This is the kind of garbage I hate. We have the bankruptcy of Lehman and AIG gets taken over on Monday and Tuesday, market loses like a 1,000 points, and the world is coming to an end as of Tuesday. By Friday the Dow makes all of their losses back.
On Monday the Dow loses 777, the world is ending as we know it, and the next day we gain back 424 of the loses. Reporters are telling you it is the end of the world in one sentence and in the next they tell you it is a good time to buy in.
Now we get the Senate approval of the bill to
save us all from "suddenly living on the streets, eating our pets to survive, and selling our children into Chinese slave labor camps" and the market responds with "The Bailout Plan May Not Avert Slowdown".
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20602013&sid=aY8uG5robjSM&refer=commodity_futuresOil Pares Gains on Concern Bailout Plan Won't Avert Slowdown
By Christian Schmollinger and Angela Macdonald-Smith
Oct. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil pared gains in New York because of concerns a $700 billion financial-rescue package passed by the U.S. Senate won't avert an economic slowdown in the world's biggest energy-consuming nation.
The Senate approved legislation that links the rescue plan to an increase in bank-deposit-insurance limits and $17 billion in tax breaks for solar power, wind energy and heavy oil refineries. The House of Representatives may take action Oct. 3, said Brendan Daly, a spokesman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
``With the bill passed, you'll see some hope and then a sell off,'' said Jonathan Kornafel, a director for Asia at Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore. ``There is a lot of bearish pressure on crude right now.''
Crude oil for November delivery traded at $99.24, up 71 cents, at 1:02 p.m. Singapore time in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It earlier rose as much as 1.9 percent to $100.37 a barrel before the vote and traded as low as $99.01 after the bill was passed.
Prices are down 32 percent from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11. Yesterday, the contract dropped $2.11, or 2.1 percent, to settle at $98.53 a barrel after a U.S. report showed a bigger-than-forecast supply increase and that fuel consumption dropped to the lowest since 2001.
Inventories rose 4.28 million barrels to 294.5 million last week, the Energy Department said. Stockpiles were forecast to climb 2.75 million barrels, according to a Bloomberg News survey. Imports and refinery operations increased after storms curtailed supplies last month.
Historic Volatility
Brent crude oil for November settlement rose $1.70 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $97.03 a barrel on London's ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was at $95.80 a barrel at 12:23 p.m. Singapore time. It declined $2.84, or 2.9 percent, to settle at $95.33 a barrel yesterday.
Oil prices are more volatile than at any time since the first Gulf War in 1991 as the market grapples with signs of falling demand and the expectation of an economic recovery following the passage of the bailout plan.
Historical price volatility during the last year for New York crude futures measured over 10, 30, 50 and 100 days. All are at their highest since January 1991 when U.S. and allied forces fought to expel Iraqi troops from Kuwait.
``With the bailout passing, people feel that maybe the market will stabilize, the economy will be rescued and crude prices will go up,'' said Anthony Nunan, assistant general manager for risk management at Mitsubishi Corp. in Tokyo. ``This removes some of the uncertainty, but the big problem is going to be the House.''
`Heightened Expectations'
Oil futures plunged 9.8 percent on Sept. 29, the biggest drop in seven years, after Congress voted to reject the bank rescue plan. A week earlier, a record 16 percent jump led regulators to say they were on the lookout for price manipulation. Crude fell 28 percent in the third quarter, its worst performance in 17 years.
``Everyone is expecting the market to dump, and it's not, so everyone is sitting'' and waiting, said Hudson Capital's Kornafel. ``So, in that sense, you have heightened expectations and that always raises volatility.''
Fuel use over the past four weeks averaged 19 million barrels a day, the lowest since October 2001, according to the Energy Department. That is 7 percent less than last year.
Gasoline stockpiles rose 901,000 barrels as refinery output climbed because units returned to service after being shut down following Hurricanes Ike and Gustav. Distillate supplies declined by 2.4 million barrels, more than the 1.5 million barrels estimated by analysts.
Refining Profits
Refineries operated at 72.3 percent of capacity last week, up 5.6 percentage points from the previous week, the report showed. It was the biggest weekly rise in utilization since October 2002.
Profits from producing motor fuels at refiners have plunged as demand has dropped. The price difference, or crack margin, between crude oil and gasoline fell to 66 cents a barrel today, 80 percent less than last year.
``If you look at the refinery margin right now, it's basically trading next to zero and that's with the hurricanes shutting a number of facilities,'' said Hudson Capital Energy's Kornafel. ``In that situation you'd expect it to blow out, but it's continued to weaken and that points to the demand expectations in the U.S. better than anything.''