Archive for November, 2009

11/30/09 1:40 pm - Forex: EUR/USD: Euro dips below 1.5020 level

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) – Euro decline from intra-day high at 1.5085 has extended below 1.5020 support and the pair reached prices right at 1.5000 moments ahead of the U.S. session opening.

According to Valeria Bednarik, collaborator at FXstreet.com, under 1.4995, the pair could attempt a re-test of session low at 1.4960: “EUR/USD is attempting to break the 1.5020 support, not quite easy at this point. Probably under 1.4995 pair would attempt a test of the daily low around 1.4970, while only a clear and strong acceleration trough this level could trigger a deeper movement to the 1.4930 area.”

On the upside, Bednarik points out to 1.5060/1.5094 congestion area: ” we have some messy congestion zone between 1.5060/1.5094, so only clearly above this yearly high, I expect the pair to run higher with an intermediate resistance around 1.5135 ahead of the 1.5160 area.”

For more information, read our latest forex news.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/30/09 1:40 pm - Forex: EUR/USD: Euro falls further to 1.4975

FXstreet.com (Córdoba) – The Euro is extending its decline form the highs of the day. EUR/USD fell below 1.5000 to 1.4975 and so far has fallen more than a hundred pips from 1.5080 (intra-day high). If the pair falls further immediate support lies at 1.4950/55 and below at 1.4920. Current price at 1.4985/90 is 0.17% below today’s opening price.

Valeria Bednarik, Fxstreet.com collaborator, affirms: “Current candle opening under 20 SMA support further falls in the next hours yet will likely confirm such movements with an acceleration under 1.5000. Nest support in the pair comes at the daily low, around 1.4970, while back above 1.5040, chances of further falls seems quite limited. 4 hours charts are losing upside momentum but mostly flat, no giving a clear bias.”

For more information, read our latest forex news.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/30/09 1:40 pm - EUR/USD Classical

Leave a Comment

11/30/09 1:40 pm - Euro / US Dollar

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - New Record Low Yield On Two Year Treasuries; Is This The Start Of A Dollar Rally?

In the wake of the Dubai default (please see Dubai Defaults – Deflation In Action – Watched Pot Theory Revisited for details), I am up watching treasury yields.

Two year treasury yields plunged to an new all-time record low as the following Bloomberg table shows.

Yield Curve as of 2009-11-27 12:22 AM

click on chart for sharper image

On Monday Bloomberg reported Treasury Sells Two-Year Notes at Record Low Yield

The Treasury sold $44 billion of two-year notes at a yield of 0.802 percent, the lowest on record, as demand for the safety of U.S. government securities surges going into year-end.

The last auction, a $44 billion offering on Oct. 27, drew a yield of 1.02 percent. Indirect bidders, a class of investors that includes foreign central banks, purchased 44.5 percent of the notes today, the same as at the October sale.

The previous low was 0.922 percent on the auction held. Dec. 26, 2008.

For the first time in seven decades, Treasury bills are paying no interest while stocks continue to appreciate — a divergence that might be perilous if Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke didn’t know all about 1938.

Notice the misguided faith the author has in Bernanke’s ability to do something intelligent. The fact of the matter is we would not be in this mess if the Fed had been acting intelligently instead of openly promoting housing and credit bubbles that have now crashed.

As for the divergence, yes, it’s there. I commented on it Tuesday in Nearly 1 in 4 Borrowers Is Underwater; Case Shiller Prices Rise 4th Consecutive Month; Treasury Yields Sink

While the stock market is saying one thing, the treasury market says another. I know who I believe, and it’s not the stock market.

Hyperinflation In Reverse

So here we are with two year treasuries down from Tuesday’s record low yield of 0.802 percent to a mere .65 percent this morning. Also note that five year treasuries are at 2.01 percent, and three month treasuries yield zero percent.

This must be a symptom of the hyperinflation everyone seems to be predicting…. except in reverse.

Thanksgiving morning at about 5:00 AM (before any news reports were out on Dubai) I was trying to figure out what was going on with the futures and I penned in Yen Hits 14 Year High vs US Dollar; Nikkei Sinks

Dollar Sinks S&P Futures Down

One thing of note is that S&P 500 futures are down 14 points and commodities are down as well even though the dollar is sinking. This is a dramatically different change from the norm.

Of course this is a holiday and we must see if there is follow through. This could be a one day wonder.

The important point is that if this sticks, or if equities sink while the Yen and/or Dollar rally, the reflation trade is finally over.

Can it be that the much despised treasuries are the only thing that will rally while everything else sinks? Yes, that is entirely possible given how lopsided anti-dollar sentiment is vs. everything else.

It may or may not play out that way. After all, Friday has barely begun. We have seen these kind of starts to the day actually close up. However, at this hour, commodities are getting whacked while the dollar has reversed hard to the upside.

Given the US markets were closed yesterday, I have the same question floating in my mind as a day ago, wondering if this is another one day wonder rally in the dollar (and another one day wonder selloff in equities) or if this is the start of a long awaited correction in both the dollar and equities.

Time will tell, but it will not be pretty for dollar bears or equity bulls if it is.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Mike “Mish” Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - Dubai Defaults – Deflation In Action – Watched Pot Theory Revisited

Last night after a 10 hour drive I was up at 5:00AM watching the futures plunge but not knowing why. Now we know: Dubai default fears spook investors

Global stock markets endured heavy selling on Thursday as investors were spooked by the spectre of a default by Dubai and after a febrile foreign exchange market saw the yen surge to a 14-year high against the dollar.

The turmoil caused a flight to less risky assets. Gold, which had challenged $1,200 in Asian trading, fell back from its highs and money flowed into havens such as German government bonds.

US markets are closed for the Thanksgiving holiday, but electronic trading of the benchmark S&P 500 equity futures contract showed a potential drop on Wall Street of 2.2 per cent.

As the European trading day progressed it became clear it was Dubai World’s difficulties that had hit a particular nerve, reminding investors of the lingering damage wrought by the financial crisis.

Banking stocks tumbled on concern about their potential exposure to Dubai. Indeed, the cost of insuring against default by the emirate jumped, with Reuters reporting the Dubai five-year credit default swap being quoted as high as 500-550 basis points. This means it would cost about $500,000 a year to insure $10m of Dubai’s debt. On Tuesday it would have cost about $360,000.

Greek and Irish government five-year credit default swaps also moved higher as nations with supposedly precarious fiscal positions were punished. In contrast, investors sought out comparative haven assets, pushing the yield on the German Bund down by 8 basis points to 3.16 per cent.

Dubai Debt Delay Rattles Confidence in Gulf Borrowers

Please consider Dubai Debt Delay Rattles Confidence in Gulf Borrowers

Dubai shook investor confidence across the Persian Gulf after its proposal to delay debt payments risked triggering the biggest sovereign default since Argentina in 2001.

The cost of protecting government notes from Abu Dhabi to Bahrain rose, extending the steepest increase since February as Dubai World, with $59 billion of liabilities, sought a “standstill” agreement from creditors.

Dubai World’s assets range from stakes in Las Vegas casino company MGM Mirage to London-traded bank Standard Chartered Plc and luxury retailer Barneys New York through asset-management firm Istithmar PJSC. The Dubai government’s attempt to reschedule debt triggered declines in stocks worldwide that had been rebounding from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Unlike Argentina, which stopped payments on $95 billion of debt eight years ago after yields on benchmark bonds more than doubled in four months to more than 40 percent, Dubai’s announcement yesterday “was a surprise,” said Alia Moubayed, a London-based economist at Barclays Plc.

Gold And The Watched Pot Theory

While some were spouting US government debt default theories or dollar devaluation theories others were looking for the “unwatched pot”.

Inquiring minds are taking another look at Gold And The Watched Pot Theory written October 07, 2009.

Message Of Gold

The reason for the strength in gold is not US inflation. As I have pointed out many times, gold fell from 850 to 250 over the course of 20 years, with inflation every step of the way. Thus, the inflation story just does not fit.

However, it should be clear that a major financial crisis is in store following a long period of competitive currency devaluation and massive debt and derivatives expansion by nearly every major country on the planet.

Might the US dollar blow up? Yes it might. But so could the RMB if China floated it, and so could the British pound. No one seems to see the crisis brewing in Japan with a huge demographic problem, a shrinking population, falling exports, and no way to pay back its national debt.

There is seldom a mention of the problems in European banks who foolishly lent money to the Baltic States in Euros or Swiss Francs and now those Baltic country currencies have collapsed and the loans cannot be paid back. European banks also lent to Latin America and those loans are also suspect. Arguably, European banks are in worse shape than US banks, but no one talks about it, at least in the US.

Spain has unemployment approaching 20% yet must suffer through the same interest rate policy as Germany. Seldom does one hear about this either.

Certainly the UK is a complete basket case with its banks on government life support. Iceland has already blown up, who is next?

Most are not aware of the problems in China, Japan, or Europe. However, the problems in the US are universally well understood. Indeed all eyes are on the dollar and everyone is talking about deficits, monetary printing, and especially unfunded liabilities even though the latter is tomorrow’s problem, not today’s.

Watched Pot Theory Revisited

A watched pot may boil, but it’s not likely to explode, especially when everyone watching the pot expects an explosion any second.

Indeed, it would be fitting if the Ridiculous Hype Over Secret Oil Meetings, helped form a bottom on the US dollar.

Yet, it’s easy to see that a financial crisis is brewing.

Somewhere, something is going to blow sky high, but from where I sit, it’s as likely to be in the Yen, the Swiss Franc, the British Pound, or something no one is watching at all as opposed to the US dollar specifically.

Hyperinflation?!

Amazingly some see this as hyperinflationary.

Nadeem Walayat writing for the Market Oracle says Deflationists Are WRONG, Prepare for the INFLATION Mega-Trend

Nov 18, 2009 – 12:58 AM

The jist of the deflationists argument is that debt deleveraging MUST trigger huge consumer and asset price deflation. Whilst we have all witnessed huge asset price deflation and some consumer price deflation during 2008 and into 2009. However we have also witnessed unprecedented government and central bank actions of this year, which have ignited asset price inflation with more to come that is now starting to feed into consumer price inflation.

Why do deflationists have it wrong ?

It is that focusing on the deleveraging of the the debt mountain is a red herring, taken on its own then yes it DOES imply deflation as the debt bubble ’should’ contract. But given the asset price reaction of 2009 that is NOT what is actually taking place! the Debt bubble is NOT deleveraging, the bad debts are being dumped onto the tax payers! The huge derivatives positions that act as the icebergs under the ocean as compared to the asset price tips that we see above water are not contracting but expanding!

The DEFLATIONISTS ARE DEAD WRONG !

The last 8 months have proven it to be so ! But STILL they cling on as though they have blinkered visions as a function of presumably not having to put their own money on their deflation calls. What will there position be in another 8 months – it will be to REINVENT HISTORY TO IMPLY THEY SAW IT COMING ALL ALONG!

What’s amazing is how hyperinflationists who have blown the call for 10 years running now accuse deflationists in advance of rewriting history.

Here's the deal. Deflation happened, the only debate is how long it lasts. It is more than premature to proclaim the end of it on the basis of an 8 month period. Things do not progress in a straight line and a rebound after a 51% plunge in the S&P 500 and 10 year treasury yields close to 2% was expected.

That rebound is a much proof of the end of deflation as any of half a dozen 50-100% rebounds in the Nikkei over the last two decades, or the massive rebound in the DOW in 1931 before it plunged to new lows.

Many of those pointing to 8 month timelines as if that is what matters ignore an even bigger timeline in which stocks fell that 51%. If this rally is proof of inflation the the plunge must be proof of deflation.

The reality is neither is true. What is true is that in a credit based fiat economy, what matters is ability of the Fed and Central Banks in general to foster bank lending. And that is not happening.

Total Bank Credit

click on chart for sharper image

More Deflationary Writeoffs Coming

click on chart for sharper image

Allowances for loan losses will decrease as charge offs increase. However, the above charts are in relation to non-performing loans.

Because allowances for loan losses are a direct hit to earnings, and because allowances are at ridiculously low levels, bank earnings have been wildly over-stated.

The $trillions poured into the economy got a measly 2.8% rise in GDP.

Now what? Jobs are still contracting, businesses are not borrowing, banks are reducing credit card limits, etc, etc.

Those are not conditions of inflation, let alone hyperinflation. Now concerns are rising in Congress and the administration over the national debt. Meanwhile, more defaults loom: on housing, on commercial real estate, and on credit cards.

Two year treasury yields are at a record lows of .74 and five year treasuries are at 2.11.

If hyperinflation is coming, buy houses. Nowhere else can you get the leverage you can get in houses. It’s a sure thing. Meanwhile I suggest gold has been rising for another reason: credit stress and fears of deflationary economic collapse.

Dubai just stepped up to the plate out of the blue, defaulting on debt. Defaults are part of the deflationary process. Prepare for more of them because they are coming.

I see no reason to change my stance that the US is in for a long slug of hopping in and out of deflation for quite some time. Ironically it is the hyperinflationsts who are rewriting history. The hyperinflationists had it wrong, deflation happened first.

Deflation is here, the only debate is how long it lasts. Some of us saw it coming, the rest still scream about the massive inflation that is supposedly coming. They may be correct eventually, but when?

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Mike “Mish” Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - Currency Majors Technical Perspective

EUR/USD Current price: 1.4899 After being close for holiday, stocks opening will be key today as they are expected quite lower, exacerbating risk aversion sentiment triggered past Asian session. Bearish gold also favors the downside, while hourly charts show price under moving averages and strongly bearish. Indicators had corrected part of the oversold condition, turned flat currently, yet bigger time frames remain bearish. Watch for a break under 1.4800/10 strong static support area, for

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - EURUSD: Loss Of Momentum Signals Further Weakness

HIGHLIGHTS: EURUSD: Loss Of Momentum Signals Further Weakness – Having broken through the 1.5062/82 levels to close higher at the 1.5143 on Wednesday, EUR failed to sustain those.. AUDUSD: Loss Of Longer Term TrendlineTargets The 0.8904 Level – The pair is on its way to a second-week of downside losses following its failure at the 0.9404 level and Thursday break and hold below its longer term rising trendlineinitiated from the 0.6303 … EURUSD EURUSD: Loss Of Momentum Signals Further Weakness.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - Forex: EUR/USD: Euro rises to 1.4930

FXstreet.com (Córdoba) – The Euro is extending it recovery after falling earlier to 1.4825, reaching the lowest price of the week. EUR/USD is holding above 1.4900 after finding support at 1.4885. The pair rose to 1.4929 and if extends the recovery above 1.4930, next resistance levels lie at 1.4955 (Nov 26 low) and 1.4975/80. On the downside, support levels lie at 1.4885 and below here, 1.4830 (session low), and 1.4800 (Nov 20 low).

According to Stoyan Mihaylov, technical analyst at Deltastock.com, the Euro could fall to 1.4550: “Yesterday’s break below 1.5020 and especially today’s below 1.4920 signal a reversal at 1.5146, that jeopardizes the important support at 1.4801. A break below that level will state that a major top is in place and will target 1.4623, en route to 1.4550.”

For more information, read our latest forex news.

Go to Source

Leave a Comment

11/27/09 11:20 am - EURUSD: Euro Bearish Breakout is Nearly Confirmed

Leave a Comment