Business Plans Did Not Include Oil Prices This Low
The issues facing the oil industry can be summed up via a quote that recently appeared on Bloomberg:
“Asset managers bought the story that we’d have $100 oil forever,” said Tim Gramatovich, chief investment officer with Peritus Asset Management in Santa Barbara. “Bondholders are left holding the bag.”
Is The Oil Bounce Running Into Resistance?
The trendlines on the weekly oil chart below were drawn and presented on January 22, 2016. As you can see, oil has rallied back to a logical level in recent weeks, but it has thus far failed to break the downtrend that began in late 2014. Oil rallied back to the same trendline on two other occasions (red arrows). In both cases, the rally ended and crude oil resumed its primary and bearish trend.
We will learn something either way near the trendline shown above. If oil breaks to the upside and prints a weekly close above the trendline, the odds for the crude oil rally continuing will improve. If oil reverses this week, it is possible the countertrend rally has come to an end. Time will tell.
Have Longer-Term Stock Trends Improved?
This week’s stock market video covers twenty-one long-term trends including oil (USO), energy stocks (XLE), emerging markets (EEM), S&P 500 (SPY), Dow (DJI), and NASDAQ (QQQ). 2016 charts begin at the 14:50 mark.
Oil’s Impact On Stocks And Bonds
The oil business requires quite a bit of capital investment (rigs, tankers, storage facilities, refineries, etc.). Therefore, access to the credit markets is important. With oil industry revenues being adversely impacted by low oil prices, it is getting harder for some companies to service and refinance their debt. The examples below were highlighted by Bloomberg on March 11, 2016. Missed interest payments and potential defaults include:
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