http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8c03f6bc-f...077b07658.html
Well, ... if Goldman advices its clients to get out of commodities and if one believes the current contango is artificially produced by the synthetic derivatives (and the guys at Goldman probably don't understand how that works ) then one may think the price of oil is going spike up.
According to GRG's first principle of oil futures thermodynamics :
"What Goldman wants, Glodman gets."
Goldman warns on commodity returns
ByJavier Blas in London
Published: February 18 2009 16:10 | Last updated: February 18 2009 16:17
Goldman Sachs, Wall Street’s largest commodities dealer, yesterday told clients to bet on falling returns from commodities, including crude oil, warning that the shape of the futures curve will trigger further losses to investors in the asset class.
The shape of the futures curve is crucial to the profitability of commodities indices. In addition to the spot return, commodity index investors obtain a separate return – the roll yield – as they roll trades over each month, just before the futures contract expires. That return is positive when futures prices are lower than the prevailing front-month price – a backward-dated market – and negative when futures prices are higher – a contango market.
“While we remain long-term bullish on direct commodity investments, it is this large cost of holding the position [rolling] that drives our underweight recommendation on direct commodity investments,” Goldman Sachs said.
The contango in many markets has widened to record levels, causing hefty losses due to the roll even with stable spot prices.
ByJavier Blas in London
Published: February 18 2009 16:10 | Last updated: February 18 2009 16:17
Goldman Sachs, Wall Street’s largest commodities dealer, yesterday told clients to bet on falling returns from commodities, including crude oil, warning that the shape of the futures curve will trigger further losses to investors in the asset class.
The shape of the futures curve is crucial to the profitability of commodities indices. In addition to the spot return, commodity index investors obtain a separate return – the roll yield – as they roll trades over each month, just before the futures contract expires. That return is positive when futures prices are lower than the prevailing front-month price – a backward-dated market – and negative when futures prices are higher – a contango market.
“While we remain long-term bullish on direct commodity investments, it is this large cost of holding the position [rolling] that drives our underweight recommendation on direct commodity investments,” Goldman Sachs said.
The contango in many markets has widened to record levels, causing hefty losses due to the roll even with stable spot prices.
According to GRG's first principle of oil futures thermodynamics :
"What Goldman wants, Glodman gets."
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