Global Shah of Oil
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2012 17:16 -0500
Exxon Mobil is no longer the world's number-one oil producer. As of yesterday, that title belongs to Putin Oil Corp – oh, whoops. We mean the title belongs to Rosneft, Russia's state-controlled oil company. With TNK-BP in its hands, Rosneft will be in charge of more than 4 million barrels of oil production a day. And who is in charge of Rosneft? None other than Vladimir Putin, Russia's resource-full president. Gazprom in control of Europe's gas, Rosneft in control of its oil. A red hand stretching out from Russia to strangle the supremacy of the West and pave the way for a new world order– one with Russia at the helm. It is not as far-fetched as it might seem – or as you might want it to be. Or imagine this: Russia could join OPEC.
Goldman Lowers 2013 Brent Price Target From $130 To $110
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 08:19 -0500Translation: Goldman is now buying Brent from its clients, aka Goldman 101.
Gold Slides Even As Ongoing South African Gold Miner Strike Means No Production On The Horizon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2012 11:36 -0500Anyone wondering what the reason for today's dramatic gold price dump is, look no further than South Africa, where we learn that after nearly two months of endless strikes in the metals and mining complex, the country - the world's fifth largest producer of gold - is nowhere nearer to restoring its mining output. This of course means that less and less gold will hit the market. Which in centrally planned and regulated markets, means gold will collapse far more than the 1% so far, and likely close limit down, with Bernanke's compliment (don't worry that none of this makes logical sense: Heidelberg toner cartridge did a hostile take over of logic long, long ago).
Guggenheim On Gold And The 'Unsustainable' Return To Bretton Woods
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2012 17:18 -0500
It seems our recent re-introduction of the world to Robert Triffin has struck a note among a number of market participants. The gold-convertible U.S. dollar became the global reserve currency under the Bretton Woods monetary system, which lasted from 1944-1971. This arrangement ended because foreign central banks accumulated unsustainably large reserves of U.S. Treasuries, threatening price stability and the purchasing power of the dollar. Today, central banks are once again stockpiling massive Treasury reserves in an attempt to manage their currency values and gain advantages in export markets. We have, effectively, returned to Bretton Woods. The trouble is, as Guggenheim's Scott Minerd notes, that the arrangement is as unsustainable today as it was during the middle of the last century. None of this should come as a surprise given the unorthodox growth of central bank balance sheets around the world. The collapse of Bretton Woods in 1971 caused a decade of economic malaise and negative real returns for financial assets. Can anyone afford to wait to find out whether this time will be different?




