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lol! You have been saying that for over a year!! A Company generating $22 Million in revenues and positive cash flow and you are bad mouthing! Go find a real looser on the pinks with no income and badger their Investors for a while, because you have no credibility here.
Oil Is ‘Biggest Investment Opportunity in the World’
http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2015/01/22/blackstones-ceo-oil-is-biggest-investment-opportunity-in-the-world/?mod=yahoo_hs
Smart Investors are buying select oil and Gas Stocks right now!
Oil Is ‘Biggest Investment Opportunity in the World’
http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2015/01/22/blackstones-ceo-oil-is-biggest-investment-opportunity-in-the-world/?mod=yahoo_hs
Smart Investors are buying select oil and Gas Stocks right now!
Oil Is ‘Biggest Investment Opportunity in the World’
http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2015/01/22/blackstones-ceo-oil-is-biggest-investment-opportunity-in-the-world/?mod=yahoo_hs
OPEC’s El-Badri: Oil will rebound, and it’s not going to $20-a-barrel
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/opecs-el-badri-oil-will-rebound-and-its-not-going-to-20-a-barrel-2015-01-22?siteid=yhoof2
Quality Companies like NAS/JD will rise to the top as they did winning the awards in their respective field. Expect consolidation which is a good thing for them as they will be one of the few left standing once prices turn around.
?? Why am I considered a spammer? I invest in Oil and Gas stocks and do allot of research on the subject, when I find articles I think are important to other Investors in those stocks, post the results of the independent articles I find that may be of interest to them. What is wrong with that?? Not selling anything!
I have done nothing wrong so either reinstate me or delete my account, your call if you think I am doing harm.
Natural Gas Prices will Soar by 2015
If you are not buying Oil and Gas stocks now, you are missing the boat as this ship is ready to sail in 2015. Buy now at these bargain prices and hold, you can easily double your investment by years end.
"Phil Flynn is senior energy analyst and a futures account executive at Chicago-based The Price Futures Group. He is one of the world's leading energy market analysts and a daily contributor to Fox Business Network, where he provides market updates and analysis. HAI managing editor Sumit Roy recently caught up with Flynn to discuss the latest developments in the energy markets.
HardAssetsInvestor: Natural gas has been rallying recently, and now it's at a seven-month high. Is it solely cold weather that's driving up prices?
Phil Flynn: A lot of it obviously is the cold temperatures. It’s been cold, and based on the weather forecasts we're seeing, it's not going to get a heck of a lot warmer. In the next two weeks, we should see some substantial drawdowns in inventory. Having said that, yes, it is definitely the cold weather that's given us this dynamic move, but you don't want to underestimate the non-heat-related demand. There is demand growing everywhere.
While the cold weather seems to be overshadowing that right now, it's definitely a story that's going to continue. Manufacturing businesses are going to take advantage of these low natural gas prices and you're going to see the non-heat-related demand continue to grow.
It's going to continue to astound people. Our exports are a lot stronger; we're going to be seeing a lot of natural gas going to Mexico, and they're approving additional exports a lot more quickly than anybody thought possible.
Weather's definitely your headline, and we probably wouldn't be moving up like this if it weren't cold, but there’s definitely more to it than just the weather.
HAI: Do you think it's too late for investors to get in for this winter run?
Related article: Natural Gas Pipeline Bottlenecks Lead to Price Spikes in New England
Flynn: I don't think so. Obviously, we could see some pullbacks along the way. But to me, there could be significant upside left in this market. The only concern we have at the moment is that the market is a bit overbought and it might try to shake some people out. But having said that, we broke out of a major channel to the upside.
We really do seem to be gaining some momentum. While we might be able to pull back to $4, it’s interesting that before, a lot of people thought that $4 would be a ceiling. Now it looks like it could be the floor, long term. I could foresee a scenario, if some of these colder, long-term forecasts come to fruition, that we could very easily test $4.50. And we might even surprise some people and move a bit higher.
It's awfully early to be having these cold temperatures. And we've been lulled to sleep in the past, because the last couple of years, we've had some warmer-than-average winters and cooler-than-average summers. We really haven't tested this market on full cylinders.
The way the weather is right now, how early it is in the season, we may really test the limit of the demand side, and it may surprise some people on the upside; mainly because, as I said, we are seeing a lot of non-heat-related demand as well. You may see more surprises on the upside than the downside.
HAI: How about longer term? I know you’ve recommended long-dated natural gas call options in the past. Is that something you're still interested in?
Flynn: It is. We've been saying that we expect that, by 2015, natural gas will get to about $7. And I know it sounds kind of crazy, it even sounds kind of expensive, but in the whole scheme of things, $7 natural gas isn't really that expensive if you consider what they're paying for LNG in Europe and other places. I bet they'd love to lock in some $7 gas.
Your FREE Guide to the most lucrative investment in American History Direct Investing in Oil & Gas Wells and why this investment can pay out for 18... even 50 years. You will learn about tax breaks, how to find the best deals and special loopholes known to only a few investors. Click Here to get hold of your free guide right now while there's still time.
You're going to see kind of a reversion to the rest of the market. As exports start to increase and demand starts to go up, we're going to probably move the market a little higher. And that's not necessarily a bad thing. What we're going to see with that is a big increase in economic growth.
Eventually we're not just going to keep natural gas glutting in one area; at some point, we're going to start moving it because it's too valuable of a commodity. Low prices are going to cure low prices. You're going to find a way to export it, you're going to find a way to use it, because it's too cheap not to.
One comparison I would make is when oil prices went to $10 or $11 in 1999, and everybody thought it was going to go to $7 because there was a glut of oil. But what happened is that when prices got that low, low prices cured low prices, and then you had all this exceptional demand growth in the emerging markets like China and India. A lot of that was driven by economic reform, but also by cheap prices.
Related article: 10 Things to Consider about the Marcellus Shale
In my eyes, you’re seeing this commodity boom-and-bust cycle with natural gas. It went from all-time highs to close to all-time lows (when you adjust for inflation). Now you should get a reversion to a normal price. If $15 was the high end and below $2 seems to be the support, somewhere in the middle—around $7—would be a reasonable cost and still put the U.S. at an advantage with other places in the world where prices are higher.
HAI: What about oil? Are you a bull or a bear in 2014?
Flynn: I'm a bear on oil short term. When oil was above $100, I was writing some commentary that I thought oil was going to test the lower end of the trading range at $88. We were at $102-103, and I said if we break $100, we've crossed the Rubicon, the point of no return, and oil prices should collapse. And I thought we'd see a quick test of $88. Well, we didn't get to $88; we shot down and we got to $91 and some change. And now we're bouncing back up toward $97-98.
We definitely saw an uptick in demand in the United States because the refiners are kicking it into high gear. We're starting to get oil out of Cushing, Okla. And as the Southern leg of the Keystone pipeline starts to suck oil out of that area, we're going to push it back down. And because of more reliable supply coming out of the North Sea and the possibility of increased Iranian exports, we saw spread come in.
We saw WTI come up a lot in a short period of time, and we've seen the Brent crude come down quite a bit in a short period of time. What we're seeing is not so much an oil rally here in the United States, because the production of oil in the U.S. is at a 25-year high. Rather, you're seeing an end-of-the-year adjustment on the Brent-WTI spread.
In 2014, is Brent going to gain on WTI? Or is WTI going to gain on Brent? Well, to be honest with you, I don't care. I think next year both are going to fall. Instead of spreading between $120 and $90, we'll probably be spreading between $80 and $90, or something more reasonable on both sides. We're going to see production rise across the board.
Long term, WTI at some point will reassert itself as a global benchmark, mainly because the United States is going to be one of the biggest oil producers, one of the biggest importers, one of the biggest exporters. Everything that's going to be happening with oil is going to be happening in the United States. And I think it's going to be a good barometer of global economic growth".
By. Sumit Roy
Natural Gas Prices will Soar by 2015
If you are not buying Oil and Gas stocks now, you are missing the boat as this ship is ready to sail in 2015. Buy now at these bargain prices and hold, you can easily double your investment by years end.
"Phil Flynn is senior energy analyst and a futures account executive at Chicago-based The Price Futures Group. He is one of the world's leading energy market analysts and a daily contributor to Fox Business Network, where he provides market updates and analysis. HAI managing editor Sumit Roy recently caught up with Flynn to discuss the latest developments in the energy markets.
HardAssetsInvestor: Natural gas has been rallying recently, and now it's at a seven-month high. Is it solely cold weather that's driving up prices?
Phil Flynn: A lot of it obviously is the cold temperatures. It’s been cold, and based on the weather forecasts we're seeing, it's not going to get a heck of a lot warmer. In the next two weeks, we should see some substantial drawdowns in inventory. Having said that, yes, it is definitely the cold weather that's given us this dynamic move, but you don't want to underestimate the non-heat-related demand. There is demand growing everywhere.
While the cold weather seems to be overshadowing that right now, it's definitely a story that's going to continue. Manufacturing businesses are going to take advantage of these low natural gas prices and you're going to see the non-heat-related demand continue to grow.
It's going to continue to astound people. Our exports are a lot stronger; we're going to be seeing a lot of natural gas going to Mexico, and they're approving additional exports a lot more quickly than anybody thought possible.
Weather's definitely your headline, and we probably wouldn't be moving up like this if it weren't cold, but there’s definitely more to it than just the weather.
HAI: Do you think it's too late for investors to get in for this winter run?
Related article: Natural Gas Pipeline Bottlenecks Lead to Price Spikes in New England
Flynn: I don't think so. Obviously, we could see some pullbacks along the way. But to me, there could be significant upside left in this market. The only concern we have at the moment is that the market is a bit overbought and it might try to shake some people out. But having said that, we broke out of a major channel to the upside.
We really do seem to be gaining some momentum. While we might be able to pull back to $4, it’s interesting that before, a lot of people thought that $4 would be a ceiling. Now it looks like it could be the floor, long term. I could foresee a scenario, if some of these colder, long-term forecasts come to fruition, that we could very easily test $4.50. And we might even surprise some people and move a bit higher.
It's awfully early to be having these cold temperatures. And we've been lulled to sleep in the past, because the last couple of years, we've had some warmer-than-average winters and cooler-than-average summers. We really haven't tested this market on full cylinders.
The way the weather is right now, how early it is in the season, we may really test the limit of the demand side, and it may surprise some people on the upside; mainly because, as I said, we are seeing a lot of non-heat-related demand as well. You may see more surprises on the upside than the downside.
HAI: How about longer term? I know you’ve recommended long-dated natural gas call options in the past. Is that something you're still interested in?
Flynn: It is. We've been saying that we expect that, by 2015, natural gas will get to about $7. And I know it sounds kind of crazy, it even sounds kind of expensive, but in the whole scheme of things, $7 natural gas isn't really that expensive if you consider what they're paying for LNG in Europe and other places. I bet they'd love to lock in some $7 gas.
Your FREE Guide to the most lucrative investment in American History Direct Investing in Oil & Gas Wells and why this investment can pay out for 18... even 50 years. You will learn about tax breaks, how to find the best deals and special loopholes known to only a few investors. Click Here to get hold of your free guide right now while there's still time.
You're going to see kind of a reversion to the rest of the market. As exports start to increase and demand starts to go up, we're going to probably move the market a little higher. And that's not necessarily a bad thing. What we're going to see with that is a big increase in economic growth.
Eventually we're not just going to keep natural gas glutting in one area; at some point, we're going to start moving it because it's too valuable of a commodity. Low prices are going to cure low prices. You're going to find a way to export it, you're going to find a way to use it, because it's too cheap not to.
One comparison I would make is when oil prices went to $10 or $11 in 1999, and everybody thought it was going to go to $7 because there was a glut of oil. But what happened is that when prices got that low, low prices cured low prices, and then you had all this exceptional demand growth in the emerging markets like China and India. A lot of that was driven by economic reform, but also by cheap prices.
Related article: 10 Things to Consider about the Marcellus Shale
In my eyes, you’re seeing this commodity boom-and-bust cycle with natural gas. It went from all-time highs to close to all-time lows (when you adjust for inflation). Now you should get a reversion to a normal price. If $15 was the high end and below $2 seems to be the support, somewhere in the middle—around $7—would be a reasonable cost and still put the U.S. at an advantage with other places in the world where prices are higher.
HAI: What about oil? Are you a bull or a bear in 2014?
Flynn: I'm a bear on oil short term. When oil was above $100, I was writing some commentary that I thought oil was going to test the lower end of the trading range at $88. We were at $102-103, and I said if we break $100, we've crossed the Rubicon, the point of no return, and oil prices should collapse. And I thought we'd see a quick test of $88. Well, we didn't get to $88; we shot down and we got to $91 and some change. And now we're bouncing back up toward $97-98.
We definitely saw an uptick in demand in the United States because the refiners are kicking it into high gear. We're starting to get oil out of Cushing, Okla. And as the Southern leg of the Keystone pipeline starts to suck oil out of that area, we're going to push it back down. And because of more reliable supply coming out of the North Sea and the possibility of increased Iranian exports, we saw spread come in.
We saw WTI come up a lot in a short period of time, and we've seen the Brent crude come down quite a bit in a short period of time. What we're seeing is not so much an oil rally here in the United States, because the production of oil in the U.S. is at a 25-year high. Rather, you're seeing an end-of-the-year adjustment on the Brent-WTI spread.
In 2014, is Brent going to gain on WTI? Or is WTI going to gain on Brent? Well, to be honest with you, I don't care. I think next year both are going to fall. Instead of spreading between $120 and $90, we'll probably be spreading between $80 and $90, or something more reasonable on both sides. We're going to see production rise across the board.
Long term, WTI at some point will reassert itself as a global benchmark, mainly because the United States is going to be one of the biggest oil producers, one of the biggest importers, one of the biggest exporters. Everything that's going to be happening with oil is going to be happening in the United States. And I think it's going to be a good barometer of global economic growth".
By. Sumit Roy
$5-a-gallon gas on the way!! Former oil exec Source USA Today
John Hofmeister attracted national attention in 2010 when he predicted that average U.S. gasoline prices would soar to $5 a gallon in 2012, thanks to rising crude oil prices. His forecast fell short, as the cost of filling up flirted with $4 in 2012, but never went higher.
Now, with gasoline prices at $2.14, their lowest level since May 2009, the former president of Shell Oil is issuing another warning, telling motorists that their joy ride may end sooner than they think.
"The next round of high prices is likely to start later this year, as crude rebounds to the $80s and $90s, perhaps pushing to the $100 level by late in the year or early next," Hofmeister told me the other day after a trip to Calgary, where he was promoting natural gas as a transportation fuel.
"The triggering mechanism will be global demand growth relative to how much capital constraint gets baked into future plans for production this year and next. If new production capital is deferred and demand growth continues at 2% or more, we'll see capacity constraints during 2016, an election year of course, drive prices higher. Whether we reach $4 a gallon or push past, it's too early to tell."
Moreover, Hofmeister still sees $5 gas on the horizon.
"Over the next several years, as demand growth approaches 100 million barrels a day and the industry production falls short, yes, I believe later this decade we'll see $5 a gallon and possible shortages of fuel in some parts of the world," he said.
Hofmeister paints a gloomier picture of gasoline prices than many analysts, including the U.S. Energy Information Administration, which predicts U.S. gasoline prices will average $2.33 this year and $2.72 in 2016. But he also feels that the perception of a "glut" in world oil production now is overstated, with supply outpacing demand by only 1 million barrels a day or so.
Some of his former peers in the oil sector share his sentiments regarding the oil oversupply, and its impact on oil prices.
"Most of us in the industry are surprised that it's fallen as hard and fast as it has," Ryan Lance, CEO of ConocoPhillips, said at a Center for Strategic and International Studies. "I don't know that I have a real good answer to that question, other than it doesn't feel like the fundamentals would support that kind of fall."
Like Hofmeister, Lance said oil prices could rebound faster than anticipated, as they did in 2009, following the Great Recession.
"People were worried about the global economy, and prices went to $30, $40 a barrel, and just a matter of months later, it was back to $100 a barrel," he said. "And that's the kind of volatility we're in, when we see these imbalances that are created, even though they are relatively small in absolute terms."
Still, Hofmeister sees a solution to end the roller-coaster pattern to oil and gasoline prices: natural gas.
Since retiring from Shell in 2008, he's been actively promoting natural gas as a transportation fuel, as the head of an organization called Citizens for Affordable Energy.
"I believe that with the right focus and development of the natural gas fuels market, we could begin to reduce global demand for oil from the 100-million-barrels-a-day level around 2020 to lower demand levels by substituting natural gas fuels," he said. "We could pull it back to 90, 80, even 70 million barrels a day over the next two to three decades, taking enormous pressure off chronic high oil prices."
In the meantime, though, his advice to motorists regarding gasoline is simple: "Enjoy the price, because it's going to go back up."
Yes and way under book value!
All I am buying right now is Oil and Gas right now! When a commodity swings this low like it is today, corrections will bring large profits for smart investors, and I see 30% or more in the next year.
All I am buying right now is Oil and Gas right now! When a commodity swings this low like it is today, corrections will bring large profits for smart investors, and I see 30% or more in the next year.
Reuters poll on Oil and Gas 2015:
"The survey of 30 economists and analysts projected Brent to average $74 a barrel in the next year and $80.30 in 2016. The forecast for 2015 is $8.50 below the average projection in the previous Reuters poll.
The November poll number were down $11.20 from October, marking the biggest downgrade in average forecasts since the 2008 global downturn. Brent has averaged $100.57 so far this past year.
As non-Opec production responds to lower prices, oil is seen to be recovering in the second half of 2015, while demand picks up in the course of the year, the poll showed."
Oil and Gas stocks are at bargain today from overreaction by the Market. A correction is very likely in the first half of the year, and will lead to smart investors capitalizing on the Market by weathering the slump in todays prices. Long term forecast show substantial increases in the next 25 years as emerging markets such as India and China require more fossil fuels, making todays global output to fall well short on demand.
Reuters poll on Oil and Gas 2015:
"The survey of 30 economists and analysts projected Brent to average $74 a barrel in the next year and $80.30 in 2016. The forecast for 2015 is $8.50 below the average projection in the previous Reuters poll.
The November poll number were down $11.20 from October, marking the biggest downgrade in average forecasts since the 2008 global downturn. Brent has averaged $100.57 so far this past year.
As non-Opec production responds to lower prices, oil is seen to be recovering in the second half of 2015, while demand picks up in the course of the year, the poll showed."
Oil and Gas stocks are at bargain today from overreaction by the Market. A correction is very likely in the first half of the year, and will lead to smart investors capitalizing on the Market by weathering the slump in todays prices. Long term forecast show substantial increases in the next 25 years as emerging markets such as India and China require more fossil fuels, making todays global output to fall well short on demand.
All I am buying right now is Oil and Gas right now! When a commodity swings this low like it is today, corrections will bring large profits for smart investors, and I see 30% or more in the next year.
Reuters poll on Oil and Gas 2015:
"The survey of 30 economists and analysts projected Brent to average $74 a barrel in the next year and $80.30 in 2016. The forecast for 2015 is $8.50 below the average projection in the previous Reuters poll.
The November poll number were down $11.20 from October, marking the biggest downgrade in average forecasts since the 2008 global downturn. Brent has averaged $100.57 so far this past year.
As non-Opec production responds to lower prices, oil is seen to be recovering in the second half of 2015, while demand picks up in the course of the year, the poll showed."
Oil and Gas stocks are at bargain today from overreaction by the Market. A correction is very likely in the first half of the year, and will lead to smart investors capitalizing on the Market by weathering the slump in todays prices. Long term forecast show substantial increases in the next 25 years as emerging markets such as India and China require more fossil fuels, making todays global output to fall well short on demand.
Oil Bull in 2015? Experts say so!
Nomura Securities is already calling the bottom and “the birth of a new oil bull market.” The bank forecasts that Brent crude will bottom at an average of $45 in Q1, recover to $55 in Q2, and go back to the long-term average of $80 by the end of this year.
The oil market is in real trouble if the bear is driven by weak demand, but fortunately, this one is just a temporary price war started by Saudi Arabia.
The force is still strong. “It is not demand weakness that triggered the oil price collapse. Global oil consumption is at a record high and there is only about 3% of spare global capacity as the era of easy oil is long gone,” according to analysts Gordon Kwan and Bob Chen. The recent oil price collapse was “deliberately triggered by Saudi Arabia” to slow down development in U.S. shale oil, Canadian oil sands and deep-water and Arctic drilling.
Oil Bull in 2015? Experts say so!
Nomura Securities is already calling the bottom and “the birth of a new oil bull market.” The bank forecasts that Brent crude will bottom at an average of $45 in Q1, recover to $55 in Q2, and go back to the long-term average of $80 by the end of this year.
The oil market is in real trouble if the bear is driven by weak demand, but fortunately, this one is just a temporary price war started by Saudi Arabia.
The force is still strong. “It is not demand weakness that triggered the oil price collapse. Global oil consumption is at a record high and there is only about 3% of spare global capacity as the era of easy oil is long gone,” according to analysts Gordon Kwan and Bob Chen. The recent oil price collapse was “deliberately triggered by Saudi Arabia” to slow down development in U.S. shale oil, Canadian oil sands and deep-water and Arctic drilling.
I am still believing in U.S. Oil and Gas! No way we are going anywhere! Go HAL
Yes News would be good! Any updates on production up/down/etc., think we all would like to know!
Let's get this party started! :)
Did the Saudis and the U.S. Collude in dropping oil prices??
Yes they did.............
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Did-The-Saudis-And-The-US-Collude-In-Dropping-Oil-Prices.html
Just as fast as the supposed oil glut occurred, it can be reversed just as quickly by the Saudis and the U.S. Oil will return to $100 bpd this year, mark my words! :)
Oil to return to $100 bpd this year:
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/01/08/oil-barron-100-oil-is-coming-back-4-high-yield.aspx
I am buying Oil/Gas stocks now while they are a bargain! Most smart money is as they know this low cycle will end and soon!
Hopefully they use it for part of the buy back! This is not even trading at a 1x multiple. Market value for the Company I estimate to be $16 million, what is going on???
I saw that, Wellington Shields bought shares? Not worried about Wellington as they are friendly to the Company and helping them uplist.
I am loading up on O&G right now, know it's a 12 month play but almost certain (99.9%) will at least double my investment over the period. Have allot of NASV already at a low average pps,and just loaded up on HAL and CLR which are bargains as well, I feel this is a opportunity of a lifetime, all experts agree.
Enjoy low gas prices now as they won't last long!! Just as quickly as the 50% drop in Oil and Gas in the last half of 2014, 2015 will see a sharp reversal back to $90 plus per barrel.
From Yahoo Finance: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/energy-crisis-early-2016-114519781.html
I am adding O&G stocks to my portfolio now while they are a bargain, like HAL and many others because once the bounce happens, could easily double my investment, and it is not a matter of if, but when!
Enjoy low gas prices now as they won't last long!! Just as quickly as the 50% drop in Oil and Gas in the last half of 2014, 2015 will see a sharp reversal back to $90 plus per barrel.
From Yahoo Finance: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/energy-crisis-early-2016-114519781.html
I am adding O&G stocks to my portfolio now while they are a bargain, like CLR and many others because once the bounce happens, could easily double my investment, and it is not a matter of if, but when!
Enjoy low gas prices now as they won't last long!! Just as quickly as the 50% drop in Oil and Gas in the last half of 2014, 2015 will see a sharp reversal back to $90 plus per barrel.
From Yahoo Finance: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/energy-crisis-early-2016-114519781.html
I am adding O&G stocks to my portfolio now while they are a bargain, like NASV and many others because once the bounce happens, could easily double my investment, and it is not a matter of if, but when!
Symbol change from NASVD to NASV should be announced on 1/8/15 They don't count weekends!
I am confident we will see appreciation with STTK, and soon
TSLA still a great buy at $220
Production Contracts at $90 per barrel through 2015
"According to their last filings, oil companies such as EOG Resources Inc, Anadarko Petroleum Corp, Devon Energy Corp and Noble Energy Inc had hedged their 2015 production at prices of $90 a barrel or more."
Read full story:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/revamped-u-oil-hedges-may-test-opecs-patience-061009060--finance.html
Analysts remain bullish on energy, forecasting that 44 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 will rise 23 percent in 12 months
Energy Stocks being swept up by Investors:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-30/energy-bargain-hunters-plow-record-amounts-into-etfs.html
Smart money knows the downturn is only temporary!!!!
Sam Stovall, chief U.S. equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ, says history indicates that when small-cap energy stocks have been beaten down to today’s extent, the ensuing rebound has typically been dramatic.:
http://fortune.com/2014/12/29/how-to-bet-on-an-oil-rally/?xid=yahoo_fortune
Some are saying by end of first quarter!
Downturn in Oil Prices will rebound by mid 2015, mark my words! $90-$100 per barrel will be back once Russia succumbs to the inevitable! They are loosing the economic war big time. Once the dust settles Saudi and the U.S. will allow prices back up.
Added more when TSLA was down! Too good of Company to stay against the ropes!!
Oh yeah! I am with you, have a very good feeling! NASV in 2015! They are a producing machine! Achieved allot this past year!