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Commodity Markets In Distress As Oil Rout Continues

One hundred and eleven years after the birth of Count Basie, and the ongoing rout in the crude complex is in full swing today. Downhill one-way traffic continues amid headlines such as 'No End in Sight for Oil Glut' and 'Oil Poised for Longest Weekly Losing Streak Since 1986 Amid Glut'. As the headlines get more apocalyptic, and the price projections get lower (this week: $15 oil, no, $10 oil), the more it feels like we are approaching a turning point. Or at least a whipsaw.

Looking at the overnight data releases, China has served to endorse the current mood of doom and gloom via a preliminary manufacturing print of prodigiously downbeat proportions. A print of 47.1 was seen, which was considerably lower than last month's 47.8, and shy of the consensus of 47.7. It is the lowest print since March 2009 (hark, the belly of the great recession). Related: Hungry Venezuela Eyes $40 Billion Offshore Discovery In Guyana

China Caixin Preliminary PMI (source: investing.com)

In other preliminary releases, Eurozone manufacturing on the aggregate came in above consensus (and in line with last month's level), aided by a decent number from Germany, but held in check by a miss from France (showing increasing contraction to boot). Eurozone services data on the aggregate also beat consensus, ticking higher on the prior month. Related: Supply, Demand Equilibrium Further Away Than Ever Before

Weakness across the commodity complex as a whole continues to be an ongoing theme in global markets. The below chart illustrates the losses seen in the stock prices of various oil and mining companies, with Bloomberg estimating that $2.05 trillion has been wiped off their market caps. Meanwhile, the Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials has dropped to its lowest level since 2002.

While US refiners continue to make hay while the sun shines amid super-strong crack spreads, US producers are feeling increasing pain as oil prices continue to drop. US oil and gas companies raised $44 billion in debt in the first half of this year, the most since 2007, in an effort to maintain liquidity amid the oil price drop. As prices retest 6-year lows, producers once again see their financial situations heading south. Related: Oil Prices Must Rebound. Here's Why

On the whole, 62 US oil and gas companies own $235 billion of debt, and at least 10% of that is at a distressed level. JPM Morgan has set aside $140 million for potential write-downs in the coming months, with other banks doing the same. All is looking rather ominous. While oil producers get pummeled, miners get mauled:

By Matt Smith

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Matt Smith

Taking a voyage across the world of energy with ClipperData’s Director of Commodity Research. Follow on Twitter @ClipperData, @mattvsmith01 More