$80 Magic!
Friday, October 23, 2009
by Phil Flynn of PFGBEST
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Is $80 the magic number that breaks the back of the fermenting economic recovery? Is eighty dollars a price or just a destination? Well yesterday it looked more like a destination as the front month oil contract hit $80 a barrel on the last trading day of the November contract before it retreated on a US dollar bounce and a plunging Canadian dollar. Oil fell back from $80 after the Producer Price Index came in showing benign inflation and numbers that showed the home-building market remained weak. Still the $80 a barrel area is raising concerns with oil bulls and OPEC that $80 a barrel plus oil could “hamper economic growth”. Comments by OPEC President Secretary-General Abdalla El-Badri seemed to put a scare into oil bulls that were looking for a reason to take profits anyway when he told Bloomberg News that “Anything above $80 will really hamper economic growth.” Does that mean that it is possible that if oil goes above $80 a barrel OPEC will pump more oil to help save the economy? Right now OPEC has been a pariah of the economic recovery by withholding supply to increase price. Their collision to keep prices high has created an imbalance in the system that could derail the economic recovery. While the rest of the world flooded the globe with stimulus our friends in OPEC did the opposite. Instead of allowing oil prices to fall and help heal the economy they tried to support prices in a sinking economy. Had they not done that it is possible that the demand for their product would be much stronger than it is. Yet because OPEC failed to allow the market to work the price of oil is higher than it should be. That becomes a problem and creates an imbalance. As the economy recovers instead of economic growth absorbing the price rise it now becomes a threat. As I have said many times before, High oil prices in and of themselves is not a bad thing as long as they are driven by economic growth. Yet if they are driven by a withholding supply in a marketplace artificially keeping prices high during n economic slowdown then that is when they start to do some damage. The funny part of this is that if OPEC had only said that they would pump as much oil as anyone wanted and temporarily lift quotas the truth is that demand for their product would be higher and at this point they could have commanded a $80 price without fear of demand destruction reprisals. The truth is that OPEC at this point would have made more money not less. The perception of an accommodative OPEC production policy would have taken pressure of the global economy and would have given more strength to the dollar and allow global central banks the flexibility to keep their accommodative policies longer without the now growing fear of commodity price inflation. In other words OPEC probably shot themselves in the foot for some short term gains that may turn out to be longer term pain. Instead of trying to work off an oil glut OPEC at this point might have had to start bringing back some of their idle production. Of Course el- Badri takes no responsibility for OPEC role in these higher prices! He points the blame at speculators. He says that there is no shortage of oil in the market yet he is calling on members of his group to continue to withhold supply. He says that OPEC won’t raise production at its meeting in Angola in December unless the 125 million barrels of crude and fuel that remains in floating storage are gone and that conventional stockpiles need to drop. El-Badri said to “Watch the floating storage, if that is eliminated, and watch the stocks, if they are at 52, 54 days, then OPEC will take action.” What great guys. Of course the imbalance created in part by OPEC is creating imbalances in the refining business. We know it is hampering refiners ability to make profits as high input costs an relatively weak demand cuts into their profits as the driven by lager macroeconomic forces are creating imbalances within the oil business. That seemed clear in last night’s American Petroleum Institute supply report. The API shows that a refiner while increasing runs slightly to 81.5% they are getting squeezed as high input prices and relatively weak demand is creating a situation that makes it very unprofitable for them to operate. Low runs helped crude stocks increase by 3.8 million barrels. Gasoline stocks fell 558,000 barrels and distillate stocks fell by 998.000 barrels. Crude runs fell by 94,000 barrels. Yet gasoline demand saw a bump up according to the MasterCard SpendingPulse report. Gasoline consumption in the U.S. rose to the highest level in almost two months as demand increased three-day Columbus Day holiday weekend.. Who knew that that was such a big driving holiday? MasterCard says that motorists bought an average 9.34 million barrels of gasoline a day in the week ended Oct. 16 which was 3.7 percent above the prior week and the highest level of demand since Aug. 21. Bloomberg news says that It was also the largest week-to-week increase in consumption since Sept. 26, 2008. All regions of the country recovered from the prior week, when demand fell 2.4 percent. Year over year Bloomberg says that demand rose 3.9 percent from 2008, when Gulf Coast refiners were restarting units that had been shut because of hurricanes Ike and Gustav. Demand last October was also weaker because of the U.S. recession, which increased the jobless rate and reduced consumer spending. Of course today we get the EIA report yet we still have to watch the dollar. Yesterday the Dollar rebounded yesterday as Canada's central bank held its key interest rate at a record low 0.25 percent and warned that the Canadian dollar's rise threatens to derail the country's recovery. The Bank of Canada said an economic recovery is under way but said this year's surge in the Canadian dollar is expected to more than fully offset recent favorable developments. As far as rates go the central bank reiterated its intention to hold the rate at its historic low until the middle of next year which Dow Jones reported that the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to keep policy unchanged in October, saying that its bond-buying program had substantially raised equity and corporate bond prices. In the minutes of the meeting, released Wednesday, MPC members agreed that if sustained - the rise in asset prices would help boost economic growth, as would the sterling's depreciation and declines in short-term interest rates. Yet they warned that those huge adjustments were still needed in banks' balance sheets, and warned of the risk of further losses in future. And that the forecast round ahead of the November Inflation Report would provide an opportunity to assess more fully how the medium-term outlook for activity and inflation had evolved since August." The Fox Business Network always follows through!!! Tune in where you can see me every day! And if you want to trade anything from stocks to futures or foreign exchange you need to open your account with PFGBest! Not only gas and grains but metals, gold coins, bars and even stocks. If your broker is not doing enough for you call me at 800-935-6487 or email me at pflynn@pfgbest.com .
Recent articles from this author
- When OPEC Eyes Are Smiling?! - Wednesday, March 17, 2010
- You've Got A Friend - Tuesday, March 16, 2010
- The Great Fire Wall of China - Monday, March 15, 2010
- Absolutely Astonishing - Friday, March 12, 2010
- HOT!HOT!HOT! - Thursday, March 11, 2010
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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