CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Will LTRO2 Trigger SPR2 A Look at Oil vs Commodities

Article By: ,  Financial Analyst

As the ECB unleashes its LTRO-2 this week, the BoE starts off its QE3 and the Fed maintains hints/hopes of QE3, oil markets may well start worrying about a potential SPR2–a 2nd round of strategic petroleum reserves release from the 28-nation International Energy Agency (IEA), following last June’s release, which we called it “QE for the oil market”. As central banks’ asset purchases support equities (and commodities), energy-importing nations may have little choice but to push for SPR2 despite the recent strengthening in their currencies against the greenback.

Meanwhile, rising oil prices may shadow eurozone debt concerns as the main culprit to a cooling global growth and the next pullback in equities. Yet, it’s worth charting the relationship between oil, commodities and equities. As rising oil prices move in tandem with equities and overall risk appetite, it becomes unclear whether higher energy prices are propped by demand optimism, supply concerns or overall speculative flows stemming from a weak US dollar and rising stocks. It can be a combination of all three.

Each of the three prior peaks in WTI/CRB ratio coincided with a decline in stocks, oil prices and commodities in general. The most recent of them was in late April 2011, occurring one week prior to the top in S&P500, Dow-30, FTSE-100 and the rest of all other indices. In our February 14th note, we made the fundamental and technical case for a preliminary 108 target in WTI. Upcoming pullbacks may be deemed as luring for the bulls as long as the Iran stand-off lingers. A close below 104 would place the short-term uptrend in jeopardy.

What about Brent?
How do we reconcile the fact that WTI is at 10-month highs relative to the CRB, while Brent is at an all time high relative to the CRB? Since Brent is more reflective of international demand for oil, the latest surge bears more implications for global growth than in previous occasions. The ongoing standoff between Iran and the nuclear agency may be a convenient catalyst for rising prices, but this is far from the first time markets witnessed belligerence from the oil producer. Expectations of an Israeli attack on Iran back in summer 2008 were just as high if not higher than today.

As the summer driving season nears and central bank asset purchases remain part and parcel of the financial system in the absence of any real structural solutions to the eurozone debt/growth ascent, Brent can extend gains to as high as the high $130s (WTI near $120s), aided by persistent USD weakness. But traders must not overlook the historic behavior in oil relative to overall commodities and the implications on global markets. It is unlikely to be different this time, especially if Fed QE3 never appears.

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