Kevin Kerr on CNN tonight 11pm Sunday

August 31st, 2008

Check out this rig map form Oil drum….Awesome map…What scares me most? LOOP terminal dead center. If this facility takes a direct hit all bets are off. The look at all the refineries in the firing line…Check out my blog www.kerrtrade.com

Well we are seeing oil rally 150 points right now and gold and silver are also up solidly. It looks as though Gustav will hit as a category 4, intense winds reports from rigs and platforms are coming in. Tune in tonight at 11pm est to CNN network (not headline news)…Kevin will discuss the impact on energy prices and infrastructure with Rick Sanchez. We will continue to monitor the situation closely here at www.kerrtrade.com and www.kerralert.com

Don’t count on lower gas prices anytime soon!

August 31st, 2008

Make no mistake, these are killer storms! I am mostly monitoring for any damage to the L.O.O.P. (Louisiana Offshore Oil Platform) of one of those terminals is damaged, all bets are off. And look at all these facilities right in the path of destruction!

Oil starts trading this evening for the electronic session and will shut down again for the Labor Day holiday…Can you say volatility!

Check back here later for my video blog on the situation and any updates….Stay safe!

From Matt Simmons (Twilight in the Desert author and former energy advisor to George W Bush): “LOOP (Louisiana Offshore Oil Platform) is the only facility in the Gulf to unload VLCC tankers which carry over 2 million barrels of crude. They can in theory be unloaded onto smaller tankers that can make it into the Gulf Coast ports but this is very lengthy timing and the spare capacity of these smaller tankers is slim.”

We get about 1.2 million b/d +/- 10% of crude imports through Loop. However, they also have upwards of 54 million barrels of storage and will be pumping to their customers for quite some time with or without new tankers, presuming the refineries are open. When/if the SPR gets going, it can release up to 4 million barrels a day.
And this note from Black Bear of Jurojinweekly.com

“My take: A lot of the oil infrastructure in Energy Alley has been reinforced since Katrina/Rita. The post-Katrina rig protection modifications will soon be tested. If the infrastructure is damaged, that could affect your prices at the pump. A note: After Katrina, people stopped driving and stayed home to watch New Orleans disaster-porn on the TV, significantly reducing gasoline demand and sending prices lower. That’s right – hurricanes can drive prices down as well as up. So I guess my “forecast” is for more volatility.”

Black Bear

Maybe, but damage to oil terminals and refineries is really the worry here…Platforms not so much. Thanks Black Bear!

Gustav swells to dangerous Cat 4 storm off Cuba

August 30th, 2008

And Hannah isn’t far behind and building strength.

I will be monitoring the situation closely and will be talking to my sources in Louisiana and Texas all weekend. Also, I am monitoring Hannah and this storm could most certainly hit Florida hard, the citrus industry could be in big trouble.

Be sure to check back Sunday and Monday for my detailed updates as news of damage comes in. REMINDER. The energy markets and I believe the metals too, will open for trading Sunday night electronically, but will not be open Monday!

Many people do not know this, BE AWARE and be cautious if trading Sunday night like me! Our prayers are with everyone in the region, BE SAFE, EVACUATE!

Turning Off the Spigot!

August 29th, 2008

Time to fire up the stoves in Estonia….It could be a long cold Winter! As many of you who have followed me for years know I also live in Estonia, and we will be going there on Sept 15th for about a month. 2 years ago we remember in January when Russia switched off the nat-gas to Ukraine and in turn to the rest Europe… The crisis was resolved once Europe got spooked, but this year may not be as easy. So I am thankful we use wood burning stoves!

We have about 4 of these stoves on each floor of our house and let me tell you it may sound like hillbilly living but it is actually very effective and a hell of a lot cheaper than my $2000 a month heating oil bills here.

Winter will be here before you know it and as someone who grew up in Minnesota, let me tell you Estonia makes Minneapolis feel like Miami in January. These stoves keep us toasty warm in our big house, no worries…We even cook with it…. Yes cook on a wood burning stove. We also have a microwave too and other things but we use the wood stove all the time.
Morning... Pancakes anyone!

Morning! Pancakes anyone!

Anyway, I will be reporting form Estonia and even form Russia when I go to Ivangorod on the border. I will be bringing you new video and photos form the shale mines, the border and interviews with others. It is a scary time for all of Eastern Europe and now even Western Europe….Just read the story below. Don’t think it will happen? Well I can tell you it can and will!

Russia may cut off oil flow to the West

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 10:39am BST 29/08/2008

Fears are mounting that Russia may restrict oil deliveries to Western Europe over coming days, in response to the threat of EU sanctions and Nato naval actions in the Black Sea.

Any such move would be a dramatic escalation of the Georgia crisis and play havoc with the oil markets.

Reports have begun to circulate in Moscow that Russian oil companies are under orders from the Kremlin to prepare for a supply cut to Germany and Poland through the Druzhba (Friendship) pipeline. It is believed that executives from lead-producer LUKoil have been put on weekend alert.

“They have been told to be ready to cut off supplies as soon as Monday,” claimed a high-level business source, speaking to The Daily Telegraph. Any move would be timed to coincide with an emergency EU summit in Brussels, where possible sanctions against Russia are on the agenda.

Storm of Profits? A day in the life of NY media with Kevin Kerr!

August 28th, 2008

Then checkout Kevin on BNN in Canada here!

http://watch.bnn.ca/clip86569#clip86569

Make way for Hannah , MeanWhile a Wild Day in the Pits as Gustav Arrives

August 28th, 2008

Gustav is looking ugly but Hannah may be even worse, especially for Florida!

accuweathercom-2-weather-news-headlines-weather-news
accuweathercom-weather-news-headlines-weather-news

This just in from Bloomberg…

Rigs Evacuated

“Several thousand” of the almost 20,000 workers on offshore platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, about a quarter of whom are needed to maintain production, were to be evacuated, Ted Falgout, director of Port Fourchon in Louisiana, said in an interview yesterday. The port is a staging area for rig workers.

“There’s going to be disruption in oil production next week in the Gulf of Mexico, especially the rigs off Louisiana,” AccuWeather’s Walker said. “Even in Texas they’re going to have to take protective measures.”

Crude oil for October delivery rose as much as $1.10, or 0.9 percent, to $119.25 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It traded at $118.80 at 10:17 a.m. London time.

U.S. oil and gas platforms and pipelines are most concentrated in the waters south of Louisiana and east of Texas. Offshore fields in the Gulf accounted for 26 percent of total U.S. crude production and 12 percent of natural gas output in April, according to the U.S. Energy Department.”

Now here are some updated comments form farmers on AG web. It underscores the dry conditions I have been talking about.

“Here’s a sampling of what some folks are saying:

8/27 – Mclean, Livingston counties, Illinois: Very dry! Only .3 rain in august. Beans are turning prematurely and the double crop beans are actually dying. Corn is fired all the way up and ears hanging down. We are getting ready to put this one away and look forward to sky high inputs for 2009. Corn is looking to be a little below average and beans are really suffering-they will be well below average. Neighbors are beginning to wonder what happened to elite germplasm seed that could take the stress?

8/27 – Southwest Ontario: What a year, to put it into short sentence, this is a record year for the books and I hope I’ll never see it again! June was the wettest month on record, July was next to the driest month on record, and Aug will be going down as the driest month on record. The crops? I need not have to expand upon it, you know the story……….. :-(

8/27 – South Central Minnesota: Very dry, corn and beans have really shut down in the last week. Lots of beans are drying up on the lighter soil or leaves turning over. Since the crops are 2-3 weeks behind we need rain and warm weather to finish them off. Started corn harvest last year Sept. 12 last year and neighbors did some beans on the 9th. Be lucky to do any in Sept. this year.”

Breaking Sugar News… How Sweet It Is!

August 27th, 2008

From Bloomberg, this just in!

India Buys Raw Sugar for the First Time Since 2006

By Thomas Kutty Abraham

Aug. 27 (Bloomberg) — “Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd., India’s biggest refiner, bought 30,000 metric tons of raw sugar from Brazil, the nation’s first overseas purchase in 2 1/2 years as domestic production declines. “

Kevin’s take on the situation…

Sugar is seeing some serious buying coming in off of this news and the picture for sugar is really coming together. If you haven’t bought those October 2009 calls then you are getting left at the pier. Just like my new silver and cattle trades in Global Commodities Alert .

Don’t have access to GCA? Sure you do… get my latest mailbag complete with my outlook for my former trading services trades and much more all FREE. That’s right you can simply request a copy of my most recent mailbag by going to www.kerralert.com and requesting the update in the box on the upper right of the screen. I hope you will.

Also this morning I got a last minute call to come in and talk about hurricane Gustav as it heads toward the Gulf Coast. I spoke exclusively with my friends s on CNBC’s Squawk Box…. Watch it here!

Trading Block
A check on the markets, with Kevin Kerr, Global Commodities Alert and Kevin Ferry, Cronus Futures Management

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=833647370

OK so we are in the height of storm season, and true to form another one is coming right behind Gustav…keep checking my blog all weekend for updates.

Latrest from AccuWeather.com

“Less than 48 hours ago, Gustav was a tropical low being monitored for potential development. Today, a close eye is being kept on another low. The disturbance currently lies several hundred miles to the northeast of the Leeward Islands. The low remains disorganized with thunderstorms failing to wrap around its center. The low could organize and strengthen in the next couple of days as the system tracks through warm water and wind shear overhead decreases.

Story By AccuWeather.com Meteorologist Kristina Pydynowski

Also this just in form the Baltics…

Associated Press 08.26.08, 1:24 PM ET
TALLINN, ESTONIA -
The government of Estonia is temporarily hosting the Web sites of Georgia’s central bank and Foreign Ministry to try to protect them from cyber attacks, officials said Tuesday.

Georgia has transferred key Web sites to servers in other countries, including Poland and France, after some came under attack following the outbreak of war with Russia, the state-run Estonian Informatics Center said.

“This is a way to help Georgia make their Web pages visible to the world,” said Katrin Pargmae, a spokeswoman for the Estonian center. Estonia is also hosting a Georgian English-language news portal.

Estonia has experience coping with similar attacks: Its government and private sector Web sites were targeted in May 2007, just days after the Baltic state decided to relocate a Soviet war memorial and grave, angering Estonia’s ethnic Russian minority and neighboring Russia.

Got Juice? Gustav Come to Papa!

August 26th, 2008

“Gustav, now a Category 1 hurricane, is strengthening as it approaches Haiti. Many areas already recovering from Fay are in danger of more torrential rain and damaging winds.

The AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center reports that Gustav, upgraded to a hurricane at 2:20 a.m. EDT Tuesday, is approaching Haiti. As of 5 a.m. EDT Tuesday, Gustav is 100 miles south-southeast of Port Au Prince, Haiti and moving to the northwest at 9 mph.”

If your looking at my thoughts on the portfolios of my old newsletters than look no further then the post below this one. Or if you want a complete copy of my new GCA Mailbag for FREE then just go to www.kerralert.com and request it.

Batten down the hatches in Florida here comes Gustav All the best, Kevin

RTA & GRT thoughts on the portfolios, From today’s GCA mailbag!

August 25th, 2008

From today’s Global Commodities Alert Mailbag. Full GCA mailbag is available to anyone at www.kerralert.comm for a limited time only at no charge, just register on the front page!

The below opinions on my positions at my former publications are strictly my opinion and provided solely as a courtesy not as investment advice in any way. I always suggest speaking to your broker or registered professional before making any trading decisions for yourself.

Kevin’s notes regarding RTA & GRT positions:

As I mentioned, for a while, at least until my former trading services hopefully have new editors in place and finally let people know I have left, I will give you my brief thoughts on positions I initiated in my former trading services. I consider it my responsibility and hope it helps. I will send you thoughts on RTA first and then post it to my blog later the same day

Remember these are only suggestions and I highly suggest though that you consult with your broker before taking any action on those positions. These are simply my thoughts and are not endorsed nor approved by Agora Financial or MarketWatch.

Sugar: is finding some resistance at the current levels after a significant run to the upside. Patience is the key word here, and as we head into 2009 I would expect more choppy trade indeed. The weather in Florida certainly didn’t do much good for many of the crops in flooded areas, and sugar was one of them, although impact from that may be small. I would simply hold onto this position and watch and wait. Remember this trade has a lot of time to be right. HOLD

Soybean Oil: Soybean oil and soybeans in general are skyrocketing on a couple of major factors. First, dry weather in the Midwest is now concerning farmers a great deal because this is a key time for soybeans and corn. Second, fears of an early frost are now also playing a role in the rally. Look for more jittery talk to keep the grains well supported as we head into September. Now last week I suggested to buy back the short leg of that spread and that was the right call in my opinion. I believe officially they are not doing that in RTA so it’s really up to you. No matter what you should always discuss the ramifications of any trade change with your broker or financial professional. HOLD

Orange Juice, is seeing a modest bounce on Fay, the storm that seemed to never end. I am more focused on the Steiger Report which is an industry report which indicates a much smaller yield in oranges is expected this year. This market seems way oversold to me. I am glad that I put on January calls rather than November. This position may need the extra time value to take advantage of more weather factors and a rebound. My suggestion is to HOLD.

Gold. No market remains more choppy, besides maybe oil, than gold. Now we are long silver in GCA long term, and I still believe the second half of the gold spread in RTA will come back before December. However I have to tell you that there is a reason I grabbed profits on that first half of the spread while I was at RTA’s helm, and the pullback is it. You have to look at this trade as already a winner since we took nice profits on the first half. Even if the second half doesn’t come back we have already protected ourselves. Of course the new editor at RTA may take a different course. I cannot officially suggest buying backt he short leg on this gold spread, only because the premium increase is significant. However if this interests you then you should speak to your broker and make sure they explain it to you fully, and what additional cost there will be. HOLD

Ok now let’s get back to what I am looking at now. Good luck to all you RTA and GRT subscribers, I will have further opinions here each Monday night. If you would like to find out more about what we are doing at GCA I am offering for a limited time a significant discount for my former subscribers, just look for the coupon at www.kerralert.com

Ok now to back up my observation about the grains just look at these findings form Ag Web…I am actually going out next week to Illinois and Indiana to check out some crop conditions for myself too.
2008 Pro Farmer Midwest Crop Tour, form Agweb.com

“Minnesota is looking at better corn yield prospects than a year ago; Iowa will see a slight downturn, based on data gathered by experienced crop scouts on this week’s Pro Farmer Midwest Crop Tour.

In Iowa, over the past two days, Tour participants measured corn yields at an average of 168.33 bushels per acre based on 325 samples. This compares to a 167.67 bu. per acre yield measured by the Tour in 2007, and an official statewide average of 171 bu. per acre last year.

Western tour director and Pro Farmer editor, Chip Flory, says, “Iowa is a good example of how the crop has been living on the edge all season. It continues to live day-to-day. Without rain soon, we are going to see ear weights continue to trend lower, robbing additional yield. The Iowa story is not over.”

On soybeans, Iowa Tour participants found an average of 1,091.25 pods per 3′ x 3′ square, compared to 1,218.40 measured by the 2007 Tour. The average pod count came from 311 samples collected by participants.

That 10% drop in pod count for this year tells only part of the story. Crop scouts figure the Iowa soybean crop has reached a tipping point. Rains either make it better, or it goes in the tank. August rainfall totals in Iowa have only been half of normal. That is punishing the crop now, and it can’t make up for all of that lost time, especially with the trend of below-average daytime temperatures and cool evenings. Not what soybeans need right now.

In Minnesota, Tour participants measured an average corn yield of 178.35 bu. per acre, compared to 169.07 bu. per acre tabulated during the 2007 Tour. The current-year data is based on 133 samples gathered on Thursday.

For Minnesota soybeans, the Tour measured an average of 1,006.58 pods per 3′ x 3′ square. That compares to 1,030.10 in a 3′ x 3′ foot square in 2007.

“We were stunned by how dry it is in Minnesota,” according to Chip Flory. “We’ve watched dryness in the eastern Corn Belt. Minnesota shocked us! We were pulling ear samples in Minnesota, and noticed remnant pollen was still on the leaves. It hadn’t rained enough since pollination to wash pollen off the leaves! We saw heavy plant populations, but ear length is going to be very short. Hopefully they’ll have enough short ears to add up. But we have our doubts. Too late for rains to mean much to corn; could still give soybeans a much-needed” boost.”

RTA & GRT position focus

August 24th, 2008

Hi everyone , As promised, I will have an RTA/ GRT update but not today, it will actually be out each Monday just after our GCA readers get their update. I will touch on all the RTA and GRT positions that I initiated while still the editor. Certainly not ‘official’ or lengthy,but what I suggest doing anyway. I will even post part of our GCA mailbag issue which came out yesterday. Be sure to check here tomorrow (Monday afternoon), and have a great rest of the weekend.

Meanwhile, I talked with CNBC Singapore on Thursday and you can watch it here.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=828834458

Kerr Commodities Watch

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