The Financial And Economic World Confidence Game

 | Jul 26, 2016 02:33AM ET

Crude Oil prices fell again yesterday and it seems that gasoline is now on everyone’s mind. As noted last week, I don’t think that is the reason for the price action except in that it tells a very different story than the one in the media about “stimulus” hope.

The significance of crude and gasoline is the difference in narratives and what is supporting them. Stock prices at record highs, or near them, is likely being driven by renewed hope for monetary policy wherever it may strike, all the while forgetting how patently ineffective past monetary policy has been. The energy sector and the renewed drop in the futures curve (the whole curve, though more so at the front) is remembering the consequences of monetary policy that doesn’t work while at the same time finding still little evidence that anything has changed (and some evidence that if something has changed it is only further in the “wrong” direction). Stocks once more trading, though much less enthusiastically, on what “should be”; energy trading on what actually is. All that is also a replay of last year, specifically last July.

As it turns out, there is a lot more to the gasoline “glut” than just the inventory numbers suggest. It has already become a major factor in actual activity, suggesting that there is a big problem here. In other words, unlike what is believed about monetary policy and especially narrative vs. reality .

In a summer of discontent with high inventories and an unseasonably weak demand, some refiners have started blending winter grade gasoline earlier than usual to sell later in the year, two trading sources told Reuters last week.

The switchover from summer blends, which are more environmentally friendly and costlier to produce, usually happens in August for sale starting on Sept. 15, the date allowed under U.S. government regulations. Winter blends are more likely to evaporate in the summer heat and cause smog.

Betraying these actual physical conditions are news accounts of very “strong” particularly US economic fundamentals as well as near-record stock indices. Some of this disconnecting hope set purposely against physical condition can be traced to what is surely seasonality that escapes the traditional perspective of either recession or not recession. But I don’t think that is the whole story.