9/1/09

Nat gas and UNG . I'll add to the discussion

Read Seeking Alpha AND Bloomberg

UNG NATGAS Pair: they are and have been selling the UNG and buying NATGAS futures

UNG Weekly RSI is not confirming this new low...great buy soon
NATGAS futures dipped below multiyear trend line so a hard sell off could ensue

The opportunity for long UNG will be a hard sell off and reversal with the trend change in the Pair trade chart

USO held trend line for the 5th time...will it hold the next time?

SPX off 2% XLF crushed 5%, Market break or buying opp?... 4% from the top if we did top

It could be the start of a H&S with a drop to 980 to start the right shoulder...who knows

USO off 1% at trend support

SPX off 1.5% at the 10 day EMA on the 60 min chart

1028 on ISM report but reversing....looks like trouble the next few days


Notice the H&S on the RSI!

8/31/09

China to default on loser derivative trades(WTF)

 
Markets hit by China commodity default
Monday, August 31 12:48:54
A report that Chinese state-owned companies will be allowed to walk away from loss-making commodity derivative trades provoked anger and dismay among investment bankers on Monday as they feared it may set a damaging precedent.
The State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, the regulator and nominal shareholder for state-owned enterprises (SOEs), told six foreign banks that SOEs reserved the right to default on contracts, Caijing magazine quoted an unnamed industry source as saying in an article published on Saturday.
While the details of the report could not be confirmed, it was Monday's hot topic in financial circles from Shanghai to Singapore as commodity marketers feared that companies holding underwater price hedges could simply renege on the deals, costing banks millions of dollars in profit.
The warning from SASAC follows a series of measures from Beijing this year to crack down on the sale of derivative products by foreign banks to Chinese enterprises, principally big consumers, who bought protection against higher prices last year only to watch the market collapse -- leaving them with losses.
While many companies including top airlines have come clean on the losses, some analysts fear another wave may follow.
"I wouldn't be surprised if more state firms emerge with big derivatives trading losses, otherwise SASAC wouldn't come out with such a radical move," said a Hong Kong-based derivatives analyst, who like most other industry officials and bankers declined to be named due to the high sensitivity of the issue.
A SASAC media official said on Monday that he was waiting for the "relevant department's" official comment before he can clarify to media. A government official said that the Bureau of Financial Supervision and Evaluation under SASAC was handling the issue. The official declined to be named and did not elaborate.
Spokespersons at Goldman Sachs and UBS declined comment, and media officials at Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan were not immediately available for comment. All are major global providers of commodity risk management.
No bank were named in the Caijing report. The SASAC media officer also declined to identify any specific banks.
"It's a handful of companies who are being encouraged by regulators to re-negotiate," said a second banking source. "It's outrageous, but it's China, so everyone is treading very carefully."
For banks that are hoping to sell more derivatives hedges in China, the world's fastest-expanding major economy and top commodities consumer, the danger goes beyond the immediate risk to existing contracts to the longer-term precedent that suggests Chinese companies can simply renege on deals when they like.
The report follows an order from SASAC in July that required all central government-controlled state companies engaged in trading derivatives to make quarterly reports about their investments, including details of holdings and performance.
But the reported letter opened several important questions that could not immediately be answered. "If we were among the banks receiving that letter, we would be very angry. But now the key is to find out more details on the letter: In whose name the letter was issued, the government or the corporate's? And under what was the reason for defaulting?" said a Singapore-based marketing executive with a foreign bank.
The source, whose bank did not receive a letter, said that Air China, China Eastern and shipping giant COSCO - among the Chinese companies that have reported huge derivatives losses since last year - had issued almost identical notices to banks.
"If it's in the name of the government, the impact will be very negative," said the source, who declined to be named.
Beijing-based derivatives lawyers said the so-called "legal letter" has no legal standing -- SASAC as a shareholder has no business relationship with international banks.
"It's like the father suddenly told the creditors of his debt-ridden son that his son won't pay any of his debt," said a lawyer from the derivatives risks committee of the Beijing Lawyers Association. (C ) Reuters
 

SPX closes (Monday) below the 4 wk EMA barely, (Still have all week left)

USO XLE. XLE big base of 11 months, if USO breaks down, XLE could test 37 ish again.


Another 30 min of trade at the Open then flat, Still barely in pattern. Watch Asia tonight

1 Hour to go, holding in the pattern, no real bounce yet. UNG off 5% new lows Oil still weak -4%

So, unless we bounce hard, we are looking at 970 to 1000 as support as we trend down (10 and 40 EMA)

Wack on open XLF XLE XLB XLK weakest - SPX at low end of pattern near 10 day ema