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Oil’s ability to shrug off bad news is incredible

Huge build in inventories ignored

You would be forgiven for not being impressed by oil lately. After all, WTI is trading just 4.5% above the August high. The move pales in comparison to some other commodities and it hasn’t done much in the past two weeks.
oil
What makes the move so impressive to me is just how much bad news the market has endured:
  • Libya coming back online and pumping 1.2m bpd
  • OPEC+ not delaying the taper and instead added 500k bpd/month through March
  • A raging resurgence in the pandemic sparking new restrictions throughout the developed world
  • Consistent inventory builds including today’s in the US, which was the second-largest on record
Today’s EIA report showed a build of 15.189m barrels compared to a draw of 1.035m expected. There were also surprise builds in gasoline and distillates.
That’s the kind of thing that could break a market. Initially that looked like it might be the case as crude fell to $44.96 from $46.05 in seconds. However it quickly steadied and in 80 minutes had recovered the gain. It later slipped on soft risk appetite in the US but is back to $45.75.
One of the reasons for the build was a large wave of imports and relatively small exports. That suggests a timing issue could be at play and we could see a quick reversal.
That said, this is only one in a series of bearish inventory numbers and oil continues to hold up. It’s still going to be a rough few months and the 5mbpd in spare OPEC production looms but there is lots to like in the medium-to-long term.

Brazil central bank holds rates at 2.00%, says believes inflation is temporary

Comments from Brazil’s central bank

  • Reaffirms forward guidance that it doesn’t intent to reduce monetary stimulus as long as specified conditions met
  • Latest readings in inflation were above expectations
  • Despite the expected cooling in food prices, inflation is still expected to be high
  • Inflation expectations and baseline forecasts remain below target for relevant policy horizon
  • Continues to monitor inflation developments carefully, in particular, underlying inflation
  • Soon the conditions for maintaining forward guidance may not be satisfied
  • Forward guidance removal doesn’t mean rate hike
The drop in BRL this year has certainly been inflationary and that’s unwinding now. At the same time, you can see the growing concerns about inflation.

NASDAQ has its worst day since October 30

The S&P has its worst day in 3 weeks

The major indices all fell today with the NASDAQ snapping a 4 day winning streak and having its worst day since October 30. The S&P index at its worst day in 3 weeks. The major indices all fell for the 2nd time in 3 trading days.

On the positive side, the NASDAQ and S&P index close at record levels yesterday. The Dow industrial average reached an all-time high in trading today at 30319.70. The S&P index and the NASDAQ index also reached all time trading highs before rotating lower.
The final numbers are showing:
  • S&P index fell 29.44 points or -0.80% at 3672.81. The new all time high reached 3712.39. The low price reached 3660.54.
  • NASDAQ index fell -243.82 points or -1.94% to 12338.95. The high price reached 12607.14 (a new intraday all time high). The low price extended to 12290.780
  • Dow fell -105.07 points or -0.35% to 30068.83. The high price reached 30319.70. The low extended to 29951.85
Facebook shares fell all closed off low levels after the FTC announced they were suing the company for monopolistic practices.
Doordash IPO was priced at $102 per share of from $75 last week and opened for trading at $182. The high price reached $195.45. The trading low came in at $163.80. The prices settled at $190 up 86.27% from the IPO price.
Other winners on the day included:
  • Rite Aid, +7.61%
  • Rocket, up 4.16%
  • General Electric, +3.83%
  • Phillip Morris, +2.38%
  • Lyft, +2.13%
  • AT&T, +2.08%
  • Ford motors, +2.05%
  • Goldman Sachs, +1.67%
  • 3M, +1.66%
  • Uber, +1.45%
  • PNC financial, +1.39%
  • Home Depot, +1.28%
  • Citigroup, +0.99%
  • IBM, +0.05%
  • Caterpillar, +0.74%
  • Morgan Stanley, +0.72%
Losers on the day included:
  • FireEye, -13.02%. The cybersecurity firm was hacked by a nation state
  • Tesla, -7.01%
  • Palantir, -6.9%
  • Crowdstrike Holdings, -6.41% (downgraded by JPM for valuation reasons)
  • Zoom, -6.39% (also downgraded by JPM)
  • Nio, -5.52%
  • Snowflake, -4.83%
  • Chewy, -4.41%
  • Corsair, -4.39%
  • First Solar, -3.98%
  • Netflix, -3.63%
  • Rackspace, -3.39%
  • salesforce, -3.23%

Major European indices close mixed for the 2nd consecutive day

German DAX +0.5%. France’s CAC, -0.2%

The major European indices are closing mixed for the 2nd consecutive day.

  • German DAX, +0.47%
  • France’s CAC, -0.2%
  • UK’s FTSE 100 +0.3%
  • Spain’s Ibex, +0.15%
  • Italy’s FTSE MIB, -0.3%
in other markets as European/London traders look to exit:
  • spot gold is trading sharply lower by $24.36 or -1.31% to $1846.15.
  • Spot silver is trading down $0.42 or -1.74% to $24.13
  • WTI crude oil futures are trading down $0.17 or -0.36% to $45.43. The inventory data shocked with a surprise build of 15.189 million barrels. Gasoline stocks also were over 2 times greater than expectations at +4.221M
  • Bitcoin on Coinbase it is trading down by $454.02 $18,317.02.  The low for the day reached $17,639. The high was at $18,838.51
In the US stock market, the major indices are trading lower. Doordash IPO is getting all the attention. The food delivery service company was priced at $102. The indicative opening price is now at $175 to $180.  That gives the company a market capitalization of well over $60 billion.
  • S&P index -6.5 points or -0.18% at 3695.50
  • NASDAQ index -42 points or -0.34% at 12540.64
  • Dow industrial average -58 points or -0.20% at 30114.38

Crude oil inventories for December 4 week 15.189M vs -1.035M estimate

Department of Energy inventory data for the week of December 4, 2020

  • Crude oil inventories surprise build of 15.189M vs. draw of -1.035M estimate
  • Gasoline inventories build 4.221M vs 2.000M estimate
  • Distillates inventories build 5.222M vs 0.900M estimate
  • OK Cushing crude inventories draw -1.364M vs -0.317M last week
Huge builds in the crude, gasoline and distillates. The price of crude oil is trading down $0.05 or -0.09% at $45.57. The high for the day reached $46.24.  The low extended to $45.33

Bank of Canada keeps rates unchanged as expected

Bank of Canada interest rate decision for December 2020

Statement from the Bank of Canada

The Bank of Canada today maintained its target for the overnight rate at the effective lower bound of ¼ percent, with the Bank Rate at ½ percent and the deposit rate at ¼ percent. The Bank is maintaining its extraordinary forward guidance, reinforced and supplemented by its quantitative easing (QE) program, which continues at its current pace of at least $4 billion per week.

The rebound in the global and Canadian economies has unfolded largely as the Bank had anticipated in its October Monetary Policy Report (MPR). More recently, news on the development of effective vaccines is providing reassurance that the pandemic will end and more normal activities will resume, although the pace and breadth of the global rollout of vaccinations remain uncertain. Near term, new waves of infections are expected to set back recoveries in many parts of the world. Accommodative policy and financial conditions are continuing to provide support across most regions. Stronger demand is pushing up prices for most commodities, including oil. A broad-based decline in the US exchange rate has contributed to a further appreciation of the Canadian dollar.

In Canada, national accounts data for the third quarter were consistent with the Bank’s expectations of a sharp economic rebound following the precipitous decline in the second quarter. The labour market continues to recoup the jobs that were lost at the start of the pandemic, albeit at a slower pace. However, activity remains highly uneven across different sectors and groups of workers. Economic momentum heading into the fourth quarter appears to be stronger than was expected in October but, in recent weeks, record high cases of COVID-19 in many parts of Canada are forcing re-imposition of restrictions. This can be expected to weigh on growth in the first quarter of 2021 and contribute to a choppy trajectory until a vaccine is widely available. The federal government’s recently announced measures should help maintain business and household incomes during this second wave of the pandemic and support the recovery.

CPI inflation in October picked up to 0.7 percent, largely reflecting higher prices for fresh fruits and vegetables. While this suggests a slightly firmer track for inflation in the fourth quarter, the outlook for inflation remains in line with the October MPR projection. Measures of core inflation are all below 2 percent, and considerable economic slack is expected to continue to weigh on inflation for some time.

Canada’s economic recovery will continue to require extraordinary monetary policy support. The Governing Council will hold the policy interest rate at the effective lower bound until economic slack is absorbed so that the 2 percent inflation target is sustainably achieved. In our October projection, this does not happen until into 2023. To reinforce this commitment and keep interest rates low across the yield curve, the Bank will continue its QE program until the recovery is well underway and will adjust it as required to help bring inflation back to target on a sustainable basis. We remain committed to providing the monetary policy stimulus needed to support the recovery and achieve the inflation objective.

UK’s Gove on Brexit: I hope we will get a trade deal

Not much has changed in the Brexit narrative for a trade agreement

The clock is ticking as we await Boris Johnson’s trip to Brussels, expected some time later today, in order to try and break the impasse in Brexit trade negotiations with European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen.
The UK and EU reached a separate agreement “in principle” on the Northern Ireland border checks, which defeats the amendments of the Internal Market Bill.
That’s one positive at least but while the battle on that front is resolved, the war is still raging. As such, the pound still finds itself in the crossfire for the time being.

Nikkei 225 closes higher by 1.33% at 26,817.94

Japanese stocks rebound after slower start to the new week

Japanese stocks rebound after slower start to the new week
Asian equities are higher for the most part, with the risk mood seeing a more positive tilt ahead of European trading today. US stimulus hopes helped to feed some optimism into the market but even as that was quashed, it didn’t dent sentiment on the day.

 

The Hang Seng is up 0.9% while the Shanghai Composite is bucking the trend and trading down by 0.6% going into the closing stages.
Elsewhere, S&P 500 futures are up by 0.2% and 10-year Treasury yields are up 1.7 bps to 0.934% as we look towards the session ahead.
In the major currencies space, the dollar and yen are the weaker performers with the aussie and kiwi leading gains with AUD/USD near 0.7450 currently.
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