Oil! The price forecasts vary. Why?

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By David Kotok - August 23rd, 2009, 4:30PM

David R. Kotok co-founded Cumberland Advisors in 1973 and has been its Chief Investment Officer since inception. He holds a B.S. in Economics from The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, an M.S. in Organizational Dynamics from The School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania, and a Masters in Philosophy from the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Kotok’s articles and financial market commentary have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, and other publications. He is a frequent contributor to CNBC programs.

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Oil! The price forecasts vary. Why?
August 23, 2009

Oil flirts with $75 dollars a barrel. Forecasts range from a low in the $40s to $85-90 before the end of the year. Inventories on or off the water, futures and ETF-driven trading forces derived from dollar strength or weakness, China’s and other emerging market countries’ demand, mature countries’ economic recoveries, fuel substitutions when natural gas prices are so low relative to oil – these are some of the crosscurrents that make the oil price so difficult to determine.

One oil price driving force that has been more obscure lately is the geopolitical risk in the Persian Gulf at the Straits of Hormuz. This body of water, situated between Iran and Saudi Arabia, is what Stratfor’s George Freidman has described as Iran’s “true nuclear option.” The details of that analysis are found in the last several discussions at www.stratfor.com. Cumberland is a subscriber; readers may wish to try the free subscription available on their website and see if they like the service. It will give you an opportunity to read the Iran and Persian Gulf analysis.

Stratfor disclosed some intricate and little-known intelligence items this week while market agents were busy with Bernanke at Jackson Hole. At the end of August, it takes shocks to pry folks out of vacation mode and away from the Kansas City Fed meeting. For us, some long plane rides and two days’ work in Salt Lake City gave us a reading opportunity. We immediately asked for and obtained permission to republish the last Iran situation analysis for our readers. It follows below.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Mixed Signals From Tehran, by Stratfor, www.stratfor.com .

“THE IRANIAN GOVERNMENT’S BEHAVIOR has grown a bit more bizarre over the past several days — as to be expected, with a September deadline looming for negotiations with the West over its nuclear program.

U.N. officials revealed Thursday that Iran had allowed International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors access last week to its nearly completed Arak heavy water reactor for the first time in a year. Iran also agreed to allow expanded IAEA monitoring of the Natanz uranium enrichment site, which produces material for nuclear fuel that potentially could be enriched further for use in nuclear warheads.

In addition to these confidence-building measures, the Iranians also appear to be using private channels to dilute the U.S. perception of an Iranian threat. After Israeli President Shimon Peres left a meeting with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev in Sochi on Tuesday, STRATFOR received word from an Iranian diplomatic source that Russia has flatly refused to sell Iran the S-300 strategic air defense system. Iranian Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar (nominated by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to be the new interior minister) was rebuffed by his Russian counterpart when he visited Moscow in February and, despite his attempts, has not since been invited back. The Russians allegedly told the Iranians that as long as concerns remain over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, they can pretty much forget about the S-300.

The timing of this message is interesting, especially as Russia, in recent weeks, has been the one to draw attention to possible weapons sales to Iran. Even after the Israeli president traveled to Sochi to warn the Russians against arming Iran, state arms exporter Rosoboronexport announced that it would consider Iranian requests to buy front-line fighters and bombers. Peres claimed that Medvedev promised to reconsider the matter of S-300 sales to Iran, but the Kremlin has not confirmed making such a pledge. With Russia’s negotiations with the United States currently in a flux, the Russians want to remind Washington of the upset they could cause in the already shaky state of affairs in the Middle East should their demands be ignored.

“The Iranians evidently are nervous enough about this September deadline that they feel the need to give the West at least some assurances that they are willing to cooperate.”

But the Iranians evidently are nervous enough about this September deadline that they feel the need to give the West at least some assurances that they are willing to cooperate. While trying to soften up its image, Iran also might be seeking to want to give Washington the impression that, in light of the domestic political turmoil that followed presidential elections in June, the regime simply isn’t prepared or capable of committing to serious negotiations in the near term.

This was the kind of mixed message that came across Tuesday, when Iran’s envoy to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, said on state television said that Iran was ready to resume negotiations with the West over its nuclear program — as long as the talks were held without preconditions and based on mutual respect. Several hours later, Soltanieh publicly claimed he’d never said anything about Iran’s readiness for negotiations; he attributed his earlier comments to a letter he had sent to the United Nations, calling for a ban on armed attacks against nuclear facilities around the world. The lag between the first statement on state TV and Soltaniehs odd retraction gave the impression that there were competing opinions among the regime elites over how to negotiate with the West, and that Soltanieh had spoken prematurely. There was enough confusion that day that Washington didn’t bother responding to the statement either way.

Between threats of crippling sanctions on Iranian gasoline imports and hinting at military action, the U.S. administration has insisted that this September deadline would not come and go without consequences if Iran defies demands to curb its uranium enrichment programs. There are methods to getting around sanctions, but the Iranians don’t seem to be in the mood to take many chances on the military threat. As we have recently noted, the real nuclear option that Iran holds against the United States is the threat of mining the Strait of Hormuz. This is an option of last resort, however — and while Iran’s leadership is playing out all the options, it has a need to make itself appear as confused and benign as possible.”

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We again thank Stratfor for permission to share these views.

Stratfor’s analysis reminds us of previous periods when oil prices firmed. We reach back into history to the time when the Egypt closed the Red Sea to Israeli shipping and triggered a war in 1967. We recall the 1973 invasion of Israel on the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur. We remember the Iraqi belligerency of Saddam Hussein. In many instances there was a firming of oil prices that preceded some hostile action in the Middle East.

Those price hikes had no apparent explanation at the time. The clarity came after the events. There are oil-trading companies linked quietly to Middle Eastern governments; many are owned or controlled by the rulers of those countries or their neighbors. They know that oil prices will spike on geopolitical risks. They take long positions prior to actions that will cause those prices to spike. At the time preceding the outbreak of violence, the markets don’t have a clear explanation for the rising price. That is the pattern of the last 50 years.

Having followed Stratfor’s details on the developments in Iran, we speculate as to whether this is another one of those developing instances. Our primary rule about the Middle East is simple: when it is too quiet and there is no apparent violence, the situation is temporary and will soon change for the worse.

Is there going to be a September surprise? As Stratfor notes, September is a key month for Iran and for the US. The same is true for oil

David R. Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer, email: david.kotok@cumber.com

Yahoo Finance vs Google Finance

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 23rd, 2009, 2:00PM

Pretty interesting comparo:

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0823-web-digi_full

Courtesy of NYT

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Source:
Where Yahoo Leaves Google in the Dust
RANDALL STROSS
NYT, August 22, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/business/23digi.html

The Annotated S&P

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 23rd, 2009, 11:00AM

I really like the style of the David Singer’s handwritten annotations of this chart:

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SPX Annotated
click for ginormous chart
annotated-spx

PDF: DS’ Annotated SPX

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Any thoughts on this ? I think stylistically its fresh, and David has been pretty sharp calling the very short term squiggles . . .

Words from the (investment) wise August 23, 2009

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By Prieur du Plessis - August 23rd, 2009, 9:58AM

Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (August 17 – 23, 2009)

After starting the week with a broad-based sell-off, stock markets resumed their five-month uptrend as investors’ confidence in the recovery prospects of the global economy gained traction. With risky assets back in favor, a number of bourses and crude oil closed at fresh highs for the year, showing resilience in the face of a sharp correction in China on Monday (-5.8%) and Wednesday (-4.3%). Safe-haven assets such as government bonds and the US dollar received a cold shoulder.

23-08-09-01

Source: Walt Handelsman, August 20, 2009.

Referring to the nascent economic recovery, Paul Kasriel and Asha Bangalore (Northern Trust) said: “There is concern being voiced that after the fiscal stimulus wears off, the economy will lapse back into a recession. Anything is possible, but that does not necessarily make it highly probable. In the post-WII era, once the US economy has gained forward motion, it has maintained that forward motion until the Federal Reserve has intervened to halt it.

“We believe that the earliest the Fed will begin to take action to brake the pace of nominal economic activity will be late-June of 2010. And if it begins to take action then, it will do so only tentatively. If, in fact, economic activity is flagging from a lack of additional fiscal stimulus, then the Fed is unlikely to commence tightening or would reverse course. We believe that the next recession, whenever it occurs, will be precipitated by the lagged effects of Fed tightening, not by the economy ‘running out of gas’ on its own.”

The past week’s performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below – a set of numbers that indicates renewed investor appetite for risky assets.

23-08-09-02

Source: StockCharts.com

A summary of the movements of major global stock markets for the past week, as well as various other measurement periods, is given in the table below.

The MSCI World Index (+1.6%) and MSCI Emerging Markets Index (-0.8%) followed separate paths last week as China and a number of emerging markets came under pressure during the first few trading days. Emerging markets have now underperformed developed markets for three weeks running.

Read the rest of this entry »

Cul-de-Sac of Lost Dreams

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 23rd, 2009, 8:46AM

Big front page NYT article on Beth Court, Moreno California, titled A Cul-de-Sac of Lost Dreams.

Its a piece in the making since January, with lots of those small human elements that personalizes the housing boom and bust. (EG: “a new homeowner lugged two large shopping bags from Home Depot across his front yard, where his young daughter danced a mad jig in her pajamas.”)

The caption to a picture of the block “Loss and Opportunity, side by side” sums up the tone pretty well, as does this excerpt:

“The continuing economic fallout has brought a reckoning for those who believed that home equity would always rise, financing lives beyond their means, while also creating unexpected opportunities for people previously on the sidelines of homeownership.”

Pour a cup of joe, and begin your Sunday morn with this huge piece.

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So Cal Turnover
23bethmap
courtesy of NYT

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Source:
A Cul-de-Sac of Lost Dreams, and New Ones
JENNIFER STEINHAUER
NYT, August 22, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/us/23bethone.html

New Music?

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 22nd, 2009, 7:30PM

One of the reasons I have not done any new Friday Night Musics in some time has been the absence of anything really noteworthy.

This year, I seem to have hit a real dearth of new albums worth sharing.

Which leads me to this Saturday night question: What are you listening to? Anything worth passing on. In particular, I am looking for discs released over the past year or so.

My 2008 “Different Kind of Music List” was a little more challenging than prior years (See 2007 and 2006 and 2005 and 2004), but 2009 is shaping up to be even harder.

What is catching your musical fancy ?

Quentin Tarantino in His Own Words

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 22nd, 2009, 4:33PM

Language is not safe for work

Saturday Linkfest

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 22nd, 2009, 4:30PM

“Wall Street is the only place where people who own Rolls Royce seek advice of the ones who travel to work by subway/local trains”   -Warren Buffet

So says Sir Warren, who if he knew who we were, would be enjoying this weekend reading right now via the local Dairy Queen’s WiFi:

0822-biz-webchartsStocks, Oil Hit New 2009 Highs Stocks and oil rallied to the highest levels this year as a report showing strong sales of existing homes boosted investors’ hopes for a U.S. economic rebound on Friday.

What the Stress Tests Didn’t Predict (NYT)

World Economy Emerging From Worst Recession Since World War II (Bloomberg) — The global economy may be coming out of the worst recession since World War II as record-low interest rates and trillions of dollars in fiscal stimulus spur demand.

America May Need to Find Another Financier (NYT) AS the United States rolls up record budget deficits, Asian countries are showing a reduced willingness to finance the debt.

Credit Crisis Is a Big Draw for Finance Museum (NYT)

Financial Historian on The Dow as ‘Cultural Icon (Marketbeat) ’Wall Street without the Dow?  It seems to be a possibility. We know Dow Jones & Co Inc. has been sounding out potential buyers for the company’s stock-market indexing business.  See also The Dow’s Ins and Outs

Surprising sentiment (MarketWatch) Contrarians are no longer sure that the stock market’s very short-term trend is down. And that represents a big shift from what contrarians were saying as recently as just one week ago, when almost all of the sentiment indicators seemed to be saying that the rally was entering into dangerous territory.

Why Is Obama’s Top Antitrust Cop Gunning for Google? (Wired)  Recently, Google’s size and ambitions have begun to obscure its halo. Advertisers have watched nervously as the company’s share of the search-advertising market has jumped to 75 percent from 50 percent over the past three years.

The 3 key parts of news stories you usually don’t get (Newsless)

Max Damage, a compulsively addictive game

What else is worth reading ?

Hitting Bottom?

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 22nd, 2009, 2:00PM

In honor of this week’s Jackson Hole meeting:

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darkow081809

How Not to Reduce Excess Reserves

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 22nd, 2009, 1:29PM

Here is something I never expected to be linking to on a Saturday afternoon, via the St. Louis Fed’s David C. Wheelock: How Not to Reduce Excess Reserves:

The Federal Reserve’s actions to support financial markets and the broader economy have resulted in a large increase in bank reserves—both total reserves and reserves held in excess of legal requirements—since September 2008.1Excess reserves have risen from an average of less than 5 percent of total reserves during the 5 years ending in August 2008 to more than 90 percent since November 2008. Many observers contend that the large increase in excess reserves poses a significant inflation risk. A look back at a similar episode during the 1930s provides some insights about how not to reduce excess reserves.

Consider the chart below as a textbook example of what David says not to do:

“In 1936, officials decided to increase reserve requirements in three steps—from 13 percent to 26 percent on transactions deposits and from 3 to 6 percent on time deposits . . .

The chart shows the dates of each increase in reserve requirements. The policy was successful in reducing both total excess reserves and the ratio of excess to total reserves. However, interest rates also rose, money stock growth declined sharply, and in May 1937 the economy entered a reces-
sion (the shaded region in the figure represents the recessionary period).”

Excess/Total Reserves Money Stock Growth

excess-reserves

Chart courtesy of St. Louis Fed

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Source:
How Not To Reduce Excess Reserves
David C. Wheelock
St. Louis Fed September 2009

http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/mt/20090901/mtpub.pdf

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