Mon, Jun 29 2009, 05:40 GMT
by Phil Flynn
Post Fed Commodity Rush. And the money kept rolling in from every side. Oil bulls hands reached out and they reached wide. Now you may feel it should have been an oil related cause. But that's not the point my friends. When the money keeps rolling in, you don't ask how. Think of all the people guaranteed a good time now. The Fed has called the oil bulls to it, money out the door. Never been a friendlier Fed than the Fed we have now! Rollin', rollin', rollin'...
You can talk about Nigeria as the reason oil rallied and I guess you might be right somewhat. Or you can talk about a couple of refinery issues. But if you leave it at that, you are really missing the point my friend. What you are missing is the wonderfully intriguing subplots that are really driving this energy market. Oh sure, the market has a concern that the ongoing attacks in Nigeria are whittling away at the most significant spare production capacity that we have had this decade. Yet if this was just about Nigeria why did copper and gold turnaround as well? No, this is once again about the strange macroeconomic dynamic that we have been in and the market fears we will never escape from. The rally in oil is about the Fed and their accommodative policies. Oil rallied because the Fed failed to provide the marketplace with an exit strategy from their policy of near zero interest rates and quantitative easing they just gave the world the green light to pile back into commodities. The Fed basically told foreign countries, commodity hedge funds and speculators it's cool to get bullish and to ignore those worries of oversupply.
I guess it took the market 24 hours to digest the fed's message. Well Swiss Bank currency intervention knocked the Franc for a loop and basically had the currency market off kilter. Yet it seemed that the currencies got in line as traders basically bought without regard for the intervention that they hope will be a onetime deal or at the very least unsuccessful over the long run.
Still the best trade on the board might be to buy ‘forever stamps”. You know what I mean. Those forever stamps that are good no matter how many times postal rates increase. The reason I say that is that President Obama, when pushing his cap and trade tax, said that the polluters would pay for it. He said the energy legislation cost American families "maybe a postage stamp a day" in higher utility bills. Which means by my estimate that postage stamp must be going up too about $5.48 each. And oh yeah, don’t worry about those job losses in the oil and gas industry. President Obama says we are overstating it. Just ask the government for a grant to do some green retraining.
Have a great weekend! And do not forget to sign up for your free trial to alaronenergies and it's a great time to open your account if you have been waiting! Just call me at 800-935-6487 or email me at pflynn@alaron.com. See me today and every day on the Fox Business Network and also in Australia today on Sky News!
Buy August crude 6550 - stop 6260.
Buy August heating oil at 16500 - stop 16300.
Buy August RBOB at 17300 - stop 16900.
We're long August natural gas from apprx 412 – stopped earlier apprx 392.
Published on Mon, Jun 29 2009, 05:41 GMT
Alaron Futures and Options
| 822 W. Washington Blvd. Chicago IL 60607
http://www.alaron.com | info@alaron.com
Today's Trading Signals by Financial Trend Analysis
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 08:37 GMT
Technical Market Commentary - Technical Market Commentary by India Forex Advisors
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 05:58 GMT
Market Morning Briefing - Market Morning Briefing by Kshitij Consultancy Service
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 05:45 GMT
Forex Technical Report - S&P Finishes Higher but Erases Most Day-Session Gains by ForexHound.com
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 00:57 GMT
Daily Forex Strategy Briefing - EUR/USD at Crossroad by CMS Forex
Tue, Nov 24 2009, 00:36 GMT
Asian forex market wrap: don’t be happy, worry!
Forex Live | Tue, Nov 24 2009, 04:56 GMT
Forex: Dollar falls on Monday; Stocks rally in Wall Street and Europe
FXstreet.com | Mon, Nov 23 2009, 21:58 GMT
Stocks consolidates gains; Dollar holds near intra-day low
FXstreet.com | Mon, Nov 23 2009, 19:35 GMT
China October Pulp Imports 1.07 Mln Tons; Up 55% On Year
Dow Jones | Mon, Nov 23 2009, 04:08 GMT
China October Cocoa Bean Imports 129 Tons, Down 95% On Year
Dow Jones | Mon, Nov 23 2009, 04:06 GMT
GET CASH BACK FOR YOUR TRADES! Learn more about the Pip Rebate Program