Monday, November 1, 2010

Crude Oil Advances to a Two Week High on Chinese Expansion, U.S. Stimulus

Crude oil increased to a two week high after Chinese manufacturing expanded at the quickest pace in six months and on expectations the Federal Reserve will announce measures this week to stimulate the U.S. economy. Oil rose 1.9 percent as China’s Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said the country’s purchasing managers’ index climbed to 54.7 in October. The Fed may make more asset purchases, known as quantitative easing, after its meeting Nov. 2 to Nov. 3. An industry report showed that U.S. factory output expanded more than forecast last month.

“The combination of the strong Chinese data and expectations for quantitative easing this week, is giving traders good reasons to be long,” said Phil Flynn, vice president of research at PFGBest in Chicago. Crude oil for December delivery rose $1.52 to $82.95 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest settlement since Oct. 18. Prices are up 7.7 percent from a year ago. Brent crude oil for December settlement increased $1.92, or 2.3 percent, to $85.07 a barrel on the London based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 0.2 percent to 1,185.70 at 2:31 p.m. in New York, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 0.2 percent to 11,142.82. The reading in the logistics federation’s PMI in China compared with 53.8 for both the previous month and the median forecast of 13 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The country overtook the U.S. last year as the biggest energy user......Read the entire article.



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Phil Flynn: Terror Premium Is A Cost Of Doing Business

What was striking in the Friday reports about the attempted mail bomb terror attack was the market's indifference. The market has already priced in a certain amount of terror possibilities and in a way we are paying for it every day. We are paying for it in the cost of insurance and freight and we are paying for it in terms of even higher commodity prices. It's sad that we have come to expect this type of evil in the world. Today oil is getting a boost out of strong data from China and India.

The Chinese official purchasing manager's index rose to a six-month high in October to 54.7 from 53.8 in September. The market was only looking for a 52.9 reading. The strong number brought back the risk appetite and rallied the oil and broke the dollar. The HSBC version came in at only 54.8 but did have one of the biggest month to month increases in history. With readings like these it is no wonder that China is trying to slow its economy down. The main driver for the market this week will be the Fed. Now everyone knows that the Fed and the size of its massive QE2 program and how it is implemented will be the main factor in the pricing of oil and all other commodities.

People are finally getting the fact that it has been the Fed and the different phases of this economic crisis that has driven the cost of oil, NOT SPECULATORS! US product exports should be strong again in this week’s reports. Oil Inventories are still at the highest level since the 1930s! Look for crude to be down 2.0 million barrels, gas down 2.0 million, distillates down 2.5 and runs up 0.5.

Watch Phil on the Fox Business Network every day. And get his trades by calling him at 800-935-6487 or email him at pflynn@pfgbest.com.


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Gold, Crude Oil, SPX....Trading Around the Election

This week we have a major wild card (Election) happening on Tuesday. Most of you know I don’t get involved with political discussion for several reasons… one of them being that I am Canadian “an outsider” looking in.

That being said, it looks and feels as though the market has been propped up and oil has been held down from an invisible force. Lots of theories going around saying higher stock and lower/stable oil prices will give voters the warm fuzzies to keep the current leaders elected… I prefer trading the charts and not getting caught in the Wall St. hype.

Let’s take a quick look at some charts

SPY – SP500 ETF Trading Vehicle
The broad market has been finding buyers as the beginning of each month and it looks as though it’s ready for another bounce. I do want to note that Tuesday or Wednesday we could see a very sharp move in the market as investors around the world digest the outcome. It is very important to keep positions small and or use protective stops incase of a flash crash or flash rally for those of you trying to pick a top.


Gold Price – Futures Contract
The price of gold looks to be setting up for another wave down in my opinion. More often than not we see a sharp pullback, sideways chop then a pop above recent highs. It’s that pop above recent highs which tends to suck in long positions only to roll over and make new lows quickly after. As noted in previous reports, gold has support around $1300 area and that’s what I am looking for. Again this week’s election will trump recent price action so we really just need to sit tight until the smoke settles.


Crude Oil Futures:
Crude oil has been trading sideways for a solid month while the US dollar has been dropping at tremendous rate. Many oil traders believe the price is being manipulated to stay down until the election is finished because of the strong negative affect rising oil prices have on the economy/end user/voters.


In short, this is a going to be a wild week in the market. Keeping position sizes small and using protective stops is crucial during times like these. We have taken profits on both of our positions from last week and have moved our stops to breakeven for the balance just incase of a crash.

Overall, I am neutral on the market for a couple days until we see what type of blip we get on the charts.

If you would like to receive my Daily Trading Commentary, Charts and Trades be sure to join my newsletter at The Gold And Oil Guy.com

Chris Vermeulen



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Oil N'Gold: Crude Modestly Higher ahead of FOMC Meeting

Crude oil price climbed higher in Asian session on Monday as USD's decline ahead of the FOMC meeting raised appeal for commodities. Data showing strong manufacturing activities in China also boosted oil prices. Gold kept hovering around 1360. We believe either upside or downside surprise from Fed's QE should benefit positive for gold in the long term. However, a milder than expected dose of QE may trigger selloff in the metal in the near-term.

Economic data released last Friday were mixed. US GPD grew by an annualized pace of +2% (consensus: +2.2%) in 3Q10, from +1.7% a quarter ago. University of Michigan consumer confidence was revised down -0.2 points to 67.7 in October. While the ‘economic conditions' index rose +3.6 points to 76.6, the ‘expectations index' fell -2.7 points to 61.9.Chicago PMI, however, beat market expectations and improved to 60.6 in October. We believe the set of data should not alter the Fed's decision to announce new QE measure at the meeting this week.

The dollar fell against major currencies with the exception of Japanese yen. The market forecast the size of Fed's new bond buying program would be $1-2 trillion but it may begin by announcing $500B over several months or $100B per month. Apart from purchasing Treasury securities, the Fed may modify its language used in the accompanying statement. At the Boston Fed conference, Chairman Ben Bernanke said that 'clear communication about the longer run objectives of monetary policy is beneficial at all times but is particularly important in a time of low inflation and uncertain economic prospects such as the present' and the FOMC will continue to 'actively review its communications strategy with the goal of providing as much clarity as possible about its outlook, policy objectives, and policy strategies'.

China's PMI expanded to 54.7 in October from 53.8 a month ago. This is the fastest growth pace in 6 months and signaled the country's economy can sustain through the government's tightening measures. This is also positive news for the oil market as, according to IEA, China has overtaken the US as the world's largest oil user.

Let's Look at the Commitment of Traders....


Finding the Trend in the Foreign Exchange Markets

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Crude Oil Market Commentary For Monday Morning Nov. 1st

Crude oil was higher overnight as it consolidates some of last week's decline. Stochastics and the RSI are neutral to bearish signaling that sideways to lower prices are possible near term.

If December renews last month's decline, trendline support drawn off the August-September lows crossing near 78.87 is the next downside target. Closes above last Monday's high crossing at 83.28 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted.

First resistance is last Monday's high crossing at 83.28.
Second resistance is the reaction high crossing at 84.80.

Crude oil pivot point for Monday morning is 81.37

First support is the reaction low crossing at 79.90.
Second support is the uptrend line drawn off the August-September lows crossing near 78.87.



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Sunday, October 31, 2010

UNG: Why I Consider This ETF a Frightening Investment

From overleveraged Delta Petroleum, to overhyped Houston American Energy, to over the hill Energy Conversion Devices, there's no shortage of spooky investments in the energy sector. These are all relatively small companies, though, and unlikely to draw in space monster sized amounts of money.

For me, the most terrifying investment vehicle in the space is an ETF that has vaporized untold amounts of wealth since some mad scientists of Wall Street brought it to life in 2007. I'm talking about the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) exchange traded fund.

The ETF's popularity is easy enough to understand. Like the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) or the Powershares DB Agriculture Fund (DBA), UNG provides investors a way to bet on the direction of a commodity (or basket of commodities, in the case of the agriculture fund) without having to accept company risk, dabble in futures contracts, or take delivery of a silo full of grain.

With commodities increasingly viewed by investors as an asset class, such funds are all the rage with pension funds, hedge funds, and retail investors alike. UNG trades more than 20 million shares daily, or well over $100 million by dollar volume. The liquidity here is tremendous, keeping the fund price closely in line with daily net asset value. Nothing frightening so far, right?

The problem with UNG, as well as countless other ETFs that invest in near month futures contracts, is that the fund's value gets chewed up like a zombie victim as the contracts get rolled from month to month. Compounding this issue of "roll yield" is that the larger the fund gets, the harder it gets to nimbly exit expiring contracts and enter new ones. The fund spreads its roll dates over four days, which in theory should help to minimize the impact of its trading, but I still suspect that other savvy market players are able to game this pattern.

After the past few years' performance, shares are off roughly 85% since inception, you'd think that investors would have run away screaming by now. For some reason, though, they just keep getting lured back in. Perhaps there's a mind control device at work here. That, or investors think they can actually time a recovery in natural gas with great enough precision to avoid getting their faces ripped off by the Negative Roll Yield Mutant.

If you want to trade in and out of this ETF in a matter of minutes or hours, that's your prerogative. For those investors out there who, like me, anticipate an eventual recovery in natural gas prices but want to be able to ride out another year of depressed prices if need be, I'd suggest ditching this frightening fund in favor of a low cost producer who can survive the current rig invasion. Two companies that potentially fit the bill are Range Resources (RRC) and Southwestern Energy (SWN). You can read my case for the latter company, one of the premier shale gas operators here.

From Toby Shute at Seeking Alpha


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ExxonMobil: A Big Bet on Natural Gas

Exxon Mobil is the biggest publicly traded company in the world, but its stock price has been lagging over the last year chiefly because a lot of people wonder why it’s making such a big bet on natural gas. Exxon Mobil spent $41 billion a year ago to acquire XTO Energy, doubling its natural gas reserves. And it is building up a massive liquefied natural gas capacity around the globe. Too bad for Exxon Mobil that a gas glut in the United States and elsewhere is causing gas prices to tank, and a boom in shale drilling promises moderate prices for years to come.

I caught up with William M. Colton, the company’s vice president for corporate strategic planning, late Friday afternoon and asked him about natural gas. I got an earful of passionate praise for the product that Exxon Mobil has staked so much on. There is no doubt about gas with this executive. “If there is any kind of major trend, we think it’s going to be a shift toward more natural gas,” he said. “Natural gas is available. It’s the most efficient way to generate massive power. It’s affordable. We already have gas infrastructure in place. From a CO2 emissions standpoint, it’s 60 percent cleaner than coal, and it’s all U.S. We have 100 years of supply.”

And for the world? “Natural gas will be the fastest growing fuel to supply the world’s growing demands into the future.” Okay, okay, natural gas is great then. But can it ever be profitable?
That’s where the discussion gets really interesting. Mr. Colton thinks policymakers are one day going to put a price on carbon dioxide emissions, a debatable point of view, perhaps, now that cap and trade legislation looks dead in Congress and some anti-tax Republicans appear poised for victory on Tuesday......Read the entire article.

Here is your FREE trend analysis for ExxonMobil

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Halliburton Rejects Blame for BP Cement Job

Halliburton, whose failed cement job on the BP well in the Gulf of Mexico was identified as a contributing factor to the deadly blowout by a presidential investigative panel on Thursday, is defending its work and assigning the blame for the accident to BP. Panel Says Firms Knew of Cement Flaws Before Spill (October 29, 2010) Inquiry Puts Halliburton in a Familiar Hot Seat (October 29, 2010) In a six page statement issued Thursday night, Halliburton questioned tests that showed its cement mixture to be unstable and incapable of holding back the oil and the gas in the well, saying the tests were conducted on formulas other than what was eventually used on BP’s Macondo well. It said that a sample of the cement mixture it planned to use on the well, tested shortly before pumping began on April 19, had produced a positive result.

But Halliburton admitted that no stability test was conducted on the actual recipe for the cement used on the well. The company said that BP had ordered a change in Halliburton’s customary formula for cement by adding a higher proportion of a chemical that slows the hardening of the mixture. The well blew out on April 20, killing 11 workers and eventually releasing nearly five million barrels of oil into the gulf. Since then, BP, Halliburton, Transocean and other partners in the well have traded accusations of blame as civil and criminal investigations have proceeded.......Read the entire article.


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Oil N'Gold: Crude Oil Weekly Technical Outlook For Saturday Oct. 30th

Crude oil continued to be bounded in choppy sideway trading between 79.25 and 84.45 last week. Outlook remains unchanged. With 78.04 support intact, there is no confirmation of reversal yet. The consolidative price actions from 84.43 also suggests that recent rally is not over. An upside break out will be in favor. Though, in case of another rise, we'll continue to focus on reversal signal inside resistance zone of 82.97/87.15. On the downside, break of 78.04 support will indicate that rise from 70.76 is over and deeper decline should be seen to retest this support level first.

In the bigger picture, after all, we're still favoring the case that medium term rally from 33.2 is already completed at 87.15. Recovery from 64.23 is treated as a correction and should be near to completion, if not finished. Even in case of another rise, strong resistance should be seen as crude oil enters into resistance zone of 82.97/87.15 and bring reversal. We're still expecting another fall to 60 psychological level (50% retracement of 33.2 to 87.15 at 60.18). However, decisive break of 87.15 will put focus on long term fibo level at 50% retracement of 147.27 to 33.2 at 90.24.

In the long term picture, current development suggests that rebound from 33.2 is finished at 87.15, inside 76.77/90.24 fibo resistance zone as expected. Price actions from 147.27 are treated as consolidation in the larger up trend and with 90.24 fibo resistance intact, a test of 33.2 eventually is in favor. Though, decisive break of 90.24 will bring stronger rally to above 100 psychological level as a relatively powerful second wave of the consolidation continues.

Nymex Crude Oil Continuous Contract 4 Hour, Daily, Weekly and Monthly Charts.


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Friday, October 29, 2010

Commodity Corner: Crude Oil Settles Lower; Natural Gas Breaks $4.00 Mark

Crude oil for December delivery settled lower Friday after the U.S. Commerce Department reported a lower than expected gross domestic product (GDP) estimate for the third quarter of 2010. Oil ended Friday's trading session $81.43 a barrel, a 75 cent decline from the previous day. The Commerce Department stated earlier in the day that Real GDP grew 2.0 percent at an annual rate during the third quarter, below the 2.1 percent that the private sector anticipated. During Friday's session, oil peaked at $82.12 and bottomed out at $80.56. The commodity is down 1.3% compared to Monday's settlement price.

Natural gas continued to benefit from predictions of colder temperatures for much of the Central and Eastern U.S. through next week. The December futures price settled at $4.04 per thousand cubic feet Friday, a 15 cent gain from the previous day and a 21.7% improvement from Monday's settlement price; note that the November contract was still being traded Monday. Gas traded within a range from $3.83 to $4.035 Friday. The price of gasoline for November delivery fell by a penny Friday, settling at $2.10 a gallon. Gasoline, which is up nearly 1% for the week, traded from $2.07 to $2.13.

Courtesy of Rigzone.Com

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