CL Redux

<b> I am surprised to Learn that all the Today's SELL off is in JUST only WTI but NOT in Brent </b> ( Here is the story WHY?? )

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UPDATE 11-U.S. oil sinks below $98, Brent gap widest since April
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/10/22/markets-oil-idUSL3N0IC11R20131022

NEW YORK, Oct 22 (Reuters) - U.S. oil prices sank below $98 to their lowest in nearly four months on Tuesday, while European Brent held firm, as fears of a near-term U.S. crude surplus pushed the spread between the two oil contracts to its widest gap since April.

1/ The onset of seasonal autumn U.S. refinery maintenance, coupled with additional spurts of pipeline outages, have curbed demand for crude, causing domestic stockpiles to swell and fueling the abrupt unwinding of the Brent-WTI oil spread, which has widened by some $3.50 a barrel in three days.

"It's a trade that's really attracting some interest and people are hopping on the Brent bandwagon and selling WTI to finance it," said Stephen Schork, editor of the Schork Report in Villanova, Pennsylvania.

2/ U.S. crude futures for November, which expired on Tuesday, dropped $1.42 per barrel to settle at $97.80, with selling exacerbated as the front-month contract dropped below the 200-day moving average for the first time since June. The December contract ended the day $1.38 lower at $98.30.

Brent for December settled 33 cents higher at $109.97 after trading at a session high of $110.94.

3/ The Brent/WTI spread widened by $1.38 to end at $11.67, the widest gap since April. The spread, which stood at around $5 a barrel three weeks ago, could deter U.S. imports of overseas crude and may bolster inland margins.

4/ Recent data showing that crude stockpiles in Cushing, Oklahoma,<b> were rising again after a 14-week decline helped trigger selling pressure in the U.S. contract.</b>

That oil stocks at Cushing were on the rise was further confirmed late on Tuesday when industry group American Petroleum Institute (API) showed stocks at the <b>U.S. oil storage hub rose last week by 423 million barrels for the second week in a row, while U.S. crude inventories rose by 3 million barrels.

The build in crude was fairly in line with a Reuters poll calling for a 2.9 million barrel increase. </b>

<b>REFINERY EBB AND FLOW
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With U.S. refinery operations at a seasonal ebb due to maintenance and domestic production rising steadily, U.S. crude markets are under pressure at every turn.

U.S. output from major shale oil plays is expected to <b> increase by 60,000 barrels per day in November from October, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said. </b>

Still, most analysts expect the Brent/WTI slump to be temporary. Once refiners emerge from maintenance in the coming weeks they are likely to rev up crude runs to take advantage of cheaper oil and export excess fuel.

<b>"The way this will get closed is when refineries get back online to export to Europe," </b> said Bill O'Grady, chief market strategist at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis.

<b>LIBYA SUPPORTS BRENT
----------------------------------</b>

Brent oil also faces tighter supply from output cuts in Libya as the United States becomes more insulated from geopolitical shocks as supplies from shale plays multiply, analysts said.

Libya's oil production is around 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) as the government works to end protests at fields and ports that have cut shipments for months.

Tenuous relations between the United States and Saudi Arabia, the most important oil producer in the Middle East, also supported a geopolitical risk premium in Brent.

<b>The Saudis are expected to make a "major shift" in dealings with the United States in protest against Washington's perceived inaction over the Syria war and its overtures to Iran. </b>
 
Quote from riskaddict:

IV is dropping like a rock right along with the price. Which seems to me is a way of the world of traders saying hey this price is starting to make sense. All this along with the dollar and oil tanking the same day further leads me to believe wti is finding its happy place. A range between 96 and 106 for the next 6 months or longer would make my life very easy and i think most companies in the industries on both sides would be satisfied with that.


This is what I was thinking on the 17th. I'm pleased we got to around 96 but I was really thinking avg IV would be well above 25 and we aren't even there. My plan was to start selling 92 and 93 puts when we got to 96 but with the lack of premium built in here I'm limping in and 93.50 is now on the radar.
 
Interesting Observation ...

Quote from austinp:

CL had been my preferred market until recently, but current price action does not permit scaling into multiple contracts positions. Nor can I really feel comfortable about placing numerous contracts outside of congestion breaks and/or pullbacks the way price just violently explodes.

I can see trading maybe 1 or 2 contracts trying to game the price bursts, but as for me I need to trade something where I can methodically enter & exit with scaled size. That has not been CL for quite some time on a consistent basis, and definitely not the past few months.

Would love to see it return to historical price behavior of the decade-plus past, but it's a long ways from there right now. To my understanding, most if not all of the former futures prop shops in Chicago and elsewhere are downsized or gone mostly from the contraction in CL.

The government wanted less volatility in the crude oil - gasoline prices for sake of consumer confidence, so they made that happen. Back in 1990s and 2000s, any discussion of government meddling with markets got scoffed at by the masses. Ten years later, the same government openly discusses financial markets manipulation.
 
Day after election, Saudi Arabia rejects seat on UN Security Council
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...15fc66-37d5-11e3-89db-8002ba99b894_story.html

UNITED NATIONS — Just hours after winning a coveted place on the U.N. Security Council for the first time, Saudi Arabia did a stunning about-face Friday and rejected the seat, denouncing the body for failing to resolve world conflicts such as the Syrian civil war.

1/ The unprecedented move at the United Nations appeared largely <b>directed at Saudi Arabia’s longtime ally, the United States, reflecting more than two years of frustration. </b>

a/ The oil giant and the world’s superpower are at odds over a number of Mideast issues, including how Washington has handled some of the region’s crises, particularly in Egypt and Syria.

b/ It also comes as ties between the U.S. and Iran, the Saudis’ regional foe, appear to be improving somewhat.

c/ The Saudis were displeased that the U.S. backed off threats of military strikes against Syria in response to its alleged use of chemical weapons.


http://christiannewsandwire.com/the...urce=outbrain&utm_medium=traffic&utm_content={aid}&utm_campaign=outbrain

What should worry the Obama administration is that <b> Saudi concern about US policy in the Middle East is shared by the four other traditional US allies in the region: Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Israel.</b>

-- They argue (mostly privately) that Obama has shredded US influence by
-- dumping President Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, backing the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi,
-- opposing the coup that toppled Morsi,
-- vacillating in its Syria policy,
-- and now embarking on negotiations with Iran — <b> all without consulting close Arab allies. </b>

<b>And for all the bellyaching from Saudi Arabia about the US refusal to topple Assad by force, </b> the Obama administration has given no signs that the days of Saudi Arabia’s free pass on its repressive practices are coming to an end.

<b>On balance, the interests the two sides have in common remain much stronger than the interests they don’t </b>. A breakup would certainly be interesting – and welcomed by fans of democracy promotion. But a catastrophic shift in the relationship doesn’t seem likely yet, whatever the pundits say.
 
Iran is reaching out to its old oil buyers and is ready to CUT prices if Western sanctions against it are eased
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http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/10/22/us-iran-oil-idUSBRE99L18B20131022

(Reuters) - Iran is reaching out to its old oil buyers and is ready to cut prices if Western sanctions against it are eased, promising a battle for market share in a world less hungry for oil than when sanctions were imposed.

New Iranian President Hassam Rouhani's "charm offensive" at the United Nations last month, coupled with a historic phone call with U.S. President Barak Obama, revived market hopes that Iranian barrels could return with a vengeance if the diplomatic mood music translates into a breakthrough in the stand-off over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme.

1/ <b>The Islamic republic's crude exports more than halved after the European Union and United States tightened sanctions in mid-2012, cutting its budget revenues by at least $35 billion a year</b>

2/ <b>"The Iranians are calling around already saying let's talk ... You have to be careful, of course, but there is no law against talking," said a high-level oil trader, </b> whose company is among many that stopped buying Iran's oil because of sanctions.

3/ According to the IEA, demand in developed European countries has fallen by 2 million bpd in the past five years, or three times what the region was getting from Iran.

"It's a different market. It's a market that has a greater degree of supply than the market they, Iranians, exited," said a trader with an oil major, who used to buy Iranian oil.

4/ Before the EU sanctions, traders said the most common debate in the market was whether China would swallow all or just part of the Iranian oil unwanted elsewhere.

But Beijing has played ball with the West and tried to cut imports from Iran.

Arch-rival Iraq, which overtook Iran as OPEC's second-largest oil producer, said last week China was seeking to steeply raise Iraqi oil purchases.

Iran's Ghamsari said Iran might have to set or accept lower prices to go back to the market.

<b>"Naturally, a resupply of Iran's crude oil on the world markets will result in oil price cuts. The current figures show that the demand for oil is 30 percent lower than in normal conditions, </b>" he told Shana.

5/ <b>"If I'm allowed to buy again, I will jump on it straight away," said a European refiner, who asked not to be named. "Europe is terribly short of sour, heavy crude; the only one available is Russia's Urals, </b> and it has become very expensive."

6/ <b>"Without any constraint in place, OPEC could find itself pumping some 4 million bpd above the forecast call (on its oil). Broken budgets and recriminations between OPEC members are the most obvious fallout," </b> said David Hufton from PVM brokerage.

7/ It is also sending strong signals to oil markets about its pricing policies should it make headway in the nuclear talks with the West. <b>The next round of talks with the U.N. nuclear agency is planned for next week.</b>

<b>"Given the new circumstances, a large number of traditional buyers of Iranian oil are making the preparations and providing the facilities for raising their oil purchase from Iran," </b> news agency Shana quoted National Iranian Oil Co's head of trading Mohsen Ghamsari as saying on Tues
 
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