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Hype hype hype hype Iran


 

Oil prices got a bid from a rising stock market and concerns over Iran. Now, while some traders and analysts try to hype the Iran story, the truth is the odds of an imminent military conflict with Iran are being greatly exaggerated. And if we do actually get into a conflict, it is unclear as to whether or not it will have a long term impact on oil prices in a world awash in supply.

Many analysts point to the fact that the Iranians have threatened to close the Straits of Hormuz, a major choke point for global supply. The Straits are located between Oman and Iran and connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. According to the Department of Energy, Hormuz is the world's most important oil chokepoint due to its daily oil flow of 16.5-17 million barrels based on 2008 figures. At that time that was roughly 40 percent of all seaborne traded oil (or 20 percent of oil traded worldwide). Currently with OPEC production cuts, it is like to be in the 12 to 13 million barrels a day area.

Many military analysts doubt Iran’s ability to shut down the straits for any extended period of time. Even if they did the Department of Energy says that closure of the Strait of Hormuz would require the use of longer alternate routes at increased transportation costs. Some alternate routes would include the 745 miles-long Petroline, also known as the East-West Pipeline, across Saudi Arabia from Abqaiq to the Red Sea. The East-West pipeline has a capacity to move five million barrels per day. The Abqaiq-Yanbu natural gas liquids pipeline, which runs parallel to Petroline to the Red Sea, has a 290,000-barrel per day capacity. Other alternate routes could include the deactivated 1.65 million barrel per day Iraqi Pipeline across Saudi Arabia and the 0.5 million-bbl/d Tapline to Lebanon. Oil could also be pumped north to Ceyhan in Turkey from Iraq. There are two pipelines that can be used and they have a designed capacity of 1.1 million barrels a day and 500,000 barrels per day. Yet right now, due to sabotage, the one pipeline is running only 900,000 barrels per day and the other 300,000.

Now, while a shut down of the Straits of Hormuz would create a deficit in supply and sharply higher prices for a time, the deficit would be easier to replace from other sources than it would have been just a few years ago. With global inventories overflowing and the likelihood that an Iranian shutdown of the straits would be a battle that they would not win, is why the oil market is taking the Iranian threat in stride.

While the United States moves towards green energy sources China seems like it is trying to corner the global oil market. In its latest big move with big cash, as the Financial Times reports, China’s state-owned oil company is in talks with Nigeria to buy large stakes in some of the world’s richest oil blocks in a deal that would eclipse Beijing’s previous efforts to secure crude overseas. The Financial Times says that the attempt would put the Chinese into competition with western oil groups, including Shell, Chevron, Total and ExxonMobil who control and operate the 23 blocks under discussion. Sixteen licenses are up for renewal. CNOOC, one of China’s three energy majors, is trying to buy 6bn barrels of oil, equivalent to one in every six barrels of the proven reserves in Nigeria, sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest crude producer and a major supplier to the US. Details of the talks were revealed in a letter from the office of Umaru Yar’Adua, Nigeria’s president, to Sunrise, CNOOC’s representative, a copy of which was obtained by the Financial Times. The overall value of the Chinese offer is not disclosed, although some details suggest a figure of about $30bn. Some oil sector executives said the total on the table was $50bn.

Get ready for some Fox Fun by tuning into the Fox Business Network where you can see me every day! We are recommending selling rallies and putting on bearish option strategies! Call for today’s levels. Maybe it is time to get that account opened! Email me at pflynn@pfgbest.com or call me at 800-935-6487.

Sell November crude at 6800 - stop 7178.

Sell November heating oil at 17800 - stop 18000.

Sell November RBOB 16750 - stop 11690.

Sell November natural gas at 518 - stop 530.

 


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About the author


Phil Flynn is Energy Analyst and General Market Analyst with PFGBEST (www.pfgbest.com). Phil is one of the world’s leading energy market analysts, providing individual investors, professional traders and institutions with up-to-the-minute investment and risk management insight into global petroleum, gasoline and energy markets. Phil’s market commentary, fundamental and technical analysis, and long-term forecasts are sought by industry executives, traders and global media.

Because he has been available to media around the clock, even during some of the most turbulent market periods in history, and because he has built a solid reputation for accuracy in his market analysis and forecasts, through thousands of interviews and broadcast appearances for more than a decade, Phil Flynn has become a headline-making name even as he continues to provide expert advice and customer care to his proprietary trading account clients.

Media highlights include: CNN, CNBC, Bloomberg, ABC, CBS with Katie Couric, NBC’s “Today Show” and “Nightly News with Tom Brokaw”, FOX’s “O’Reilly Factor”, PBS’s “The Newshour with Jim Lehrer” and “Nightly Business Report”, MSNBC’s “The News with Brian Williams”, Wall Street Journal Report, The Wall Street Journal, Business Week, Investor’s Business Daily, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Associated Press, The Toronto Globe & Mail, Houston Chronicle, Futures Magazine, National Public Radio’s Marketplace, a chat with the President of the United States, and many more venues.

You can read Phil’s daily market analysis and blogs at www.pfgbest.com.

PFGBEST is among the largest non-clearing U.S. Futures Commission Merchants, with customers, affiliates and brokerage offices in more than 80 countries. The company is a leader in sustainable investing through diversified products including managed funds, futures, forex, options, full-service and discount brokerage, trader education, market research, and direct online futures trading through its BESTDirect™ platform, and numerous other platforms and applications.

Phil’s commitment to and experience in futures trading is documented in two books, The Mind of a Trader (Financial Times/Pitman,1997), and Trading Online (publisher, date), both by Alpesh B. Patel. Phil is a lifelong resident of Illinois. He attended Daley College in Chicago before beginning his career on the trading floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Phil Flynn
Phone: 800.935.6487
Email:pflynn@pfgbest.com

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