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To: kollmhn who wrote (82779)12/26/2000 11:58:19 PM
From: Tomas  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 95453
 
Power failure - What went wrong with Californian energy deregulation?
Financial Times, December 27
By Christopher Parkes

Harsh words and angry exchanges can be expected when consumer advocates, power company executives and politicians meet in Sacramento on Wednesday to resolve the energy crisis that has brought California to the brink of blackouts this winter. But the course of action is already clear: 20m consumers who were promised that market deregulation would eventually bring cheaper prices will soon have to accept increases of at least 10 per cent in the cost of electricity.

The action - which will mean abandoning the price freeze agreed in 1996 - has been forced on the state's Public Utilities Commission by the news that financial pressures were threatening thousands of job and even the viability of Pacific Gas and Electric and Edison International, California's leading private-sector distributors. Their debt faced relegation to "junk" status, weakening their ability to raise funds.

In two months the companies have between them accumulated more than $8bn in debt. Under the terms of the state's experiment in partial deregulation, they cannot charge more than $70 a megawatt hour for power that now costs them as much as $1,400 - almost 50 times as much as a year ago.

"We believe that retail rates in California must begin to rise," the utility commissioners said in an interim opinion issued last Thursday. "It is our intent to maintain the utilities' access to capital on reasonable terms."

The price rises, to be discussed at public hearings in Sacramento today and tomorrow and introduced possibly as soon as January 4, have been condemned as a "ratepayers' bailout" by consumer groups. But Wall Street is relieved. "Acerbic rhetoric has finally given way to pragmatic conciliation," says Raymond Niles, an analyst at Salomon Smith Barney.

PG&E and Edison International are seeking price rises of a little under 20 per cent; the state government has hinted that 10 per cent - to start - would be more acceptable politically.

That California's energy deregulation has gone awry is beyond doubt. Gray Davis, the state governor, is due to meet Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve, today to discuss the risks energy shortages posed to California's economy and that of the nation at large. Economists see the crisis as a further sign that, after years of under- investment, the state's infra-structure is in no condition to sustain growth.

But while higher consumer prices may ease the utilities' immediate predicament, long-term remedies will also be needed. Mr Davis, a Democrat struggling with a policy inherited from Republican Pete Wilson and his appointees on the PUC, has suggested it might be necessary to return to a regulated market. Even John Bryson, chairman and chief executive of Edison International - one of the groups that helped formulate the deregulation project - has called for radical action. "We need to reform and, where necessary, re-regulate California's electric system," he said before Christmas.

The proximate causes of the crisis lie in a coincidence of circumstances that have exposed the underlying weakness of both the supposedly "free" market in power and the fragility of the generating systems supplying it. As defenders of energy liberalisation point out, a market in which retail prices are in effect capped while wholesale rates are governed by supply and demand can hardly be called "free".

In the rush to deregulate, few considered the possibility - now a reality - that natural gas prices would rise sharply. But in the past year the cost has risen more than three-fold to the highest levels seen in the 10-year history of the gas futures contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

A cold spell in November and December forced a reversal of the normal seasonal trade in power. California, which customarily imports electricity in summer to keep the air conditioning spinning and exports autumn and winter surpluses, remained a net importer.

At the same time, hydroelectric generators in the north of the state as well as in Oregon and Washington have been obliged to reduce production and transmission of their traditionally cheap hydro-electric power this year because dry weather has left their reservoirs unfilled. As a result, California's own oil- and gas-fired power stations worked so much overtime during the summer that the need for maintenance and repairs meant that a third of the state's capacity was shut down for much of this month.

But the underlying causes of the present difficulties go back at least five years. Then, as the state emerged from the deepest recession in its history, little account was taken of the fact that no significant generating capacity had been built since the late 1980s. None has been added since, even though about a third of the state's generating plant is technically obsolete. Since the mid-1990s, however, the Californian economy has grown so vigorously that its gross product is now the sixth biggest in the world - ahead of Italy and closing fast on the UK. Last year, according to Bill Richardson, federal energy secretary, the state's consumption of electricity rose 13 per cent.

California's strong environmental lobby is partly to blame for the lack of additional generating capacity. Even as a heatwave was causing rolling blackouts in the San Francisco Bay area, local authorities this summer refused Duke Energy and Calpine permission to build new power stations. At the same time AES, another generation group, was detected running its plant so hard that it breached air pollution limits. Although it was allowed to continue because power supplies were so tight, the regional air resources board punished the lapse this month with a record $17m fine.

Generators cite such cases as examples of the disincentives to investment in California. They complain that obtaining planning permission for a new power station in the state typically takes up to four years, twice as long as elsewhere in the US.

Out-of-state suppliers in Texas and Arizona, over which Californian officials have no jurisdiction, stand accused of "price gouging" and exploiting the situation - charges now under investigation by state and federal authorities.

With industry and commerce requiring less energy because of the holiday break and the promise of higher prices on the way to relieve generators, California's electricity crisis may be abating. At its worst, blackouts were avoided only because industrial customers voluntarily reduced consumption and householders responded to appeals to switch off their Christmas lights at the evening peak in demand.

But deregulation had the aim of reducing power costs which were up to 50 per cent higher than elsewhere in the US. Cuts of 20 per cent over seven years were promised: instead, prices are to be increased. That is more than a costly embarrassment for a state that prides itself on being a trendsetter. By strengthening the case of proponents of regulation, it could stall market liberalisation efforts in other states and may yet throw the process into reverse at home.

All is not yet lost. The advent of higher retail prices has been welcomed by Wall Street as a sign that rationality is returning to the market. Economists predict a slowdown in regional growth and reduced demand for electricity, providing an opportunity to make further corrections to increase supply.

But there is a more alarming possibility as well. Meteorologists who correctly predicted the havoc wreaked by El Nino in 1998 said a year ago that California and the west were in for a protracted drought to match the one that emptied reservoirs between 1986 and 1992. If that happens, the crisis just past may be only the beginning - and the recriminations in Sacramento today merely a taste of the acrimony to come.



To: kollmhn who wrote (82779)12/27/2000 2:29:26 PM
From: SliderOnTheBlack  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 95453
 
How about a back-slapping, self-aggrandizement cheerleading REALITY CHECK here ?

The sky did fall and the Oilpatch most assuredly did totally & completely disconnect from the fundamentals.

The discussion was whether it did; or could - and it most assuredly did of late and will again as the top inches ever more close on the horizon...

The OSX fell from its high of 140ish to OSX 94 directly into the peak move to $35 Oil and $9 Nat Gas - the combined "alltime high" commodity price environment.

Kollmnh; if that 30% OSX selloff "directly" into the ramping of alltime high combined commodity prices, along with historic supply-demand #'s for Oil & Gas and record, or near record earnings was "NOT" a complete disconnect from fundamentals - please tell me what it was ?

Personally; I believe the value of these Internet Stock Discussion Threads - is that they are a sounding board for ideas, stratagies, macro takes on the broad market, economy etc.. as well as individual company research idea incubators.

Where the value disappears is when these threads "disconnect from THEIR fundamentals" of reality… and degenerate into a Coffe Klatch - Self Aggrandizement Society - becoming cheerleading threads & go into denial.

We often revert to an environment of "one-upmanship" - which I plead guilty to on occasion as sometimes it is done in answer to the ankle-bites & spin-doctoring that tends to materialize at both the tops & bottoms of the individual legs within the broader Oilpatch cycles. So please excuse another degeneration…as we discuss reality.

Here is a little reality check of what has REALLY transpired of late in the various indices discussed here on this thread; on this 50 day comparison chart below:

siliconinvestor.com

NEM +21%
XAU +16%
XNG +13%
XOI + 1%
OSX down - 1%
S&P 500 down - 4%
NASDQ down - 24%

Other than the XNG stocks ramping 20%ish over the last few days; the sky most assuredly did fall over the last few months in this market and the Oilpatch; as the XNG would have joined the XOI , the OSX, the S&P 500 and the NASDQ as indicies that have tanked of late.

What amazes me that I personally have continually sold into all major leg rallies of this cycle and have been very, very successful in doing so. But, yet every single time I do - it’s the same chants of - "you sold too soon, you missed the boat, you're spreading gloom & doom" etc… but, literally; virtually every single time - I walked with 70-80% of that legs move - only to have my critics watch their profits rollover & retrace…

We saw this in the last E&P meltdown in Sept '99.. I heard it when I took heavy profits in the Spring of 1999 and again this April when I exited the toppishness to play what I viewed as a better risk vs reward play - the NAZ dead cat bounce.

And I heard it again this past August when I took 75% of all my funds out of the market - as the OSX ramped thru 125 onward to it's 140 top and I'm hearing it again here…

Yes; I did miss the final 10 points of that run to 140. And yes; I've been keeping 50% cash + during most of this fall and yes; I stayed disciplined to my stops on my re-entries of late to the OSX - entering & getting stopped out time & time again from 115 to 120 - and I'm glad I did… Because I have lots of cash available- unlike the many who were banging the "Max Margin" drum of late; or who were "allready" fully invested; so I was able to buy on the sub 100 OSX breakdown - made a very nice quick 20% hit on MRL which was 40% of my entre & rode the move to OSX 110; then cashing in. So; yes - I most certainly did cash in a bit early and missed the final 10-12 points here - but so what ?

Is OSX 120 not in reality merely in - "been here & done that" territory ?

But, yes: we did set some new highs on the XNG / Nat Gas stocks here this week; but untill the thread was chided into "owning up" and not coming out with the ususal array of Monday Morning QB calls a week from now of - "glad I sold such & such on that pop" - did many talk about ringing the register…(VBG) ?

That is my biggest issue about this thread. Those of us who have shown some trading discipline; talk about using stops, using rising - tight trailing stops into rallies and most importantly - who continually ring the cash register on these run ups - are criticized everytime we do.

It’s the old - "Once you buy - you gotta hold untill you die" mentality…

It's as if whenever anyone points out the continual volatility and subwave legs within the broader cycle moves here - as profit taking & trading events - that were then somehow the Anti-Christ , spreading gloom & doom; or we're going to "miss the boat"….

We'll I've got news for you - I've missed very few, if any boats here over the last 24 mos in the Oilpatch & sold more tops & bought more bottoms than most… above all - what has continually worked here is continually ringing the register & taking profits EVERY SINGLE TIME - we see these types of moves; every single time that Crude Oil, or Natural Gas make the cover of Barons, the News Weeklies, are the lead stories on CNBC and most especially (VBG) - when this thread reaches this level of euphoric cheerleading.

I can link a litany of posts of some of the Pinocchio's here who either sat in deadmoney for months & months - watching the paint dry while the rest of the sector doubled, or tripled as they focused on one, or two obsession stocks; or who have continually "max margined" into blow offs, lost their ass mathematically - even have posted their own tear jerker - Mea Culpa's on more than one occasion; who mystically disappear on every single OSX blowup - only to re-appear impervious to reality and lead the cheerleading when we "finally" do get an up-leg rally.

I am not painting myself as the God of the Oilpatch; far from it - but, I do appreciate disenting opinion; be it long, or short oriented; but most importantly, I want to hear the opine's from those who talk about their exits as well as their entries and who do so - as they do it/ livetime and not in "Pinocchio-esque, much after the fact ass covering fashion.

Those posters I enoy reading most importantly share their reasons for doing so and have maintained some crediblity and have not degenerated into Blind-Bulls & Cheerleaders - impervious to the reality of the continued whipsaw volatility that we've had over the last couple of years….

You kow who you are & Kudo's - for "keeping it real".

My main message of late has been all about "Risk versus Reward" opportunitys here in the Oilpatch - and that we have allready seen the "Big & Easy Money" environment in the Oilpatch… as Elvis indeed; has left the building… and we are in the 2nd half - potential rollover-peak of the cycle; not the early -throw a dart stage… the "peak" on the horizon is what will cause rollover here - not the bottom coming into sight - don't ever forget that.

This is; was and will allways be a cyclical sector - it is NOT a growth stock sector and the minute investors & traders here focus on being out before the "bottom" versus the "top" of the cycle appears on the horizon - they'll allready be Hogs led to slaughter & won't have exited as fat & sassy Pigs…

We've literally made 80%+ of all the OSX profits over the last 2 years in this Boom Cycle in just 3-4 months. Never has "trading" been more efficient than buying & holding than in this sector.

That 80% + was that historic near 50% one month OSX move in the spring of 1999; when the OSX moved from OSX 47 to over 70 in 30 days in March to April and this Spring 2000 in what has now become a near annual March to May rally; where the OSX moved from 80 to 120 - another 50% move peaking & rolling over in April - May; allowing "some" of us to waltz on over to the NAZ-Wreck & pick up yet another "Big & Easy Money" - 50%+ throw a dart environment there as well (VBG) - but, that was criticzed heavilly as "selling too soon, missing the boat" etc as well…

Those were the two sweet-spots to be margined, or levered to the Oilpatch; those two very narrow windows delivered nearly 90% of all the OSX index gains here. THAT - was when to be "max margined" and some of us were…

Pigs get Fat & Hogs get slaughtered… the "Big & Easy Max Margin" opps are in the ealry cycle - not near the peak cycle… take your 50-65% " scalps" out of these later cycle - high risk broad market; individual wave/leg moves & keep selling into any & all strength of major up moves; as volatility and buying opps as well as laggards have not disappeard. There is little chance of missing the final crescendo leg here… entire late cycle subsectors have not moved & we are in a very high risk environment for the high flying mo-mo subsectors here such as the NG mid-cap Pureplays… be Max Margined and fail to take heavy profits on a crescendo top on XTO BRR TMBR COG CRK EOG et al & you stand to not just watch yourself give back all your profits (as many have continually done here) but; you just might get caught on a Sept 99, or Oct 97 Déjà vu all over again cycle rollover top…

On this thread we are starting to get the 2nd & 3rd wave of Oilpatch investors - who see this recent historic convergence of events concerning Nat Gas as a buying opp unfolding vs. a selling opp unfolding and view anyone who is seeing this as a profit taking and shortly - a "shorting" opportunity - as the devil reincarnate…this amuses me; as many of us have ate, slept & breathed the Oilpatch for the last 24 months - it is moronic; to accumulate the knowledge & the feel of the sector and to be so emotionally driven as to not logically see the downside of the cycle as not just as profitable; but as profitable - and even perhaps more "quickly" profitable on the downside; as the cycle is on the upside.

The next high reward-low risk play I see in this cycle is puts & shorts on the Nat Gas E&P pureplays.

Anyone who is a cyclical subsector speciality investor - should allways beat the Street on the downside as well. - one can & should trade cyclicals in both directions & if you don't - you are merely a wannabe Pig about to shortly become a slaughtered Hog… mere bacon on the grill… So think about it; and pay a little attention to the "Profit Takers" as they & not the meek will really inherit the earth (VBG) !

So in closing: I'm sorry; but I don't buy the self-arrgrandizement society here; backslapping each other over a 10% one day pop; as if the last 40 points down on the OSX just didn't occur ? - as if OSX 120 is "new nirvanna" territory - versus the reality of it merely being - "been here & done that territory" and as if we're not in an exit-plan environment for the E&P's verus a buying, or entry opp environment.

I also am disappointed at how few continue to factor in the external market events as potential caps to the Oilpatch's obvious positive fundametnals

What I've been trying to convey; is that in my opinion; there will continue to be some nice trading opps and yes; we could and perhaps should go higher; but that any "significant" moves up are profit taking & exit opps - due to the cap that the negative overall broad market & slowing US economy hold over the acknowledged sterling underlying Oilpatch fundamentals.

This is profit taking & "prevent defense" territory imho - especially for those who were here back in the dark days of sub $10 Oil in the Fall of 1998; or made the "REAL" Big money in the Spring Rallies of 1999 and 2000 - AND cashed it in & rang the cash register.

Of late; I not only said the sky was falling (as it obviously did) - I profited greatly from it of late.

I shorted the BTK & the SOX and the QQQ's here of late; even caught a nice 15% upside move on the QQQs long - using it as a hedge; as I closed my shorts and certainly outperformed the Nat Gas Stocks./XNG and the OSX during that timeframe by a significant degree.

Most importanly imho; I built a portfolio weighted position in the XAU - gold/silver stocks during the cheapest 90 day period out of the last 15 YEARS of the XAU's history - along with making some nice trades as many stocks bounced 40-60% off those bottoms & have what I believe will turn out to be a very compelling cost basis (not including trading gains) of XAU 45 here. But, nailing the cheapest 60-90 day window out of 15 years on the XAU - is "spun" here as some type of negative call ?

Next time anyone here - leads the pack & is out front and nails the cheapest 90 day window in any other commodity/cyclical sector out of the last 15 years - let me know…

So here I set with the Spring 99 & 2000 moves on leverage allready under my belt and in the cash register; an exit in August of this year at OSX 125ish of 75% of my Oilpatch funds; holding only a few Oilpatch calls presently along with a 50% Gold/Silve position at a XAU 45 cost basis; a very nice short-sided bag job on the SOX, NAZ-QQQs & BTK in the cash register during the Oilpatch tank job; along with a couple of 10-20% quick flips on the OSX; but also along with an acknowleged couple of stop out -1-5% false starts of late as well…and I still have 45% cash…

So; if I missed anything by using stops, maintaining the discipline of my trading plan, having an exit/profit taking strategy; for focusing on when the "top" versus the bottom appears on the Oilpatch Horizon and for using Cash & the XAU Gold/Silver stocks as both offensive & defensive vehicles during one of the most volatile Bear Markets of late…in which the OSX tanked 30% and I profited heavilly on the short-side in the broad market; please let me miss another one…

Yes; there is still money to be made on the long side - and OSX 150 to 165 is a strong possibility by the end of 2001, but so is OSX 72 if OPEC acquiesses to the Bush Administration, or cheats and the US Economy slows to a greater degree than expected and the spillover reaches Asia & Europe as well.

Odds are there will be much, much better risk vs reward opps for the Oilpatch once the questions as to how "soft the US Economy lands" are answered and untill the broad market & the NAZ form a solid bottom; this is a profit taking opp and sadly; few see it as what it is; given the broad market weakness & risk in the slowing US Economy & the Toppishness Confluence of Sentiment & Fundamentals in the Nat Gas pureplays.

But; you can count on one thing - I'll stay focused on spotting the "TOP" on the horizon & I'll be making money on the downside allready - before most here see the "bottom" that they mistakenly are waiting to see - as their exit point…

Be early & often to the cash register ~ and you'll live well & prosper.

A great big Ka-Ching Ciao~

$lider

... PS: Got "lots" of Gold AND Silver (VBG) ?