Crude Oil
Crude Carnage & Asian Contagion Crushes Hype-Fueled Dreams Of US Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 17:53 -0500Sep 2 - Dow Sinks Over 400 Points as Weak China Data Batter U.S. Stocks
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 09/01/2015 16:41 -0500News That Matters
US Manufacturing Plunges To 2-Year Lows As New Orders, Employment Tumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 09:06 -0500Following disappoint PMIs from around the world, the US decoupling meme took another knock today as Markit PMI printed 53.0 (from 53.8) - its lowest in almost 2 years, led by a plunge in the employment subindex. Weakness was also evident in new factory orders. As Markit notes, "U.S. manufacturing sector continues to struggle under the weight of the strong dollar and heightened global economic uncertainty." On the heels of Milwaukee and Dallas Fed weakness, ISM Manufacturing printed a disastrous 51.1 (vs 52.5 expectations) - the lowest since May 2013. Employment tumbled, as did New Export ordedrs, but unadjusted New Orders plunged to its lowest since 2013, which is a problem given the massive inventory builds that have saved the world in the last few months.
Mysterious Buying And Selling By China Distorts Mid-East Oil Price, Baffles Traders
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 08:30 -0500Two state-owned Chinese oil trading companies (Chinaoil, which is the trading arm of state-run China National Petroleum Corp. and Unipec, which is owned by Sinopec) have been busy monopolizing the Dubai spot market, as a bout of suspicious trading activity between the two has served to distort prices and confuse other traders.
US Futures Tumble After Latest Abysmal Chinese Economic Data, Crude Surge Stalls
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 05:52 -0500Just like the last time when Chinese flash PMI data came out at the lowest level since the financial crisis, so overnight when both the official Chinese manufacturing and service PMI data, as well as the Caixin final PMI,s confirmed China's economy has not only ground to a halt but is now contracting with the official manufacturing data the lowest in 3 years and the first contraction in 6 months, stocks around the globe tumbled on concerns another major devaluation round by the PBOC is just around the corner with the drop led by the Shanghai Composite which plunged as much as 4% before, the cavalry arrived and bought every piece of SSE 50 index of China's biggest companies it could find, and in a rerun of yestterday sent it to a green close, with the SHCOMP closing just -1.23% in the red. So much for the "no interventions" myth. We wonder which journalist will take the blame for today's rout.
Stocks Suffer Biggest Monthly Drop In Five Years As Oil Spikes Most Since 1990
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 17:50 -0500Sep 1 - Global Stocks Extend On Rout
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/31/2015 16:39 -0500News That Matters
Why So Much Oil Price Volatility? Blame The Speculators
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 13:03 -0500On the face of it, the crash and massive rebound makes little sense, with many oil market analysts undoubtedly left shaking their heads. But there is a logic to what unfolded, just not the logic of the physical market for crude.
"The Quantitative Easing Hangover Is Starting" - Dallas Fed Dead-Cat-Bounce Collapses To Post-2009 Recession Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 09:41 -0500With the biggest miss sicne April 2013, Dallas Fed's 2-month dead-cat-bounce has collapsed to -15.8 (against expectations of -4.0). This is practically the weakest level for the manufacturing index since 2009. The entire report is a disaster - Fisher's exit seems well timed? - as New Orders crash from +0.7 to -12.5 and Pries Paid craters from +0.1 to -8.0.Even worse, 14 of the 15 'hope' indicators declined and as one respondent warned "the quantitative easing hangover is starting." We have 3 simple words - "not unequivocally good."
China Dramatically Intervenes To Boost Stocks Despite Reports It Won't; US Futtures Slump On J-Hole
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 05:49 -0500Yesterday, the FT triumphantly proclaimed: "Beijing abandons large-scale share purchases", and that instead of manipulating stocks directly as China did last week on Thursday and Friday, China would instead focus on punishing sellers, shorters, and various other entities. We snickered, especially after the Shanghai Composite opened down 2% and dropped as low as 4% overnight. Just a few hours later we found out that our cynical skepticism was again spot on: the moment the afternoon trading session opened, the "National Team's" favorite plunge protection trade, the SSE 50 index of biggest companies, went super-bid and ramped from a low of 2071 to close 140 points higher, ending trading with a last minute government-facilitated surge, and pushing the Composite just 0.8% lower after trading down as much as -4.0%.
Aug 31 - Fed Mester: US Economy Can Support Rate Increase
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/31/2015 03:44 -0500News That Matters
The Dollar: Now What?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/29/2015 09:18 -0500Dollar recovered from the exaggerated panic at the start of last week. Outlook is still constructive. Here is an overview of the technical condition of currencies, bonds, oil , and S&P 500.
Fed Kocherlakota: 2015 Rate Rise Not Appropriate, Open To More Stimulus
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/28/2015 14:57 -0500News That Matters
Oil Surges To $45 After Saudi Troops Invade Yemen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2015 11:30 -0500For the 3rd day in a row, crude oil prices are spiking as the short squeeze morphs into a war premium. Heberler reports that Saudi ground troops have entered Northern Yemen and seized control of two areas in the Saada province. WTI is now above $45...
China Surge Continues, Futures Slide As Jittery Market Looks For Jackson Hole Valium
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2015 05:52 -0500Overnight's start attraction was as usual China's stock market, where trading was generally less dramatic than Thursday's furious last hour engineered ramp, as stocks rose modestly off the open only to see a bout of buying throughout the entire afternoon session, closing 4.8% higher, and bringing the gain over the last two days to over 10%. This happens as China dumped a boatload of US paper to push the CNY higher the most since March, strengthening from 6.4053 to 6.3986, even as Chinese industrial profits tumbled 2.9% from last year: this in a country that still represents its GDP is rising by 7%. Expect much more Yuan devaluation in the coming weeks.






