OPEC’s Crude Refinement

On Friday, another OPEC meeting came and went in Vienna, Austria with abundant anticipation yet, little to alter the current bearish narrative. Contrary to preliminary reports and despite the desperate pleas from member nations Algeria and Venezuela, OPEC remains steadfast and unmovable to its current production levels.

That decision led to a steady futures oil leak on Friday as January WTI futures spilled -$1.11 (-2.70%) to finish the week at $39.97 per barrel – just 37 cents above its year-to-date low made earlier in the trading session. That spillover has yet to be sopped up as WTI January crude futures begin the new week -3.43% at a new year-to-date low price of $38.60/bbl.

“Broad and volatile” to “dangerously violent” were some of the words aptly describing last week’s commodities trading. It was actually a two-day period – between Thursday and Friday - where trading charts were tossed, trading manuals were rendered meaningless, and where fund managers and traders sweated desperately for answers.

It was a 30-hour period where the German Bund erased two months of solid gains by falling -1.5%, one where after a long and measured November gain of 2.58% the Euro Stoxx 50 index cratered -3.61%, one where the U.S. dollar index tumbled by 2.4% - the largest move since early 2009, and one where the WTI January crude oil contract slipped -5.7% in one-hour’s time on Friday December 4th.

On Monday, the trend continues as WTI plunges another 5%, below $39 a barrel, and Brent drops more than 4% to a little more than $41 a barrel. The action weighed heavily on the energy sector, which shed 4.5% and proved to be a drag on Wall Street’s major averages.

Volatile price moves often arouse confusion about both trading and investing. Information flow arrives at uncoordinated intervals and with various degrees of importunity. The shear array of data – from the trifling, suggestive, or even considerable – tend to respond significantly at once, while inflation-adjusted or “domino effect” numbers can lag and tell a vastly different story.

As a trader or investor, distinguishing between the temporary and lasting is critical. Deciphering “facts” – i.e. news and data that we have to reckon with whether we like it or not from “values” – i.e. news and data that we want or like – either because it makes sense or fits within our framework- is all the difference in the world.

Crude is now sticky with boredom

Yet through all the severe volatility and harrowing moves, I would suggest petroleum markets are sticky with boredom as judged by the latest headlines reiterating the tired, retrofitted captions including, “OPEC Members Beg for Production Curbs,” or “Stocks Slip as Oil Prices Fall on Hefty Inventories,” and “Gasoline Falls below $2.00 per Gallon!”