Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Oil notes 3
good summary of Weekly chart , showing good holding of UPtrend channel for about 1 year great charts at this site: http://www.thinkscripter.com/indicator/time-price-opportunity-tpo-profile/ a) asr: explore thinkorswim platform for this nice Volume charts so close to price they show actual action in FACE, see above riskaddict charts. b) we may use 'amibroker' on continuous CL data for quick QUANTS like one mentioned in point 3) c) for showing clients of spreads on web, we can use barchart.com with qtedge/t.st1 d) for spreads of CL/HO etc.. we can use desktop of barchart.com , it has nice spread desktop charts.. day 5: Mark down or Accumulation ---------------------------- 1/ over night it touched 86.99 ( so it has clue to go down ) from 86.15 close of previous day 2/ and EIA WEdnesday report is due 10:30 EST , so expected 2 MM build should act as resistance for price hike. so with this up coming event of EIA build up fear 86.99 ( overnite) should have been great short 3/ other thing to analyze is 4 days down , with S&P at same level as 4 days ago , with CL continuos contract data back test ( simple test with AMbibroker) should have given - how many times on 5 th day CL is down , how many times UP ( I guess with S&P holding 5 day ago level , the probability of down may be < pagenumber="2&virtualBrandChannel="0&sp="true"> -------------- a day to day account of Gaza events , we need this kind of record for events , once the events are stored in simple TEXT based DB , these can be retrived to display on OUR charts
Monday, January 24, 2011
We trade our belief system
If you don't do it excellently, don't do it at all. Because if it's not excellent, it won't be profitable or fun, and if you're not in business for fun or profit, what the hell are you doing there?... Robert Townsend
You better work, work, work. I have one thing to say—you better work!...Ru Paul from the song Supermodel (You Better Work).
W
http://www.traderplanet.com/newsletter_articles/view/4028/distribution:8
We trade and invest to make money. It’s science with a decent dose of art and intuition thrown into the mix. It’s work, and the instruction is to view it as work. You get paid for putting in hard days of work and hard nights of study and using your skills to make money.
Many come to the markets because of the hype, the lure of easy money and the availability of this or that system, method, software, trading technique, trading room, seminar, infomercial or tempting e-mail. Never in the history of mankind has it been easier for people to tap into the markets. Large numbers of people visualize themselves sitting in their pajamas, making trades from home and earning a really good living. On top of this, trading goes on all over the world and people can buy and sell at almost any time of the day or night. What’s not to like about this? How easy can this be?
At their core, trading and investing are simple. The challenge is that they are not easy. Why? Because markets are complex adaptive systems that are always in motion. Other than the regulations set by the exchanges, there are very few rules. In trading, we make our own rules and strive to take money from other people before they take our money. This is serious business, because it is our hard-earned money that we put at risk every time we enter a position. There is almost no way, short of complicated hedging strategies, to put money into the markets without putting it into the realm of risk.
Why do so many traders fail? Why are so many called and so few chosen? There are several main reasons for this, but the fundamental one centers around belief systems. When you think about it, you realize that the market is pretty much a level playing field. Everyone has access to similar information, charting systems, and trading platforms. For a price, you can get just about anything you think you need in terms of trading. The one thing you really need to be successful is not for sale: Your belief system and the belief system of others.
You are not really trading the markets. You are trading your beliefs about the markets against the beliefs of everyone else who is trading. This is the area where the majority of traders fail. They do not have a good understanding of their belief systems, yet struggle to put them into action to generate profits. You are what you believe, and if you don’t know who you are or what you believe, the market is a very expensive way to find out. Why? Because you will act every drama going on in your inner and outer life, and project these into the markets. Ever obliging, the markets will give back to you what you project into them. In the markets and in life, you tend to get what you give. This happens every day on a very large scale—those who know themselves take money from those who do not know themselves.
Let’s look at a price chart as one example of this. What is a price chart? Emotions plotted on a grid. That’s it. Why do you execute on that chart? Because you believe something about it. The thousands of others who are executing on that chart are also trading their beliefs. In order to have a chart, it is necessary to have both buyers and sellers. In order for price movement to occur, there must be both buyers and sellers. That means that people are trading their beliefs in that moment. If it were not so, there would be no price movement and no trading edge.
How can we understand this even more clearly? A price print means different things to different people. Those who win have learned to focus on what the price means to others, rather than to themselves. Put another way, top traders are always looking to find out where the other person is going to execute. Where is the other person who is already in the position going to get out of that position? What does that person think or believe about his position, and what is going to cause him to get out? It really is the beliefs of the other person that matter to you in terms of profit. When everyone who is going to get in is in, and everyone who is going to get out is out, there is no price movement. The movement occurs when the loser decides to get out, because the winner can wait. This is the edge that traders have when they let profits run.
Try to put this concept into perspective. It’s actually quite simple. The top trader is always looking for those edges where enough people change their beliefs and give up their positions. The top trader is asking continuously: What so other people believe about this price action? What has to happen to make these people change their beliefs? How long has the loser been losing and the winner been winning, and at what point will they each believe is enough?
Put yourself in the position of the loser and try to fathom what that person believes about his or her position. If you are attracted to this concept and want to learn more or if you don’t understand this concept---please let me know? Constantly question your own belief systems until you know why you are doing something. Always ask yourself, “What do I believe that is not true? What do others believe that is not true?” That is a good place to start working today!
If you must play, decide on three things at the start: the rules of the game, the stakes, and the quitting time…Chinese Proverb
Thanks and Good Trading!
Janice Dorn, M.D., Ph.D.
www.thetradingdoctor.com
Copyright and Illustration Copyright: 2010, Janice Dorn, M.D., Ph.D. All Rights Reserved.
Friday, January 21, 2011
On the implications of a widening WTI-Brent spread
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Is WTI becoming an ETF derivative?
Posted by Izabella Kaminska on Feb 20, 2009 this is 2009 *************At the current rate of expansion, Jakob expects the fund — operated out of California by former (unsuccessful) US Republican candidate for congress Nicholas Gerber — to hit 100,000 WTI futures contracts by Monday.
Just to compare, this time last year the fund held only 2,855 WTI futures.
At those levels the fund now controls some 20 per cent of the open interest on the April Nymex WTI contract, and 30 per cent of the same contract on the ICE exchange. As Jakob puts it:
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On the implications of a widening WTI-Brent spread
Posted by Izabella Kaminska on Jan 12 14:55.http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2011/01/12/456846/on-the-implications-of-a-widening-wti-brent-spread/
The spread between the two main global oil benchmarks, West Texas Intermediate and Brent, is blowing out (again). And it’s been doing so for most of the month.
We’ve known for a long time, of course, that WTI futures are partial to underpricing distortions due to the contract’s over-reliance on the Cushing delivery point in Oklahoma. This has a tendency to clog up due to limited capacity and one-way crude flows, a phenomenon which has recently become known as ‘Cushing syndrome‘.
The trouble is, this time ’round, it looks increasingly like the widening might be as much to do with tightness in the physical Brent crude market (that made of Brent, Forties, Oseberg and Ekofisk crudes) as it is restricted capacity at Cushing.
Data from the ICE Futures Europe — home to the most liquid and popular Brent futures contract on the market — shows, for example, that four days ahead of expiry there are still more than 122,000 February contracts waiting to be rolled on, exchanged for physical or cash settled.
The physical market for Brent, however, remains tight — something which John Kemp at Reuters suggests could create a lucrative opportunity for those positioned accordingly.
As he explains on Wednesday:
It would be surprising if one or more large dealers and physical traders had not anticipated this tightness by establishing large long positions in the spreads or the underlying physical, tightening the market even further.
But even without a deliberate squeeze, recent investment inflows, some into nearby contracts rather than further along the curve, would probably have been enough to temporarily stretch the available liquidity and push the market into a steep backwardation.
But that’s not the only side-effect.
Pricing for product margins is being skewed too. The difference between the February RBOB (the benchmark gasoline blend used in the US) crack vs WTI, and the February RBOB crack vs Brent, for example, has hit a monumental $6, a figure which is very rarely seen at this time of year.
You can see the widening in the following chart from Petromatrix’s Olivier Jakob:
It’s all the more bizarre given gasoline stocks in the United States are still at multi-year highs. Favourable refining economics are hence not the reason for the widening.
No, as Jakob sums up, it’s more than likely all due to what’s going on in Brent:
… one of the main reasons why the RBOB/WTI crack has improved over the last 10 days is because of the collapse of WTI versus Brent. The RBOB crack to Brent has not improved at all and the contango on RBOB is increasing
Bulls to turn from gold toward oil, copper: Goldman
(Reuters) - Oil supplies are adequate but will tighten later this year as a bull market for industrial commodities gathers force and the focus on gold fades, Goldman Sach's global head of commodities research said on Monday.
On the oil market, Brent is a better benchmark than its U.S. equivalent and should attract investment flows and retain the robust market structure it has held since December, Jeff Currie told Reuters in an interview.
For the month of December, industrial commodities oil and copper outperformed gold, which together with other precious metals was one of the star performers for last year as whole.
Currie said December's trend would continue and "a key theme" of 2011 would be a bull market for cyclical commodities, supported by economic recovery.
Long term, the strongest performers should be the "CCCP group" of crude, copper, corn and beans and platinum -- raw materials for which China, the world's leading commodity market, will have to rely on imports.
Copper, which hit a series of records in December that continued into January, already faces shortages. Oil supplies for now are ample, Currie said, in agreement with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which on Monday published its latest monthly report on supply and demand.
"OPEC is right. The market is relatively well supplied right now," he said.
But that could change by the end of the year, he said.
"Can demand push supply up against the capacity constraints? That's likely to happen in the latter part of 2011 on crude and into 2012."
PRICE STRENGTH NOT YET ALARMING
Reflecting tightening supplies, Goldman has issued a 2011 target for U.S. crude of $105 a barrel -- compared with around $91 on Monday. This year's prices are not expected to be strong enough to derail economic growth.
"It's unlikely to happen this year, when we have high inventories and substantial spare capacity. That would be a 2012 event," Currie said.
High inventories are reflected in a contango market structure for U.S. crude, also known as West Texas Intermediate (WTI), but Brent has switched to the opposite structure backwardation, meaning prompt contracts are more expensive than those for future delivery.
Currie said Brent's backwardation would persist and that the investment flows associated with extra commodity index weighting toward Brent earlier this month could continue.
"We definitely expect to see some growth in the market," Currie said of Brent.
"Brent is the better benchmark without question. WTI is idiosyncratic."
U.S. crude's idiosyncrasies include storage issues at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for U.S. futures.
Extra capacity is being added in Cushing, which Currie said should prevent any return to supercontango -- a function of storage capacity being full -- but inventory would still be enough to keep U.S. futures in a contango structure.
The combination of contango, large stocks, reduced demand and a struggling economy has been marked by a strong correlation between oil and other raw materials and equities as a range of markets price in long-term economics. That link should weaken.
"There has been a very high correlation between the two (equities and commodities). It's higher when the commodities market is in contango. It becomes lower when we're in backwardation. We're at that point right now," said Currie.
Factbox: Top 10 reasons why 2011 isn't 2008 for oil markets
(Reuters) - Oil prices are heading toward $100 a barrel again, just over three years after they first touched triple digits on the first trading day of 2008.
Analysts are not expecting a replay of 2008, however, when prices roared to a record high over $147 a barrel before crashing down below $33 at the end of the year.
Below is a factbox on major differences between the current oil market situation and three years ago.
1) SPARE OIL PRODUCTION CAPACITY
Markets have a greater supply cushion in 2011 than they did in 2008. Analysts estimate OPEC has extra capacity of between 5-6 million barrels per day (bpd) of output it could bring on, primarily from Saudi Arabia, to cool off overheated markets, according to a Reuters poll.
Spare OPEC capacity had dipped to around 1.5 million bpd in 2008, but Saudi Arabia has since brought on new capacity.
In addition, Iraq, which is not subject to OPEC production ceilings is expected to add 400,000 barrels per day of output in 2011, according to government officials.
(OPEC spare capacity: r.reuters.com/wev29q )
2) SPARE OIL REFINING CAPACITY
Limited spare global refining capacity also helped push up prices in 2008, but since then significant extra capacity has been added in emerging markets such as India and China. In addition, U.S. refiners have capacity shut in due to low margins, which could be brought back online if needed.
Global refining capacity rose by 2.2 percent in 2009, supported by a nearly 600,000 bpd rise in India and a 800,000 bpd increase from China, according to the 2010 BP Statistical Review. (Graphic: link.reuters.com/kuc44r )
In addition, more complex refining capacity has been added to the market, capable of refining lower-quality crude. In 2008, a lack of desulpherization capacity helped drive up prices for higher quality crude needed to produce lower sulphur products.
3) INVENTORIES
Crude stockpiles held by OECD countries have jumped since 2008, giving the group more padding to compensate for any supply disruption. OECD days of forward demand cover hit 60 in the third quarter of 2010, up from 53 days three years ago, as the economic crisis hit demand. (Graphic:link.reuters.com/muq29q )
4) GLOBAL DEMAND
While global demand fell in 2008 from record highs in 2007, consumption rebounded strongly in 2010 and is expected to rise by 1.43 million bpd to a record 87.78 million bpd in 2011. Analysts polled by Reuters in December estimated demand rising to 88.6 million bpd.
5) RESOURCE NATIONALISM
Resource nationalism among oil-producing nations was on the rise in 2008, with governments cutting back supplies to increase prices, taking larger stakes in projects and revising terms for current and future projects.
Countries such as Venezuela and Russia, which were at the fore of the movement in 2008, currently are seeking greater foreign investment as part of efforts to boost oil output.
6) THE DOLLAR ISN'T FALLING
A drop in the dollar against the euro to record lows in 2008 helped drive oil's rise to record highs, boosting commodities denominated in the greenback.
The dollar firmed in the fourth quarter of 2010, however, due to eurozone sovereign debt woes and expectations of a stronger U.S. economy, adding another potential check to rising oil prices. (Graphic:link.reuters.com/kyj54r )
The dollar and oil prices showed a strong negative correlation for much of 2010, reaching nearly 75 percent in November on a 25-day basis. The negative correlation eased in December, however, dipping to under 17 percent in thin holiday trade at the end of the month.
7) SUBSIDIES HAVE BEEN REDUCED
Fuel subsidies in key emerging economies such as China and India, the backbone of global demand growth over the past decade, have been reduced since 2008, exposing consumers there to higher costs to help check runaway consumption.
China hiked fuel prices in 2009, after averaging 7 percent annual oil demand growth 2004-2008, as part of efforts to curb wasteful consumption. Petrol prices in India have risen 17 percent since deregulation in June.
8) PEAK OIL
Concerns oil had neared peak global production levels helped drive up prices in 2008, led by gains in the far end of the futures curve.
Increased production from unconventional in countries such as Canada and deepwater plays such as Brazil have since have eased this concern, helping ease concerns about future supply.
Total proved oil reserves, including Canadian oil sands, rose from 1,475.7 billion barrels in 2008 to 1,476.4 billion barrels in 2009, according to the BP 2010 statistical review.
Markets are also keeping an eye on growing production for U.S. shale oil deposits, which could raise supplies and ease prices in the giant U.S. market as shale gas did for natural gas markets.
9) NATURAL GAS IS CHEAP, AND WILL REMAIN SO
Prices for U.S. natural gas, which competes with refined products, are about half the average of $8 per million British termal unit seen in 2008, due mainly to the explosion of production from U.S. shale.
According to the latest estimate from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, total marketed U.S. natural gas production in 2010 rose more than 3 pct to 22.66 trillion cubic feet, the highest level since 1973.
10) INVESTORS GO ACTIVE, SEEKING ALPHA
Investors are now investing in commodities in order to chase absolute returns, as opposed to seeking to diversify their portfolios as in 2008. To increase alpha, they are taking a more active approach to managing their commodities exposures, compared with the huge cash pushed into passive, long only investments in the run up to 2008.
According to Barclays Capital, 43 percent of commodities investors will be seeking to invest in the asset class through actively managed portfolios in 2011.
(Editing by David Gregorio)
A Primer On Oil Indicators
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A Primer On Oil Indicators |
Written by Brad Zigler | |
January 20, 2011 12:09 pm EST | |
Page 1 of 3
Every week, when the U.S. Energy Department releases its petroleum inventory data, we take an in-depth look at the oil market, using several indicators measuring the industry's health from a refiner's standpoint (for examples, see the Wednesday Weekly Oil Roundup editions of Brad's Desktop). The thinking behind this approach is simple. Better-informed consumers are less likely to be surprised by shifting price trends in crude oil and refined products, such as gasoline and heating oil. Investors, too, are better served if they understand the price pressures at the refining level. The presentation of these indicators, however, prompts more than a little head scratching among new readers. "What's the significance of the differential in refining margins?" asks one reader. Another inquires: "Why should I care about a three-month roll in WTI futures?" So, just as we did with our Friday Inflation Scorecard columns ("Deciphering The Inflation Scorecard: Why Gold?" and "Deciphering The Inflation Scorecard: Part 2"), we've put together a guide to our Wednesday Weekly Oil Roundup indicators. Oil Refining Margins – Not all refiners are alike. Refiners make choices about the products they turn out based on equipment availability and market demand. Some refiners may concentrate on the production of lighter distillates, such as gasoline, while others tend to produce higher proportions of middle fuels, such as diesel and heating oil. For lighter distillate refineries, a 3-2-1 "crack" is used as the standard mix: three barrels of crude oil yields two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of heating oil. Refiners leaning toward middle distillates are proxied by a 2-1-1 crack: two barrels of crude oil yields one barrel each of gasoline and heating oil (heating oil and diesel are chemically similar and likewise priced alike). Gross refining margins are derived by dividing the proceeds of product sales by the cost of the crude oil inputs. When the economy's perking along, selling gasoline is favored over diesel and heating oil, since consumers tend to drive more, increasing gasoline demand. Petrol consumption, in contrast, declines in bad times, along with motor fuel prices. Thus, the peaks and valleys in the margin differential often confirm broad economic trends. 3-2-1 runs will tend to move to a premium over 2-1-1 operations in boom times and reverse to a discount in downturns.
Refining Margin Differentials Vs. S&P 500 |
Average Daily Volume and Open Interest – Week-to-week changes in volume give shape to a price trend. An increase in volume adds strength to a trend, while a decline makes it suspect.
Open interest represents the number of unliquidated contracts, or potential volume, extant. When open interest builds, traders flood into the market, while declining open interest denotes a liquidating market. Stronger price trends—both bullish and bearish—are accompanied by rises in volume and open interest.
CBOE Oil Volatility Index (OVX) – The Chicago Board Options Exchange tracks the implied volatility embedded in options on the United States Oil Fund (NYSE Arca: USO) in its OVX index. The index is a clue to traders' near-term expectations. The number—currently 27.28—represents the annualized expected volatility in USO prices over the next 30 days. A relatively low reading means options are "cheap," favoring their purchase, while high values make it more attractive to sell. Generally speaking, as oil prices fall, volatility tends to rise, while it declines in a bull market.
CBOE Oil Volatility Index (OVX)
Protective Put Prices – The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index derives its value from a universe of calls and puts. The Oil Put index, though, only considers put prices as the cost of insurance on a long oil position. An upward spike in the index often precedes a significant price break, while low values suggest trader complacency with oil prices.
Heating Oil/Gasoline Spread – A spread represents a paired futures position—long one contract, short another. Spreads capture a developing discount or premium between the two contracts.
Conventionally, the first contact specified is bought, the second sold. Thus, the HO/RB spread consists of buying heating oil and selling RBOB gasoline. Heating oil tends to move to a premium over gasoline in winter and early spring, but generally loses ground to trade at a discount in the summer driving season.
Heating Oil (HO)/Gasoline (RB) Cracks
Corn/Ethanol Crush – The U.S. manufacture of ethanol—an alcohol additive to motor fuel—is based upon corn. Rising corn prices reduce the crush yield if ethanol prices fail to rise apace. At times, the correlation between corn and ethanol prices rise, at other times it falls.
Presently, inflation in corn prices outstrips that of ethanol, reducing refiners' yields. Thus, the price of gasoline and ethanol can be compared to determine the relative attractiveness of adding alcohol in the fuel mix.
Ethanol Crush
Brent/WTI Premium/Discount – The benchmark grade for European crude oil is Brent—which is extracted from North Sea oil fields—while the U.S. uses West Texas Intermediate crude. The U.S. grade is lighter and sweeter—meaning it is less viscous and lower in sulphur—than North Sea oil and, consequently, it tends to trade at a premium. Supply considerations, however, can cause a disruption in the normal spread. Presently, a relative glut of WTI to North Sea oil has caused Brent to trade at a substantial premium to WTI. To a certain point, this improves the competitiveness of Canadian oil (the U.S.' largest foreign supplier).
WTI Contango/Inversion – The spread between the price of the near-month NYMEX contract and the one for delivery three months later reflects the market's perceptions about oil supply. When near months bid higher than the price of later deliveries, there's not enough product to carry over—a condition known as "inversion," or "backwardation." This tightness in supply usually translates into high overall prices. The converse—where lower prices in front months and progressively higher prices in distant deliveries, often known as "contango"—describes a market well-supplied with oil.
You should now have a handle on our Wednesday numbers. Hopefully, this little primer will help you make sense of our weekly reports on this critical market sector. Your questions, of course, are still welcomed.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Crude Oil Volatility Falls as Futures Slip in New York Trading
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-01-18/crude-oil-volatility-falls-as-futures-slip-in-new-york-trading.html
Crude Oil options volatility fell after the underlying crude futures slipped 16 cents after theInternational Energy Agency said supplies are ample, particularly in North America.
Implied volatility for at-the-money options expiring in April, a measure of expected price swings in futures and a gauge of options prices, was 26.2 percent as of 4 p.m. in New York, down from 27.3 percent Jan. 14.
Oil for February delivery settled at $91.38 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, compared with $91.54 a barrel Jan. 14. Futures erased all of this year’s gains and were unchanged from Dec. 31.
March $95 calls were the most active options in electronic trading today, with 2,121 lots changing hands. They fell 28 cents to $1.46 a barrel. March $110 calls, the next-most active contract, lost 3 cents to 5 cents a barrel with 1,812 contracts trading. One contract is for 1,000 barrels of crude oil. February options expired at the close of Nymex floor trading Jan. 14.
The exchange distributes real-time data for electronic trading and releases information on floor trading, where the bulk of options trading occurs, the next business day.
March $80 puts were the most active options traded Jan. 14 with 6,786 lots changing hands. They fell 6 cents to 21 cents a barrel. The next-most active option, March $110 calls, slipped 1 cent to 8 cents a barrel on 4,500 contracts traded.
Open interest was highest Jan. 14 for March $100 calls with 41,212 contracts. Next were December $100 calls with 39,208 and December $120 calls with 33,703.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Trading Wisdom from my own
Percentage Volume Oscillator
Rabbitt Q-RanK
-asr: we should have our own Q rank for CL based on EUR , S&P , GOLD - Video here
Back-testing your trading ideas - http://www.amibroker.com/guide/h_backtest.html
Back-testing systems for futures contracts - http://www.amibroker.com/guide/h_futbacktest.htmlPortfolio-level backtesting - http://www.amibroker.com/guide/h_portfolio.html