Market Share
Saudi Oil Production Hits All Time High, Surges By 'Half A Bakken'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2015 08:03 -0500As hopeful US investors buy everything oil-related on the back of a lower than expected crude build this week (after the biggest build in 30 years the week before), The Kingdom has stepped up overnight and ruined the dream of supply-restrained price recovery as it announced a surge in production output in March to yet another record high. The nation boosted crude output by 658,800 barrels a day in March to an average of 10.294 million a day, which as Bloomberg notes, is about half the daily production from the Bakken formation. WTI Crude prices have slipped by around 2% from yesterday's NYMEX Close ramp highs as it appears Saudi Arabia is not willing to just let this effort to squeeze Shale stall.
Frontrunning: April 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2015 06:27 -0500- As reported here first a month ago: The $9 Trillion Short That May Send the Dollar Even Higher (BBG)
- As an instant target for foes, Clinton may struggle to get message heard (Reuters)
- Emerging Stocks Rally 11th Day as Aussie Weakens on China (BBG)
- Puerto Rico, Investors Enlist Ex-IMF Officials (WSJ)
- Dollar’s Rise Reshuffles Global Economy (BBG)
- Indonesia eyes regular navy exercises with U.S. in South China Sea (Reuters)
- Banca Monte dei Paschi Breaches Exposure Limits to Nomura (WSJ)
- European Bond Buyers Find Negative Doesn’t Necessarily Mean Bad (BBG)
How Much Longer Can OPEC Hold Out?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2015 14:10 -0500OPEC has been in the line of fire from the western world in light of its stance of not reducing the production levels of its member nations (excluding Iran). Most view this as a strategy to squeeze the American shale production and other non OPEC nations. How much longer can it hold out?
"Saudi Arabia Is Going For it" - Why The Saudis Just Boosted Oil Production To A Record High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 13:58 -0500Instead of leaving its own production flat in an attempt to stabilize oil prices and hit its "optimistic" outlook sooner rather than never, Saudi Arabia would boost production quite sharply to claw back market share. Specifically al-Naimi, revealed that the kingdom’s oil production in March was 10.3-million barrels a day – a record high. .. Why is Saudi Arabia opening the spigot? There is no doubt that country’s own domestic demand is rising, thanks to heavy investment in new refineries, requiring more production. But it also appears that Saudi Arabia is making renewed push for market share for fear that a gusher of Iranian oil will soon hit the export markets as the Iranian embargo is ratcheted back
Futures Flat On Minutes Day; Chinese Bubble Spills Into Hong Kong; Biggest Energy M&A Deal In Over A Decade
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2015 06:00 -0500While US equity futures are largely unchanged, if only ahead of the now daily pre-open market-wide ramp, things in Asia have continued on their bubbly flurry, where China's Shanghai Composite briefly rose above 4000 for the first time since 2008, but it was the surge in the Hong Kong stock market that showed the Chinese bubble is finally spilling over, in the form of a blistering rally on the Hang Seng which rose nearly 4% on immense volume which at 250 billion Hong Kong dollars ($32 billion) was three times the average daily volume over the past year and nearly 20% more than the previous record volume day in October 2007, at the height of the pre-financial crisis bubble.
Why From China's Biggest Bear, Hugh Hendry Became One Of Its Biggest Bulls
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2015 18:28 -0500Considering that Chinese equities are the best performing market in USD terms (second only, oddly enough, to Russia) in 2015, one can see why after a disappointing 2012 and 2013, and modest 2014, Hendry has hit 2015 out of the park with a bang, generating a 10.6% return in the first two monthes of the year. So is Hendry still bullish on China's stock market prospects? Why yes, and then some. But is he is contrarian just for the sake of being contrarian? Does he see something in China that nobody else does? Or is he simply right... or wrong, as the case may be? We will let readers decide.
What Happens After A Mega Corporation Raises Its Workers' Wages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/01/2015 20:48 -0500Here is what happens when mega-corporations such as WalMart and McDonalds, whose specialty are commoditized products and services and have razor thin margins, yet which try to give an appearance of doing the right thing, raise minimum wages. They start flexing their muscles, and in the process trample all over the companies that comprise their own cost overhead: their suppliers and vendors.Take the case of WalMart: the world's biggest retailer "is increasing the pressure on suppliers to cut the cost of their products, in an effort to regain the mantle of low-price leader and turn around its sluggish U.S. sales."
Frontrunning: April 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/01/2015 06:26 -0500- Oil holds around $55 as Iran nuclear talks drag on (Reuters)
- Bob Diamond’s African Banking Venture Runs Into Problems (WSJ)
- Iran Nuclear Talks Resume With Lavrov Saying Deal at Hand (BBG)
- Wal-Mart Ratchets Up Pressure on Suppliers to Cut Prices (WSJ)
- Renegades of Junk: The Rise and Fall of the Drexel Empire (BBG)
- Explosion at Yemen factory kills at least 25: residents, medics (Reuters)
- Macerich Rejects Simon Property’s $16.8 Billion Takeover Bid (WSJ)
- Reckoning Arrives for Cash-Strapped Oil Firms Amid Bank Squeeze (BBG)
"The Risks Are Very High" Swiss Billionaire Warns "Global Financial Markets Have Never Been This Distorted Before"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/29/2015 19:15 -0500"Global financial markets are more distorted than ever before and accordingly, the risks are very high... All equity and currency markets are pretty extended, at present; and many of the bond markets are as well... We know that the longer a distortion prevails, the more investors get used to it and it becomes the “new normal” to them. That’s where the problem lies! I see three potential threats..." - Felix Zulauf
Did The Fed Just Whisper "Fire" In A Crowded Market?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/29/2015 15:10 -0500The Fed has finally come to terms with the realization that control is no longer an option. It's been a mirage that's held up far longer than originally anticipated. The monster has now grown far too big and dangerous while possibly exposing, to their dismay, the only way they might have a shot of regaining some stability for future control is to let it fall apart: as they stand by and watch hoping to 'thread the needle' for further intervention just in time. Along with trying to have some C.Y.A. assurance to the 'In Crowd' that "Hey – we tried to warn you!" if it indeed does exactly that.
Which is scarier? A Fed that may be signalling they’ve lost control? Or, a Fed that still believes "Don't worry – we've got this!"
Fortescue Has An Idea For Arresting Iron Ore Price Slide: Start A Cartel
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/25/2015 19:00 -0500Fortescue chairman suggests price collusion as a decent idea for driving up iron ore prices, drawing the attention of Australian regulators. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley turns bearish citing a number of issues including cash flow and inability to refinance debt.
Thoughts on The Current Oil Market
Submitted by EconMatters on 03/23/2015 16:54 -0500Our views on some of the popular oil-market related topics including Saudi, 'Fracklog', E&P Funding Crisis, Dividend Cut by XOM? and final thought on Merit of the Integrated Model
Tech Startup Bubble Has America's Retirement Funds Chasing Unicorns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2015 10:30 -0500A shift in the mutual fund industry's stance towards grossly overvalued private tech startups may be embedding risk into the retirement accounts of unsuspecting Americans, suggesting that the rather creative valuations VCs and founders place on the latest app may be imperiling your 401k. It's called "chasing unicorns."
The Web: Destroyer or Savior of Culture, Pay and Employment?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/22/2015 21:00 -0500"The web has enabled virtually anyone with Internet access to create a nearly-free global distribution network. Critics of this democratization feel that this has unleashed an avalanche of mediocrity that is judged on "likes" and pages views. The other side of the debate sees the demise of the gatekeepers, who could enforce their own view of what was valuable culturally and economically, as freeing all those who could never get past the gatekeepers.
The Fed’s Trapped In The Corner With An Empty Bucket
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/22/2015 13:51 -0500In response to questions posed by Santelli, former Dallas Fed president Richard Fisher made two points which were both salient if not downright prophetic. The first: “Well, what worries me is how totally lazy investors have gotten, totally dependent on the Federal Reserve and I find this to be a precarious situation.” The second: “Are we vulnerable in my opinion to a significant equity market correction? I believe we are. Not only has the Fed painted themselves into an even tighter corner – they’ve left no clear path as to now kick the empty can.



