The Hopes and fears of oil traders are met in the Euro Zone tonight! There is nothing like a good Spanish bond auction and a strong German consumer confidence number to get our minds off Mario Draghi. German confidence unexpectedly gained and Spain sold 7.4 billion dollars in T-bills in a successful bond auction with a reasonable yield of 1.735% on the three-month T-bills, down from 5.11% at the previous sale on Nov. 22, and it paid an average yield of 2.435%, down from 5.227%.
It is all about hopes and fears and that has been the dominate force driving oil this year and in recent days. The hopes that the Euro zone would step up to the table with a big bazooka to put the Euro break up fears to rest were dashed. Mario Draghi is a drag and is making it clear that a Euro bond is highly unlikely. Yet the German consumer confidence is showing that Europe might be more resilient than thought and downgrade fears might not be coming as fast and furious as previously thought .Dow Jones reports that Fitch Ratings says the 'AAA' rating on debt issues of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) largely depends on France and Germany retaining their 'AAA' status.
The revision of the rating outlook on France to negative last Friday implies that the risk of a downgrade of EFSF debt has increased. We affirmed France's 'AAA' status but warned that that there is a slightly greater than 50% chance of a downgrade within the next year or two. This is therefore also the case for the 'AAA' ratings assigned to the EFSF's debt issues, unless additional credit enhancement mechanisms are introduced. The 'AAA' ratings assigned to EFSF debt issues rely on the EUR726bn of irrevocable and unconditional guarantees provided by the euro member states, and on the conservative guidelines the EFSF sets itself regarding debt management and liquidity risk.
Of the guarantees and over guarantees from 'AAA' rated member states, France and Germany provide EUR369.6bn, or over 80%. Although the EFSF could potentially remedy a downgrade of a small 'AAA' guarantor by increasing the size of its cash reserve or through additional credit enhancements, this would be far more challenging if a larger guarantor like France or Germany were downgraded. The primary source of ratings risk for EFSF debt issues is therefore the possibility that one or more of its largest 'AAA' guarantors is downgraded.
Oil may be also getting a boost from the Dow Jones report that, “Saudi King Abdullah is urging neighboring states to join in a formal Gulf union to confront what he called rising threats to their security and stability, as Gulf leaders convened to discuss regional uprisings and growing Arab worries over Iran. You must realize that our security and stability are threatened and we need to live up to our responsibilities," King Abdullah told the leaders of the five other nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council, gathered in Riyadh in their first annual GCC meeting since the Arab uprisings began. "
The Gulf's monarchies, emirates and sheikhdoms risked losing all if they failed to combine their efforts, Abdullah said. "So I ask you to go beyond the stage of cooperation, to a union in a single entity. King Abdullah gave no immediate public details of how he envisioned such a union taking shape, or operating. Gulf officials had said earlier that the two day meeting launched Monday would address greater cooperation in the military realm and others. The GCC comprises Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Bahrain.” Stay tuned.
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Showing posts with label Riyadh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riyadh. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Sabic Net Tumbles 76% on Plastics, Fertilizer Demand
Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world’s largest petrochemical maker, said second-quarter profit fell 76 percent, missing analysts’ estimates, as the economic slump hurt prices and demand for plastics and fertilizers. Net income declined to 1.81 billion riyals ($483 million) from 7.55 billion riyals a year earlier, Riyadh based Sabic said today in a statement on the Saudi bourse Web site. The average estimate of four analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was 2 billion riyals.....Complete Story
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Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Crude Oil Below $45, SABIC's First Loss, Iran Supports OPEC Cut
"Nymex Crude Falls Below $45 Barrel On Economic Fears, Expiration"
Crude oil futures were down Tuesday, slipping below $45 a barrel on lingering concerns about the U.S. economy.
Light, sweet crude for May delivery was down $1.82, or 4%, at $44.06 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after falling as low as $43.83 a barrel. June Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange fell $1.37 to $48.49 a barrel.
For the past month, oil prices have held up relatively well, hovering around or above the $50 a barrel mark despite domestic crude supplies swelling to 18 year highs. But crude sliced nearly a tenth off its value Monday, plunging with equity markets as investors worried about the health of U.S. banks, despite a series of better than expected quarterly results....Complete Story
"SABIC Drops After First Quarterly Loss Since 2001"
Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world’s largest chemicals maker by market value, dropped the most in five months in Riyadh trading after reporting a surprise quarterly loss on slumping demand for plastics and fertilizers.
Sabic fell 9.9 percent to 42 riyals, the biggest decline since Nov. 22. The first quarter net loss was 974 million riyals ($259.7 million) after booking 1.18 billion riyals in goodwill writedowns, the Riyadh based company said today in a statement. The loss is the company’s first since the last quarter of 2001 and misses analyst estimates of 1.02 billion riyals in profit.
The first simultaneous recession for six decades in the U.S., Japan and Germany forced Sabic to slash polyethylene and polypropylene prices and cut its workforce as demand weakened for plastics....Complete Story
"Iran Supports OPEC Output Cut Conditionally"
Iran said on Thursday that it will conditionally support OPEC output cut, the official IRNA news agency reported.
Iran's representative to OPEC Seyyed Mohammad-Ali Khatibi voiced the conditional support to some reporters on the sidelines of an oil gas show in Tehran, MENA said.
"The OPEC decision to cut its output at a meeting in May in Vienna depends on the market condition," Khatibi was quoted as saying, adding "if there is an oversupply of oil (in the market), the output cut will be considered."....Complete Story
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