Timing & trends
Originally posted at MarctoMarket.com
The weekend meeting between many OPEC and non-OPEC producers has helped spur the recent gains in the price of oil. We are concerned that market may be getting ahead of itself.
First, the freeze in output that had previously been agreed to by Russia, Saudi Arabia, and a few other countries was conditional on participation by Iran. We have consistently been suspicious of this condition. Iran has sacrificed or at least delayed its nuclear development in exchange for the lifting of the embargo. If it were to agree to limit its output, it would have made the concessions for nothing. This cannot be politically acceptable.
Our reading is that Saudi Arabia was cognizant of this, but providing the condition did a couple of things for it. It deflected the blame for low oil prices away from it and toward its rival Iran. It also pushed a wedge between Iran and Russia.
Second, for many producers, a freeze is not really a concession. Many producers are operating near capacity. They have stepped up output to make up for the lower price. This is a rational strategy under some conditions.
Third, there was an unintended disruption in supply in Iraq and Nigeria which is being resolved. Iraqi output reportedly rose 2% in March. Reports indicate that Saudi Arabia and Russia also increased their output ahead of the tentative freeze agreement in February and afterward. This too seems to be a rational strategy under certain conditions.
Fourth, some OPEC countries are looking to expand capacity. Kuwait, for example, reportedly will soon seek assistance to access undersea oil reserves for the first time. Projections suggest it would boost capacity by 5% or more.
Hear Jim Puplava’s Big Picture: Oil – The Bottom, The Recovery, The Shock
Earlier today, OPEC projected a greater decline in non-OPEC output than it did last month. It now assumes that non-OPEC output would fall by 730k barrels a day this year. This is about a 5% larger drop than projected in March. In addition to the decline in US output, it is also anticipating a further drop in Chinese output as some fields mature. OPEC is also expecting a larger drop in UK output. There are reportedly many fields in Russia that are also maturing and cuts in investment are preventing their replacement.
Separately, we note that China imported a record amount of oil in Q1 2016. Over the past few years, China has built substantial refining capacity, drawn by the wide margins. There are some indications that as often is the case in China, it quickly developed over-capacity, which squeezes margins as its exports its surplus.
We suspect that many observers do not fully appreciate the tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The two OPEC countries are aggressively competing on a number of fronts, including but not limited to market share. Reports suggest each has taken action to undermine the other, including frustrating shipping efforts.
Also, we see many observers citing old breakeven levels for US shale producers. As far as we can tell, there is near constant technological improvement, and this has lowered the breakeven of some of the largest US producers toward $40 a barrel from $60 a barrel.
A freeze in output would take place at elevated levels. The EIA estimates that surplus is about 1.4 mln barrels a day this year. This is down from 1.59 mln from the previous estimate. The excess output next year is projected at 410k barrels, down from 640k. Our reading of the literature suggests many observers have underestimated the resilience of US output and how quickly it may return.
US crude inventories are still rising at about a 10% year-over-year rate. This is down from around 29% in the middle of last December, the peak in the cycle.
Open interest in the June light sweet crude oil futures contract has shifted to June from May. Yesterday the June contract rose through the March high near $43.20. Prices bottomed on the June contract on January 20 near $30.80. There has been a five-leg advance off the low. Today’s flat consolidation does not mean much, and there is potential toward $45. Beware of buy the rumor sell the fact.
Related podcast: Don Coxe Says Low Oil Prices Will Persist As Long As the Saudis Are Frightened of Iran

Legendary investor, Jim Rogers on capital markets, US dollar positions, global currencies, the possible relationship between the US dollar and Chinese renminbi, the growth of the renminbi, and how some currencies would benefit from a rate hike.
The 36 minute interview shifts to the agricultural industry, including some comments on the organic food sector. The TPP and free trade agreements and the knowledge-based economy wrap things up.

Either we saw a top in the mining shares Friday or we will see it on Monday. The cycles suggest a low around April 19th and the e-wave pattern suggests a continuation higher after the bottom is put in, likely into early June.
The 8 year low still looms in the fall. I still believe we will see lower prices after the spring rally terminates, and lower stock prices and a strong dollar play havoc with the commodity sector.
The chart below explains:
Click for Larger Image
For a juxtaposition read and view the charts in Jordan Roy-Byrne’s friday article:
Gold Stocks Breakout, Gold to Follow
For an interesting article on Gold demand in the 1st quarter of 2016 read:
Something Big Happened in the Gold Market
Brad Gudgeon, editor and author of the BluStar Market Timer, is a market veteran of over 30 years. The subscription website is www.blustarmarkettimer.info

1. Mike’s Editorial of the Week
In a blistering commentary Michael roasts emotional thinkers, the mainstream media, and weaknesses that can cost you money.
{mp3}grant/040216x{/mp3}
2. “Awesome Silver & USD Alarm Bell”
Stewart Thomson of Graceland Updates and his 24 key points for the short and intermediate term of the most important price driver of precious metals, the US dollar
3. Martin Armstrong – ECB Losing Control
Banks continue to implode in Europe and smart capital flees to the USA, the ECB is incapable to reversing the trend.

Stock Markets
The Sensational Season seems to be improving. How much sensation is needed to become overdone?
Our target on the rally in stocks, commodities and junk has been for around March. As noted last week, equity sectors we cover had reached technical readings high enough to conclude that most of the expected move has been accomplished.
Base metal miners (XME) rallied from 11.33 in January to 21.48 last week. Outstanding enough to take money off the table. Trading between 19 and 21 since, taking out the 200- Day at 17.50 would turn a correction into the next phase of the decline.
The decline started in 2011 with exceptional momentum and real prices for metals having been unusually high for an unusually long time.
We don’t see anything that undoes the condition of too much capacity.
Oil stocks (XLE) rallied from 49 in January to 63.85. This was right to the 200-Day ma. Also it reached Daily and Weekly RSIs that limited rallies since the peak in 2014. It has traded between 60 and 62, remaining below the 200-Day.
Since 2014, mining stocks fell to a quarter of the high. Oil stocks have fallen in half, which suggests too many investors are still positioning on Middle East problems. Until this capitulates, the longer-term outlook is not positive.
Retail (XRT) did well in accomplishing the best momentum in a couple of years. The rally started at 37.67 in January and has reached 46.50 this week. The last part of the rally has been sharp enough to register an Inverse Springboard, which could reverse the action.
Getting below the 200-Day would be negative.
Weaker sectors such as the banks (BKX) have been modest on the rebound. That’s despite the best action in spreads and the curve since the pressures started in June. BKX moved from 56 in February to 66 last week. Since the peak in July, this is the second test of the 20-Week exponential moving average.
If it fails it would be similar to 2008 when it followed the ema down. Seemingly forever. Broker-Dealers are in the same pattern and the chart follows.
This week, credit spreads seem to have stopped narrowing.
After the technically heralded peak at 400 in July, Biotech (IBB) sold off to the 240 level. The rebound was to 272 in early March. It has been around 257 since.
On the longer term, the rebound is the second attempt to get above the declining 20-Week ema. If it fails Biotechs have much further to fall.
Currencies
Over the past year, the US dollar seems to building a base. This is noticeable on many declines ending at 30 on the Daily RSI. The basing level for the DX has been either side of the 95 level.
It could take more time in the basing pattern, but the next surprise will be to the upside. We hope not to be surprised.
The Canadian dollar has accomplished the best rally since the bear began at 106 in 2011. This was from 68 to almost 78. The Weekly RSI is now as overbought as it was at the key high in June 2014. That’s as crude peaked at 107.
This rally in the C$ seems to be topping.
Credit Markets
Credit spreads have clocked the best run of narrowing since the pressures erupted last June. That’s when the CCC spread was trading at 9.50%. It reached its worst in the panic into February at 20.66%.
The low was 17.08% a couple of weeks ago. Now at 17.57%, getting above 17.80% would formally end the correction.
As noted last week, JNK, HYG and EMB had accomplished technical excesses. The potential setback would likely begin to widen spreads.
The long bond (TLT) seems poised to take another run at the 135 level.
Precious Metals
Gold rallied from the depressed 1045 level in December to the high at 1287 earlier in the month. Essentially, a 23% rally against a 3% drop in the dollar. This has stimulated supply/demand researchers to discover shortages in supply as well as growing demand.
We have found that the only time it is really safe for fundamental research is at a distressed bottom for the sector. Such as in December. Other than in such conditions, supply/demand analysis is usually dangerous. Particularly, in silver.
Our policy is to consider that December was likely a cyclical low for gold stocks that would set up a cyclical bull driven by improving earnings. The latter would depend more upon improving operating margins than upon a soaring price in dollars.
The sector as charted by the HUI became the most overbought on the Weekly RSI in five years. The low was 99 and the high was 189 in the middle of the month. The 90 percent gain compares to the 23 percent gain in the bullion price.
A significant correction is needed and seems to have started.
Latest on the Canadian Dollar jump April 8th HERE
Link to April 1, 2016 Ross Clark and Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1Z4teyHFoI&feature=youtu.be
