At what point does a broad contango play come in to provide support? Right now, the one year return on the curve ex storage is ~17%.
quote:Perhaps a relevant chart (via Zerohedge)quote:just because the commodity is down 20% doesn't mean all stocks should. If the company is situated well financially i would expect little to no sliding. now the ones that aren't, well yes people will be in for a rude awakening.
These oil stocks trading weird. Oil
Down about 20% in a month but stocks are flat to positive for last month. Earnings have to be terrible and I don't think any CEO will forecast great numbers for 2015. I think they are being setup for a huge down day on earnings
quote:I think it's in the infantile stages but should ramp up. Lots of capacity increases in tankers over the past few years that are sitting empty. Pretty sure I read somewhere that companies are already storing in tankers sitting offshore to wait.
At what point does a broad contango play come in and provide price support? Right now, the one year return ex storage is close to 17%.
quote:I should have explained my thinking better, normally the stocks should follow, however the price of crude is artificially deflated because of OPECs unwillingness to balance the market. therefore this tells me that everyone thinks the price of crude is under-valued and the divergence is showing up in the stock prices that should normally track a properly functioning market. Just an educated guess.quote:Perhaps a relevant chart (via Zerohedge)quote:just because the commodity is down 20% doesn't mean all stocks should. If the company is situated well financially i would expect little to no sliding. now the ones that aren't, well yes people will be in for a rude awakening.
These oil stocks trading weird. Oil
Down about 20% in a month but stocks are flat to positive for last month. Earnings have to be terrible and I don't think any CEO will forecast great numbers for 2015. I think they are being setup for a huge down day on earnings
quote:Trying to rationalize equity prices has been a tough job since 2008-09 (as in - I personally believe equities trade on Fed expectations first and foremost, and the author of this chart would probably agree). This particular disconnect, and again just speculation, looks like a short-squeeze/momentum trade on the due to market (not fundamental i.e. related to WTI). The energy high yield credit probably provides a better picture of the underlying health and fundamentals of the companies at the margins.quote:I should have explained my thinking better, normally the stocks should follow, however the price of crude is artificially deflated because of OPECs unwillingness to balance the market. therefore this tells me that everyone thinks the price of crude is under-valued and the divergence is showing up in the stock prices that should normally track a properly functioning market. Just an educated guess.quote:Perhaps a relevant chart (via Zerohedge)quote:just because the commodity is down 20% doesn't mean all stocks should. If the company is situated well financially i would expect little to no sliding. now the ones that aren't, well yes people will be in for a rude awakening.
These oil stocks trading weird. Oil
Down about 20% in a month but stocks are flat to positive for last month. Earnings have to be terrible and I don't think any CEO will forecast great numbers for 2015. I think they are being setup for a huge down day on earnings
If prices should correlate, what are your thoughts on the divergence and the drivers behind them? Not arguing, but genuinely asking a question.
quote:
Crude is not artificially deflated. Crude is trading at exactly what the market is dictating currently. You can't assume that it is solely OPEC's responsibility to cut their production to balance the market. Why don't all of the US producers turn off their spigots to balance the market?
quote:Yes, I know you can't just shut off the spigot. I was being facetious. Personally, I believe that prices have been artificially propped up for quite some time. I believe some strong forces in play is the stabilization of oil production in some of your more war torn countries in the Middle East. Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, though still going through civil unrest, have been producing at high levels without much interruption in their production.quote:
Crude is not artificially deflated. Crude is trading at exactly what the market is dictating currently. You can't assume that it is solely OPEC's responsibility to cut their production to balance the market. Why don't all of the US producers turn off their spigots to balance the market?
You understand why they can't "turn off their spigots" correct? There's more forces at work than a simple supply and demand curve. I pulled the data. Either we were artificially held up for several months or something else is at play here. The separation of US production vs supple has been diverging for years now. There's no reason prices just fell off the face of the earth this quickly. There's something else going on here.
quote:im not too worried about the price of oil, too many people "want" it between $60 and $90. some sort of conflict will ensue...
Agreed. In the 90s the Suadis market share was just over 17% of global production. Now it's closer to 12% is my understanding. They want that 5% back and I don't think they care where they get it from.
quote:This would be the end of US refiners
excuse my nativity, but if the sweet spot is 65-90 per why not cut off the importing of oil, drill our own and keep the price relatively tame and less volatile like the price on an all you can eat Furrs Cafeteria?
quote:quote:This would be the end of US refiners
excuse my nativity, but if the sweet spot is 65-90 per why not cut off the importing of oil, drill our own and keep the price relatively tame and less volatile like the price on an all you can eat Furrs Cafeteria?
quote:FIFY
then why do we continue to allow ourselves to be run byother countriespoliticians who do not have our best interests in mind?
quote:
excuse my nativity, but if the sweet spot is 65-90 per why not cut off the importing of oil, drill our own and keep the price relatively tame and less volatile like the price on an all you can eat Furrs Cafeteria?
quote:
Halliburton Co. said Tuesday it has cut jobs in Houston because of weakening market conditions as oil prices slide, but the oil field services company refused to say how many employees it let go.
quote:US refiners are exporting a lot of refined product. You would basically fix their input price while their product price still fluctuates along with the world crude market. They may have some really awesome times (US $70 vs World $100) and some really bad times (US $70 vs World $40). No way to run a business with that much unpredictability.quote:quote:This would be the end of US refiners
excuse my nativity, but if the sweet spot is 65-90 per why not cut off the importing of oil, drill our own and keep the price relatively tame and less volatile like the price on an all you can eat Furrs Cafeteria?
Why? why not retool them to refine the lighter sweet crude instead of refining imported oil...
if you can produce your own product for roughly the same cost or have some benefit such as market stabilization, then why do we continue to allow ourselves to be run by other countries who do not have our best interests in mind?
quote:
Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi met U.S. Deputy Energy Secretary Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall on Tuesday in Riyadh where they discussed oil markets, the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported. SPA gave no specific details about the meeting in a brief statement but said the officials looked into cooperation on energy and environmental issues, climate change, solar energy use and mutual investments.
A U.S. energy department spokesman said in addition to those areas, the two officials discussed global oil markets.
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro is in Algeria on a diplomatic push to persuade reluctant fellow members of OPEC to prop up a sinking market by cutting output. Saudi Arabia, OPEC's dominant member state and the world's biggest oil exporter, has repeatedly said the group will not cut production.
On Tuesday, United Arab Emirates Energy Minister Suhail bin Mohammed al-Mazroui stood by OPEC's decision to keep production unchanged.
Mazroui showed no sign of backing down from OPEC's insistence that other producers, particularly the U.S. shale oil drillers which it blames for oversupplying the market, reduce their output.