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This trading "BOOM" is the real deal. Michael Cosgrove. CEO - The Amerex Group of Companies. I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced . . . but I know it when I see it. 1964 – Justice Potter Stewart. 13.35% in 1980. 10.51% in 1974. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Michael Cosgrove
Page 2: Michael Cosgrove

I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced . . . but I know it when I see it.

1964 – Justice Potter Stewart

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Interest rate chart

Interest Rates 1965 - 1980

0.00%

2.00%

4.00%

6.00%

8.00%

10.00%

12.00%

14.00%

16.00%

10.51% in 1974

13.35% in 1980

Source: (www.federalreserve.gov)

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Long term gasoline chart

0.00

0.50

1.00

1.50

2.00

2.50

Gasoline Prices 1919 - 2005

$1.38 in 1981

$2.27 in 2005

$0.37 in 1973

$0.63 in 1978

Source: (www.eia.doe.gov)

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Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973

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•Capped Domestic Crude Oil Prices

•“New Crude Oil” – No Price Cap

•“Stripper Oil” – No Price Cap

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CONTROLLEDOIL

CERTIFICATE

UN-CONTROLLEDOIL

CERTIFICATE

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Price controls rescinded January 1981

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long term crude chart

Source: (www.eia.doe.gov)

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• U.K Taxes on North Sea Crude Oil

• Japanese trading companies seeking to

• Wall Street begins to arbitrage crude oil

increase top line revenue

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National Energy Policy Act - 1992

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“you have to understand that market realities have diverged from traditional valuation methodologies”

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1. Duke Energy Trading & Marketing, LLC 55,885,662 mwh2. PG&E Energy Trading Power 51,330,085 mwh 3. Southern Company Energy Marketing LP 42,940,259 mwh4. Aquila Energy Marketing Corp. 39,964,588 mwh5. Reliant Energy Services, Inc. 31,288,607 mwh6. El Paso Merchant Energy 22,339,315 mwh7. Entergy Power Marketing Corp. 18,201,513 mwh8. Constellation Power Source 16,466,585 mwh9. MIECO, Inc. 12,254,449 mwh10. Sempra Energy Trading 11,269,371 mwh11. Enron Power Marketing Inc. 9,305,833 mwh12. Williams Energy Marketing & Trading 7,722,926 mwh13. TXU Energy Trading 6,838,664 mwh14. New Energy Ventures, Inc. 6,822,925 mwh 15. HQ Energy Services 6,762,105 mwh16. LG&E Energy Marketing Inc. 6,505,649 mwh

Second Quarter 2000 Top Power Marketers

(source – PowerMarketers.com)

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Cinergy Day Ahead Power 1995 - 1998

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000N

ov-

95

Ma

r-9

6

Jul-

96

No

v-9

6

Ma

r-9

7

Jul-

97

No

v-9

7

Ma

r-9

8

Jul-

98

No

v-9

8

Source: (www.ferc.gov)

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Page 38: Michael Cosgrove

NASDAQ Adj Close*

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

4,500

5,000

Source: (www.nasdaq.com)

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Current market expansion

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1. The crude oil trading boom of the late 70’s was based on the gaming of a poorly conceived attempt to legislate energy prices.

2. The crude oil trading boom in the mid 80’s to mid 90’s was based upon a response to evolving tax laws in the U.K., the trading of cargoes of crude oil to bolster top line revenue and by the introduction of the ultimately self-extinguishing practice of arbitrage trading.

3. The boom in power trading in the late 90’s was based upon extraordinary stock market valuations, creating ravenous desire on the part of power marketers to demonstrate superior market share as measured in MWH traded.

Page 44: Michael Cosgrove

•Continued deregulation•Changing load shapes•Accurate price reporting•Higher ethical standards•Clearing of OTC energy products•Non-correlated asset•High energy prices•High volatility•Big money•Energy is hot•Balance sheet & order flow•Hedge funds

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Where do we go from here?

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1. Next big thing…2. Volume growth3. Sustained volatility4. Worldwide deregulation5. Higher allocations to energy6. Financial institution presence7. Hedge fund presence8. Consolidation among utilities9. Niche players10.Robust fundamentals

Page 47: Michael Cosgrove

We have just begun…