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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sense who wrote (157352)5/1/2020 5:58:20 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Dr. Voodoo

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217657
 
have turned cautious or adventurous since Monday and especially in the last 24 hours (what qualifies as intermediate term these times), depending on PoV

got on and rapidly off-loaded long UDOW but kept the long SPY calls at small loss

closed most DRD short puts at large profits, to ready for the next reload, but kept the DRD longs bought along the way since onset of lockdown / stay-in / whatever, and shall hold on / hang on, for the longer term, until whenever but guessing far into the future.

In the coming round intend to step up commitment to DRD, and RGLD, and ... well ... the usual suspects.

do not have paper gold at this juncture, for do not like to leak value when paper gold goes down even as I do not mark to market physical gold.

I suspect gold and Tesla share one trait within reasonable parameter range, that when each starts to go down, no bids stand in the way.

shorted a dab of TSLA puts (strike 500s) last night and I do not know why, probably to sleep better as TSLA rises, but shorted a lot more TSLA naked calls (strike 1000s) and I do know why, to better position for inevitable fall,

even as had re-upped short TSLA itself on Monday - seems have developed an addiction I cannot shake, or a computer game too riveting to leave.

The hedge funds and other short TSLA players are, I believe, in the majority doing it by shorting the shares and by going long the puts. I prefer shorting the calls, for the intermediate term, and shorting the shares for either short or long term. I got the time as long as my opposites are willing to buy. I like cash in my hands.

in the meantime, due to Jack's more adventurous approach, and the Coconut's natural inertia, the Coconut is ahead of the Jack, 25% to 17% YTD, but am hoping that the Jack shall pull ahead in the coming several months. The Coconut spells it out for me, "dada does a lot but goes nowhere". Daughters bite.









My TSLA order of battle requires moderate focus, I think, and I think of the simultaneous equations essentially as a cash generator, akin to ocean wave power stations, up and down and up again, providing warmth and light, hopefully, as opposed to chills and flashes, here be readout of positions, all shorts including the puts, ranging at the far end, 1800 strike, June 2022, and at the immediate edge, strike 1000, tonight. The 'tonight' shall see my counterparty carried away in stretcher. On the side I have short TSLA equity position.








To: sense who wrote (157352)5/1/2020 12:45:13 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 217657
 
Re << Rush towards the danger, embrace the opportunity >> and Message 32710243 <<TSLA>>

The timing was exquisite by intermediate hindsight, not by way of brilliance, but by path of being lucky, I hope, for the next down leg, which likely just started, I think.

This time we know better of what to do. Closed most shorted puts, including TSLA puts.

It is good to have Elon facilitating a trade ...

zerohedge.com

Hacked? Tesla Tumbles After Musk Twitter Account Says "Stock Price Too High"

Update (1225ET): Since we haven't heard any claims, from Tesla or Musk, that the CEO's twittter account was hacked, we're going to assume this is one Titanic Musk meltdown.

He has continued to tweet a stream of nonsense, including a reference to his (ex-gf/gf/baby mama) Grimes.



We also can't help but wonder...

Tesla issued stock at $767 two months ago. Musk's tweet has pulled stock down to $687 at the moment. I wonder what those buyers are thinking about.

— Wash Your Hands Charley Grant (@CGrantWSJ) May 1, 2020
Even "Kylie Jenner" chimed in (h/t @litquidity)....

Kylie chiming in pic.twitter.com/5ueJANx1R8

— litquidity (@litcapital) May 1, 2020
* * *

Elon Musk just tweeted that he's planning on selling all his possessions and "will own no house", before tweeting that Tesla's share price is "too high" - basically a wet dream for Tesla bears.



Which raises suspicions about whether Musk's account was hacked.

Here's a screenshot of the three tweets (which included a "FREEDOM" tweet referencing his earnings call rant about California's "fascist" lockdown).



Musk's twitter bio has also been changed, though it's unclear whether this happened on Friday, or whether it was changed prior to today.



Whatever happened, it's impacting Tesla's shares, which are sliding on the "share price too high" comment.

No word yet form the company as the world wonders whether Musk has been hacked...or is perhaps in the middle of another meltdown.

Musk's insanely huge ego and erratic behavior have been closely followed over the years: From making ridiculous promises and production targets, to smoking weed with Joe Rogan, to his romance with Grimes and penchant for beefs (the SEC and the diving team that rescued the Thai soccer team are two previous adversaries).

The beef with the SEC resulted in Musk giving up his chairman role at Tesla, though he remains CEO and his control over the company is still widely seen as absolute. But if there's one thing shareholders likely won't tolerate, it's a CEO who takes shots at his company's share price.

At least that's what one might think: Musk has actually done this before. Back in 2017, Musk said Tesla's share price was "higher than we deserve", triggering a dip in shares, though the incident was quickly forgotten, and Tesla shares continued their meteoric rise.

Tesla share holders right now t.co pic.twitter.com/Harev6cmYj

— Stephen A. Smith Burner (@SASBurnerAcct) May 1, 2020
Then again, nobody has more riding on Tesla's stock price than Elon Musk, who signed off on a new compensation scheme a couple years back that would only pay off if he met certain lofty share-price targets. He's not even close to his long-term goal, which is why we expect Musk will soon declare the whole episode a hack, even if it was truly an "episode".

Sent from my iPad



To: sense who wrote (157352)5/2/2020 12:50:30 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Secret_Agent_Man

  Respond to of 217657
 
The Coconut & Jack’s portfolios were at +25% and 17% YTD respectively as at yesterday (May 1st pre-open) Message 32710243 , and

the Jack laughed before nodding off to sleep at 10:00pm Cape Town time (NYSE 4:00pm) after watching some movie, and noting the score at 31% and 28% in his favor.

I explained volatility to him, and he seems to like volatility. The coconut is happy w/ her 28%.




To: sense who wrote (157352)5/2/2020 1:02:24 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217657
 
Below, if spot-on, might mean ...

(1) deflation before inflation
(2) dilution gets to hide amidst deflation
(3) if dragged out, longer, inflation peak higher than lower
(4) expect dividend cuts

bloomberg.com

The Great Shale Shut-In Has Begun, Making Good on Trump’s Pledge
Catherine Traywick
American shale explorers are rapidly crimping production in the country’s most prolific oil fields as the worst price crash in history threatens the industry’s survival.

Three of the biggest oil explorers in the U.S. -- Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp., and ConocoPhillips -- plan to curb as much as 660,000 barrels a day of combined American output by the end of June. Across the county, crude production by all companies has already tumbled about 1 million barrels a day since mid-March, when OPEC and its allies clinched an historic deal to trim global supply.

It’s too soon to tell how long the reductions will last but if implemented for a full year, they would overshadow any previous American production slide going back to at least 1984. Moreover, the pull-back puts the U.S. on track to fulfill the Trump administration’s pledge to removing 2 million barrels of daily supplies through market attrition.

READ ALSO: Trump’s Oil Deal: The Inside Story of How a Price War Ended

With the new reductions announced just two weeks after crude prices turned negative for the first time on record, resuscitating the market will come at a steep cost for an industry facing bankruptcies, job cuts and consolidation. For some explorers, austerity means slowing growth plans, while for others it means outright subtractions of oil volumes.

Almost 40% of oil and natural gas producers face insolvency within the year if crude prices remain near $30 a barrel, according to a survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Production shut-ins aren’t just a U.S. phenomenon: wells are being turned off from Scandinavia to Brazil as crude producers wilt under the crash.



“You cut out what’s easiest to cut out. Right now that’s the Permian -- you lay down the rigs, walk away and you can always come back to it,” said Mark Stoeckle, a Boston-based fund manager at Adams Funds with $2.1 billion of assets. “It’s very different than other parts of the world” where you have to deal with production sharing agreements, government partners, tougher employment laws.

Producers are cutting back more quickly than anyone foresaw as prices sink below break-even levels of even the most efficient explorers. In North Dakota, firms have shut in roughly one-third of the state’s oil production, with more than 40% of that reduction coming from a single company: Continental Resources Inc.

In the past seven weeks, more than half of the American rig fleet has gone quiet, with the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico accounting for 56% of the shutdown, according to Baker Hughes Co. data.

Supermajors such as Exxon and Chevron -- latecomers to the shale revolution -- are better positioned than most producers to weather the storm, even as their own budgets take a hit.

CompanyCutsPeriod
ConocoPhillips360,000 b/dJune
Continental Resources150,000 b/dMay, June
Chevron200,000 b/d2020
Exxon Mobil Corp.100,000 b/d1Q
Parsley Energy Inc.22,000 b/d (Rystad Energy estimate)April-June
PDC Energy Inc.27,000 b/d (Rystad estimate)May and June
Cimarex Energy27,000 b/d (Rystad estimate)May
Matador Resources Co.2,739 b/d2020

In The GroundWhile Exxon on Friday posted its first loss in at least three decades and Chevron slashed $2 billion off its spending plan, the companies have the capital to taper shale production until prices make a comeback.

Exxon, which plans to curb about 100,000 barrels a day of Permian production during the current quarter, will focus on shutting younger, highly productive wells first. In a sense, the company is using the rocks surrounding those untapped wells as de facto storage.

Chevron is chopping 125,000 barrels a day from its targeted exit rate for the Permian region this year and idling all but five drilling rigs, Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth told Bloomberg TV. The company is aiming half its worldwide cuts at U.S. fields. The rest will occur as part of its host nations’ OPEC+ commitments, according to Chief Financial Officer Pierre Breber.

“You can think of the U.S. as choices that we’re making to balance cash flow and long-term value,” Breber said. “Outside the U.S. you can think of it as OPEC+ agreements.”

View the latest market-moving news and analytics surrounding volatile crude prices.

ConocoPhillips plans to cut even more deeply, curtailing worldwide production by 420,000 net barrels a day in June. That equates to about a third of Conoco’s first-quarter output. About 360,000 of those reductions will occur in U.S. fields.

Independent Permian shale producer Concho Resources Inc. has already shut in about 4% to 5% of total output, and expects to keep its full-year production for the year around last year’s level. So far, most of the wells that have been shut were higher-cost, vertical wells, but Concho said future curtailments will likely include some horizontal ones -- industry shorthand for shale.

While the supply curbs seem to have <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-01/oil-market-showing-signs-of-life-as-producers-plan-output-cuts" itemprop="StoryLink" itemscope="itemscope" title="Oil Market Showing Signs of Life as Producers Plan Output Cuts{NSN Q9O013T0G1LC }" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(65, 110, 210); max-width: 100%; text-decoration: underline;">put a floor under oil prices, with the U.S. benchmark on Friday posting its first weekly gain in in a month, a sustained recovery will rely on even deeper cuts. If prices stay at their current level, hovering around $20 a barrel, shut-ins across the U.S. could reach 2 million barrels a day by June, according to Elisabeth Murphy, an analyst at consultant ESAI Energy.

— With assistance by David Wethe, Rachel Adams-Heard, and Alix Steel

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Sent from my iPad