- Fed bond buying could end near 7.25% jobless rate (dow jones)
- World Bank cuts growth outlook as advanced nations drag (Reuters)
- Bundesbank to retrieve $200bn of gold reserves (the guardian)
- India growth rebound faces inflation crimping rate cuts (Bloomberg)
- Fed should ease policy further: Kocherlakota (Reuters)
- Chief of Boston Fed optimistic on jobs (Boston Globe)
- www.CentralBankNews.info
What Will Happen to Oil and Gas Prices in 2013?
The US energy sector is undergoing a rapid change. It’s no exaggeration to describe it as a revolution.
The nation’s ability to get at once-inaccessible shale oil and gas has sent energy production soaring.
The US Energy Information Administration expects oil production to rise by 25% this year. And in less than a decade, America could overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s top oil producer.
This could have a major impact on everything from US industry to the strength of the dollar. It’s all very exciting.
But it’s easy to get a little too carried away, particularly now that everyone knows about the ‘shale gas revolution’. Those expecting a future of cheap energy and collapsing oil prices are heading for a disappointment.
Here’s why – and what it means for your money.
Saudi Arabia Now Wants to Put a Floor Under the Oil Price
Natural gas prices in the US (if not elsewhere) have collapsed as production of shale gas has surged.
With all these predictions of soaring US oil shale production, you might have expected oil prices to have dropped significantly by now.
So why haven’t they?
For a start, it’s worth remembering that oil is a global market, unlike natural gas, which is still split into distinct regional markets. Rising production in one area can be offset by falling production elsewhere.
So one culprit for the firm oil price is Saudi Arabia. Up until very recently, it has been trying to keep a lid on oil prices. In the longer term, the Saudis understand only too well that if oil becomes too expensive, it only boosts efforts to find new sources of energy.
And in the shorter term, fears over a conflict in Iran last year saw Saudi Arabia acting as a safety valve – keeping production high and capping prices at around $100 a barrel. This also had the useful side effect (for the Saudis) of damaging their rivals in Iran.
But this has now started to change. The latest figures show that Saudi production in December fell to its lowest level since early 2011.
There are various reasons for this. With immediate concerns over Iran dying down, now that the US election has passed without an Israeli attack, there are concerns that there is already too much oil on the market.
That’s not good news for Saudi Arabia. It might not want prices to go too high, but it can’t have them fall too far either. The country needs increasing amounts of money to bribe its population with bread and circuses to buy off growing pressure for reform.
But there are also physical limits to the amount of oil that Saudi Arabia can produce. As I already pointed out, much of the recent production boost was driven by bringing old wells back online. Clearly, this is not sustainable.
Don’t Get Carried Away by Reports of Soaring US Oil Production
So even as US production is growing, we can’t necessarily expect the same from the rest of the world.
It’s also important not to get too carried away by the hype over US production. Even if the Energy Information Administration is right to forecast a jump in production over the next two years, output in 2014 will still be below that of 1988, and nearly a fifth below the peak in 1970.
And America is not yet properly equipped for the business of being the world’s great oil power. As Capital Economics points out, the domestic infrastructure is poor. There aren’t enough pipelines. And existing refineries work best with light imported crude, rather than the heavier oil found in Oklahoma, North Dakota and Texas.
More importantly – at least as far as energy prices go – investment in drilling and exploration has started to fall, even as more oil and gas is pumped. That’s because the plunge in natural gas prices has made many fields – which produce both oil and gas – unprofitable to run.
You can see the impact this has had by looking at the number of rigs being used to drill for oil and gas. Oilfield services company Baker Hughes estimates that the number of oil rigs has fallen by just under 8% from August last year.
The drop in gas rigs has been even bigger. There are just 434 operating at the moment, compared with 1,606 at the peak just before the financial crash. Along with strong demand for consumption, this has helped to reduce the glut of gas, which had been pushing prices down. While natural gas prices remain low, they have recovered somewhat from their lowest levels over the past year or so.
One Way to Play the Rising Natural Gas Price
So what does this mean in practical terms? The price of crude oil still looks more likely to fall than to rise. But we wouldn’t bet on a crash – and we certainly wouldn’t bet on petrol prices for your average British driver falling significantly this year.
Meanwhile, the price of natural gas is likely to rise, as demand continues to increase while production drops off. This should be good news for companies that are involved in shale gas production.
One interesting – if risky play – is Chesapeake Oil (NYSE: CHK). While continued low natural gas prices meant that it made a loss this year, the company has taken the bold decision to double down on the price of gas going up. It has increased its reserves and decided not to hedge its exposure to natural gas prices.
Having been the target of regulators over a dubious loan, Chesapeake’s maverick chairman Aubrey McClendon has made his peace with shareholders, forgoing his annual bonus and agreeing to cut the company’s debt levels. This should help investor confidence and ensure that his attention is focused on maximising revenue.
Matthew Partridge
Contributing Writer, Money Morning
Publisher’s Note: This article first appeared in MoneyWeek
From the Archives…
Why the Australian Stock Market Will Climb in 2013
11-1-2013 – Kris Sayce
What Lower Interest Rates Mean for Australian Stocks in 2013
10-1-2013 – Kris Sayce
Downside in the Yen: Shinzo Abe and the Three Bears
9-1-2013 – Murray Dawes
How the ‘China Money’ Could Push Silver 58% Higher in 2013
8-1-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie
Brightest Comet in 333 Years to Signal a Major Rally in Gold?
7-1-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie
USDJPY breaks below channel support
USDJPY breaks below the lower line of the price channel on 4-hour chart, suggesting that a cycle top has been formed on 4-hour chart. Deeper decline would likely be seen and next target would be at 87.50 area. However, the fall from 89.67 would possibly be consolidation of the uptrend from 82.11, as long as 86.82 key support holds, the uptrend could be expected to resume, and another rise towards 95.00 is still possible.
Risk Management for Technical Traders [Interview Excerpt]
Tips from EWI Senior Analyst Jeffrey Kennedy’s Stocks and Commodities interview
By Elliott Wave International
If you trade with Elliott wave analysis, your trading decisions are all about the difference between where the market is vs. where it will be. According to Jeffrey Kennedy, editor of our Elliott Wave Junctures service, risk management skills are vital to being a successful technical trader.
Here’s what Jeff had to say in a recent interview:
Risk management is all about consistency. It is all about longevity. It is like going back to the story about the tortoise and the hare. You want slow or small consistent profits…
Being an analyst and trader involves two totally separate skill sets. As an analyst, you are a master of observation. You are focusing on what could happen. As a trader, your primary focus is on what is happening. Regardless of whether you think the market’s about to top, if the trend is up, as a trader, you’ve got to play it. Divergence is a great example of what I am referring to.
As an analyst, if I am looking at a momentum tool, and
I see divergence, well, that is suggestive of market weakness.
As a trader I have to focus on what is happening,
not what could happen.
If I see the daily trend is up, I have to buy the market. How do I resign myself to the fact that I have divergence, which means a decrease in momentum, a possible weakness, and a possible trend change? I have to focus on what is happening as a trader and the trend is up. How do I reconcile that?
This is where risk management comes into play. For example, you are allowed to play the buy side to the tune of $100,000. If you are seeing divergence begin to enter the market, you may say to yourself, “I have to trade the trend, and the trend is up, but because of this divergence, I am not going to go all in.” … [and] you have to have a very tight stop on the position.
… That is how risk management comes into play, and how
you focus on what is happening and reconcile what is happening
as a trader. But you also have to take into consideration
what could happen when you are wearing your analytical hat
and see that potential for divergence because there are
markets I have seen where the divergence continues for six
months. Analysts trade what could happen, whereas
traders trade what is happening.
Effective risk management is indispensable to successful trading. Ultimately it doesn’t matter how accurately you spot divergence or label your waves if you risk too much on your trades.
This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline Risk Management for Technical Traders [Interview Excerpt]. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.
Is Amex Going Slumming?
Reputations can take decades to build…and only minutes to throw away. I thought of this last week when I read that American Express (NYSE:$AXP) was gutting its travel services, laying off more than 5,000 employees—or roughly 9 percent of its workforce—most of whom worked in travel.
Remember, Amex is the card for the global elite—executives and high-net worth consumers. There is a certain cachet to pulling an Amex card out of your wallet—particularly a Centurion Card (also known as “the Black Card”). In the company’s own words, Amex targets “super-affluent high net worth individuals on a continual quest for the best and most exclusive. They own companies and frequently travel; they define success.”
High-end travel services were part of what gave Amex its prestige. So pulling back on the perks that give Amex its aura of exclusivity might seem risky. Though as Amex CEO Kenneth Chenault noted in the post-earnings conference call, the economics of corporate travel are changing.
In a time of threadbare budgets and global austerity, full-service travel agency may seem a bit frivolous. And cost-conscious businesses are finding ways to reduce travel costs, both by traveling less (Skype conference call anyone?) and by using lower-frill airlines and hotels. I have no hard data on this, and I don’t know if it is even tracked. But I’ve observed on recent flights that Business Class has been noticeably devoid of suit-wearing gentlemen in their 40s and 50s—what we might think of as “the business crowd.” There are a lot more grey flannel suits in Coach Class these days. Again, no hard data here; just an observation.
So Amex’s decision to scale back its travel services may simply be an acknowledgement of changing times. But Amex has made some other moves recently that would seem to be chipping away at its high-end image. For example, the company partnered with Wal-Mart (NYSE:$WMT)—yes, Wal-Mart, in launching a reloadable pre-paid card targeted at lower-income consumers who often have no access to the traditional banking system.
Now, I have nothing against Wal-Mart. It’s a fantastic company. I own shares for myself and clients, and I myself have saved thousands of dollars over the years buying my sundries there. But I can’t escape the thought that Amex is going slumming.
Amex should tread carefully here. What separates Amex from the Visa (NYSE:$V) and MasterCard (NYSE:$MA) cards used by the lumpenproletariat masses is the image of exclusivity. Amex doesn’t sell financial services; you can get those from any bank down the street. No, Amex sells image.
And Wal-Mart prepaid cards might not quite be the best way to sell that image. Just sayin.’
Amex can never compete with MasterCard and Visa in the mass market, but it doesn’t need to. The company has roughly an 8% market share based on cards in circulation, according to Card Hub. Yet it has 23.8% of market share by purchase volume, barely 3% below MasterCard. There are a lot fewer Amex users, but collectively they spend a lot more than the average credit card user.
Unlike MasterCard and Visa—which are payment networks and not banks—Amex is an actual financial institution with all of the assorted risks this entails. Not surprisingly, Amex trades at a substantial discount to its payment network rivals—a forward P/E of 12 vs. 19 and 20 for Visa and MasterCard, respectively. But given the higher credit quality of its borrowers, it trades at a premium to mass-market card issuers like Capital One (NYSE:$COF), which trades for just 8 times expected earnings.
Based on the numbers, Amex is probably priced “about right,” neither expensive nor cheap. But I am not a buyer at current prices. Amex seems like a company struggling to find its way in a changing market. A marketer of exclusivity has no business offering prepaid card at Wal-Mart.
Disclosures: Sizemore Capital is long WMT.
The post Is Amex Going Slumming? appeared first on Sizemore Insights.
Market Review 15.01.2013
Source: ForexYard
Following several days of losses, the JPY turned bullish during Asian trading last night, after comments from the Japanese economy minister created doubts about how aggressive any future monetary easing from the Bank of Japan will be. The EUR/JPY fell 160 pips, eventually trading as low as 118.27, while the USD/JPY lost 97 pips to reach as low as 88.61.
Comments from Fed Chairman Bernanke yesterday, in which he discussed how fragile the US economic recovery is, boosted demand for gold which led to an increase in prices. The precious metal advanced close to $10 an ounce during Asian trading to reach as high as $1676.47.
Main News for Today
US Retail Sales/Core Retail Sales- 13:30 GMT
• Both indicators are forecasted to come at 0.2%
• If either comes in above their forecasted levels, the dollar could see upward movement during afternoon trading
US PPI- 13:30 GMT
• Forecasted to come in at -0.1% which, if true, would represent a significant increase over last month’s -0.8%
• A better than expected figure could lead to gains for USD and crude oil
Read more forex news on our forex blog
Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.
© 2006 by FxYard Ltd
Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.
Forex Update: Currency Specs, Today’s Technical Charts & US Dollar recovers
CountingPips.com Email Newsletter January 15, 2013
The Technical Traders Morning Charts
Gold and silver traded higher yesterday while the miners lagged. This is not a bullish sign for the metals. The trend remains down and we need a clean break…
The Dollar Recovers Lost Ground
The EUR/USD is consolidating near its current highs, that is natural after such explosive growth. The bulls are not able to overcome the 34th figure so far, but also there from the down side, the pair’s movement is limited by the support at 1.3336.
Currency Speculators trimmed US Dollar short positions last week
Non-commercial large futures traders, including hedge funds and large speculators, registered a US dollar short position total of $6.96 billion…
Scientists Find Mega-Oil Field … 1,300 Light Years Away
Have our wishes been answered? Scientists have found an oil field which contains 200 times more hydrocarbons than there is water on the whole…
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Elliott Wave Trading – Learn to Label Elliott Waves More Accurately
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The momentum relationship most often seen in waves 3 and 5 is divergence. Bullish divergence forms when prices make a new low while an accompanying indicator does not. Conversely, bearish divergence occurs when prices register a new high while an accompanying indicator does not. Bullish and bearish divergences are common to waves A and C, just as they are waves 3 and 5.…
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The Senior Strategist: Profittaking but underlying positiv tone
Last week we saw some profiktaking, but the underlying tone i still positiv, says Jyske Bank Senior Strategist Ib Fredslund Madsen in this weeks edition of ‘The Week Ahead’.
Video courtesy of en.jyskebank.tv
The Technical Traders Morning Charts
By Chris Vermeulen, TheGoldAndOilGuy.com
Good Morning,
Yesterday’s trading session played out exactly as posted in the morning chart update. Today will be a different story from the looks of it as the dollar index looks to be putting in a bottom and that has the SP500 down 0.40% this morning. It may trigger our first entry point to let long stocks today.
Dollar Index:
SP500 Futures:
Natural gas has been holding up well the past two sessions and looks as though it is forming a cup and handle pattern at the $3.40 level. The first upside target would be $3.50 then $3.60.
Crude oil has been trading sideways/higher the past week but the on balance volume clearly shows sellers are unloading contracts at the $94 level. Yesterday I talked about how crude oil was walking a fine line up its support trend line and once that breaks look out! Price is holding up but be aware it could drop fast and hard any day here.
Gold and silver traded higher yesterday while the miners lagged. This is not a bullish sign for the metals. The trend remains down and we need a clean break before getting long.
Bonds continue to their march higher as expected and this type of price action points to lower stock prices. This morning stocks are set to gap sharply lower confirming money is rolling back into the safe haven (bonds) for protection from falling share prices.
Be sure to follow my trades at www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com and my free watchlist: https://stockcharts.com/public/1992897
Chris Vermeulen
The Dollar Recovers Lost Ground
The Dollar Recovers Lost Ground
EURUSD
The EUR/USD is consolidating near its current highs, that is natural after such explosive growth. The bulls are not able to overcome the 34th figure so far, but also there from the down side, the pair’s movement is limited by the support at 1.3336. As a result of the single currency increase, the RSI on the 4-hour chart entered the overbought zone, and it starts moving out of it due to the consolidation. The sentiment is still bullish, but it is wise not to rule out the correction towards the 33rd figure where buyers are likely to activate. The increase above the 34th figure would allow the to test last year’s high near 1.3480.
GBPUSD
Yesterday, the situation was not in favor of the bulls in the GBP/USD pair. The British pound also came under pressure together with the U.S. dollar as well, due to sales in the cross rate with the euro. As a result, there on the way to the level of 1.6160, the GBP/USD was at the mercy of bears, that caused a drop in the exchange rate to 1.6031. Here was an increase in demand for the pound, and it manged to recover to 1.6093. The pair remains under pressure, but if the bulls manage to defend the support near 1.6030 — 1.6000, the resistance at 1.6170 will be under threat once again, and in case of its breakthrough, the pound will resume its growth towards the 63rd figure.
USDCHF
Active buying of the EUR/CHF continued yesterday too, that allowed the USD/CHF pair recover lost ground. Thus, having found the support at 0.9119, the USD/CHF started increasing until it reached the resistance at 0.9262. This time, there on the 4-hour chart the pair left the oversold zone and it could resume the decrease. But the increase above the 92nd figure would slightly improve the prospects for the dollar, and this time, bears need to return the pair below this level again to be able to break below the support at the 91st figure. The growth and ability of the dollar to consolidate above 0.9300 would significantly weaken the bearish pressure on the pair.
USDJPY
The sales of the yen contributed to the USD/JPY pair’s increase, up to the level of 89.64. Here, the pair bull faced a decent resistance, which at this stage could not constrain their onslaught. This provoked the players to take profits, causing the dollar to drop to the support level at 88.62. The Dollar/Yen pair’s state of being overbought involves the development of a downward correction, but it’s difficult to determine its scope, given that the previous attempt from 88.40 didn’t receive its development. The pair felt the support so far, from which the bulls will try to resume the dollar’s increase, but if this support doesn’t stand, then the rate will drop to 88th figure.