The Giant GUSHing Sound

The following originally appeared on the Direxion Xchange blog.

OPEC announced that it would cut oil production by 1.2 million barrels per day to 32.5 million. This is the cartel’s first cut in eight years and will take place by January. The agreement exempted Nigeria and Libya, but included Iraq, and did allow Iran to raise its output as it recovers from US sanctions. In addition to OPEC, Russia also agreed to cut output.

Over the past two years, OPEC countries’ profits have dropped due to higher supply and lower demand. Wealthier members like Saudi Arabia have been able weather the storm. But the less wealthy, like Venezuela and Nigeria have struggled. OPEC has kept production levels stable because Saudi Arabia and Iran wanted to keep market share. But prices continued to drop – until last week’s cut.

The impact was almost instantaneous, as WTI crude oil blasted up 8.6%, nearly breaking $50, and energy stocks skyrocketed. Oil and energy-related stocks rallied.

The market was somewhat prepared, as the general consensus among traders was 50/50 as to whether the OPEC members would come to an agreement on the supply cuts.

Energy stocks, especially those of oil & gas exploration & production companies reacted sharply.

The Daily S&P Oil & Gas Exp. & Prod. Bull 3x Shares GUSH, and The Daily S&P Oil & Gas Exp. & Prod. Bear 3x Shares DRIP reacted sharply to the OPEC announcement.

Can OPEC countries trust each other? 

The big question is whether individual OPEC countries can trust each other. As any undergraduate economics student knows, the incentive to cheat for a cartel member is commensurate with the rise in price. The strength of the deal will depend on the commitment of all its members. So even though the back and forth headlines regarding OPEC policy that we’ve experienced since 2014 may seem to have come to an end, the truth is they probably haven’t.  

As the weeks and months unfold, and the President-elect and the GOP has to commit to articulating and passing real policy, traders will have to find ways to find opportunity in the uncertainty. Now more than ever, direction matters.

Related Funds:

GUSH –Daily S&P Oil & Gas Exp. & Prod. Bull 3x Shares 

DRIP – Daily S&P Oil & Gas Exp. & Prod. Bear 3x Shares 

ERX – Daily Energy Bull 3x Shares 

ERY – Daily Energy Bear 3x Shares 

 

Performance (as of 9/30/2016)

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Direxion Shares Risks – An investment in the ETFs involve risk, including the possible loss of principal. The ETFs are non-diversified and include risks associated with concentration that results from the Funds’ investments in a particular industry, sector, or geography which can increase volatility. The use of derivatives such as futures contracts, forward contracts, options and swaps are subject to market risks that may cause their price to fluctuate over time. The Funds do not attempt to, and should not be expected to, provide returns which are a multiple of the return of the Index for periods other than a single day. For other risks including Correlation, Leverage, Compounding, Market Volatility, specific risks regarding S&P Oil Services securities, and for the Direxion Daily S&P Oil & Gas Exp. & Prod. Bear 3x Shares risks related to shorting. Please see the summary and full prospectuses for a more complete description of these and other risks of each Fund.

 
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