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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10039)4/9/1998 5:56:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1998 (2)

OIL & GAS

World Oil Prices Jump On U.S. Oil Stock Data

LONDON, April 8 - Oil futures recovered in late trade on Wednesday after two days of falling prices, with a report showing lower than expected U.S. crude oil stocks helping dealers regain some confidence.

Benchmark Brent blend for May delivery last traded at $14.00 a barrel, up 30 cents on the day. In the last 30 minutes of business it peaked at $14.12 before retracing lower.

The levels were almost two dollars down on Brent's peak last week of $15.82 following an announcement of production cuts by oil cartel OPEC.

Traders who have sold crude lower say they have yet to see firm evidence of reductions by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

OPEC members, aiming to drain excess crude from a glutted market, agreed to cut production by 1.245 million barrels per day from April 1 to the end of 1998.

Data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) showing a crude stock draw of 415,000 barrels for the week ending April 3 confounded many forecasters' expectations and pushed prices upwards.

Department of Energy figures released on Wednesday showing a 1.5 million barrel build-up in the last week stifled Brent gains.

But traders later focused on the 4.0 million barrel dip in gasoline stocks, the key petroleum product in the summer when demand from vacationing U.S. drivers is high, and pushed prices upwards.

Producers have seen Brent average a disastrous $4.50 a barrel less so far this year than in 1997, cutting export earnings for OPEC member countries by some $8 billion in the first quarter of 1998.

Oil exporters outside the cartel led by Mexico and Norway have joined forces with OPEC in pledging an additional 400,000 bpd in cuts, helped by unexpected cooperation from China.

And Russia offered its support on Wednesday by announcing it intended to cut its oil exports by 61,000 bpd, amounting to 2.3 percent of its export volume.

Russia To Cut Oil Exports

MOSCOW, April 8 (UPI) - Russia says it will cut oil exports by 61,000 barrels a day to help support sagging oil prices.

Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov (''nehm-TSAWF'') says petroleum product exports from Russia would be cut by 4,900 tons a day.

A government spokesman says the move is purely political, adding that Russia would ''watch for reaction from OPEC members.''

Oil analysts in Moscow tell United Press International the cut is largely a political gesture of support for stable, higher world prices, and would not significantly dent Russia's export revenues.

Russia, which is not a member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, is a major world exporter of oil and relies on oil sales for a large part of its income.

Nemtsov has voiced his concern with falling oil prices in the past, and has invited OPEC officials to visit Moscow this month for talks on a coordinated move to boost prices, possibly by cutting production.

Russia's Itar-Tass news agency says the government estimates it is losing as much as $24 million a day in revenues because of the oil price slump.

NYMEX Crude, Products End Up On Short-Covering

NEW YORK, April 8 - NYMEX futures on crude oil and refined products ended on an upbeat after a short covering rally towards the close lifted prices, mostly influenced by by bullish inventory data on gasoline.

The May crude contract gained 33 cents, finishing at $15.55 a barrel, off the day's high of $15.68, on moderate volume.

May gasoline extended its gains to 50.44 cents a gallon, up 0.86 cent, trading below the day's high of 50.80 cents.

May heating oil, taking the cue from gasoline, rose .74 cent at 43.20 cents a gallon.

''The unexpected draw in gasoline stocks fueled trading today,'' said Gerald Samuels of New York's Arb Oil, adding that traders went on short-covering, on light volume.

The Department of Energy reported early Wednesday a draw in U.S. gasoline stocks by 4.0 million barrels for the week ending April 3.

That was double the 1.956 million barrel draw reported by the American Petroleum Institute late Tuesday, which was in line with forecasters' expectations. The API draw sparked a small rise in crude and refined products in overnight ACCESS trading.

Michael Busby, a trader at Northville Industries, noted, that the inventory data supported the market ''but there was was actually no other news to spur trading.''

''You would wish (the inventory data) were more dramatic than what they were,'' he quipped.

The market turned upside after hitting the day's low at $15.16, developing some support after two days of lingering below $15.50.

The API and DOE data on crude oil inventory were conflicting, with the API reporting a draw of 415,000 barrels and DOE a build of 1.5 million barrels.

The moderate DOE build on crude was near the 2.0 million barrel build that traders and analysts expected and so hardly affected trading, market players said.

Traders said there was little or no effect of news that Russia's major oil companies and the government have struck a surprise deal on Wednesday to cut crude exports by 2.3 percent and product exports by 3.2 percent in response to low world prices.

A senior government source told Reuters that whether or not the cuts went ahead would largely depend on steps taken by OPEC members to reduce exports.

The Russian cuts, 61,000 barrels per day for crude and 4,900 bpd for products ''were too small,'' to affect trading, said Energex Ltd trader Dominick Cagliotti.

OPEC producers have agreed to cut their production by 1.245 million bpd while non-OPEC producers will reduce output by about 270,000 as a way to rescue slumping oil prices.

In addition, China announced it had cut production by about 150,000 bpd.

US Cash Crudes - WTS Strengthens Then Falls Back

NEW YORK, April 8 - West Texas Sour/Midland differentials on Wednesday were about seven cents stronger, mostly based on the month delay in accepting bids for the sale of sour crude from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve, traderes and brokers said.

U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Frederico Pena on Wednesday said he didn't wish to see the sale of 207.5 million barrels of oil from the SPR, which was mandated last year by Congress at a time when oil prices were about 50-percent higher.

As differentials for WTS/Midland dropped, outright prices for all cash crudes in the U.S. rose as a result of the 33-cent increase in the value of the NYMEX front-month futures contract.

The NYMEX rose as a result of short-covering, traders said.

The May crude NYMEX contract settled Wednesday at $15.55 per barrel.

With the premium to guarantee delivery of domestic crudes, WTI/Cushing was talked in a range of $15.61 to $15.66 per barrel. The exchange for physical (EFP) premium was talked at seven- to nine-cents.

WTS/Midland was done as high as $2.20 under WTI/Cushing Wednesday, but pulled back to end the day offered at $2.26 below WTI/Cushing and bid at -$2.30.

The last deal reported done for WTS/Midland was -$2.28.

WTI/postings-plus dropped to a couple of cents to $1.94/1.97 over WTI/Cushing. Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James, which weakened on Tuesday, was unchanged and pegged around 70 cents below WTI/Cushing.

West Texas Intermediate/Midland was unchanged at -39/-37 cents, and done at -38 cents.

Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire was also unchanged, at -$1.27/-$1.22.

Offshore Eugene Island was also unchanged, at minus $2.10 to minus $2.05.

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Ends Up, ACCESS Loses After AGAs

NEW YORK, April 8 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures ended higher across the board Wednesday in a fairly active session, then slipped in after hours trade following an unexpectedly-large weekly inventory build, sources said.

In the day session, May gained 2.1 cents to close at $2.689 per million British thermal units after climbing early to another contract high of $2.725. On ACCESS, the spot month dipped to $2.641 shortly after the AGA report, then quickly recovered to the $2.66-2.67 area. June, which also hit a new benchmark today of $2.75, settled 2.4 cents higher at $2.718. Other months ended up by 1.3 to 2.4 cents.

''It (the AGA number) was a lot higher than most people expected and the market sold off on it, but it's coming right back,'' said one East Coast trader, noting the market was technically overbought and due for a pullback, particularly with open interest at near-record levels.

AGA said Wednesday that U.S. gas stocks rose last week by 53 bcf, well above Reuter poll estimates in the 10-20 bcf range. Overall stocks climbed to 207 bcf, or 24 percent, above last year.

Eastern stocks a week ago rose 36 bcf and climbed to 39 percent above last year. Consuming region west storage, which fell 11 bcf last week, slipped to two percent below 1997 levels. Inventories in the producing region gained 28 bcf for the week and edged up to 21 percent over year-ago.

Forecasts this week still call for slightly below-normal temperatures in the East before moderating to several degrees F above normal early next week. Texas is expected to average several degrees F above normal for the period, while the Midcontinent should warm from slightly below normal to as much as 15 degrees above later in the week.

Technically, May resistance was now seen at today's high of $2.725 and then in the $2.78 area, a measurement objective from the recent leg up. Further selling should emerge at $2.812, a prominent spot continuation high from December.

Interim May support lies at $2.605 and $2.46, both previous contract highs, with further support seen at the $2.33 double bottom. Major buying was expected at the $2.135 recent low.

In the cash Wednesday, Gulf Coast swing quotes jumped more than a dime to the low-$2.60s. Midcon pipes surged more than 15 cents to the low-to-mid $2.50s. Chicago city gate gas firmed more than 10 cents to about $2.70, while New York saw similar gains to the mid-to-high $2.80s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip gained two cents to $2.723. NYMEX said an estimated 78,492 Hub contracts traded, down slightly from Tuesday's revised tally of 81,085.

NYMEX will be closed Friday for the Good Friday holiday.

U.S. Spot Natural Gas Prices Surge After NYMEX Rally

NEW YORK, April 8 - U.S. spot natural gas prices gained more than 10 cents Wednesday following a sharp incline in May futures on Tuesday, traders said. After setting new highs on Tuesday, NYMEX's May contract soared to another new high of $2.725 today. However, some traders speculated that cash prices may be on the retreat Thursday after a downward move in futures this afternoon and an anticipated drop in demand over the holiday weekend.

Henry Hub swing gas traded mostly in the mid-$2.60s, up about 15 cents from Tuesday.

Similarly in the Midcontinent, prices jumped 16 cents to the $2.50s in active trade. A volatile trading session on Northern resulted in Demarcation prices ranging anywhere from $2.38 to $2.68, with most business reported done in the low-to-mid $2.50s.

Chicago city-gate values were also seen much higher around $2.70.

In the West, southern California border prices surged more than 20 cents to the high-$2.60s, propped up in part by an operational flow order (OFO) in northern California, sources said.

Permian Basin prices were also higher at $2.44-2.47, while San Juan prices were talked mostly at $2.35-2.39.

In the Northeast, New York city-gate prices tacked on about 10 cents to the mid-$2.80s, while Appalachian values on Columbia were quoted at $2.75-2.79.

Separately, estimates for today's American Gas Association storage report ranged from a draw of 12 bcf to a build of 50 bcf, with most seen at plus 10-20 bcf.

Forecasts are calling for cooler weather later this week in the Midwest and East. But another warming trend is expected to follow on Sunday and Monday, with temperatures seen at eight to 15 degrees above normal in the Chicago area.

Canadian Spot Natural Gas Rises On Tight Supply, NYMEX

NEW YORK, April 8 - Canadian spot natural gas prices swelled Wednesday as threats of short supply grew and additional market strength filtered in from Tuesday's rally in NYMEX's May futures, industry sources said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted higher again at C$2.30 per gigajoule (GJ) from about C$2.22-2.24 on Tuesday. May AECO was talked at C$2.26-2.28.

Winter business was also reported done firmer at C$2.75-2.77 from C$2.68, while one-year prices jumped to about C$2.53-2.55 from C$2.40 per GJ.

About 145 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd) of gas was injected into western storage on Tuesday, down slightly from about 150 mmcfd on Monday.

But storage injections are lagging, one Calgary-based trader said.

''They need to put in about 600 million (cubic feet) each day to refill storage in time for withdrawal season,'' he said, noting the withdrawal season typically begins Oct 31.

This is also in conjunction with NOVA Gas Transmission's announcement on Tuesday that the pipeline may be short supply this summer by about 400-500 mmcfd.

In the export markets, prices at Sumas, Wash., jumped seven cents to the mid-to-high US$1.80s per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

In the east, Niagara prices rebounded to about US$2.75-2.83 per mmBtu, up about 15 cents from Tuesday's levels, following May futures' rally to new highs.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10039)4/11/1998 11:25:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1998 (1)

GENERAL MARKET ACTIVITY

Toronto Stocks End The Week In Positive Territory


TORONTO - Toronto stocks ended an abbreviated holiday week in positive territory Thursday as the market clawed back the ground lost during a two-day losing streak.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 49.5 points, or 0.7%, to 7620.64. The benchmark gained 7.91 points on the week.

About 115.4 million shares changed hands on the TSE, down from 136.7 million shares traded Wednesday. Advancers outpaced decliners 570 to 464 with 295 issues unchanged.

The market advanced on "a low inflation outlook and good earnings from Chrysler and Yahoo Inc.," said Steve Bokor, a portfolio manager with Canadian Western Capital Corp.

Bank stocks contributed the most amid optimism the industry is preparing for a wave of mergers and acquisitions.

Royal Bank of Canada (ry/tse) rose $1.40 to $87, Toronto-Dominion Bank (td/tse) climbed $1.20 to $65.40 and Bank of Montreal (bmo/tse) advanced $1.50 to $81.35. Financial services stocks accounted for 23 points to the TSE 300's gain.

Cognos Ltd. (csn/tse) soared $3.80 to $40.50, after rising as high as $43.25 intraday. ATI Technologies Inc. (aty/tse) jumped $1.10 to $68.90 after hitting a record $71.35 intraday. The Markham, Ont.-based company said its fiscal second-quarter profit more than tripled to $42.3 million, or 70› a diluted share, beating analysts' expectations by 10› a share.

Newbridge Networks Corp. (NNC/TSE) rose $1.20 to $38.55 on news of a blockbuster contract with Cable & Wireless PLC.

Among industrials, Biovail Corp. gained $4.00 to $59.15; Asbestos lost $7.25 to $20.25.

Among mines, Rio Algom rose $1.15 to $27.35; Barrick Gold fell $1.10 to $31.75. In Tokyo, the benchmark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average rose for the fourth consecutive day as investors anticipated announcement of tax cuts and other stimulus measures.

Investors will get an opportunity to gauge the outlook for Canadian profit growth with a series of earnings reports from Alcan Aluminium Ltd., Bombardier Inc., BCE Inc. and Northern Telecom Ltd. next week.

Other Canadian markets were mixed. The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 19.43 points, or 0.5%, to 3839.88. For the week, it rose 2.85 points. The Vancouver Stock Exchange lost 0.03 of a point to close at 638. For the week it fell 5.43 points or 0.8%

In New York, the closely watched Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 103.38 points or 1.2 percent to 8994.86, inching closer once again to the 9000-point plateau it punched through earlier this week.

For the week, the Dow gained 11.45 points or 0.13 percent.

Traders said today's activity lacked the excitement of recent sessions as investors booked off early for a long weekend.

North American markets are closed tomorrow for Good Friday.

"We are seeing the pre-holiday trading pattern," said Sean Church, chief operating officer at Priority Brokerage in Toronto. "A lot of people are traditionally tidying up their portfolios before a holiday."

Overall in Toronto, 10 of the TSE 300's 14 subindexes closed in positive territory led by a 1.3 percent jump in the banking sector. The heavily weighted sector was hot this week after merger mania gripped the market. On Monday Citicorp and Travelers Group Inc. said they plan to merge, creating the largest financial services group in the world.

Also bouying the markets was a 1.4 percent jump in consumer products, a 1.1 percent climb in industrial products and a 1.5 percent hike in the metals group.

Tempering the gains was a 1.8 percent drop in the influential gold sector as the June price for COMEX gold slipped 0.90 to 310.20.

Major overseas markets ended mainly higher.

London: British shares rose as the Bank of England decided not to raise interest rates. The FT-SE 100 index climbed 50.3 points, or 0.8%, to 6105.5, up 41.3 points, or 0.7%, on the week.

Frankfurt: Germany's blue-chip Dax index closed at 5317.22, up 47.76 points, or 0.9%, and up 93.7 points, or 1.8%, from last week.

Tokyo: Japanese shares were cheered by reports of a 10 trillion yen stimulus package. The 225-share Nikkei average closed at 16,536.66, up 160.04 points, or 1%, a rise of 1018.88 points, or 6.6%, on the week.

Hong Kong: The Hang Seng index closed at 11,342.02, up 27.56 points, or 0.2%, and up 289.34 points, or 2.6%, on the week.

Sydney: The all ordinaries index closed at 2805.8, down 7.7 points, or 0.3%, but up 35 points, or 1.3%, on the week.

Markets Brace For Profit Hit
The Financial Post

First-quarter reports for most companies are a few weeks away, but early signs point to a halt in profit growth - indeed, it may be an achievement if average profits simply match those of first quarter 1997.

But while analysts were busy scaling back their earnings estimates in the first quarter, company shares were running with the bulls. All major indexes hit record highs in Canada and the U.S.

So it seems likely stock prices will take a hit - perhaps by 5% to 10%, says one forecast - as flat earnings are rolled out.

Last fall, analysts polled by Boston-based First Call Corp. were looking for 1998 first-quarter profit growth of about 15% for companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 index. This week the estimate had tumbled to 0.5%.

"Clearly in the fourth quarter, things were starting to slow down," said Charles Hill, director of research at First Call Corp. "Now they're collapsing."

In Canada, the picture is similar, with earnings growth expected to be flat over the first two quarters, said Subodh Kumar, market strategist at CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc.

In the earnings game, chief financial officers and investor relations staff spend a lot of time "massaging" their earnings estimates with brokerages.

"Companies that report below expectations are going to get hit quite hard," said Kumar. The market has seen commodity prices fall and is prepared for bad news from base metals producers and oil companies, but other surprises are not priced into the market.

In fact, the bull run saw the Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index return nearly 13% in the quarter and the S&P 500 return 13.5%.

"The market has been telling us since the beginning of January that it's not worried about a hit to earnings from Asia," said Jim Mountain, managing director of private equity trading at ScotiaMcLeod Inc.

Yet, as First Call's Hill cautioned, the impact of Asia's downturn is just beginning to be felt. Profit in the energy sector is forecast to fall 28%, while technology firms will suffer a 9% decline, according to First Call surveys.

Deflation out of Asia has pushed the producer prices down 1.8% over the past year and lower prices will eat into profits, warned Bruce Steinberg, chief economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in New York.

The initial call in January was for a 4% drop in profit for the semiconductor sector, but the latest survey expects a fall of 30%. Over the same period, the profit forecast for communications equipment and computer firms has slid from positive values of 10% and 18%, respectively, to -30% and -14%.

Revival Of The Fittest

Once the boutique broker to be reckoned with in the oilpatch, Peters & Co. saw its market share eroded by tough new competitors. Then it went out and hired players like Ian Bruce and the makeover was on

The Financial Post

In his 16 years as an investment banker, Ian Bruce has worked on some of the biggest deals in the oilpatch. They include the $310-million sale of the Saskatchewan government's 50% interest in the Lloydminster heavy oil upgrader to Li Ka-shing's Husky Oil Ltd.; Canadian Occidental Petroleum Ltd.'s $1.7-billion purchase of Wascana Energy Inc.; and IPL Energy Inc.'s $1.2-billion acquisition
of Consumers' Gas Co., to name a few.

His new colleagues at Peters & Co. hope he has many more in him, and with reason. The 44-year-old Bruce, the firm's newly minted vice-chairman and director, has the kind of track record that brings in large cap clients.

But there's more to it. The appointment of the former ScotiaMcLeod Inc. Calgary managing director is a milestone in the firm's revival plan. Once the oil and gas industry's most influential, best connected and best informed specialist dealer, Peters & Co. has watched its market share slip away in recent years to bank owned dealers and new entrants like FirstEnergy Capital Corp. (formed by Peters & Co. alumni), Griffiths McBurney & Partners, Goepel McDermid Inc., and Newcrest Capital Inc.

The changes really started last summer, when Peters & Co. followed some of its new competitors into the principal trading business. Since then, the firm has added professionals in trading, institutional sales, treasury and corporate finance. In total, it has beefed up its bench strength by a dozen people and now has a staff of 60.

"Over the last number of years, we have clearly seen more competitors come into our niche," says president and chief executive Michael Tims. While the firm has consistently enjoyed excellent results, "what we decided strategically was that we were going to beef up all areas and work to improve each area."

Especially with the addition of Bruce who, as one industry observer puts it, is "a big, big coup for them."

One of his mandates is to help Peters & Co. move to the mid-sized to large oil and gas issuers that have eluded it so far, with the exception of long-time clients like Alberta Energy Co. and Ranger Oil Ltd.

There's no reason why the firm can't take a leading role in large industry financings - a role that has been historically handed to the big, bank-owned dealers, partly because of their retail capabilities, says the Manitoba native in his rapid-fire style.

"If there is a big secondary on, say, Petro-Canada ... the boutiques, if they are active traders, and they are actively following the stock and providing good research and trading volumes and knowledge, should be well represented in those deals."

He will also help the firm with the lucrative royalty and income trust business on a selective basis. "My role," he says modestly, "will evolve. I have worked hard all my life. I'll fit in. I want to fit in here, as opposed to come in and bash people around."

Where Bruce mainly fits is in Peters & Co.'s inner sanctum - the executive team consists of Tims, chairman Robert Peters, research director Wilfred Gobert, corporate finance managing director Bruce Fiell and head of trading Nirvaan Meharchand.

What they are plotting is how to get a bigger share of the lucrative investment banking business generated by the oil and gas industry.

The sector consistently ranks as one of Canada's top users of corporate finance services. It has large requirements for cash to fund programs like exploration, as well as mergers and acquisitions.

In 1997, the industry was outranked only by financial services in terms of money raised through equity financings. Oil and gas companies garnered $5.9 billion in 262 separate equity and trust offerings last year. That's roughly 15% of the $39.5 billion raised in all types of financings in Canada, according to The Financial Post DataGroup.

When equity issues by oil services companies are included, the 1997 tally increases to $8 billion, according to Peters & Co.'s estimates.

The oil and gas industry also consummated $16.3 billion in mergers and acquisitions --60% more than the record $10.2 billion set a year earlier, according to figures compiled by Calgary-based Sayer Securities Ltd.

The problem for the Peters & Co. brain trust is the firm's declining market share. Bank-owned firms like RBC Dominion Securities Inc. and Nesbitt Burns Inc. dominate the field, but newcomers like Newcrest and Griffiths McBurney have come on strong, especially in serving the needs of small-cap oil and gas exploration and service companies.

Last year, for example, Peters & Co. raised $329 million and was the lead underwriter in 18 deals. But the firm's aggressive progeny, FirstEnergy, brought in $448 million and was lead underwriter in 22 deals.

Bruce's arrival at Peters & Co. also comes when the energy sector is taking a pause from last year's hyperactivity. Low oil prices have slowed capital spending and made markets unreceptive to new equity
issues.

Merger and acquisition activity has also slowed. Producers with strong balance sheets are reluctant to take a run at weaker players when their share prices are low, while weaker players are reluctant to sell in a bad market, preferring to hang in until the good times roll again.

Bruce, a chartered accountant and professional business valuator with a B.Sc. from Queen's University and MBA from the University of Western Ontario, prefers to take the high road in assessing Peters & Co.'s prospects.

"The goal is to be leading, and leading in my view is quality of relationships, excellence, quality of people inside theorganization, quality of research capability, quality of trading capability, knowledge of what the institutions want," he says.

"And I think the firm ... has very much come back, and in a lot of the relationships hasn't slipped at all."

In the past, slippage would never have been an issue.

Founded in 1971 by Peters, a former retail broker, and analyst Ray Hugo, Peters & Co. was the country's first specialist dealer in oil and gas financings and flourished with the growth of Canada's energy sector. Initially, the firm concentrated on private placements, raising institutional money for companies that wanted to finance exploration programs or acquire producing assets. Over time, it moved into equity underwritings and eagerly bought for its own account, becoming at one point the largest single shareholder in Poco Petroleums Ltd.

Little was beyond the firm's reach. It regularly dispatched its own observers to meetings of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries so its Calgary based clients could savor first-hand insights into the direction of oil prices.

If the firm suspected a particular well might have an impact on a company's stock price, it hired its own scouts - the oil and gas industry's equivalent of industrial spies - to monitor developments.

It was well connected to Premier Peter Lougheed's Conservative government, not to mention Calgary's powerbrokers.

"Early on, one of Rob Peters' strengths was that he knew everyone and he had strong relationships with people," says a competitor. "When you added the technical talent of Mike Tims, that was a tough combination to go up against."

But in recent years, Peters has taken a less active day-to-day role and moved on to other business and personal interests. Coincidentally, his former employees over at FirstEnergy have put together a highly charged, ultra-competitive powerhouse.

Observers think a makeover was due at Peters & Co. "They needed to do something," says one source. "There is such a gap between the top and where they are now. They are just preserving the franchise they have."

Bruce dismisses the street talk. He joined the firm, he said, because he admires the people and what it has done for the energy industry over the years.

He also believes the future of bank-owned dealers will be a rocky one with the proposed and rumored bank mergers.

When combined, the bank's investment dealer functions will be hard pressed to hold on to their market share, he says. "The institutional clients don't want all that muscle concentrated into one spot. The institutions want to be able to deal with other people."

Regardless of the inevitable market cycle, Bruce, a father of three who likes to work with wood in his spare time, plans to emphasize what's worked for him in the past: coming up with ideas, providing top service and drawing on the relations he built over the years, which he has casually catalogued in his two "antique" rolodexes.

Meanwhile, bets are already flying about whether the new and re-invigorated Peters & Co. will give other investment firms a run for their money.

"I was pleased to see Ian was going to join a boutique where I think his talents will be better remunerated. It makes Peters & Co. a stronger firm because Bruce is a great addition," concedes Tom Budd, now managing partner, corporate finance, with Griffiths McBurney.

And, says one staffer at FirstEnergy, "we look forward to doing business with him."




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10039)4/11/1998 11:39:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1998 (2)

OIL & GAS

Oil Narrowly Higher As Supply Glut Pressures


LONDON, April 9 - World oil prices shed early gains on Thursday as a glut of physical crude dominated sentiment ahead of the long Easter weekend.

A late sell-off saw benchmark Brent crude close only two cents higher at $14.00 a barrel, well down from earlier highs of $14.21.

Futures traders said they had sold as a precautionary measure, unwilling to go into the holiday period carrying excess oil in such an oversupplied market.

Earlier Brent had strengthened on news that key producer Venezuela would not honour some supply contracts as it starts to implement output cuts agreed in a groundbreaking pact between OPEC and non-OPEC producers.

The deal aims to bolster world oil prices by trimming about 1.5 million bpd from global supply. Venezuela has pledged to cut production by 200,000 barrels per day (bpd).

Bulls also took heart from U.S. efforts to delay the sale of oil in its Strategic Petroleum Reserve and Russia's decision to slash exports through Latvia as political tensions between the two countries rise.

Prices have been under pressure since the output cuts were agreed because of doubts about producers' solve to actually carry out the reductions.

Some traders remained sceptical of Venezuela's commitment, insisting that the announcement of force majeure by state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) was too vague.

''How many contracts? And when will the force majeure take effect? There are just too many questions still unanswered,'' one trader said.

''The market is saying 'Show me the cuts'. We've got to wait until we see the April production returns,'' said Nauman Barakat of Prudential Bache in New York.

Producers have seen Brent average a disastrous $4.50 a barrel less so far this year than in 1997, cutting export earnings for OPEC member countries by some $8 billion in the first quarter of 1998.

Traders said the market had not yet reacted to the U.S. Department of Energy's report on Wednesday that Americans would be guzzling more gasoline during their summer holidays.

The DOE said in its annual driving forecast that U.S. highway travel and gasoline demand during this summer's driving season was expected to post the largest annual increase in a decade.

Due to low gasoline prices, highway travel is expected to rise 3.8 percent and gasoline demand should increase 2.8 percent between April and September compared with the same period a year ago.

OECD Oil Stocks In Mystery February Decline - IEA

LONDON, April 10 - Commercial oil stocks held by the world's industrialised nations appeared to register a surprising and sizeable decline in February, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Friday.

Preliminary data showed commercial inventories of crude and petroleum products held in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) fell by a million barrels a day (bpd) in February, reversing a build of that size in January, the IEA said in its monthly oil market report.

''Preliminary data for a few key markets show little or no increase in industry stocks through most of March,'' the agency added.

But it said the February drawdown appeared to contradict its data for supply and demand which by itself pointed to a 1.2 million bpd stockbuild in February.

A buildup of oil stored at sea and outside the OECD by producers could explain part of the imbalance, it said.

There was also the ''growing possibility'' that the IEA had overestimated world oil supply in the early part of 1998, the report said.

Even given future revisions to IEA supply data ''there would remain a large inventory overhang,'' it added.

The IEA's preliminary data estimated end-February OECD stocks at 2.518 billion barrels, 129 million higher than the year previous and 208 million above end February 1996.

Oil Glut To Keep Pressure On Producers-IEA

LONDON, April 10 - Glutted oil markets will continue to put pressure on revenue hungry producers despite a groundbreaking pact to curb global output and rescue battered prices, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Friday.

Supply exceeded demand by a hefty 1.5 million barrels day (bpd) in the first quarter of the year, leaving stocks to build heavily, the West's energy watchdog said.

''Current supply exceeds demand and stocks are high, suggesting a continuation of a difficult market for producers,'' the Paris-based agency said in its monthly oil market report.

Last month oil cartel OPEC approved an agreement to remove 1.245 million bpd of its output from the market between April 1 and the end of the year to nudge up prices that had sagged to nine year lows.

In a rare act of cooperation with the Organisation of the Petorleum Exporting Countries, other producers such as Norway and Mexico pledged cuts last month of 270,000 bpd, while Russia later chipped in with cuts of 61,000 bpd.

But prices have been under pressure since the output cuts were agreed because of doubts about participants' resolve to actually carry out the reductions.

Traders say it could be several more weeks before firm evidence emerges that crude sales have been curbed.

Producers have seen Brent average a punishing $4.50 a barrel less so far this year than in 1997, cutting export earnings for OPEC member countries by some $8 billion in the first quarter of 1998.

The report by the IEA said it had lowered its estimate of global oil demand in the first quarter of 1998 by 400,000 bpd to 75 million bpd.

It said this was due to continuing mild weather in the northern hemisphere and a marked reduction in deliveries to South Korea in the first two months of the year.

''Demand remains sensitive to further downward revision,'' it said.

The agency also revised downwards 1998 non-OPEC supply by 300,000 bpd to 45.3 million bpd.

Further pressure on oil producers will come from European refinery maintenance, which will take a hefty 1.1 million bpd of capacity out of the market in May, the agency said.

It said European refinery work would peak in May after taking out 680,000 bpd of capacity in April with about 560,000 bpd of plant down for repairs in June.

The agency noted commercial oil stocks held by the world's industrialised nations appeared to register a surprising and sizeable decline in February.

Preliminary data showed commercial inventories of crude and petroleum products held in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) fell by one million bpd in February, reversing a build of that size in January.

They agency said one explanation was that it may have overestimated world oil supply in the early part of 1998, but even given future revisions to supply data there would remain a large inventory overhang.

NYMEX Crude Ends With Slim Gains On Shortened Week

NEW YORK, April 8 - NYMEX crude futures closed Thursday with marginal gains, aided by shortcovering and book squaring trades ahead of the three-day Easter weekend.

''Basically, the market is trying to find the bottom,'' said William Brown, president of New York consulting firm W.H. Brown & Co., as trade during the shortened week moved sideways -- down on Monday and Tuesday and up Wednesday and Thursday.

The sideways trade is encouraging,'' Brown said, noting that the market has been going up and down since the end of March, when OPEC confirmed an agreement to cut oil output by about 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) to lift prices amid a glut.

''But I see the market's bias, over time, is upward,'' he said.

As traders headed home for the weekend, NYMEX May crude settled just a cent higher at $15.56 a barrel after going as high as $15.80 during the session. The closing was the culmination of a shortcovering rally that began on Wednesday after May crude refused to break below support at $15.16.

For the week, May crude lost 19 cents from last Friday's closing of $15.99, which was made possible by technical buying and traders' gradual warming to the OPEC moves aimed at stabilizing falling prices.

Refined products gained Friday, but like crude, also ended lower than the previous week's close.

May gasoline closed Friday 0.16 cent lower at 50.28 cents a gallon, after getting a bullish boost earlier in the week from inventory data showing a draw of as much as four million barrels. May gasoline closed last Friday at 51.76 cents.

''Initially, the inventory draws pushed gasoline up, but I did not see that would be sustained,'' said Irene Benvenuto of Texaco in Houston.

But other news on gasoline was bearish, such as the scheduled arrival of ''substantial'' gasoline imports from Europe and the return to service of Colonial Pipeline Co.'s main pipeline, Benvenuto said.

She said the short-lived gasoline-led rally manifested itself in the gasoline to crude crack spread, which initially rose after the bullish inventory data, but faded as the trading week drew to a close.

The May gasoline crack fell by about 19 cents this week to $5.56 a barrel from $5.75 last Friday.

''We may already be in a period where traders are discounting the gas season ahead of us,'' said Brown, referring to the coming summer months, when travel and gasoline demand typically go up.

The U.S. government reported Wednesday that travel and gasoline demand in the upcoming summer months are expected to post the biggest annual increase in a decade.

Citing low gasoline prices, the Department of Energy said highway travel between April and September is expected to jump by 3.8 percent, while gasoline demand should increase 2.8 percent from year-earlier levels. Motorists are expected to drive a record 1.37 trillion miles this summer and use 65 billion gallons of gasoline, it said.

On the crude front, the market generally reacted bullishly this week to previous news Russia was planning to make small cuts in its crude exports and that China had cut output by 150,000 barrels per day, according to William Brown.

Another bullish factor was news Venezuela was invoking force majeure on some crude contracts. Some analysts said that move could be interpreted as Venezuela's earnestness to carry out its pledge to cut oil output by 200,000 barrels per day.

Overall, doubts about OPEC's commitment to reduce production are fading, according to Nizam Sharief, an energy analyst with Hornsby & Co in Houston.

''There is a good chance the OPEC and the non-OPEC producdrs will honor their pledges,'' he said.

But the market stalled this week ''because there was really nothing significant to move the market fundamentally,'' Sharief said.

US Cash Crudes - Brent Crude Favored By Traders

NEW YORK, April 9 - U.S. cash crude differentials were largely unchanged on Thursday but value seen in North Sea Brent led to a slight weakening of Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James, brokers and traders said.

On Thursday morning, LLS lost four cents in its differential to West Texas Intermediate/Cushing, getting done often at 75 cents under the benchmark. But by mid-day the crude had strengthened to 72 cents below WTI/Cushing, and remaind there for the rest of the day.

Thursday was the last day of this week's trading. Friday is a holiday and the NYMEX will be closed. Most cash traders will also take the day off, but some offices will have skeletal staffs.

LLS differentials to the U.S. cash crude benchmark have fallen 15 cents in the past week.

Traders said North Seat Brent is being offered about $2.55 under WTI/Cushing, making it profitable to bring not only Dated Brent but West African sweet crudes across the Atlantic.

Outright values for cash crudes were also largely unchanged. The front-month NYMEX crude contract gained only a cent to settle at $15.56 per barrel.

For much of the day, the May NYMEX contract was up around 20 cents.

With the exchange-for-physical (EFP) premium of eight to 10 cents added, WTI/Cushing was around $15.61 to $15.56 per barrel.

LLS was done at -75, -74, -73, -72 and -71 cents in relations to WTI/Cushing.

WTI/postings-plus was unchanged on Thursday, talked at $1.94 to $1.97.

WTI/Midland was done again at 39 cents and 38 cents below WTI/Cushing.

West Texas Sour/Midland was unchanged at -$2.28/-$2.23. WTS was done at minus $2.25.

Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire was unchanged at -$1.28/-$1.22. HLS was done at minus $1.26.

Eugene Island was also unchanged at -$2.10/-2.00. It was done at minus $2.05.

NYMEX Natural Gas Ends Down On Profit Taking, Soft Cash

NEW YORK, April 9 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures ended lower across the board Thursday in a sluggish pre-holiday session, pressured by a soft physical market, bearish weekly inventory data and some profit taking after recent gains.

May slipped 3.2 cents to close at $2.657 per million British thermal units after trading today between $2.605 and $2.67. June settled three cents lower at $2.688. Other months ended flat to down 3.1 cents.

''I think we saw some profit taking, and the funds are starting to roll (length) out of May and into June, but May still held $2.605 (support),'' said one East Coast trader, adding he expected the front of the board to be weak relative to back months.

NYMEX will be closed Friday for the Good Friday holiday.

Most agreed last night's stock report showing an unexpectedly-large 53 bcf weekly gain was bearish. The number was well above Reuter poll estimates in the 10-20 bcf range and lifted inventory levels to 207 bcf, or 24 percent, above last year.

But despite the inventory report, mild weather and a technically overbought market that needed to correct, few expected prices to crater anytime soon, citing lingering concerns about a hot, post-El Nino summer and potential problems with coal supplies.

Forecasts this weekend still call for slightly below-normal temperatures in the East before moderating to several degrees F above normal early next week. Texas is expected to average several degrees F above normal for the period, while the Midwest is expected to warm to as much as 12 degrees above by early next week.

Technical traders agreed the market was overbought and due for a profit taking pullback after a five percent gain this week amid record open interest.

They pegged important May support at $2.605 and then at $2.46, both previous contract highs, with further support seen at the $2.33 double bottom. Major buying was expected at the $2.135 recent low.

May resistance was still pegged at yesterday's new contract high of $2.725 and then in the $2.78 area, a measurement objective from the recent leg up. Further selling should emerge at $2.812, a prominent spot continuation high from December.

In the cash Thursday, Gulf Coast weekend quotes slipped about a nickel to the mid-to-high $2.50s. Midcon pipes were down more than five cents to the mid-to-high $2.40s. Chicago city gate gas was down almost a dime to the low-$2.60s, while New York was two to three cents lower in the low-$2.80s.s

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip fell 2.4 cents to $2.699. NYMEX total estimated Hub volumes were not available at 1605 EDT.

US Spot Natural Gas Prices Drift Lower Ahead Of Holiday

NEW YORK, April 9 - U.S. spot natural gas prices drifted lower Thursday ahead of the long holiday weekend as milder weather was expected to cover much of the U.S. next week, traders said.

Forecasts are calling for slightly below-normal temperatures in the East before moderating to several degrees above normal early next week. Texas is expected to average several degrees above normal for the period, while the Midcontinent is expected to warm to as much as 18 degrees above normal by early next week.

Henry Hub swing gas traded mostly at $2.60-2.61, off about three to four cents from Wednesday.

Similarly in the Midcontinent, prices fell an average of eight cents to the mid $2.40s, with business reported done anywhere from the high-$2.40s early to the high-$2.30s late.

Chicago city-gate values were also seen softer in the low-$2.60s.

In the West, southern California border prices backed off slightly from yesterday's highs to about $2.66.

Permian Basin prices were also lower at $2.36-2.39, while San Juan prices were talked mostly at $2.32-2.33.

In the Northeast, New York city-gate prices lost a few cents to the low-to-mid $2.80s, while Appalachian values on Columbia slipped to the low-to-mid $2.70s.

Canadian Spot Natural Gas Up Again On Short Supplies

CALGARY, April 9 - Most Canadian spot natural gas prices continued higher on Thursday as concerns mounted over short field supply and weak storage injection volumes, traders said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted in the C$2.36/2.365 per gigajoule range, after early trades as high as C$2.38. That was up from the Wednesday AECO price of C$2.30. May AECO, meanwhile, fetched C$2.29/2.30 per GJ, about three cents higher on the day.

''NOVA (intra-Alberta pipeline) field receipts came back a bit today, but still not enough to meet the demand -- and the borders are running flat out,'' a Calgary-based marketer said.

The marketer said his trading firm believed about 600 million cubic feet of gas a day needed to be injected into western Canadian storage faculties before next winter's heating season, but recent figures have only ranged from 120-150 million a day.

Meanwhile, one-year AECO gas was talked at C$2.49/2.50 per gigajoule, down about five cents from Wednesday, in an easing attributed to a slightly lower NYMEX market on Thursday and some profit-taking before the long Easter weekend.

At the borders, gas at Huntingdon/Sumas on the west coast was quoted in the low to mid-US$1.90s per million British thermal units, up about five cents from yesterday as supplies remained short.

Gas for export at Niagara in southern Ontario fetched US$2.75, down about three cents from Wednesday.