Saturday, February 24, 2018

Barron's: Venezuelan Free Fall Would Give Oil a Pop

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Investors in the oil market should keep a keen eye on Venezuela. an upcoming election and the prospect of U.S. sanctions will likely send the country’s wounded energy sector into a tailspin, at least temporarily. It could happen before the summer. And when it does, expect oil prices to jump by up to $10 a barrel.

“Venezuela is headed down, falling off a cliff,” says Victor Sperandeo, chief executive and general partner EAM Partners, a commodity trading advisory firm. “The place will go into chaos and won’t be able to pump oil.”

Such a move could push prices for Brent crude to as much as $75 a barrel from roughly $65 a barrel. Read more here.

Photo by David Thielen on Unsplash

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Barron's: Milk Prices Could Head Higher

By SIMON CONSTABLE

After years of decline, milk prices look ready to rally. More frigid winters, lower production in some parts of the world, and more Chinese demand will lead to higher prices.

“People are starting to see that milk isn’t as available as they thought it would be,” says Shawn Hackett, of Hackett Financial Advisors. He sees prices soaring as high as $20 per hundredweight within a year, up from Friday’s closing price of $14.34 for May-dated Class III milk contracts on the CME. Some of this increase is likely to show up in higher milk prices at your neighborhood grocery store. (A hundredweight of milk, depending on whether it’s whole or reduced-fat or skim, is roughly equal to 11.5 gallons.) Read more here.

Photo by Mehrshad Rajabi on Unsplash

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Forbes: How Trillions In Risk-Parity/Volatility Trades Could Sink The Market

By SIMON CONSTABLE

There's a problem lurking in the stock market known as the "risk-parity" trade.
The strategy, which involves investors switching between different assets based on changes in market volatility, has now grown so big that it threatens to sink the market.
How big? Some estimates peg the amount of money pursuing this type of strategy at as high as half a trillion dollars. Trades designed to profit from changes in volatility, which are inextricably linked to risk-parity, add as much as a further $2 trillion.
The issue is not the strategy itself, it is when investors decide that it is no longer useful and decide to exit their positions. In other words, when all at once they dump their positions the market will likely tank.
Here's what you need to know.

Saturday, February 10, 2018

PJ Media: Roller Coaster Reflects Change in How Investors are Viewing Stock Market

By SIMON CONSTABLE

One day the stock market is up, the next day it is down.

It’s as if investors just can’t make up their minds. There's good reason for that. There are almost too many variables for Wall Street to absorb quickly.

The stock market has been like a roller coaster all week, a far cry from the solid gain-after-gain in the market we have seen for much of the past few months. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced by almost 18 percent in the year through Thursday, an exceptional rally by most standards. Read more here.

Friday, February 9, 2018

Forbes: Five VIX Fund Questions That Need To Be Answered

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Some people may have some 'splaining to do.

The matter at hand concerns two exchange-traded securities that were designed to profit from falls in the VIX, or volatility index, which roughly tracks the volatility of the S&P 500. Read more here.



PJ Media: The EU's Banking Ruse to Create a United States of Europe


By SIMON CONSTABLE

Is the EU trying to pull a ‘fast one’ on its citizens? Maybe so.

Some recent efforts aimed at saving Europe’s banks from another financial crisis may be a Trojan horse aimed at abolishing the nation states of the European Union.

Of course, the EU isn't portraying its efforts that way. Instead, eurocrats (a.k.a. European bureaucrats) are disguising their work as an effort to save the public from a repeat of the 2008-09 taxpayer-funded banking bailouts. Read more here.