How a Simple Line Can Improve Your Trading Success

Elliott Wave International’s Jeffrey Kennedy explains many ways to use this basic tool

By Elliott Wave International

The following trading lesson has been adapted from Jeffrey Kennedy’s eBook, Trading the Line — 5 Ways You Can Use Trendlines to Improve Your Trading Decisions. You can download the 14-page eBook here.

“How to draw a trendline” is one of the first things people learn when they study technical analysis. Typically, they quickly move on to more advanced topics and too often discard this simplest of all technical tools.

Yet you’d be amazed at the value a simple line can offer when you analyze a market. As Jeffrey Kennedy, editor of the new Elliott Wave Junctures service, puts it:

“A trendline represents the psychology of the market, specifically, the psychology between the bulls and the bears. If the trendline slopes upward, the bulls are in control. If the trendline slopes downward, the bears are in control. Moreover, the actual angle or slope of a trendline can determine whether or not the market is extremely optimistic or extremely pessimistic.”

In other words, a trendline can help you identify the market’s trend. Consider this example in the price chart of Google.

That one trendline — drawn between the lows in 2004 and the lows in 2005 — provided support for a number of retracements over the next two years.

That’s pretty basic. But there are many more ways to draw trendlines. When a market is in a correction, you can draw a trendline and then draw a parallel line: in turn, these two parallel lines can create a channel that often “contains” the corrective price action. When price breaks out of this channel, there’s a good chance the correction is over and the main trend has resumed. Here’s an example in a chart of Soybeans. Notice how the upper trendline provided support for the subsequent move.

 

For more free trading lessons on trendlines, download Jeffrey Kennedy’s free 14-page eBook, Trading the Line — 5 Ways You Can Use Trendlines to Improve Your Trading Decisions. It explains the power of simple trendlines, how to draw them, and how to determine when the trend has actually changed.Download your free eBook >>

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline How a Simple Line Can Improve Your Trading Success. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

 

BOE’s Crisis Response Strategy under Pressure from Law Makers

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – Lawmakers in UK have pushed for an inquiry into the crisis response strategies taken by the Bank of England Governor Mervyn King. This has come at a time when the BOE is preparing to take over financial regulation in the country. The court has been pushed to order and investigation on some of the BOE’s actions which include the bank’s conduct after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed. Lawmakers want the investigation to cover Emergency Liquidity Assistance program which was undertaken in 2008 and 2009; they also want an investigation on the framework for providing liquidity to banks, and capability of the monetary policy committee to forecast economic parameters.

The decision by the bank to have the BOE’s investigated came after lawmakers who are debating a bill to give the BOE more power pushed for it. The bank of England had earlier been investigated in January, but the governor said that he would welcome any investigation if it were deemed necessary by the cross-party committee of lawmakers.

According to Andrew Tyrie, the investigation into the handling of financial crisis is necessary as lawmakers have not yet come up with conclusive solutions to the issues they are supposed to address. Andrew Tyrie chairs the Treasury Select Committee which oversees the Bank of England. Mr. Tyrie have also criticized The Court, which is the BOE’s governing body, saying that it refused to disclose discussions it held during the financial crisis which he claims prevented the parliament from holding the Bank of England accountable for the mistakes made in dealing with financial crisis.

The investigation into the BOE’s conduct during the crisis will be carried out by the former BOE policy maker Ian Plenderleith, former head of US research and forecasting at the Fed David Stockton, chief executive officer of Renshaw Bay LLP Bill Winters who is also a member of the UK Independent Commission on Banking.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
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EUR Resumes Bearish Trend

Source: ForexYard

After steadily gaining on the dollar and yen yesterday in overnight trading, the euro once again turned bearish during the European session. Renewed concerns regarding the political situation in Greece triggered the bearish correction. Still, the common currency was able to avoid dropping to the four-month low hit last week. Turning to today, traders will want to pay attention to a batch of British and US economic indicators. Both the British CPI and Public Sector Net Borrowing figures are forecasted to come in well below last month’s figures. If true, the GBP could take losses during mid-day trading. Later in the day, analysts are predicting that the US Existing Home Sales figure will show improvements in the American Real Estate sector. If true, the dollar could move up as a result.

Economic News

USD – Risk Aversion Boosts USD

Investors once again returned to safe-haven assets during European trading yesterday, resulting in gains for the US dollar against many of its main currency rivals. A pledge by world leaders over the weekend to help support the euro in the event that Greece is forced to exit the euro-zone did little to convince investors that the euro-zone debt crisis is anywhere close to being over. As a result, the EUR/USD, which had peaked at 1.2811 during overnight trading, tumbled over 80 pips throughout the day, eventually reaching as low as 1.2724.

Turning to today, dollar traders will want to pay attention to the US Existing Home Sales figure, scheduled to be released at 14:00 GMT. Analysts are predicting the figure to come in at 4.62M, which if true, would represent a significant increase over last month’s result and could lead to dollar gains against its safe-haven rival, the Japanese yen. That being said, should today’s news disappoint and come in below expectations, the dollar may give up some of yesterday’s gains against currencies like the euro and AUD.

EUR – Euro-Zone Uncertainties Lead to EUR Losses

After seeing gains against several of its main currency rivals during trading late last week, the euro resumed its bearish trend yesterday against its safe-haven currency rivals. Analysts attributed the downward correction to ongoing fears about the potential outcome of elections in Greece, scheduled for next month. In addition dropping more than 80 pips against the US dollar, the euro was also down approximately 65 pips against the Japanese yen. The EUR/JPY fell as low as 100.92 before staging a slight correction during the afternoon session and stabilizing around the 101.25 level.

Today, any announcements out of the euro-zone have the potential to generate volatility for the common currency. Conflicting solutions to the euro-zone debt crisis between France’s new President and the German government have led to investor worries about the prospects for economic recovery in the region. Any additional news today which indicates that euro-zone leaders are still failing to come to a unified position could result in the EUR extending yesterday’s losses further.

Gold – Gold Sees Mild Bearish Movement

Following last week’s significant bullish movement, gold once again turned downward during yesterday’s trading session as risk aversion returned to the marketplace. The precious metal fell well over $10 an ounce during the European session, dropping as low as $1584.57 before staging a slight upward correction.

Turning to today, traders will want to pay attention to euro-zone news which has the potential to impact the price of commodities and precious metals. Any risk aversion due to concerns about the upcoming elections in Greece and their potential impact on other countries in the euro-zone could cause gold to extend yesterday’s losses.

Crude Oil – Crude Oil Advances above $92

Upcoming talks between Iran and world leaders this week regarding that country’s disputed nuclear program resulted in mild supply side fears among investors, which brought the price of crude oil above the $92 a barrel level. Additionally, euro gains last week led to moderate risk taking in the marketplace, giving crude a slight boost. Overall the commodity was up close to $1 during European trading, peaking at $92.63.

Turning to today, crude traders will want to pay attention to any announcements out of the euro-zone which have the potential to generate significant market volatility. Any signs that the current crisis in Greece could spread to other euro-zone countries, in particular Spain, could result in oil reversing yesterday’s gains.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The MACD/OsMA on the weekly chart has formed a bullish cross, indicating that this pair could see an upward correction in the coming days. This theory is supported by the Williams Percent Range on the same chart, which has dropped into oversold territory. Going long may be the wise choice for this pair.

GBP/USD

Most long term technical indicators show this pair range-trading, meaning a definitive trend is difficult to determine at this time. Traders will want to keep an eye on the Relative Strength Index on the daily chart, as it is close to dropping into oversold territory. Should the indicator drop below the 30 line, it may be a sign of an impending upward correction.

USD/JPY

The weekly chart’s Williams Percent Range has crossed over into oversold territory, indicating that this pair could see upward movement in the coming days. Additionally, the MACD/OsMA on the daily chart has formed a bullish cross. Opening long positions may be the wise choice for this pair.

USD/CHF

The weekly chart’s MACD/OsMA has formed a bearish cross, indicating that a downward correction could occur in the near future. Furthermore, the same chart’s Williams Percent Range has drifted into overbought territory. Traders may want to open short positions ahead of possible downward movement.

The Wild Card

Dow Jones Industrials

The daily chart’s Williams Percent Range has dropped into oversold territory, indicating that upward movement could occur in the near future. Furthermore, the same chart’s Slow Stochastic has formed a bullish cross. Forex traders may want to go long in their positions ahead of a possible upward breach.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

What Falling Iron Ore Means for Gold

By MoneyMorning.com.au

In yesterday’s Money Morning I sounded the alarm on China.

Some of the data coming out from China right now, like bank lending, has just fallen off a cliff.

Between them, China’s big four banks have reportedly made ZERO new loans in the first half of May.

That’s a big deal because Chinese property developers need these bank loans to finance construction. According to Morgan Stanley, even large developers are waiting five months to get financing.


The smaller developers, if they can even get financing, are looking at an interest rate of 15-18%, probably from fringe-lenders.

At those rates they’d be better off putting it on a credit card!

Without a source of credit, developers are finding it very hard to build anything new, or even to finish projects off.

This is what the Chinese government wanted – to cool the property bubble down.

It looks like it is working a bit too well! And it could have a major impact on the Aussie economy…

With bank lending drying up, Chinese construction will soon STOP.

This has loads of follow-on effects.

For instance, the Chinese property market accounts for 40% of Chinese steel consumption.

So if Chinese property building grinds to a halt, there could up to a 40% drop in steel demand on the horizon. And that’s not even looking at the potential falls in steel demand for car production, infrastructure and the other industries that take the remaining 60%.

The Impact on Australian Iron Ore

This is where Australia comes in.

The Chinese steel industry is the biggest buyer of Australian iron ore, and it looks like demand for Australia’s most famous export (after Kylie) is about to fall in a hole.

The quotes from the Financial Times I used yesterday describing China’s economy have gone viral on the net. These suggested that major commodity trading houses are finding that Chinese commodity buyers have gone cold. And some big players have apparently defaulted on contracts in iron ore.

This is terrible news for anyone who is long on iron ore. You only have to look back to last September when it lost 35% in two months as a reminder of how volatile the price can be. This time around it has fallen by 12% in a month.

The fundamentals look pretty ropey. For the technical view of iron ore’s latest move, I spoke to our in-house technical guru, Murray Dawes of Slipstream Trader. He’s been making good money for his readers in this falling market, and reckons:

‘…Iron Ore prices are looking very sick indeed. $130 is the last line of support before a fall to $116. The impulsive decline from September to November last year (I.e. $181 down to $117) saw a perfect 50% retracement. The downtrend has now reasserted itself so I’d expect to see this $130 support fail in the short term and a sharp decline to $116. From there we can’t discount the possibility of a fall towards $100.’

Iron Ore – on its way to $110 / tonne?

Iron Ore - on its way to $110 / tonne?

Source: ANZ commodity research

This would have many institutional players howling, as so many of them are heavily invested in iron ore stocks. As a big player in Australia, It’s a bit hard not to be.

There is talk from big players that the Financial Times quotes about Chinese commodity buyers defaulting on contracts are ‘rumours’ designed to give traders the opportunity to short sell the iron ore market.

And I thought the gold bugs were supposed to be the conspiracy theorists!

What Happens Next For Iron Ore?

Well the next data we get on China will be Thursday lunchtime when the ‘Flash China Purchase Managers Index (PMI)’ is released. If it confirms all the recent news pointing at China stalling, then it could be an ugly day for iron ore, the rest of the resources sector, and the Australian dollar to boot.

Iron ore needs Chinese property construction, so the best hope iron ore has of a recovery is a stimulus program from China. I can’t see any hope of China’s property sector getting CPR from the government until next year, after the baton is passed from the current Chinese leadership to the next.

Iron ore is a commodity I’ve not tipped to Diggers and Drillers readers for a long time, because I prefer commodities that have supply squeezes and/or sustainable increases in demand. Iron ore didn’t fit the bill. Supply is on the up, and demand depended heavily on China.

Will Gold Face a Similar Fate to Iron Ore?


Gold fits the bill better, with supply that increases very slowly, and steadily rising demand.

But the latest developments in China may cast a shadow over gold too.

If China’s economy has dropped anchor – then will it keep importing gold in huge quantities?

In the last year, Chinese gold demand has become a big player in the market. It has imported an average of around 40 tonnes a month – around 18% of global gold mine output. These are just the official figures, and I’ll bet the real amount is far higher.

Will China keep importing if things are hitting the skids? My feeling is that most of the gold going into China is for China’s Central Bank – which should continue even if things slow down.

Some Chinese gold imports are for retail investors of course, and they are now buying around 0.25 grams per tonne per year. It’s possible this may actually increase if Chinese property investors decide to reallocate from property to gold. Other than the dodgy Chinese equity markets, they don’t have many other choices!

To be honest I’m not sure which way Chinese gold demand would turn in a slowdown. It’s something to think about, and we’ll have to watch the numbers for a while yet.

What’s in store in the meantime?

The reports I’m reading suggest the current leadership in China is brewing some stimulus up for this year.

However it won’t target property.

Rather it will point at the agricultural sector to reduce food price inflation, which has been a big problem.

If that’s the case, then in addition to hanging onto your gold…go short iron ore, and go long tractors!

Dr. Alex Cowie
Editor, Diggers & Drillers

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What Falling Iron Ore Means for Gold

LNG: Why Australia Will Be a New Global Gas Leader

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Peter Coleman is 52 years old, but his baby face makes him look years younger.

You should not let that fool you. Among other things, this savvy Aussie oil and gas executive is also a Western Australia Football Commissioner.

You know, that unique sport where you get to run up the score into triple digits while kicking your opponent in the teeth.

These days, Peter is in the middle of a major shift in the global liquefied natural gas (LNG) pecking order. Don’t look now, but the order is about to see a new global leader… Australia!

Prior to this point, market observers had usually considered the country to be a fringe player in the global oil and gas trade.

That’s about to change.

A Major LNG Exporter

Projections now put the country on schedule to displace Qatar as the major LNG exporter worldwide. Rising from nothing at the beginning of this decade, the country will be exporting at least 80 million tons of gas each year by 2020.

I first met Peter three years ago when he was still vice president for Asia and the Pacific at global oil and gas giant ExxonMobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM). At the time, I was consulting on the massive Gorgon offshore natural gas project north of Perth on the Australian west coast.

Gorgon is led by Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX) and involves what, at the time, was one of the first subsea gas gathering infrastructure networks ever attempted on a system of fields this size.

(By the way, they are still finding gas in this region).

Gorgon is Chevron’s largest project worldwide, but it is only one of three major projects in that part of Australia. All three are priming up to move LNG into the global market.

Initially, there was significant concern that the combination of projects would end up flooding the Asian market with gas, and end up driving down the price. Chevron has 47% of the Gorgon operation, but the project also includes majors Exxon and Royal Dutch/Shell (NYSE: RDS-A), along with three Japanese end users as minority participants.

And that was the potential downside.

Exxon has its own project in Papua New Guinea also coming on line. The other two main Gorgon partners worried Exxon would lock up long-term Japanese LNG end- user contracts, squeezing out Gorgon along with the other two northwest Australian projects.

Peter played his cards close to chest in those days, and you could never read his face very easily. His words are always measured, leaving you with the distinct impression that the other shoe is about to drop.

You also come away with the feeling he is providing only what he thinks you already know.

A Big LNG Market

Well, all that angst ended when China announced it was building five new coastal LNG receiving facilities simultaneously. The result has been nothing short of staggering. All of the projected volume from all of the Australian and New Guinean projects is now tied up in 15- to 20-year delivery contracts.

One of the central Australian players in all of this is Woodside Petroleum (ASX: WPL).

And that is where Peter comes back in.

For the past year, he has been CEO of Woodside.

Woodside has been paring its stakes somewhat in natural gas production projects, but it has just begun exporting from its huge $14.7 billion Pluto LNG terminal. The first consignment went off to Japan late last month. That facility will be moving at least 4.3 million tons a year with an expansion possible.

The Pluto and Xena projects remain under the control of Woodbine. But the company also believes that other natural gas producers will satisfy additional export capacity beyond Woodbine’s production levels.

Asia remains the single greatest consumer market (until the international boon began a few years ago, more than 70% of all LNG in the world was sold either to Japan or South Korea).

Still the competition will be increasing from Russian and U.S.-based production, and the question is whether the market can sustain the rapidly accelerating volume becoming available.

That just happened to be one of the main topics Peter discussed in an interview with Wall Street Asia’s David Winning.

In the process, another “ringer” was introduced.

It seems that Australia has significantly more shale gas than originally thought. It remains too early to estimate how much of this will find its way onto the market, or the time it will take to construct the necessary infrastructure, develop the field systems, extract, and process the gas.

In the interview, Peter was again quite measured in his responses. While most would turn to the recent history in North America and point toward a similar result in Australia, Peter takes the more cautious approach – awaiting geological determinations of actual basin structures.

Nonetheless, whether the natural gas will be coming from abundance offshore or locked within rock onshore, one thing is becoming quite clear.

Australia is now a leading international force and market maker in the natural gas sector.

Dr. Kent Moors

Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Oil & Energy Investor

From the Archives…

How the Ukraine Could Be Europe’s Biggest Shale Gas Play
2012-05-18 – Kris Sayce

Why Greece Can’t Afford to Stay in the Euro
2012-05-17 – Dan Denning

Get in Early on Shale Gas
2012-05-16 – Dr. Alex Cowie

APPEA – Day One at the Oil & Gas Show: Sand Dunes, Scuba Diving and Camels
2012-05-15 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The Case for Higher Gold Prices
2012-04-14 – Diane Alter


LNG: Why Australia Will Be a New Global Gas Leader

John Law: The Gambler Who Broke France

By MoneyMorning.com.au

In 1720, John Law was lucky to escape Paris with his life. His investment scheme had made him one of the richest men in France. But it collapsed – and when it did, it ruined the entire nation. With a mob behind him baying for blood, he stole away to Brussels with one exquisite diamond – the last remnant of his enormous fortune.

It wasn’t the first time that Law had been forced to run for his life. In 1697, aged 26, he had fled London. At the gaming tables of society London, he had flirted with the future Countess of Orkney. Her husband challenged him to a duel. Law won, killing the husband, but earning himself a death sentence. He sprung jail and stole off to the continent. There, his attention was drawn to mathematics, banking and gambling.

Law hit Europe’s gaming tables. He understood the new science of probability and he used it to his advantage – among his tricks, for example, he would offer wealthy gamblers tempting prizes at vanishingly small probabilities.

He was a skilful gambler – but he was still a gambler, and he suffered some drastic losses. Years earlier in London, he had been forced to mortgage his family estate in Scotland to repay his gambling debts. In Europe he made enemies of the sheriffs of Venice, Genoa and Paris, and was expelled from each of those cities. But before he was ejected from Paris, he made one important friendship – with the Duke of Orleans, a young royal who was destined to rule France.

As well as gambling, Law was preoccupied with abstract questions of money and banking. He wrote a series of books and pamphlets to promote his radical ideas on how to organise the nation’s money.

In Essay on a Land Bank and Money and Trade Considered, Law broke new ground in economic theory. Indeed, the books put him in the front rank of the great economists. Among other things, he defined for the first time the functions of money.

He also used supply and demand analysis to explain the ‘paradox of value’ – in other words, why water is cheap and diamonds are expensive. He also advanced understanding of how changes in the money supply could drive real changes in the economy (although he neglected some key aspects of this theory, as we shall see shortly).

When Paper Money Was Better Than Metal Money

In 1715, Louis XIV died. Known as the ‘Sun King’, he built the lavish palace at Versailles, he believed his reign was ordained by God – and he left France on the verge of bankruptcy. His government owed three billion livres, but only took in 142 million in taxes.

The Duke of Orleans assumed the reins of government after Louis died. Remembering his old friend Law’s ambitious ideas for transforming the monetary system, he summoned him to Paris.

First in Scotland, then in Saxony, Law had tried to convince the government to issue new paper money backed by the nation’s land, with no success. But France’s new ruler was desperate, and so more receptive.

Law convinced him that France’s metallic money supply was restrictive, and that expanding the money supply with new paper currency would stimulate trade and employment. The regent allowed Law to try his scheme on a small scale.

He and his brother established the Banque Generale and issued six million livres’ worth of bank notes, partially backed by specie. Because the authorities continually clipped and debased French coinage, Law’s currency was sought after. Soon it traded at a 16% premium over face value.

The bank opened branches throughout France and Law’s paper credit system was extended around the nation. Trade and employment picked up. The ruler was impressed.

Flush with success, Law proposed a more ambitious scheme. At the time, France controlled the Mississippi river territories – which included the present states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The area was sparsely populated.

Law proposed establishing a company and granting it a monopoly over trade in the new territory. His plan was endorsed by the regent, and in 1717, the Compagnie du Mississippi was born.

Law was growing in power and influence. The Duke of Orleans appointed him Controller General of Finance, making him the second most powerful man in France and its de facto ruler. He consolidated the East India, Canada and China trading corporations into his Mississippi Company, so that the new entity monopolised all French trade outside of Europe.

By 1720, he had assembled and fused together all of the French trading companies, the tobacco farm, the mint, the tax firms, the French national debt and a quasi-central bank under a giant conglomerate known as the Mississippi Company.

The Bubble to End All Bubbles

Remember that France was close to bankruptcy. Using audacious financial engineering, Law swapped all of France’s high-yielding government debt for equity in the Mississippi Company. Nothing similar had ever been attempted on this scale. The seemingly limitless resources of France’s new empire fired demand for shares in the company in France and across Europe.

The first share issue, at 550 livres per share, was oversubscribed, and was soon trading at twice the price. Subsequent shares were issued at 1,000 and then at 5,000 livres.

Trading in Mississippi Company shares led to one of the biggest speculative manias in history. Enormous fortunes were made overnight – the word millionaire originated from Mississippi Company traders. Almost every single member of the French aristocracy was engaged in buying or selling Mississippi stock.

And it wasn’t just wealthy investors who were caught up in the scheme. People from every class of French society rushed to get involved. Coachmen and cooks made millions in days. Trading was centred on the tiny street in Paris where Law lived, the Rue Quincampoix, and crowds gathered every day to shout and scrap for Mississippi shares. It seemed that Law’s paper wealth had obliterated the normal rules of economic life.

But Law’s theory of money was incomplete. He neglected the impact that the issuing of millions of shares would have on the money supply, and on inflation. Notes and coins in circulation went up by 186% after the company floated. By January 1720, prices were rising by 23% per month.

Law was losing control of his scheme. He proposed that shares in the Compagnie be gradually deflated by 50% over a period of months – and this is where the story ends.

The penny was beginning to drop that the Mississippi delta was less a bountiful verdant garden and more a malarial swamp. There was a run on the shares, the banks, and on paper money. Metallic specie was reintroduced. Law was sacked from the ministry.

There were ugly scenes on the streets of Paris where dozens were crushed in the crowds, desperate to withdraw coin from the remaining banks. France would take generations to recover from the collapse.

“My shares which on Monday I bought,
Were worth millions on Tuesday, I thought,
So on Wednesday I chose my abode;
In my carriage on Thursday I rode;
To the ball-room on Friday I went;
To the workhouse next day I was sent.”

An innocent merchant barely escaped alive and his carriage was ripped to pieces when the mob mistook him for Law. France’s former de facto ruler had no choice but to flee. He abandoned his fortune and his adopted country and moved to Venice, where he died in poverty nine years later.

Sean Keyes

Contributing Editor, MoneyWeek (UK)

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in MoneyWeek (UK)

From the Archives…

How the Ukraine Could Be Europe’s Biggest Shale Gas Play

2012-05-18 – Kris Sayce

Why Greece Can’t Afford to Stay in the Euro

2012-05-17 – Dan Denning

Get in Early on Shale Gas

2012-05-16 – Dr. Alex Cowie

APPEA – Day One at the Oil & Gas Show: Sand Dunes, Scuba Diving and Camels2012-05-15 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The Case for Higher Gold Prices

2012-04-14 – Diane Alter


John Law: The Gambler Who Broke France

EURUSD has formed a cycle bottom at 1.2642

EURUSD has formed a cycle bottom at 1.2642 on 4-hour chart. Range trading between 1.2642 and 1.2900 would likely be seen in a couple of days. As long as 1.2900 resistance holds, the bounce is treated as consolidation of the downtrend from 1.3283, and another fall to re-test 1.2624 (Jan 13 low) support could be expected. On the upside, a break above 1.2900 resistance will indicate that the downtrend from 1.3283 has completed at 1.2642 already, then the following upward movement could bring price back to 1.3200-1.3300 area.

eurusd

Forex Technical Analysis

2012 Gold Price Forecast: Where We Are and Where We’re Going

Article by Investment U

Gold Price Forecast for the Remainder of 2012

You'll notice that volatility in equities remains ever-present, particularly as we're in the midst of earnings season. But the volatility in gold prices has calmed down.

In 99.9% of instances, I take a bottom-up approach to investing.

I ignore the macro-economic picture for the most part; I ignore the talking heads on television; and I ignore the crests and troughs of sentiment.

I focus on companies. I focus on their opportunities. I focus on value and growth. And then I prey on the “Chicken Littles,” the panic sellers, the investors who freak out on every market dip. I snag great companies at discounts and watch the returns roll in.

This is why my favorite time of the year is August, September and October – the months of broad market catastrophes.

Now, that’s for the vast, vast majority market sectors. One of the few exceptions though, is gold.

Gold is the exact opposite. It’s a top-down investment, with its value tethered to the macro-economic picture. You add to your position on dips – like we have now – and profit on the run-ups.

In August, gold bounced off $1,900 per ounce. Today, we’re hovering around $1,590. That’s nearly a 16% decline… A 16% discount.

A lot of people think the glitter-filled days of new gold highs are behind us. I’ve heard calls for $1,100 gold and even a claim gold will tumble all the way down to $700… But I’d ignore those extremes. I will tell you, we may see gold dip lower – that isn’t out the question.

But a lot of those talking heads forget that gold is also seasonal, though this seasonality isn’t as profound as other, softer commodities.

So the reality is, we’re in a seasonal bearish period inside what I believe is a larger bull run. We’re in stasis – a holding pattern. A breather. We saw this same stall from April to July last year when gold mainly hovered around $1,500 and dipped in the $1,400s a few times.

In fact, over the last 15 years, gold prices weaken from mid-February into the summer, then again in October. And our biggest gains come in the stretch from November to early February – the annual stampede run fed by ramped up Asian buying.

You’ll notice that volatility in equities remains ever-present, particularly as we’re in the midst of earnings season. But the volatility in gold prices has calmed down. Gone are the days of $150 per ounce moves. Now, a big move is between $30 and $40. And most days the moves have been much smaller than that.

November and December are two of the strongest months for gold. But this year we also have the U.S. presidential election in November. And the macro-economic picture continues to remain tenuous. We’re still concerned about Europe. Greece is small potatoes compared to what’s unraveling in Spain. And Spain is a drop in the bucket compared to Italy.

If the dominoes begin falling, the great euro experiment’s end will move from a fun over-dinner debate to a very real possibility.

I expect it’ll be six months before the next big leg up in gold’s price. And $2,000 gold is far more eminent than triple-digit gold. Pick your spots over the next six months, and look for gold to move higher in the last half of the year. Of course, at the very least, you should have Investment U’s recommended 5% allocation in precious metals like gold.

Good Investing,

Matthew Carr

Article by Investment U

A Few More Reasons to Avoid the Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) IPO

Article by Investment U

A Few More Reasons to Avoid the Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) IPO

Like it or not, Facebook has to prove profitable and sustainable, two issues that are still in question at this time.

On Tuesday, May 15, Investment U research contributor Gary Spivak asked a series of questions about Facebook:

“Can an entire industry or company that has been in existence for less than 10 years continue to grow at its current torrid pace? Will social media continue to stay “hot hot hot” or will it merge into the mainstream? If it takes a company seven years to “rule the world,” how long could it take a competitor to come in and simply be cooler or just plain better?”

Those are questions that many market analysts have been asking ever since Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) first announced its IPO back in February. And they have every right to ask them, too.

The social media site arguably has the most hyped-up IPO of the century and, according to some business writers, of all time. What’s even less disputable is that investors were salivating over the mere prospects of Facebook going public long before any such thing was declared.

But initial publicity and enthusiasm can only go so far. At some point, a company has to stand on its own merit.

Like it or not, Facebook has to prove profitable and sustainable, two issues that are still in question at this time.

General Motors Backs out of Facebook Advertisements

With mere days left until the big IPO, Facebook bulls recently received a piece of unexpected news to pause over. Apparently, General Motors (NYSE: GM) sees some issue with its advertising campaign on the site, and has pulled its $10 million out of the game.

Now, that could be for a large variety of reasons. And none of them are clear considering the car company’s refusal to address speculation and Facebook’s inability to do so, since it’s in its pre-IPO “blackout” period.

But it isn’t the only piece of bad news the social media giant had to deal with in the last few weeks. Back in late April, Facebook reported first quarter financials, which included a decrease in profits amounting to $28 million less than the previous year and a 6% decrease compared to the last quarter.

MarketWatch tech columnist John Shinal explains that “Facebook’s results over the last two years show a consistent pattern: Advertising revenue surges in the second and fourth quarters, respectively, yet slows or even weakens in the first and third calendar periods.”

Yet even so, it doesn’t change the fact that this was the first time profits dropped in at least a two-year time span.

Consumers Ok With Facebook Alternative in the Future

Again, one bad quarter doesn’t a trend make, but it’s slightly worrisome. So too, for that matter, is a recent Associated Press-MSNBC poll.

Apparently, despite the hoopla in the business world and even the obsession among consumers themselves, half of Americans think that Facebook won’t be sticking around for the long haul. About the same number also believe that the social network isn’t worth what CEO Mark Zuckerberg expects it to go for.

That cynicism shouldn’t be shrugged off lightly, either. In the ever-evolving world of technology, trends come and go extremely easily. For one example, take the evolution of musical recordings over the last few decades…

Just 30 years ago, records were still being made and sold. Yet since then, the market has seen cassette tapes come and go, CDs begin their slow but obvious death spiral, and MP3 take over the market.

Few people can say exactly what’s going to come next, only that something undoubtedly will… and probably sooner than later.

The same has been true of social media’s relatively short history. In 2003, the hip crowd was gaga over Xanga, an online journal site where people could share their thoughts and pictures with friends or their larger community. Next up was MySpace, which peaked in 2006.

And while Facebook has reigned king – with Twitter possibly as queen – for the last several years, who’s to say that will last?

Facebook might be able to beat the trend like its predecessors haven’t been able to… but it’s probably wisest to say otherwise all the same.

Good Investing,

Jeanette Di Louie

Article by Investment U