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Voya Asia Pacific High Dividend Equity Income Fund T.IAE


Primary Symbol: IAE

Voya Asia Pacific High Dividend Equity Income Fund (the Fund) is a diversified, closed-end management investment company. The Fund’s investment objective is total return through a combination of current income, capital gains and capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing primarily in a portfolio of dividend yielding equity securities of Asia Pacific companies. The Fund will seek to achieve its investment objective by investing at least 80% of its managed assets in dividend producing equity securities of, or derivatives having economic characteristics similar to the equity securities of Asia Pacific Companies that are listed and traded principally on Asia Pacific exchanges. The Fund will invest in equity securities and will select securities through a bottom-up process that is based upon quantitative analysis. Voya Investments, LLC is an investment adviser of the Fund.


NYSE:IAE - Post by User

Post by hawk35on Sep 02, 2016 12:42am
149 Views
Post# 25201987

Oil speculators reverse course, start betting on price recov

Oil speculators reverse course, start betting on price recov

Oil speculators reverse course, start betting on price recovery

Bloomberg News, Calgary Herald



Oil speculators reverse course, start betting on price recovery

Bloomberg News, Calgary Herald


Oil investors are turning the car around.

For a second week, money managers slashed bets on falling prices by a record and boosted wagers on a rally. Futures have climbed 23 per cent in less than three weeks as some OPEC members raised the possibility of an output freeze amid signs the global glut is easing.

“This is a lot of running from one side of the boat to the other,” said Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citi Futures Perspective in New York. “Speculators were selling with both hands in July and buying with both hands this month.”

Saudi Arabia will be willing to listen to other producers and what they have to offer when it comes to an output freeze, the kingdom’s Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said in an Aug. 25 interview in Los Angeles. Oil suppliers want a deal to manage output, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo told Arabic-language newspaper Al-Hayat.

Speculators slashed their short position in West Texas Intermediate by 66,247 futures and options during the week ended Aug. 23, the most in data going back to 2006, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Bets on rising prices jumped to the highest in more than a year.

Futures rose 3.3 per cent to $48.10 a barrel in the report week. WTI, the U.S. benchmark, entered a bull market Aug. 18, less than three weeks after tumbling into a bear market.

OPEC’s Aug. 8 announcement that it would hold “informal talks” in Algiers spurred a rebound in prices. The International Energy Forum, comprising 73 countries that account for about 90 per cent of the global supply and demand for oil and natural gas, will meet in the Algerian capital on Sept. 26-28.

Another reason for the rally is that global oil oversupply is finally dissipating, according to banks from Citigroup Inc. to Bank of America Merrill Lynch. A narrowing discount on immediate supplies of Brent crude, the benchmark grade for half the world’s supply, is the “clearest indicator” that the two-year glut is fading, Credit Suisse Group AG said.

“There’s ongoing faith that the oil market globally is rebalancing,” Evans said.

Some analysts remain unconvinced that OPEC nations will be able to reach an agreement. In April, Saudi Arabia’s demands that Iran be part of any deal to limit output scuppered a proposed deal between OPEC and other producing countries.

“This is a lot of talk,” said Sarah Emerson, managing director of ESAI Energy Inc., a consulting company in Wakefield, Mass. “There are too many issues in the Arabian Gulf region for an agreement to take place.”

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