Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › OIL – 20$ – Can it happen, how to short oil
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February 27, 2008 at 6:11 PM #161684February 27, 2008 at 6:57 PM #161321Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipant
In my newsletter release at the beg of Feb for January, I stated to look for a large upmove in Oil due to the commercials shifting to a heavy long position right at the ideal time for a seasonal low.
The tendency for a rally in Crude starting in Feb is one of the strongest and most consistent seasonal patterns that exists. When you couple that with the real pros the commercials being heavily long, you had about as good a setup for a rally as you are ever going to get.
If oil at a 100 is a surprise, you just need to learn what really moves markets, and it is not emotional opinions. Many here are heavily focused on fundamentals in RE, so why not be similarly focused on fundamentals in other asset classes?
February 27, 2008 at 6:57 PM #161617Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantIn my newsletter release at the beg of Feb for January, I stated to look for a large upmove in Oil due to the commercials shifting to a heavy long position right at the ideal time for a seasonal low.
The tendency for a rally in Crude starting in Feb is one of the strongest and most consistent seasonal patterns that exists. When you couple that with the real pros the commercials being heavily long, you had about as good a setup for a rally as you are ever going to get.
If oil at a 100 is a surprise, you just need to learn what really moves markets, and it is not emotional opinions. Many here are heavily focused on fundamentals in RE, so why not be similarly focused on fundamentals in other asset classes?
February 27, 2008 at 6:57 PM #161633Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantIn my newsletter release at the beg of Feb for January, I stated to look for a large upmove in Oil due to the commercials shifting to a heavy long position right at the ideal time for a seasonal low.
The tendency for a rally in Crude starting in Feb is one of the strongest and most consistent seasonal patterns that exists. When you couple that with the real pros the commercials being heavily long, you had about as good a setup for a rally as you are ever going to get.
If oil at a 100 is a surprise, you just need to learn what really moves markets, and it is not emotional opinions. Many here are heavily focused on fundamentals in RE, so why not be similarly focused on fundamentals in other asset classes?
February 27, 2008 at 6:57 PM #161650Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantIn my newsletter release at the beg of Feb for January, I stated to look for a large upmove in Oil due to the commercials shifting to a heavy long position right at the ideal time for a seasonal low.
The tendency for a rally in Crude starting in Feb is one of the strongest and most consistent seasonal patterns that exists. When you couple that with the real pros the commercials being heavily long, you had about as good a setup for a rally as you are ever going to get.
If oil at a 100 is a surprise, you just need to learn what really moves markets, and it is not emotional opinions. Many here are heavily focused on fundamentals in RE, so why not be similarly focused on fundamentals in other asset classes?
February 27, 2008 at 6:57 PM #161719Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantIn my newsletter release at the beg of Feb for January, I stated to look for a large upmove in Oil due to the commercials shifting to a heavy long position right at the ideal time for a seasonal low.
The tendency for a rally in Crude starting in Feb is one of the strongest and most consistent seasonal patterns that exists. When you couple that with the real pros the commercials being heavily long, you had about as good a setup for a rally as you are ever going to get.
If oil at a 100 is a surprise, you just need to learn what really moves markets, and it is not emotional opinions. Many here are heavily focused on fundamentals in RE, so why not be similarly focused on fundamentals in other asset classes?
February 27, 2008 at 7:10 PM #161331kewpParticipantEuropeans pay an arm and a leg for gas….I guess we’re getting there ourselves.
If we adopted European mileage standards our dependence on foreign oil would literally end overnight.
February 27, 2008 at 7:10 PM #161626kewpParticipantEuropeans pay an arm and a leg for gas….I guess we’re getting there ourselves.
If we adopted European mileage standards our dependence on foreign oil would literally end overnight.
February 27, 2008 at 7:10 PM #161642kewpParticipantEuropeans pay an arm and a leg for gas….I guess we’re getting there ourselves.
If we adopted European mileage standards our dependence on foreign oil would literally end overnight.
February 27, 2008 at 7:10 PM #161660kewpParticipantEuropeans pay an arm and a leg for gas….I guess we’re getting there ourselves.
If we adopted European mileage standards our dependence on foreign oil would literally end overnight.
February 27, 2008 at 7:10 PM #161729kewpParticipantEuropeans pay an arm and a leg for gas….I guess we’re getting there ourselves.
If we adopted European mileage standards our dependence on foreign oil would literally end overnight.
February 27, 2008 at 9:13 PM #161392paramountParticipantBased on the model, by the time gas hits $4 on average we will have probably already seen $4.10 (or something close to that).
The models fluctuates around specific prices – sort of like a low frequency sine wave trending upward.
February 27, 2008 at 9:13 PM #161688paramountParticipantBased on the model, by the time gas hits $4 on average we will have probably already seen $4.10 (or something close to that).
The models fluctuates around specific prices – sort of like a low frequency sine wave trending upward.
February 27, 2008 at 9:13 PM #161702paramountParticipantBased on the model, by the time gas hits $4 on average we will have probably already seen $4.10 (or something close to that).
The models fluctuates around specific prices – sort of like a low frequency sine wave trending upward.
February 27, 2008 at 9:13 PM #161721paramountParticipantBased on the model, by the time gas hits $4 on average we will have probably already seen $4.10 (or something close to that).
The models fluctuates around specific prices – sort of like a low frequency sine wave trending upward.
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