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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services

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To: Gary Burton who wrote (39836)3/13/1999 12:15:00 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (3) of 95453
 
Just want to point out that this thread was far better than Wall Street and its grossly overpaid analysts in predicting that OPEC and non-OPEC would cut significstly.. Anybody who followed the Iranian and Arab web sites should have seen this coming. Perhaps some of us should sponsor an energy fund.

Mixed notes from BARRON'S on oil today. Their commodities analyst sees this rally as a great selling opportunity. But Alan Abelson quotes other analysts who see this aa a fundamental turnaround.

March 15, 1999



Crude Awakening?

The oil rally looks like a selling opportunity

By Cheryl Strauss Einhorn

A selling opportunity. That's what the recent 30% runup in crude-oil prices may present traders.
Major petroleum-producing countries surprised observers Friday by agreeing to curb output by
2.7%, or two million barrels a day, which was as much as four times more than some forecasters
had expected. But given the burden on nations resulting from these large reductions, and oil
producers' well-known history of cheating, the current price of $14.70 a barrel may not stick.

If anything, moreover, the size of the announced cuts shows the extent to which OPEC is hostage
to the fiscal difficulties that the prolonged period of depressed oil prices has caused.

Last week's announcements do not guarantee an immediate end of the bear market. Last March an
agreement among Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico led to a sharp rally in oil prices. Reality set
in later, as cheating resumed. Prices fell to their lowest levels in 12 years, as national politics -- not
global industry fundamentals, notably the economic downturn in Asia -- drove output decisions.

And as recently as just two weeks ago, OPEC members were complying with only 77% of their
stated production cut goals. Further, data on crude oil and its product inventory clearly do not
support higher prices. Supplies of crude rose 4.7 million barrels last week, gas inventories
increased the equivalent of 3.1 million barrels and, perhaps even more telling, there are 42 million
more barrels of petroleum stored currently than a year earlier.

Thus, to some extent, oil prices are now caught in "a frenzy of speculative buying, which could
end in a sharp decline," says one veteran trader.

Moreover, since oil prices tend to strengthen this time of year as refiners gear up for the peak
gasoline demand of the driving season, the market should expect some pullback once it gets past
two events -- OPEC's March 23 meeting, where the announced accord will be concluded, and the
building of gas stocks.

So what exactly happened last week to get the oil market so pumped up? Essentially, four events.
First, Iran and Saudi Arabia reached an important compromise on Iran's baseline production level
of 3.6 million barrels a day. Previously, Iran had maintained that its base level was 3.9 million
barrels; now it will use the lower figure as the base from which new cuts will be made.

Sorting out this issue was critical to discussions about any future production cutbacks. Also, the
deal was important because it showed a greater willingness by Saudi Arabia -- the world's largest
producer, the instigator in this latest round of cut-back discussions and the most credible OPEC
member when it comes to achieving reductions -- to shoulder more weight than it has in the recent
past since it ceased being OPEC's swing supplier.

Second, a broader group of OPEC nations then met in Saudi Arabia. This group, known as the
Gulf Cooperation Council, lent its support to the understanding, which was another key ingredient
in working toward a cutback.

Third, on Thursday, Saudi Arabia and Iran took their plans outside of OPEC to embrace other
significant world producers such as Mexico and Venezuela, which had said no fewer than three
times last week that it did not plan to cut its oil output further.

Fourth, on Friday, the announcement came that oil ministers had agreed to "an output cut over two
million barrels per day over and above previous commitments, to be implemented by OPEC and
non-OPEC countries as of April 1, 1999," said the communiqué.

Thus, while the near-term outlook for crude is bearish, John Saucer at Salomon Smith Barney
thinks a $17 price by yearend is "conservative," and "it may be higher than that." Still, he hedges
that forecast: "We learned last year that good solid cuts are not enough to turn this market."

Beyond oil, cotton, grains and even gold all staged impressive rallies last week, bringing the
Bridge-CRB Index to 188.28 from 186.53 one week earlier. Yet the persistent deflationary
problems plaguing commodities -- such as noneconomic excess capacity and therefore a lack of
pricing power -- continue to point to more of a bear-market bounce than the beginning of a major
turning point in most markets.

KEY COMMODITY INDEXES

CRB Group Indexes
3/12
3/05
Yr. Ago
CRB Futures
188.27
186.53
226.00
Industrials
179.18
181.84
222.69
Grain/Oils
168.99
165.54
215.44
Livestock
217.38
220.24
225.87
Energy
145.19
139.53
160.76
Precious Metals
239.88
239.12
257.52

BARRON'S ~ Bridge Telerate

E-mail: cheryl.strauss-einhorn@news.barrons.com.

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Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



reasons.But Alan Abelosn quotes other energy analysts as being vedry bullish.
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