Showing posts with label Markets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Markets. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Why we can't afford 99-cent gasoline

By Donald Sensing

If you like the very low gasoline prices, even though we are not supposed to drive anywhere, get used to it. Oil's spot price may drop some more, yes (it plummeted today after Thursday's highest-rate increase ever in one day). But production is going to drop. Usually, that means gas prices rise. Not this time. And that is actually very bad news.

Cheap gas and nowhere to go. That's bad.
American oil frackers operate at a loss much below $60 per barrel (depending where they are located). The largest such operation, the Permian Basin, needs about $65 per barrel to make a profit. It straddles Texas and New Mexico.

The drop in oil price was triggered by Russia's refusal to cut production at the Saudis' request. So the Saudis jacked production up to drive the price down and punish the Russians. Well, good luck with that:
After oil prices collapsed in the worst drop in nearly three decades—courtesy of the renewed Saudi-Russia rivalry on the oil market – Russia’s Finance Ministry said on Monday that Moscow had enough resources to cover budget shortfalls amid oil prices at $25-30 a barrel for six to ten years.  
Not coincidentally, both the Saudis and the Russians would like to see America's frackers permanently closed and the United States to return to a major importer of oil, not net exporters as we are right now.

One way or another oil prices will rise. That seems a cloud but actually it is the silver lining. The cloud is cheap oil. Active-rig counts fell this week in the US by 160, year over year, to 722. On the other hand, US oil production remains near an all-time high at 13.1 million barrels per day. Go figure.

And next month may be even more dramatic.
Analysts say that the month of April could see the largest supply overhang in the history of the oil market.

“We now expect the y/y demand loss to peak in April at 10.4 million barrels per day (mb/d), and annual demand to fall by a record 3.39mb/d in 2020,” Standard Chartered wrote in a note.

In the short run, the oil market surplus could reach a peak of 13.7 mb/d in April, Standard Chartered said, with an average surplus of 12.9 mb/d for the second quarter. The inventory buildup could reach a gargantuan 2.1 billion barrels by the end of the year, “stretching the midstream of the industry to its limits,” the bank wrote. That figure represents an upward revision of 50 percent from the 1.4-billion-barrel inventory surplus the bank predicted…just a week ago.

Other analysts have even more dramatic scenarios. Eurasia Group says demand could fall by as much as 25 mb/d in the next few weeks and months. The historic glut means that the world could run out of storage space. “The combination of weakening demand and excess supply is hardly going to be accommodated by onshore storage,” Giovanni Serio, head of analysis at Vitol, told the FT. “At a certain point…we will need to fill all the boats.”
 So severe is the situation that for practically the first time in long memory, "Texas Weighs Curtailing Oil Production for First Time in Decades."

Texas regulators are considering curtailing oil production in America’s largest oil-producing state, something they haven’t done in decades, people familiar with the matter said.

Several oil executives have reached out to members of the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates the industry, requesting relief following an oil-price crash, the people said. U.S. benchmark oil closed around $25 a barrel Thursday.

Texas, which hasn’t limited production since the 1970s, was a model for the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which has sought to control world-wide oil prices in recent decades. OPEC and Russia were unable to reach a deal on reducing output in response to the coronavirus pandemic, which helped trigger the current collapse in prices.

It is unclear whether regulators will ultimately act to curtail production, but staffers are examining what would be required in such an event, the people said.
Oil prices have always been manipulated by producers. Even so, at the end of the day, demand has always been in control. And now the worldwide demand has dropped like an anvil and will continue to do so. The largest users of petro products - shipping and aviation - are harboring vessels and canceling flights. That will likely accelerate.

That said, oil production is going to plummet because, as stated above, we are running out of places to put it. That does not mean that gas prices will suddenly rise. The huge over-supply will see to that. But cheap gas prices are not going to offset the real pain dropping demand will cause: higher unemployment not only of oil-industry workers, but businesses whose revenues depend on customers using oil just to buy or get to their products or locations, such as hotels, tourist attractions, airline workers, dock workers, gas station owners and workers, the list is very long.

I am not an economist by a long shot, but unless we stop our "insane over-reaction," there is going to be a lot of pain to come that 99-cent gasoline will not pay for.

Update: How low can it go? "How Low Can Oil Go? One Forecast Sees $5 a Barrel." Which means that gasoline will be not much higher than free - and yet it will be also more difficult to find because gas stations will be closing at accelerated rates as oil prices plummet.

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Wednesday, June 12, 2019

The answer is "Everything"

By Donald Sensing

Forbes: "Why The Left Doesn't Understand Health Care"

In one case, an insurer prevented a woman from getting a CT scan her doctor ordered. In another, a mother couldn’t afford the full regimen of special bags needed to clear her cancer-stricken daughter’s lungs. In a third case, a woman lost her health insurance and could not afford end-of-life chemotherapy.

These examples come from National Nurses United, the country’s largest nurses’ union. To prevent further incidents like these, the union favors a universal, government-run health care system. A lead editorial in the New York Times last week appeared to endorse their thinking.

Here is what these folks are missing.

The events described and many more like them happen every day. In every country. All over the world. And more than 90 percent of the time, the insurer is the government. According to one report, one out of every six British cancer patients is denied access to the latest cancer drugs. That’s mainly because the British National Health Service has decided that the drugs are too costly relative to the gain.
Read the whole thing.

Medical care is always going to be rationed because it is finite. So will we have medical care rationed by the decisions of its users and recipients, who can best assess the choices they face, or of bureaucrats in Washington who just look at ledger sheets - and given the nature of today's Left, the political identity group of who will receive preferential access and subsidies?

Medical care is provided according to three overlapping factors:

Affordability

Access

Quality

Pick which two you want in a system because you will never get all three at the same time. And if medical care gets nationalized, you won't even get two. 



"Medicare for All"


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Wednesday, January 23, 2019

"Living wage" is a racist scam to create more serfs of the state

By Donald Sensing


A little history to begin:

In 2013, John Hawkins posted, "20 Questions Liberals Can't Answer." I responded in my own post that of course they can answer them, quite easily - but they won't answer them honestly because the political cost would be too high, so I provided the answers.

Here was question 16:
16) A minimum wage raises salaries for some workers at the cost of putting other workers out of jobs entirely. What's the acceptable ratio for that? For every 10 people who get a higher salary, how many are you willing to see lose their jobs?
It is easy for the media to find and interview someone who is employed at minimum wage and will express gratitude that we pushed through a raise for him/her. It is almost impossible to identify an individual whose job was cut because of the minimum wage increase and the media would not interview such a person anyway. So it's win-win for us all around: We tell low wage earners that only we will protect their new wage level and that the evil Tea Bagger Republicans want to keep them in poverty. So once again your question makes no sense because employment isn't the point; trapping people into voting blocs is the point.

In 2003, I postulated that a mandated minimum wage probably serves to keep wages down, not up.
If the sewers are to be shoveled, and the other necessary but dirty jobs done, it can only be done by compulsion or by offering a reward high enough to make it worth someone’s while. That doesn’t mean that the voluntary worker will be paid a lot; I know that the garbage collectors in my town are not driving new Lincolns. It does mean that a true free-market the wage offered will have to be raised until there are takers.

The Soviet state never eliminated poverty. Until its end enormous numbers of its peasantry, the serfs, lived in conditions barely materially better than under the Czar’s reign. And they were no more free, since the communist government forbade them to leave the land.

The federal minimum wage is $5.15 per hour. Would there be any sewer shovelers who would voluntarily accept that wage if true free-market forces prevailed? I am wondering - and some smart readers please leave a comment - whether the federal min-wage law actually keeps the poor down because it sets a legal wage ceiling, not a floor, above which employers don’t really have to pay.
There was a time (1987) when even the New York Times got it:
The idea of using a minimum wage to overcome poverty is old, honorable - and fundamentally flawed. It's time to put this hoary debate behind us, and find a better way to improve the lives of people who work very hard for very little.
Some states or municipalities are mandating a min-wage of $15 per hour. Since we know, as Leftists do not, that money doesn't grow on trees, where will the money come from to pay for the increase? Service industries will be hardest hit, especially food service and restaurants. San Francisco has seen numerous restaurants close because, as one closing manager said, "There is only so much you can charge for tacos."

Finally, NR explained in 2017 the work of economists at the University of Washington:
The study, commissioned by the city government of Seattle and published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, found that Seattle’s law incrementally raising its minimum wage — to $13 an hour last year, en route to $15 — resulted in low-wage workers’ earning less money rather than more. This surprised many in Seattle, who had been assured by all the best economists, including Paul Krugman, that such a thing would not come to pass.

So, what happened?

The short version is: You can pass a law saying you have to pay low-wage workers more, but you cannot pass a law that says you have to hire them in the first place, or that you cannot cut back on hours when the price of hourly labor goes up. As businesses responded to the new higher labor costs by reorganizing their processes in less labor-intensive ways (the classic examples here are the replacement of wait staff with computer screens in restaurants and the replacement of bank clerks with more sophisticated ATMs), the law that was supposed to increase low-wage workers’ incomes actually reduced them — substantially, by an average of $125 a month.
So why the legislators decide in the first place that a minimum-wage law was desirable, regardless of what wage was set? It was to price blacks and other minorities out of the job market.
Walter Williams, the famous economist and professor at George Mason, looked back on the railroad industry at around the end of the 19th century. Back then, as Dr. Williams points out, non-unionized blacks often had to accept a lower wage than their white counterparts due to racism of employers. So the white union had a plan: raise the minimum wage to price blacks out of work. One member of the racist, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen union, who called for the minimum wage increase, celebrated the removal of the “incentive for employing the Negro.”
Anyone who has studied the history of progressivism-liberalism-back-to-progressivism is entirely unsurprised by Prof. Williams' work. Read the whole thing. 

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Friday, September 1, 2017

Coming: Pain at the pump

By Donald Sensing

Largest US refinery Motiva may be shut up to two weeks

Motiva Enterprises' Port Arthur, Texas refinery, the nation's largest, may be shut as long as two weeks for assessment of the plant and repair of any damage, sources familiar with plant operations said on Thursday.

The 603,000 barrel per day (bpd) Port Arthur Refinery was shut on Wednesday due to flooding from Tropical Storm Harvey.

In a statement to CNBC, Motiva said it "cannot provide a timeline for restart at this time." The oil company says it will begin assessing the refinery "as soon as the local area flooding has receded," although Motive is uncertain about how long it will take for floodwaters to diminish.
The refinery has seen better days:


BTW, the refinery is owned by Saudi Arabia, which took full control in May.

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Monday, August 7, 2017

The next economic crash will be life altering

By Donald Sensing

When one side pops so does the other:


In my secret life as a financial analyst (meaning I read finance-related web sites) and in my personal conversations with other nearing retirement age, I have been struck that almost everyone understands that the US economy is in a bubble again, the so-called "Trump recovery" notwithstanding.

Actually, we are in two economic bubbles. One is a somewhat conventional stock-market bubble. The other is a far more serious and destructive-pop of the government debt bubble.

The market bubble first: "Beneath the glow of stock-market records, darkly bearish trends are lurking."
Major U.S. stock-market indexes are trading near record levels, but does that statistic simply mask an ominous picture that’s being painted behind the scenes?

Market breadth, a measure of how many stocks are rising versus the number that are dropping, has turned “exceedingly negative,” according to Brad Lamensdorf, a portfolio manager at Ranger Alternative Management. Lamensdorf writes the Lamensdorf Market Timing Report newsletter and runs the AdvisorShares Ranger Equity Bear ETF HDGE, +0.47% an exchange-traded fund that “shorts” stocks, or bets that they will fall.

“As the indexes continue to produce a series of higher highs, subsurface conditions are painting an entirely different picture,” Lamensdorf wrote in the latest edition of the newsletter. He noted that the year-to-date advance in equities — the S&P 500 SPX, +0.19%  is up 10.6% in 2017 — has been driven by outsize gains in some of the market’s biggest names.
Simply put, though the market indices are rising, most of the gains are from a decreasing number of stocks. More and more of the market is falling week after week, month after month. But the indices are rising, tending to mask that the overall markets are declining. Here is an example, the S&P Index in red, INX, compared to the IJR fund in blue. IJR is a mutual fund of the S&P index of 600 Small Cap companies.

This is today's track so the time frame is obviously very short. What about the last month?


These illustrate the market-breadth problem: indices being held up by the Godzilla companies of each index while the smaller companies decline. But wait! There's more!
There have been other signs of worsening technicals. Currently, 60.4% of S&P 500 components are above their 50-day moving average, considered a positive sign for short-term momentum. In mid-July, nearly 75% were, according to StockCharts. For the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, +0.18% only 47.3% of components are above their 50-day, compared with 67% in late July, a dramatic swing lower.

Recently, nearly 6% of New York Stock Exchange- and Nasdaq-listed securities hit a 52-week low on a day when the S&P 500 ended at a record, according to data from Sentimentrader that was cited by Lamensdorf, who called this “an alarming percentage.”

He added that it was the second-highest level going back as far as 1965, and that “Similar spikes occurred in 1973 and 1999, both directly preceding significant corrections.”
So what is a defensive move to mitigate the effects of the crash when it comes? Well, let's look at funds that are defensive in nature, that is, funds that usually make money (though not a lot) in bear markets. Or at least they don't decline so much.

Utilities funds are usually considered a safe haven. Here is the Vanguard Utilities ETF, VPU (blue), compared to the S&P 500 and Dow-Jones indices.


An income fund, oriented toward preservation of capital, is another bear-market investment. Here is USAIX v. the S&P and DJI.


Remember that the S&P and the Dow lines are somewhat deceiving since they do not show the decliners versus gainers within each of them. These do, although they are for the overall markets.

NYSE:


NASDAQ:


And finally, "If You Are a Crazy Bullish Investor Right Now This Chart Should Be Terrifying."
The iShares Transportation Average ETF (IYT) provides a warning to reduce equity holdings on strength, as its weekly chart will be downgraded to negative at Friday's close. The investment strategy is "sell on strength," as stocks appear vulnerable for a correction.

There are warnings away from the negative weekly chart for the transportation exchange-traded fund.

The July reading for the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) Asset Allocation Survey showed the lowest level of cash in more than 17 years, while the allocation to stocks was at a 12-year high in June. What happened to all the so-called cash on the sidelines?

The NYSE Margin Debt through June is near a record high of about $550 billion. Record high margin debt preceded the peaks of the tech bubble of 2000, and the bear market of 2008. ...
Tracking the transportation ETF is important, as recent weakness implies that the goods we produce are not being ordered by stores or businesses slowing shipments. The good news is that this ETF held its 200-day simple moving average of $164.23 on Aug. 2. 
 The problem with bubbles is that everyone knows they will pop, but no one knows when or what exactly will pop them.

Then we have the government debt bubble.
Yesterday, in my post about the latest jobs report, I said that “our massive looming government debt bubble” will “precipitate the biggest economic disaster of them all.” A commenter here at RedState asked what I meant by a “government debt bubble.” I have talked about this before, but it is an important enough topic that it is worth revisiting. 
In short, we’re in a bus speeding towards a cliff. We’re probably already past the point of no return. The bus is going over the side. It’s not a matter of if, but a matter of when. About the only thing we can do is bail out of the bus before it goes over. ...
But President Trump isn’t talking about what it would take to make a dent in the debt. That would take entitlement reform, frankly — and that’s the least popular topic on the planet. Indeed, preserving ObamaCare, our newest and shiniest entitlement, seems to be the top priority for our elected officials these days. Actually reforming entitlements is out. Get with the times, man!

Why talk about this today? After all, it’s not the fashionable topic of conversation. Palace intrigue at the White House, Russia investigations, transgender this that and the other, and whatever other stupid story of the day is occupying all the talking heads — that’s what brings in the clicks. I’m surprised you actually clicked on this post and read this far. It makes you among a distinct minority in this country.

And as long as only a distinct minority cares, we’re going to keep careening towards that cliff.

Once we leave solid ground, the flight through the air will be exciting and fun.

As long as you don’t think about what comes next.

It will not be cheap if we start now. But it will only be more expensive later, until finally it is completely unaffordable.


Which may not be long.

Update: Will the crash be triggered by collapse of the Godzilla tech companies? Probably:
We can never know when the end will come. Still, there are three critical signals to watch for.

The first is regulation. The tech giants are seen today as monopolizing internet search and commerce, and they are angling to take over industries such as publishing and automobiles, raising alarms at antitrust agencies in Europe and the United States. Fear that new internet technologies are doing more to waste time and brainpower than to increase productivity has already provoked a backlash in China, where officials recently criticized online gaming as “electronic heroin.” A regulatory crackdown on tech giants as either monopolies or productivity destroyers could pop the allure of tech stocks.

The other signals are more familiar. Going back to the “nifty 50” stocks of the 1960s, nearly every big market mania ended after central banks tightened monetary policy and many people who had borrowed to get in the game found themselves in trouble. The dot-com bubble peaked in 2000, after the Federal Reserve had increased interest rates multiple times. The current boom will likewise be at risk if an increase in inflation compels the Fed to raise interest rates beyond the modest rise the market currently expects.

Finally, watch for tech earnings to start falling short of analyst forecasts. The dot-com boom was driven in part by increasingly optimistic predictions for technology company earnings, and it imploded when earnings started to miss badly. Investors realized then that their expectations about profits from the internet revolution had become unreal.
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Thursday, June 29, 2017

Dueling oil reporting

By Donald Sensing

From my Google news feed this morning, dueling headlines about oil prices:


I wonder whether CNN Money thinks that the "worst" for oil prices is a low price or a high one? Let's take a look!
Crude oil prices plunged to $42 a barrel last week, sinking into a bear market amid renewed concerns about a massive supply glut that just won't go away. Some even feared a return to the sub-$30 prices that spooked global investors early in 2016.

But there are signs that the notoriously-moody oil market may have gotten a bit too pessimistic. After crashing more than 10% in June, crude prices have rallied four straight days to climb back above $44 a barrel.
There you have it. In CNN's mind, the "worst" thing that can happen to oil prices is that they fall and give us cheap energy.

Anyway, once again, what Warren Buffet said about stock-price forecasting (and by extension, commodities pricing) is verified.


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Friday, March 10, 2017

Two news services in one!

By Donald Sensing

Headlines this morning on Yahoo News:

Lower oil prices have the potential to take down the stock market

And a few lines below it:

Crude oil’s plunge could actually be good news for stocks

These prompt me to invite you to consider my previous post, "The purpose of economic [or stock] forecasts."

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Thursday, January 5, 2017

“It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”

By Donald Sensing

Give It Up: Forecasting Oil Prices Is Impossible


Just as that great market analyst Yogi Berra said . . .

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Tuesday, December 6, 2016

The oil bump didn't last long

By Donald Sensing

Oil prices blasted off Nov. 30 after OPEC announced a deal among its members to cut production by 1.2 million barrels per day, with another 300,000 pledged by Russia and another 300,000 being sought from other non-OPEC producers.

Oil spiked upward in double-digit percentages, even though the deal does not kick in until Jnaury. Well, of course, because oil buying is a futures market - buyers bid on contracts now for delivery later. Three months is a typical period. That's how the commodities markets work.

Yesterday oil began to slide in price. This was inevitable since like any commodities market, that of oil is traded heavily by speculators who do not want to buy physical oil at all, they just want to leverage money. So speculators started taking profits and that drove prices down. (There is a deadline date that closes contracts, and if you still hold an active contract the day after, you are going to buy 1,000 barrels of oil no matter what, or 42,000 gallons. Hope you have somewhere to put it!)

But did prices decline for other reasons, too? Here is the chart since Nov 29 for an ETF called USO, used as a proxy for oil contracts since USO's share price matches oil contract's price moves on a 1:1 ratio:



As the market has not opened as I type this, the pre-market price shows a further decline.

Was the decline due to things other than profit taking?
But on Monday, a Reuters survey found that OPEC's output hit a record high in November, indicating that member countries could have a hard time sticking to their plan.

"We remain skeptical of Iraqi and Iranian compliance," said Michael Cohen, head of energy commodities research at Barclays, in a note Monday.
"OPEC export levels may remain elevated in 1H 17 if countries step on the gas in December and fill their storage. Lower demand and lower refining runs should also help the Saudis keep exports high."
Note that the OPEC deal was only for production, it does not affect exports into the world market. And OPEC nations were cheating in advance by raising production and cheating after implementation. Any economist knows why. See also, "Saudi Arabia And The Great OPEC Production Cut Hoax."

Disclosure: I am not invested in oil or the oil industry in any way. Don't take anything I write as investment advice! 

Update: There are a number of analysts making the case for oil to go much higher and generally remain there:

The Oil Deal: Pay Attention Because The Game Just Started

Oil Prices Doubled The Last Time OPEC Cut Production

And finally, nine bearish factors that will drive prices down

UpdateIran Brags It Can Now Sell As Much Oil As It Wants

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Saturday, December 3, 2016

OPEC is dead, awaiting burial

By Donald Sensing

Many analysts say that the Nov. 30 deal by OPEC nations to cut daily oil production by 1.2 million barrels per day will turn out not to be very consequential in 2017. Non-OPEC Russia, a major producer, also agreed to cut production by 300,000 bpd and another 300,000 pledge is being sought from other non-OPEC countries, making the total potential cut 1.8M bpd. The additional pledges will be gained (or not) on  Dec. 10.

What was the deal? Financial Times explains:


Let's start with Bloomberg's coverage of former Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi:
"The only tool they have is to constrain production," al-Naimi said of OPEC at an event in Washington, D.C. "The unfortunate part is we tend to cheat." ...

He also expressed skepticism that Russia, considered a wildcard during talks, would follow through on its promise to reduce output. "Will Russia cut 300,000?" he said. "I don’t know. In the past, they didn’t."
CNBC's Jackie DeAngelis said that "Nobody really knows at this point" whether there will be cheating.
The moves in oil prices won't really take off until we learn whether members are cheating on the deal or not, DeAngelis said. That won't be until February or March, given that the deal doesn't take effect until January.

If everyone holds to their part of the deal, then crude oil prices could break past the $60-mark, according to Goldman Sachs.
But many producers both inside and outside the cartel have already been cheating. In fact, Bloomberg calls the announced cuts "fake news" for which consumers pay real money.
... Russia as a country made $6 billion just by talking to OPEC about cutting its oil output: News about the negotiations drove up the price. Now, Russia has agreed to a cut by 300,000 barrels per day by January "if technically possible." It looks like a lot -- a quarter of the total cut OPEC members have agreed among themselves -- but then Russia's output increased by 520,000 barrels a day between the end of August and the end of October, reaching an absolute record level. Russia has been making money on the increasing price while growing production -- the best of both worlds thanks to some deft news manipulation and nothing else. Now, even if Russia cuts output by about 2.7 percent of the current level, as it has promised, it will still reap a profit if the price of crude holds at the current level -- about 7 percent higher on Thursday morning than three days before.
Many years ago I visited a Toyota lot to look at used cars. There was one I looked at with sticker price of $2,999. It was attractive but too old so I moved on. Days later I returned and found balloons and banners all over the lot announcing a big sale. What did the windshield placard of that car say? "40% Off! Was $4,499, now only $2,999!"

That's what OPEC and other producers have done with production: they ran production up preparing for a deal to run it part-way down. Qatar, for example, is on track to surpass 1M bpd for the first time ever. And even if all OPEC nations fully comply with the cuts (which they never have done before), by this time next year developed nations' on-hand stocks of oil will have declined all the way from 65 days's supply to 56. That's enough for speculators and traders to make major coin between now and then, but not near enough to matter to the actual use of oil in consuming nations.

The thing about the OPEC deal, though, is that we've been here before:


This the price pattern comparison not of the direct price of crude but of an oil ETF called USO (US Oil Fund). USO tracks daily the price moves of crude at a 1:1 ratio. If oil prices rise by 2 percent, so does USO's price, and the same for falling prices. (See my Sept. 9 post, in which I explained why oil prices would rise, which they did. And then fell again, as the top chart above shows.)

Finally, the OPEC deal to set higher prices will be torpedoed by non-OPEC producers, including Russia despite its OPEC head nod, who have little incentive to cut production, and by United States shale-oil producers.
The U.S., Canada, Brazil and Kazakhstan aren't going to cut back on production, and neither is Indonesia, which left OPEC over that very matter, less than a year after rejoining it.
Financial Times chimes in,
But there is a surge of production coming in the next 12 months from new fields in countries outside Opec, such as Brazil, Canada and Kazakhstan. It is perfectly possible that total global production — from Opec and non-Opec states combined — will be higher next year than in 2016.
By far the major influence here is shale. In fact, that there was an OPEC deal struck at all on Nov. 30 is a sign of shale's growing market power and OPEC's diminishment.
OPEC isn't cutting production because it is interested or able to manage the oil market as it has in the past, it has done so because it has failed to crush the U.S. shale industry in a way that would have made it hobble along for a significant period of time, while waiting for global demand for oil to pick up.
Shale is winning
What OPEC's oil ministers doubtless realize is that shale-oil production has matured greatly in technology and economics and still has more maturing to do. Shale oil has been growing steadily less expensive to get out of the ground. Shale production has proved to be very resilient against oil-price declines despite major financial obstacles that traditional pump wells do not have: shale production rates fall per well about 70% after the first year, for example, and about half the total well costs are spent in just operating the well while traditional pump wells are very inexpensive to operate.

Nonetheless, as oil prices cratered early this year to sub-$30, shale production actually increased.
Why has U.S. shale production proven to be so resilient to low oil prices? I can think of (at least) three reasons. All three come down to costs.

First, as oil prices fell, so did the costs of drilling and completion services—more than 30% from the last quarter of 2014 to the first quarter of 2016. Because of this steep drop in costs, wells that would have been only marginally profitable in late 2014 could still be profitable in early 2016. Much of this decline in the price of drilling and completion services can be rationalized simply by supply and demand.  When oil prices fell, shale producers had the ability to drive a harder bargain with their suppliers.  After all, there was less of a “pie” to share in those negotiations, and there were fewer customers for oilfield service contractors to negotiate with.  Thus, even without changing operating procedures or drilling locations, shale producers were partially insured against lower oil prices by a fall in the costs they faced.

Second, the engineering properties of shale wells mean that “breakeven” price calculations can be misleading about the profitability of new wells in a different oil price environment. While the development costs of conventional oil wells are mostly fixed in the form of drilling an expensive hole in the right place, more than half of the cost of developing a shale well lies in the complicated hydraulic fracturing treatment that producers must employ to make these wells productive.  There is now long-standing evidence that more aggressive treatments generate more oil production. ...

Finally, shale producers are learning how to get greater bang for their buck out of drilling operations. As my colleague Sam Ori pointed out in an earlier post, producers have substantially increased the of total oil recovered in a typical well—from about 5% of the original oil in place to more than 12%. BP’s Chief Economist Spencer Dale predicts a 25% recovery factor might even be conservative five years from now. 


Here is the key point why shale is going to dominate the world oil market more and more:
As today’s shale producers continue to learn the most efficient ways of developing new wells, tomorrow’s producers in shale basins around the world will probably follow their lead.  In doing so, the emergence of a nimble and innovating global shale industry will continue to frustrate conventional oil producers eager to return to tightly controlled production and higher prices.
And so,
The reason the production cut this time around isn't going to be effective over the long term, is it has never been implemented with a mature U.S. shale industry. OPEC has never had a third competitor (beyond Russia), which is able to step into the vacuum created by a cut and quickly recover at least a portion of it.

The OPEC empire can't strike back
As mentioned earlier, this is being considered as a major aggressive move by many following the oil market, with the idea it's no different than it has been in the past. Not only is this not the case, but when shale oil production surges over the next couple of years, there is little or nothing left in OPEC's arsenal to deal with it.
What OPEC won't do is keep production cuts in place and let shale producers gain world-market share at their expense, especially since the production cuts will not actually affect worldwide supply.

FT:
Cartels need a swing producer that has the capacity to vary production to the degree necessary to control the market and which can absorb the pain of such a move. That is what they would have done in the past, but it may now be impossible, economically and politically. Saudi Arabia cannot sustain such a sacrifice, particularly given its weak security situation and its failure to diversify its economy. If that is true, the $50 price we have today is a ceiling. Opec as a cartel is over and everyone will have to get used to the new reality.
Saudi Arabia used to be the swing producer, but those days are gone. It simply cannot afford the deep further cuts necessary to raise oil prices above $60, especially since one of the key components of a cartel is dominance of the means of production. But as we've seen, those days are gone for good and so is the cartel.

OPEC, as we have all come to know and hate it, may not be quite dead yet but it's coughing up blood. From this point on governments of nationally-controlled, oil-based economies will not control the oil market. Instead corporate oil producers, sensitive to market-based supply and demand and especially to market competition, will move to the fore. It's hard to see how that can be anything but better for consumers.

Maybe 1960-2016 is more accurate.

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Krugman gets smacked by reality

By Donald Sensing

It is true that as election evening progressed, and it became clearer that Donald Trump would cruise to victory, that overseas markets and the US Dow-Jones Average futures plunged.

And Nobel laureate in economics Paul Krugman wrote at the time:

It really does now look like President Donald J. Trump, and markets are plunging. When might we expect them to recover?

Frankly, I find it hard to care much, even though this is my specialty. The disaster for America and the world has so many aspects that the economic ramifications are way down my list of things to fear.

Still, I guess people want an answer: If the question is when markets will recover, a first-pass answer is never.
Well, this only shows why I stopped heeding Krugman a loooong time ago. This morning:


Google Finance's chart of the DJIA for the last five trading days looks like this:


The record high is intra-day and will not be recorded as an official all-time high unless the Dow closes the day higher than the previous record. The existing record was 18,613.52, set on Aug. 11 of this year.

Heh!


Update: Market makers are so concerned about a Trump administration that the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed today at 18,807.88, a new record almost 200 points higher than the old one. The chart since election day:




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Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Stock market tanks on Trump win

By Donald Sensing

Here is the Dow-Jones pre-market as of right now. This is what's called a "buying opportunity." But not quite yet.


Update: It seems the market makers are losing their panic mode:

Update: Well, that didn't last:



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Wednesday, October 5, 2016

The sunset of the dollar

By Donald Sensing


Since at least the end of World War 2, the US dollar has been the currency of choice in international markets, especially commodities markets and especially oil, supplanting the British pound sterling and, when the central banks of the world abandoned gold to back up currencies.

On the international spot markets, oil is priced and paid for in dollars. That means that a stringer dollar makes oil cheaper for the United States but more expensive for other nations, since they must spend more of their own currency to buy dollars to buy oil.

Now major oil suppliers are planning to get rid of the dollar as the oil currency with something called a "Special Drawing Right." If they do, it will ripple strongly throughout all internation markets and trading. In fact, The SDR is poised to become the de facto global reserve currency.
The response to U.S. efforts to cheapen the dollar in 2010 — 2011 was not long in coming. It came from four directions — IMF, Russia, China, and Saudi Arabia. Enter the new world money: Petro-SDR.

Less than a year after Obama’s declaration of a new currency war, the IMF released a paper that is a blueprint for implementation of a new global reserve currency called the Special Drawing Right (SDR), or world money.

On December 1, 2015, the IMF announced that the Chinese yuan would be included in the basket of currencies used to determine the value of one SDR. With China onboard, the SDR is poised to become the de facto global reserve currency.

China’s and Russia’s immediate response to the coming dollar collapse and rise of the SDR is to buy gold. (It’s not yet possible to diversify heavily into SDR denominated assets because there are very few SDR assets available.) Russia has acquired over 1,000 tons of gold in the past seven years, and China has acquired over 3,000 tons of gold in the same time. ...

Gold, yuan, and SDRs all have one thing in common — they are alternatives to the dollar. As momentum toward these alternatives grows, the role of dollars as a reserve currency could diminish quite quickly — like sterling’s role between 1914 and 1944. The result for dollar holders will be exactly the same as the result for sterling holders: inflation and lost wealth.
Iran has already announced it will not accept dollars for oil; it wants Euros. From February:
Over the weekend, a top official at Iran's state-owned oil company said the country had a strong preference for euros.

"Our top priority is to receive cash and oil [payments] in euro," Safar-Ali Karamati, a deputy director at the National Iranian Oil Company, told an Iran news outlet on Saturday.
But Iran is not a large producer and the Saudis are working on the SDR partly to foil Iranian economics. You can bet the Saudis won't be accepting Euros for oil.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

The Fox Butterfield Republican Senator and EpiPens

By Donald Sensing

I mentioned a few days ago that Fox Butterfield had apparently taken up writing headlines. Fox Butterfield is the real name of a real, former New York Times reporter whose main claim to fame is comparing apples to apples and finding it incongruous. His most famous example was an article in which he wondered why felon-incarcerations were rising while the crime rate was falling.

Apparently it never occurred to him that locking up more career criminals for longer sentences might send the crime rate into decline. Nah, couldn't be.

Now we come to the latest crisis du jour, the explosion of the cost of EpiPens:

Doctors and patients say the Mylan pharmaceutical company has jacked up the prices for an EpiPen -- the portable device that can stop a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction -- from around $100 in 2008 to $500 and up today.

That's a hike of over 400 percent.

"Patients are calling and saying they can't afford it," said Dr. Douglas McMahon, an allergy specialist in Maplewood, Minnesota. "They're between a rock and a hard place."
Now, for patients who do need this medication, this price level is truly a serious matter and for some people no doubt is legitimately a crisis. That the medicine is delivered by auto-injector only illustrates the urgency with which the medicine is needed: it is not needed at all unless it is needed real bad.


Mylan is the only company that makes Epipens. The only other maker ceased manufacture last year after a massive recall of its products. So Mylan enjoys an absolute monopoly, "a brand dominance equal to that of Kleenex."

As you can imagine, there are calls for the federal government to do something. So:


And there he is, folks: the Fox Butterfield Republican who doesn't understand why, oh why, this medical device is so expensive when, after all, the taxpayers are paying for it!

In response, Mylans wrote back that "product improvements" had made the cost rise but also that "most EpiPens are covered by insurance." Well, duh.

This is not to minimize that people who need these are still paying money out of pocket -- because there is nothing so heartless as the pay scale of Medicaid or Medicare, both of which are deliberately designed to rations health care to their patients.

It is to point out that Grassley and the rest of the Political Class remain clueless that government always skews the market. As EpiPen user Tom Knighton writes,
"When epinephrine only costs a few cents, but they're going up to $500, personally I don't think that's ethically responsible," said Dr. McMahon.

And he understands better than most what costs are involved: For the past few years he's been developing his own, smaller version of the EpiPen, and trying to get it approved by the FDA and bring it to market. He estimates that process costs about $1.5 million. In 2015, Mylan's profits from the sale of EpiPens rose to $1.2 billion.

McMahon says his device will retail for about $50. ... 
Further, McMahon first needs to go $1.5 million in the hole -- in addition to his research and development costs -- to bring a product to market.
 And there you have it, Americans: when more government is what you vote for, more government is what you get. And when you think that government should pay for things, it will. Boy, will it ever:



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Monday, March 31, 2014

But it's the only game in town

By Donald Sensing

High-frequency trading is computerized stock trading done programmatically, without human operation. Using ultra-speed data connection to computers at stock exchanges, HFT computers can buy and sell enormous blocks of stocks with a tiny fraction of a second.

"Front running" is when Trader A places an order for, say, 300,000 shares of Consolidated Amalgamated and that order is electronically detected at a data hub by an HFT system. The HFT computer enjoys a much faster connection to the exchange. The HFT computer sends a buy order to the exchange for 300,000 shares of Con-Am; the order arrives three milliseconds before Trader A's.

In that three milliseconds, the HFT order drives the price of Con-Am stock up one penny. Trader A  just lost $3,000 on the buy. Trader A's order drives Con-Am up another penny in another three milliseconds. Then the HFT sells. The HFT system just made $6,000 in six milliseconds.

The first place his orders were landing was the BATS Exchange across the river in Weehawken, N.J., and high-frequency traders were lying there in wait. 
Michael Lewis: Brad realizes, "Oh my God, that's how I'm being front-runned. I'm being front-runned because my signal gets to the BATS Exchange first and they can beat me to all the, all the other exchanges." 
It only took a tiny fraction of a second for Brad's trade to reach the next exchanges on the network, but the high-speed traders were able to jump in front of him, buy the same stock and drive the price up before his order arrived, producing a small profit of just one or two pennies. But it was happening to everyone's trades millions of times a day.
That's why HFT trades make tens of billions of dollars per year. And that's why author Michael Lewis says that the stock market is rigged. If you own a retirement fund or you invest on your own, this is worth your while to see.



Is the U.S. stock market rigged? - CBS News

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Why do most mutual funds trail the market?

By Donald Sensing

Interesting insights from a retiring Morgan-Stanley investment strategist. In any given year, 60 percent of managed funds underperform their market segment (I have read other sources that say it is 70 percent).

But in fact, raw numberS reveal that half perform higher, half lower - before management fees are deducted.

It's the fees that drag many funds' overall performance below their index.

Long piece, worth the read:



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Yahoo goes into internet porn business

By Donald Sensing

The big technology-company news today is that Yahoo.com announced it will buy Tumblr.com for $1.1 billion. 

Apparently this is getting a lot of attention because:

1. Tumblr is a blog platform, which means that Yahoo is now (potentially) able to go head to head against Google, which own Blogspot (the platform for this blog),

2. "Tumblr gets a bunch of traffic from porn and copyright-violating content. And that doesn't jibe well with any sensible advertiser" (from http://www.businessinsider.com/tumblr-porn-problem-2013-5).



I have a Tumblr blog that I used mainly to park links to read later, but I haven't used it in a long time.

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