Friday, December 12, 2014

Crude Oil, and the Collateral Damage

Three months back, I was having a casual discussion with my friend based out of Singapore who coincidentally have some commodity traders as friends. Though, conversation was not focused on any particular topic, we eventually ended up discussing oil for a while and he mentioned that one of his friend was mentioning about fall in crude prices due to huge shale and oil discoveries in US. This was quite logical as US is the biggest consumer of oil and having her own reserves means, less dependence on OPEC (Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries). I think, it aligns with the demand and supply theory.

I don't think I have imagined that fall will be this steep, a forty percent decline within three months. I would have shorted it, rather shorted a refinery stock like Reliance or ONGC given that I had grasped the collateral damage this fall is carrying. It's quite interesting to read into these events, and eventually it gets complicated when you dig more. Is it just a pure demand play?

The story started with US shale and oil reserves, and thus, less dependence on the oil producing nations. Oil in US is made available at lesser prices per barrel, the last I read was sub $60/barrel whereas Brent hovering at $100/barrel. The prices will converge as US not dependent on this expensive oil. Therefore, there is more supply and less demand. To balance out the prices, balance the supply as per the demand. This sounds simple logic, however it is not. OPEC decided not to cut production which led to price correction. There were some news making bold headings that all this shit is rigged. Oil producers are now trying to eliminate the low cost small shale producers. It's easy, you make oil cheaper than shale or the crude produced in the US. Small players may not be able to survive for long.

OPEC is like a cartel, and normally supply is balanced out by cutting or increasing oil production, and no production cuts have been announced. There are some forecast reports which indicated less demand in 2015. This is another area of debate, whether OPEC can cut the production or not. 

Declining oil prices is like a bonus for the oil importing nations like India. Petrol prices are down by INR 13 per litre, and there is a similar but lesser impact on the diesel prices as the prices were highly subsidised.  Indian government used this opportunity to free up the diesel prices. This is going to have a cascading impact on inflation, fiscal, and on industries which use crude as raw material e.g. Paint, tyre etc. Stock prices of some the companies are zooming in the expectation that companies will show higher margins due to decline in input costs. Well, this is one side of the story. Refiners are beaten down with bears taking over full control. The reasons are multiple, a) less oil supply means less refining volumes reducing profits b) large refineries which can process very large quantities of crude will not be fully utilized, thus reducing margins as these still need to be maintained c) oil and gas producing companies may not be able to make any positive cash flows if the their cost of production is higher than the market rate making the businesses loss making and companies will have difficulties in servicing debt which may have a cascading impact on banks. Think about the inventories built at $90 per barrel and with crude down to $65 per barrel, who is going to take that loss.

There will indeed an impact on the alternative green fuel theory like CNG, PNG. I believe business are more driven by Math rather carbon, though, you can have some incentives through carbon trading. On a positive side, less demand for bio fuels will bring down the commodity prices giving more power to the consumption story. It totally depends on how long the low oil prices stay.

In a trade, someone loss is someone's gain. Eventually, end consumer is going to save and spend more which means consumption will rise and thus, more demand. The whole cycle will reverse, when and how sooner, perhaps, no one knows.

vA

Reliance and ONGC are the listed companies on the Indian leading stock exchanges. These conglomerates are into multiple businesses including refining, crude and gas producing businesses.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Bonus Stripping

Bonus stripping has existed for years, and intelligent investors have taken full advantage of this. To make it clear, this is subject to prevailing tax laws of the country or region. 

I am not going to take you through what's bonus stripping, and how you can benefit from the same. There were numerous articles in the newspapers couple of days back explaining it to the lowest possible details. I like the below one: 

http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2014-10-28/news/55521336_1_capital-gains-tax-bonus-shares-infosys-shares

This explains why the prices usually start rising on exchanges when a company declares a bonus share, and usually falls when the event is over. Infosys is the good example which rose to 4300 levels from 3500 levels in the span of two months, and now showing signs of weakness. 

I think, it's a good strategy to deploy if you have accumulated short terms gains or capital gains from property in the current financial year. I too have used it to lower some short term tax gains as I am okay holding Infosys for another year. It could be risky at times, therefore, be watchful of the company declaring bonus. 

Stock splitting is different, you can't have the same advantage as that of bonus stripping. The cost of acquisition also reduced by the same proportion. For example, if you have purchased SBI for 3000/share before the split (split ratio 1:10), your acquisition price after the split will be taken as 300/share to calculate the capital gains. Considering the current price of 319 on 05 Dec 2014, you are actually making a gain of INR 1900 if you have purchased 10 shares before the stock split (Your acquisition price taken as 300/share)

Stay Invested
vA

Don't believe, it's been a decade

It has changed a lot in the perspective how I used to do trading or investing. I do remember my first trade on National Stock Exchange using the web platform on Indraprastha Gas Limited (less than 50 shares, trading sub 80 prices). Believe it or not, I had some insider information about the amount of dividend that the company was going to declare. It was just Rupees 1.5, and I don't remember whether I entered into this trade just for the dividend or something else. I had no idea at that time on the pricing movement relative to dividend or that you don't have to pay any tax on this income.

After ten years, it has changed a lot. Dividend is an important factor in my stock selection criteria, and I know how stock prices react during the dividend record dates, both pre-event and post-event. Well, it's been a long journey, be it volumes or the transaction amount or the instruments I now currently use day to day with ease and without any fear. 

Something which hasn't changed much, that all this shit is rigged. A lot of insider information leaked out to the privileged few and it's very difficult to make money with the public information if you are doing trading. A recent example should be of Oil. Oil is falling and the OPEC is not cutting production which means that oil is going to fall further. There was an article in Bloomberg saying that this is their deliberate attempt to wipe out the small shale gas producers. Nobody knows what's rigging at higher levels. Everybody knows this, and therefore, equity investments come with a disclaimer of risk.

Stay Invested!!
vA