Oil fell more than $5 to $136 per barrel Tuesday morning as concern about a global economic slowdown prompted traders to conclude that oil demand growth may slow in the quarters ahead.
Oil fell $5.11 to $136.26 per barrel -- a drop that brought its two-day decline to more than $8. (Oil is still about 90% higher than a year ago, and about 400% higher than in 2000.)
The other major energy commodities, likewise, plunged for a second day, in early Tuesday trading. Heating oil plummeted 14 cents to $3.83 per gallon, unleaded gasoline fell 12 cents to $3.36 per gallon, and natural gas plunged 45 cents to $12.53 per million BTUs.
Some bloom off the energy rose?
Economist Peter Dawson said investors and traders are taking a harder look at the energy picture, in light of recent corporate and economic data points. While underscoring that "it's always difficult to try to evaluate events in motion," Dawson said a protracted recession in the U.S. combined with a global slowdown "would take some of the bloom off the energy asset rose."
During June, inflation in China was up 7.1%. That is somewhat better than recent figures, but is still very troubling. According toReuters, "for the first six months as a whole, consumer prices were 7.9 percent higher than a year earlier -- well above the government's official full-year target of 4.8 percent."
Over time, and that time may be brief, high costs in China means rising prices for exports to places like the US. Much of the inflation on the mainland comes from rocketing oil and commodities prices. Those will eventually have to be passed through the manufacturing process and that means that prices for American-bought goods sourced in China are going up. That in turn, puts pressure on US inflation rates.
The China numbers should remind US companies and policy markers that rising costs are a global issue and not a local one. The rising price of oil and food will take their toll across the world and cannot be contained in any one geographic sector. As the American economy slows, increasing prices out of China also increase the risk of stagflation.
All in all, China is just the first link in a long chain and that link is weakening.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Apparently rock musician Sammy Hagar is not one of U.S. Sen. John Warner's (R-Virginia) constituents.
Sen. Warner has suggested that the U.S. Congress might want to consider reimposing a national speed limit to save gasoline and possibly ease fuel prices, The Associated Press reported.
However, Warner has not specifically sponsored legislation calling for a roll-back to 55 miles per hour: he has only asked U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman to research which speed limit would provide optimum gasoline efficiency given current technology, and also wants to know if the Bush Administration would support a Congressional effort to mandate a lower speed limit, The AP reported.
OPEC President Chakib Khelil Monday blamed the U.S. Federal Reserve for sky-high oil prices, The Associated Press reported, adding that surging prices are not likely to decline.
Khelil said he believes the declining dollar has pushed oil higher and that the Fed's interest rate reductions to boost the U.S. economy are the primary reason for the dollar's decline, the AP reported Monday.
In an effort to jump-start the U.S. economy slowed by the nation's worst housing slump in a generation, the Fed has cut short-term interest rates by 325 basis points to 2% since September 2007.
Khelil's comments did not push oil higher as of early Monday afternoon. Oil traders looked past those comments and focused on the dollar's rise for the day versus the euro and pound, and new data points suggesting a deeper, longer U.S. recession, energy trader Jim Dietz told BloggingStocks Monday. Oil fell $3.70 to $141.59 per barrel, with futures hitting a daily low of $140.15 earlier in the day.
Oil traders adopt 'defensive' stance
"Right now the oil market is focused on the U.S. economy not OPEC's comments, and many were spooked by the Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae announcement. Everything is in pullback mode now, oil, stocks, gold, other commodities. The mood is defensive...preserve capital, basically," Dietz said.
Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) may have to raise up to $46 billion and $29 billion in capital, according to Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH), Bloomberg News reported Monday. Fannie Mae fell $3.17 to $15.61 while Freddie Mac declined $2.51 to $11.99 in Monday afternoon trading.
The need to fulfill promises of increased aid for Africa, and a general agreement between the United States and Russia on an approach to Iran's nuclear program took center stage as leaders from the Group of Eight industrial nations met Monday in Japan, The Associated Press reported.
President Bush, attending his last summit as a sitting U.S. president, underscored the importance of providing aid for Africa, calling on wealthy nations to provide mosquito netting and other aid to prevent needless deaths, the AP reported.
Basic items - - even equipment as basic as mosquito netting - - can reduce mortality rates in sections of Africa. Mosquito netting prevents children and others from dieing of bites from disease-carrying mosquitoes.
In 2005 the G-8 pledged to increase global aid to $130 billion, and increase assistance to Africa to $50 billion. ONE, a nonpartisan group working to end extreme poverty, predicted that the U.S. and the United Kingdom will meet their commitments, while France, Italy, Germany and Canada are off the mark, Bloomberg News reported Monday.
Increased global food aid likely
Economist Glen Langan, whose specializations include agricultural economics, said increased aid for food and agricultural development will likely be announced by G-8 leaders at the summit, or soon thereafter, due to the rising cost of food's impact on poorer nations. "The aid will be targeted to meeting basic needs first, but with an eye toward directing some funds to self-sustaining agriculture," Langan said, adding that Africa "has the potential to achieve food production gains greater than South America."
"The agriculture, mining and oil and gas businesses are booming globally, and mining firms have been plagued by a lack of available earth-moving and subsurface mining equipment," notes Paul Tracy.
"The prices of wheat, soybeans, corn and other basic food commodities are surging to new multi-year highs. There are two main drivers of this trend: rising consumption of agricultural commodities in emerging markets and increased consumption of crops for biofuels production.
"The developing world is also driving demand for petroleum products and other raw materials. A building boom in China, for example, is driving demand for steel, copper and aluminum used in building construction.
"One problem holding back these industries in recent years is a shortage of equipment. Mining firms have been plagued by a lack of available earth-moving and subsurface mining equipment. And agricultural products producers need tractors, combines and other equipment that are in short supply globally to efficiently run their farms.
We had the internet bubble and the real estate bubble and now, there is the ethanol bubble. Recently, I ran some numbers on ethanol and to my amazement realized that it is – too use a catch phrase from the environmental world -- not sustainable. Turning food into fuel is just plain silly; and when oil prices come down the ethanol bubble could pop big.
I ran did a little research and found some numbers:
47% of the Mexician' diet is corn
it takes 2.4 pounds of corn a day to feed a hungry person
it takes 22 pounds of corn to make one gallon of ethanol
there are 42 gallons of refined gas in one barrel of oil
Now, a little basic math can be very enlightening. To replace one barrel of oil, it takes 42 gallons of ethanol or (42x22)=924 pounds of corn. That is enough corn to feed one hungry person for (924/2.4) 385 days – a little more than one year.
Oil fell more than $5 to about $140 per barrel Monday morning after Iran's foreign minister expressed confidence in talks with western governments regarding the nation's nuclear program, Bloomberg News reported.
Iran's foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki told CNN talks are "in a new environment" and "new approaches" are possible.
A rising dollar Monday morning also helped push oil lower. The dollar strengthened against the euro and the British pound on expectation G-8 industrial leaders will verbally support the dollar at an upcoming economic summit in Japan.
Oil fell $5.14 to $140.15 per barrel Monday morning before recovering slightly to $141.30. The other major energy commodities also plunged in early Monday trading. Heating oil plummeted 13 cents to $3.97 per gallon, unleaded gasoline fell about 10 cents to $3.47 per gallon, and natural gas plunged 42 cents to $13.16 per million BTUs.
Economist Glen Langan, who argues that fundamentals (primarily rising demand) are the major factors determining oil's price, said legitimate progress on the Iran uranium enrichment issue would ease traders' concerns about Iran's supply. "Iran is still OPEC's No. 2 producer and a major exporter of oil, so lasting good news with regard to Iran will ease traders minds about tensions in and near the Persian Gulf. That will take some pressure off prices," Langan said. About 20% of the world's oil flows through the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.
The dollar rose to its highest level in more than a week Monday morning on talk leaders at the G-8 summit in Japan will support the currency in an attempt to halt rising commodity prices.
The dollar strengthened about one-half cent versus the euro to $1.5629 and about 1 cent versus the British pound to $1.9659 in Monday morning trading. The dollar also rose about one-half yen to 107.66 versus Japan's yen.
Ian Stannard, a senior currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA (NASDAQ: BNPQY), France's largest bank, told Bloomberg News Monday that support for the dollar in the form of verbal invention continues, driven by the thesis that a stronger dollar, globally, is in everyone's interest.
Many economists agree that a falling and weak dollar has been a factor in rising commodity prices. Oil and other commodities tend to rise when the dollar falls as investors / traders seek to preserve purchasing power of the decreased value of dollar-denominated commodities by bidding their price up. However, economists differ regarding the extent of the weak dollar's commodity-inflation impact, with some arguing it is only a mild factor.
'Actions speak louder than words'
Further, economist Peter Dawson told BloggingStocks Monday, dollar bulls should not feel too emboldened by a verbal stance by the G-8.
"Renewable fuels and clean energy, a sector beaten down hard since last fall, are now primed for a major comeback," says Eric Roseman, editor of The Commodity Trend Alert. Here's his ETF play on the sector.
"With every passing day the price of crude oil rises, the secular trend to alternative energy becomes even more powerful. Consumers, companies and governments are now sick and tired of soaring energy prices.
"The long-term solution is to obviously reduce our dependence on oil and increase our consumption of renewable fuels like wind, solar, and nuclear energy.
"The bull market in alternative energy began in 2005 when a host of companies in this thriving sector went public, supported by government subsidies, especially in Germany and Spain. Interestingly, Germany and Spain have just reduced solar energy subsidies this spring.
"In my view, those subsidy cuts don't matter at this stage. When companies in the solar sector are making money, why should governments continue subsidizing them?
Oil easily pushed past $145 Thursday morning after traders calculated that the already weak dollar has further to fall after the European Central Bank increased a key interest rate by a quarter point to 4.25%.
Oil rose as much as $2.28 to $145.85 per barrel -- an all-time high -- before easing back slightly to trade at $144.40 at mid-day.
Oil tends to rise when the dollar falls as investors/traders seek to preserve purchasing power of the decreased value of dollar-denominated commodities by bidding their price up. However, it's important to note that the dollar/oil correlation is not perfect: there have been instances in which the dollar fell and oil fell.
These days, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet isn't too popular in currency market circles, if one trader is any indication.
Trichet, a legendary inflation hawk, campaigned for and secured a quarter-point interest rate increase Thursday, to 4.25%, in the ECB's key, short-term interest rate, the refinance rate. Many economists thought Trichet's action was premature, despite Europe's 3.7% annualized inflation rate, and that it could spell further economic slowing Europe. Unbowed, Trichet plowed ahead.
With the above as a backdrop, many currency traders, Andrew Resnick among them, plowed ahead with euro-long trades on the calculation that a higher interest rate for the euro will cause the euro to rise. Resnick went long with the euro in the euro-dollar currency pairing.
But then what did Trichet do? He stated at the regular post-ECB rate decision press conference that he has "no bias" and that "we have no pre-commitment" to raise rates further - - signaling that one interest rate increase may be enough, Bloomberg News reported.
The result? The euro plunged versus the dollar after his comments: it fell 1.2 cents - - a large price move in the currency market - - to $1.5758 Thursday morning.
And with it plunged Resnick's profits for the day. All his trades were stopped-out for losses. 'Trichet is making many friends among traders'
"Trichet," Resnick said, "isn't making many friends among traders, and probably not among business executives and economists as well." Resnick followed his evaluation of Trichet's social standing with several candid and frank, descriptive, colorful comments about the ECB president that can't be published here. Suffice it to say that Resnick is not happy with Trichet's two-step.
In a move that surprised almost no one, the European Central Bank increased its key interest rate, the refinance rate, a quarter point to 4.25%. The increase brings the refinance rate to its highest level in seven years.
The currency market, which for the most part had already factored-in the ECB rate increase, did not react initially following the decision. The euro was virtually unchanged versus the dollar at $1.5882.
The other major currency pairings also held their ground. The dollar was unchanged against the pound at $1.9884 and the dollar rose slightly, up 0.10 yen to 106.25 yen, versus Japan's yen.
Economist: Trichet 'jumped the gun'
London-based economist Mark Chandler told BloggingStocks Thursday the ECB's decision was no surprise, but that doesn't decrease his disappointment with the ECB's stance.
"I afraid I'm going to really disagree with this one. I understand where [ECB President Jean-Claude] Trichet is coming from, but he's jumped the gun from my perspective. He could have waited another quarter," Chandler said. "There's a real concern now he's going to throw Europe into a recession like America, and if the dollar continues to fall against the euro, his rate increase won't lower inflation all that much. I don't like that bargain at all."
The worst news Wednesday regarding oil wasn't its record high close of $143.57 per barrel. It was the dollar.
"There may be another record Thursday, and another Monday, and so on," energy trader Jim Dietz told BloggingStocks Wednesday.
The reason? Concern that the already weak dollar will fall further, Dietz said. The European Central Bank meets Thursday to vote on interest rates, with many economists expecting the ECB to increase it refinance rate by 25 basis points to 4.25%. If it does, the dollar may fall further, Dietz said.
Traders eye ECB meeting
"And if the dollar falls, that would put even more upward pressure on oil, so all eyes will be on that ECB decision," Dietz said. The ECB will announce its decision Thursday at 7:45 a.m. EDT. Oil tends to rise when the dollar falls, as investors / traders seek to preserve purchasing power of the decreased value of dollar-denominated commodities by bidding their price up. However, it's important to note that the dollar / oil correlation is not perfect: there have been instances in which the dollar fell and oil fell. Thursday won't be one of those instances, Dietz said.
"If we see a major move down by the dollar, say one cent against the euro, that will easily send us over $145 a barrel," Dietz said. As of late Wednesday afternoon, the dollar had already fallen about nine-tenths of a cent to $1.5882 versus the euro.
Many investors / traders are aware of the increasing demand for oil stemming form emerging markets economic growth. Vibrant, dynamic economies in China and India, but also in Australia and the Middle East, have been the biggest factor in oil's four-year bull market, which has brought oil prices to a record of over $140 per barrel.
Moreover, oil sector analysts, economists and executives are counting on continual, sizable oil production increases from non-OPEC nations to help contain oil prices in the quarters and years ahead, but now it appears there may be a problem related to that assumption.
Non-OPEC, OPEC output estimates lowered
The U.S. Energy Information Administration, the U.S. Department of Energy's statistical unit, has lowered its estimate for non-OPEC production in 2010 by 1.1 million barrels per day to 51.8 million barrels per day, from last year's forecast of 52.9 million. At the same time, the EIA lowered its 2010 OPEC production forecast by 400,000 barrels to 37.4 million.
Further, the EIA now sees 2010 global oil demand at 89.2 million -- in other words a statistical balance between daily global oil supply and demand.
Economist Glen Langan told BloggingStocks the projected production reduction is not good news for consumers in either the developed or developing worlds.