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Equities & Oil

9/30/2015
By Charles Payne

Originally valued at $59.8 trillion, Global Equities have lost more than $13.0 trillion in value, which is the kind of destruction that has consequences.  This one might surprise you.

Last year, Saudi Arabia launched a war on American oil producers and it has been wildly successful.  It’s been so successful; in fact, there’s growing speculation that they’ll declare victory and begin to manipulate crude oil prices to go higher.

In the most recent head count, U.S. oil rigs in operation continued to slip.  As of now, there are 640 rigs, down from 1,592 a year ago.  To date, the problem has been actual production; it has continued to increase, but now it appears to be peaking as well.  Of course, the Middle Kingdom wants the production to decline.  The fracking miracle propelled the United States to the top of the heap.

Oil Production

Millions B/D

2004

2014

United States

8.3

12.5

Saudi Arabia

10.7

11.6

Russia

9.3

10.8

Despite the fact that oil is 80% of Saudi Arabia’s revenue and the plunge in price hit them hard in the wallet; that country has been steadfast in its determination to hold the line and to suppress prices by keeping their spigot overflowing.  That could change because of war and global financial markets.  Funding the battle against rebels in Yemen and preparing for a potential invasion from ISIS cost billions each month…that money has to come from somewhere.

Here’s the breakdown on the search for cash (a little more than sofa cushion money):

Foreign Exchange

$661 billion from $737 billion in August 2014

Bond Market

Recently floated bonds raising $24 billion

Asset Management

Has pulled $70 billion from asset managers around the world

Make no mistake; it’s far cheaper for Saudi Arabia to pull oil out of the ground, as this is a perilous game and situation to take back shares.

Other Players

This week, it’s been reported that the lower global stock markets is taking a toll on major players in the oil patch.

Qatar

There are reports of losses of $12 billion from its $250 billion sovereign wealth fund as eight of its top ten holdings, including Volkswagen and Glencore, have been hammered.

Norway

The managers of the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund have egg on their collective faces after posting the first quarterly loss ($8.8 billion) in three years.  It may seem like a drop in the $870 billion bucket, but a couple more like this could add up quickly.

Moreover, if there’s further weakness in equities and a global credit crunch, it would be dumb for OPEC and other non-cartel members not to squeeze the spigots, although the demand side might deteriorate.  Either way, it’s a game where the winner can only enjoy a pyrrhic and temporary victory.

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Charles Payne
Wall Street Strategies


 

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