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WTI Crude Slides Back Into Red For 2016 As The Fed And Oil Remain On Unsustainable Paths

WTI Crude Slides Back Into Red For 2016 As The Fed And Oil Remain On Unsustainable Paths

Oil prices have increased 50 percent since the lows exhibited earlier this year, a rise that is largely linked to the positive market reaction to the OPEC output freeze.

But WTI Crude has given up all its early morning "see oil is fixed" gains in a hurry as once again the algo ramps give way to the realization that, as OilPrice's Leonard Brecken notes, comes even as for all intents and purposes OPEC has nearly reached its production limits and Iran still plans in increasing output.

Citadel Down 8% In 2016 Due To Collapsing Liquidity, Forced Liquidations

Citadel Down 8% In 2016 Due To Collapsing Liquidity, Forced Liquidations

One month ago we wrote that as a result of the vicious gyrations in the market, even one of the top performing poster children of successful hedge fund investing, one which had so far avoided the P&L misery shared by many of its peers (mostly due to its "tactical trading" or HFT frontrunning group) Ken Griffen's Citadel had been quietly unwinding its Surveyor Capital multi-manager long/short (not, as some mistaken assume "market neutral") strategy.

How To Trade The Stock Market According To Jim Cramer

How To Trade The Stock Market According To Jim Cramer

"We're in a bear market — we can't get away from it," warned CNBC's Jim Cramer on February 5th, exclaiming that "the stock market is not working."

 

In his own words...

http://player.cnbc.com/p/gZWlPC/cnbc_global

 

But a month later - following a 13%, almost irrepressible ramp in stocks - Cramer has changed his tune, explaining last night that "signs of a massive rally could be coming."

 

Hartnett: "This Is The World's Most Painful Chart"

Hartnett: "This Is The World's Most Painful Chart"

The 2016 market can be described as a sequential bursting of pain trades: first it was the momentum trade; then it was the whipsawed action in Treasurys where record shorts were burned on the way up, and then longs screamed when central banks unleashed the latest coordinated attempt at reflation, then it was the FX whipsaws where central bank easing led to the opposite reaction in the underlying currencies (as noted earlier), then the sudden trapdoor under the USD which many had expected would continue rising, then it was the healthcare sector where hedge fund hotels got crushed in the late

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