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what is really behind the curtain

Stephen1151

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CALGARY — Oil sands giant Suncor Energy Inc. staged a massive pullback from its growth ambitions Tuesday, as the rebalancing of Alberta`s fortunes continues to take hold.With sagging energy prices driving the company to post its first quarterly loss since 1992, Suncor said it will further slash its 2009 capital spending plan to $3-billion, after already trimming it to $6-billion from $10-billion last year.

Suncor`s move is the latest in a series of announcements by companies scaling back expansion plans in Alberta as the falling price of oil erodes the economics of the oil sands. It`s a dramatic reversal for an industry that just six months ago was struggling to find a home for a tidal wave of cash washing in on a triple-digit price per barrel of oil.

“Clearly the focus of the company here is to be prudent in a period of significant uncertainty,” Suncor chief financial officer Ken Alley told a conference call Tuesday morning. “We are preparing ourselves to deal with a commodity price that`s in the $40 [U.S.] range, and potentially downside from that.”

Suncor shares fell 16 per cent Tuesday after it reported a fourth-quarter loss of $215-million (Canadian).

That compared with a profit of $1.04-billion in the same period last year. After excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of $434-million or 46 cents a share in the quarter.

Shares in rivals Petro-Canada and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. fell 8 per cent, while EnCana Corp. was down 5 per cent. Light, sweet crude oil closed down $1.53 (U.S.) Tuesday at $40.68.

Suncor is suspending work on the third phase of its Firebag oil sands project and its Voyageur upgrader, which was already slowed down by the spending cuts announced last year.

Crews have already built 50 per cent of Firebag 3 and 15 per cent of Voyageur, which they had been scheduled to complete construction of in 2009 and 2012, respectively.

The possibility of losses and further construction delays are now extending across the industry.

Industry newsletter author Ian Doig has calculated that cancellations and delays to upgrader projects alone already total $73-billion (Canadian), and said Suncor`s results are a sign of things to come. “It`s devastating,” he said.

Suncor`s cuts mean “you have to at least consider the thought that we see similar announcements in the next couple of weeks” from other major players who still have oil sands projects in development, Edward Jones analyst Lanny Pendill said. Those include Imperial Oil Ltd., EnCana Corp. and Husky Energy Inc., each of which declined to comment Tuesday on their capital expenditure plans or possible delays ahead of their own fourth-quarter results.

The industry`s waning fortunes will also hit Alberta`s coffers. In a research report published this week, Calgary investment house ARC Financial warns that the industry`s total upstream oil and gas revenues are likely to fall from $135-billion in 2008 to $80-billion in 2009, and that the Alberta government can expect a royalty cheque in 2009 that is $5-billion smaller.

The slowdown in oil sands projects is “a No. 1 issue for us in terms of jobs,” Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach said Tuesday. With a file from Dawn Walton



© The Globe and Mail

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Breaking News from The Globe and Mail

<H2 _counted="undefined">Outlook dims as rates fall to record low</H2><H3 _counted="undefined">Major banks match half-point rate cut</H3>HEATHER SCOFFIELD



Wednesday, January 21, 2009

OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada has cut its key interest rate to a record low, warning of a deepening recession that is hitting the country on many fronts – a bleak picture of the Canadian economy that serves to underline the need for effective federal stimulus in Finance Minister Jim Flaherty`s budget next week.

Citing the intensifying financial crisis that is “spilling over into real economic activity” around the world, the central bank drastically slashed its growth expectations for Canada this year, forecasting a contraction of 1.2 per cent, compared with an earlier forecast of a modest 0.6 per cent expansion.

The country`s income is contracting, house prices are falling, wealth is crumbling and exports are on a sharp decline, the bank noted. It cut its target for the overnight lending rate by half a percentage point to 1 per cent – lower than in 1958, when the most-watched policy rate was 1.12 per cent.

The major banks matched the Bank of Canada cut, passing the full amount on to consumers by slicing their prime lending rates half a percentage point to 3 per cent. In December, when the central bank slashed its overnight rate by three-quarters of a percentage point, the banks decided to cut prime by just half a point.

Mortgage rates also tumbled.

Rates on variable mortgages, which move hand in hand with the prime rate, fell. Lenders also cut fixed mortgage rates, which had been expected to fall along with bond yields.

Rate cuts alone won`t be enough to push the economy into recovery, according to economists. The bank is forecasting that by 2010, financial markets will have stabilized and a combination of steep interest rate cuts and fiscal stimulus around the world will have taken effect, enabling Canada`s economy to grow at 3.8 per cent.

That forecast is beyond the wildest dreams of most economists, who are projecting a more gradual recovery starting late 2009, and reflects in part a mathematical exercise that allows the bank to satisfy its goal of bringing the economy back into balance within two years. But the odds of achieving even a more modest Canadian recovery rest heavily on the budget to be delivered in Ottawa next week.

“You`ve got to put on the jumper cables and give everyone a big shock,” said Glen Hodgson, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada. “The next step is a big fiscal shock. The government gets that, loud and clear.”

While Mr. Flaherty has said he`ll present a large stimulus plan in his budget next Tuesday, it remains to be seen how big the package will be, how quickly the money will flow into people`s pockets, and how well it will be received by a dour public that is skeptical of the government`s moves and is disheartened under the weight of a major global recession.

This lack of confidence is seriously harming the Canadian economy, and is “undermining business and household confidence worldwide and further eroding domestic demand,” the bank said.

Fiscal stimulus needs to come swiftly and decisively, in a way that can reverse this destructive, spiralling loss of confidence that is slamming the global and Canadian economies, added Dale Orr, chief economist at IHS Global Insight Canada.

“Fears of recession cause recession,” he noted. “If [Finance Minister Jim Flaherty] believes the bank, then that really puts the pressure on him to get the stimulus package working quickly.”

Separately, and as if to underline the central bank`s sentiments, Statistics Canada said manufacturing shipments plunged 6.4 per cent in November, the fourth consecutive month of declines.

The bank also warned that slack is building up in the economy – meaning job losses ahead. And inflation will drop to below zero for much of 2009 because of falling energy prices. Even core inflation – which excludes energy and other volatile prices – will drop to 1.1 per cent, far below the central bank`s 2 per cent target.

The bank`s aggressive interest rate cuts will definitely help rejuvenate growth, economists said.

But in order to change the psyche of consumers who won`t spend, of businesses that resist investing and of banks reluctant to lend, the federal budget needs to back up the rate cuts with bold measures that will reassure Canadians of recovery, Mr. Hodgson said.

The budget should not only contain ways to encourage consumer and business spending, but will also likely contain measures that encourage lending and banking activity, said Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets.

“The obvious implication of being at 1 per cent is that any further reduction in borrowing costs will come from [the federal government] helping the banking system and through mortgage purchases,” he said.

© The Globe and Mail
 

jarrettvaughan

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Sep 18, 2007
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Interest rates have dropped again, thus increasing cashflow............I think that is pretty good news.
 

invst4profit

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Unless you are renting to oil workers this is overall reasonably good news for investors from my perspective. It really depends on whether you are a half full or half empty type of person I guess.
In bad times there is money to be made by people with money.

Buy and hold with positive cash flow.
 

klewlis

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Sep 23, 2008
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I wonder if I should refinance my personal debt... I`m in a better position financially and the interest rates are lower... hmmmm...
 
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