Saturday, April 12, 2014

Europe Folds As Putin Tells It To Pay Ukraine's Gazprom Bill, Or Else ...

 Europe Folds As Putin Tells It To Pay Ukraine's Gazprom Bill, Or Else ...
Another day ending in "y" means another day in which Putin plays the G(roup of most insolvent countries)-7 like a fiddle.
The latest: Europe should provide aid to Ukraine to ensure uninterrupted natural-gas deliveries to the region, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said as reported by Bloomberg.
"Russia is the only country helping Ukraine’s economy with energy supplies that are not paid for,"  Dmitry Peskov told reporters today in Moscow,  commenting on President Vladimir Putin’s letter yesterday to 18 European heads of state. “The letter is a call to immediately review this situation, which is absurd on the one hand and critical on the other.
Said otherwise: PUTIN SAYS EUROPE GAS TRANSIT DEPENDS ON UKRAINE: IFX
Or, as we explained yesterday, Russia is quite happy to keep the EU gas flowing... as long as Ukraine has enough gas in storage to assure Gazprom it won't syphon off gas destined for Europe. So how much gas does Ukraine need to pre-stock? About $4-5 billion worth. The problem is that Ukraine doesn't have a dime to spend on gas.
So putting the question aside if Ukraine will or won't import even one bcf of Russian gas ever again (thanks to some fracking or US natgas exporting magic), what Putin just said is that if Europe wants an uninterrupted supply of gas it better find a way to fund Ukraine to the tune of up to $5 billion, or else the gas may just get shut off.
And guess what: Putin is about to win yet again:  
European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger is working on a plan to help Ukraine pay some of its gas bills to Russia, he told Austria's ORF radio on Friday, saying there was "no reason to panic" about Russian gas supplies to Europe.

"We are in close contact with Ukraine and its gas company to ensure that Ukraine remains able to pay and the debts that the gas company has to Gazprom do not rise further," he said, adding he would meet Ukraine's energy and foreign ministers on Monday.

"I am preparing a solution that is part of the aid package that the IMF, the European Union and the World Bank is giving to Ukraine and from which payment for open bills will be possible."

Friday, April 11, 2014

Marc Faber Warns "The Market Is Waking Up To How Clueless The Fed Is"

"I think it's very likely that we're seeing, in the next 12 months, an '87-type of crash," warns a somewhat excited sounding Marc Faber, adding that he thinks "it will be worse."
Marc Faber Warns "The Market Is Waking Up To How Clueless The Fed Is"

The pain is just getting started as Faber notes that "the market is slowly waking up to the fact that the Federal Reserve is a clueless organization." Internet and Biotech sectors (growth stocks) are "highly vulnerable because they're in cuckoo land in terms of valuations," and fully expects the selling to spread as The Fed "have no idea what they're doing. And so the confidence level of investors is diminishing," and that means we will see a major decline.

Copper, iron ore imports defy China weakness

Copper, iron ore imports defy China weakness










Markets were shocked on Thursday by surprisingly weak trade data from China, the world's second largest economy, that showed overall imports falling by double digits and exports declining 6.6%.
But China's appetite for raw materials like iron ore and copper appear undiminished.
Chinese steel mills and iron ore traders made the most of soft prices for the commodity in March, ramping up imports 21%.
After a steep drop off, mostly attributed to seasonal factors, in February of more than 25 million tonnes from the record setting pace in January, imports jumped to just under 74 million tonnes in March.
First quarter imports are 19% higher than last year and at 222 million tonnes imply an annualized tally of almost 890 million tonnes, compared to 2013's 820 million tonnes.
The surge in imports also come despite iron ore stockpiles at China's ports reaching fresh highs of 108 million tonnes this week.
Long a practice in the copper market, some estimates put the portion of the country's iron ore stockpiles used as collatoral for trade credit at 40%.A factor boosting imports is tightening domestic credit conditions in China which encourage imports as part of financing deals.
The benchmark price of iron ore was down slightly on Thursday, but is up 14% from 18-month lows suffered early March.
According to data from the The Steel Index, the import price of 62% iron ore fines at China's Tianjin port lost $0.30 to $119.10 per tonne on Thursday, down from $134.20 at the start of the year.
Copper shipments also defied weakness in China, rising a whopping 31.4% on year to 420,000 tonnes. That's up from 379,000 tonnes in February due to the Lunar New Year holiday, but down from a particularly strong 536,000 tonnes in January this year.
China's copper imports are very price sensitive and the red metal fell to a near four-year low in March of $2.92 a pound.
The copper price has since recovered to above $3.00 a pound, but is down more than 10% year to date and a new study suggests more pain is in the offing.
The closely-watched Thomson Reuters GFMS Copper Survey forecasts a period of copper market surpluses as global mine supply ramps up and predicts the average price to test $2.75 a pound ($6,000/tonne) in the second half.

Is Aluminum’s Nine-year Surplus Finally Ending?

Is Aluminum’s Nine-year Surplus Finally Ending?
2013 wasn’t a great year for aluminum. During the first nine months of the year, production of the metal exceeded demand by 1.2 million metric tons (MT), The Wall Street Journal quotes the the World Bureau of Metal Statistics as saying. That’s more than double the surplus recorded during the previous year.
Unsurprisingly, prices for the metal were hit hard by that oversupply. Specifically, states the news outlet, as the year drew to a close, three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down at $1,748 per MT, its lowest point since July 2009.
That may sound bad, but a broader look at the aluminum market shows that it’s not just this past year that the metal has performed poorly — it’s been down in the dumps for nearly a decade. As Bloomberg notes, “[t]here have been nine years of excess global production … with Chinese output tripling in the period.”
All that doom and gloom makes this week’s news that in 2014 the metal may go into deficit that much more significant.
Alcoa’s positive prediction
Providing that positive news was Alcoa (NYSE:AA), one of the world’s top aluminum producers. It released its first-quarter results on Tuesday, at that time also commenting that it sees the aluminum market falling into a 730,000-MT deficit this year. That’s up significantly from the deficit of 106,000 MT the company predicted back in January, as per Bloomberg.
Driving that deficit, the company said, will be a 7-percent increase in worldwide aluminum demand, much of which is expected to come from the aerospace sector. However, auto sector demand, particularly from Ford (NYSE:F), which needs the metal for its lightweight F-150 pickup truck, will also play a role, said Klaus Kleinfeld, chairman and CEO at Alcoa. “The opportunity in auto is tremendous,” Bloomberg quotes him as saying.
Price update
Aluminum prices have certainly gained some support from Alcoa’s new outlook. Most recently, Bloomberg pegged LME aluminum for three-month delivery at $1,827 per MT, above the $1,700 to $1,800 range it traded in for 2014′s first quarter.
However, that prediction isn’t the only factor that’s been positively impacting the metal’s price — a week prior to the company’s announcement, aluminum broke its 200-day moving average for the first time since March 2013, with three-month aluminum approaching $1,850 per MT, as per MetalMiner. Explaining the gain, Forbes notes that it was related to the UK High Court’s decision to uphold Rusal’s (EPA:RUSAL) block on the implementation of new LME warehouse rules. If put in place, the rules would have “depressed the spot premiums manufacturers like Alcoa depend on.”
At the moment, it’s uncertain if prices for the metal will continue to rise. After all, as Forbes points out, structural factors such as “persistently high aluminum inventory relative to demand” are still an issue. However, Alcoa’s deficit prediction certainly seems to indicate that a shift may be in the works.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Another SPX Chart 1946 2014 Co-relation

Another SPX Chart 1946 2014 Co-relation

Another SPX Chart 1946 2014 Co-relationAnother SPX Chart 1946 2014 Co-relation


German Vice Chancellor Warns 'No Alternative To Russian Gas'

'No Alternative to Russian Gas'

Even Germany's vice chancellor Sigmar Gabriel realizes that there is no alternative to Russian gas for Germany, at least not in the near future. It should be noted to this that Germany's energy policy has driven energy prices to the very edge of what the population and industry can still handle.
On the one hand, there is the vast subsidization of 'green energy', which is not only thoroughly uneconomic and blighting the landscape, but the costs of which have been off-loaded on consumers, who pay a special 'ecological fee' on top of their already far too high bills.
On the other hand, after the Fukujima accident, Germany's government quickly gave in to pressure from the Greens and decided to completely phase out nuclear energy (as if Germany were in danger of being hit by a tsunami). This is of course a completely futile gesture, as the country is surrounded by other countries brimming with nuclear reactors over which it has no control whatsoever (admittedly, even one nuclear accident would be one too many). However, this hasty step has once again made electricity more expensive.

Oil and Gas Reserves Infographic

We have come across a neat infographic published by RIA Novosti on the countries harboring large oil and gas reserves – all data are per capita and in USD terms.

Oil and Gas Reserves Infographic

Indebted Rusal flags steeper loss for 2013 due to Norilsk Nickel

Indebted Rusal flags steeper loss for 2013 due to Norilsk Nickel
Loss-making Russian aluminium group United Company Rusal Plc said it has revised down its earnings for 2013 after a review of its share of profits of associates in Norilsk Nickel showed the figure was overstated by $100 million.
Rusal is of the view that a lower profit share in Norilsk Nickel will have an adverse impact on its consolidated financial statements for 2013, the world's biggest aluminium producer said in a filing to the Hong Kong bourse on Thursday morning.
Rusal's 2013 loss has now been revised to $3.322 billion from $3.222 billion and its share of profits of associates should be $84 million instead of $184 million, it said.
Carrying value of the company's investment in Norilsk Nickel, the world's largest nickel and palladium producer, should be $7.801 billion, rather than $7.901 million.
Rusal had reported its full-year net loss for 2013 was at $3.22 billion, versus $528 million loss in 2012. 
Lenders have granted the world's biggest aluminium producer a three-month breather, giving the loss-making firm time to try to hammer out revised terms for $3.7 billion of debt repayments without risk of default.