Someone, at east, is coming clean.
As
oil prices skid, ‘panic is beginning to set in’
12
December, 2014
Oil,
markets sink
As
analyst Alastair McCaig puts it today, “panic is beginning to set
in” across financial markets as the collapse in oil prices deepens.
His
comments came as equity and currency markets faced fresh turmoil,
with crude slipping further below the $60-a-barrel mark on a new
price forecast and more economic signals from China. Iran’s oil
minister added fuel to the fire with his suggestion that there may be
$20 to go still where crude is concerned.
This
is a catch-all ASF view; only displays when an unsupported article
type is put in an ASF drop one
Stock
prices sank, while the Canadian dollar plumbed new depths.
“With
the Iranian oil minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh now stating that he
can see oil being squeezed down to $4 a barrel, panic is beginning
to set in,” said Mr. McCaig of London-based IG.
“Overnight,
Chinese industrial figures continued to soften, encouraging BHP
Billiton to lower its expectations for Chinese steel consumption and
alter its production levels accordingly,” he dded.
On
top of that, the International Energy Agency cut its projections for
demand for oil next year.
“Each
bounce brings forward the suggestion that a bottom has finally been
found, but then new sellers appear to take the price lower once
again,” market analyst Chris Beauchamp, also of IG, said as crude
slipped again, its losses for the week adding up to about 12 per
cent.
“Demand
bearishness has been added to the expectations of significant supply
levels, with oil-supplying nations reduced to squabbling over a
diminishing market.”
Investors
reacted by fleeing.
Japan’s
Nikkei actually gained 0.7 per cent, but stock prices fell in Europe
and North America.
London’s
FTSE 100, Germany’s DAX and the Paris CAC 40 were down by between
2.5 per cent and 2.8 per cent.
The
S&P 500, Dow Jones industrial average and Toronto's S&P/TSX
composite also sank. The Dow tumbled the most, off by 308 points, or
1.7 per cent - while the TSX lost 173 points, or 1.2 per cent.
The
Canadian dollar, whose fortunes are tied to the price of oil, touched
a low of 86.28 cents U.S. The high wasn’t all that much higher, at
86.83 cents. By late afternoon, the currency sat at 86.41 cents.
Oil
prices have staged a stunning decline since the summer, plunging by
more than 40 per cent and knocking oil-dependent economies like
Norway and Russia, whose currencies, like the Canadian dollar, are
under exceptional pressure.
Big
oil companies – Canada’s Cenovus Energy Inc. is but one – are
slashing spending while economists fast revise their forecasts for
economic growth.
And
the rout has taken its toll on shares of energy companies across the
globe.
“It's
been another bad week for energy stocks, with oil prices falling more
than 9 per cent as OPEC - which accounts for one third of global oil
production - cut its 2015 demand forecasts to the lowest in more than
a decade, while at the same time its most influential member, the
Saudis, continued to deny that there would be any slowdown in
production,” said market analyst Craig Erlam of Alpari.
“It's
a battle over market share at the moment and no one wants to back
down. The supply glut in the oil market saw inventories in the U.S.
grow again this week, helping to further weigh on oil prices. The
decline in oil prices is showing no signs of slowing which would
suggest that $50 a barrel is quite likely, and soon.”
Where
the loonie is concerned, the currency is now at its lowest in about 5
and one-half years. And it’s likely we haven’t seen the last of
the slide.
“For
Canada the impact is negative for the oil sector, investment, the
fiscal balance and growth; a stronger U.S. economy and weaker CAD
will mitigate some of the downside; however all in all it is net
negative,” said chief currency strategist Camilla Sutton of Bank of
Nova Scotia, referring to the Canadian dollar by its symbol.
“As
oil prices fall CAD is also likely to fall,” she dded.
“However,
the relationship is not one for one. Since the recent highs in oil
prices, June 30, WTI oil is down 45 per cent, while CAD is down 7 per
cent … The lower oil prices fall the more vulnerable CAD becomes.
We expect CAD to trend lower in the near-term and early 2015, and to
close 2015 at lower levels than it closes 2014.”
The
loonie, as Canada’s dollar coin is known, is “caught in a massive
oil slick,” said chief technical analyst George Davis of RBC
Dominion Securities.
“The
uninterrupted selloff in crude oil prices remains at the forefront as
a key market driver, causing the commodity currencies to feel the
brunt,” he said.
Yesterday,
Norway’s central bank cut interest rates by one-quarter of a
percentage point over fears what the oil collapse will mean to the
economy, while Russia’s central bank hiked by a full point to
defend the battered ruble and stem an outflow of capital.
One
of the big issues, said Mr. McCaig, is the threat of deflation, and
what that could mean. That’s a huge issue particularly in Britain
and the troubled euro zone.
Of
course, it all plays out in different ways.
Economists,
for example, are cutting their outlook for Alberta, which is home to
Canada’s oil patch, while the central provinces of Ontario and
Quebec should benefit from lower energy costs and the weaker
currency.
“Lower
oil prices are just like a tax cut for consumers so the expectation
is that some of that wealth effect will be spent,” said analyst
Jasper Lawler of CMC Markets in London.
“There
is typically a lag between when petrol prices to when people start to
feel richer.”
(I
got gas in Toronto this morning at $1.009 a litre. No, I didn’t
actually feel richer, but I did fill up the tank.)
Repsol yes Talisman
Shares
of Talisman Energy Inc. surged today as Spain’s Repsol SA moves
ever closer to a multibillion-dollar deal for the Canadian oil
company.
As
The Globe and Mail’s Jeffrey Jones reports, industry sources and
news reports indicated that talks are well under way and could be
wrapped up in days.
The
Financial Times said today the deal could be valued in the range of
$6 a share to $8, meaning more than $7-billion in the middle of that
spread.
Talisman,
which has been shedding assets, said this week it had been approached
by Repsol and others, but did not elaborate.
Amaya
probed
Quebec’s securities
watchdog is investigating trading activities in the shares of Amaya
Gaming Group Inc., the Montreal-area online gambling company whose
stock has soared after a $4.9-billion (U.S.) deal to buy the
PokerStars franchise, The Globe and Mail's Bertrand Marotte reports.
Amaya
said today it is co-operating with the Autorité des marchés
financiers (AMF), Quebec’s securities regulatory authority, in a
probe into trading activities in Amaya securities related to the
acquisition earlier this year of Oldford Group Ltd., parent of
Rational Group Ltd., owner of PokerStars, the world’s biggest
online poker company.
“To
the corporation’s knowledge, this does not involve any allegation
of wrongdoing by the corporation," Amaya said.
Manulife
Financial and brokerage firm CanaccordGenuity said they are helping
the AMF in its investigation.
An
RCMP spokesman in Montreal said the police force assisted the AMF in
the form of security during visits to Amaya offices with search
warrants but is not part of the probe.
Home
prices dip in month
You
can’t consider Canada’s housing market a single market, but on a
national basis, home prices fell month-over-month in November for the
first time in a year.
The
Teranet-National Bank home price index shed 0.3 per cent last month,
compared to October, according to fresh numbers released today.
Prices
slipped in eight of 11 markets measured, rose in just one and were
flat in two others.
On
an annual basis, prices were still up by 5.2 per cent, though that
marked a drop from October’s 5.4 per cent.
And
it was highlighted again by Calgary, where prices surged 9.2 per cent
annually, and Toronto, at 7.3 per cent.
Hamilton
and Edmonton saw gains of 6.2 per cent, while Vancouver, which along
with Calgary and Toronto has been the focus, gained 5.9 per cent.
On
a monthly basis, only Edmonton saw an increase, of 1.1 per cent,
while Vancouver and Hamilton came in flat.
Prices
fell 1.6 per cent in Halifax, 1.5 per cent in Quebec City, 1 per cent
in Montreal, 0.7 per cent in Winnipeg, 0.6 per cent in the Ottawa
area, 0.3 per cent in Toronto and Victoria, and 0.2 per cent in
Calgary.
“It
was the first time in two years that prices were up on the month in
only one of the markets surveyed,” said senior economist Marc
Pinsonneault of National Bank of Canada.
Just
this week, the Bank of Canada said a new model that is has devised
suggests, for the first time, that Canadian home prices may be
inflated by between 10 per cent and 30 per cent.
While
that’s a wide range, it nonetheless speaks to a frothy nature.
“While
home prices in Canada's 11 major cities may have edged down slightly
in November, they still remain quite elevated, hovering near record
highs,” said economist Dina Ignjatovic of Toronto-Dominion Bank.
“Moreover,
while the decline was fairly broad based, prices in several key
cities are well up from year-ago levels,” she dded.
“Going
forward, solid momentum in the job market over the past few months,
combined with an ultra-low interest rate environment should continue
to support the housing market in the near term. However, as
interest rates creep up in the latter half of next year and into
2016, affordability will erode, resulting in a moderation in home
price growth.”
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