Market Share
This Is What Needs To Happen For Oil Prices To Stabilize
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/20/2015 14:45 -0500Each of the 3 stages needed to move to a sustainable price have to be given time to play out. The rig count story has been told with a brutally fast 60 percent drop. Meaningful production declines are on. Next will be inventory draw downs; in that order. As to the latter, we’re just beginning to see the effects of the rig count. Large drawdowns will be here sooner than predicted.
Moody's Downgrades France, Blames "Political Constraints", Sees No Material Reduction In Debt Burden
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2015 15:45 -0500Citing "continuing weakness in the medium-term growth outlook," Moody's has downgraded France:
*FRANCE CUT TO Aa2 FROM Aa1 BY MOODY'S, OUTLOOK TO STABLE
Apearing to blame The EU's "institutional and political constraints," Moody's expects French growth to be at most 1.5% and does not expect the debt burden to be materially reduced this decade.
The Shale Delusion: Why The Party’s Over For U.S. Tight Oil
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/15/2015 12:56 -0500The party is over for tight oil. Despite brash statements by U.S. producers and misleading analysis by Raymond James, low oil prices are killing tight oil companies. Reports this week from IEA and EIA paint a bleak picture for oil prices as the world production surplus continues. EIA said that U.S. production will fall by 1 million barrels per day over the next year and that, “expected crude oil production declines from May 2015 through mid-2016 are largely attributable to unattractive economic returns.” IEA made the point more strongly. “..the latest price rout could stop US growth in its tracks.”
Shale Oil's "Dirty Little Secret" Has Been Exposed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2015 10:45 -0500"The shale sector is now being financially stress-tested, exposing shale’s dirty secret: many shale producers depend on capital market injections to fund ongoing activity because they have thus far greatly outspent cash flow."
$20 Oil? Goldman Says It's Possible
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/11/2015 16:51 -0500"While we are increasingly convinced that the market needs to see lower oil prices for longer to achieve a production cut, the source of this production decline and its forcing mechanism is growing more uncertain, raising the possibility that we may ultimately clear at a sharply lower price with cash costs around $20/bbl Brent prices."
Nomi Prins: Mexico, The Fed, & Counterparty Risk Concerns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2015 19:05 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- BIS
- Bond
- Brazil
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Czech
- default
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- High Yield
- Hungary
- India
- Market Share
- McKinsey
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- non-performing loans
- Poland
- Saudi Arabia
- Too Big To Fail
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Wells Fargo
- World Bank
This level of global inter-connected financial risk is hazardous in Mexico, where it’s peppered by high bank concentration risk. No one wants another major financial crisis. Yet, that’s where we are headed absent major reconstructions of the banking framework and the central bank policies that exude extreme power over global economies and markets, in the US, Mexico, and throughout the world. Mexico’s problems could again ripple through Latin America where eroding confidence, volatility, and US dollar strength are already hurting economies and markets. The difference is that now, in contrast to the 1980s and 1990s debt crises, loan and bond amounts have not just been extended by private banks, but subsidized by the Fed and the ECB. The risk platform is elevated. The fall, for both Mexico and its trading partners like the US, likely much harder.
Iran Cuts Crude 'Selling Price' To Asia To 3-Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2015 17:17 -0500In what appears to be a bid to lure Asian buyers to lock in longer-term supplies, Reuters reports that Iran has cut its quarterly selling price (for its flagship 'light' crude) to its lowest (relative to Saudi) since Q4 2012. According to recent tanker loading data, Iran's oil sales in September are set to hit a six-month low, and this price reduction is just one of the steps taken by the OPEC producer to ramp up output and regain market share lost since U.S. and European sanctions aimed at its nuclear program cut its crude oil exports by more than half.
Petrostate Cash Crunch Continues Amid Oil Collapse, Proxy Wars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2015 14:45 -0500The fallout from the demise of the petrodollar is becoming impossible to sweep under the rug even as Gulf states are keen to downplay the severity of the budget crunch. For the Saudis, who need crude at $100 to plug a budget deficit that’s projected at a whopping 20% of GDP, the situation is becoming particularly acute. For Qatar, the situation isn't quite as dire but that doesn't mean the country's officials aren't acutely aware that the world is now scrutinizing the budgets of petrostates in the wake of collapsing crude and indeed on Monday, Qatari Finance Minister Ali Sherif al-Emadi was at pains to reassure the market.
Glencore Capitulates: Scrambles To Avoid Default By Selling Equity, Dumping Assets, Cutting Dividend
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2015 08:37 -0500Early this morning Glencore finally capitulated and admitted defeat not only on its expansionary phase (it was just last year Glencore had approached Rio Tinto to engage in a merger), but on its shareholder "friendliness", with a stunning annoucement that it would proceed in a $10 billion debt reduction, issuing $2.5 billion in equity in the form of a rights offering, sell $2 billion worth of assets (such as "proposed precious metals streaming transaction(s) and the minority participation of 3rd party strategic investors in certain of Glencore’s agriculture assets, including infrastructure"), cut working capital by $1.5 billion, cut capex and its loan book by a further $1-$1.8 billion... oh, and it would also scrap its final $1.6 billion dividend as well as next year's interim payout, saving a further $2.4 billion. All this because our "best way to trade China's blow up" was finally picking up steam.
Steen Jakobsen Warns "The Fiat Economy Is Unsustainable"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 13:32 -0500We live in a Fiat economy where growth is fuelled by debt, and less and less from productivity and demographics. This takes place in a closed circuit with the US dollar as the reserve currency. The problem now is that the economy can not get restarted without changes to one or several parameters. Simply put, this fiat economy is unsustainable and must change, and we must adjust to slower growth and start actually producing.
Did Tim Cook Lie To Save Apple Stock: The "Channel Checks" Paint A Very Gloomy Picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/29/2015 20:54 -0500Is AAPL the next AOL, and is Tim Cook the next Thorsten Heins? It all depends on China: if the world's most populous nation can get its stock market, its economy and its currency under control, then this too shall pass. The problem is that if, as many increasingly suggest, China has lost control of all three. At that point anyone who thought they got a great deal when buying AAPL at $92 will have far better opportunities to dollar-cost average far, far lower.
China Loses All Control: Arrests Journalist, Financial Executive Over Market Crash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 14:51 -0500With China's equity bubble now squarely in the rearview and the stock market crash making headlines the world over, Beijing is out for blood in a desperate attempt to find a scapegoat for a market rout that has rattled the country to the core. In what is perhaps a worrying sign of things to come, overnight China arrested a journalist and a top investment banker for "spreading fake trading information" and "illegal trading", respectively.
Iran Prepared To Defend Old Market Share "At Any Cost"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 10:55 -0500Iran’s oil minister says his country supports calls for an emergency OPEC meeting to explore ways to shore up the price of oil, but even without such an effort, Tehran is willing to regain its market share “at any cost.”
Mid-East Meltdown Continues: Stocks Sell-Off Across Petrodollar States
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 06:52 -0500"Regional buyers need a lot of conviction to step in front of this speeding train [especially] in context of a rapidly changing economic environment."
"Long, Slow, And Painful": Barclays Documents The End Of The Commodities Supercycle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2015 20:00 -0500"It is an old saying in commodities that the best cure for low prices is low prices. Market participants are now asking how much further prices need to fall and how long they need to stay there to bring supply and demand back in to balance and halt the price declines across a broad swathe of different raw materials markets. The fear is that just as the upside of the supercycle brought an unprecedented and long period of historical price highs, the plunge to the downside is shaping up to be equally dramatic and may yet have a way to run."


