Home / News / Inside Investor morning report – April 21st

Inside Investor morning report – April 21st

Oil is worthless, Virgin set for administration and Netflix Inc reports strongly.
News

Oil worthless

In an unprecedented move, the oil price fell below $0 to negative $35; yes you read that right, sellers must now pay buyers of oil. Importantly, this only applies to oil for May delivery, and has been driven by the huge Russian and Saudi supply increases.

That being said June and July deliveries remain near all-time lows at $21 and $32 respectively suggesting the COVID-19 shutdown should be run and done by then. The result was a heavy fall in energy stocks with Exxon (-4.5%) and Marathon Oil (-4.7%).

Netflix reports

The S&P 500 matched the ASX 200’s (-2.5%) weakness on Monday, falling 2.5%, big tech gains not sufficient to offset the huge oil price fall. Netflix reported strongly, a prime beneficiary of the combination of millions working from home and many out of jobs.

  • The businesses constant flow of news shows including this week’s Michael Jordan documentary ‘The Last Dance’ has meant the share price is now up 36% for the year.

    Virgin out?

    In Australia, it looks like Virgin Australia Airlines (ASX: VAH) will be heading into voluntary administration with both the Federal Government and its many global shareholders unwilling to assist in recapitalising the company with the $1.4bn it needs.

    The company may well come out of this, but it will require the white knight in the form of private equity capital or an additional fundraising. NAB was the first of the banks to increase write-downs (by around $500m) but management made no comments around their dividend policy.

    Receive the latest market updates and insights with our free Inside Investor newsletterClick here to subscribe.




    Print Article

    Related
    How to improve the well-being of people living with dementia

    With no cure in sight, and the WHO predicting increasing cases of dementia as the population ages, it is critical society becomes more adept at dealing with this illness, especially with research showing many of those afflicted can respond positively to myriad activities and the right living environment.

    Nicholas Way | 20th Nov 2024 | More
    Seniors chalk up a win with cash payments to stay

    While less and less people use cash, for many seniors, uncomfortable using debit or credit cards, banking online or simply fearful of potential scams, it remains the payment system of choice.

    Nicholas Way | 20th Nov 2024 | More
    Age pension processing times nearly halved as red tape slashed

    Older Australians are the beneficiaries of a Services Australia initiative that has greatly improved service delivery for a wide range of government benefits.

    Nicholas Way | 13th Nov 2024 | More
    Popular