Thursday, September 8, 2011

EIA: This Week In Petroleum....The Latest Twist in Crude Oil Price Patterns


Since the beginning of the year, a defining feature of the oil market has been the apparent "disconnect" between prices for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and those for other crude oil grades. Prices for WTI have been trading at an ever widening discount to those of other grades, such as North Sea Brent, a close WTI look-alike in terms of gravity and sulfur content (Figure 1). The WTI futures curve and that of Brent futures also have parted ways: WTI futures remain in contango, meaning that prices for nearby contracts trade at a discount to those for later delivery, while Brent futures have swung into backwardation (prompt barrels trading at a premium to deferred ones). Recently the discount of WTI futures to Brent futures, a closely watched market indicator, has reached a record-high level. EIA's newly released Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) expects a large WTI discount to persist through the end of 2012. Recent market developments, however, warrant a fresh look at its likely causes.

Figure 1. Spot price spreads: Brent - WTI and LLS - WTI

Historically, periods of WTI discount versus Brent have generally been associated with a buildup in inventories at Cushing, OK, the delivery point of the NYMEX crude futures contract. It was thus not surprising that the recent widening of the WTI discount initially coincided with an unprecedented buildup in Cushing crude stocks (Figure 2), thanks to both surging domestic and imported crude supply in the Midwest and a significant expansion of local storage capacity. Seeking to explain the price discrepancy between Cushing and other crude grades, analysts pointed to a lack of pipelines out of Cushing that, in effect, stranded rising crude supplies in the landlocked Cushing and broader Midwestern markets, causing stocks to rise.

Figure 2. Cushing crude oil stocks and Brent - WTI price spread


Also, any increase in the WTI-Brent spread has traditionally been associated with a corresponding shift in the WTI time structure: the spread between front-month and second-month WTI generally closely tracks that between front-month Brent and front-month WTI (Figure 3). That makes sense, given the transit time to move Brent barrels from the North Sea to the U.S. Midwest.

Figure 3. Weekly Brent - WTI price spread and WTI contract 2 - contract 1 price spread


But neither of these features is evident in recent market trends. Far from building further, in line with the widening of the WTI discount, Cushing crude stocks have been falling fast in the last few months. At latest count, Cushing stocks were more than 9 million barrels below their early-April peaks - a reversal in inventory trends that has not stopped the WTI discount from widening further (Figure 2). Meanwhile, WTI "time spreads" - the price difference between prompt WTI barrels and WTI supplies for later delivery - have not kept up with the Brent-WTI spread. The contango in WTI futures has shrunk, with front-month WTI trading at a narrowing discount to the second-month contract, while the Brent-WTI spread has taken off - a development that normally would portend a widening WTI contango (see Figure 3).

Two considerations may help make sense of these somewhat counterintuitive developments. First, it may help to look beyond U.S. inventories and consider the stock situation in Brent's own regional market. As reflected in the steep backwardation in Brent futures markets, the European crude market continues to face very tight supply conditions. The disruption in Libyan crude exports, most of which normally end up at European refineries, drew European crude stocks well below their normal range (see Figure 4). Despite the release of oil from International Energy Agency strategic storage and increased Saudi exports, the tight crude oil supply situation in Europe has blunted the downward price impact of weak economic recovery. Current supply conditions in Europe have had as much impact on the transatlantic arbitrage and Brent-WTI spread as the buildup of excess supply in Cushing.

Figure 4. OECD Europe crude oil stocks

Second, rising inventories at Cushing should not be seen, in this case, as the exclusive, primary driver of the WTI price discount, but rather as a secondary symptom of underlying transportation bottlenecks. Those bottlenecks, which have been the real root cause of recent relative WTI price weakness, can also manifest themselves in other ways, such as rising transportation costs.

Bottlenecks are not airtight: depending on the pull from other markets, some oil can seep through, but at a cost. Such has been the case of the Cushing storage hub and the broader Midwestern market, from which rail, barge and truck shipments of crude have been on the rise. The greater the pull on Midwest crude supplies, the higher the transportation costs, as the least expensive ways out of the Midwest are tapped first and transportation costs increase for the marginal barrel.

Logistical bottlenecks hindering crude flows from Cushing and the Midwest to the U.S. Gulf Coast can be seen as the primary factor of the WTI disconnect, whether they express themselves through stock builds and an associated increase in marginal storage costs (thus increasing the slope of the contango), or through stock draws and a ramp-up in marginal transport costs (causing "location spreads" to widen). Notwithstanding the recent decline in Cushing inventories as markets resort to premium-cost transportation capacity to move discounted WTI crude, such capacity is itself constrained and may soon be overwhelmed by renewed growth in exports from Canada or regional refinery maintenance. Pipeline companies are going ahead with plans to add capacity out of the region, whether through new, dedicated lines (Keystone XL, awaiting regulatory approval) or by reversing and/or expanding existing infrastructure, as Magellan and others have announced. Until such plans come closer to being realized, or the crude supply balance in Europe significantly improves, the WTI discount will likely persist and perhaps widen further.

Gasoline and diesel prices advance for second straight week
The U.S. average retail price of regular gasoline increased this week, adding almost a nickel to reach $3.67 per gallon. The average price is $0.99 per gallon higher than last year at this time. The largest increase came on the West Coast where prices gained more than eleven cents per gallon over last week; the average price in region is now $3.86 per gallon, the most expensive in the country. The average price in the Rocky Mountain region gained an even four cents per gallon on the week. Moving east, average prices in the Midwest and on the East Coast rose 3-4 cents per gallon. Rounding out the regions, the Gulf Coast saw prices add about two cents per gallon to remain the least expensive in the country at $3.49 per gallon.

Similar to gasoline, the national average diesel price climbed almost a nickel to $3.87 per gallon. The diesel price is $0.94 per gallon higher than last year at this time. The West Coast average diesel price gained more than seven cents per gallon, the largest regional increase for the week. The Rocky Mountains followed, adding more than five cents to last week's price, while the Midwest registered an increase of just under five cents per gallon. The East Coast and Gulf Coast each saw price increases of about four cents per gallon.

Propane inventories level out
Last week, U.S. inventories of propane began to level out as the re-stocking season draws to an end. Total U.S. propane stocks drew slightly to end at 53.6 million barrels. Midwest regional propane inventories decreased by 1.1 million barrels, while Gulf Coast stocks increased by 1.0 million barrels. Rocky Mountain/West Coast regional stocks also grew by 0.1 million barrels, while East Coast inventories drew slightly. Propylene non-fuel use inventories represented 5.5 percent of total propane inventories.

Posted courtesy of the EIA's This Week In Petroleum 



Adam Hewison: President Obama’s Job Is On The Line

Tonight at 7 PM (EST), all eyes will be focused on President Obama and his speech on creating new jobs in America. This is probably one of the most important speeches he will ever give and could mean the difference between keeping or losing his job in November.

So what will this mean to the markets?

So far, President Obama’s words have not helped the markets in the past. It remains to be seen what is going to happen to gold, the equity and futures markets after the president’s speech. We will get an early indication as to how the markets interpret President Obama’s make or break speech during after hours trading and in the futures markets. As always, we will rely on our Trade Triangle technology.

So far today the $90 a barrel has proven to be resistance on the upside in the October Crude Oil contract. What is also disturbing is the fact that the Williams % R is setting up for a negative divergence to the downside, but it’s to early to tell. We will need to have more data to confirm this move. A negative divergence on the Williams % R indicator is as follows: the market makes a new rally high, yet the Williams % R does not follow. This technical situation is also exacerbated by the fact that crude oil is at the top of its Donchian trading channel.

Our Trade Triangles are for the moment mixed, indicating a lack of any serious long term trend. With our monthly Trade Triangle still in a negative mode, we expect that crude oil will continue to move in a sideways manner much like it did for most of August. The longer term monthly Trade Triangle must be given more weight than either the daily or weekly Trade Triangles.

Monthly Trade Triangles for Long Term Trends = Negative
Weekly Trade Triangles for Intermediate Term Trends = Positive
Daily Trade Triangles for Short Term Trends = Positive
Combined Strength of Trend Score = + 70


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Crude Oil Bulls Gain New Strength in Thursday Morning Trading

Crude oil was slightly lower in Wednesday evenings overnight session as it consolidates some of Wednesday's rally. Yesterdays break through 89.90 resistance hints that a rebound from 75.71 has resumed as prices are diverging and are turning neutral to bullish signaling that sideways to higher prices may be possible near term. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought

If October extends the rebound off August's low, the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.41 is the next upside target. Closes below Tuesday's low crossing at 83.20 would confirm that the rally off August's low has ended. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target.

First resistance is the overnight high crossing at 90.11. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.41. First support is Tuesday's low crossing at 83.20. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Thursdays trading is 88.66.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Bulls Face Challenge of Strong Resistance as Crude Oil Closes Higher

Crude oil closed higher on Wednesday and above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 confirming that a low has been posted. The high range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Thursday. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought and are turning bearish signaling that a short term top might be in or is near.

If October renews this summer's decline, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.72 is the next downside target. Closes above the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.57 would confirm an end to this summer's downtrend.

First resistance is last Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.57. First support is Tuesday's low crossing at 83.20. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 79.38.

CME: Rollover Dates For Equity Index Products

The following provides some important information about the Rollover dates for the suite of Equity Index Products listed and traded at CME Group exchanges.


• The Rollover date is generally defined as eight calendar days before a contract expires for most our equity index futures. This date differs slightly for Nikkei 225 contracts, as the rollover date has historically been the Monday before expiration.

• From the Rollover date on, it is customary to identify the second nearest expiration month as the “lead month” for the index futures, as the nearest expiring contract will terminate soon and will have a less liquid market than the new “lead month” contract.

• For certain contracts traded in open outcry and then traded electronically on CME Globex during the overnight (ETH) sessions, the rollover date will dictate which contract is listed for trading on Globex.

Note: The following contracts have only one contract listed at a time for trading during the overnight CME Globex session (these contracts are not available on CME Globex during the RTH session):

Æ’ S&P 500
Æ’ NASDAQ-100
Æ’ S&P MidCap 400
Æ’ S&P SmallCap 600 futures.

Therefore, the rollover date will determine what contract month is listed for trading during the CME Globex session.

For example, if the rollover date is Thursday, June 9, 2011, for the S&P 500 futures contract, the CME Globex session beginning that evening (at 3:30 p.m. Chicago time /CT) will list the Sep 2011 contract for trading and the Jun 2011 contract would no longer be available to trade on CME Globex.

On the trading floor, the Sep 2011 contract will become the lead month beginning at 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, June 9, 2011.

Upcoming Rollover Dates, Quarterly Equity Index Futures Contracts

June 2011 Rollover Dates

• Nikkei 225 futures: Rollover Monday, June 6, 2011 - Expire Friday, June 10, 2011

• All other equity index futures contracts: Rollover Thursday, June 9, 2011 - Expire Friday, June 17, 2011

• Reminder: As previously announced in CME Group Special Executive Report S-5662 from March 16, 2011, CME will delist the E-mini MSCI Emerging Markets futures and E-mini MSCI EAFE Index futures on June 19, 2011, for trade date Monday, June 20, 2011. For more information, please visit www.cmegroup.com/equities.

Sept. 2011 Rollover Dates

• Nikkei 225 futures: Rollover Tuesday, September  6, 2011 Expire Friday, September 9, 2011

• All other equity index futures contracts: Rollover Thursday, September 8, 2011 Expire Friday, September 16, 2011

Questions?
Phone     1-800-331-3332
Email       equities@cmegroup.com

David Banister: Is This Bull Market In Gold Over With Double Top?


A few weeks ago I penned a public article and private forecast for my subscribers calling for a major correction in Gold being due. 72 hours after my forecast, Gold had dropped a stunning $208 per ounce in 3 days catching most by surprise. Why did I forecast a top in Gold then? Why did Gold rally back to new highs recently? Is the Gold Bull Market now over? Let’s see if I can answer those questions with some level of logic below.

I had forecasted a major correction because Gold has had a run of 34 Fibonacci months from October 2008 to August of 2011 from $681 to $1910 per ounce spot price in US dollars. That type of pattern was formed with a clear 5 wave move, with obvious corrections along the way. The reason I was confident of a major correction was due to the confluences of the 34 months of time, the price relations to prior rallies and corrections, and the Fibonacci sequences coupled with the sentiment and cover stories on Gold in major publications. Gold should have entered into a multi-month correction that will consolidate that 34 month move, and the first shot across the bow was the $208 drop in 3 days.

Interestingly, that $208 drop over 3 days corrected 50% of the 8 week move from $1480 to $1910. As we can see markets move very very fast these days and can whipsaw even the best of traders. I told my subscribers to cover their short bets at $1724 spot, and since then we rallied to $1920 this week before topping again.

The reason Gold rallied back and touched the old highs and then some was due to the German Court pending decision regarding the constitutionality of backing the Eurozone countries with bailout funds. Today we had a positive decision by the court denying claims that the bailouts were unconstitutional. Had the German Court ruled the other way, we would have seen Gold spike to $2000 and the SP 500 and European Bourses tank hard. So if you were getting long Gold on this recent rally, you were taking on a lot of short term headline risk and I told my subscribers it was best to stand aside until we got the ruling.
Now that the ruling came out, Gold has topped at 1920 in what typically traders would call a “Double Top” pattern, but it’s more involved than that. 

In the work I do, we call it an “Irregular correction “ pattern, where the retracement of the $208 decline runs all the way back up and past where the decline began at $1910. These are very rare patterns and again, I believe exacerbated by the Eurozone issues as they hinged short term on the German decision. What we should see now is what I call a “C WAVE” to the downside, with targets typically at $1620 relative to the rally from $681 to $1910 over 34 months. A drop of $290 is only 15% from the highs and would fill in gaps in the Gold chart.

Will Gold drop that low? The fundamentals for Gold are screamingly bullish, but the entire world knows that and it may be priced in for a while. Gold should consolidate those topping highs for a while to let the fundamentals catch up the price action in Gold which ran ahead of them and then some. The Gold bull market should run for 13 Fibonacci years, and I have been bullish since November 2001. I understand the fundamentals are very strong for Gold, so please don’t miss-read my comments ore forecast. I use crowd behavior and psychology to help pinpoint major tops and bottoms, and right now we should have some more work to the downside to correct sentiment in Gold and then allow for the base building period before the next leg up towards the highs in 2014.


Over at my TMTF service, we called the top in Gold and shorted it and covered at $1724. We also recently forecasted the deep drop in the SP 500 from 1231 highs and warned our subscribers in advance. My methods use contrarian signals and behavioral patterns to warn of pivot highs and lows in advance. 

Consider checking out David Banisters site at Market Trend Forecast.Com and take advantage of a 33% discount or sign up for our occasional free updates.

Storms Put Pressure on Crude Oil Shorts, Bulls maintain The Advantage

Crude oil is trading higher as the effects of tropical storm Lee and threats of a new storm work through the gulf region. But traders see this as temporary short covering rebound as lack of confidence in the Europe financial crisis dominates commodity futures. Crude oil Stochastics and RSI are overbought and are turning bearish signaling that the corrective rally off August's low might be ending soon.

Closes below August's uptrend line crossing near 84.26 would confirm that the aforementioned correction has ended. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target. Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted.

First resistance is last Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.51. First support is August's uptrend line crossing near 84.26. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Wednesday morning is 85.27.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Crude Oil, Gold and Natural Gas Market Commentary For Tuesday Afternoon

Crude oil closed down $0.58 a barrel at $85.87 today. Prices closed nearer the session high today. The bulls have faded after last Friday's very weak U.S. jobs report. I would not be surprised to see choppy trading mostly between $80 and $90 a barrel for the next few weeks.

Gold futures closed down 8.00 an ounce at $1,868.70 today. Prices closed nearer the session low today after hitting a fresh all time record high of $1,923.70 in overnight trading. Profit taking pressure was featured as the day wore on. A stronger U.S. dollar index and lower crude oil prices were also bearish factors for gold today. The fact that U.S. stock indexes had moved well off their daily lows by the time gold closed was also negated for the precious yellow metal.

Natural gas closed up 5.6 cents at $3.928 today. Prices closed nearer the session high today and saw short covering in a bear market. Bears still have the solid near term technical advantage. The next upside price breakout objective for the bulls is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $4.159.

The U.S. stock indexes closed weaker today but well up form the session lows. Last Friday morning's very week U.S. jobs report has sunk the indexes. Key for the stock index bulls is to hold prices above the August lows. If they can do that, then those lows will likely mark major lows. If U.S. stock indexes drop below the August lows, then fresh, serious chart damage would be inflicted to suggest a fresh leg down in prices in the near term. Trading action in the stock indexes this week will be extra important.


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Adam Hewison: It Never Seems to go Away, Does it?

It never seems to go away, does it?

What I’m referring to is the problems with the economy and the sovereign debt problems in Europe. It would appear as though no politician wants to touch these major economic problems with a ten foot pole. Of course like everyone else on the planet they are concerned about protecting their own jobs and getting reelected.

The market action in the equity markets today can only be described as negative. Gold may be having a major reversal, and the dollar is soaring to its best levels in quite some time. Like I have said before, the markets are never boring.

The pullback in crude oil from the top of the Donchian Trading Channel that we have mentioned in previous publications has now taken place. The October crude oil contract has also managed to ignite an intermediate term sell signal when it moved below the parabolic SAR indicator. This should indicate that we will see more sideways to lower price action. With a score of -65 we expect we will see a broader trading range with support coming in around the $80 a barrel level.

At the present time our long term monthly Trade Triangle indicator is negative while the weekly Trade Triangles is positive which is creating a mixed picture at the moment for crude oil. However, the longer term monthly Trade Triangle must be given more weight than either the daily or weekly Trade Triangles.

Monthly Trade Triangles for Long Term Trends = Negative
Weekly Trade Triangles for Intermediate Term Trends = Positive
Daily Trade Triangles for Short Term Trends = Negative
Combined Strength of Trend Score = – 65




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Crude Oil Market Commentary For Tuesday Morning Sept. 6th

As the world wakes up Tuesday to a fresh round of currency wars [the Swiss getting a shot in this morning] oil traders remain focused on 82.95 as their next support target. Crude oil was lower due to profit taking in overnight trading. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought and are turning bearish signaling that the a-b-c correction off August's low might be coming to an end.

Closes below August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81 would confirm that the aforementioned correction has ended. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target. Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted.

First resistance is last Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.88. First support is August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Tuesday morning is 84.53.
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