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Here Are The Three Choices Facing OPEC Next Week

Here Are The Three Choices Facing OPEC Next Week

The last time OPEC (and Non-OPEC) member nations sat down to attempt a coordinated increase in oil prices by cutting production they succeeded... for about three months. Every since then, oil has been on a gradual declining path, boosted by a surge in US shale output and declining global demand, with WTI recently even sliding sliding below OPEC's implicit price floor of $50/barrel. Which is why on May 25, after the failure of the first 6 month production cut, the same nations will try the same exercise, this time looking to cut output for 9 months, and hoping for a different outcome.

BofA Warns Of "Tech Mania" Risk: Sees Highest Tech Inflows Since Dot Com Bubble

BofA Warns Of "Tech Mania" Risk: Sees Highest Tech Inflows Since Dot Com Bubble

As one would expect, in a week that saw the biggest one-day drop in US equities since last September, retail investors bailed on US stocks resulting in what BofA dubbed "risk-off flows" as $1.6 billion was pulled from global equities - with active managers once again getting the short end of the stick, with $4.3 billion in outflows from mutual funds, largest in 7 weeks while another $2.7 billion flowed  into ETFs - offset by $9.7 billion inflows to bonds and $0.2 billion to gold.

Will The $40 Billion Saudi Infrastructure Gift Influence Trump?

Will The $40 Billion Saudi Infrastructure Gift Influence Trump?

Authored by Zainab Calcuttawala via OilPrice.com,

It’s “Infrastructure Week” in Washington, and foreign powers are taking note.

Ahead of President Donald Trump’s upcoming visit to the Middle East, Saudi Arabia has promised to make $40 billion of its sovereign wealth fund available to the United States to bankroll part of the roughly $1 trillion in infrastructure improvements that Trump promised on the campaign trail.

Chinese Phone Giant Admits To "Unprecedented Degree" Of Falsified Revenue

Chinese Phone Giant Admits To "Unprecedented Degree" Of Falsified Revenue

Fabricating data in China, it turns out, is not only a favorite government pastime. Publicly traded, if state-owned, phone giant Unicom Group fabricated financials relating to 1.8 billion yuan ($261 billion) in revenue over a five-year period from 2012 to 2016 - or as the company admitted, it engaged in an "unprecedented degree of falsified revenue."  This is China we are talking about, where the definition of "unprecedented" is very different from the US.

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