Wall Street, Oil Compete For Embarrassing Record On Pie-In-The-Sky Trade Deal

 | Nov 15, 2019 07:34

In movie analogy, the two would be competing for the Razzie awards. And it’s hard to pick a winner between them, with performances that seem equally embarrassing.

We’re talking about Wall Street and oil.

The stock market is pumped up on U.S.-China steroids, hoping to somehow stretch its unfathomable streak of record highs until the New Year, on a trade deal that none can set a date for or even quantify.

The oil market is borrowing some of that trade deal hocus-pocus too. But, more importantly, it is also buying into OPEC’s shale oil spin that masks the cartel’s own demand inadequacy.

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Worse, in following the OPEC narrative, oil traders are virtually ignoring surging weekly stockpiles of U.S. crude and record high production reported by the Energy Information Administration.Despite some contest over its methodology, the EIA still produces data with a global reputation for transparency that OPEC can only dream of.Said John Kilduff, founding partner at Again Capital, an energy hedge fund in New York:

“These are strange times indeed on both Wall Street and the oil market. Stocks are up, chasing a pie-in-the-sky trade deal. Oil is defying fundamentals that point to at least $5 lower on a barrel.”

In Thursday’s stock market, the S&P 500, which has been hitting record highs almost every other day lately, reached a new closing peak at just under 3,097. While that milestone came without drama, the other major indices—the NASDAQ and Dow—struggled through the day.The catalyst investors, traders and their computers wanted was a trade deal with China. But that didn't come. Instead, investors had to deal with disappointing developments with tech giants like Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) (NASDAQ:CSCO) and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) (NASDAQ:AAPL).Two weeks after the White House triumphantly announced there will be a phase-one deal and a subset of agreements that will bring the bitter 16-month U.S.-China dispute to a close, no sort of pact has been reached.The critical issues right now appear to be how much China will spend on U.S. farm products and when and how tariffs imposed earlier this year—and possibly set to be boosted next month—will be rescinded.

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As of Thursday, no one in the Trump Administration or Xi Jinping's government was signaling any clarity on when an agreement will come.

But given the propensity of both sides to keep their stock markets “juiced” on hopes of a deal, a statement could emerge on Friday either out of Washington or Beijing, or even both capitals, saying negotiators have—again—achieved consensus on key differences and are “close”—perhaps, incredibly close—to signing a deal.

On the oil front, crude prices fell just modestly on Thursday despite bearish weekly data from the EIA. The near flat finish came as OPEC skillfully diverted the market’s attention from the weak demand for its oil with suggestions that U.S. shale production could sink beyond trade expectations.

According to OPEC, there will be a smaller surplus in the oil market next year, although it still expects demand for its crude to drop as rivals pump more.

OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo also said on Wednesday there would likely be downward revisions of supply going into 2020, especially from U.S. shale.

It’s true that the notion of a shale bust-up is growing with the 30-month low in the U.S. oil rig count and other distressing developments like the financial meltdown at Chesapeake Energy (NYSE:CHK). While it is mainly a natural gas producer, the company is one of the pioneers of the U.S. fracking revolution that gave birth to shale.

For greater perspective, the U.S. upstream sector has about 55% fewer drilling rigs than the 1,609 deployed during the highs of October 2014. But it is producing about 40% more oil than five years ago, according to the EIA.

On Thursday, the EIA said production has hit a new record high of 12.8 million barrels per day. In other short-term energy outlook data issued a day earlier, it said it expected an average all-time high of 13 million bpd for November. For 2020, it raised output projections to an average of 13.29 million bpd from a previous 13.17 million bpd.

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