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Sunday, October 11, 2009
Crude Oil Weekly Technical Outlook
Crude oil edged higher last week but momentum is so far quite unconvincing. Nevertheless, further rise is still in favor as long as 68.16 support holds. Break of 73.16 resistance will confirm that fall from 75.0 has completed at 65.05 already. The corrective structure will in turn indicate that medium term rally is still in progress for another high above 75.0 before completion. On the downside, below 68.16 will suggest that rebound from 65.05 has completed and will flip intraday bias back to the downside.
In the bigger picture, medium term term outlook is quite mixed so far with crude oil still struggling around 55 weeks and 55 months EMA. The bearish case is still slightly in favor with 73.16 resistance intact. That is, medium term rebound from 44.2 has completed at 75.0 on bearish divergence conditions in daily MACD and RSI. Break of 65.05 support will solidify this case and target 58.32 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 33.2 to 75.0 at 59.03) for confirmation. However, break of 73.16 will in turn favor the case that rise from 33.2 is still in progress for another high above 75.0. Nevertheless, strong resistance should be seen in 76.77/90.24 fibonacci.....Entire article and charts!
Labels:
Crude Oil,
downside,
fibonacci,
Oil N' Gold
Crude Oil Rises a Third Day on Recovery in Global Fuel Demand
Crude oil rose for a third day on speculation fuel demand will increase as the global economy emerges from recession. Oil climbed after U.S. equity markets reached their highest in a year Oct. 9, fanning hope for a recovery in world energy consumption. An Investors Business Daily survey due tomorrow in the U.S., the world’s largest energy user, may show consumers were optimistic for a third month, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
“We are looking at an international economy that is going to be stronger in 12 months’ time,” said David Moore, a commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd. in Sydney. “There’s that conviction that things are going to be better down the track” even when some data is not “especially supportive,” he said. Crude oil for November delivery climbed as much as 79 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $72.56 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was at $72.23 at 9:26 a.m. Singapore time. Futures have gained 62 percent this year.....Read the entire article.
Invest AD Technical Analysis: Natural Gas May Climb to $7 Dollars
Natural gas may climb to $7 per million British thermal units after the commodity last month rebounded from a long term support level, according to Abu Dhabi-based Invest AD. Natural gas futures have almost doubled to $4.77 per million British thermal units since reaching a more than seven year low on Sept. 4. “Holding above a 20 year support and rebounding sharply from that level, signals an increase in demand for natural gas,” said Aksel Kibar, a portfolio manager at Invest AD, the investment firm owned by the Abu Dhabi Investment Council. “Any break above the $5.00-$5.50 range will push the prices toward the $6 to $7 area.”
Gas for November delivery fell 3.9 percent to $4.77 on the New York Mercantile Exchange Oct. 9. The fuel is down 15 percent this year, while crude oil is up 61 percent. “Natural gas underperformed crude oil in the last 10 years and in September the natural gas and crude oil ratio reached the lowest level in 20 years,” Kibar said. “This clearly shows an oversold condition for natural gas”.....read the entire article.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
New Natural Gas ETF's on The Way
It's no surprise with the recent increase of interest in natural gas that we have more choices coming our way in the ETF arena. Jefferies is expanding their coverage of nat gas with two new funds, the Jefferies Natural Gas Equity ETF and the Jefferies Energy Wildcatters Equity ETF.
While UNG continues to be the most popular ticker, most commercial traders have focused on the FCG. And the Jefferies Natural Gas Equity ETF looks to be a direct competitor with the First Trust ISE Revere Natural Gas ETF.
The "Energy Wildcatters" ETF will focus on giving traders a way to trade a basket of small and mid cap companies in both the U.S. and Canada. All companies must have a market cap of between $200 million and $2 billion, and bring in at least 75% of their annual revenues from exploration and production of natural gas.
I for one love the nickname "wildcatters" for this fund. Let their be no mistake, this ETF does not follow the daily price of natural gas.
Here is the SEC filing for the Equity ETF and the SEC filing for the Wildcatters Fund.
Labels:
energy,
ETF's,
Jefferies,
Natural Gas,
Wildcatters
Increased Natural Gas Pipeline Capacity in US Is Bad News for Canadian Natural Gas
A new natural gas pipeline in the United States is allowing cheap gas from the Rockies to displace more than 10% of Canada’s gas exports to the Midwest US, forcing more Canadian gas into storage and lowering natural gas prices for Canadian producers. The 1,679 mile, $4.4 billion Rockies Express pipeline, or REX, is providing about 1.5 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of cheap gas from the Rockies through the Midwest to Ohio. The latest section of REX just opened June 29.
The new pipeline is displacing about 600 million cubic feet per day (mmcf/d) of Canadian production, says Jack Weixel, director of Energy Analysis for Bentek Energy. Bentek provides specialized energy pipeline information to clients in the oil and gas sector in North America. Weixel estimates the mid-continent corridor of pipelines send just over 5 bcf/d of gas, net, to the US from Canada (some western Canadian gas goes back into Southern Ontario via Michigan). “It has pushed off about 600 million cubic feet per day off the Northern Border Pipeline, which runs into Midwest pipelines at Ventura, Iowa,” Weixel told me over the phone from his Colorado office.....read the entire article.
Friday, October 9, 2009
Chevron Squeezes New Oil from One of World's Oldest Fields
Chevron Corp. is employing new technologies in hopes of extending the life of one of the world's oldest and most prolific oil fields, a process that is being replicated elsewhere to help the energy industry squeeze more out of aging oil basins. The Kern River field has produced more than 2 billion barrels of oil in its 110 year history, but Chevron estimates it still holds another 1.5 billion barrels.
Chevron is using the Kern River field as a real world laboratory, testing enhanced recovery techniques and bringing in engineers from around the world to learn them. "The thing about being in this old oil field," said Chevron engineer Joe Fram, "you can try stuff." To get as many of those barrels as possible out of the ground and do so cheaply enough to turn a profit Chevron is deploying high tech temperature sensors to monitor its production, using three dimensional computer models to plan its wells and filtering waste water from the fields through walnut shells so it can be re-used .....read the entire article.
Labels:
Chevron,
CVX,
Kern County,
Rigzone
The Dreaded Vote of Confidence
Oh no! The dreaded vote of confidence. You know in professional sports when your team is playing lousy and just put in a dismal performance and the owner of the team or the GM gives you a “vote of confidence” and you’re fired the next week? Well it is a good thing that the Treasury Secretary isn’t a baseball manager or he would be gone. After the dollar took another drubbing, the White House came out and said that Obama has "tremendous confidence" in Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner right after the dollar hit an 18 month low.
Oh sure, the vote of confidence in question may not be in the US dollar but as the weakening dollar adds to inflation and increases the cost of oil and almost every commodity the average American buys, I would not feel too easy if I were Tim Geithner right now. The President has confidence in Mr. Geithner but do they have confidence in the dollar? The silence about the dollar out of the White House right now is deafening to the markets.....read the entire article.
Labels:
Crude Oil,
GM,
Tim Geithner,
US Dollar,
White House
Crude Oil Daily Technical Outlook
Crude oil edged higher to 72.55 but upside momentum remains unconvincing. Nevertheless, another rise is still mildly in favor with 68.16 support intact. Break of 73.16 will indicate that fall from 75.0 has completed at 65.05 already. The corrective structure will in turn indicate that medium term rally is still in progress for another high above 75.0 before completion. On the downside, below 68.16 will suggest that rebound from 65.05 has completed and will flip intraday bias back to the downside. Break of 65.05 will reaffirm the original bearish view that crude oil has topped out at 75.0 already and will bring fall resumption towards 58.32 key support next.
In the bigger picture, the lack of follow through selling so far dampens the bearish view that crude oil's medium term rise from 33.2 has completed at 75.0. Nevertheless, risk remains on the downside as long as 73.16 resistance holds. A break below 65.05 support will solidify the case the crude oil has topped out in medium term again. In such case, deeper fall should be seen to test on 58.32 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 33.2 to 75.0 at 59.03) first and break will target a retest of 33.2 low. However, a break of 75.0 will indicate that rise from 33.2 has resumed for 76.77/90.24 fibo resistance zone (38.2% and 50% retracement of 147.27 to 33.2) instead.....Here is the charts!
Labels:
bearish,
downside,
Oil N' Gold,
resistance
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Oil Pares Weekly Gain as Bernanke Says Fed May Tighten Policy
Crude oil fell in New York, paring its weekly gain, as the dollar climbed after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said monetary policy may be tightened once the economic outlook has “improved sufficiently.” Oil traded near $71 a barrel as the U.S. currency rose against the yen and the euro, damping the investment appeal of commodities including gold. Prices rallied 3 percent yesterday after the dollar declined and the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits dropped.
Bernanke’s remarks have had “a small impact on the immediate market,” said Ken Hasegawa, a commodity derivatives sales manager at broker Newedge in Tokyo. “It shows policy is not decided yet. The trend of the dollar will continue” to give direction to oil prices, he said. Crude oil for November delivery fell as much as 66 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $71.03 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract was at $71.13 at 11:09 a.m. Singapore time. Yesterday, it rose $2.12 to settle at $71.69. Futures are poised.....Read the entire article.
Labels:
Bernanke,
Crude Oil,
gold,
New York Mercantile Exchange,
yen
Devaluation of the Dollar Spurs Oil Investment
"Oil had a couple of things going on today -- most notably, the dollar went through its low from September," explained Darin Newsom, senior analyst with DTN, a market information service in Omaha, Nebraska. "So we've got this pressure in the dollar, and that is sparking all kinds of buying interest in commodities." Investment in the commodity is increased when the value of the dollar falls because oil is traded in the greenback and investors holding other currencies are able to purchase oil at a cheaper price. "We saw the dollar coming under pressure today on the idea that maybe the economy is still going to sputter around here for a while as we go into the fourth quarter, early first quarter of next year," Newsom continued.
"Even though the Federal Reserve hinted that in 2010 we would start to see interest rates possibly start to go up, certainly there is no indication now that is going to happen any time soon; and again with the dollar moving to the new low, it would seem to confirm that idea that we're in this time where we're going to just hold low interest rates.....read the entire article
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