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18 Sep 2023

Crude oil prices are booming and is now up 34.5% since late June BUT THIS IS NOT JUST A SUPPLY STORY - WATCH OUT DEMAND AS WELL!!!

The OPEC+ (Saudi/Russian) production cuts are the easy culprit to blame for higher prices. They do matter. But another equally important factor is booming demand. Bloomberg uses Department of Energy data for production, imports, and inventory changes to "input" the weekly demand for crude oil. Below is a five-week average to smooth the noise. Demand is through the roof! This suggests the economy is okay (aka "no landing") as there are few if any, signs of "demand destruction." The combo OPEC+ cutting back + demand booming = 34.5% crude oil rally in 10 weeks... Is there more to come? Source: Jim Bianco

18 Sep 2023

McKinsey annual State of artificial intelligence survey is here, and the results confirm 2023 is all about generative AI:

by McKinsey & co

13 Sep 2023

Concerns over Italy's ability to cut the budget deficit have increased Italy's 10y risk spread over German bunds

The risk spread may expand more if the ECB raises rates 25bps on Thursday. As highlighted by HolgerZ, Italian banks' €380bn of BTPs are central to the €1.6tn so-called sovereign "doom loop." Source: Bloomberg, HolgerZ

8 Sep 2023

This is an AI generated chart

Source: Murilo Pereira

5 Sep 2023

$862bn in deposits have left the banks since the Fed began to raise interest rates

Source: Apollo, TME

4 Sep 2023

Is the market too complacent? retail investor flows are exceeding 2021 highs

Source: Topdown charts, vanda research via FT

4 Sep 2023

Crude Oil $100 calls over the next year have seen their open interest rise to 120,000 as of Thursday. $90 and $100 calls are also the 2 most held strikes over the next 12 months

Source: Barchart, Bloomberg

31 Aug 2023

The "maddest macro chart I have seen for many years." by Albert Edwards (SocGen)

"The US corporate sector is a massive net borrower. Normally when interest rates rise, so too do net debt payments, squeezing profit margins and slowing the economy. BUT NOT THIS TIME. Corporate net interest payments have instead collapsed. What on earth is going on?" asked Edwards "This chart not only explain the resilience of corporate profits, but is a key reason why this recession has been delayed – especially as companies in aggregate are now a net beneficiary of higher rates (NB: this is mainly explained by mega-caps as most of the other companies are in big trouble). Source: SocGen, www.zerohedge.com

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