Wasn't crude oil supposed to go to $200 a barrel?

It's true, the rumors were circulating heavily when crude oil was trading at $145 a barrel that it was going to be hitting $200 a barrel in a matter of days or weeks at the very latest. Well, that never happened. Crude oil learned that gravity plays a part in every commodity market's life.

The pullback in crude oil, given the fact that a major hurricane named Ike is shooting for the gulf, is not so surprising given the history of the commodity markets. Often times we see pressure coming into a market months ahead of the actual news that either production has been increased or demand fluctuation has changed the dynamics of the marketplace.

Take a few minutes and watch this short video and see how we have been looking at crude oil. Afterwards, check out our track record in this market for the past 12 months.

I hope you find time to quickly browse through this video as it will certainly give you some good trading tips on how to improve your own trading.

Every success trading and every success in life.

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-Creator of MarketClub.com

Adam's Bio

TRADERS CONTEST: Do you have a good trading story? First prize is an Apple iTouch! Enter your story here. There is no entry fee.

Please don't miss this

Tuesday, August 26nd, 2008

FR: Adam Hewison, President INO.com

RE: Please don't miss this

Dear Blog reader,

Learning by experience can be costly, especially in the financial markets. Fortunately, there are shortcuts. "I've changed from losing money to consistently making a profit," says Paul, a trader from Illinois. "I've learned techniques that really have made a big difference in my trading." He credits INO TV's streaming educational videos and audios for his success. INO TV is a division of INO.com, a pioneer in the web-based delivery of financial information since 1995.

Traders of all levels will appreciate INO TV's online digital library of video and audio seminars, the largest and most comprehensive collection of trader and investor seminars available anywhere today. INO TV's seminars-currently numbered at 547 with more being added all the time - present time-tested theories, techniques, and strategies from over 150 master traders. INO TV offers traders an easy and convenient way to improve their skills, confidence, and profits.

Traders say online seminars are more convenient, less costly compared to the high price tag of live seminars, INO TV's annual membership fee of $99.95 (or $49.95 for three months) is a bargain. While many traders find the live atmosphere of seminars enjoyable, others find that the registration fees, travel expenses, and hotel charges are cost prohibitive. Dean, a trader in the UK, is one of the latter. The live seminar he attended, which cost him $7,500, failed to meet his expectations. "I should have avoided going to the actual seminar," he says. "What I learned through the online videos was more than what they were giving me at the seminars." Dean says that the knowledge he acquired in a single month of viewing INO TV online would have cost him about $24,000 in seminar fees.

It's not just the cost that makes INO TV so attractive to traders. It's also the convenience. Dirk, a financial writer and seminar instructor in the Netherlands who has been an active trader for over a decade, elaborates. "I was invited by my broker to attend a seminar on futures. For me, coming from a small village near Amsterdam, that would be a time consuming and high-priced event," he explains. "It is far more convenient to watch a video online. Watching them at any convenient time and seeing them again and again brings a trader far more value while being very time efficient."

Anyone with a computer and a high-speed internet connection can take advantage of INO TV's digital seminar collection. The on-demand streaming seminars feature some of the world's top experts, whose ranks include trading systems pioneers, trading contest champions, authors, trading coaches, and real floor traders. Many of the seminars come with free downloadable workbooks. INO TV's digital library of trading seminars is the most extensive collection available online, and these seminars are not available anywhere else. Members are free to watch and listen to as many seminars as they want, as often as they want, for one low membership fee. A 3-month membership is just $49.95, and an annual membership just $99.95. To enroll FREE go online.

A special note from Adam:
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Even though I caught some lucky breaks early in my financial career and went on to become a successful forex trader, I still look back with 20/20 hindsight and realize that I could have been more successful, sooner, if I had been a more educated trader. That's why I'm so excited about what we have to offer at INO TV: proven trading techniques - practical tools for consistent success - step by step trading methods that will empower you to build wealth and create the life you want. And all straight from the lips of the masters themselves. If you do nothing else today, visit FREE INO TV and find out if the service is right for you


Adam Hewison
Co-Creator, INO TV

New trading video

Hi,

It sure is good to be back. This past weekend I returned from vacation in France with my wife where we were cruising the canals just outside of Strasbourg. It was a great deal of fun.

I have to say, every trader needs and deserves a break away from the markets. Normally the August markets are fairly quiet, so it seemed like a good time to get away. Boy... was I wrong. Not wrong on the markets, but wrong on the markets being quiet.

Arriving back in the States having not seen a newspaper for two weeks and with limited access to internet, I was surprised to see some of the moves in the major markets. I was also happy to see the price of crude oil!!

I have known for a long time that news is not the important driver of price action. Most new traders believe they needed to be glued to the news every second of the day, frightened they will miss some news headline.

Here's a little secret... the most important element in the market is not the news, it is the market action itself. Everything else is secondary. In my new video I explain exactly how we look at the market and how you can benefit from looking at the market the same way.

The new video is only four minutes long and I think you'll find it fresh, timeless and interesting.

The simplicity speaks for itself.

Enjoy the video,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com

"Saturday Seminars"- Simpler Is Simply Better — Getting Down and Dirty in the Real World - Part 2

Stewart builds on his 1997 TAG seminar with additional information and insights. Stewart shares many of his basic daytrading rules and observations. Simplifying the decision process removes many of the psychological impediments involved in placing an order and frees valuable time for trading. Fifteen years of real-world trading and advising have convinced Stewart — and will convince you — that simpler is simply better.

Stewart Taylor began his trading career sixteen years ago by trading basic patterns and breakout strategies. These simple strategies evolved into complex day-trading strategies utilizing Elliott Wave and intraday cycles. Stewart’s trading style has come full circle, and he is now a leading proponent of the “simple is simply better” approach. Stewart developed his analytic abilities as an institutional broker serving the fixed income community with Brittenum & Associates, Refco, Vining Sparks Securities, Shearson Lehman, American Express, and Prudential Securities. In 1992, Stewart formed Taylor Consulting, Inc., and began publishing his market letter, The Taylor Fixed-Income Outlook.

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Saturday Seminars are just a taste of the power of INO TV. The web's only online video and audio library for trading education. So watch four videos in our free version of INO TV click here.

INO TV

Where we stand on crude oil

What a great move in crude oil yesterday. It was enough for us to cover our short positions and bank almost $10,000 a contract in profits.

Watch this video and see how we did it.
Here's the full AP story from yesterday.

(AP:NEW YORK) Oil prices soared over $4 a barrel Wednesday, halting a dramatic two-week slide after a surprise drop in U.S. gasoline supplies fed speculation that record fuel prices aren't keeping Americans off the roads.

But energy market analysts offered mixed views on whether prices would swing back toward record levels above $147 a barrel hit earlier this month or if Wednesday's big rally was just a temporary bump.

Light, sweet crude for September delivery jumped $4.58 cents to settle at $126.77 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier rising as high as $127.39. It was crude's biggest one-day rally since July 10, when prices ended $5.60 higher. Oil closed $2.54 lower on Tuesday at $122.19 a barrel.

The Energy Information Administration said in its weekly inventory report that U.S. gasoline supplies fell by 3.5 million barrels last week. Analysts surveyed by energy research firm Platts expected gas supplies to increase by 400,000 barrels. U.S. crude stockpiles also fell by 100,000 barrels last week, less than the 1.3 million barrels analysts had predicted.

The report gave some traders reasons to believe that crude's slide was overblown and that the drop in gas supplies mean prices have fallen enough to nudge Americans back onto the roads.

"It's stopping the bearish momentum that we've seen over the last few days," Phil Flynn, analyst at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago, said of the surprise decline in gas supplies.

But some analysts raised questions whether U.S. fuel demand was picking up. Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst of Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J., doubted that Americans are actually driving more, saying a seasonal bump in gas demand probably drew down supplies temporarily.

"It's nonsense to say that this proves that people are back to their old driving habits," Kloza said. "There just wasn't enough enthusiasm to push prices lower. "

Crude's jump was boosted by word that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will quit his post in September, an announcement that raised doubts about the future of U.S.-backed Middle East peace efforts in the oil-producing region.

Also supporting prices was a report by Goldman Sachs, which affirmed its earlier forecast that crude will hit $149 a barrel by the end of the year.

The investment bank called weakness in U.S. energy demand "transient rather than permanent," saying the fundamentals of falling oil production and rising world energy consumption remain intact. Past forecasts for higher oil prices have caused jumps in prices as speculative buyers are drawn into the market.

Still, other analysts said oil's recovery doesn't mean prices are about to go higher again, but rather shows that traders saw a short-term buying opportunity after Tuesday's sell-off.

"I still expect to see further air being let out of this balloon," said Stephen Schork, an analyst and trader in Villanova, Pa.

He noted that U.S. demand for energy is falling across most sectors. Inventories of distillates, which include heating oil and diesel, rose by 2.4 million barrels, more than the 1.8 million barrels expected, according to the EIA report.

And Americans continue to cut back on their driving to cope with almost $4-a-gallon pump prices. The average price of a regular gas fell 1.5 cents on Wednesday to $3.926, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Prices Information Service and Wright Express.

"We clearly have demand destruction," Schork said.

Before Wednesday's rebound, crude prices had dropped in seven of the last 10 sessions, and are down about 14 percent from their peak above $147 a barrel earlier this month. Prices remain about 60 percent higher than at this time last year.

The dollar was stronger Wednesday against the euro, but the oil market seemed to be ignoring a trend that ordinarily would pressure prices. Investors buy commodities as a hedge against inflation and a weaker dollar but tend to sell when the American currency strengthens.

Oil also gained Tuesday's announcement from Royal Dutch Shell PLC that it may not be able to fulfill some oil export contracts after Nigerian militants sabotaged a pipeline in the Niger Delta.

Militant attacks on Nigerian oil facilities have trimmed nearly one quarter of the country's regular daily output. The strongest Nigerian militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, said it sabotaged two pipelines early Monday in the southern oil-producing region.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 5.08 cents to settle at $3.5203 a gallon while gasoline prices gained 12.74 cents to settle at $3.1351 a gallon. Natural gas futures rose 11.8 cents to settle at $9.248 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, September Brent crude rose $3.34 cents at $126.05 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.