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How Much Longer Can Junk Bonds Ignore Tumbling Crude Oil? UBS Has The Answer

How Much Longer Can Junk Bonds Ignore Tumbling Crude Oil? UBS Has The Answer

One month ago, Goldman spotted a curious divergence in the energy sector: whereas in 2015 and 2016, the energy-linked asset class that had the highest beta to crude and was the most impacted as a result of the plunge in oil prices, was debt and specifically junk bonds while equities were relatively resilient to crashing crude prices, in 2017 this relationship had flipped, and - as of mid-May - despite the latest tumble in oil prices, HY Energy credits had returned 2.3% vs. 3.3% for the broader HY index, while Energy equities were down a whopping 9.6%.

Macquarie Warns OPEC Deal To Collapse In 2018

Macquarie Warns OPEC Deal To Collapse In 2018

Authored by Tsvetana Paraskova via OilPrice.com,

OPEC’s production cut deal is unlikely to survive beyond its current deadline in March 2018, with the agreement seen falling apart towards the middle of next year, in which case a huge amount of extra oil would hit the market, Ian Reid, head of European oil and gas research at Macquarie, told CNBC on Thursday.

OPEC’s deal has not had the cartel’s desired effect on the markets, neither in terms of oil prices nor in drawing down the global glut.

Is There Still Hope For Higher Oil Prices?

Is There Still Hope For Higher Oil Prices?

Authored by Nick Cunningham via OilPrice.com,

Oil prices have cratered in recent weeks, dipping to their lowest levels in more than seven months and any sense of optimism has almost entirely disappeared. All signs point to a period of “lower for longer” for oil prices, a refrain that is all too familiar to those in the industry.

WTI dipped below $44 per barrel on Tuesday, and the bearish indicators are starting to pile up.

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