U.S stocks futures are pointed to a weaker start after Dell’s worse-than-estimated loss. S&P 500 futures slipped 5.90 points to 1,088.40 and Nasdaq 100 futures fell 7.25 points to 1,763.00. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 47 points to 10,280.00.
Yesterday, Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) reported net income of $337 million or $0.17 a share versus $727 million or $0.37 a share, a year ago quarter. While its net revenue for the quarter fell 15% to $12.90 billion from $15.16 billion in the prior-year quarter. Both these numbers were well below the analysts estimates of $0.28 a share on net revenue of $13.18 billion.
In pre-market trading, shares of DELL are down 6.36%.
Also, The Gap Inc. (NYSE: GPS) third quarter sales rose 0.8% to $3.59 billion and net income rose 25% to $307 million or 44 cents a share.
Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ: INTU) first quarter revenues rose 2.5% to $493 million and net loss was $68 million or 21 cents a share.
After yesterday’s drop of over 2% a barrel, oil futures fell a further 51 cents to below $77 a barrel in electronic trading.
United States Oil Fund LP (ETF) (NYSE: USO) fell 1.21% to $39.18 in the pre market session.
Also Gold futures dropped $4.10 to $1,137.80. Given this, SPDR Gold Trust (ETF) (NYSE: GLD) could see some selling pressure.
Can USCF's new fund tackle the natural gas contango?
United States Commodity Funds' new ETF, the U.S. 12-Month Natural Gas Fund (NYSEArca: UNL), began trading yesterday, offering investors another easy access point to the natural gas market. But let's hope it sees smoother sailing than its controversial cousin, the U.S. Natural Gas Fund (NYSEArca: UNG).
Not only have regulators vociferously blamed UNG for distorting the commodity markets earlier this year, the fund has also performed dismally to date, dropping a whopping 61.24 percent since the beginning of the year. And it's not because investors have lost their taste for the fund: Last month, UNG still saw brisk inflows of $308 million, even as its net assets dropped $263 million.
Record-low natural gas prices have played their part in slashing UNG's returns, of course, but the big anvil weighing the fund down is the market's nasty case of contango. For the better part of the year, the front-month NYMEX natural gas futures contract has stayed cheaper than those with later delivery dates. And since UNG buys only the front-month contract, selling it near its expiration date to purchase the next-nearest month's contract, the fund has been stuck in a wicked cycle of "sell low, buy high" for months now.
UNL, on the other hand, may be able to avoid some (but not all) of the same pricing sting. Instead of focusing solely on the front-month contract, UNL purchases an equally weighted basket of futures contracts with delivery dates in each of the next 12 months. Two weeks from rollover time, the fund sells the front-month contract and buys the one 12 months out, essentially pushing the basket forward in time.
Given that currently UNG must absorb losses across 100 percent of its contracts during rollover, while UNL only experiences losses in 1/12th of its portfolio, this methodology should protect the latter somewhat from contango's vicious sting. But it can't make UNL entirely immune, considering the furthest-out contracts are still priced substantially above the front-month contract: Yesterday, the December 2009 contract closed at $4.254, while the December 2010 contract closed 45.7 percent higher, at $6.199.
Also consider that at 0.75 percent, UNL's expense ratio is a mite bigger than UNG's (0.60 percent), so when the contango lessens, any cost savings from choosing the former over the latter would naturally erode. And should the natural gas market flip to backwardation, UNL's staggered buying strategy would actually put it at a disadvantage to UNG.
But backwardation's not likely to happen in natural gas—at least, not anytime soon. To see inversion occur, we'd need to start seeing shortages in the physical commodity, yet natural gas stocks just hit an all-time high. In fact, the International Energy Agency recently predicted that even if demand rebounds, due to an extra-cold winter and economic recovery, we'll still see a natural gas surplus that will depress prices until 2015.
Will UNL ultimately outperform UNG until then? Obviously only time will tell, but we may be able to divine some clues from USCF's other 12-Month Oil Fund (NYSEArca: USL) and its UNG-analogous partner, the U.S. Oil Fund (NYSEArca: USO). Despite oil's price recovery, the commodity has also experienced heavy contango recently, and year-to-date, USL is up 38.84 percent, while USO is only up 22.87 percent.
Still, while I'm always happy to have more tools in the box, when it comes to natural gas, I'm not yet sure whether a flathead or a Phillips screwdriver would be better.
Millions of investors who bought gold in the last 12 months are undoubtedly very happy at the moment - considering that the yellow metal has risen 60% since last November to a recent close of $1,138.60 an ounce on Monday.
But chances are good that many won’t be smiling when they discover just what ...
United States Commodity Funds recently won regulatory approval for its newest addition: a 12-month natural gas exchange traded fund (ETF). The fund is expected to begin trading tomorrow.
The U.S. 12 Month Natural Gas Fund (NYSEArca: UNL) has gotten the green light from regulators to issue about 30 million shares, which will ...
Commodities continue to perform well as the US dollar tests the October lows. If we step back and take a look at the weekly charts of the gold, silver, oil and natural gas ETFs we can get a better feel for what to expect in the coming week.
Trading commodity ETFs can be a ...
The indices finally backed off as profit taking finally set in, but they started with a bang to the upside early on and hit nominal new 2009 highs before they began to back off in the morning.
At that point they began to stair-step lower in a nice orderly down-channel all day. I’m not sure if that means we’re getting the start of a significant down move just yet, but we’ll see if they can at least get downside follow-through in the next day or two.[More...]
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