Once again, the big story is the bailout, which I will not cover here, it gets its own posts, though I will be dealing with some of the market effects of the proposal, which can be viewed as positive, if you are an optimist, or negative, if you are me.
First, the US dollar took it’s biggest hit vs. the Euro in 7 years, because of concerns that this bailout will end up being so expensive that it will debase the currency, and as a result, crude oil climbed the most ever, more than $25/bbl before settling at the end of the day at $120.92/bbl, up $16.37.
You can view the price in oil as a belief among traders that the economy, and hence demand, will be recovering, or you can believe that traders think that this plan will push the dollar over the edge. I think that the contemporaneous fall of the dollar indicates the latter.
The increase in prices appears to be a part of a more general rebound in commodities, though retail gasoline continued its downward path, but gasoline tends to lag oil by a few weeks, as it is actually a manufactured final product, as opposed to a raw material.
In either case, it appears that The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is not taking a close look at oil trading as a result of the volatility today.
The Chicago Fed sees more signs of a recession, reporting a drop in economic activity.
Finally, it there are indications that investors are just beginning to see US treasuries the same way that they did during the Japanese meltdown…You know…the one that lasted fifteen years.
Honestly, if that happens to the US, it will be much worse, because we lack the safety net of Japan.