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Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know Newsby SA Editor Rachael Granby- Bank trio becomes duo. Wells Fargo (WFC) will become the largest U.S. bank by branches with its bid for Wachovia (WB), after Citigroup (C) withdrew from compromise negotiations late yesterday on concerns about the quality of some of Wachovia's assets. Wells Fargo, with a bid valued at $11.4B, expects the purchase to be completed by the end of the year, and denies it will have to absorb assets shakier than originally thought.
- Government considers next steps. As the financial crisis continues to worsen, the U.S. government is considering two dramatic steps to turn around, or at least slow, the damage: guaranteeing billions of dollars in bank debt and temporarily insuring all U.S. bank deposits. The moves, which would mark the government's most extensive intervention to date, are in discussion stages only.
- Credit stays frozen. As frozen credit markets refuse to thaw, the cost of default protection on corporate bonds reaches new global records amid investor concerns the credit crisis will trigger corporate failures as companies struggle to finance their businesses. Interbank lending remains limited, and borrowing from the Fed's expanded discount window continued its trend of setting new highs every week, as the total daily average rose to $420.2B vs. $367.8B last week.
- Oil demand withers. The International Energy Agency warned Friday worldwide oil demand...
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Wednesday, October 15.Bullish Calls:Continental Resources (CLR) -- "This is a remarkable decline. All of the high quality ones are down so much, I can't go against it. This is where you pull the trigger.
3M (MMM) -- The moment this stock starts yielding 5%, I'm a buyer. Until then, keep your powder dry.Bearish Calls:Computer Sciences (CSC) -- This is a company that was going to be bought, but they passed up the chance. Now I don't want to buy it."Email continues...
Annaly Mortgage (NLY) -- I think this is a business model that needs to borrow money. Definitively do not buy."
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Whither Canada's Tar Sands?
Analyst: Oil Prices Inflated by 50%
Should We Listen to Boone Pickens on Oil?
Just a Commodities Correction - Not the End of the Bull (Part 2)
"According to Merrill Lynch, oil demand growth in the emerging markets has never contracted year-over-year in the modern era." - comments like these kill it for me. So you are writing about oil but do not even seem to have access to consumption stats, you seem to be merely quoting the conclusion of others. That won't go far in the shady sector of oil... and you get it wrong in saying that consumption increases have all been from the developing world. the big consumption jump of 2004 was led by China, but the US came to a rather close 2nd. But the main theme of the article, commodities are just pulling back and will resume, sounds reasonable to me, for oil that is. However that oil pullback could now last a bit longer than the 3-6 months I personally had expected, unless political events necessitate a strong rebound.
Will American Changes in Energy Consumption Stick?
Oil: Does Supply and Demand Still Apply?
The Crude Reality
Getting More Constructive on Crude Oil
Investing in Tankers: Ship, Ship, Hooray?
The Energy Follies
"I'm all for moving off of fossil fuels, which contribute to climate change, but for the time being we are kind of stuck using them...", so let's keep on drilling. 10-15 yrs until production on OCS/ANWR. For how long do you think we will be stuck with fossil fuels/when do you think alternatives will, well, work?
This is an investor's website. Is it? Is it rather an outlet for interest groups in disguise? This article is irrelevant to investors, it would be fine for a personal blog, but here it is misplaced.
Oil Headlines
Russia still has a long way to go, but I doubt the political will to max out their production/go beyond 10 Mnb/d, not even getting to the Russians' abilities. So their oil might not run out in a long time, but I don't think they will be doing as much as until recently to cover the incremental demand. There are few places left to find another Ghawar, while it still may be possible, the probability is low enough so that one should not bank on it. Also, new non-Opec discoveries will be a lot more expensive to bring to market than older ones due to rampant cost inflation in the up&downstream sectors. Also, drill ships are booked out for another five years or so, and as a rule of thumb it takes ~10yrs from first oil to exportable production. Consumption in exporting countries is rising rapidly, see e.g. KSA's decision to stop fuel oil exports which will increase demand for heavy crudes as refineries elsewhere will produce more of that stuff.
I cannot comment much about the Pickens plan in terms of viability etc as I am not in power gen, but some diversification of energy sources should not harm, and diversifying energy sources/lowering the US dependence on oil will improve matters for the majority, especially as China is not actually that far ahead of the US in terms of incremental oil demand over the past five years. Beyond that I have no interest in weighing into politically motivated analysis/discussions, other than to expose such contributions here on SA which pretend to deliver sound analysis when they are most likely spam from the political think tanks or the like.
As to abiogenic petroleum, well this is just as with the global warming thing, no, actually opposite. The former has no credible proponents that I know of, the latter has pretty much no credible opponents left (more or less citing the Economist which is not exactly tree hugger's publication). John Egan is not the only one who has to admit that he made a detour to the pits of Oil is Mastery site, from what I remember the cited science there was published in the 19th(!) century. Not that abiogenic petroleum does not exist at all, it is just that the huge quantities of oil man extracts from earth on a daily basis cannot really come from a replenishable source. Ok so let's say oil is infinite... how come we bother about OPEC? Start wars for oil? Is this "oil is limited" thing is just a conspiracy driving up prices? It is not. So why are you worrying about declines in existing fields if oil is unlimited anyway? I quite like this article: www.monthlyreview.org/... - reminds me of that old Greg Palast article on the Iraq war. It may also be just another conspiracy theory, but unfortunately the most credible I have seen. As to sub-$100 oil, I don't want to tie myself too much to oil price f/c, so just my loose expectation: oil will continue to decline near term, say H2 08, but rise in mid term. Bottom? 100 well likely, but not below 80. the quicker prices now fall, the less demand destruction, which will fuel the next ascend.
Oil Headlines
A Glut of Petroleum Products
Confirmatory Bias and Oil Investing
Introduction to a Long Lecture on Oil
b pursley - not sure why i still react to your ramblings. not knowing you or m damon personally, i would still put him way above you in terms of ideas and insight, given that he is ex-harvard and roles like mr ripley simply couldnt have been played by a dumbass. but then his quotes relate to his movie character, not him personally.