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Tag: Commodity markets

  • What Biden’s decision to pause new U.S. LNG exports means for the energy market

    What Biden’s decision to pause new U.S. LNG exports means for the energy market

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    The Biden administration’s announcement Friday that it’s pausing liquefied natural gas export approvals sparked political backlash, drew cheers from climate activists and stoked uncertainty in energy markets, but is unlikely to see the U.S. give up its title as the world’s top LNG exporter.

    The U.S. will delay its decisions on new LNG exports to non-free trade agreement countries, allowing time for the Energy Department to update the underlying analyses for LNG export authorizations, the White House said.

    Those analyses are roughly five years old and “no longer adequately account for considerations” such as potential cost increases for American consumers and manufacturers or the “latest assessment of the impact of greenhouse gas emissions,” it said.

    The Biden administration likely “realizes the role of LNG in foreign policy, but at the same time it needs to show the Democrat base that it is doing something for climate change,” said Anas Alhajji, an independent energy expert and managing partner at Energy Outlook Advisors, pointing out that the announcement comes during a presidential election year.

    “Delaying one project or stopping it may not be a big deal, but it is a problem if it becomes a trend,” he said in emailed commentary.

    Environmental groups, which have pushed for action, cheered the decision.

    The 12 impacted projects in the U.S. “would spew out as much climate-warming pollution as 223 coal plants per year, and they present explosion risks to the communities where they’re located and emit other health-harming chemicals,” the Sierra Club, an environmental group, said in a statement welcoming the decision.

    Top exporter

    The announcement is particularly important for a nation that became the world’s biggest LNG exporter in the span of less than a decade.

    The U.S. became the world’s largest LNG exporter during the first half of 2022 on the back of increases in LNG export capacity, international natural gas and LNG prices, and global demand, particularly in Europe, according to the Energy Information Administration.

    Less than a decade ago, U.S. LNG exports were negligible. The country had only started exporting LNG from the Lower 48 states in 2016, the EIA said.

    The country’s exports of LNG climbed to a fresh record in November 2023, with the EIA reporting domestic exports of 386.2 billion cubic feet, up from 384.4 bcf a month earlier. Exports in December 2016 were at just 41.8 bcf.

    U.S. LNG exports soared after 2016.


    EIA

    With 90% of U.S. LNG going to non-free trade agreement destinations, withholding licensing effectively “halts project development,” John Miller, managing director, ESG and sustainability policy at TD Cowen wrote in a Friday note.

    Equities

    LNG equities with operating facilities likely won’t benefit from the administration’s announcement, at least not immediately, until the impacts of this pause in export approvals to non-FTA countries becomes more clear, Jason Gabelman, director, sustainability & energy transition at TD Cowen said.

    U.S. companies with government approvals that have not been sanctioned, “could have a higher probability of moving forward this year, albeit modestly” as offtakers may be hesitant to sign up to new U.S. projects with LNG development getting “politicized,” he said. Among those, he pointed out approvals for proposed liquefaction units at NextDecade Corp.’s
    NEXT,
    +2.30%

    Rio Grande LNG export facility project in Brownsville, Texas.

    At the same time, it would not be a surprise if U.S. LNG companies pursuing growth that do not yet have non-FTA approval see downside pressure, said Gabelman.

    LNG projects take around 4 years to build and any delays to project sanctions today will take “multiple years to manifest in the market,” he said.

    Still, the U.S. announcement “introduces the risk of more stringent oversight that could limit new U.S. capacity” more than four years out, Gabelman said.

    Companies that supply equipment to LNG liquefaction projects include Baker Hughes Co.
    BKR,
    +0.59%

    and Chart Industries Inc.
    GTLS,
    -7.54%
    ,
    said Marc Bianchi, a senior energy analyst at TD Cowen.

    Any slowing of approval would create “overhand on order growth,” he said.

    Climate change

    The White House said Friday that its decision will not impact the ability of the U.S. to continue supplying LNG to its allies in the near term but also acknowledged environmental concerns.

    “I think we’ve got to be clear eyed about the challenges that we face. The climate crisis is an existential crisis, and we’ve got to be, I think, really forward leaning into making sure that we’re taking that head on,” said Ali Zaidi, the White House national climate adviser, told reporters Friday.

    He added that given the number of approvals already completed, the number of projects under construction are set to double existing capacity with approvals beyond that set to double capacity yet again.

    “So there’s a long runway here, and we’re taking a step back and thinking, OK, let’s take a hard look before that runway continues to build out,” he said.

    Rob Thummel, senior portfolio manager at Tortoise, argued that U.S. LNG exports actually reduce global carbon emissions as natural gas typically “displaces coal to generate electricity in countries such as China and India.”

    They also improve global energy security as U.S. natural gas is becoming Europe’s primary energy supplier, replacing Russia, he said.

    In a statement Friday, Sen. Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat and chairman of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said that if the Biden administration has facts to prove that additional LNG export capacity would hurt Americans, it needs to make that information public. But if the pause is “another political ploy to pander to keep-it-in-the-ground climate activists,” he said he would “do everything in my power to end this pause immediately.

    Manchin plans to hold a hearing on the decision in the coming weeks.

    Market impact

    The U.S. decision to delay new LNG export permits is unlikely to have an impact on domestic natural-gas supplies or prices, said Energy Outlook Advisors’ Alhajji.

    Still, the EIA noted in its Annual Energy Outlook released in March of last year that it remains uncertain as to how LNG export capacity will affect domestic prices, consumption and supply.

    LNG prices and the rate at which new LNG export terminals can be constructed help determine LNG export volumes, the EIA said, and higher LNG exports can result in upward pressure on U.S. natural-gas prices, while lower U.S. LNG exports can pressure prices.

    On Friday, natural gas for February delivery
    NG00,
    +0.23%

    NGG24,
    +0.26%

    settled at $2.71 per million British thermal units, up 7.7% for the week.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. is likely to keep its position as the world’s top LNG exporter, according to Tortoise’s Thummel.

    The U.S. is the currently the largest LNG exporter at almost 12 bcf per day, with Qatar coming in second, he said.

    Qatar is expanding its LNG export capacity and is expected to have the ability to export almost 20 bcf per day by 2028, he said. The EIA reported recently that Qatar has averaged 10.3 bcf per day in exports during the last 10 years.  

    That would mark sizable growth. But the EIA reported in November that LNG export capacity from North America is likely to more than double from around 11.4 bcf per day to 24.3 bcf per day by the end of 2027.

    The EIA said North America’s LNG export capacity is likely to more than double by 2027.


    EIA

    Given expected growth in U.S. LNG export capacity, the U.S. is likely to “remain the largest exporter of LNG in the world” despite the U.S. announcement, said Thummel.

    —Victor Reklaitis contributed.

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  • Why Red Sea chaos is driving oil buyers ‘into the arms of U.S. shale producers’

    Why Red Sea chaos is driving oil buyers ‘into the arms of U.S. shale producers’

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    Attacks by Iran-backed Houthi rebels on vessels in the Red Sea have led to transport disruptions for oil and other goods, but international oil shippers may have found a way to deal with the chaos.

    The latest data from the Energy Information Administration offers a hint to that solution.

    The report from the government agency showed surprisingly large weekly increases in gasoline and distillate supplies, contributing to losses for energy futures on Thursday.

    But Robert Yawger, executive director for energy futures at Mizuho Securities USA, also highlighted another key figure in the data — a weekly jump in U.S. petroleum exports.

    Exports climbed by 1.377 million barrels a day to 5.292 million barrels a day for the week ended Dec. 29, according to the EIA.

    “For the first time since Houthi Yemeni rebels started to attack international shipping in the Red Sea, we are seeing a spike in U.S. exports,” said Yawger, in a Thursday afternoon note.

    The Red Sea chokepoints are critical for international oil and natural-gas flows, according to the EIA.


    U.S. Energy Information Administration

    “Apparently, international shippers are worried about being attacked on the open sea, and are getting beat” on the cost of sailing around the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa as an alternative to the passage through the Red Sea, he said. Instead, the “safer and cheaper way to procure supply, especially for EU customers, is to sail the boat to the U.S. Gulf Coast and load up on cheap U.S. [oil] barrels.”

    See: Houthis launch sea drone to attack ships in Red Sea, hours after U.S. issues ‘final warning’

    U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude
    CL.1,
    +0.66%

    CLG24,
    +0.66%

    trades at a discount to global benchmark Brent crude
    BRN00,
    +0.45%

    BRNH24,
    +0.45%
    .
    On Thursday, the February WTI futures contract settled at $72.19 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, while March Brent settled at $77.59 on ICE Futures Europe — a difference of $5.40 a barrel.

    That compares with a “cost of carry” for an Amsterdam/Rotterdam/Antwerp refiner of around $4 a barrel, said Yawger. So “forget about the Houthis/Iranian menace in the Red Sea,” he said. “You don’t need a U.S. Navy escort from danger — just a nice, clean two- to- four-week round-trip journey to the U.S.”

    ‘Ironically, the chaos in the Middle East is driving international crude-oil customers into the arms of the U.S. shale producers.’


    — Robert Yawger, Mizuho

    He expects U.S. petroleum exports to sustain the 5 million plus barrel-per-day level in the coming weeks, with the “geopolitical situation seemingly heating up every day.”

    “Ironically, the chaos in the Middle East is driving international crude-oil customers into the arms of the U.S. shale producers,” said Yawger. “There is a very good chance U.S. exports break the all-time record in coming weeks, just in time for refiners to pull back on the run rate.”

    Weekly U.S. crude-oil exports reached a record 5.629 million barrels a day in the week ended Feb. 24, 2023, based on EIA data going back to February 1991.

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  • Oil prices fall as traders monitor rising tensions in Red Sea

    Oil prices fall as traders monitor rising tensions in Red Sea

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    A picture taken during an organised tour by Yemen’s Houthi rebels on November 22, 2023 showing the Galaxy Leader cargo ship approaching the port in the Red Sea off Yemen’s province of Hodeida.

    – | Afp | Getty Images

    Oil prices fell Tuesday as traders monitored rising tensions in the Red Sea amid a backdrop of record U.S. crude production and worries about demand in China.

    The West Texas Intermediate contract for February lost $1.27, or 1.77%, to settle at $70.38 a barrel. The Brent contract for March shed $1.15, or 1.49%, to trade at $75.89. 

    Crude prices had jumped more than 2% earlier in the trading session on escalating tensions in the Red Sea, a crucial global trade chokepoint. 

    Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, said oil prices do not reflect the increase in tensions because traders are not convinced that a major supply disruption is on the horizon.

    “The market is basically saying ‘we will wait and see until something happens,’” Croft told CNBC on Tuesday. “But it’s really getting much more serious every day,” she said of tensions in the region.

    Traders are more focused on the macroeconomic backdrop of record U.S. production and faltering demand in China, said Adi Imsirovic, a veteran oil trader who is now an energy security expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    Danish shipping giant Maersk said Tuesday it will pause shipping through the Red Sea until further notice after one of its vessels came under attack by militants over the weekend.

    And Iran on Monday deployed a destroyer to the Red Sea, according to the country’s Tansim news agency. The report did not elaborate on the details of the warship’s mission, but said Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei stressed the need to maintain a presence in international waters. 

    The move by Tehran comes after U.S. Navy helicopters destroyed three boats of Iran-backed Houthi rebels. The Navy was responding to a distress call by Singapore-flagged vessel Maersk Hangzhou which had come under Houthi fire, the U.S. Central Command said in a statement.

    In a statement by a rebel spokesman on Sunday, the Houthi group maintained that the boats were engaged in “official duties to secure maritime routes”, a news channel owned by the rebels stated

    “Any escalation of conflict in this region is certainly going to add more of a risk premium on Brent,” Bernstein’s Senior Energy Analyst Neil Beveridge told CNBC. He noted, however, that there won’t be any major impact just yet.

    “We haven’t seen the Iranian naval incursions before. And as long as it really doesn’t lead to any escalation, then I don’t really see any significant impact at this level,” he added.

    The Houthi group has been attacking vessels in the Red Sea, targeting Israeli ships and other vessels headed to or from Israel, in retaliation for the country’s war in Gaza that has so far killed nearly 22,000 people there.

    Major shipping companies stopped traversing the Suez Canal and Red Sea routes in early December, choosing to reroute via southern Africa instead — a longer and more expensive journey with ocean freight rates hitting as high as $10,000 per container. 

    German container shipper Hapag-Lloyd said Friday it would continue to divert its vessels around the Suez Canal.

    The U.S. has launched a multinational maritime force, Operation Prosperity Guardian, in an effort to protect trade in the key waterway.

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  • Shale Is Keeping the World Awash With Oil as Conflicts Abound

    Shale Is Keeping the World Awash With Oil as Conflicts Abound

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    Updated Jan. 1, 2024 12:05 am ET

    A surprise surge in American oil and gas production and exports is helping to keep the world stocked, blunting the impact of widening conflict in the Middle East that has crimped key shipping lanes. 

    When Iranian-backed Houthi militants began launching missiles and drones at ships crossing the Red Sea near Yemen in October, many feared disruption to the vital shipping lane would drive up energy prices. But oil and gas prices this past month have sunk about 5% and 23%, respectively. 

    Copyright ©2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Oil prices end lower as crude suffers first losing year since 2020

    Oil prices end lower as crude suffers first losing year since 2020

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    Oil futures ended slightly lower Friday on the final trading day of 2023, capping crude’s first losing year since 2020 as concerns about the demand outlook outweighed potential supply disruptions and efforts by OPEC and its allies to limit production.

    Price action

    • West Texas Intermediate crude for February delivery
      CL00,
      -0.45%

      CL.1,
      -0.45%

      CLG24,
      -0.45%

      fell 12 cents, or 0.1%, to close at $71.65 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

    • March Brent crude
      BRN00,
      +0.05%

      BRNH24,
      +0.05%
      ,
      the global benchmark, fell 11 cents, or 0.1%, to settle at $77.04 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe.

    • Back on Nymex, January gasoline
      RBF24
      rose 0.8% to $2.103 a gallon, while January heating oil
      HOF24
      fell 0.1% to $2.553 a gallon.

    • February natural gas
      NGG24,
      -0.64%

      declined 1.7% to finish at $2.514 per million British thermal units.

    Market drivers

    WTI, the U.S. benchmark, slumped 21.1% in the fourth quarter and suffered a yearly fall of 10.7%. Brent tumbled over 19% in the final three months of the year, posting an annual loss of 10.3%.

    Gasoline futures dropped 14.5% in 2023, while heating oil declined 24.1%. Natural gas plunged nearly 44%.

    Crude had rallied over the summer as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, together known as OPEC+, maintained production cuts, with Saudi Arabia throwing in a voluntary reduction of 1 million barrels a day beginning in July and Russia moving to curb exports. While production cuts have been rolled over into early 2024, oil peaked in late September as expectations for a significant supply deficit failed to materialize.

    Increased production by the U.S., which saw its output hit record levels in 2023, and other non-OPEC producers have also capped the upside for crude, analysts said.

    Read: Why oil may not see a return to $100 a barrel in 2024

    Oil futures jumped in the wake of the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October on fears that a broader conflict could cramp supplies from the Middle East, but crude failed to challenge its September highs and soon eroded its geopolitical-risk premium. Prices bounced somewhat in December as attacks by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels on shipping vessels in the Red Sea sparked a round of rerouting, but gains have proven difficult to sustain.

    Instead, investors “have started to focus on the risk that there may be excessive supply in oil markets next year, and insufficient demand,” said Marios Hadjikyriacos, senior investment analyst at XM, in a note.

    “Even though OPEC+ has taken repeated steps to rein in production and support prices, it is unlikely to pursue the same strategy for much longer, as it would forfeit more market share to U.S. producers who have dialed up their own production to record levels,” he wrote.

    Natural-gas prices, meanwhile, have slumped recently on a warmer-than-normal winter, said Lu Ming Pang, senior analyst at Rystad Energy, in a Friday note.

    The number of heating-degree days (HDDs), which reflect the extent of heating required, has been below normal so far, with a deviation of 28 fewer HDDs from the normal reported on Dec. 15, the analyst noted. HDDs are forecast to rise through Jan. 5 but remain slightly below normal.

    “Gas demand for heating is likely to rise as a result but will still remain below seasonal norms,” Pang said. “A combination of warmer weather, high underground-storage levels, and high domestic gas production is expected to keep U.S. prices suppressed.”

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  • El Niño's 'sweet tooth' means indulgent treats could soon be even more expensive

    El Niño's 'sweet tooth' means indulgent treats could soon be even more expensive

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    Sugar for sale at a supermarket in Yichang City, in China’s Hubei province, on April 6, 2023.

    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    A mammoth rally in 2023 for El Niño-exposed raw materials will likely hit consumers’ pockets over the coming months, according to one specialist food and agribusiness bank.

    Soft commodities have posted huge gains year-to-date.

    Futures contracts on orange juice, cocoa, coffee and sugar have soared in part because of extreme weather and supply concerns related to El Niño.

    “You can say El Niño has a sweet tooth because it sort of eats or takes away much of the sugar in the world,” Carlos Mera, head of agri commodities market research at Netherlands-based Rabobank, told CNBC.

    “Sugar prices have probably already been passed on [to consumers] but certainly for chocolate we should expect a big increase at retail level — and El Niño is certainly something to watch.”

    The El Niño phenomenon, which returned earlier this year, is a naturally occurring climate pattern that takes place when sea temperatures in the eastern Pacific rise 0.5 degrees Celsius above the long-term average. It can pave the way to more storms and droughts.

    Orange juice on display in a grocery store on Jan. 19, 2023, in Miami, Florida.

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The effects of El Niño tend to peak during December, but the impact typically takes time to spread across the globe. This lagged effect is why forecasters believe 2024 could be the first year that humanity surpasses a critical warming threshold.

    El Niño-related dryness in much of Southeast Asia, India, Australia and parts of Africa has supported a price rally for soft commodities such as sugar, coffee and cocoa this year, Rabobank said in its annual outlook for 2024.

    The Dutch bank broadly expects global food price inflation to fall sharply after years of soaring prices.

    It also warned that several crops could be adversely affected by El Niño early next year, while acknowledging there is the potential for some crops to benefit, citing those in the United States, southern Brazil and Argentina.

    Surging soft commodities

    Orange juice futures climbed a whopping 80% in 2023, hitting an all-time high in late November after hurricanes and disease devastated citrus crops in Florida.

    “Occasionally, these markets exceed our wildest expectations. Did anyone predict $4.00 orange juice? The profit potential from this trade is staggering,” trader Dave Reiter of Reiter Capital Investments LLC said on Oct. 30 via X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Reiter has since warned that the eventual crash in the price of orange juice “will be one for the record books.”

    The price of cocoa, a vital ingredient for chocolate, jumped 64% this year to notch 46-year highs as West African supplies were hit hard by heavy rains and amid issues such as fungal disease.

    The robusta coffee variety on Dec. 15 hit its highest level in 15 years, while sugar prices have risen 13% in 2023 even after paring gains since registering a 12-year peak in September.

    Workers collect dry cocoa beans in front of the store of a cocoa cooperative in the village of Hermankono on Nov. 14, 2023.

    Sia Kambou | Afp | Getty Images

    Rabobank’s Mera said there is a “very clear” relationship between El Niño and higher sugar prices because the weather pattern tends to make conditions in major sugar exporting countries such as Thailand, India and Australia drier than normal.

    For cocoa, Mera said the impact of El Niño is likely to be “much weaker.” He added that the mechanics of the cocoa market means higher chocolate prices are not likely to immediately weaken demand or even incentivize production.

    “The cocoa industry is characterized by a lot of forward selling in part because of how cocoa is traded [in the Ivory Coast and Ghana],” Mera said, referring to the world’s two largest cocoa producers.

    “For example, they tend to sell the crop a year in advance. That means that the chocolate that you buy in the supermarket has probably been bought at a much lower price a year ago,” he added.

    “I’m surprised that cocoa is so much higher and that is not felt by the consumers just yet,” Mera said. “It will be — that cost will be passed to consumers at some point in 2024.”

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  • India's lab-grown diamonds may be 'value for money,' but natural diamonds won't lose their sparkle

    India's lab-grown diamonds may be 'value for money,' but natural diamonds won't lose their sparkle

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    Similar to a natural diamond, a lab-grown diamond is graded based on the 4Cs — clarity, color, cut and carat weight.

    Lionel Bonaventure | Afp | Getty Images

    Demand for lab-grown diamonds in India has grown steadily, but naturally mined diamonds won’t be losing their sparkle any time soon, industry experts say.

    India currently has the world’s largest youth population. More and more millennial and Gen Z shoppers have been captivated by the so-called LGDs because of their price point, analysts told CNBC.

    The price of a lab-grown diamond can be five times cheaper than a natural diamond, but they are both chemically identical.

    According to Limelight Diamonds, one of India’s largest LGD jewelry brands, a natural diamond is priced at around $6,000 per carat while its LGD counterpart is just $1,200.

    Both are also graded based on the 4Cs — clarity, color, cut and carat — the widely accepted standard characteristics to determine a diamond’s value and quality.

    Sales of LGDs have skyrocketed as buyers in India who were previously unable to purchase diamonds due to their high cost now feel they can enter the market. 

    “Previously, less than 5% of Indian women were able to afford natural diamonds,” said Pooja Sheth, founder and managing director of Limelight Lab Grown Diamonds.

    “But consumers are feeling it’s more value for money to purchase a lab grown diamond and there is a huge amount of incremental demand from new purchases who have never bought a diamond before,” she commented.

    India is currently the second-largest lab-grown diamond producer, behind China which accounts for at least half the world’s production.

    Edahn Golan, the CEO of Edahn Golan Diamond Research and Data, said he’s optimistic the South Asian nation could soon be No. 1.

    China’s LGD market is bigger in terms of production, but it is not polishing as many gems as India, Golan explained. “The technology that is used in India is far more sophisticated, and has much more room for improvement over time in the future,” he told CNBC in a phone interview.

    “China can make more diamonds with the technology they are using, but India can make more, and make them better.”

    Chance to upgrade?

    Limelight Diamonds has sold 10,000 carats worth of LGD jewelry from April 2022 to March this year, according to the company. Sheth claimed the company has already seen nearly twice as much sales from just April to September this year.

    However, Sheth pointed out that many buyers are not necessarily spending less when buying LGDs.

    “Lab grown diamonds have provided a purchasing upgrade. Even though prices are cheaper, many are not reducing their budgets,” she said.

    “They are either upgrading themselves with a bigger rock, or buying a pendant and [a pair of] earrings with that.” 

    First lady Jill Biden, U.S. President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi participate in an arrival ceremony at the White House on June 22, 2023.

    Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Much of the optimism surrounding LGDs in India can be attributed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s state visit to the White House in June when he gifted First Lady Jill Biden a 7.5 carat gem that was made in the South Asian nation.

    “The perception towards lab grown diamonds suddenly changed and that really altered the growth of lab grown diamond acceptance in the country,” Sheth said.

    “It’s about opening up an entire segment of Indian audiences that have not been able to purchase diamonds before.”

    Natural diamonds still dazzle

    Despite much optimism, LGD buyers still view the jewel as an entry point to the diamond market and will most likely purchase natural diamonds when they have a more purchasing power in future, analysts told CNBC.

    “Lab-grown diamonds are now the talk of the day. But If you have enough money floating around, you’ll essentially buy a naturally mined diamond,” said Tehmasp Printer, CEO of the International Gemological Institute.  

    “Millennials and Gen Zs may opt for a LGD when they want to get married, but switch to a naturally mined diamond down the road,” Printer told CNBC.

    “If you have a Toyota, you’ll want to buy a lower end BMW after before you finally get a [Mercedes-Benz] S-Class. It’s a question of upgrade.” 

    Spending on jewelry increased during the pandemic when money could not be spent on travel or services

    Brand X Pictures | Stockbyte | Getty Images

    Paul Zimnisky, CEO of Paul Zimnisky Diamond Analytics, agreed.

    The growth of the LGD market will not make a marginal shift on natural diamond sales, Zimnisky said.

    “Man-made diamonds represent around 20% of the total industry in the value sold. It was basically zero 10 years ago, so it has been growing rapidly on a relative basis,” he said.

    “But it would be incorrect to say that that’s the reason why the diamond price is softer this year. It’s mostly a return to normalization.”

    Zimnisky highlighted that spending on jewelry increased when Covid restrictions were lifted globally, pushing diamond prices to their peak in February 2022. 

    Prices have come down by 25% since then, according to Zimnisky’s Global Rough Diamond Index.

    Data from the analytics firm predicted that demand for global diamond jewelry will fall to $81 billion this year from $89 billion in 2023, which is still higher than $75 billion in 2019, before the pandemic hit.

    However, Zimnisky cautioned that trouble could be round the corner for LGDs if prices for the gem continue to fall too because of how rapidly they are being produced.

    “I think the price of retail isn’t reflective of how low the raw material prices are and the retail price for the man-made diamond will continue to go lower … that’s the risk for the lab diamond industry,” he warned, predicting that a three-carat LGD solitaire ring will soon sell “well under $1,000.” 

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  • Jon Corzine Fast Facts | CNN Politics

    Jon Corzine Fast Facts | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the life of Jon Corzine, former governor of New Jersey.

    Birth date: January 1, 1947

    Birth place: Willey’s Station, Illinois

    Birth name: Jon Stevens Corzine

    Father: Roy Allen Corzine Jr., farmer

    Mother: Nancy (Hedrick) Corzine, teacher

    Marriages: Sharon Elghanayan (2010-present); Joanne Dougherty (1969-2003, divorced)

    Children: with Joanne Dougherty: Jennifer, Joshua and Jeffrey

    Education: University of Illinois, B.A., 1969; University of Chicago, M.B.A., 1973

    Military: United States Marine Corps Reserves, Sergeant, 1969-1975

    Religion: Methodist

    Is the third New Jersey governor to break a leg while in office. Jim McGreevey broke his leg in 2002 and Christie Whitman broke hers in 1999.

    1975 – Begins working for Goldman Sachs.

    1980 – Is named a partner at Goldman Sachs.

    1994-1999 – Chairman and chief executive of Goldman Sachs.

    November 7, 2000 – Is elected to the United States Senate.

    2001-2006 – United States Senator representing New Jersey.

    November 8, 2005 – Is elected governor of New Jersey.

    January 17, 2006-January 19, 2010 – 54th governor of New Jersey.

    July 1, 2006 – Orders a government shutdown amid a budgetary impasse between the state legislature and his office. It ends on July 8th.

    December 21, 2006 – Corzine signs a bill legalizing same-sex civil unions.

    April 12, 2007 – Is seriously injured in a car accident. According to official reports, Corzine’s driver was going 90mph in a 65mph zone, and Corzine was not wearing a seat belt.

    December 17, 2007 – Signs legislation repealing the death penalty.

    November 3, 2009 – Is defeated in his re-election bid by Republican Chris Christie.

    March 23, 2010 – Is named CEO of MF Global.

    October 31, 2011 – MF Global files for bankruptcy after it is revealed that more than $600 million of customer money is missing.

    November 4, 2011 – Corzine resigns from MF Global.

    December 2011 – Corzine testifies multiple times before both the House and Senate Agriculture Committees, claiming he does not know where the missing customer money went.

    November 15, 2012 – The House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations releases a report saying that Corzine’s risky decisions led to the loss of customer funds.

    April 4, 2013 – Louis Freeh, bankruptcy trustee for MF Global and former head of the FBI, releases a report blaming the demise of the commodities trading firm on Corzine.

    April 23, 2013 – Louis Freeh files a lawsuit against Corzine and two lieutenants at MF Global saying their risky decisions led to the company’s bankruptcy and the improper use of the client’s money to cover losses.

    November 5, 2013 – A bankruptcy judge approves a recovery plan that will allow almost 26,000 customers to collect 100 cents on the dollar of a combined $1.6 billion in lost investments from MF Global.

    March 11, 2014 – Corzine’s youngest son, Jeffrey Corzine, 31, commits suicide.

    December 23, 2014 – A New York federal court orders MF Global Holdings to pay restitution in the amount of $1.212 billion, plus a $100 million civil penalty for its subsidiary’s misuse of funds.

    January 5, 2017 – The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission says a federal court ordered Corzine to pay a $5 million penalty for his role in MF Global’s “Unlawful use of customer funds” and his “failure to diligently supervise the handling of customer funds.”

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  • Oil prices post first weekly gain in 8 weeks amid ship attacks in Red Sea

    Oil prices post first weekly gain in 8 weeks amid ship attacks in Red Sea

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    Oil futures fell on Friday, but finished off the session’s lows to eke out a gain for the week — the first for U.S. and global benchmark crude prices in eight weeks.

    Attacks on ships traveling through the Red Sea, blamed on Yemen’s Houthi rebels, raised the potential for disruptions to the transport of oil and other goods, providing some support for prices.

    Oil saw larger declines early Friday after a Federal Reserve official walked back dovish comments made earlier this week by the Fed Chair Jerome Powell, helping to strengthen the U.S. dollar.

    Price action

    • West Texas Intermediate crude for January
      CL00,
      +0.49%

      CL.1,
      +0.49%

      CLF24,
      +0.49%

      declined by 15 cents, or 0.2%, to settle at $71.43 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, with prices ending 0.3% higher for the week, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    • February Brent crude
      BRN00,
      +0.52%

      BRNG24,
      +0.52%
      ,
      the global benchmark, fell 6 cents, or nearly 0.1%, to $76.55 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, settling 0.9% higher for the week.

    • January gasoline
      RBF24,
      -0.16%

      added 0.9% to $2.14 a gallon, up almost 4.3% for the week, while January heating oil
      HOF24,
      +0.20%

      climbed 1.1% to $2.62 a gallon on Nymex, marking a weekly rise of 1.5%.

    • Natural gas for January delivery
      NGF24,
      -0.88%

      gained 4.1% to $2.49 per million British thermal units, but still logged a weekly loss of 3.5%.

    Price support

    Danish shipping company A.P. Moeller-Maersk
    MAERSK.A,
    +7.52%

    said it will pause all of its container shipments through the Red Sea until further notice and detour them around Africa, Reuters and Bloomberg reported Friday, amid rising risks to its fleet posed by Houthi militants.

    The Red Sea is “one of the hot pockets of seaborne crude flows,” accounting for approximately 10% of global volume, said Manish Raj, managing director at Velandera Energy Partners. “Although the attackers lack sophistication … shipping crews are even less sophisticated, making them easy targets.” 

    A potential blockage of the Red Sea route would be “chaotic indeed, but not nearly as detrimental as blockage of [the] Strait of Hormuz near Iran, for which there is no viable alternative,” Raj said.

    Read from the AP: How are Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea affecting global trade?

    For now, there is concern over higher insurance costs for these ships, said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at the Price Futures Group.

    With ships in the Red Sea continuing to be at high risk, ‘it won’t take that much for the market’ to see oil prices spike if an oil tanker should be hit.


    — Phil Flynn, Price Futures Group

    Obviously, the risk to oil supply is large, although “so far, most of the attacks have been on cargo ships and not oil-related ships,” Flynn told MarketWatch.

    However, as ships in the Red Sea continue to be at high risk, “it won’t take that much for the market” to see oil prices spike if an oil tanker is hit, Flynn said.

    For the week, both U.S. and global benchmark crude prices posted gains.

    “The combination of lower U.S. inventories, stronger economic data, and improved OPEC compliance [with production cuts] for the month of November were the highlights of the week,” said Peter McNally, global head of sector analysts at Third Bridge.

    “However, there are ongoing seasonal challenges that forced OPEC to sustain production cuts through the first quarter of 2024, so it remains to be seen if they have done enough to prevent inventories from continuing their upward trend,” he said.

    Read The Year Ahead: Why oil may not see a return $100 a barrel in 2024

    Price pressures

    Oil had been trading lower early Friday after New York Federal Reserve President John Williams told CNBC that it is “premature” to discuss whether it is time to cut interest rates. “We aren’t really talking about cutting interest rates right now,” Williams said.

    That ran contrary to Powell’s comments Wednesday that Fed officials were starting to discuss when to cut rates.

    After the euphoria in the U.S. stock market over the Powell “pivot party” on Wednesday, we got a “wake-up call” from Williams when he pushed back on market expectations for a March rate cut, Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK, said in market commentary.

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  • China is 'on the verge of deflation' — and plunging pork prices aren't helping

    China is 'on the verge of deflation' — and plunging pork prices aren't helping

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    Pigs moving about their pen.

    Vw Pics | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    Plunging pork prices in China are pushing the world’s second largest economy closer to deflation, in what could be another blow to its faltering economy.

    A pork glut drove retail pork prices in China down 31.8% in November compared to a year ago, the latest official consumer price index showed.

    And the tumbling prices of pork, which has an outsized weighting in China’s CPI, could add to the deflationary risks the country already faces, analysts who spoke to CNBC said.

    Deflation — associated with the decline in prices of goods and services and a sign of a weakening economy — is concerning because consumers may postpone investments or purchases in hopes of prices falling further.

    “Aside from falling real estate prices and price cutting across consumer goods, the biggest reason for China being on the verge of deflation is falling pork prices,” China Market Research Group’s Managing Director Shaun Rein said. 

    China’s consumer price index fell 0.5% year-on-year in November, marking the sharpest slide in three years. 

    Food makes up an estimated one-fifth of China’s CPI basket. Pork constitutes a large component within the food category of the basket, and has the greatest impact on China’s CPI which explains the close correlation between pork prices and CPI in China. 

    Too much pork

    China’s pork sector has seen a prolonged period of oversupply and weak domestic consumption, said Jun Rong Yeap, a market strategist at IG in Singapore.

    Pork production in 2022 hit the highest in eight years at 55.41 million tonnes, official data showed. More recently, the country’s pork output for the third quarter rose 3.6%.

    “For the world meat market, a Chinese pork surplus means a deflationary impulse,” said Newedge Wealth’s senior portfolio manager Ben Emons, who added that the oversupply can be traced to before the pandemic.

    Between 2018 to 2021, the African swine fever — which reverberated through the global pork supply chain — led to pork prices rising over 100%, Emons said in a note. That incentivized domestic pork production, with Chinese pig breeders responding by borrowing heavily to modernize hog farms. 

    Chinese consumers are changing diners’ preferences out of health consciousness, especially young people who switch to poultry and other foods.

    Ben Emons

    Newedge Wealth’s Senior Portfolio Manager

    China’s hog cycle, which dictates pork prices, is currently facing an oversupply, said Erica Tay, Maybank’s director of macro research.

    On top of that, unseasonably warm weather in November has delayed the traditional surge in cured meat demand in the winter months and upcoming festive new year, Tay said. Suppliers can only start curing meat at temperatures below 10°C, he added.

    Beijing has tried to stem the slide in prices by conducting two rounds of pork buying for its strategic reserves, with the National Development and Reform Commission aiming to hold a third round within the year.

    Additionally, while China is a heavyweight producer and consumer of pork, Chinese demand for meat is dwindling even though pork is getting cheaper, as consumers opt for healthier alternatives.

    Roast pork and other kinds of siu mei are displayed in the kitchen of a Chinese restaurant.

    South China Morning Post | South China Morning Post | Getty Images

    “Chinese consumers are changing diners’ preferences out of health consciousness, especially young people who switch to poultry and other foods,” Emons noted.

    Affluent Chinese are increasingly considering beef to be a healthier alternative to pork, with 28% of consumers surveyed saying they plan on reducing pork consumption, a study published in February by managing consulting firm McKinsey showed.

    As for the less affluent, China Market Research Group’s Rein observed that they are saving money by ordering less pork.

    China’s deflationary risks

    The trajectory of China’s post-Covid economic recovery has been a choppy one, dragged down by its embattled property sector and slew of underwhelming economic data.

    While pork prices are a core factor tipping China into deflation, an amalgamation of other factors have also contributed to subdued price pressures. 

    For one, aggressive discounting by e-commerce retailers during the Single’s Day period depressed consumer goods prices in November, said Tay from Maybank.

    The receding fervor for domestic “revenge travel” has also seen airfares drop, reversing past months’ climbs, she added.

    — CNBC’s Isabella Lok contributed to this report.

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  • Oil prices drop to 2-week lows as doubts linger over OPEC+ production cuts

    Oil prices drop to 2-week lows as doubts linger over OPEC+ production cuts

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    Oil futures fell Monday to their lowest levels in more than two weeks, building on recent declines that came after a round of voluntary production cuts announced by OPEC+ left traders skeptical about compliance.

    Price action

    • West Texas Intermediate crude for January delivery
      CL00,
      -0.63%

      CL.1,
      -0.63%

      CLF24,
      -0.63%

      fell 85 cents, or 1.2%, to $73.22 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange,

    • February Brent crude
      BRN00,
      -0.44%

      BRNG24,
      -0.44%

      dropped $1.29, or 1.6%, $77.59 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe.

    • January gasoline was down 0.1% at $2.1198 a gallon, while January heating oil
      HOF24,
      +0.85%

      edge down 0.4% to $2.6501 a gallon.

    • January natural gas
      NGF24,
      -4.48%

      declined 5.3% to $2.664 per million British thermal units.

    Market drivers

    The OPEC+ deal last week was “unconvincing, to say the least, and oil prices have been in decline ever since,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA.

    “With markets seemingly anticipating more of an economic slowdown next year, the announcement simply doesn’t go far enough,” he said in market commentary. “It’s another large cut but how much will actually be delivered on? And are we at the limits of what the alliance is willing to achieve to balance the markets?”

    Crude prices ended last week with back-to-back losses after OPEC+ producers on Thursday agreed to voluntarily cut around 2.2 million barrels a day (mbd) of crude from the market in the first quarter of next year, a figure that included a widely expected extension of Saudi Arabia’s 1 mbd voluntary output cut and Russia’s 300,000 barrel a day cut to crude exports.

    OPEC+ cuts “look like they have rebalanced the market” for the first quarter of next year, but without further OPEC+ cuts in supply from the second quarter, “oil looks to register a 1 mbd surplus in that quarter, analysts at Citi wrote in a note dated Monday.

    The voluntary nature of the overall reductions sparked skepticism around enforcement and compliance, analysts said.

    “Soft price action since the OPEC+ meeting is reflective of an investor cohort that remains perplexed on how to deploy risk. The near-term path of least resistance is lower, given the degree of ambiguity and lack of catalysts,” Michael Tran, commodity and digital intelligence strategist at RBC Capital Markets, said in a Sunday note.

    “Oil has become a ‘show me’ type market. Now here comes the hard part: Prices will likely remain volatile and potentially directionless until the market sees clear data points pertaining to the voluntary output cuts,” he said.

    Those cuts won’t be implemented until next month, with country-level production and export data to follow. That means it will be a “long and volatile” two months before there is even preliminary clarity on compliance — “a long stretch for a market that is seeing a high degree of uncertainty, lack of risk deployment and a liquidity vacuum,” Tran wrote.

    Traders were also monitoring developments in the Middle East following an escalation of maritime attacks related to the Israel-Hamas war.

    Ballistic missiles fired by Yemen’s Houthi rebels hit three commercial ships Sunday in the Red Sea, while a U.S. warship shot down three drones in self-defense during the hourslong assault, according to the U.S. military. The Iranian-backed Houthis claimed two of the attacks.

    Oil futures spiked higher following the Hamas attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7 but failed to challenge their late September highs. Crude subsequently fell back as fears of a broader conflict that could threaten crude flows faded, trading well below levels seen just before the start of the conflict.

    — Associated Press contributed.

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  • Gold soars past $2,100 to new record — and analysts don't expect it to stop there

    Gold soars past $2,100 to new record — and analysts don't expect it to stop there

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    Traffic_analyzer | Istock | Getty Images

    Gold prices notched a new record on Monday for a second day in a row — with spot prices touching $2,100 as the global rush for bullion appears set to continue.

    Gold prices are on course to hit fresh highs next year and could remain above $2,000 levels, analysts said, citing geopolitical uncertainty, a likely weaker U.S. dollar and possible interest rate cuts.

    Prices of the yellow metal have risen for two consecutive months with the Israel-Palestinian conflict boosting demand for the safe-haven asset, while expectations of interest rate cuts have provided further support. Gold tends to perform well during periods of economic and geopolitical uncertainty due to its status as a reliable store of value.

    “The anticipated retreat in both the USD and interest rates across 2024 are key positive drivers for gold,” UOB’s Head of Markets Strategy, Global Economics and Markets Research, Heng Koon How, told CNBC via email. He estimated that gold prices could reach up to $2,200 by the end of 2024.

    Similarly, another analyst is bullish on bullion’s outlook.

    “There is simply less leverage this time around vs 2011 in gold … taking prices through $2,100 and putting $2,200/oz in view,” said Nicky Shiels, head of metals strategy at precious metals firm MKS PAMP.

    All that glitters is gold

    Spot gold prices rose to a new record high of $2,110.8 per ounce Monday before giving up some gains. It is currently trading at $2,084.59.

    On Friday, gold touched $2,075.09 to surpass a precious intraday record high of $2,072.5 on Aug. 7, 2020, according to LSEG data.

    Bart Melek, head of commodity strategies at TD Securities, expects gold prices to average $2,100 in the second quarter of 2024, with strong central bank purchases acting as a key catalyst in boosting prices.

    According to a recent survey by the World Gold Council, 24% of all central banks intend to increase their gold reserves in the next 12 months, as they increasingly grow pessimistic about the U.S. dollar as a reserve asset.

    “This means potentially higher demand from the official sector in the years to come,” Melek said.

    A possible policy pivot by the Fed in 2024 could also be on the cards, he added. Lower interest rates tend to weaken the dollar and a softer dollar makes gold cheaper for international buyers thus driving up demand.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    Gold prices in the past six months

    On Friday, while Fed Chairman Jerome Powell pushed back on expectations for aggressive interest rate cuts ahead, his remarks indicated the Fed may at least be done hiking for now.

    “We believe the main factors buoying gold in 2024 will be interest rate cuts by the U.S. Fed, a weaker U.S. dollar and high levels of geopolitical tension,” BMI, a Fitch Solutions research unit, said in a recent note.

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  • Gold futures soar to record close. Here’s what’s driving the rally.

    Gold futures soar to record close. Here’s what’s driving the rally.

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    Gold futures ended Friday at their highest on record, with prices on the cusp if a so-called golden cross — signaling the potential for further upside in the precious metal.

    Gold prices surged as the market reacted to the escalating tensions in the Middle East, said Bas Kooijman, CEO and asset manager of DHF Capital, in market commentary. The end of the truce in the region could “continue to fuel risk aversion and investors’ concerns.”

    The escalation has “helped extend gold’s uptrend of the last two months as traders take into account changing expectations regarding monetary policy,” he said. “Traders have been betting on an end to the interest rate hiking cycle and possible rate cuts in the first half of next year, which could continue to support gold’s rise over the medium term.”

    On Friday, gold for February delivery
    GC00,
    +0.10%

    GCG24,
    +0.10%

    climbed by $32.50, or 1.6%, to settle at $2,089.70 an ounce on Comex. Prices based on the most-active contracts, settled at an all-time high, surpassing the Aug. 6, 2020 record-high finish of $2,069.40, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Prices traded as high as $2,095.70 on an intraday basis on Friday, surpassing the previous record intraday high of $2,089.20 from Aug. 7, 2020.

    Gold’s rally started after the release of the October consumer-price index, Edmund Moy, senior IRA strategist for U.S. Money Reserve and a former director of the U.S. Mint, told MarketWatch. The data released Nov. 14 showed that the U.S. cost of living was unchanged in October.

    The market viewed that reading as saying the Fed has “tamed inflation and is probably finished raising rates and will, in all probability, start reducing rates sooner and faster than previously predicted,” said Moy.

    Lower Fed rates mean lower Treasury yields, and since Treasurys are purchased in dollars, falling demand for Treasurys means falling demand for the dollar, he said, which can boost the price for dollar-denominated gold.

    “While gold’s current rally is a bit overheated, both the golden cross and the proximity of an all-time high acting like a magnet for the price means that we’re likely to see further gains in the very immediate term,” Brien Lundin, editor of Gold Newsletter, told MarketWatch.

    Most-active gold futures on Friday were close to reaching a bullish indicator known as a golden cross, when an asset’s short-term moving average moves above its long-term moving average. The 50-day moving average was at $1,955.44, pennies below the 200-day moving average of $1,955.51 Friday.

    Gold prices around the globe had already rallied to fresh record price highs in other currencies and with the U.S. dollar gold price joining the party, “you can expect another wave of buying momentum to come into the market now,” said Peter Spina, president of GoldSeek.com.

    “The end of the stealth phase move of the gold bull market is over. It will finally be acknowledged and recognized by the mainstream.”


    — Peter Spina, GoldSeek.com

    “I fully expect significantly higher gold prices in the months ahead,” he told MarketWatch. “The end of the stealth phase move of the gold bull market is over. It will finally be acknowledged and recognized by the mainstream.”

    Read: Gold rallies toward ‘golden cross’ after defying bearish signal

    Spina said it’s important to note that gold prices are “not hitting record highs, but rather the U.S. dollar is hitting record lows against superior money.”

    That says the U.S. dollar’s purchasing power is “being eroded even further, more aggressively now,” he said. The ICE U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    a measure of the currency against a basket of six major rivals, is down 0.3% for the year to date after a November pullback.

    The precious metal remains supported by Federal Reserve interest-rate cut bets even after Fed Chairman Jerome Powell signaled that it was too soon for the Fed to claim victory over the inflation beast, said Lukman Otunuga, manager, market analysis at FXTM.

    Read: Powell won’t endorse market expectations for quick rate cuts

    The Fed’s ability to cut interest rates in March is likely to be influenced by key data including CPI and jobs data, among others,” said Otunuga. “Given how the Relative Strength Index (RSI) on the daily charts remains in overbought regions, gold could experience a technical throwback before pushing higher.”

    Lundin, meanwhile, also warned that the all-time high for gold may mark a “quadruple top” unless gold is able to decisively break through a new plateau, probably somewhere over $2,100 an ounce.

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  • Markets – MarketWatch

    Markets – MarketWatch

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    Technology-stock gains drive big day, week on Wall Street

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  • Oil prices fall for a third week in a row

    Oil prices fall for a third week in a row

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    Oil futures finished higher on Friday, but posted a third straight weekly loss. “Oil pundits forecasting widespread oil shortage this year is old news, and the reality is that physical markets are flush with the black gold,” said Manish Raj, managing director at Velandera Energy Partners. December West Texas Intermediate crude
    CLZ23,
    +2.13%

    rose $1.43, or 1.9%, to settle at $77.17 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. For the week, prices for the front-month contract lost nearly 4.2%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

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  • Gold posts first weekly loss in more than a month

    Gold posts first weekly loss in more than a month

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    Gold futures fell on Friday, as hawkish comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Thursday and weaker investor appetite for the haven metal prompted prices to post their first weekly decline since early October.

    “The tailwind in gold has gone silent,” said Adam Koos, president at Libertas Wealth Management Group. The yellow metal was formerly supported, in part, by the thought that the U.S. would be hitting a ceiling on interest rates and dissipating inflation, but “none of that seems to matter under the shadow of the Fed.”

    On Friday, gold for December delivery fell $32.10, or 1.6%, to settle at $1,937.70 an ounce on Comex, down 3.1% for the week, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Prices based on the most-active contract marked the biggest daily decline since mid-April and first weekly loss in five weeks.

    Fed helps set overhead resistance

    In remarks on a panel at the International Monetary Fund Thursday, Powell said Fed officials are “gratified” with the progress made so far to bring down U.S. inflation but weren’t yet confident that interest rates are high enough to bring inflation down to their 2% target over time.

    “Gold is an inmate within the confines of overhead resistance, and the door to freedom resides at $2,060,” Koos told MarketWatch. “Just when an exit plan seems near — when a break-out with parole seems promising — Jerome Powell came in like the warden on Thursday, saying that he’s unconvinced that monetary policy has been sufficient thus far, and that inflation could still warrant future rate hikes.”

    Read: Powell says Fed is wary of ‘head fakes’ from inflation

    Risk aversion

    Gold prices have also been influenced by a fall in investor appetite, as fears that Middle East tensions will spill over to wider regions have eased, said Lukman Otunuga, manager, market analysis, at FXTM.

    If concerns over the spread of the Middle East conflict continue to ease, that may “pave the way for further downside” in gold prices, he told MarketWatch.

    However, should fears return and intensify over a potential spillover of the Israel-Hamas conflict, there may be a “fresh wave of risk aversion” that would send investors towards “safe-haven destinations” like gold, said Otunuga.

    “It’s not only the developments in the Middle East, but also Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that could fan fears about a global recession,” he said.

    Price potential

    For now, gold has the potential to extend its losses, said Otunuga.

    Ahead of Friday’s gold-price settlement, he warned that a “solid breakdown and daily close” below $1,945 would open the doors toward a fall to the 200-day simple moving average at $1,934, before the U.S. October consumer price index report on Nov. 14.

    Koos, meanwhile, said gold is likely to remain in “price prison, staring at the ceiling of $2,060” an ounce, until the Fed decides to slow its role in fighting inflation.

    A move beyond that price level represents “freedom and new all-time-highs,” he said. “Until then, patience will be a requirement, at the very least.”

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  • A wall of debt rolling over: Here’s what’s scaring Bridgewater’s co-CIO

    A wall of debt rolling over: Here’s what’s scaring Bridgewater’s co-CIO

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    A weak session is setting up for Tuesday, with oil under pressure after unexpectedly downbeat China export data. So the preference is for bonds this morning, as stock futures tilt south.

    Onto our call of the day, which deals with another worry — a wall of government debt that will be with us for decades. It comes from Bridgewater’s highly regraded co-chief investment officer Bob Prince, who was speaking at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit on Tuesday, hosted by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.

    Prince touches on asset liability mismatches, such as what was seen during the banking crisis earlier this year. He explains that one big factor behind a crisis is when a certain economic regime exists for an extended period of time and “people extrapolate that into the future on the basis of leverage and asset liability mismatches. Then you get a shift in that regime.”

    The events of March, which saw the collapse of SVB, Signature Bank and Silvergate, were a perfect example of that, Prince says. Then he turns to what he calls the “broader effects of a transition from 15 years of abundant free money,” that was first used to battle deleveraging pressures in the financial system in 2008 and then the pandemic.

    One long-term effect of that gets particular attention by Prince, who points out how U.S. government Treasury debt to GDP was about 70% in 2008, around where it had been for decades.

    “The after effects of offsetting deleveraging and pandemic, you’ve had a massive wealth shift from the public sector to the private sector and that’s left the government with debt to GDP up from 70% up to 120%. And the particular vulnerability of that is in the debt rollovers and the gross issuance that you’re going to see in the coming decades . You’re stuck with that debt until you pay it off and that means you have to roll it over like anybody else does,” said Prince.

    “Gross debt issuance will be running at 25% for as far as the eye can see, that means every year you’re issuing 25% of GDP in debt. In 1960, the average amount of debt issuance was 12% of GDP,” he said.

    Prince says most people really don’t pay attention to debt rollovers because they just assume those will get done, but notes that when countries have experienced balance of payments crisis in the past, mostly emerging markets, that is because they have been unable to roll over that debt.

    In the U.S. case, it’s crucial to look at who is holding the debt, particularly the 27% held by foreign investors and 18% by central banks. “Foreign investors would normally be a reliable source of investment but it does heighten sensitivity to geopolitical risk, and so geopolitical risk converges with debt rollovers and gross issuance of the Treasury is an issue that you need to pay attention to in the coming years.

    While not an “acute problem,” he says, it’s a lingering one, and when it comes to central banks it’s also unclear whether their holdings also present a “rollover risk.”

    Prince also touches on the fact that that all that “abundant free money” has fueled a private-equity boom, but with interest rates now at 8% instead of 2% or 3%, “the pace and transaction cycle is bound to slow,” and they are starting to see that.

    “When we talk to institutional investors around the world, many of them are experiencing liquidity issues right now and the liquidity issues result from the fact so much money was allocated to private assets and the transaction cycle is slowing,” he said.

    MarketWatch 50: Forget U.S. stocks for now. Invest here instead, says Bridgewater’s co–investment chief

    A team of analysts at Citigroup led by Nathan Sheets have also weighed in on government debt, telling clients in a new note that “it’s unwise for policy makers to experiment or test” where the threshold for too much debt lies. Here’s their chart showing the bleak trajectory:

    Dirk Willer, head of global asset allocation at Citigroup, said a debt crisis scenario in the U.S. would likely mean a selloff of risk assets globally. He notes that bonds in rival countries may not be the best bet as they don’t always benefit. And both gold and bitcoin underperformed during the U.K. gilt crisis, so those may be out.

    Also in attendance at the conference in Hong Kong, Deutsche Bank’s CEO is worried geopolitics could create another market event and Citadel’s Ken Griffin said investors should put money in China.

    Read: ‘Stock-market correction is over’ after broad surge amid ‘epic’ market rallies

    The markets

    Stock futures
    ES00,
    -0.02%

    NQ00,
    +0.31%

    are pointing to a weak to flat session ahead, while the 10-year Treasury yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    eases back. U.S. crude
    CL.1,
    -2.20%

    is under $80 a barrel after worse-than-forecast China exports signaled more economic bumps in the global growth engine. The dollar
    DXY
    is up.

    The buzz

    Planet Fitness stock
    PLNT,
    -0.27%

    is surging on upbeat results and an improved growth outlook. Uber
    UBER,
    +0.82%

    is up as earnings beat forecasts, but revenue fell short. D.R. Horton
    DHI,
    -0.96%

    stock is also getting a boost from results. EBay
    EBAY,
    -0.44%
    ,
    Occidental Petroleum
    OXY,
    -2.00%
    ,
    Akamai Tech
    AKAM,
    -0.06%

    and Gilead Sciences
    GILD,
    -0.55%

    after the close.

    Reporting late Thursday, Tripadvisor
    TRIP,
    +2.29%

    delivered blowout results and the stock is surging, while Sanmina
    SANM,
    -1.03%

    is down 14% after the manufacturing services provider’s disappointing results.

    UBS
    UBS,
    -0.49%

    UBSG,
    +2.79%

    swung to a $785 million quarterly loss on lingering effects of its Credit Suisse takeover, but it pulled in $33 billion in new deposits and shares are up.

    After a decade of turmoil, office-sharing group WeWork
    WE,
    -24.73%

    filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday. 

    The U.S. trade deficit climbed 5% in September to $61.5 billion as imports rebounded. Still to come is consumer credit at 3 p.m. Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr speaks at 9:15 a.m., followed by Fed Gov. Christopher Waller at 10 a.m.

    The International Monetary Fund boosted its China outlook for 2023 and 2024.

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    According to this recent JPMorgan survey, two-thirds of investors are ready to start pumping more money into equities, while just 19% plan to increase bond exposure. Also, note that 67% also said they did not expect performance of the Magnificent 7 stocks — Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Tesla and Meta — to “crack before the end of the year.”

    Top tickers

    These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

    TSLA,
    -0.31%
    Tesla

    AMC,
    +2.15%
    AMC Entertainment

    NVDA,
    +1.66%
    Nvidia

    AAPL,
    +1.46%
    Apple

    NIO,
    -3.16%
    NIO

    GME,
    -2.45%
    GameStop

    AMZN,
    +0.82%
    Amazon.com

    PLTR,
    -1.85%
    Palantir Technologies

    MULN,
    +3.88%
    Mullen Automotive

    MSFT,
    +1.06%
    Microsoft

    NVDA,
    +1.66%
    Nvidia

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  • Orange-juice futures suffer their biggest weekly decline in over 6 years after hitting record

    Orange-juice futures suffer their biggest weekly decline in over 6 years after hitting record

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    Orange-juice futures posted a drop of nearly 11% for the week on Friday, the largest such percentage decline since late March 2017, just days after settling at their highest price on record.

    “The weather is good and the hurricane season is almost over,” Jack Scoville, vice president of The Price Futures Group and author of the Grains and Softs Report, told MarketWatch on Friday. 

    The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. It can impact crops in the region, and Florida is among the top orange growing states. The season started off strongly but was relatively quiet in October.

    The speculators in the market tried to take profits and “found out that there was no buying interest under the market, so it went down hard,” said Scoville. 

    The most-active January contract for frozen concentrated orange juice posted a weekly loss of 10.6% on Friday, the worst weekly performance since the week ended March 31, 2017, according to Dow Jones Market Data. It settled Friday at $3.4925 a pound on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange, down 1.4%, for the session, after dropping 5.2% Thursday.

    The big mover among the futures contracts is November, said Darin Newsom, Barchart senior market analyst.

    That contract was down around 14% from this past Tuesday’s high of $4.3195, he said. The first notice day, the day buyers of futures contracts receive a notice that a seller intends to make delivery of a commodity, was Nov. 1, he said.

    Given that, anyone holding long futures who didn’t want to take delivery had to get out of their position — leading to a sharp selloff, Newsom explained. The January contract saw some “spillover selling” from the November contracts.

    Prices for frozen orange juice had marked a record high settlement of $4.008 a pound on Oct. 30. They trade a whopping 71% higher year to date, on track for the best year since 2009.

    It’s “hard to buy when a market goes to new all-time highs,” said Newsom.

    Key reasons for the rally are post-COVID demand for vitamin C, and the worst Florida citrus crop since the 1920s, due to a disease called citrus greening, said James Roemer, publisher of WeatherWealth newsletter.

    However, the lack of Florida hurricanes this fall and a potentially large 2024 orange crop in Brazil, the world’s largest producer, are “potentially bearish longer term,” he said.

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  • Oil prices slip in cautious trading ahead of Fed meeting even as Middle East tensions spike

    Oil prices slip in cautious trading ahead of Fed meeting even as Middle East tensions spike

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    In an aerial view, the Valero Houston refinery seen on August 28, 2023 in Houston, Texas.

    Brandon Bell | Getty Images

    Oil prices dipped even after Israel sent ground forces into the Gaza Strip, raising tensions in the Middle East, as investors closely monitor the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary policy meeting later this week.

    Global benchmark Brent was down 1.06% at $89.52 per barrel. The U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures last declined 1.16% to $84.55 per barrel.

    “I think the market had priced in the incursion on Friday and tonight is more ‘sell the fact,’” Bob McNally, president of Rapidan Energy Group, told CNBC via email. He said the ground operations were “limited so far” and noted other macroeconomic concerns.

    The Fed is expected to leave rates unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, after the U.S. economy grew faster than expected at a 4.9% annual pace in the third quarter.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during a Saturday press conference that Israel has entered its second phase of the war, in what he expects will be “long and difficult” as the country expands its ground operations in the strip.

    Oil prices surged late Friday, with Brent jumping above $90 per barrel as Israel said its troops were ‘increasing the ground operation’ in Gaza as it seeks to eradicate the militant group Hamas.

    “While a major oil supply disruption is not our base case, the oil market last week became a little too complacent about the likelihood of a major Israeli ground incursion in Gaza, and the risk of a wider regional war,” McNally continued.

    The escalation of the war raises the risk around supply disruptions that have been hanging over the market since Hamas’s attack.

    Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Research

    Markets are likely to add an additional war-risk premium given the latest developments.

    More risk premium may be factored into the price of crude oil this week, McNally forecasts. ANZ echoed similar projections.

    “The escalation of the war raises the risk around supply disruptions that have been hanging over the market since Hamas’s attack,” ANZ wrote in a daily note on Monday.

    While U.S. crude futures were up only 3.3% since Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, the potential for a broader conflict to evolve is keeping markets on edge, the bank continued.

    While both Israel and the Palestinian territories are not major oil players, the conflict sits in a wider key oil producing region, raising concerns the war could widen beyond Gaza. On Sunday, U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the U.S. sees an “elevated risk” of the conflict spilling over to other parts in the Middle East region.

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    Oil prices year-to-date

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  • Oil falls, markets hold steady as Israel launches Gaza ground offensive

    Oil falls, markets hold steady as Israel launches Gaza ground offensive

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    Oil futures dropped Sunday night as markets saw a calm opening following Israel’s launch of a ground offensive in Gaza that drew implied threats from Iran amid market fears of a wider conflict that could disrupt global crude supplies.

    Oil declined as Israel “seems to be approaching the situation with caution, which has brought a sense of relief that the worst-case scenarios may not materialize,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, in a note.

    Innes, however, said investors should remember “this is likely to be a long, drawn-out affair with many false dawns.”

    West Texas Intermediate crude for December delivery
    CL00,
    -1.51%

    CL.1,
    -1.51%

    CLZ23,
    -1.51%

    fell 93 cents, or 1%, to $84.61 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Sunday night. December Brent crude
    BRNZ23,
    -1.34%
    ,
    the global benchmark, was off $1, or 1.1%, at $89.48 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, dipping back below the $90-a-barrel threshold.

    Oil futures jumped nearly 3% on Friday, but suffered weekly declines, eroding the modest risk premium priced into the market.

    Read: 4 reasons why oil prices have only seen a modest Middle East risk premium

    Israeli solders had moved at least two miles deep into the Gaza Strip as of Sunday, the Wall Street Journal reported, after beginning a delayed ground incursion into the enclave aimed at routing Hamas following its Oct, 7 attack on southern Israel that left more than 1,400 dead and saw more than 200 Israelis taken hostage.

    A sustained bombardment of the densely populated Gaza Strip by Israel has resulted in more than 8,000 casualties, according to Palestinian authorities. Israel has been under pressure by the U.S. and others to minimize civilian casualties.

    U.S. stock-index futures ticked higher, with S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.32%

    up 0.3%, while futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.20%

    added 68 points, or 0.2%.

    The biggest worry among investors is a conflict that sees Iran become more directly involved. Iranian crude exports have rebounded from lows seen after the Trump administration withdrew the U.S. from a nuclear accord with Tehran and reimposed sanctions in 2018.

    A renewed crackdown on Iran could take up to 1 million barrels a day of crude off the market, while a spiraling conflict could see Tehran threaten transportation chokepoints, particularly the Strait of Hormuz, or otherwise attack infrastructure in the region, while driving up a fear premium.

    Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi, in a post on X written in English, said Saturday that Israel had “crossed the red lines, which may force everyone to take action.”

    U.S. warplanes on Friday struck two locations in eastern Syria, which the Pentagon said were linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps, following a string of attacks on U.S. air bases in the region that started last week.

    U.S. stocks are poised to book another round of monthly losses as October draws to an end, though pressure has been attributed largely to a surge in Treasury yields. The S&P 500
    SPX
    last week joined the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    in correction territory, while the Dow
    DJIA
    is down more than 2% year to date.

    The rise in yields, which move opposite price, has come as U.S. government debt has failed to attract its usual haven-related buying amid rising Mideast tensions.

    See: Israel-Hamas war sees investors shun most traditional havens, except for these two

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