USO and XLE

uso dec 24 2014xle dec 24 2014

Everybody seems to be dead sure that oil and oil stocks can only go up from here, and that this is an opportunity of a lifetime. After all our appetite for oil simple cannot be satiated as there is always another Hummer to buy, a pool to heat or an exotic destination to fly to. This may be true in the long run but not necessarily at every point in time. We have had fairly recent lows in oil at $10 and $30, much lower than now. Also, apparently, the economic concept of pricing something in the margin in the context of an oligopoly, is not understood at all. That a lousy 2 mln. barrels of overproduction on a daily need of about 90 mln. barrels can cause a 45% price drop is simple not believed. The problem here is that probable only a very small fraction of the commentators have ever bothered to study the fragility of an oligopoly’s equilibrium. It is not at all like the marble in the salad bowl. Instead it is the marble on the salad bowl after it is turned around.

In any event when in the minority it is important to check your facts even more conscientiously than normal. Therefore we have added USO (an ETF that is a proxy for oil) and XLF (the S&P sub index for energy companies). The USO displays a clear gap. Using our the-gap-is-often-in-the-middle approach we have to assume that we are not near a bottom yet. The EW count also suggest that we need at least one more 5th wave but perhaps more than one if we start the thing of with a series of 1-2’s (not shown), i.e. we may just be in wave 4 of 3!

   Looking at the XLE we also have to assume that we are not near a logical bottom, the first serious one is at $55. So we will stick with the view that this is not over yet and that Alberta may be down the proverbial creek without a paddle. At least they are in good company.

Below is the oil future updated to this morning;

oil dec 24 2014

Oil and ABX, both on track

oil dec 23 2014 2abx dec 23 2014

Oil does look as if it is doing a triangle. The next down leg could start any moment.

ABX is getting closer to its target which may be just a little lower, around $11. It all depends on whether or not this last leg is a wedge or a more normal 5th wave, The risk here is missing the boat rather than paying 50 cents too much.

Oil update

oil dec 23 2014

Here we have the crude oil futures  (this time G which is february, which trades about 50 beeps higher than the january one when it matured). So far at least, the idea that this might be a triangle looks pretty plausible so a 5th wave down may still be in the offing. Now that the Saudis have made it clear that they might stick to this course even if the stuff drops to $20.

Nikkei 225, a bit of nostalgia.

Nikkei 225 dec 22 2014 textbankers trust warrants

From; Calendar Anomalies and Arbitrage, by W.T. Ziemba

We are approaching year-end, often things happen at that time, perhaps because of all the good intentions that are mostly broken in a few days which may cause mood changes. This is the Nikkei 225. It hit a high of about 39000 around year-end ‘89  only to drop to 7000 in ‘09. People were so bullish that they completely ignored the ‘87 crash in the US. The world applauded their management skills and the only direction the market could take was up. Here in Canada Bankers Trust came out with an issue of warrants which were in reality put options. Options were so cheap that you could buy a 3-year leap with a strike such that you would break-even if the Nikkei dropped by a mere 6%, that is how bullish they were in Japan and willing to take the other side. The beauty of these warrants was that they were RRSP eligible. This was one of the first instances where derivatives were used to circumvent the CRA legislation with respect to RRSP eligibility.

To make a long story short, at around year-end we had the stock index of the then 2d largest economy turn on a dime for no apparent reason other than “enough is enough”. Who knows but history may repeat itself.