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To: Crocodile who wrote (9502)3/11/1998 10:45:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998 (2)

TODAYS FOCUS - CRUDE ON THE WORLD SCENE

TOP STORY

Oil Stocks See More Heavy Selling

The Financial Post

Canadian oil and gas stocks endured another day of heavy selling yesterday as the price for crude remained unchanged near a four-year low.

But a positive outlook for natural gas prices reined in any "panic" reaction, said Peter Linder, an analyst with CIBC Wood Gundy Inc. in Calgary.

Oil and gas stocks have lost significant ground since last October because of a 37% slump in oil prices resulting from weak demand and a surge in world production.

Crude oil for April delivery finished unchanged yesterday at US$14.33 a barrel. Oil prices fell 3.9% on Monday because of expectations the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries won't cut production to boost prices when it meets March 16. Saudi Arabia, the world's largest producer, said it won't attend the meeting and won't cut production until others do the same.

An OPEC agreement would boost prices by several dollars a barrel almost immediately, said Linder, who's not changing his oil price forecast of US$18 for 1998.

"The market is assuming the dip that started a few weeks ago may be more severe and more prolonged than originally envisioned," Linder said.

Overall, the industry is holding up fairly well because natural gas prices are expected to strengthen further by the fall with the addition of new pipeline capacity to the U.S., he said.

The Alberta spot price for natural gas at the Calgary-based Natural Gas Exchange was $1.72 a gigajoule yesterday, and $2.18 a gigajoule for delivery between November and the end of October 1999.

FEATURE STORY

English Oil Shares Slip On Depressed Oil Prices


Shares in British oil companies were dragged lower for a second day on Tuesday by depressed oil prices after Saudi comments dashed hopes of OPEC reaching a deal on curbing over-supply, analysts said.

By 1040 GMT, shares in Enterprise Oil Plc (UK & Ireland: ETP.L) slid 14p to 550-1/2, Shell Transport ( UK & Ireland: SHEL.L; RD.AS) lost 6p to 422-3/4p, British Petroleum Co (UK & Ireland: BP.L) shed 21p to 818p, and LASMO Plc (UK & Ireland: LSMR.L) drifted down 5-1/2p to 279p.

Shell and BP were among the heaviest traded shares, with volume of 4.6 million and 2.9 million, respectively. The market overall was slightly lower.

On Monday, international benchmark crude slumped to its lowest level in nine years, prompted by bearish comments by Saudi Arabia that it was no longer prepared to cut production in order to support prices, abandoning its key role as ''swing producer.''

Brent crude ended down 61 cents at $12.98 a barrel on London's International Petroleum Exchange on Monday, its lowest level since November 1988. It compares to an average price of about $19 during the 1990s and a high of nearly $25 last winter.

''There had been hopes for an emergency OPEC meeting at the beginning of next week,'' said analyst Bruce Evers at Henderson Crosthwaite, but Venezuela said it could not attend.

''In the short term, it would appear that there is no chance of a compromise,'' Evers said. ''The Saudis have been here before and what they are not prepared to do is to give up valuable market share to competition who are pumping for all they are worth.''

As well as over-supply, other fundamentals on the demand side are also weak, analysts said, with demand in Asia slowing dramatically, U.S. demand slightly weaker, and European demand still slack, and problems compounded by a mild Northern Hemisphere winter.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Tuesday that Asian demand has ''gone from being the reliable pillar of world demand growth to a significant downside risk.''

FEATURE STORY

European Oil Storage Firms Reap Benefits of Glut


European oil storage companies are reaping the benefits of a glut on world oil markets and say they are often turning customers away because of tight space in brimming tanks.

Independent crude and petroleum product companies in the key Amsterdam - Rotterdam - Antwerp transhipment centre say that after years of straining to make ends meet, business last year was good and is booming again in 1998.

Van Ommeren, the Dutch shipping and tank storage firm which this month announced it would merge with Dutch rival Pakhoed, said its storage space was fuller in 1997 than in the last three years.

"We are full at the moment. Storage is very tight and yes, you sometimes have to turn down customers," said Van Ommeren Commercial Director Jet Eikenaar, responsible for products storage in the Netherlands for several years.

"If you compare 1995, 1996 and 1997, I think 1997 was a really good year and 1998 looks very promising as well," said a senior official for Pakhoed.

Oil traders have taken to storing crude over many months in a contango market which prices prompt oil at a discount to future liftings -- allowing them to hedge the cost of storage.

An unexpected influx of oil from the Asian market, hurt by the collapse in local currencies, and low product prices has also helped boost the storage business in Europe, operators said.

But a change in storage trends where operators depended more on long-term contracts to meet their fixed costs in an unpredictable oil market rather than on oil trade play had tightened storage availability, they said.

"We have only a small portion of storage capacity free for the trading market," said Eikenaar.

"Traders are the first to disappear when the market turns to backwardation. We can't be dependent on them," she explained adding that there were still contracts that ran on a month-by-month basis.

Backwardation prices prompt oil at a premium to future deliveries.

"Occupancy rate has been very high since November and December. There is more product in storage," said an official with German Oiltanking.

Product tanks were mostly filled with gas oil, accumulating after a mild winter and depressed Asian demand, and with gasoline stocks ahead of the driving season. Jet, fuel oil and chemicals followed closely.

Meanwhile in Britain storage was also full, with gasoline storage seekers having to be rebuffed.

"Gasoline has been sucked up in the UK because of the budget," said a trader. "It's very difficult to find storage.

Britain's March 17 budget has encouraged dealers to stock up on gasoline to take advantage of a promised rise in gasoline duty.

Dealers said some companies buying up cheap jet fuel from the Gulf and moving it to northwest Europe were finding storage so scarce in the Amsterdam - Rotterdam - Antwerp region that they were having to move shipments to Scandinavian storage.

The International Energy Agency on Tuesday confirmed industry concern on storage saying there was little room for additional first and second quarter stock building, the IEA said.

It warned that the problem "could intensify" unless oil was moved out of storage.

"The problem with that is you don't have the ability to move oil quickly and sell it quickly," said a trader.

Dealers said the last obvious option for storing spare oil was at sea. Steady volumes of floating storage indicate that hasn't yet happened.

"I haven't seen distressed cargoes. There is no doubt there is an oil glut but I don't think the situation has reached that stage yet," said a trader with an oil major.

Roy Mason, of weekly UK-based Oil Movements said this month there had been no surge in demand for floating storage tankers month but would not be surprised if it increased.

"Storage is cheap at the moment, tanker rates are relatively low and there is plenty of oil around," he said.

FEATURE STORY

IEA Says World Oil Stocks Piling Up As Demand Fades


World oil demand is not growing as fast as expected this year leaving stocks to pile up in a market awash with rising crude supplies, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday.

The Paris-based agency said a reassessment of the economic prospects of some Asian countries and mild winter weather were cause for another downward revision to its projection for world oil demand this year.

In a monthly report the IEA reduced its projection for 1998 oil demand by 200,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 75.1 million, growth of 1.6 million for the year, and slashed 400,000 bpd from its first quarter estimate to 75.4 million.

The IEA reduced its estimate for demand growth this year in Asia by 160,000 bpd and says that since October it has cut 500,000 bpd from its demand projection for the region.

"Asian demand has gone from being the reliable pillar of world demand growth to a significant downside risk," the IEA said.

The agency said that dampened demand has been met by a surge in oil supplies. World oil output rose by 670,000 bpd in February to 76.7 million bpd, it estimated.

FEATURE STORY

Oil Prices in Asia at 9-Yr Lows, More Downside Seen


Deadlock between the world's oil-producing nations over output levels left oil prices in Asia languishing at nine-year lows on Tuesday with further losses expected, analysts said.

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has been shaken by a stand-off between kingpin Saudi Arabia and self-acknowledged quota-buster Venezuela over production levels.

Prices slumped sharply overnight as Saudi Arabia said it would no longer tolerate other OPEC producers taking its market share, effectively killing hopes of near-term measures to boost oil prices.

The stand-off means oil is likely to remain over-supplied on world markets, putting downward pressure on prices.

Asian oil producers have added a further 50,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude to already ample world supplies at a time when key Asian oil demand has slowed sharply in the face of the region's financial crisis.

"I would not rule out the possibility that we will see single digit oil prices," Gordon Kwan, an energy analyst at Daiwa Securities in Hong Kong, said.

"If it gets down to that level it will be a brief dip, rather than a sustained period of extremely low oil prices," he said.

Overnight in London, Brent April crude futures fell to a low of $12.85 per barrel -- a price not seen since November 1988.

April Brent was quoted on the Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX) at $13.05 on Tuesday.

New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) crude futures fell as low as $14.15 per barrel, a four-year low, but just 41 cents above a nine year low.

Crude has lost more than 40 percent of its value since October last year, providing Asia, a net importer, with a welcome boost.

A warm winter in the northern hemisphere cut demand for heating fuel and resulted in a build-up of stocks.

OPEC had raised its quotas 10 percent to 27.5 million barrels per day (bpd), but over-production has pushed actual output to more than 28.5 million bpd.

The United Nations has proposed that an "oil-for-food" deal with Iraq be more than doubled, a move likely to trigger further rises in supply.

With Saudi Arabia signalling it would not resume its role as the world's balancer of supply and demand, oil prices could extend their weakness in coming months.

Kwan said single digit prices -- last seen in 1986 -- were possible, but added that was likely to shake producers, including Venezuela, into action to limit supplies.

"If it falls another couple of dollars it will certainly draw attention," he said.

The South American producer, with an OPEC quota of 2.58 million bpd and actual production well above three million bpd, has said it will not cut output by so much as a barrel.

"We are following a policy of income via volume," Pedro Mantellini, a senior adviser of state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela, said overnight.

The increased OPEC production has come as Asian demand growth has slowed to around three percent per year from five to six percent previously.

Papua New Guinea's Gobe oil field came on stream on Monday, providing 50,000 bpd of crude supply and contributing to the International Energy Agency's forecast that world supplies would rise in 1998 by 1.34 million bpd. The agency said that would leave markets over supplied.

But the lower oil price has also provided some windfall profits for Asia, which only produces seven million bpd of its 18-20 million bpd consumption.

Chinese Petroleum Corp (CPC) CHIP.CN of Taiwan said on Monday its profits had ballooned to T$2.216 billion (U.S.68.6 million) in February from T$507 in January. The windfall came because CPC had budgeted crude imports at US$17.50 per barrel but actually paid only US$13.87.

However, the company is still dealing with an overall T$6.86 billion deficit in its financial year to the end of June, a hangover from the double whammy of rising oil prices and falling currency values last year.

The slump has modestly offset the decline in the value of some Asian currencies hit by the crisis of the past nine months. But even with the slide, most are paying more for their oil than when the crisis kicked off in July 1997.

The consolation for producers is that benchmark Brent prices have spent only 10 percent of their time below $15 per barrel in the last 10 years.

"A long-term upside is more sustainable than the brief downside we will see for now," Kwan said.



To: Crocodile who wrote (9502)3/11/1998 10:56:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998 (3)

FEATURE STORY

Algeria Aims at 80 Pct Crude Output Growth by 2000


Algeria expects its crude oil production to grow by 80 percent to around 1.4 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2000, an official of state oil company Sonatrach said on Tuesday.

Algeria pumped 880,000 bpd in February according to a Reuters survey of industry monitors and analysts.

Zohra Talantikite, head of Sonatrach's Planning department, said Algeria's hydrocarbons output is expected to reach 200 million tonnes oil equivalent (mtoe) in 2000, from 182 mtoe in 1997,

"Hydrocarbons production is expected to reach 200 million tonnes (oil equivalent) at the horizon 2000, practically four fold its level in 1970," Talantikite told an energy forum in the southern Tunisian city of Sfax.

Talantikite said Algeria's total hydrocarbon reserves stand at 115 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

Plans for the next five years include increasing yearly exports capacity of natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to respectively 60 billion cubic metres and 9.0 million tonnes.

"Hydrocarbons production will grow by more than 35 percent (in five years), a level never reached in Algeria's petroleum history," Talantikite said.

LPG output will double while condensate production will be maintained at a "stable" level of 17 million tonnes per year, she added.

Natural gas output will reach an annual level of 150 billion cubic metres (bcm) with the development of the southeastern fields of Hassi R'Mel and those of the southwestern region around In Salah in partnership with British Petroleum, Talantikite said.

Hydrocarbons exports will increase by over 45 percent during the next five years.

This will be the result of an increase in liquids exports that will reach a record 60 million tonnes oil equivalent by 2000, LPG exports at nearly 9.0 million tonnes by 2000, and gas exports which will reach 60 bcm in 1999, she said.

The total value of Algeria's hydrocarbons exports would increase by nearly 60 percent compared to 1995 based on a crude price of $16 per barrel.

In 1997, Algeria exported nearly 50 bcm of gas, 96 percent of which was to Europe. Half of that was exported through pipelines, she said.

Sonatrach and its partners would invest $19 billion, 60 percent in hard currencies, to reach these objectives, Talantikite said. Of this, 70 percent would go on exploration and development.

Sonatrach offered both upstream and downstream investment opportunities.

"In the downstream, partnership opportunities include refining condensates, manufacturing fertilisers, and petrochemical projects," she said.

"Other opportunities in other sectors such as petroleum services, desalinisation of sea water are also possible," Talantikite added.

From this year Sonatrach will fully control the refining and the national distribution network of refined products as well as the petrochemical industry, Talantikite said.

Sonatrach's foreign partners had invested over $1.3 billion in exploration in Algeria since 1991. During the last five years there were 15 discoveries totalling 5.0 billion barrels, with 2.6 billion barrels discovered in 1995 alone, she said.

FEATURE STORY

Iraq-U.N. Oil Talks To Conclude Thursday - U.N.


Talks between the United Nations and Iraq on implementing an increase in the amount of the ''oil-for-food'' program are expected to end on Thursday, the U.N.'s spokesman said on Tuesday.

The talks, which began on Monday, are to work out details in order to allow Iraq to increase the amount of oil it can sell under the scheme from $2 billion to $5.256 billion every 180 days in order to meet the urgen humanitarian needs of ordinary citizens suffering under sanctions.

''Technical talks continue Tuesday afternoon and they are expected to conclude Wednesday morning. On Thursday, (Iraqi foreign minister Mohammed Saeed) al-Sahaf will meet with deputy Secretary General Louise Frechette to close the talks,'' said Fred Ekhard, U.N. spokesman.

Under a Security Council resolution passed last month, the increase would earmark about a third of the proceeds to cover Gulf War reparations, mainly for Kuwait, as well as U.N. Iraq-related expenses. This deduction would be in line with those from the proceeds raised so far.

Al-Sahaf told Reuters Tuesday that Iraq is still pressing its demand that the deduction from the program be capped at the current level.

''The reason why this additional amount of money has been added to the program is because of the serious deterioration of the health and nutrition situation in my country,'' al-Sahaf said.

The U.S. and Britain are strongly opposed to any change in the resolution which calls for a pro-rata increase in the deduction; diplomats said no change is expected. Al-Sahaf said Baghdad also is pressing that it be allowed to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on improving its oil infrastructure, which has badly deteriorated under more than seven years of sanctions.

The U.N. will this week send two of its oil ''overseers,'' or experts, as well as a team from Dutch firm Saybolt, which monitors oil exports on the ground in Iraq, to assess Iraq's current capacity and what is required to raise it to a level needed to reach the higher monetary target.

Iraqi officials have repeated said the country can only export around $4 billion of oil over a six-month period given the current state of its infrastructure.

FEATURE STORY

Saudi King's Illness Makes Oil Industry Look Ahead


Saudi Arabian King Fahd's illness had the oil industry guessing again on Tuesday about the possible consequences of any future change in the leadership of the world's largest oil producer and exporter.

Although diplomats said Fahd's heir apparent, Crown Prince Abdullah, had long since assumed day-to-day running of the kingdom before Fahd's latest illness, oil executives remained alert to any sign of policy change should the 76-year-old king succumb to his gall bladder infection.

''There is a feeling that Abdullah is a little bit cautious as a person and more traditionalist as a Saudi...that oil policy may be a little different,'' said Leo Drollas, economist at London's Centre for Global Energy Studies.

Oil traders in the Gulf said Crown Prince Abdullah's reputation as a more conservative leader who is perceived by some as more of a pan-Arab nationalist and less pro-Western figure than King Fahd could feed through at some time into oil policy changes.

''It's more likely under the rule of Abdullah that Saudi would keep its oil in the ground...not to produce too much and not to spend too much,'' said one regional trader.

Saudi Arabia's current oil policy is to ensure stability in often volatile markets which will guarantee the future viability of oil as the world's preferred energy source.

A recent statement issued by Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi made no difference in oil policy between King Fahd and Prince Abdullah.

''...Saudi Arabia, in line with the directives of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Fahd and Crown Prince Abdullah, is interested in the stability of the international oil market, which would serve the producers and ensures that oil continues as a main energy source,'' Naimi said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency on Sunday.

Crown Prince Abdullah, who is first deputy prime minister, commander of the National Guard and half-brother to King Fahd, said the king was in ''good health'' at the royal wing of the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh.

Oil markets were slow to react to the news that the king had been admitted to hospital on Monday, although some traders said it had partly helped slow a heavy selling bout on world markets which sent benchmark Brent crude to a nine-year low of $12.85 a barrel on Monday.

Prices skidded after Naimi said on Sunday that the kingdom would not again be a ''swing-producer,'' namely that it would not by itself cut production to restore order to slumping prices.

Saudi Arabia has emerged since the 1991 Gulf War as the world's most important supplier because it is one of the few remaining countries which still has spare production capacity to be tapped in the event of war or an emergency.

Saudi pumped an unrivalled 8.7 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude last month, making it a vital source of energy for the industrialised world from Japan to the United States. It could pump close to 11 million bpd if freed from any quota obligations under its leading role in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

With 25 percent of the world's oil reserves, Saudi planners this year will mark the 60th anniversary of the first discovery of oil by a ''mission statement'' to be the prime exporter of oil.

King Fahd has suffered poor health for several years. He had a gall bladder operation in 1994 and in November 1995 suffered a stroke.

FEATURE STORY

Shell Moves Ahead With Study For Oilsands Project

Fort McMurray Today

A $100-million feasibility study is about to start which will tell Shell Canada Ltd. and partner BHP whether to go ahead with a massive oilsands project. Shell and the Broken Hill Proprietary Company Ltd. will split the costs of the research 75/25 respectively during the next year.

"There's a lot of work to do, " said Shell spokeswoman Tara Black. She said the $100-million pricetag will include a look at engineering and design studies, commercial evaluations, regulations and environmental factors.

"We'll spend $3.4 billion on the entire project so we think it's reasonable to spend $100 million to see if it's worth spending the rest."

About $25 million of the research funds will go towards building and operating a pilot plant on Lease 13, about 70 kilometres north of Fort McMurray.

It will test extraction processes on a large scale. Construction and engineering have already started on the pilot plant. "We need to make sure our technology will work," said Black.

When the feasibility study is done in early 1999, the companies will decide whether to go ahead with the project which would start up in 2002.

The $3.4-billion project includes the $1.2-billion Muskeg River surface mine and extraction facility, a $400-million pipeline connecting it to a $1.8-billion Scotford upgrader near Fort Saskatchewan, which would be built near Shell's current refinery.

Black said Shell and BHP also need regulatory approvals from the Alberta government, which they are hoping for in the next year.

"We also need to have the financial factors to work out -- can we do this at a reasonable cost?" said Black.

"We also look at the market conditions and commercial expectations."

Shell and BHP will continue environmental studies and public consultations throughout the next year. The Muskeg River mine application was filed at the end of 1997 and the upgrader and pipeline applications will be filed within months.



To: Crocodile who wrote (9502)3/11/1998 11:22:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (15) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1998 (4)

OIL & GAS

WORLD

Oil Price Steadies But Respite Will Be Brief


Weak global oil prices paused for breath on Tuesday but brimming storage tanks and a battle for market share between two of the world's largest producers will make the respite brief, traders said.

April futures for Brent blend, the international benchmark grade, touched a nine-year low of $12.85 a barrel on Monday in the wake of a defiant statement by Saudi Arabia that it would not cut crude output unilaterally.

Oil prices have fallen more than 40 percent from last year's average of around $19.30, dragged down by a 10 percent increase in OPEC's output ceiling and a collapse in demand wrought by Asia's financial crisis and a mild northern hemisphere winter.

On Tuesday Brent closed unchanged at $12.98 a barrel, having failed to sustain a gentle rally which took the market to the day's high of $13.21.

But a deadlocked dispute over production levels between Organisation of the Petroluem Exporting Countries kingpin Saudi Arabia and the cartel's biggest quota buster Venezuela dimmed the chances of prices holding.

"The medium term downtrend is clearly in place and the indicators still suggest further downside, with the 1988 level at $11.70 now a potential target," said Leslie Nicholas of brokers GNI in his daily report.

Venezuela last month pumped 30 percent in excess of its agreed quota of 2.6 million barrels per day and has rejected calls by Saudi Arabia and others for production restraint.

The kingdom, angered by its fellow OPEC founder member, on Sunday said it would not act alone to support oil prices and was prepared for a lengthy fight to retain its market share.

"We do not want to reduce production to find out that other countries, especially those who do not want to adhere to their quotas, flood the market, take our valuable customers," said Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi.

But Venezuela appeared unbowed by the turmoil in world oil markets and ready to plough on with its plan to reach six million barrels of daily capacity in four years.

"We are following a policy of income via volume. With or without OPEC we must put the Venezuelan people first," said Pedro Mantellini, senior advisor to state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela.

Washington-based consultants The Petroleum Finance Company described OPEC as paralysed by the battle of wills between the two producers and said prices would need to fall further to soften entrenched positions.

"The feeling is that prices must fall below $10 before the pain really starts to hit oil producing economies, but it is difficult to evaluate at this time how much Venezuela can take," said Nicholas.

The West's energy watchdog, the International Energy Agency, also sounded the alarm on Tuesday, pointing to slowing world demand growth and a rising level of oil stocks.

The Paris-based think tank in its monthly oil market report said concerns were growing that storage space for oil in a saturated market was running out.

It said projected supply and demand trends indicated the situation could get worse unless oil exporters followed some simple advice: "Less oil needs to be shipped."

A reassessment of Asia's economic prospects led the IEA to cut projected 1998 oil demand by 200,000 bpd to 75.1 million bpd, growth of 1.6 million bpd for the year.

Further gloom looms later this year when a United Nations plan to more than double the value of its "oil-for-food" deal with Iraq will see several hundred thousand barrels of extra oil inundating markets.

The deal to raise the export ceiling to $5.2 billion every six months from $2 billion will start when an aid distribution plan currently being negotiated in New York is agreed.

"The unresolved issue of how to reintegrate Iraqi oil, which has been largely ignored by OPEC for seven years, now requires urgent attention," the Petroleum Finance Company said.

"Not the least because it has raised its head at the time when market fundamentals have deteriorated to their worst condition in the last several years."

NYMEX

Crude Oil

NYMEX Crude Down Seven Cents To $14.26 In Dull Day


Crude futures at the New York Mercantile Exchange closed slightly down Tuesday in dull trading as prices bobbed and weaved on a narrow range off Monday's close.

Light, sweet crude for April delivery closed seven cents down at $14.26 a barrel.

Refined products closed higher as traders awaited weekly inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute. An earlier Reuter poll showed analysts expecting a moderate build in crude, gasoline and distillates in the API statistics.

April heating oil lost .10 cent at 40.83 a gallon while April gasoline was down .30 cent at 46.25 a gallon.

Short-coverings which lifted the market in early trading gave way to some small profit-taking later in the session, said one floor trader.

"There was not much news and basically the bearish fundamentals have not changed," said a floor trader at E.D. & F. Man International Inc.

"The API statistics might give us a clue as to what's in store and tomorrow may be the tell-tale day," the trader added.

Early trading pushed NYMEX crude to the day's high of $14.52 as a flurry of short-coverings pushed the market up from the day's opening of $14.43. Overnight ACCESS trading, which gave April crude a 14-cent gain at $14.48 a barrel on short-covering gave impetus to the morning session.

No viable support developed, however, triggering the downslide, with the day's low registering at $14.22, still above Monday's low of $14.15.

Brent crude futures at London's International Petroleum Exchange closed unchanged at $12.98 after a modest rally succumbed to bearish fundamentals, traders said.

Most of the developments during the day were bearish.

At the United Nations, a spokesman said talks between the U.N. and Iraq on implementing an increase in the oil-for-food program were expected to end on Thursday.

The talks, which began on Monday, are to work out details that will allow Iraq to raise the amount of oil it can sell from $2.0 billion to $5.256 billion every 180 days in order to meet urgent humanitarian needs of ordinary Iraqis hard-hit by past U.N. sanctions.

Iraq has previously said it can only sell up to $4 billion of oil every six months because of the state of its oil facilities. The U.N. is to dispatch a team this week to find out what needs to be done so the facilities can produce enough to meet the new monetary target.

The U.S. State Department said that King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, who was in hospital after a gall bladder infection, has had surgery.

Earlier, Crown Prine Abdullah told well-wishers that the king was in good health.

Market watchers said they did not see Saudi Arabia's oil policy changing in the event of a transition as those policies "are well in place."

But other experts fear instability after Fahd, who is 76, dies because Prince Abdullah and his immediate potential successors are all over 60 years of age and the kingdom could face the prospect of a new king every two or three years.

Saudi Arabia, OPEC's and the world's largest oil exporter, said in a strongly-worded statement Sunday it would not unilaterally cut its oil output amid low prices arising from a glutted market. It said it was prepared for a lenghty fight to retain its market share.

Saudi Arabia spearheaded in November OPEC's 10 percent increase in production to 27.5 million barrels per day (BPD). But OPEC is currently producing well over 28 million BPD, boosted by quota-busting members, the biggest of which is Venezuela, which has said it would not cut ouput by even a barrel.

The higher output went into effect as Asia went into an economic tailspin, weakening demand for oil in the region. Oil prices have also dropped partly due to a mild winter in the northern hemisphere.

Natural Gas

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Drifts Lower Late In Sparse Trade


NYMEX Hub natgas futures on Tuesday mimicked yesterday's session, with the large number of market participants currently at GasFair in Houston keeping trade range-bound, industry sources said.

At 1435 EST, April was off 2.4 cents at $2.145 per mmBtu, as some late technical selling led the contract down to rematch the $2.14 low. May was down 2.9 cents at $2.185, while other deferred months slipped to unchanged to about 2.5 cents lower.

"It should be reflective of April prices," one trader said, referring to the market's disregard for the recent three-day cold spell.

In the short-term cash market, forecasts calling for significantly colder weather in the Northeast boosted prices at the New York city-gate to about $2.62-2.70, while Henry Hub was quoted mostly in the low-to-mid $2.20s. The Chicago city-gate market jumped nearly 10 cents to about $2.40, while prices in the Permian Basin stepped up to the high-teens to the low-$2.20s.

But heating demand is expected to gradually wane through this week and into next week, returning northeastern temperatures to near to slightly above-normal levels.

On the technical side, resistance levels were still pegged at $2.185, $2.23, $2.30 and $2.355. Support at $2.14 continued to hold late, with further support seen at $2.12 and $2.105.

NYMEX said 25,198 Hub contracts had traded as of 1420 EST. Open interest for March 9 was up 86 to 192,810.

Estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report ranged from 20 bcf to 80 bcf, versus a 57 bcf withdrawal a year ago, traders said.

However, more focus was on next week's AGA report, which will reveal how much of an impact this cold weather had on supplies, traders said.

Meanwhile, April KCBT futures remained below yesterday's settlement, trading down 1.5 cents at 1433 EST at $2.065 per mmBtu.

U.S. SPOT GAS

US Spot Natural Gas Gains Amid Numbing Midwest Temps


Below-normal temperatures sweeping across the Midcontinent continued to lift U.S. spot natural gas prices Tuesday, but further near-term gains may be cut short as milder weather was expected to return next week, traders said.

Next-day Henry Hub prices gained about eight cents from Monday to settle at $2.22-2.27. Meanwhile, NYMEX April natgas futures retreated to $2.155 midday from early highs of $2.185.

"Cash is stronger on the cold weather," said one trader, referring to cool air and gusty winds now penetrating the Midwest and creeping over to the Northeast. Demand for gas has chipped away at supply, fueling the bullish tone, he said.

But colder-than-normal temperatures in the eastern half of the U.S. were forecast to return to above normal as soon as next week, perhaps capping gains made over the last two sessions, traders said.

"Cash should look weaker over the next few days as the weather returns to normal," one trader said.

In the western Texas cash market, Permian and San Juan prices were quoted at $2.16-2.22, mostly unchanged from Monday.

Southern California border prices firmed about three cents to $2.43-$2.48.

In the Midcontinent, prices picked up about five cents to $2.19-2.24. On Northern at Demarcation continued to trade at a premium to all other Midcontinent pipes, settling in the upper $2.30s.

Chicago city-gate edged up four cents to $2.38-$2.43.

New York city gate prices jumped about 20 cents to the upper $2.60s on word that cooler weather was making its way eastward. Appalachian gas on Columbia, meanwhile, inched up two cents to $2.28-2.33.

In generation news, Texas Utilities 1,150 megawatt (MW) Comanche Peak 2 nuclear power unit was regaining power Tuesday after tripping off line last weekend due to a loss of its turbine cooling water pumps.

CANADA SPOT GAS

Canada Spot Natural Gas Eases In West Ahead Of Milder Air


Western Canadian spot natural gas prices turned a little softer on Tuesday as milder weather was forecast to arrive tomorrow, marketers said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted mostly at C$1.76 per gigajoule (GJ), though some late morning deals were reported done at C$1.74. Prices on average were down about four cents from Monday's levels. Traders said they were expecting more softening again on Wednesday as milder air approached. Temperatures in southern Alberta were forecast to reach a high of +5 degrees Celsius on Wednesday and +7 on Thursday. Cooler weather is expected to return this weekend.

Meanwhile, April AECO was talked one cent softer at C$1.70, while winter business slipped to C$2.35-2.37 from C$2.40-2.44, and one-year eased to about C$2.18-2.20 from C$2.20-2.23 per GJ.

Maintenance continued on TransCanada PipeLines mainline, restricting about 156 million cubic feet a day of interruptible gas. The work is scheduled to last through March 27, the company said.

In the export market, prices at Sumas, Wash., also drifted about five cents lower to US$1.60-1.62 per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

Conversely in the East, colder weather pushed gas prices at Niagara about eight cents higher to US$2.38-2.44 per mmBtu.

MARKET ACTIVITY & COMMENTARY

The roughnecks in Canada's oilpatch were left in the mud yesterday as nearly everyone else climbed aboard the Toronto Stock Express for another thrilling ride into uncharted territory. Crude oil prices continued to dribble under the $15 level, keeping the market euphoria from reaching the oil and gas group.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 Composite Index gained 0.9% or 67.93 to 7295.99. In contrast, the Oil & Gas Composite Index fell 1.1% or 67.54 to 6363.62. Among sub-components. the Integrated Oils fell 0.7% or 61.55 to 8849.58. The Oil & Gas Producers dropped 1.4% or 76.44 to 5573.59. The Oil & Gas Service's was basically unchanged, losing 0.0% or down just 0.90 to 2752.53.

I have noticed the press has been reporting heavy volume in trading out of oil and gas shares. No doubt, there is a good extent of selling pressure. However, let me also point out that the overall volume in trading of oil and gas shares, since oil has fallen under $15.00, is considerably less than average volume over the past 10 - 30 - 90 day periods. I suspect complete panic has not taken place due to two reasons. The overall market environment remains strong and shares are already at depressed levels for many companies. But I also see the low - going lower. In other words, shares prices have yet to catch up with the declining rate that oil has fallen. I think that will happen, but on a gradual basis. Companies such as Northrock Resources and Tri Link Resources will suffer the most due to crude oil generating the majority of their revenue. Both these companies were among the top $$$ losers yesterday. Also among the top $$$ losers yesterday were Talisman Energy, Amber Energy and Imperial Oil - all weighted towards crude oil.

To a lesser degree, natural gas producers and service firms should also suffer due to the influence of lower oil pricing. It's simply the image for the entire energy sector that will be the culprit. I have been conserving capital for reinvestment into the oil and gas sector and my original planned timing was to do it 30 to 45 days from now. That plan has been cancelled and I would guess, shelved for another 3 to 6 month period. This may be one of those infrequent years where investment in the third or fourth quarter will be better suited for superior near term appreciation.

BUY - HOLD - SELL

Gordon Capital

Beau Canada Exploration (BAU-T: $2.40) BUY

CFPS for 1997 was $0.64 vs. $0.50 in 1996. Finding and development costs on a proven plus half probable basis increased slightly to $6.66/boe (up from $5.87/boe in 1996) with reserve additions replacing production by 2.5X. Liquids production was up 26% year-over-year to 10,454 bbls/d and gas production was up 16% to 71 mmcf/d. We have reduced our 1998 liquids production forecast to 9,000 bbls/d (a reduction of 1,000 bbls/d) to reflect the shutting in ofheavy oil production as a result of lower oil prices. Our 1998 gas production forecast remains 100 mmcf/d. Our fully diluted cash flow forecast is $0.60 in 1998 and $0.75 in 1999. Our 12-month stock price target remains $3.25. BUY


Maxx Petroleum Ltd. (MXP-T: $1.72) BUY

CFPS for 1997 was $0.52 vs. $0.57 - in line with expectations. Proven and probable reserves additions in 1997 replaced production 4X at a finding and development cost of $6.64/boe. The 1998 capital budget of $33 million is expected to be funded through internally generated cash flow. This years exploration program will attempt to diversify Maxx's production and reserve base by focusing on adding gas, primarily in west central Alberta. We have lowered our 1998 liquids production forecast from 8,200 bbls/d to 7,200 bbls/d and increased our gas production forecast from 12 mmcf/d to 17 mmcf/d. Consequently, our fully diluted CFPS forecasts is now $0.50 in 1998 (down $0.10) and $0.65 in 1999 (down $0.05). Maxx production remains heavily weighted to oil, as such, a US$1.00 change WTI translates in to a C$0.06 change in 1998 CFPS. Our current CFPS forecasts are based on WTI of US$18.50 in 1998 and US$19.00 in 1999. We maintain our BUY opinion on Maxx with a 12-month stock price target of $2.25.

Oil Shares Bounce On Upgrades, Price Outlook Rocky

Shares of oil majors wrestled back some of Monday's losses on the back of upgrades for four integrated oil companies from PaineWebber analyst Frank Knuettel.

Knuettel said that upgrades raising Texaco Inc (TX) and Occidental Petroleum Corp (OXY) to "buy" from "attractive" and for USX-Marathon Group (MRO) and Mobil Corp(MOB) to "attractive" from "neutral" reflected a reweighting of the integrated oil group to market weight.

"It was a combination of oil prices and a number of other factors," Knuettel said.

Marathon was the biggest gainer in the group, adding 1-11/16 to 35-13/16, while Mobil added 1-9/16 to 72-9/16, Occidental 11/16 to 26 and Texaco 2-1/4 to 58-1/16.

Knuettel is forecasting an average 1998 oil price of $18.00 per barrel for the world benchmark Brent blend, compared with a current price of around $13.00 per barrel for April delivery and an average of $19.30 in 1997.

Gary Hovis at Argus is also expecting a rebound in oil prices and a recovery in the sector's shares in the longer term.

He sees earnings for the international oil group rising 6.0-6.5 percent this year.

"I do not see stock prices falling that much from here. They have hit the bottom in terms of this mini-recession," he said.

However, other analysts are less sanguine on the oil price outlook, noting that the fundamental supply/demand situation remains sharply out of kilter and that Venezuela, the key OPEC overproducer, remains committed to raising output to maintain income.

Also, the Paris-based International Energy Agency trimmed its forecast of world demand for oil by 200,000 barrels per day, largely as a result of the Asian financial crisis and warm winter weather in Europe and the U.S. that has cut home heating oil demand.

"The medium term downtrend is clearly in place and the indicators still suggest further downside, with the 1988 level at $11.70 now a potential target," said Leslie Nicholas of brokers GNI in his daily report.

END - END







To: Crocodile who wrote (9502)3/12/1998 8:53:00 AM
From: Crocodile  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1998 (1)

Thursday, March 12, 1998

Bay Street stocks advanced to their third straight record, smashing through the 7300 barrier. Wall Street cyclical issues came through to provide yet more records

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 49.85 points, or 0.7%, to 7345.84.
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Volume was a heavy 140.9 million shares worth $2.53 billion. Advancers outpaced decliners 558 to 526 with 286 issues unchanged.
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On Tuesday, the TSE 300 stopped just short of topping the important 7300-point mark with a 67.93 point rise to 7295.99.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average also added to its record close with a gain of 32.63 points, or 0.4%, to 8675.75.
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The Toronto market has gained 187.24 points, or 2.6%, so far this week.
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Overall, nine of the TSE 300's 14 sub-indexes closed higher, led by a 1.8% rise in the heavily-weighted financial services sector, which accounts for more than 20% of the the TSE 300.
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"People are trying to find some sustainability of earnings and for the most part the banks' first-quarter earnings have been quite reasonable," said Dave Picton, a portfolio manager at Synergy Mutual Funds in Toronto.

The paper and forest products sector notched another jump, gaining 1.8% as takeover fever from Monday's announcement of the acquisition of Montreal-based pulp and paper company Avenor Inc. by U.S.-based Bowater Inc. continued to spur the paper sector. So far this week, the forest group has climbed more than 9%.
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But gold and metals stocks tempered the market's gains as the gold and precious minerals index fell 1.9% and the metals group dropped 1.3%. The April price for Comex gold dropped US$1.40 to US$295.10.

Despite the records in Canada, some observers say the momentum will be hard to maintain.
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Investors seem to be chasing stocks higher instead of buying them based on a fundamental research, said Fred Pynn, director of equity research at Bissett & Associates Investment Management Ltd. in Calgary.
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He pointed out that the TSE 300 is trading above 24 times trailing earnings. In addition, the market is trading at a record high on a price-to-book value basis, while its dividend yield is at a record low.
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The market "seems to have momentum of its own," which could fuel further gains over the short-term, Pynn predicted. Beyond that point, interest rates will need to drop or profits will need to rise for the market to continue to support its lofty valuations, he said. But neither is likely to happen, given the strength of the U.S. economy and the declining trend in corporate profits because of Asia's financial problems.
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In other Canadian markets, the Montreal Exchange portfolio index rose 15.15 points, or 0.4%, to a record close of 3747.21.

The Vancouver Stock Exchange composite index fell 3.63 points, or 0.6%, to 621.14.

For a scorecard of trading activity on all Canadian Stock Exchanges, go to:
quote.yahoo.com .

REFERENCE: Canadian Market Summary
canoe2.canoe.ca
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On Wall Street, drug names faded and technology's gains stalled, but stocks of companies in smokestack industries stepped into a leadership role, lifting major market averages to record levels.
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Forest and paper products moved higher and chemical stocks also marked progress in a day dominated by stocks that have largely been left out of the market's recent rallies.
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"The cyclical stocks are moving faster than consumer issues, which is a reverse of yesterday," said Jack Regan, head of derivatives trading at Josephthal & Co.
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But different leaders, same result, at least for most averages. Besides the Dow industrials, also setting record were the Standard & Poor's 500 composite index, which added 4.22 points, or 0.4%, to 1068.47, and the New York Stock Exchange composite index, which gained 2.30, or 0.4%, to 557.30.
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Advancing issues beat decliners, 1,742 to 1,222, on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading was brisk, with 652.3 million shares changing hands on the Big Board versus 631.4 million Tuesday.
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London: The market crept to its third record close of the month. The FT-SE 100 index closed at 5829.8, up 1.3 points.
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Frankfurt: Stocks inched ahead in afternoon trade, with the Dax index closing at 4832.76, down 1.67 points.
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Tokyo: Stocks lost ground as expectations that Japan's economy could worsen were reinforced by a fall in long-term Japanese interest rates to a record low. The Nikkei average closed at 16,756.14, down 226.68 points, or 1.33%.

Hong Kong: The Hang Seng index closed 220.28 points, or 2%, higher at 11,118.85.
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Sydney: Stocks powered to a stronger finish, fuelled by a 3.1% rise in media giant News Corp. The all-ordinaries index closed at 2714.8, up 21.9 points, or 0.8%.

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