Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
You would be surprised what comes via twitter these days including oil information.

This came via twitter--pic is the pricing slide in chart form and you must admit there seems to be no bottom right now:

Urals Crude at $ 95.34 today.

pic.twitter.com/qifuQ0lO0e
As usual with stuff flying around on Twitter, this is suspect: there's no indicated source for the data and no actual transactions cited. The figures would represent a very large deviation from the normal Brent/Urals price spread, and that alone makes them questionable.

When you see a referemce to a specific transaction: i.e. a Urals cargo in the Baltic or Mediterranean sold on x day at dated Brent minus y... then you know the actual price, what people are paying instead of what someone says they are paying. I would not trust such information via Twitter, unless linked to a credible source.

Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
There are a couple of things in play right now that are contributing---number one is the high US production that is flowing straight to the US refineries which are designed to handle mainly sour thus a slumping need for Urals sour rught now in the US
The US was never a significant buyer of Russian oil; domestic production is primarily displacing Venezuelan and Nigerian production. That oil will go somewhere of course, and will compete with Russian oil for buyers.

Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
---production does not seem to have been reduced by Qatar/UAE and the KSA and that is leading to an oversupply right now and 2) there seems to be a general slump in demand for what ever reason.
The Saudis have cut 400k bbl/day. It's not clear how far they are willing to go. So far OPEC seems to be treating it as normal fluctuation, no special meetings to discuss production cuts or any similar indications of alarm.

Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
The Swedes are saying it it hits 93 by say next Tuesday Wednesday then there is in fact no bottom until the 85-88 ranges which could in fact happen by the week after next.
Which Swedes? Again, don't take it seriously unless specific transaction data is reported.

Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
That is a major problem for Russian finances especially in the face of this latest round of sanctions.
Yes, it is, though the extent of the problem remains difficult to quantify. That still leaves the question of how any of this relates to the Ukraine. I don't see Putin backing down just because he suddenly has an unanticipated money problem: it might even make him more aggressive. It's not as if backing down in the Ukraine will push oil prices back up again. The oil price problem and the woeful state of the Russian oil industry will be there no matter what happens in the Ukraine, so it's hard to see it as a major influence on the decision making process there.