Energy & Commodities

The Euro In Free-Fall

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The Euro elected the Yearly Bearish Reversal at the 12150 area and it has penetrated the 2010 low so far of 11880 intraday reaching so far 11801. The key support lies at a set of DOUBLE WEEKLY BEARISH REVERSALS found at 11778. If we elect that this year, the Euro will fall most likely BELOW par to the 103 area. We do have Weekly Bearish Reversals at 11850 and 11640. A weekly closing below 11640 will be devastating.

This is all part of the game at foot. I have warned the dollar had to rise and this will TURN DOWN the US economy later this year. Welcome the return of volatility. The banks may be able to trade proprietary again as they technically establish internal hedge funds for their own money, yet the real problem is emerging the lack of liquidity. You can raise heaps of cash these days. But the markets are returning to their infancy – lack of participants leading to more and more illiquidity, which translates into higher volatility. Now only a weekly closing back above the 12510 area will suspend the free fall temporarily.

Low Oil Prices Fuel Bonanza Increases in Ethanol Stocks

Chen Lin was one of the very few who foresaw the collapse in oil prices, so investors are well advised to pay attention to his advice. In this interview with The Energy Report, the author of the What is Chen Buying? What is Chen Selling? newsletter touts the prospects of a few oil companies that can prosper in the downturn, and explains why cheap oil means high profits for U.S. ethanol producers.

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The Energy Report: You anticipated the collapse of the price of oil. How did you see this coming when so few others did?

Chen Lin: I was very fortunate. In an interview with The Energy Report last year, I expressed my fear that the price of oil could fall as low as $47 per barrel ($47/bbl). Because I invest in and follow a lot of fracking companies around the U.S. and Canada, I knew how fast North American oil production was increasing. Coincidentally, major Wall Street firms started to agree with my assessments one year later.

On Sept. 5, 2014, I alerted my subscribers that I had sold out a lot of energy stocks and reduced a lot of other positions to raise cash. Thanks to these timely sales, I’ve had a good year so far. But it’s been very tough watching oil fall as far and as fast as it has. 

As the oil price is in free fall, many companies with high leverage to the price will likely go under. Investors need to be extra careful in picking beaten-down stocks in the energy sector. My personal view is that the oil price is likely to continue to fall into next year, and possibly won’t find a bottom until next spring. I am watching it closely. It is very important to stay with companies that can survive this downturn, if not benefit from it. 

TER: Angelos Damaskos of Sector Investment Managers Ltd. told The Energy Report that increased North American oil production due to development in the shales has been balanced by decreased oil production elsewhere in the world. Therefore, he argued, there must be another cause for the oil price fall, and suggested significantly reduced buying from China. Do you agree? 

CL: No. China’s oil demand has been increasing, and there’s no way the Chinese government can hide it. China is the second-largest oil importer after the U.S. In fact, China’s oil imports have increased by as much as 50% recently because of the price reduction. China is filling up its strategic reserve. 

North American oil production has increased, so if demand stays constant, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) would have to reduce production to keep the price stable. 

TER: Since the price has fallen, does this suggest that OPEC has increased production?

CL: Possibly. I can understand Saudi Arabia getting sick of Canada and the U.S. taking its market share and acting accordingly. Partly because of the American military presence in the Gulf region, those countries cannot squeeze U.S. shale production without American permission. 

Another possibility is the U.S. acting to squeeze Vladimir Putin and Russia. The U.S. and the Saudis, acting together in the 1980s, brought the price of oil so low it was a big factor in the collapse of the Soviet Union. I can see the Saudis and the U.S. doing that again. You have Goldman Sachs calling for an oil price crash, and the Saudis are selling aggressively—and selling to the U.S. at much lower price than to Asia and Europe. The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) price is based in the U.S., and Saudi Arabia wants WTI to go down.

TER: About 90% of Saudi Arabia’s revenues come from oil production. How long can the country keep prices down? 

CL: When oil was over $100/bbl, Saudi Arabia built up its cash reserves, so it can easily ride out $80/bbl prices for 2–3 years. The real losers in this price war are oil producers with much higher costs—countries such as Russia and Iran. In November, the Russian ruble was defending 40 to the U.S. dollar; now it’s defending 50. 

TER: Back to China, are you worried or sanguine about the state of the Chinese economy? We hear stories about overleveraging, problems with debt and the banks, and a real estate bubble.

CL: All this is true. China definitely has a property bubble. Bank leverage is definitely high. The situation is not good and getting worse. But the Chinese government has more freedom to take action than the U.S. does, or the countries of the European Union do. 

Ideally, China needs to depreciate its currency to stimulate exports to Japan and Europe, its biggest trading partners. The U.S. would not allow devaluation, however, so China is somewhat stuck. But I believe China can weather this situation for some time. 

TER: Is the “revolution of rising expectations” a threat to China’s stability? People who have long been poor become inured to poverty. When they become a little bit richer, however, they come to expect ever-increasing prosperity. When this doesn’t happen, people can get very angry very quickly. 

CL: That’s a very good point. It’s a possibility. We must keep in mind, however, that the Chinese government retains strong control of the media and other means of popular discontent. Despite the recent problems, the current Chinese regime has been very popular because of its anti-corruption campaign and its moves against the state monopoly. The new regime’s honeymoon isn’t over yet and is likely to continue for the near term.

TER: How long before oil prices again reach $100/bbl? 

CL: It’s hard to say. The lower oil price will decrease production, but not immediately. This will occur in 2–3 years. As I see it, the drop in oil price will actually help the price reach $100/bbl in the future. Many oil companies are now reducing capital expenditures (capexes), so exploration is being curtailed. Fracking companies are reducing their activities. Ultimately, this must lead to higher prices.

TER: Lower oil production will lead to higher oil prices, but lower gold production hasn’t led to higher gold prices. What’s the difference?

CL: We cannot live one day without energy, without oil. Without oil, we cannot drive our cars, get to our jobs, heat our homes. We can, however, live without gold for a few years. Gold is more of a financial instrument than a commodity.

TER: How much damage will oil at less than $70/bbl cause to shale oil and oil sands operations? 

CL: Many companies in these spaces are cutting capexes by 20–30% for next year. Production could be down 20-30% in 2–3 years. 

TER: Shale oil and oil sands operations are, by their nature, very high capex. And shale oil wells don’t produce for long. Could three years of $70/bbl oil kill off shale oil? 

CL: No. I have checked with a lot of companies—some I own, some I follow—and the word is that prices of $50–60/bbl would be needed to kill shale oil.

TER: Now that the Republicans control both houses of Congress, will the Keystone XL Pipeline be approved?

CL: This is one of the top priorities for the Republicans in Congress. Though the recent efforts to approve the pipeline failed, Congress will likely bring it up next year. Keystone approval would be great news for Canada. Canadian oil producers have suffered so much, so I’m glad they would profit the most. The oil sands would benefit hugely as well. 

But this would be a long-term benefit because it will be years before Phase 4 would go into operation. In the near term, what could be a huge problem for the Canadian producers are new rail regulations coming into effect in 2015. This is in reaction to the many shipping accidents of recent years. These regulations will be really tough. They will raise shipping costs and reduce exports. Canadian oil companies are facing more pain before the Keystone starts.

TER: Which oil sands company is your favorite, and why? 

CL: I own Pan Orient Energy Corp. (POE:TSX.V). Its pilot oil sands project is in Alberta, but it also owns many conventional projects in Asia. Pan Orient is my favorite energy play because of its very strong balance sheet. The company just announced a $42.5M asset sale in Thailand. This brings its cash value, plus the other 50% of the Thai project, to CA$2.25 per share. It is trading now at $1.70/share. Beyond that, you get Canada and Indonesia for free. 

Pan Orient plans to sell its Canadian asset. But right now, that asset is valued, for share purposes, at zero. At rock bottom, it’s worth $100M. In Indonesia, Pan Orient’s partner will cover drilling costs for 2015. The company announced the Indonesia deal with Talisman Energy on Nov. 11, so its cash position will go even higher. In addition, Pan Orient will have an experienced partner with major Indonesia presence drilling on its very large concessions; the target is as large as half a billion barrels of oil equivalent. That’s a huge wild card the market didn’t expect. The company is in an ideal situation now because the cash position is there, Canada is producing, Thailand is producing, and the cash flow is covering the expenses. 

TER: Which pure oil play junior is your favorite? 

CL: Mart Resources Inc. (MMT:TSX.V) has been my home run of the past few years. I’ve already received a dividend that was more than my original investment. Mart just announced the new pipeline has started flowing. Once the new pipeline is fully ramped up, we should see the production triple, which will generate huge cash flow. Mart’s production cost is exceedingly low. 

TER: Is Mart seeking aggressively to expand its operations?

CL: It is. Mart is part of a consortium that has just acquired a new Nigerian asset from Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE), Total S.A. (TOT:NYSE) and Eni S.p.A. (E:NYSE). The consortium will control 45% of a block producing 30,000 barrels per day (30 Kbbl/d).

TER: Which natural gas juniors do you like? 

CL: I used to own Rex Energy Corp. (REXX:NASDAQ), but not anymore, the main issue being its heavily indebted balance sheet.

TER: Rex Energy is in the Appalachian and Illinois basins. How long before these regions are tapped out? 

CL: They will probably last for quite some time. Right now, prices are low, and producers aren’t generating much cash flow. But we may have a very cold winter, and natural gas stocks could be back in favor. And we might start to export natural gas from the U.S. and Canada as early as next year. That could be very positive in the long run. 

TER: Are we looking at a natural gas price crash due to overabundance?

CL: Some recent finds have been phenomenal, so the price could potentially go even lower. Hopefully, we can build up liquefied natural gas exports soon.

TER: Is there another company you like in this sector?

CL: One I do own is Cub Energy Inc. (KUB:TSX.V), which is drilling in Ukraine. Unfortunately, more than half of its production is in East Ukraine, a conflict area. It is still producing, but it cannot drill more wells. It is, however, getting good results from West Ukraine. Cub is a good, long-term Ukraine gas play. 

TER: The first oil shock was in 1973, 41 years ago. Since then alternative energy has been all the rage. But we remain essentially dependent on oil and gas, four decades later. Do you worry that the 30% decrease in the oil price could cripple alternative energy companies and their projects? 

CL: That depends. Some alternative energy companies will be hurt. One such company I own is Alter NRG Corp. (NRG:TSX; ANRGF:OTCQX). It uses plasma to burn garbage to generate natural gas that’s very clean, with no waste and no pollution. That could be attractive to such highly polluted countries as China and India. Currently, new garbage-burning plants in China generate a lot of resistance, but adopting plasma technology makes it much more attractive. 

Alter NRG has already built a plant in the United Kingdom (U.K.), and is building a second. In an island country like Britain, garbage is a huge problem. There is no room for landfills, so garbage must be shipped outside the country. There’s a high tipping fee, raised from consumers, to pay for collection. The natural gas price in the U.K. is very high as well. The return on investment in Alter NRG’s U.K. operations is very high, even after the fall in energy prices.

TER: Can you explain Alter NRG’s business model? 

CL: The tipping fee alone makes its U.K. projects worthwhile, so the natural gas generated is free. The company can sell the gas or use it to generate electricity, which is sold for a high price. And this is renewable electricity, so it is of premium value. The ash produced by incineration is pure, and can even be used in construction. 

I’ve been to Puerto Rico, another island nation, and I’ve talked to local people and companies that would love technology like Alter NRG’s. The only problem for this company is that it’s a long process from recognition of the technological benefits to government approval and construction. 

TER: Why do you believe the future is so bright for ethanol producers?

CL: In September, ethanol followed oil down in price. But there was a complete rebound and more in October. The conventional wisdom is that ethanol is considered part of gasoline, 10% by law. So when the oil price falls, and the gasoline price falls, the price of ethanol should fall too. That explains the coordinated short attacks on ethanol in the past two months. Shares of Pacific Ethanol Inc. (PEIX:NASDAQ) fell 60%, while the short interests in REX American Resources Corp. (REX:NYSE) more than tripled. I own both these companies, as well as Green Plains Renewable Energy Inc. (GPRE:NASDAQ)

The conventional wisdom about ethanol has been proved wrong. Lower oil and gas prices encourage more consumption. More gas consumption, by law, requires more ethanol—more ethanol, in fact, than can be produced. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. plants are running at 930,000–940,000 barrels per day. Maximum daily U.S. ethanol capacity is 925,000 barrels per day. That’s why the ethanol price rebounded sharply in October and is now higher than in the summer, when oil sold at $100/bbl. 

On the supply side, few ethanol plants are coming on line because it is very difficult to get Renewable Identification Number (RIN) permits from the Environmental Protection Agency. So don’t expect any major new plants in the next few years. This issue was discussed in detail during the question-and-answer session of the Great Plains’ recent conference call.

TER: But ethanol share prices are still depressed.

CL: That’s why I’m so excited. The oil index funds are short ethanol, but they don’t understand the situation. Last quarter, Pacific Ethanol beat its earnings estimate with $0.33/share. Its margin has since risen from $0.35/gallon to more than $1/gallon. Imagine how much money it’s making now. The company has some debt, but its cash exceeds that by $30M. The company is now considering a dividend and a share buyback, as is Green Plains.

REX American and Green Plains also boast robust balance sheets and record-high margins. I am bullish on ethanol stocks. 

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TER: The use of ethanol for fuel requires the diversion of agricultural products, which leads to higher food prices. We’ve seen significantly higher food prices in the last few years. Do you think it’s possible that, given the lower prices of oil and gas, politicians might cut the 10% requirement?

CL: Actually, they are looking to increase it to 15%. Thanks to genetic modification, harvests of corn and soybeans are at historic highs, and the commodities are priced at historic lows. That’s another reason why ethanol companies are so profitable. Input costs are at an all-time low, with output prices at an all-time high. 

TER: Do you think ethanol companies are a better bet than oil companies?

CL: I do, especially from now until the end of the year. We have a tax-loss selling season. I see a lot of funds potentially going out of business or facing heavy reduction. Meanwhile, ethanol is booming. 

Earlier, I mentioned the rail-transportation regulations coming into effect in 2015. They will be particularly beneficial for Pacific Ethanol because it is selling ethanol in California, and its price is based on the ethanol from the Corn Belt, in Iowa, which is transported by rail. Shipping costs will jump in 2015, so ethanol margins will increase. 

Again, by law, gasoline must contain at least 10% ethanol, and when shortages occur, the price of ethanol skyrockets. The law is the law. The most recent conference calls of Green Plains and Pacific Ethanol confirmed the coming, strong ethanol price. This is not reflected in share prices yet, which are already bound to increase greatly based on current margins. 

TER: Chen, thank you for your insights.

\Chen Lin writes the popular stock newsletter What Is Chen Buying? What Is Chen Selling?, published and distributed by Taylor Hard Money Advisors Inc. While a doctoral candidate in aeronautical engineering at Princeton, Lin found his investment strategies were so profitable that he put his Ph.D. on the back burner. He employs a value-oriented approach and often demonstrates excellent market timing due to his exceptional technical analysis.

Want to read more Energy Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page

Small-Cap Stocks Poised To Move

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Highlights from this Interview

• Almaden Minerals Ltd. “Stocks such as AMM could benefit from the January Effect.”

• Galane Gold Ltd. “GG has a great management team.”

• Integra Gold Corp. “ICG is the best story in Quebec and could be a takeout target.”

• Pershing Gold Corp. “PGLC’s project is open pit and all infrastructure is in place, a rare situation.”

• Red Eagle Mining Corp. “RD has one of the most economic, high-grade, low-cost mines out there.”

• Goldcorp Inc. “The Canadian mines could be a big benefit for G.”

Are You Ready for the January Effect? As far back as 1942, economists have noted that small-cap companies in particular tend to surge at the beginning of the year in a cycle known as the January Effect. After the year we have seen in the natural resources space, The Mining Report checked in with sector experts to find out whether they are expecting this traditional gift, how they are preparing for it and what companies could benefit.

Rick Mills, founder, Ahead of the Herd: There has been a general long-term downward trend in the resource sector. Junior resource companies have had the stuffing knocked out of them; many are oversold and ripe for a bounce. 

The January Effect is a calendar or seasonal-caused increase in the relative strength of small-cap stocks over large caps in late December and early January. This seasonal effect is mostly over by the end of the first full trading week in January and is not to be confused with the “January Barometer,” an old market saw saying, “As goes the Screen Shot 2015-01-07 at 4.55.08 AMfull month of January so goes the market for the year.”

The January Effect, as it pertains to the junior resource sector, is caused by both large and small individual investors (and institutional investors window dressing—dumping laggards so they won’t show up in year-end reports) selling their stocks/rebalancing their portfolios starting in November and well into December to create a tax loss to offset capital gains. 

Smart investors and traders buy select stocks, starting as early as late November, through to the last day, or even a day or two beyond, of eligible tax-loss selling for the year. 

An excellent example of a consistent short-term January Effect trade would be Copper Fox Metals Inc. (CUU:TSX.V) recently trading as low as $0.095 and hitting a high of $0.15.

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Discovery is reaping shareholders rewards so worth watching is a uranium junior, Lakeland Resources Inc. (LK:TSX.V), exploring in the Athabasca Basin. A great way to leverage any uptick in the uranium price is Uranerz Energy Corp. (URZ:TSX; URZ:NYSE.MKT). [Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted on Friday, Jan. 2, 2015. On Monday, Jan. 5, Uranerz announced an all-share buyout by Energy Fuels Inc. (EFR:TSX; EFRFF:OTCQX; UUUU:NYSE.MKT)].

Great Panther Silver Ltd. (GPR:TSX; GPL:NYSE.MKT) is on top of the list of producers that are well positioned to take advantage of an uptick in gold and silver prices. Kootenay Silver Inc. (KTN:TSX.V) discovered and is developing the Promontorio project into an open-pit mine in Sonora, Mexico. The company recently drilled one of many prospects on its immense project and discovered another significant high-grade silver deposit, La Negra. 

New Carolin Gold Corp. (LAD:TSX) is an exciting gold project. The company is working old mines in an underexplored area in southwestern British Columbia. Success here could open up a lot of people’s minds about junior mining overall.

Diamonds are exciting and could certainly lift the Toronto Stock Exchange out of its funk. Two to watch in the new North Saskatchewan Craton Diamond Play are Strike Diamond Corp. (SRK:TSX.V) and Athabasca Nuclear Corp. (ASC:TSX.V).

Nickel is definitely a metal to have on your radar screen. Today nickel sulfide discoveries are as rare as chicken teeth, but North American Nickel Inc. (NAN:TSX.V) has found an incredible amount of smoke in Greenland and should find fire soon. Meanwhile in Canada, Equitas Resources Corp. (EQT:TSX.V; T6U1:FSE) is just getting going. It has a large prospective for nickel property in the right type of rock in the right place.

In the copper space the low-hanging fruit has been picked but VMS Ventures Inc. (VMS:TSX.V) is a junior producer that owns 30% of the now producing high-grade Reed copper mine. Carmax Mining Corp. (CXM:TSX.V) has an exciting copper-gold project, the Eaglehead, in northwest British Columbia. 

Cobalt is a critical metal with no production in North America. Global Cobalt Corp. (GCO:TSX.V) is working on a project in northwestern Ontario and has recently acquired a project in the U.S. Global Cobalt could be instrumental in meeting a growing demand. 

I believe in commodities. If you do as well, then all these companies are worth putting on your radar screen. 

Steve Palmer, founding partner, president and chief investment officer of AlphaNorth Asset Management: December, January and February are historically the best performing months of the year. There is no reason to believe the current situation will be any different. The TSX Venture index has been under severe pressure over the past few months, which has taken it down 30+% since August. It has recently been below the lows of the 2008 financial crisis despite an economic environment that is far better. I believe the current risk/reward is highly skewed to the upside for the TSX.V. 

Several resource names that could rally nicely are Blackbird Energy Inc. (BBI:TSX.V)Sintana Energy Inc. (SNN:TSX.V)Talon Metals Corp. (TLO:TSX), and U3O8 Corp. (UWE:TSX; UWEFF:OTCQX).

Angelo Damaskos, founder and CEO of Sector Investment Managers Ltd.: We generally do not trade short-term technical volatility in markets but prefer to focus on fundamental value that is likely to be rerated over the medium term. Nevertheless, given the extreme selling conditions we have experienced in the last four months of 2014 in the energy space, there is a higher probability of a sharp rebound early in 2015. Historical review of previous corrections before the year-end in oil-related shares shows a seasonal pattern of recovery in the first quarter of the following year: The winter double-bottom pattern was observed in 2008–2009, 2006–2007, 2001–2002, 1998–1999, and 1993–1994.

We, therefore, advise our clients to increase their allocations to mid-cap oil producers for three reasons:

1. Extreme adversity against oil shares has led to solid companies trading at Price/Cash Flow and Price/Net Asset Value multiples last seen in the 2008 meltdown;

2. Bearish calls for the oil price dropping below $50/barrel ($50/bbl) are widespread; a contrarian investment view would support a rebound to above $60/bbl. Fundamentally, it is widely accepted that oil prices at $60/bbl are extremely damaging to supply from marginal fields and prolonged trading at this level would result in a lot of supply shut-ins, thus removing any supply overhang within 6–12 months; markets are likely to discount such change in supply with a 3–6 month lead;

3. Large short-selling interest built up in the months of November and December that may be closed on first signs of rebound—mid-cap shares are likely to respond first, followed by small caps after a sustained rally.

We believe, nevertheless, that investments should be focused on companies with strong production growth even at lower oil prices based on sustainable capital expenditure programs (primarily funded out of organic cash flow), lower average cost of production contributing to profits at current prices and strong balance sheets with low debt and fixed obligations. Examples of such companies include RMP Energy Inc. (RMP:TSX)Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. (AAV:TSX; AAV:NYSE) and Parex Resources Inc. (PXT:TSX.V).

We are generally cautious/bearish on the overall markets as we feel global economic growth is likely to slow, impacting earnings expectations. Central banks of both developed and emerging economies may raise interest rates, thus further slowing growth and negatively impacting equity valuations. Resources sectors have been sold off hard, so it is unlikely they would suffer further in correlation to a general market correction.

Look for an article about the January Effect on precious metals in The Gold Report on Wednesday, Jan. 7.

Want to read more Mining Report articles like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit The Mining Report home page.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) JT Long conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee. She owns, or her family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Uranerz Energy Corp., Energy Fuels Inc., Great Panther Silver Ltd. and North American Nickel Inc. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Rick Mills: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: New Carolin Gold Corp. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Great Panther Silver Ltd., Kootenay Silver Inc., New Carolin Gold Corp., Equitas Resources Corp., Lakeland Resources Inc., Carmax Mining Corp., VMS Resources Inc. and Global Cobalt Corp. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
4) Steve Palmer: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. AlphaNorth Funds own all of the companies mentioned. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
5) Angelo Damaskos: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. Funds I advise hold shares in RMP Energy Inc., Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. and Parex Resources Inc. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.
6) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
7) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
8) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

The Story Behind Oil’s Plunge

In the financial markets, everything makes sense in hindsight. While the narrative had continued since the 2008 Financial Crisis that energy prices were rising and there was nothing to slow them down, it only took a small crack in the armour to send oil tumbling down by about 50% since the 2014 summer peak.

This infographic video from CNN Money helps put the sudden and inevitable oil plunge in perspective. In short, it is a combination of slowing demand (stemming from China’s growth slowdown, the EU’s stagnation, and America shaking off its addiction to oil) and oversupply caused by new shale technology and OPEC keeping production constant. 

Lower oil prices create some relief for consumers at the pump, but also create their own array of problems. Losses of jobs, especially around more expensive shale and oil sand production, will partly counterbalance the gains from the additional $60 billion in consumer discretionary income in 2015. Energy companies also struggle at such prices.

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Click for Larger Chart & Video

Crude mistake

Iran is feeling the pain of lower crude oil prices and is calling on Saudi Arabia to do something about it. 

Reuters News reported that Iran Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said “If Saudi does not help prevent the decrease in oil price…this is a serious mistake that will have a negative result on all countries in the region” whose economies rely heavily on oil. 

That is an understatement and a lot more mild than the comment from Iranian President Hasan Rouhani who told the Associated Press  last month that Saudi Arabia’s refusal to scale back oil production was tantamount to a “conspiracy against the interests of the region” and the Muslim people. “Iran and people of the region will not forget such conspiracies, or in other words, treachery against the interest of the Muslim world,” he said. Of course, while Iran wants the Saudi’s to cut production, it is unlikely that will happen.  

Today it seems that the words of European Central Bank president Mario Draghi are having more of an effect on oil. Draghi said that the risks to the ECB’s ability to fulfill its price-stability mandate have increased over the past six months. He warned that medium-term inflation expectations have fallen since June raising expectations that the ECB will start moving on its bond buying program sooner rather than later.

That sent the March Euro to a new contract low and the lowest price since June of 2010 and the March dollar to a new contract high, which is pressuring oil. It seems oil cares more about over supply and the value of the dollar then Iran and their complaints to Saudis.

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…continue reading page 2 HERE