Oil rises 3% as Saudis advocate cooperation to stabilize market

Brent crude futures rose as much as 3 percent on Monday, adding to strong gains last week, on rising hopes that the market has bottomed out and as OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia said it would work with other producers to limit oil market volatility.

Brent futures were trading at $36.15 per barrel at 11:26 a.m. ET (1626 GMT), up $1.05, or 3 percent. U.S. crude futures traded 98 cents, or 2.7 percent, higher at $33.67 a barrel

Since Feb. 11, the last time Brent was below $30, the crude benchmark has risen by 17 percent, though prices are still a fraction of the $115 of 20 months ago.

“The kingdom (of Saudi Arabia) seeks to achieve stability in the oil markets and will always remain in contact with all main producers in an attempt to limit volatility and it welcomes any cooperative action,” the Saudi cabinet said in a statement.

Saudi Arabia and several fellow OPEC members agreed with non-OPEC Russia this month to freeze output at January levels in an attempt to prop up prices.

Russian President Vladimir Putin called a meeting with top managers of his country’s leading oil producers on Tuesday.

However, Iran remains the main obstacle to a global output freeze because it is determined to ramp up supply after the country’s emergence from international economic sanctions in January.

On Monday Iran said it had increased exports steeply over the past month. Exports climbed as high as 1.75 million barrels per day, adding to an already oversupplied market.

“There is still a lot of downside risk … but the U.S. crude market seems to have passed the worst point and crude runs should start creeping higher, taking pressure off inventory levels,” said Richard Gorry, director of JBC Energy Asia.

U.S. producers cut the number of rigs drilling for oil for a tenth week running, taking the rig count to its lowest since December 2009.

A Reuters monthly poll showed on Monday that oil prices are expected to average a little more than $40 a barrel this year.

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Copyright: CNBC

Houston energy leaders optimistic that next year will bring good fortune for industry

Despite heavy rains, more than 300 guests gathered at the Houstonian Hotel on Feb. 23 for HBJ’s Conversation with Houston’s Energy Leaders breakfast. The heavy rain served as a metaphor for the current state of the oil industry, and energy leaders offered their take on how to weather the storm for the rest of 2016.

The three panelists approached the current energy market with three different perspectives. Maynard Holt, co-president and co-head of investment bank Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co., is bullish on the market over the next year, saying that oil could move to between $42 and $50 a barrel, which could open the market to a flurry of activity.

“We’ll be sitting here not too long from now saying, ‘Wow, that hurt, but it’s over and look at all the good things that are happening,'” Holt told the crowd.

And Ron Wagnon, president of Greenwell Energy Solutions, argued that the energy downturn will be a positive for the market in the long run and that it actually needed to happen. His company has been acquisition heavy over the past few years and isn’t shying away from a deal this year either.

“There’s a lot of opportunity out there,” Wagnon said. “The challenge in today’s market is creating a value for the businesses and trying to find flexibility — without access to cash — to do equity trades to bring businesses in the portfolio.”

One of the significant issues with today’s oil downturn is the difference in fortune between the upstream and downstream portions of the industry, Ken Medlock, senior director of the center for energy studies at Rice University’s Baker Institute, said. For those in upstream, the downturn has hit hard, however, the downstream market is doing well if not thriving. Regardless, the Bayou City will still continue to grow economically.

“Houston will weather this storm. The economy will continue to evolve, the energy space will continue to evolve, and Houston will be at the center of that,” Medlock said. “There’s been a lot of interest — particularly from the press — whether or not the transformation of the energy sector will make Houston obsolete, and I would say no, there’s no way that’s going to happen.”

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Copyright: Houston business journal

Why the U.S. is cutting carbon emissions no matter what happens with the Supreme Court

Last week, the Supreme Court threw U.S. and international climate policy into turmoil by freezing President Obama’s Clean Power Plan while it is being challenged before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. But matters took a turn over the weekend with the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, whose absence from the high court could mean that the plan will ultimately survive.

“If Scalia’s seat remains vacant when the Clean Power Plan reaches the high court, a 4-4 vote would result in an automatic affirmance of the D.C. Circuit’s decision on the rule,” says Jack Lienke, an attorney with the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law, by email. “We can’t know what the D.C. Circuit will decide, but supporters of the Clean Power Plan are optimistic — both because the D.C. Circuit panel, unlike the Supreme Court, denied motions to stay the rule and because the three-judge panel includes two Democratic appointees.”

So last week the Clean Power Plan seemed to be severely threatened – but now, not as much.

Despite this roller-coaster, though, one thing has not changed — the power sector in the U.S. is transforming in a way that will make the generation of electricity much less carbon-intensive in the future, the precise thing that the plan aims to achieve anyway. This is not a legal development, and not really a political one either. It is, in substantial part, a business decision.

Two recent sets of new data underscore this reality. The first, recently highlighted by the American Wind Energy Association, involves where the U.S. is adding new electricity generating capacity. In 2015, AWEA’s and other recent data suggest, wind led the way with 8.6 gigawatts (or billion watts) of new added capacity. Solar photovoltaics added 7.3 gigawatts (much of that on individual rooftops) and, in third place, came natural gas with 6 gigawatts.

The wind industry says another 9.4 gigawatts, meanwhile, are currently under construction, and 4.9 gigawatts on top of that are “in advanced stages of development.” Thus, the two biggest growth sectors for U.S. power are both renewable. Coal, by contrast, saw 14 gigawatts of plant retirements in 2015.

Similarly, the U.S. Energy Information Industry expects renewable energy to grow 9 percent in the U.S. in 2016, and to make up two thirds of added capacity (not unlike in 2015).

And this is just one of many, many indicators of a change underway in the U.S. power sector. Consider another: What leaders of the U.S. utility industry themselves think about the future.

The website Utility Dive has just published a survey of over 500 utility industry executives, from companies large and small, conducted in late 2015 and early 2016. 61 percent of respondents came from investor owned utilities, followed by 15 percent municipal utilities, 14 percent from electric cooperatives, and 10 percent public power companies. The companies were of all sizes, but 23 percent of those surveyed had customer bases of over 4 million people.

And the headline finding? “Nearly every” respondent felt that it was time for his or her company’s business model to change. And no wonder — the power industry is being upended by an insurgency of Nest thermostats, rooftop solar installations, customers who want home batteries and car chargers and much more.

Power companies are struggling to keep up with all of this — and the result of many, if not most, of these changes is that the utility industry is likely going to be less carbon intensive in the future, in part because you and I are going to both waste less energy and also get more out of the energy that we do use.

In particular, the survey shows, utility companies are wary of falling behind in a distributed energy world in which customers need them less because they can generate (with solar) and perhaps store (with batteries) much or even all of their own power. So companies want to become providers of these kinds of services, and so retain these customers.

Sure enough, when it comes to finding new sources of income and new businesses, “the most popular emerging revenue opportunities among respondents are energy management and efficiency services, community solar, and electric vehicle charging infrastructure, while green pricing programs and rooftop solar offerings were also popular,” the Utility Dive survey finds.

Oh, and then there’s how power will be generated at these sometimes massive companies in the future. The Utility Dive survey finds (and again, this is worth quoting in full):

Respondents believe utility-scale renewables, distributed generation and natural gas will increase in their utility’s power mix, while coal and oil will decline and nuclear will remain stagnant. Utilities expect stronger growth for large-scale solar and distributed generation than they do for wind or gas.

The number one thing that utility executives said their company should invest in more was energy storage, at 65 percent, followed by distributed generation, at 52 percent. Energy storage, at the grid scale, is a key technology that will allow for, among other things, more integration of renewable resources onto the grid.

In another notable statistic, meanwhile, when asked in what areas their companies’ power mixes would “significantly decrease” in the coming 20 years, 54 percent said coal, far more than for any other electricity source. No wonder that 41 percent of executive surveyed wanted the Clean Power Plan maintained as it is, while 29 percent thought it should be strengthened. It’s hard from such numbers to argue that the plan is strongly opposed by power companies.

It’s important to emphasize that these results are coming from leaders of an industry that is hardly known for risk-taking. Utilities have been, traditionally, heavily regulated incumbents who are slow to change.

But they’re also headed by leaders who can sense what’s happening out there and who would be foolish to ignore it. Which is why no matter what happens with the Clean Power Plan, all signs suggest our country will be using less coal — and a lot more wind and solar — in the future

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CopyrightWashingtonpost

Energy, materials lead Wall Street gains as oil jumps

Wall Street was higher on Monday as prices of crude oil and other commodities surged, pointing to an uptick in investors’ risk appetite following a rout in global markets.

Crude prices were up more than 5 percent after data showed a fall in U.S. rig counts and the International Energy Agency said it expects U.S. shale oil output to fall.

Prices of industrial metals such as Copper and Zinc were also up as investors worried about potential shortages.

Still, oil prices are hovering near levels last seen in 2003, with investors weighing the impact of a potential wave of defaults from energy companies on the financial sector.

Chevron’s (CVX.N) 1.4 percent rise provided the biggest boost to the energy sector .SPNY.

The S&P financial sector .SPSY, which has been the worst performer among the 10 major sectors this year, was up 1.79 percent on Monday as bank stocks recovered slightly.

“You’ve seen oil rebound today, which people are viewing very much as a kind of a green flag in the short-term to take on risk again to a certain degree,” said James Abate, chief investment office of Centre Funds in New York.

Abate, however, cautioned Monday’s gains should not be seen as the start of a long-term recovery.

“To me, this continues to be a counter-trend rally in the context of an intermediate to longer-term decline in the stock market. Our view is that this is nowhere near the resumption of a bull market,” he said.

At 9:37 a.m. ET (1437 GMT), the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 179.29 points, or 1.09 percent, at 16,571.28, the S&P 500 .SPX was up 22.75 points, or 1.19 percent, at 1,940.53 and the Nasdaq Composite index .IXIC was up 52.02 points, or 1.15 percent, at 4,556.45.

All 10 major S&P sectors were higher, led by a 2 percent rise in both energy .SPNY and materials .SPLRCM sectors.

Investors are also keeping a close eye on the U.S. Federal Reserve for its next move on interest rates.

While Fed Chair Janet Yellen has indicated the central bank would stick to its rate hike program, policymakers appear at odds and traders have all but given up on a hike this year.

Shares of Fitbit (FIT.N) were up 4 percent at $16.24 ahead of its results later in the day.

Lumber Liquidators (LL.N) was down 20.8 percent at $11.26 after a report showed people exposed to some types of the company’s laminate flooring were more likely to get cancer than previously estimated.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by 2,487 to 279. On the Nasdaq, 1,906 issues rose and 375 fell.

The S&P 500 index showed 13 new 52-week highs and no new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 24 new highs and nine lows.

Copyright: Reuters

¿Qué es una fianza de Buena Calidad y Vicios Ocultos?

La fianza de Buena Calidad es aquella que se utiliza para garantizar la reparación del bien, obra o servicio pactado en el contrato y en el que se compruebe la existencia de vicios ocultos, además garantiza que no exista alguna falla escondida que se descubra con el transcurso del tiempo, previamente fijado en el contrato y posterior a la recepción de una obra.

Este tipo de fianzas se solicita cuando ya se ha entregado una obra, producto o servicio y garantiza la buena calidad de los bienes construidos, instalados o vendidos por una compañía constructora o un proveedor de servicios, así como los defectos de los materiales utilizados.

La vigencia depende del servicio, cuando se trata de obras tiene una vigencia de un año, desde la fecha de terminación de la obra.y cuando se trata de proveeduría hasta 18 meses, una vez entregado el pedido.

Para contratar una fianza de buena calidad se necesita:

  • Pactar entre las partes un contrato u orden de compra que estipule claramente la obligación a garantizar por medio de la fianza,

  • El monto del contrato

  • El plazo de entrega de los bienes o servicios y las posibles penalizaciones derivadas de la mala calidad o vicios ocultos.

  • Acreditar a la compañía afianzadora la experiencia, solvencia económica y moral del proveedor o contratista, de acuerdo a la Ley Federal de Instituciones de Fianzas.

En NRGI Broker estamos consientes de la importancia que implica garantizar el cumplimiento de lo estipulado en sus contratos, nuestra experiencia nos ha consolidado como líder
en el mercado de seguros y fianzas. No ponga en riesgo su estabilidad económica, conozca nuestras soluciones integrales.

 

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Comuníquese con nosotros, estamos para ayudarle:

(55) 9177.2100

info@nrgibroker.com

Oil extends rally to $35 after Iran welcomes output freeze

Oil rose to $35 a barrel on Thursday after Iran welcomed plans by Russia and Saudi Arabia to  freeze output and an industry report showed a surprise drop in U.S. inventories.

The gain added to a more than 7 percent surge in the previous session, which came even though analysts said the market had overreacted to Iran’s support for the caps and the Russian-Saudi move would not likely reduce the global surplus.

Brent LCOc1 rose 60 cents to $35.10 a barrel by 1248 GMT, having closed 7.2 percent higher in the previous session. U.S. crude CLc1 gained 65 cents to $31.31.

“It’s a continuation of yesterday’s move,” said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank. “What we see still is extreme volatility. I would not be surprised to see prices retreating again by a big margin in coming days.”

Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh met counterparts from Venezuela, Iraq and Qatar on Wednesday but did not say whether Iran would cap its output in keeping with the move by Russia and Saudi Arabia.

 

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Copyright: Reuters

Wind energy benefits for Hidalgo County and RGV

As the debate over climate change rages on — with some fervently believing we need to curb our fossil fuel usage, while others think it is a global hoax — there’s one thing we know for certain: South Texas has plenty of wind.

And harnessing that wind can supply electricity and energy, not only for the Rio Grande Valley but for other communities in Texas and elsewhere in the United States.

On Tuesday, commissioners formally approved a letter of support with EDP Renewables for construction of the Hidalgo Wind Farm. The project involves building 102 wind turbines in the northwestern part of the county, near McCook, which should produce 204 megawatts of power and add $200 million in taxable assets to our county’s tax base.

Additional turbines will be located in Starr County. Altogether, the 33,000 acres of developed wind farms should produce 250 megawatts of electricity, EDP Project Manager Henry Woltag, of Houston, said.

The total project involves a $410 million investment, $250 million of which is in Hidalgo. The total taxable value in the first year was placed at $180 million.

Renewable energy sources

Renewable energy sources

County Judge Ramon Garcia said that this is a good use of land that will be an economic multiplier for the county, and region

Landowners will receive royalties and our fertile winds will supply much-needed power.

The county is offering tax incentives, in excess of $7 million. But Garcia has said the county overall will collect $17 million over 25 years of business.

Electricity from the wind farm will connect to the new Electric Transmission Texas transmission line being built from Edinburg to Brownsville. Exactly where the electricity from the Hidalgo Wind Farm project is delivered is anyone’s guess, but Woltag promises some of it will stay in the Valley.

Font: The Monitor

 

 

Russia says better Iran-Saudi Arabia ties would help oil prices: RIA

Russia wants to see improved relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia at a time when joint action is needed to influence global oil prices, the RIA news agency on Monday quoted Zamir Kabulov, a senior official at Russia’s Foreign Ministry, as saying.

Russia, one of the world’s top oil producers, has repeatedly refused to cooperate with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in recent years despite the falling price of oil, the lifeblood of its economy.

Any hope of sealing a global output deal has so far foundered on Iran’s position. Tehran is boosting production to try to regain market share after sanctions were lifted, paving the way for it to re-enter the market after a long absence.

The prospect of cooperation between Iran and leading producer Saudi Arabia is further complicated by the fact that the two countries are geopolitical foes who support different sides in conflicts in both Syria and Yemen.

“We all need stability on the oil market and a return to normal (crude) prices,” RIA quoted Kabulov as saying.

“And these are the key nations, especially Saudi Arabia and Iran, which is striving to return to the oil market, anticipating the removal of sanctions.”

Some OPEC countries are trying to achieve a consensus among the group, while some non-members back an oil production freeze, sources familiar with the discussions said last week, a possible attempt to tackle the global glut without cutting supply.

Top exporter Saudi Arabia might be warming to the idea, though it was too early to say whether it would give its blessing because any deal would mainly depend on a commitment by Iran‎ to curb its plan to boost exports, the sources said.

Even as officials on both sides discussed the possibility, Russia and OPEC continued to pump oil at some of the highest levels in recent times last month, suggesting both were locked in a fierce struggle for market share.

Benchmark Brent crude LCOc1 has fallen around 70 percent since mid-2014

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Copyright: Reuters

Global shares climb as firmer Chinese yuan eases deflation fears

World stocks rose sharply on Monday as China’s central bank fixed the yuan at a much stronger rate and oil cemented recent gains, easing fears of global deflation. 

The rally belied a string of poor economic data from Beijing and Tokyo as demand for safe-haven assets waned, yet investors remained on edge due to lingering concerns about growth and the health of the financial sector. 

European stocks rose 3 percent .FTEU3, having shed nearly 10 percent over the last fortnight, mirroring a bounce in Asia. Futures pointed to notional gains of 1.6 percent on Wall Street ESc1 but U.S. markets will be closed for a holiday.

 Meanwhile, assets that tend to perform well in times of stress lagged. The Japanese yen lost ground against the U.S. dollar, top-rated German bond yields edged away from nine-month lows and gold slipped 2 percent after its strongest week in four years.

“We had a very strong statement from the Chinese authorities signaling they are committed to a stable currency and that’s helped sentiment … safe-haven flows have unwound somewhat,” said RIA Capital Markets strategist Nick Stamenkovic.

In China, spot yuan jumped more than 1 percent to 6.4934 per dollar – its firmest this year – after the People’s Bank of China set its daily midpoint 0.3 percent stronger and the head of the bank was quoted as saying speculators should not be allowed to dominate market sentiment. [CNY/] A stronger yuan reduces the risk that China will export deflation to the world, while worries about consumer price growth have also been helped by bounce back in the oil price.

Brent LCOc1 and U.S. crude futures CLc1 edged up on Monday adding to Friday’s 10 percent surge on speculation that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) might finally agree to cut output to reduce a world glut.

Euro zone long-term inflation expectations also rebounded from record lows on Monday even as Germany’s Bundesbank cut its forecast for consumer price growth in the bloc’s biggest economy.

Yuan gloabl economy

DISCONNECT

China’s weak exports and imports in January, down 11.2 percent and 18.8 percent year-on-year respectively, seemed not to disturb markets. The resulting jump in the country’s trade surplus to $63 billion for the month might have helped, as that may offer support to the yuan.

The disconnect between markets and economics was perhaps starkest in Japan, where the Nikkei .N225 jumped more than 7 percent, putting its worst week since the depths of the global financial crisis in 2008 quickly behind it.

This came despite data showing the economy contracted by an annualized 1.4 percent in the last three months of 2015, more than expected.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 2.3 percent .MIAPJ0000PUS, after losing 10 percent of its value so far this year.

European shares followed in their wake, led by a 4 percent rebound in banking stocks .SX7P on news that the European Central Bank (ECB) is in talks to buy bundles of Italian bad bank loans as part of its asset-purchase program.

Yet some strategists cautioned that Monday’s rebound may prove short-lived, with concern that central banks have little ammunition left to fight off the heady mix of an oil-induced deflationary forces, capital outflows and economic weakness in China, and pressure on the world’s financial sector.

“It’s possible we could see calmer markets this week but we are not out of the woods yet,” Thomas Harr. global head of fixed income and currency research at Danske Bank in Copenhagen.

“For the last couple of weeks we have seen a bit of central bank fatigue – they have cut rates into negative but it isn’t having much of an impact.

Against a basket of currencies .DXY, the dollar was up slightly at 96.433 having been at its lowest in almost four months. Likewise, it edged up to 113.99 yen JPY=, having touched a 15-month trough just under 111.00 last week.

The euro was last down 0.6 percent at $1.1184 EUR=, having slipped from a 3-1/2 month peak of $1.1377.

 

Copyright: Reuters

Saudi Arabia, Venezuela talk of co-operation to stabilize oil market

Saudi Arabia’s oil minister Ali al-Naimi discussed cooperation between OPEC members and other oil producers to stabilize the global oil market with his Venezuelan counterpart on Sunday, state news agency SPA reported.

Venezuela’s Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino, who is on a tour of oil producers to lobby for action to prop up prices, said his meeting with Naimi was “productive”, his ministry reported.

Cash-strapped OPEC member Venezuela has been calling for an emergency meeting of producers to discuss steps to prop up prices, which are close to their lowest since 2003.

The prospect of supply restraint by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and rivals helped oil prices LCOc1 rise above $34 a barrel on Friday from a 12-year low close to $27 last month, despite widespread scepticism that a deal will happen.

“It was a successful meeting and (conducted) in a positive atmosphere,” SPA cited Naimi as saying.

Both ministers discussed Del Pino’s visits to other oil producers and the outcome of his “meetings that aim towards the cooperation of those countries to stabilize the international oil market”, Naimi said.

“During the meeting, there were discussions about the cooperation of the producing countries within OPEC and outside (OPEC)… and the importance of the continuation of such consultations,” SPA added.

However, the comments by Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, show no indication of a shift in the country’s policy of refusing to cut supplies to prop up crude prices, some OPEC delegates said.

“They seem like just general talk about cooperation, but nothing about cutting production,” said one OPEC source.

“It’s always good to say discussions were positive and productive. Never say they were negative. The issue is not with Venezuela, it is with Iran,” said another OPEC source.

Sources familiar with the matter say Iran is reluctant to restrain crude supply as it wants to recover the market share it lost during sanctions that were imposed in 2012 because of its nuclear program. International sanctions were lifted in January.

OPEC oil production jumped to its highest in recent history in January as Iran increased sales and its rivals Saudi Arabia and Iraq also boosted supply, a Reuters survey showed.

Last Wednesday, the Iranian news agency Shana quoted Del Pino as saying six producing countries, including OPEC members Iran and Iraq and non-members Russia and Oman, supported a producer meeting.

But so far, none of OPEC’s Gulf members, including OPEC heavyweight Saudi Arabia, has publicly backed a meeting.

Saudi Arabia stabilize oil market

Copyright: Reuters