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@hog44444

freedom and whiskey. Not financial or any other kind of advice. Da Bears

United States 가입일 Şubat 2021
541 팔로잉351 팔로워
Contango
Contango@hog44444·
@Dcpcooks From a guy that spent 20 years trading at one of those big shops that might now occupy the old CME floor…your take is pretty spot on.
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DCP
DCP@Dcpcooks·
Talking to some big oil traders lately and they are not optimistic in any sense. Oil shortfalls of 600 million bbls or more in the next 60 days. I think it’s high probability we see a meaningful decline in gdp which will allow for enough demand destruction to look past the ugly inflation impact on the horizon. That impact will also be levered in conjunction with a feed through to anything related to oil related supply chains from fertilizer to PVC on top of pass through costs from diesel fuel. Farmers are going to have a very tough time. That sets up potential for a repricing of the curve front running lower yields and future cuts to offset a potential recession It’s becoming more likely this war is far harder to resolve in a short amount of time and the damage is already done it just hasn’t fed through the pipeline yet. I’t is possible the lower band of the next collar will have a 5k handle. How this impacts employment over the next three number will be very important. The chicago fed already upped the unemployment forecast this week I think there is potential for a 40-75 bp upside move in sofr here relatively quickly Yes I’m taking my book but that’s why I’m positioned this way.
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Mr Global
Mr Global@MrGlobal2025·
Where will oil prices open? I’m not even guessing at this point.
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Contango@hog44444·
Too simple. Not all 20mb was crude. 5m bpd of that was clean products. Look at distillate cracks. Those had no surplus before the war, and there is no spr to release. Will be some limited ability to run refinery kits harder , delay turnarounds et. But market will have price jet fuel and ulsd at demand destruction levels to balance.
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James Bull
James Bull@thejbullmarket·
The 20M barrels/day oil supply deficit from the Straight of Hormuz might be entirely filled now, because - we were running at a 5% surplus before the war - 9% have been rerouted - 3% of daily usage are currently being released from reserves daily over the next 3 months -2% are still going through the strait via shadow or official tankers So, the overall deficit is around 1%, potentially 0% if the above stats are 1% higher, and would remain to be so for 3 months until the IEA oil reserves have been fully depleted.
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru

JUST IN: 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia's East-West oil pipeline bypassing the Strait of Hormuz is now pumping at full capacity of 7 million barrels per day.

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Sarah Adams
Sarah Adams@sarahadams·
Remember that the intelligence world operates far removed from X, yet the commentary crowd still wants to believe they play a role. In reality, it’s mostly a back-patting echo chamber, and no amount of noise here changes what’s actually happening on the ground. X is full of people projecting what they think is happening, without real ground truth or actual human sources in the mix. By that, we mean someone overseas, not someone on the Hill rambling to whoever will listen. Most of the time, it is not an accurate reflection of reality. It is easier to consume someone else’s points and opinions than to do the work of collecting and verifying information yourself. That’s why you see the same repeated posts and talking points here. When that happens, their opinions start blending into your facts. It is not because of some shadowy influence operation, it is because people latch too quickly onto what they think is evidence to confirm their bias.
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Contango@hog44444·
@MikeZaccardi Putting cfa and cmt in your name is so weak. U don’t know shit about oil.
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Mike Zaccardi, CFA, CMT 🍖
Pretty wild how WTI crude oil averaged $90-$100 from late 2010 to late 2014.. and everyone just assumed that was normal. Total freakout today... (even with significantly higher average and median hourly earnings)
Mike Zaccardi, CFA, CMT 🍖 tweet media
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Contango@hog44444·
@cbjom This so much bigger than 2008. Did that. This different.
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Crudehead🛢
Crudehead🛢@cbjom·
Philosophical question incoming: For us, commodity people, is today our ‘2008’? #OOTT
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Contango@hog44444·
@chigrl Weekly doe stats have so much noise in them they are nearly useless.
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Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )
I think the issue with builds at Cushing stems from 2 issues: 1. Enbridge Mainline itself is running at roughly 97% capacity at 3 million bpd. So heavy sour Canadian crude is flowing into Cushing at steady to growing rates. (yes Canadian crude is stored a Cushing, I know you know this, this for others) 2. Also, the SPR release, Trump announced 172 million barrels with the first tranche of 86 million already underway. Those barrels are entering the commercial system. Some of that volume is reaching Cushing.
Brent aka Blacklion@BlacklionCTA

Interesting the WTI build at Cushing OK since speculators started extending their net length just before the Iran adventure. Cc @chigrl

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Congressman John Rose
Congressman John Rose@RepJohnRose·
EVERY Senator who fled to the airport to get out of Washington before they fully funded our brave ICE and Border Patrol agents MUST get back on a plane and DO YOUR JOB to fully fund DHS. @LeaderJohnThune needs to get our Senators back to town ASAP. And while you’re back, pass the SAVE America Act and get it on the President’s desk.
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Contango@hog44444·
@HFI_Research U do know it takes longer than a month to plan, staff and permit a drill rig right? Oil companies are for profit and they are greedy. They will drill more with higher prices. Maybe research your research.
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HFI Research
HFI Research@HFI_Research·
-5 oil rigs US shale: “And we told the White House, we are drilling more.”
GIF
LiveSquawk@LiveSquawk

#OOTT | US Baker Hughes Rig Count 27-Mar: 543 (prev 552) - Rotary Gas Rigs: 127 (prev 131) - Rotary Oil Rigs: 409 (prev 414)

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Contango@hog44444·
@ShaleTier7 It’s killing me. Knew John by reputation at Enron (I was super jr) and he also a very nice guy. This is like someone arguing the catholic religion with the pope.
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Contango@hog44444·
Tracy I like your stuff a lot. But you are wrong on this. @johnarnold is one of the greatest energy traders in history and knows what he talking about. It doesn’t matter if a refiner hedges against a $170 benchmark or a $105 one to their profitability. The only thing that matters is does their physical price off that same benchmark. Will also add the volume Asian refiners hedge is not material to the Brent paper market. The reason middle eastern markets are correcting down is that market’s delivery window is dead prompt. Brent is 30-45 days. Refineries have had a month to buy cheaper western grades and ship those instead. It’s classic backwardation working.
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Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )
Now John will say you can't hedge that way. You absolutely can. The reason Asian refiners were hedging against Dubai in the first place was convention. Their crude slate was predominantly Middle East, their product pricing was Dubai referenced, and keeping everything in the same benchmark universe simplified the book. But as more WTI Midland enters the Asian crude diet, hedging against the Brent benchmark that actually contains that grade is a tighter correlation, not a looser one. Not to mention the fact that S&P Global Platts, on March 2nd suspended nominations for any crude grade that requires transit through the Strait of Hormuz. That killed three of the five grades immediately. Dubai, Upper Zakum, and Al Shaheen all load from inside the Strait and can't get out. Only Oman (loads outside the Strait) and Murban remain deliverable.
John Arnold@johnarnold

@chigrl That's not how it works. You hedge against the exposure you have. If the best proxy to the physical cargoes you buy is Dubai, then that's what you hedge. Otherwise European nat gas buyers should switch their hedges to Waha.

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Contango@hog44444·
@ShaleTier7 Might as well up your profits and sell socal swaps.
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Michael Spyker
Michael Spyker@ShaleTier7·
Brainwave based off Tracy’s post 🧠 What if AECO producers sold forward NYMEX December gas at C$6.61/MMBtu, and when it came time to deliver, they just said “pick it up at AECO”?! WHO IS DOING THIS????
Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )@chigrl

If you've been watching oil prices and wondering why Dubai crude is falling while Brent keeps climbing...here's what's actually driving it. Asian refiners are switching their hedges on crude purchases from Dubai to ICE Brent. For decades, Asian buyers hedged against Dubai crude because most of their oil came from the Middle East and Dubai was the regional pricing benchmark. But Dubai just spiked to an all-time high of $169.75/bbl, way above Brent at ~$105. S&P Platts pulled 3 of 5 crude grades from the Dubai benchmark because of Hormuz disruptions, which distorted the price upward. If you're a refiner, why hedge against a $170 benchmark when you can hedge against a $105 one? Same protection, lower cost. ICE Brent is the global benchmark, originating as a North Sea European contract. It now includes US crude (WTI Midland was added to the basket as America became a major exporter), which makes it a natural alternative when Dubai pricing becomes distorted. The hedge migration creates a two way price effect. Money leaving Dubai drains liquidity and pushes the price down. That same money flowing into Brent adds liquidity and bids the price up. This is why the DME Oman contract has been declining while Brent stays firm. Same money, different direction. Some Asian refiners are now asking Saudi Aramco to switch its entire pricing formula from Dubai to Brent. If Aramco moves, the whole structure of how Middle East crude is sold to Asia changes.

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Contango
Contango@hog44444·
@ShaleTier7 Embarrassing. Honestly this Iran war has opened my eyes to how most people acting like oil experts are actually morons. Which probably means the same for the gold experts, political experts, etc. Treating my X feed as more entertainment than education now.
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Michael Spyker
Michael Spyker@ShaleTier7·
This entire post is wrong lol
Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )@chigrl

If you've been watching oil prices and wondering why Dubai crude is falling while Brent keeps climbing...here's what's actually driving it. Asian refiners are switching their hedges on crude purchases from Dubai to ICE Brent. For decades, Asian buyers hedged against Dubai crude because most of their oil came from the Middle East and Dubai was the regional pricing benchmark. But Dubai just spiked to an all-time high of $169.75/bbl, way above Brent at ~$105. S&P Platts pulled 3 of 5 crude grades from the Dubai benchmark because of Hormuz disruptions, which distorted the price upward. If you're a refiner, why hedge against a $170 benchmark when you can hedge against a $105 one? Same protection, lower cost. ICE Brent is the global benchmark, originating as a North Sea European contract. It now includes US crude (WTI Midland was added to the basket as America became a major exporter), which makes it a natural alternative when Dubai pricing becomes distorted. The hedge migration creates a two way price effect. Money leaving Dubai drains liquidity and pushes the price down. That same money flowing into Brent adds liquidity and bids the price up. This is why the DME Oman contract has been declining while Brent stays firm. Same money, different direction. Some Asian refiners are now asking Saudi Aramco to switch its entire pricing formula from Dubai to Brent. If Aramco moves, the whole structure of how Middle East crude is sold to Asia changes.

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Contango@hog44444·
@chigrl u should listen to John there. He knows a thing or two about oil hedging. The reason Arabs crudes spiked so much is their delivery window was very prompt. Like a week out. Brent is 30-45 days out. When straight closed people caught short immediately. They bid for the only crude that could replace it immediately. However it’s been a month now and they have had time to start taking other cheaper supplies.
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John Arnold
John Arnold@johnarnold·
@chigrl That's not how it works. You hedge against the exposure you have. If the best proxy to the physical cargoes you buy is Dubai, then that's what you hedge. Otherwise European nat gas buyers should switch their hedges to Waha.
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Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )
If you've been watching oil prices and wondering why Dubai crude is falling while Brent keeps climbing...here's what's actually driving it. Asian refiners are switching their hedges on crude purchases from Dubai to ICE Brent. For decades, Asian buyers hedged against Dubai crude because most of their oil came from the Middle East and Dubai was the regional pricing benchmark. But Dubai just spiked to an all-time high of $169.75/bbl, way above Brent at ~$105. S&P Platts pulled 3 of 5 crude grades from the Dubai benchmark because of Hormuz disruptions, which distorted the price upward. If you're a refiner, why hedge against a $170 benchmark when you can hedge against a $105 one? Same protection, lower cost. ICE Brent is the global benchmark, originating as a North Sea European contract. It now includes US crude (WTI Midland was added to the basket as America became a major exporter), which makes it a natural alternative when Dubai pricing becomes distorted. The hedge migration creates a two way price effect. Money leaving Dubai drains liquidity and pushes the price down. That same money flowing into Brent adds liquidity and bids the price up. This is why the DME Oman contract has been declining while Brent stays firm. Same money, different direction. Some Asian refiners are now asking Saudi Aramco to switch its entire pricing formula from Dubai to Brent. If Aramco moves, the whole structure of how Middle East crude is sold to Asia changes.
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Contango@hog44444·
@PitTrading101 Ionic spot. Celebrated the up and and drank away the down days there. Staff were always amazing. Sad to see it.
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