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						Seeing the bigger picture: oil price slump is part of 
						broader Asian pullback
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		 [November 26, 2018]   
		By Henning Gloystein 
 SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The steep plunge in 
		crude futures in the last few weeks was triggered by a nascent glut as 
		supply-growth started to outpace demand, but it was also part of a 
		broader pullback from risky emerging market assets such as Asian 
		currencies and stocks.
 
 Those assets had done well in recent years, boosted by economic growth 
		in nations such as China, India and Indonesia.
 
 But bulging debt across many Asian economies, tightening U.S. fiscal 
		policy and the Sino-U.S. trade war have driven investors to vote with 
		their feet, pulling their money out of assets such as oil or Asian 
		stocks and instead turning to safe-havens like the U.S. dollar.
 
 As part of that shift, oil markets have lost a third of their value 
		since early October <LCoc1><CLc1>.
 
 "Anything denominated against the USD is under pressure right now," said 
		Gregg McKenna, an independent cross-asset market analyst based in 
		Australia.
 
 (GRAPHIC: Oil vs Dollar - https://tmsnrt.rs/2R8L4ih)
 
 Billions of dollars have been pulled out of crude futures.
 
		 
		
 "Traders reported capitulation and liquidation," ANZ bank said in a note 
		on Monday.
 
 It added that net long positions for crude futures, which would profit 
		from increasing oil prices, "were reported to be cut to their lowest 
		level in three years".
 
 And traders seem to be preparing for further falls.
 
 Managed short positions in front-month U.S. crude oil futures <CLc1>, 
		which would profit from further price declines, have surged from record 
		lows of around 14,100 lots of 1,000 barrels each in July, to almost 
		110,000 lots by mid-November, exchange trade data showed. That is the 
		highest number of short positions since October 2017.
 
 (GRAPHIC: U.S. crude oil price & short positions - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Rjq7Sc)
 
 What's more, the number of puts - which give a trader the option though 
		not obligation to sell a financial instrument at a certain price - in 
		February Brent crude oil futures at $55 <LCO5500N9> and $50 per barrel 
		<LCO5000N9> has surged to record levels since October.
 
 Equally, the price to buy such an option has jumped as demand for them 
		has increased.
 
		
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			Ships off the southern coast of Singapore seen on March 2, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Edgar Su 
            
			 
(GRAPHIC: Brent put options - https://tmsnrt.rs/2R9W1jK)
 BROAD DOWNTURN
 
 The same pessimism can be seen in broader Asian markets.
 
"2018 clearly marked the end of the 10-year Asia credit bull market due to 
tightening financial conditions in Asia (especially China)," Morgan Stanley said 
in a note released on Sunday.
 "We don't think that we are at the bottom of the cycle yet," the U.S. bank said.
 
 Its peer J.P. Morgan said on Friday that the "slide in U.S. and global equity 
markets shifts the balance of risks more clearly to the downside".
 
 J.P. Morgan said the parallel slump in equities and commodities, including crude 
oil and industrial raw materials like iron ore and metals, was concerning.
 
 ANZ bank said "steel futures in China posted their fourth weekly decline as 
investors become increasingly worried about weak economic growth".[O/R]
 
(GRAPHIC: Oil prices vs Asian stock market - https://tmsnrt.rs/2R8dwku)
 Beyond financial markets, there are also signs of a downturn in global trade.
 
 More than 90 percent of all products are taken from producer to consumer by 
ship.
 
 Here, rates for containers <CHT-IDX-HARPX>, which carry finished goods, and 
rates for dry-bulk vessels carrying raw materials like coal or iron ore <.BADI>, 
have slumped by 26.4 percent and 38.35 percent respectively from their 2018 
highs as shipping stalls amid the economic headwinds.
 
 "Slowing U.S. growth would dampen demand for exports from Asia ... possibly 
weighing on freight," Singapore shipping brokerage Eastport said on Monday.
 
 (GRAPHIC: Shipping rates have declined since August 2018 - https://tmsnrt.rs/2RdZv4G)
 
 (Reporting by Henning Gloystein; Additional reporting by Gavin Maguire; Editing 
by Joseph Radford)
 
				 
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