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


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11255)6/16/1998 2:22:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/ TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY JUNE 15 1998 (3)

MARKET OVERVIEW, Con't

International Stocks

Bears find companions on European landscape

LONDON -- European bears chose to book profits on Friday instead of bargain hunting. Successive drops in New York have investors in Europe worried about a lasting correction, and traders noted that fears about the weakening yen and a possible Chinese correction have not eased.

London: Britain's FT-SE 100 index dropped to its lowest close in six weeks, down 82.7 points, or 1.4%, to 5769.8. The index was down 177.5 points, or 3%, from last week.

The export-driven engineering sector was beaten back on concerns about exposure to Asia and the strength of the pound. British Aerospace fell 21p to 489p and British Steel lost 5.5p to 134.5p.

Frankfurt:German shares fell more than 3% in late trading and closed at their lowest level in the past week. The Dax index closed at 5670.83, down 83.63 points, or 1.5%. In later screen-based trade the Xetra Dax ended at 5631.34, down 167.88 points, or 2.9%, a fall of 93.41 points, or 1.6%, on the week. Volkswagen failed to hold on to its gains in floor trading, despite news that its Audi unit had signed a letter of intent to acquire Italian sportscar maker Lamborghini. The shares shed DM38, or 2.3%, in electronic trading to settle at DM1,595.

Most Asian stock markets fell Monday on worries over the sinking Japanese yen, with the key indexes in both Hong Kong and Bangkok tumbling 5.7 percent.

The Hang Seng Index, the Hong Kong market's key indicator of blue chips, fell 452.94 points to 7,462.50, its lowest close since Jan. 30, 1995.

Brokers attributed the plunge to the yen's fall, which took it Monday to an eight-year low against the U.S. dollar. In late Tokyo trading, the dollar bought 146.44 yen, up 2.42 yen from late Friday.

As a result, Hong Kong interbank interest rates surged to levels not seen since January, when the stock market was hit by a mini-crash and the Hong Kong dollar was rocked by international speculators.

Thai share prices plunged in thin trading on worries over the yen and the health of Thai financial institutions. The Stock Exchange of Thailand index dropped 15.98 points to 263.39.

Meanwhile, the Thai baht was trading at 43.80 to the dollar, down from 43.45 at Friday's close. Malaysian shares also tumbled, with the key index plunging to a record eight-year low because of the volatile Japanese yen and weak regional stocks.

The Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange's benchmark Composite Index fell 20.13 points, or 4.26 percent, to 452.24. It was the index's lowest close since 459.08 on Sept. 28, 1990.

In currency trading, the dollar was quoted at 4.0750 Malaysian ringgit, up sharply from 3.9950 ringgit late Friday.

In Seoul, the key index plunged 4.8 percent to a new 11-year low as sentiment was battered by the Japanese yen's fall against the dollar.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index fell 14.60 points to 288.21, its lowest level since since Jan. 13, 1987.

Philippine stocks and the peso fell sharply as a result of the Japanese yen's continued weakness. The 30-share Philippine Stock Exchange Index plunged 82.16 points, or 4.5 percent, to 1,746.86, a new five-month low.

The dollar averaged 41.566 pesos, up 1.247 pesos, or 3 percent, from Thursday's 40.319 pesos. The dollar touched a high of 42.580 pesos, a level last reached in early February.

Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Industrial Index fell 38 points, or 3.5 percent, to 1,052.84. The Singapore dollar has also steadily declined, hovering around 1.75 to the U.S. dollar, compared to 1.43 last July 1, the day before the Asian crisis began.

In Tokyo, the 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average fell 197.16 points, or 1.31 percent, closing at 14,825.17. On Friday, the Nikkei had gained 8.29 points, or 0.06 percent.

The dollar gained momentum against the yen as traders concluded that world central bankers probably would not support the Bank of Japan even if it intervenes on the yen's behalf.

Investors fear the yen's continuing slide could lead to another round of currency devaluations in Asia and trigger a global recession.

On Friday, Japan reported that its gross domestic product fell 1.3 percent in the first quarter compared with the previous quarter, an annual rate of 5.3 percent.

Elsewhere:

Taipei: Share prices closed sharply higher as investors bought cheap technology stocks following the market's decline last week. The market's key Weighted Stock Price Index rose 166.72 points, or 2.3 percent, to 7,283.83.

Wellington: New Zealand share prices closed slightly higher after an extended trading session to accommodate the listing of Australian insurance and funds manager AMP Ltd. on the New Zealand Stock Exchange. The NZSE-40 Capital Index rose 1.08 points to 1,998.71.

Sydney: Australian share prices closed slightly lower. The All Ordinaries Index fell 4.2 percent, or 0.16 percent, to 2,567.5.

Jakarta: Share prices closed lower. The Composite Index fell 1.871 points, or 0.4 percent, to 406.501. Meanwhile, the rupiah was trading at 14,700 to the dollar late Monday, down from its Friday close at 14,000.

World Markets Tuesday: Asia spooked by Wall Street, buck falls

Most Asian stock markets fell for a second day Tuesday, spooked by an overnight plunge on Wall Street and the continued weakness of the Japanese currency. In London the U.S. dollar fell in early trading.

Malaysian share prices tumbled 3.6 percent because of the gloom that seems to be settling over regional markets because of the sliding yen.

The dollar was at 145.14 yen in late Tokyo trading, down 1.30 yen from late Monday in Tokyo and below its late New York rate of 146.15 yen overnight. But it still was about 5 yen higher than a week ago.

On Monday, finance ministers of the European Union, meeting in Cardiff, Wales, urged Tokyo to take new measures to strengthen and reform Japan's economy.

The Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange's benchmark Composite Index fell 16.40 points to 435.84.

South Korean shares also closed sharply lower, with the main index falling to a new 11-year low. The Korea Composite Stock Price Index slumped 8.21 points, or 2.8 percent, to 280.00, its lowest close since 276.61 on Jan. 12, 1987.

Thai share prices dropped 2.3 percent as investors dumped stocks across the board on worries over the health of the Thai economy. The Stock Exchange of Thailand index fell 5.95 points to 257.44.

Meanwhile, the Thai currency rose against the dollar. At the close of domestic trading, it was at 43.20 baht to the dollar, compared to 43.80 on Monday.

Shares in Australia and New Zealand also fell, pushed down by the sharp falls in U.S., European and Asian stock markets, brokers said.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 8,627.93
Monday, down 207.01 points from 8,834.94 Friday and at a three-month low. Prices were driven down by investor pessimism over the outlook for Japanese recovery efforts.

In Sydney, the All Ordinaries Index slumped 42.6 points, or 1.7 percent, closing at 2,524.9.

In New Zealand, the NZSE-40 Capital Index closed down 28.50 points, or 1.4 percent, at 1,970.21 after recovering some ground lost during midsession trading.

In currency trading, the Australian dollar was quoted at 58.8 U.S. cents after falling to a new 12-year low of 58.1 U.S. cents.

The New Zealand dollar bounced back above 49 U.S. cents after earlier sliding to an 11 1/2-year low of 48.82 U.S. cents. It closed local trading at 49.58 U.S. cents.

On the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the benchmark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average dropped 104.79 points, or 0.71 percent, closing at 14,720.38. On Monday, the Nikkei had lost 197.16 points, or 1.31 percent.

The weakening Indonesian rupiah and bearishness on regional stock markets pushed the Jakarta Stock Exchange's key index below the important psychological level of 400 points.

The JSX composite Index fell 6.989 points, or 1.7 percent, closing at 399.512.

Meanwhile, the dollar was trading at 15,100 rupiah compared with its close Monday at 14,550.

Singapore shares closed mostly lower. The benchmark Straits Times Industrials Index lost 3.88 points, or 0.3 percent, closing at a 9 1/2-year low of 1,048.96.

Philippine stocks fell for the sixth straight session. The 30-share Philippine Stock Exchange Index sank 20.31 points, or 1.2 percent, to 1,726.55.

Taiwan shares closed higher as a stable local currency buoyed sentiment and encouraged bargain-hunting. The market's key Weighted Stock Price Index rose 120.44 points, or 1.7 percent, to 7,404.27.

Share prices in Hong Kong closed generally higher, but sharp early gains were eroded by continued worries over the weakness of the Japanese yen. The Hang Seng Index rose 63.95 points, or 0.9 percent, to 7,526.45.

OIL & GAS

Crude Price Slumps in Asia to 10-Year Low

SINGAPORE, June 15 - Crude prices in Asia fell to a new 10-year low on Monday as scepticism oil producers would cut enough oil to bolster prices dug deeper into the market.

The New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) July crude contract, trading on the out-of-hours ACCESS electronic trading system, fell to $12.36 per barrel -- the lowest level since October 1988.

It surpassed the previous low of $12.50, which was tested but not broken in New York's open-outcry trading on Friday.

"Right now it's off in extremely light volume, so I don't know the significance of this," a New York-based broker said.

The slide occurred after Middle East Gulf oil producers, which sit on 65 percent of global oil reserves, offered little to stir the market bulls after a weekend of consultations led by Iranian oil minister Bijan Zanganeh.

Oil markets have been looking for hard evidence of production cuts to slow down supply, which the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates is running more than 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) above expected demand for 1998.

Prices are now languishing at the lowest levels in real terms since the 1970s. In actual prices terms, oil is now $6/$7 per barrel below those of one year ago.

Signs that crude futures were going to hit fresh 10-year lows came on Friday as sellers tested the strength of market support at $12.50. The price level held.

On ACCESS trading on Monday, prices opened slightly higher but soon fell back.

"We opened higher, but that was just one trade. Then we went right down to Friday's New York close. We have just drifted since then," one broker said.

By 0300 GMT NYMEX July crude futures had bounced slightly from the new10-year low to last trade at $12.44, down 15 from New York.

In the absence of real production cuts, oil traders are sceptical there is any reason to buy.

Asian oil demand, until last year the engine of global demand growth, has slumped in the face of the Asian crisis.

With Japan recording recession-type economic growth figures on Friday and China's economy slowing down, forecasters are worried that Asia could see a decline in demand this year.

Over the weekend Iran's Zanganeh did a sweep of the Gulf region to visit his counterparts in United Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, Kuwait and Qatar.

But the oil ministers fell short of publicly pledging actual production cuts.

Kuwait has previously said it would cut production another 50,000 to 100,000 bpd after pledging to cut output 125,000 bpd from April 1.

The UAE would announce its cut at the next OPEC meeting in Vienna on June 24 after pledging 125,000 bpd cut the first time around, while Zanganeh said Iran was ready to cut 100,000 bpd from July 1 on top of its initial pledge to cut 140,000.

Qatar has pledged to cut output 20,000 bpd from July 1 in addition to a pledge to cut 30,000 bpd from April 1.

Oman, considered a key test of non-OPEC sentiment, said it supported cuts but has not yet pledged any specific numbers.

The Gulf Cooperation Council, which groups OPEC members Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait and non-OPEC producers Oman and Bahrain, are scheduled to meet over the oil price in Riyadh on Tuesday. OPEC meets next week.

Gulf oil states seek way out of price rut

DUBAI, June 15 - Gulf Arab petroleum states on Monday faced another serious dive in world oil prices ahead of a Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) ministerial meeting.

With prices at 10-year lows, the meeting of GCC oil ministers on Tuesday will take on added importance for the six states which face the prospect of ballooning budget deficits and little chance of economic growth in 1998.

Oil ministers from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain -- which sit on half the world's world crude reserves --are scheduled to start formal talks in the Saudi capital Riyadh at 1000 local (0700 GMT).

Kuwait's Oil Minister Sheikh Saud Nasser al-Sabah has warned that producers faced a ''true crisis'' that needed ''sacrifices.''

The GCC secretariat has said ministers will discuss the current oil market, including the impact of Asia's economic crisis which has cut heavily into oil demand and dented prices.

Ministers from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and Qatar are expected to use the meeting as a sounding board for a ministerial meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries on June 24 in Vienna, OPEC sources said.

Oman Oil Minister Mohammad bin Hamad bin Seif al-Ramhi on Monday said he hoped the GCC meeting would lead to measures that could boost world oil prices.

''Ramhi expressed hope that the meeting would produce a number of resolutions to lift oil prices,'' the official Oman News Agency (ONA) quoted Ramhi as saying.

Key oil powerhouse Saudi Arabia has called on oil producers to back a so-called ''Amsterdam Pact'' of June 4 under which Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico agreed to cut output by 450,000 barrels per day (bpd) to help boost prices.

United Arab Emirates, Oman and Kuwait have said they support the Amsterdam deal but have yet to publicly state actual production cuts in addition to previous cuts made under a similar producers' pact in March.

Bijan Zanganeh, the oil minister of non-GCC member Iran, did a sweep of four Gulf Arab states over the weekend in an attempt to drum up support for ways to boost prices.

''We discussed measures to restore stability to the oil market and the talks provided hope,'' Iranian state television quoted Zanganeh as saying on Monday.

Oil prices have sunk to their lowest level in real terms for 25 years because of brimming stocks, Asia's economic crisis and growing supplies from Iraq under a United Nations ''oil-for-food'' deal.

''...optimism is in short supply these days. In the market all is doom and gloom,'' the Middle East Economic Survey (MEES) newsletter reported on Monday.

North Sea Brent crude futures for July delivery were trading in London at $12.32 a barrel at 1131 GMT, some $7 a barrel below last year's average.

This pushed the price of Saudi Arabia's main Arab Light export grade in Europe below $9 a barrel compared to the $14.50-$15.00 which economists say the Saudi budget is based on.

Saudi Arabia -- which relies on petrodollars for three quarters of state revenue -- is cutting back state spending sharply in an attempt to keep budget deficit targets this year, economists said.

Budget deficits of Gulf states are expected to be sharply higher this year because of sustained price weakness.

Emirates Industrial Bank last month forecast the combined budget deficits of the GCC to be $18.75 billion, or 51 percent higher than the $12.4 billion forecast for 1998.





To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11255)6/16/1998 2:41:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/ TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY JUNE 15 1998 (4)

OIL & GAS, Con't

Producers Shaken as US Oil Hits 12-Year Low

LONDON, June 15 - Oil prices plumbed new depths on Monday, defying urgent producer efforts to curb the downward march.

International marker Brent crude extended heavy recent falls, losing another 24 cents to settle at $12.17 a barrel on expiry.

Brent had been within striking distance of March's 10-year low before producers started clubbing together to trim supplies.

The heaviest losses, however, were incurred in the U.S. on Monday with July WTI tumbling to 12-year lows.

U.S. crude values are already at their lowest levels since 1986. Overflowing stocks in the world's biggest energy consumer took New York futures prices crashing through 12-year lows. July WTI dropped below $12 to settle at $11.xx a barrel, some 9xx cents under Friday's floor settlement.

In real terms, stripping out inflation, crude is as cheap as it was before the first oil shock a quarter of a century ago.

Prices fell on Monday despite a weekend of emergency talks led by Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, Kuwait and Qatar, underlining producers' concern at the devastating effect of the current price slide on their revenues.

Zanganeh said Iran was ready to cut output by more than the 100,000 barrels a day (bpd) it has already committed "if there is an agreement with other OPEC and non-OPEC (countries)."

This followed Venezuela, Mexico and Saudi Arabia's agreement to trim a combined 450,000 bpd earlier this month.

But Iran's announcement was blunted by confusion over what production level it will use as a baseline for the cut. Tehran has recently hiked estimates of its own output volumes.

And other oil ministers failed to commit bigger cuts than already flagged, as a full meeting of OPEC ministers looms on June 24.

Kuwaiti oil minister Sheikh Saud Nasser al-Sabah said on Saturday only that the current situation was a "true crisis" which required "sacrifices" by all producers.

Saudi Arabia on Monday reiterated the importance of stability returning to the world oil market.

"This is the aim of the kingdom in cooperation with all brotherly and friendly states," the official Saudi Press Agency said in remarks after the weekly ministerial meeting.

The latest round of cuts -- which so far look like amounting to some 750,000 bpd -- follow a March producer agreement to drain some 1.5 million bpd from world supply.

But analysts say that less than a million bpd has actually been taken off markets by that pact and have warned that a further million bpd of cut is required if prices are to recover.

The bearish mood was deepened by an apparent improvement in relations between Iraq and the U.N.

Chief U.N. weapons inspector Richard Butler said in Baghdad on Monday he hoped a work schedule he agreed with Iraq at the weekend could clear up outstanding disarmament issues by August.

This could theoretically clear the way for the full resumption of Iraqi exports as soon as October, although the U.S. has consistently stated its opposition to this under Iraq's current leadership.

This offset Iraq's threat to call off its oil-for-food programme late last week in protest at U.S. efforts to add new conditions to Baghdad's planned purchase of oil industry equipment.

June 15 (close) June 12 (close)
IPE July Brent $12.17 $12.41
IPE August Brent $12.58 $13.28
NYMEX July crude $11.56 $12.59

Glut Sends NYMEX Crude To 12-Year Low

Oil Drops Below $12, Lowest since 1986

NEW YORK, June 15 - Oil prices tumbled to their lowest level in 12 years Monday on growing worries about oversupply and speculation that Iraq could start exporting again soon.

Having tumbled last week, crude oil for July delivery fell another $1.03 to $11.56 a barrel at the New York Mercantile Exchange.

That was the lowest since crude oil hit $9.75 a barrel in the United Stat in April 1986 as oil producers slashed prices to try to win customers.

The recent drop comes as traders have given a vote of ''no-confidence'' to producer efforts to cut output enough to reduce bloated world inventories.

One trader said he expected the declines to continue. ''It doesn't look very good,'' said the trader. ''It might go lower. There is nothing supporting the market right now. Unless we get some bullish news, this is going to continue to drop.

There was some bearish news about Iraq.'' Chief U.N. weapons inspector Richard Butler said in Baghdad on Monday he hoped a work schedule he agreed to with Iraq over the weekend could clear up outstanding
disarmament issues by August.

This could clear the way for the full resumption of Iraqi oil exports as soon as October, although the United States has consistently stated its opposition to this under Iraq's current leadership.

Monday's decline came despite a weekend of emergency talks led by Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, Kuwait and Qatar, underlining producers' concern at the current price slide.

The drop in oil prices comes as investors and policy-makers were growing concerned that inflation was heating up because of strong economic growth and the lowest unemployment in 28 years.

Falling oil prices were a big reason inflation was all but absent in the United States last year.

The drop also promises to be good news for drivers, as unleaded gasoline for July delivery fell 1.2 cents to 45.10 a gallon. Heating oil fell 0.92 of a cent to 37.20 a gallon.

NYMEX crude on ACCESS rises in moderate trade

LOS ANGELES, June 15 (- Crude oil futures rose Monday on the New York Mercantile Exchange's (NYMEX) ACCESS trading system, with traders attributing the increase to moderate buying by speculators.

July crude, which dropped $1.03 a barrel to $11.56 in regular Monday trading, rebounded 10 cents to $11.66 on the after-hours trading session. Volume stood at 1,126 lots at 1730 PDT.

The front-month contract ended the day at 12-year lows, just 10 days after major exporting countries pledge production cuts.

''It's some short covering. Nothing's changed in the market. There's no new news,'' said a trader for a major Wall Street brokerage, referring to the price gains.

Traders and analysts said they could not be sure how much longer or how far the market will continue to drop without solid bullish news.

The lowest the NYMEX front-month crude contract has sunk since the NYMEX was created the contract in 1983 is $9.75 per barrel in April 1986.

Settling prices for crude have now dropped about $3.50 since June 5. On June 4, a meeting of three major oil producers -- Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico -- in Amsterdam produced promises of deeper cuts in world oil production.

But the market fell almost immediately as traders say both that the pledged cuts were not enough to raise oil prices and that they were skeptical that any pledges would actually be carried out by the world's oil powers.

In refined products, gasoline and heating oil futures rose slightly.

July gasoline was at 44.95 cents a gallon, up 0.01 from the settle, while heating oil was up 0.15 at 36.85 cents. Volume for heating oil was 37 lots traded by 1730 PDT, while gasoline saw volume of 91 lots.

NYMEX Hub natural gas ends up on technicals

NEW YORK, June 15 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures ended higher across the board Monday in moderate trade, driven by a steady stream of technical buying and reports the heat down South helped firm the cash, industry sources said.

July climbed 6.5 cents to close at $2.10 per million British thermal units after trading today between $2.05 and $2.105. August settled 6.7 cents higher at $2.141. Other deferreds ended up by 1.5 to 6.6 cents.

"We've had some record heat in Texas, and recent strength on the close has forced some technical buying, but it's still mostly short covering, not new buying," said one Midwest trader, adding high storage and moderate weather forecasts for most other regions should temper any rally.

But traders said scorching heat from Texas to Florida served as a reminder that a hot summer may still lie ahead.

Forecasts early this week call for normal to below-normal Northeast and Midwest temperatures before warming to several degrees F above normal at midweek. In Texas, readings this week are expected to average several to eight degrees above normal, while Florida should stay several degrees above. Warmer weather is also forecast for the Southwest later this week.

Chart traders agreed the technical picture turned more bullish last week when July closed on a strong note, then followed though to the upside today, signaling a possible short-term reversal higher.

July resistance was now seen along the down trendline in the $2.15-2.17 area. Further selling was expected at the June 1 high of $2.235, then at $2.255 and at $2.33.

July support was pegged at today's $2.04-2.05 gap, then at Wednesday's low of $1.915 and at $1.77, a prominent spot continuation low from March, 1997.

In the cash Monday, Gulf Coast swing quotes firmed eight cents to $2.01-2.05. Midwest pipes gained a similar amount to the high-$1.90s. Chicago city gate gas was more than a nickel higher in the $2.11-2.14 area, while New York was quoted up five to 10 cents at $2.20-2.25.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip rose 4.5 cents to $2.374. NYMEX said an estimated 49,237 Hub contracts traded today, off slightly from Friday's revised tally of 51,330.

US spot natural gas prices strengthen on Texas nuke outage

NEW YORK, June 15 - An unexpected outage at a Texas nuclear plant sent U.S. spot natural gas prices higher early Monday, industry sources said.

Houston Lighting & Power Co. reduced power to about 14 percent at its 1,250 megawatt South Texas 1 nuclear unit over the weekend for repairs. The unit was at 26 percent and increasing power this morning, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Also supporting cash, traders said, were the above-normal temperatures in Texas and the surrounding areas--a trend which is expected to intensify by the latter part of the week. Temperatures are forecast to be four to nine degrees above normal by Friday. Also, three-digit readings are being recorded in Florida.

At the Henry Hub, gas prices were quoted at $2.03-2.11 per mmBtu, indicating a gain of seven to eight cents from Friday. This activity was also consistent with trading on NYMEX, where July futures swung between $2.05 and $2.095.

In the Midcontinent, prices were also up eight cents to about $1.97-1.99, while Chicago city-gate was quoted mostly at $2.12, market sources said.

In West Texas, Permian Basin prices tacked on gains of about nine cents to the low-$1.90s, while San Juan values jumped to $1.50-1.60.

In the Northeast, New York city gate prices were quoted mostly in the low-to-mid $2.20s, up as much as 10 cents from last week. Appalachian prices were similarly higher at $2.17-2.18.

Canada natural gas prices rise with NYMEX, tight supply

NEW YORK, June 15 - Canadian spot natural gas prices in Alberta edged higher Monday as supplies remained fairly tight and July futures staged a minor rally this morning, industry sources said.

''We still haven't really seen the field receipts come back like they were supposed to,'' one Calgary-based trader said, adding NYMEX's climb to a high of $2.095 this morning also helped to boost the market.

Total field receipts in Alberta stood at 12.2 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd), off from the normal level of about 12.4 bcfd. Linepack as of yesterday evening was at 12.66 bcfd, shy of NOVA's target at 12.8 bcfd.

Spot gas at the AECO storage Hub in Alberta was discussed mostly at C$1.70 per gigajoule (GJ), indicating a five-cent rise in prices from Friday.

July AECO was talked at C$1.67, while winter business hovered around C$2.65 per GJ.

A larger gain was evident at the export points, where an unexpected outage in Washington State tightened western supply. The 1,158 megawatt WNP-2 nuclear unit, owned and operated by Washington Public Power Supply System, was shut while in the process of exiting a refueling outage. No restart date has yet been set.

Spot prices at Sumas, Wash., jumped 10 cents to US$1.30-1.35 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), while Station 2 business was reported done at US$1.72-1.75 per mmBtu.

In the East, Niagara pricing similarly rose 12 cents to US$2.11-2.13 per mmBtu after NYMEX's July futures climbed to a high of US$2.095, traders said.

Energy Commentary

For June 16, 1998

Energy futures set new lows again on Monday with July crude piercing key support at $12.50. The contract hit a low during the session of $11.42.

Iraq and UNSCOM reached an agreement over the weekend on a 2 month schedule to complete inspections which could lead to a UN lifting of sanctions.

Right now traders agree there are just no buyers in the market. I believe at current prices the market is a little overdone. When this complex turns it will be very violent, especially for the new speculative shorts that have recently entered the market.

For today, expect prices to remain on the defensive. Be very cautious of short-covering. July crude looks like it will now test the $10.65 - $11.10 area.

Charts & Analysis

futures.net
charts.w2d.com/menu.html

Misc.

A solution in search of a problem
The Globe & Mail

Dan McTeague is not a happy man. The Liberal MP for Pickering Ajax Uxbridge and chairman of the Liberal Committee on Gasoline Pricing, feels that his committee's recently released report is not getting the kind of respect it deserves. He said as much in a phone call concerning a column on the subject that appeared in this space yesterday.

Mr. McTeague feels his critics can only be opposed to his conclusions if they haven't read them, or haven't understood them. In fact, it's quite easy to read it, understand it -- and still feel that his report is wrong-headed.

For example, the committee says it believes that "normal supply and demand economics cannot account for the large price swings that Canadians see at the pumps." It says it is the "high level of concentration in the Canadian oil industry that is the cause of price volatility."

Further on in the report, however, the committee admits that if there were fewer independent retailers and less competition, there would be less price volatility -- because the price at the pump would stay unrelentingly high. And yet, sustained price hikes don't occur for more than a brief period in any major urban market. So where is the danger that has the Liberals up in arms?

In its conclusion, the committee admits that "Canadian consumers do have access to one of the world's lowest prices for gasoline." In fact, prices, adjusted for inflation, are currently lower than at any time since 1977. If the industry is controlling prices to keep them high, they're doing a pathetic job.

Mr. McTeague is right on two points: His committee cleverly refrains from stating -- as their Liberal colleague Mac Harb has on countless occasions -- that the industry is guilty of price fixing or collusion. They also refrain from calling for government intervention in setting gas prices.

However, the committee gallops full speed toward those two propositions before it manages to stop a hair's breadth away from endorsing them. When it comes to price fixing, for example, the reportsays "the committee believes price fixing and collusion does not occur."

But it later states that it doesn't occur because "it doesn't have to . . . price signs on retail outlets can be an easy way for market participants to achieve the same results that price fixing and collusion are supposedly said to bring without having to resort to any illegal activity."

And what are these results the big chains are achieving through all this legal activity? Maximizing their profits, it seems, by pushing prices up a few cents before a long weekend, or right after the federal budget. Mr. McTeague and his committee obviously feel this ought to be a crime.

In its report, the committee makes some statements that appear to be totally unproven. For example, it says that it "cannot support the contention . . . that retail gasoline prices are solely the result of market forces at play in a very competitive and complex industry."

Why can't the committee support that idea? Because it believes seven or so large refiners -- who are also large retailers -- "maintain absolute price controls . . . at both the wholesale and retail level" by effectively controlling supply. Is there any evidence of this? No. In fact, the report simply recommends that the government undertake a study of whether this is true.

Similarly, the report says "price wars should not be viewed as an indication that the marketplace is competitive, as is sometimes suggested," and that "price wars and uniform price fluctuations are not indications of true and effective competition." Why not? It doesn't say.

So what would the committee do about this non-existent crime? Well, for one thing, the Liberal MPs would like to make it easier to prove predatory pricing, or pricing designed to drive a competitor out of business. The report says proving beyond a reasonable doubt that this has occurred -- and that it resulted in less competition -- is just too difficult.

And why is it too difficult? Because it hasn't happened, that's why. Even after pages of evidence showing that dozens of independent gasoline retailers have fled the Ontario market because the big oil companies have squeezed their margins, Mr. McTeague's committee can't point to any evidence that this has resulted in sustained higher prices at the pump.

That's why it's hard to accept Mr. McTeague's conclusions -- not because they are hard to understand, but because there isn't any evidence to back them up. Any way you look at it, the report is a solution in search of a problem.




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11255)6/16/1998 3:02:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/ TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY JUNE 15 1998 (5)

TOP STORIES

Little hope for oil price as it sinks to 12-year low
The Financial Post

Oil prices fell once again yesterday to close at US$11.56 a barrel, the lowest level in 12 years.

There could be another six to eight months of tough conditions, analysts say, unless members of the Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries make major production cuts in the next few days.

Crude oil for July delivery dropped US$1.03 to US$11.56 a barrel for West Texas intermediate on the New York Mercantile Exchange, on indications the United Nations may lift sanctions against Iraq this year, further contributing to the world's supply glut.

The crash pushed down the Toronto Stock Exchange oil and gas subindex to 5764.13, off 151.57 points, approaching the 12-month low of 5682.55 set Jan. 9.

The drop marks the 23rd consecutive week oil prices have been in a slump, or under US$17 a barrel --the price at which producers can economically replace production and keep on drilling, said Martin Molyneaux, research director at FirstEnergy Capital Corp. in Calgary.

Oil prices have not remained below US$17 during the past 18 years for a period longer than 46 weeks, the Calgary investment dealer said. The average time for an oil price correction has been 24 weeks. If the 1991 three-week correction is excluded, the average oil price crash lasted 29 weeks.

The industry around the world is now watching a series of meetings before an OPEC session June 24. They could lead to a price rebound or a continuation of the current environment potentially until the first quarter of next year.

"If the cuts do not come, we have to wait until the next winter heating season to absorb the excess inventories and get back in the balance, with oil price acceleration late in the first quarter of 1999," Molyneaux said.

While the industry has experienced price declines of a similar or longer duration, this is the first time there's a lot of pressure on OPEC producers for a quick price fix because of their worsening financial circumstances, Molyneaux said.

Every day oil prices remains at current levels, world producers miss US$400 million in revenue. "You can bet the phone lines of every oil minister around the world are running red hot at the moment," he said.

Analysts say the cartel must deliver additional production cuts in the one-million to 1.3- million barrels daily range, on top of those agreed to at OPEC's meeting in March.

A major reason oil prices have weakened since then is that OPEC members, which had promised to reduce production by 1.5 million b/d, have actually cut back fewer than one million b/d, said Bob Hinckley, oil and gas analyst with Merrill Lynch & Co. in New York.

From a technical point of view, oil appears to be settling into a pattern indicating that it is still looking for a bottom, said technical analyst Roman Franko with Eagle & Partners in Toronto. "There will be little rallies, but now it's in a down trend and I don't expect it to end any time soon." he said. This could mean oil could rally back through to the $12.50 threshold and go up as high as $15, then retreat to as low as $9.75, he said.

For the Canadian sector, the price deterioration comes in one of the worst quarters in recent years, marked by continuing cuts in drilling, cuts to budgets and heightened consolidation activity as victims of low commodity prices are taken over by stronger companies.

Oil Firms May Have To Rethink Plans
Edmonton Sun

After months of relentless pressure on world crude prices, yesterday's drop could force oil companies to seriously rethink their drilling programs, analysts warn.

Many properties are simply unprofitable to drill at $12 US a barrel, said Judith Dwarkin, managing director of the Canadian Energy Research Institute.

"You have to look at it on a case-by-case basis, but some companies will have to shut-in," Dwarkin said.

"I would imagine producers are very concerned about whether this will last a long time. They're getting some very sharp pencils out of their drawers right now."

Canadian oilpatch officials will be watching OPEC's June 24 meeting closely to see if they can agree to even deeper cuts than they've already promised, said Greg Stringham of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

"There is some concern among our oil-producing members, but the industry as a whole is all right because they're shifting towards natural gas," Stringham said.

Trish Filevich, Treasury spokesman, said higher natural gas prices are offsetting lower oil prices so far this year.

"If those figures were to prevail for the year, we're probably going to lose about $380 million in oil from the forecast that we have, but, on the gas side, we're likely to see a $627 million gain."

"That's not even counting the (record-low) Canadian dollar," she said. "We get more because oil trades in U.S. dollars. It's better news for us."

Jim Edwards, president and CEO of Economic Development Edmonton, said the low loonie isn't all bad news.

"Since we're an export economy, it makes us more competitive with most of our exports," he said, adding tourism is benefiting from the premium on the U.S. buck.

"Visits from the Pacific Northwest (to West Edmonton Mall) are up very, very substantially. That's partly due to a collaboration that we and the mall and Horizon Air out of Seattle have been working on.

"Horizon Air tells us that Edmonton is their most productive destination at the moment."

Poco Petroleums launches friendly bid for Canrise Resources

Poco Petroleums Ltd. said Tuesday it had agreed to buy Canrise Resources Ltd. in a C$97 million stock-swap offer that extends the string of recent deals in the merger-happy Canadian oil patch.

Calgary-based Poco, one of Canada's biggest natural gas producers, said it would offer 0.3845 of one of its shares for each Canrise share, which would translate into value of C$5.54 a Canrise share, based on the average of the last 10 days of trading.

Poco said it would also assume Calgary-based Canrise's C$38 million of debt, bringing the total price of the friendly offer to C$135 million.

The offer has the blessing of Canrise's board and the company agreed to pay Poco a non-completion fee of C$3.5 million if Poco's offer is topped by another suitor.

Canrise, which produces 4,200 barrels of oil equivalent a day in Alberta, is one of several companies in the sector that had offered itself up for sale as cash flow waned amid depressed crude oil prices.

Its proven and probable reserves total 5.2 million barrels of crude oil and gas liquids and 117 billion cubic feet of natural gas. It also controls 121,000 acres of undeveloped land that Poco said was concentrated in its own main western Alberta operating regions.

Poco stock was off C$0.50 to C$13.30 in light trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange early Tuesday. Canrise climbed C$0.35 to C$5. ($1-$1.47 Canadian)

Fracmaster receipts follow Boliden's
The Financial Post

The suspension of Canadian Fracmaster Ltd.'s instalment receipts from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange today marks the second time in less than three weeks investor confidence has been shaken in these innovative time payment vehicles.

Yesterday, common shares (FMA/TSE) in the oil services company closed at a 52-week low of $9.50, slipping below the $9.75 value of the second payment for the instalment receipts issued last September. Under TSE rules, that dip into negative territory triggered an automatic suspension of the receipts.

On May 27, investors in the embattled mining firm Boliden Ltd. saw their stock slip below the price of its second instalment receipt, forcing a suspension and shifting trading of the receipts to the Canadian Dealing Network. They'll now be joined by Fracmaster's receipts.

Instalment receipts typically allow investors to defer half the cost of a common share for one year, while reaping the dividend on the full value of the share.

In September, Fracmaster sold 23.9 million common shares at $19.50, represented by two instalment receipts of $9.75 each. The receipts are commitments to pay the balance owing on a share at a specified point in the future. In Fracmaster's case, it is due on Sept. 9.

Unlike Boliden, investors yesterday were still willing to pay as much as half a cent for Fracmaster receipts, which meant they continued to trade.

Michelle Weise at Canaccord Capital Corp. said highly speculative players were buying the receipts because "... at half a cent if [the receipt] goes up anything, you are making money."

The TSE said the receipts with positive values will trade on the CDN as (fmapir/CDN) and with negative value as (fmanir/CDN).

The shares have been hit by low oil prices and heavy exposure to the volatile Russian market. If the price rebounds above $9.75, TSE media services manager Steve Kee said the exchange will take time to assess the situation. "[Fracmaster] has a longer lead time than Boliden so the TSE does not want to get into a position of making a quick decision." The TSE will not move the receipts on and off the CDN every time the price of the shares rises above, or falls below, the critical price of $9.75, he said.

Although no other instalment receipts are in a precarious situation at present, investors may decide to steer clear of them in future.

Fracmaster receipt holders, left with a bill of more than $281 million when the receipts come due, can sympathize with Boliden investors who are legally obliged to ante up $400 million by 1 p.m. tomorrow.

Sectors & Trends

A slick play in the oilfields. Pumped up for a comeback in oil? Be selective. Here's why the pros like well-positioned domestics like Phillips and Marathon rather than the big boys.


When Chevron Chairman Ken Derr told shareholders in New Orleans recently that $18-a-barrel oil was around the corner, he was only confirming what everyone else in the industry already knew: Sooner rather than later, oil will swing back from its current perch around $13. And before long, industry earnings will be riding the upswing.

Does that make this the time for contrarians to invest in major oil stocks? Yes, but with one caveat: Avoid the front-runners, ignore the marquee names, and stay away from those most obviously poised to benefit from higher prices at the wellhead.

Instead, play the names at the bottom of the lineup -- the singles hitters and defensive specialists -- who are most heavily leveraged domestically to take advantage of the environment created by this year's historic plunge in prices at the gas pump.

From that perspective, two clear candidates are Phillips Petroleum (P) and USX-Marathon (MRO). Both combine a presence in one of the world's premier production fields with refining-and-marketing operations that are being streamlined and leveraged solely to focus on U.S. consumer demand. And both offer higher estimated growth rates, lower price earnings multiples and better relative price performance than larger, better known peers like Chevron (CHV), Exxon (XON) and Texaco (TX).

The problem for the major diversified international oil companies is that they depend on strong commodity prices to make a profit on the "upstream" side of their business (exploration), but they can be brutalized by those higher raw-materials prices on the "downstream" side (refining).

Chevron's earnings in the first quarter of this year, for instance, dropped 46% year-over-year due mainly to disastrous margins in its West Coast refining business when prices were rising. In fact, all the major oil companies, with the single exception of Atlantic Richfield (ARC), are net consumers of crude oil due to their refining operations; that means they've been able to offset recent losses in oilfield income through improved results in their refining and marketing operations.

Yet it's the truly domestic refiners and marketers who will see the most earnings momentum from lower refining costs in the current quarter as well as better prices at the pump later in the year. Another factor in their favor: The domestic refineries are finally recovering from the weight of capital spending on compliance with Clean Air Act regulations as well as the oversupply that resulted when they overbuilt capacity at the same time. The refining industry showed losses from 1992 to 1996, but these firms turned the corner into profitability last year and turned out to be more efficient to boot.

Finally, there is the historically documented tendency of the major oil companies to exploit the perception of rising crude-oil prices by immediately raising prices at the gas pump. Some analysts believe they'll start early enough in the summer to capitalize on the vacation driving season, which this year occurs in the midst of a healthy U.S. economy and strong consumer confidence.

At Howard, Weil, Laboussie, Friedrichs, a Gulf Coast brokerage that focuses on energy stocks, analyst Arthur "Bud" Tower confirms that investors would benefit from a focus on downstream oil companies for the rest of the year.

"People are going to have money to spend this summer," Tower suggests. "And they're going to be spending it at The Gap (GPS), they're going to be spending it at the grocery store, they're going to be spending it on their gas-guzzling four-wheel-drive sport-utility vehicles, and they're going to hit the road.

"Even a modestly rising oil-price environment throughout the year, in an environment where we expect to have should benefit those companies with a lot of downstream exposure. Part of our thesis all along for 1998 has been to focus on companies with substantial refining interests."

Details

In all, Tower recommends that energy investors account for four steps in their analysis of major oil stocks:

1.Improvement in comparative price-earnings multiples.
2.Earnings momentum based on the fundamentals of each revenue component.
3.Strategic direction of revenue increase and cost reduction
4.Operating efficiency, which can be measured, if need be, by return on capital employed (ROCE) for each business segment.

Among the big-kahuna stocks, Tower picked Exxon (XON) and Chevron for this year, the former for overall strength and excellence of management, and the latter for exemplary balance and strong West Coast refining exposure, which Tower expects to rebound in serious fashion. Domestically, he's likewise targeted Atlantic Richfield, Occidental (OXY), Phillips and Marathon to outperform their peers.

Defiantly more optimistic is Ed Moran at A.G. Edwards & Sons. Where Tower expects the year to end with oil selling around $18.50 a barrel, Moran's sights are set closer to $19 -- with $20 likely in 1999. In fact, he's anticipating positive earnings comparisons (year-to-year) by the fourth quarter, and double-digit growth in 1999.

"Historically," Moran explains, "when oil prices have dropped this low, they haven't stayed low for a very extended length of time. And whenever they've dropped below $18, within 18 months, they've come back, not just to $18, but well over $20."

Moran tends to favor major oil companies with lower profiles. In addition to attractive valuations, he says, they have the same access to leading-edge technology as the larger majors as well as the ability to cherry-pick exploration projects and partner with the majors in developing them. He has "buy" recommendations on both Marathon and Phillips, the first for dramatic earnings improvement, the second for its relatively low valuation.

Marathon's drilling operations, Moran points out, are mainly focused in the hugely successful Gulf of Mexico fields, with significant exposure to both lucrative deep-water projects as well as natural-gas production, where prices have remained relatively stable. Downstream, he sees efficiency coming from the company's combining U.S. operations with Ashland Inc. (ASH).

Phillips, on the other hand, is concentrating on projects to employ new technology to rework one of the richest fields ever discovered in the North Sea, a strategy that has proved successful for other companies in that and other parts of the world. Downstream, Moran anticipates Phillips benefiting from refinery partnerships with the Venezuelan state oil company, PDVSA, in Texas and Oklahoma.

What kind of money does one of the most optimistic analysts foresee investors making on major oil stocks? Based on earnings of $2.06 per share this year and $2.60 per share in 1999 for Marathon, he anticipates the stock climbing to $44 from $36 before the end of the next fiscal year, a 20% gain. For Phillips, he's looking for earnings of $3.10 and $3.60 per share, with stock moving from around $50 to $58, almost a 15% gain.

Not exactly gangbusters, but nothing to be embarrassed about, either. And you get the opportunity to say you made your money in oil . . . not to mention reaping some of themost lucrative dividends on the market. That's cash you can reinvest in something with hotter short-term potential or salt away in something safe for a rainy day.

Either way, when you're filling your tank this summer and notice that the price of gas just went up again, you're likely to be a little less bothered.

Despite low prices, oil companies drill for big payoff in Gulf

Off the Louuisiana coast, La. - From 2,900 feet above the shallow muddy water along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, oil platforms dot the seascape in every direction. But 2,900 feet below the deep blue water far out in the Gulf are where the engines that drive Louisiana's economy sit atop the surface.

The recent surge in the oil patch can be attributed to federal tax relief, better technology and more substantial hydrocarbon discoveries. Oil companies are investing more and more into deep water, despite uncertain oil prices, hoping they will produce in excess of 100 million barrels of oil over the course of their lifetimes.

Players such as Shell, Texaco, British Petroleum and Chevron invest upward of $1 billion each to build new generations of offshore platforms.

However, as these platforms are raised, deep-water infrastructure is developed and other producing wells are installed below the water's surface and serviced by the existing platforms.

Back along the shelf, or in water less than 1,000 feet deep, is where the previous generation of platforms can be found. A quick comparison of the size of the structures and vast difference in production capacities can tell the tale of why the economies of Louisiana and the other coastal states that service these platforms are booming.

Texaco installed West Delta 109 in 1980, 20 miles off the coast of Louisiana, at a modest cost of $139.6 million. By March 1981 the first well, A-1, was completed and began production. Almost two years later, well A-9 began producing more than 6,000 barrels of oil per day and was the first to reach the million-barrel mark on the platform.

West Delta 109 was a high-producing well for its time, reaching production capacity of about 25,000 barrels of oil per day.

Tim Guidry, now the platform's foreman, has worked on the rig since it began production.

He is in the galley at 10 a.m. surrounded by pastries and fresh fruit prepared for breakfast by the platform's cook. Amid the machinery and the ocean, Guidry still finds comfort.

"This is our home away from home," Guidry said. "We spend half of our lives out here. There is some real good (red) snapper fishing here, and sometimes we'll have a fish fry."

Although not at peak production, the platform is still profitable, currently producing about 10,000 barrels of oil and 60,000 cubic feet of natural gas per day.

But Petronius, part of the new era of drilling, will be Texaco's first dive into the deep water arena. The $400 million drilling and production project is being installed in 1,754 feet of water 130 miles southeast of New Orleans.

The platform, owned in a 50-50 joint venture with Marathon Oil Co., is expected to tap into reserves totaling between 80 million and 100 million barrels of oil.

Petronius is scheduled to begin production in January 1999, and it will have a production capacity of 60,000 barrels of oil and 100 million cubic feet of natural gas per day.

Unlike shelf platforms like Delta 109, that dot the horizon, Shell's Mars platform cannot be missed.

Mars is 130 miles southeast of New Orleans and is two football fields wide. It stands 3,250 feet from the Gulf's floor and weighs 36,500 tons.

Shell and its partner, British Petroleum Exploration, announced plans to develop the project in October 1993 at a cost of $1.1 billion.

The feasibility of the price tag is conceivable when one takes into account the discovery of the vast reserve around Block 807 - 500 million barrels of oil equivalent. At $16 a barrel, that's $8 billion worth of oil.

To recover the reserves, Mars is capable of producing 140,000 barrels of oil and 140 million cubic feet of gas per day.

The living quarters of Mars are as noticeably different as its production capacity. A 25,000-square-foot, three-story dormitory is capable of housing 106 workers and all of the computer and office space needed to operate the platform.

The facility offers a fully staffed cafeteria-style dining area and a stocked fitness facility. Employees also can enjoy Ping-Pong, their own television hookups and private bathrooms.

But for all its conveniences, Mars is a workhorse. It has the capacity for 24 wells and currently has 11 working. At 1:30 p.m., the platform's computer shows that 68,626 barrels of oil have been produced since midnight. The total from the day before reached 113,725 barrels.

There have been few fields discovered on the continental shelf of the Gulf of Mexico since the 1960s that exceed 100 million barrels of oil equivalent, and since then there has been a gradual decline of oil and gas fields found on the shelf at all.

According to a recent study conducted by Offshore Data Services, there is a minimum of 70 deep-water drilling rigs needed just to drill the resources now available. If the rigs under construction are counted, there is a total of 41 deep-water rigs worldwide - a potential shortfall of 29 rigs.

The study also concluded that drilling will not peak until sometime between the years 2013 and 2015. If the 30 and 40 year timetable of production periods are followed as predicted in these deep water fields then service companies will not be out of a job for many years to come.

END - END - END