People’s Bank of China Cuts RRR 50 basis points

By Central Bank News
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) announced a 50 basis point cut in the required reserve ratios (RRR) for deposit taking financial institutions, effective 18 May 2012.  The new required reserve ratios will average 20.00% for large banks, and 18.00% for small banks.  The move is expected to add as much as 400 billion yuan of liquidity to the financial system.  The move marks a continued shift in the policy bias to loosening, with the PBOC previously being content to use open market operations to adjust liquidity, in contrast to the higher profile RRR.

The last reduction in the RRR was a 50 basis point cut in February this year, while the People’s Bank of China last raised the reserve requirements by 50 basis points in June 2011 to peak at an average 21.50% for large banks, and 19.50% for small banks.  The PBC also adjusted the reserve requirement rules in August, effectively resulting in tightening of about 100bps.  Meanwhile the People’s Bank of China last raised the benchmark interest rate 25bps to 6.56% in early July last year.  

China reported annual inflation of 3.4% in April, down from a high of 6.5% in July last year.  Meanwhile the Chinese economy grew an annual 8.1% in the March quarter (8.9% in Q4, 9.1% in Q3, 9.5% in Q2).  The Chinese Yuan (CNY) has appreciated by about 3% against the US dollar over the past year, with the USDCNY exchange rate last trading around 6.31.

The Slow Death of Australian House Prices

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The rate cuts in November and then December were supposed to save Australian house prices.

Yet less than six months later, recent economic data suggest things are getting worse.

According to RP Data, capital city house prices lost a combined 4.5% last year.


But ever the optimist, RP Data called this decline in April a ‘renewed softness’.

Even Tim Lawless, RP Data’s research director, admitted interest rate cuts won’t help the housing market. He said:

‘Our estimate of transaction volumes to February suggest that the two interest rate cuts in November and December last year are yet to provide a sustained stimulus to the market, with transaction volumes remaining reasonably steady around 31,000 each month. Comparing this with the sales rate through mid 2009 when around 45,000 homes were selling each month, the slowdown in buyer activity becomes quite clear.’

Housing sales by volume are down 31% since mid-2009. Adding to the housing woes is the amount of ‘housing stock’ available. It’s double that of five years ago.

number of properties advertised for sale nationally

Source: Macrobusiness/RPData.com


And not only are more houses available, but they’re cheaper as well.

Increased housing stock is dragging down house prices. Yet, what will happen to house prices when high debt levels catch up with us?

Take a look the two charts below. In the first chart, the blue line shows you Australia’s private debt to disposable income. It stands at 150%. In comparison, at the peak, Americans had a private debt level of 300%.

The peak in American private debt levels occurred just as house prices began to fall.

aggregate private debt

The next chart gives you an idea of just how big the housing crash was in the US (blue line)…and a warning of what Aussie home owners can expect:

real house price indices

Source: debtdeflation.com/blogs


Those charts come from Professor Steve Keen. He’s an economist who predicts a US style housing crash in Australia. He’s convinced that high personal debt levels will bring on a crash in Aussie home values, much like what happened in the US.

Professor Keen’s thinking used to be at the fringe of economic thought. Today, it’s mainstream.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has confirmed the correlation of debt levels and house prices. In their World Economic and Financial Surveys publication, the IMF said:

‘Based on an analysis of advanced economies over the past three decades, we find that housing busts and recessions preceded by larger run-ups in household debt tend to be more severe and protracted.’

The thing is, even if we don’t see a US style housing crash, monthly housing data suggests home values are falling at a steady rate.

So rather than a quick housing bust, Aussie homeowners face a long-term housing bust.

And it’s already underway. Even so, some spruikers still won’t admit it. They won’t say prices have fallen, they’ll tell you prices are soft…weakening…easing…. Or any other word they can think of to avoid saying, ‘Aussie house prices are falling‘.

The good news is the spruikers can’t hide behind industry-speak for much longer. Each month, fresh numbers show a dismal housing market.

One in permanent decline.

How long will it last? We don’t know that for sure. But this sort of decline could drag on for years. The US is into its sixth year of falling house prices.

The housing bubble took two decades to build up…it might take another two decades before house prices go up again.

Shae Smith
Editor, Money Weekend

The Most Important Story This Week…

Every day it seems like the news gets worse in Europe. Greece is in political turmoil. France is going to change government. Spain has been forced to bail out a bank. The entire euro currency is under threat. You would have to be crazy to invest in Europe, right? Hold that thought. Practically every investing book says to go against the crowd or to buy “when there is blood in the streets”. This is because when investors are afraid, assets go cheap. Fear drives prices down, just as greed drives them up.

A climate of fear is the investor’s best chance to buy low and later sell high. It’s easier said than done. But it’s not enough for an asset just to be cheap. It might stay cheap. There needs to be an underlying trend of demand…an exciting catalyst for change coming….a spark for an asset to be re-rated by the market. Europe is the biggest trading bloc on the planet. It needs energy. How? Wind? Solar? No. Kris Sayce explains Why Europe Will Ditch Green Energy and the change he sees coming for investors to strike now.

Other Recent Highlights…

Dr. Alex Cowie on Why It’s Time to Buy Gold: “The Reserve Bank of Australia’s 50 basis point interest rate cut last week has really taken the wind out of the Aussie. Judging by the down-leg in previous interest rate cycles – not to mention the state of the Australian economy – more cuts are coming. Which should mean the Aussie may have further to fall yet…right now Australian gold investors are looking at a very good opportunity to buy gold.”

Dan Denning on Why You Should Be Watching Japan’s Economy: “When you reach the point where you have to borrow more money just to pay the interest on money you’ve previously borrowed, you’ve reached what Hyman Minsky called the stage of ‘Ponzi Finance’. Japan is nearly there. Now, the first consequence of reaching this point is that Japanese interest rates may start going up. That would be disaster.”

John Stepek on What the European Elections Mean for the Euro: “The euro is a political construct, not an economic one. As it stands, the euro cannot function in the long term, from an economic point of view. The various countries involved are too different. So the main thing holding the euro together so far is that European voters, by and large, still want it…they don’t yet blame the currency for their woes. This could be the year that all that changes…”

James Baldwin on The Great Push North for Arctic Oil Continues: “The Kremlin has been looking for ways to incentivize producers to help Rosneft replace waning production. Tax breaks have been one way, but companies also want a little bit of insurance when they work with Moscow… The answer is ‘hostage taking.’”

To End the Week…


The Slow Death of Australian House Prices

European Elections: Voters Say “No” to Economic Reality

By MoneyMorning.com.au

‘Europe fights back against austerity,’ was how The Daily Telegraph headlined its weekend European election coverage. ‘Anti-austerity movements are gathering pace across Europe following political earthquakes in France and Greece. A total of 12 European governments have now been dismissed in three years.’

As the European welfare state is officially in its death-throes none of us should be surprised if political strife gets cranked up to eleven. I firmly expect that we will see much more of this in the future.

While I can understand the anger of the electorate and sympathize with the sense of desperation and foreboding, I cannot, however, consider the electoral choices of the weekend particularly enlightened. They do not reflect a coherent, let alone intelligent strategy as the Daily Telegraph headline seems to imply.

If those who “won” a European election deliver on their promises, economic disintegration will only accelerate. What is being offered in terms of ‘solutions’ is a dangerous assortment of economic poisons, more suitable to describe the European disease than provide a recipe for stronger growth.

Recovery through early retirement and infrastructure spending? – C’mon. Nobody can take that seriously.

But it seems that just because this heap of economic stupidity can neatly be swept under the wide tent of ‘anti-austerity’, the commentariat seems somehow willing to believe in the wisdom of the crowds and look for some deeper insights here.

I guess the reason for this is that the economic ideologies that are now being strenuously interpreted into the European election results rhyme with the economic prejudices of most commentators. They, too, believe that state bankruptcy is best to be ignored or not to be taken too seriously so that we can spend our way out of this mess.

The Perceived Wisdom is Wrong

For a long time media pundits have treated us to the perceived wisdom that economic growth can only come from the actions of the government. Only devaluation through euro-exit, inflation through more money printing and more government deficit-spending, preferably by the still credit-worthy Germans and then fiscally-transferred to the maxed-out Greeks, can revive the economy because only this can lift aggregate demand, which is the magic cure-all of economic problems.

What is lost on these commentators is that the European mess is nothing but the inevitable result of government-stipulated aggregate demand. Easy money funded the Spanish and Irish real estate booms and bankrupted their banks and by extension their governments.

Easy money allowed Greece’s political class to go on a borrowing binge that has now bankrupted the country and lured large parts of the population into zero-productivity, soon-to-be-eliminated public sector jobs.

Do you still want the state to ‘stimulate’ the economy? Be careful what you wish for.

The real culprit of high youth unemployment in Spain and Italy is not ‘austerity’, which hasn’t even started there, but a bizarrely overregulated and sclerotic labour market in which it is almost impossible for firms of a certain size to fire people. The incentives are thus stacked massively against hiring.

Yet, in France one of Hollande’s election promises is not to deregulate the labour market. If I were unemployed in France I would not be counting my chances of getting a job over the next five years. In France the state runs more than half the economy, yet Hollande promises not to privatize state-run industry. Where is the wisdom in that?

Yet, the statists and socialists are delighted. Paul Krugman, who never saw a debt crisis you could not borrow and spend your way out of, rejoices at such display of economic genius. We are all Keynesians now!

Listening to Krugman you would think Greek and French voters were not using the ballot to cling desperately to some remnants of the welfare state but were in fact positively advertising the wisdom of government stimulus and the mystical ‘multiplier’.

Some of the commentators tried to argue that what happened was also some kind of anti-establishment vote, a verdict against centralisation and the dominance of the deservedly despised bureaucratic elite in Brussels.

Nice try, but that is rubbish.

This was not an anti-establishment vote at all. It was not a vote for change but a desperate vote for the status quo. Of course, the old elite deserved the sack but they were largely booted out not because people got tired of the old policies but because the leadership now finally admitted that they could no longer deliver on the old promises.

The established parties lost because they could not continue upholding the false promise that had kept them in office for years or decades, the promise to make the ‘European model’ work. They had to admit that the European welfare state was now bankrupt. Kicking the can down the road is increasingly not an option as the end of the road is now in sight.

Shooting the Messenger

And the European election winners were those who had the chutzpah to maintain that drastic belt-tightening and painful reform were not required but that the people just had to ‘stick it to the man’, who is Angela Merkel and sits in Berlin. The tactic is straightforward. Shoot the messenger!

In France that meant voting for a charisma-free Socialist bureaucrat who will revive France with higher taxes, early retirement and a Hoover dam funded by Eurobonds and the ECB. In Greece, the big winner was an ex-Communist firebrand who admires Hugo Chavez, and who has raged against austerity measures and structural reform.

I guess we now know what the electorate is against. ‘Say no to cuts!’ But what is it for? Over in Ireland, the deputy leader of Sinn Fein, Mary Lou MacDonald, had the answer: ‘A No vote (to the “Austerity Treaty”) in Ireland will strengthen those arguing for jobs and growth.’

Well, who could not love a politician who promises jobs and growth? But the relationship between politics and jobs and growth is a tenuous one. Politicians are not savers who fund the creation of a capital stock through saving, and they are not entrepreneurs who put that capital to productive use.

Politicians are people who spend other people’s money. In Ireland the budget deficit runs at 13 percent of GDP per annum, which according to Krugman’s logic must be a fantastic recipe for jobs and growth. Let’s just sit back and watch how that economic miracle is going to unfold.

My guess is that many people in Europe still know, or at least instinctively sense, that the promises of jobs and growth through state spending and money printing are hollow. They know that the state is bust and cannot keep spending money it doesn’t have. The policy options are much more limited than the campaign rhetoric indicates. On trend, fiscal consolidation and structural reform will continue, and Germany’s negotiating position will remain strong.

Yet, on the margin this was an indication that Europe, and in particular France, remain in many areas unreformable, and that the pressure on the ECB to sustain the unsustainable with sizable money injections will, if anything, intensify.

Detlev Schlichter

Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: Detlev Schlichter is the author of Paper Money Collapse.

From the Archives…

Why China’s New Consumer Economy Won’t Give You the Trade of the Decade
2012-05-04 – Kris Sayce

Why China Could Be The Next Destination For the Financial Crisis
2012-05-03 – Merryn Somerset Webb

How Did We Get It So Wrong on Australian Housing?
2012-05-02 – Kris Sayce

This Indicator Shows the Copper Price Could Be Set to Soar
2012-05-01 – Dr. Alex Cowie

How Gold Nanoparticles Will Create A New Kind of Gold Rush
2012-04-30 – Michael Robinson


European Elections: Voters Say “No” to Economic Reality

Monetary Policy Week in Review – 12 May 2012

By Central Bank News

The past week in monetary policy saw three central banks announcing interest rate changes: Poland increased 25 basis points to 4.75%, Malawi hiked rates 300bps to 16.00%, while Belarus cut rates -200bps to 34.00%.  Those that held interest rates unchanged were: UK 0.50%, Russia 8.00%, Indonesia 5.75%, Korea 3.25%, Norway 1.50%, Malaysia 3.00%, Serbia 9.50%, Peru 4.25%, and Sri Lanka 7.75%. Elsewhere the People’s Bank of China released its quarterly monetary policy report.


Looking at the central bank calendar, the week ahead in monetary policy will be relatively quiet on the meeting front with just Iceland on the list (the following week is more busy). However there are monetary policy meeting minutes due from the Reserve Bank of Australia and the US Federal Reserve’s FOMC. The Bank of England also has its regular inflation report due out.

May-16
ISK
Iceland
Central Bank of Iceland


Source: www.CentralBankNews.info

Article source: http://www.centralbanknews.info/2012/05/monetary-policy-week-in-review-12-may.html

April 2012 Headlines at Central Bank News

By Central Bank News
Following is a list of all the headlines on Central Bank News during the month of April. The month in central banking in April was relatively quiet, but with a couple of notable interest rate changes in emerging markets (Brazil -75bps to 9.00% and India -50bps to 8.00%, also Vietnam cut rates). In the quantitative easing space the UK, ECB, and US monetary authorities kept their asset purchase programs unchanged, while the Bank of Japan added another 5 trillion yen to its quantitative easing program.

March 2012 Headlines at Central Bank News

Central Bank News Link List – 1 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 4 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 5 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 6 April 2012

Monetary Policy Week in Review – 7 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 11 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 12 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 13 April 2012

Monetary Policy Week in Review – 14 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 14 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 16 April 2012

Reserve Bank of India Cuts Rate 50bps to 8.00%

Central Bank News Link List – 18 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 20 April 2012

Brazil Central Bank Cuts Selic Rate 75bps to 9.00%

Monetary Policy Week in Review – 21 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 22 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 24 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 25 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 27 April 2012

Monetary Policy Week in Review – 27 April 2012

Central Bank News Link List – 29 April 2012


Source: www.CentralBankNews.info

Central Bank News Link List – 11 May 2012

By Central Bank News
Here's today's Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous central bank news link list.  Remember, if you want to submit links for inclusion in the daily link list, just email them through to us or post them in the comments section below.

Who Likes Ben Bernanke? These Guys…

Written by Sara Nunnally, Editor, Inside Investing Daily, www.insideinvestingdaily.com

The American dollar is the best of the worst. It is a scary thought that proves big trouble lies ahead.

It’s not often you see the wizard behind the curtain. But every once in a while you get a glimpse. It’s sometimes strange, and the headlines are a little unbelievable…

Like this one from Bloomberg on May 9:

“Bernanke Gets 75% Approval From Investors in Global Poll”

I mean, really?

Let’s take a closer look at who these investors are. They are — in essence — you and me. Bloomberg subscribers from all over the world.

They’re not big banks who get to borrow money so cheaply from the Fed that the interest they get paid to park their reserves with the Reserve is higher than the costs to borrow. And they’re not exporters who revel in a weak dollar.

They are everyday investors like you and me.

But that means I’m not quite doing my job… You see, it’s my job to pull back that curtain — to show you the inner-workings of the all-powerful machine. The “great and powerful” Fed…

And if 75% of us think Ben Bernanke‘s doing a good job, then I’ve got a lot of work to do.

The Fed’s job is to keep our economy liquid. But not too liquid. They’ve pumped so many new dollars into the system that they won’t even release the actual figures. And where have all those dollars gone? Two places: The government’s coffers to keep the country running; and into the deep dark holes of major borrowing (or bailed out) corporations.

The Fed’s quantitative easing programs bought debt at unprecedented rates, and those 75% of investors who think Bernanke is doing a good job are expecting another round.

Big banks and big corporations are also hoarding cash. I’ll let Zach Scheidt, editor of Velocity Trader, explain:

Instead of borrowing money from consumers (savings accounts, CDs, etc.), the major banks have been borrowing money at discounted rates as a result of the Fed liquidity efforts.

And big corporations have some $3 trillion on their balance sheets. That’s a massive amount of money just sitting there.

It’s like a giant clogged toilet… and the Fed just keeps throwing roles of t.p. into the bowl, hoping to push it all through. The result is going to be busted pipes or an overflowing mess. In economic terms, no buyers for our debt or hyperinflation.

Or both.

But as with all things, these opinions are relative.

The Bloomberg poll says four out of five investors think the Fed has done a better job of handling our economic troubles than the European Central Bank has done handling theirs.

And maybe they have. The EU is juggling a lot more moving parts than we are.

All that means is we’re the best of the worst. And that’s making things very confusing for investors.

The best of the worst means the U.S. dollar is climbing against other major currencies. I told my Macro Trader readers this Wednesday that the dollar has jumped above its recent downtrend. Here’s the chart I showed them.

U.S. Dollar Chart
View larger chart

Since this big move higher with a lot of momentum, the U.S. dollar index has dropped back slightly. If we were to judge our economic health in a vacuum, there would be no support for the higher dollar. But with Europe heading up a creek and Japan’s Nikkei index dropping, the U.S. is the safest port in the storm.

That Bloomberg survey said 46% of those polled ranked the U.S. among the best performers this year… more than double amount that think China will rank highly this year.

That makes the dollar in demand. The U.S. dollar index has climbed for eight days as of this writing… the longest streak since September 2008.

And that makes me nervous.

If these dynamics become a self-fulfilling prophecy, will our economic problems just slip away? Not really. Because so long as companies keep hoarding that cash, the clog will always be there. That money will eventually find its way into our economy, and when it does, those soggy dollars could send our system into a hyperinflationary tailspin.

And the mountain of debt will collapse.

Think it can’t happen? It’s already happening for Europe. Join me Monday for some truly scary stuff.

Until then, the U.S. dollar might just be the best playground for investors.

Editor’s Note: Biggest Spending Spree in Modern History? It has nothing to do with 79 million baby boomers or bailout plans… It’s a spending spree the likes of which the industrialized world has never seen before. I’m talking about nearly $1 trillion every year — for the next 20 years — that’s on track to flood into this red-hot sector. But which companies are likely to benefit the most? And how can you get your own slice of this massive new spree? Follow this link for details.


www.insideinvestingdaily.com

 

Buffett’s $5.1 Billion “Missing” Paycheck

By Carla Pasternak, http://globaldividends.com/

To say Warren Buffett has done well for himself would be an understatement. That’s why from time to time, I like to check in on what the “Oracle of Omaha” is doing with Berkshire Hathaway’s (NYSE: BRK-A) portfolio.

There is a neat resource if you like to keep tabs on Buffett, CNBC.com has a page that tracks the common stocks in Berkshire’s portfolio in real-time. You can see it here.

Looking at that page, it’s very evident that Warren and I invest a little differently than each other. He’s the most famous value investor in the world. I’m more than happy to let the dividends roll in month after month — even if the checks aren’t in the billions or millions.

So while I understand he isn’t on the prowl for high-income securities, the holdings still left me a little astonished. Poring over the names, I recognized every stock — Berkshire owns some of the most well-known companies in the world.

But I also recognized that they don’t own many stocks I would even look twice at for income. The best one is Gannettt (NYSE: GCI), which yields 6.0%.

To its credit, Berkshire has bought some securities that threw out nice income. Back in 2008, it acquired some Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) and General Electric (NYSE: GE) preferreds that paid a nice yield of 10%. However, that was a special deal not available to retail investors and both companies have since redeemed those shares.

Digging a little deeper into Berkshire’s holdings, I found the 34 common stock holdings yield an average of only 2.0%. Even so, thanks the massive size of its portfolio, Berkshire will rake in an astonishing $1.5 billion from dividends alone over the next year if you project forward the annual payments of the current holdings. Certainly $1.5 billion is a lot of money.

But Buffett’s disinterest in income is costing Berkshire.

Just to see what happened, I calculated the average yield of the 44 holdings in my High-Yield Investing portfolios. It comes out to 7.0% — more than five full percentage points above Berkshire’s 2.0% average yield.

In actual dividends paid, the difference between the yield on my portfolio and Berkshire’s would be staggering. Berkshire’s portfolio totals $73.1 billion (which is more than the GDP of Kenya, Puerto Rico, and Yemen, among others). If the entire portfolio earned 7% in dividends annually, payments would total $5.1 billion — about $3.6 billion more than it does right now, and enough to purchase seven dozen Boeing 737’s.

Of course, we don’t all have the portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway, and I think Warren Buffett has done ok for himself with his value focus. But the same principles that are leaving billions on the table for Berkshire could be leaving thousands on the table for your portfolio if you aren’t making dividends a priority.

Good Investing!


Carla Pasternak’s Dividend Opportunities

Disclosure:  StreetAuthority owns shares of COP, GCI as part of the company’s various real-money portfolios. In accordance with company policies, StreetAuthority always provides readers with at least 48 hours advance notice before buying or selling any securities in any “real money” model portfolio. Members of our staff are restricted from buying or selling any securities for two weeks after being featured in our advisories or on our website, as monitored by our compliance officer.

Kiwi Gains as Payrolls Climbs

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – The Canadian dollar has strengthened against the greenback after employment appreciated in April to almost six times than it had been forecasted. This has encouraged sentiments that the Bank of Canada will raise interest rates. Earlier, the currency had declined almost to three months low but after the Statistics Canada Payrolls report, the Canadian dollar increased against all the 16 most traded currencies.

According to a Chief Currency Strategist at Toronto Dominion Bank, Mr. Shaun Osborne, the report from Statistics Canada is a strong one and it will get the market talking about an interest rate increase from the Bank of Canada. The loonie was able to reverse losses it had incurred earlier in the day prior to the release of the report. The report showed that employment increased by 58,200 jobs; in March, the employment grew by 82,300 jobs which is the largest increase since September 2008. This month the unemployment rate has reduced to 7.2 percent from 7.3 percent. The market was expecting an increase of 10,000 jobs and the interest rate to remain constant at 7.3 percent.

However, the likelihood that the interest rates might go up by September diminished after reports from the US showed that employers added the least jobs n April. US is Canada’s biggest partner and any bad reports from the world’s largest economy affects the Canadian economy. Earlier, speculation of interest rate hike had surged after policy makers had indicated that the it could go up earlier than it had been planned.

The loonie increased by 0.4 percent against the greenback to trade at 99.83 cents per dollar. It had weakened earlier to by as much as 0.4 percent trading at $1.0017. The report from the Statistics Canada has given support for the loonie seeing it close the week on a high against the dollar and most other world currencies.

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
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Majors Technical Analysis 11/May/2012

By TraderVox.com

EUR/USD

A bullish cross on the daily chart's Slow Stochastic indicates that this pair could see upward movement in the near future. This theory is supported by the Williams Percent Range on the same chart, which has dropped into oversold territory. Going long may be a wise choice for this pair going into the rest of the week.

GBP/USD

The daily chart's Bollinger Bands are beginning to narrow, indicating that this pair could see a price shift in the near future. Furthermore, a bearish cross on the weekly chart's Slow Stochastic indicates that this pair could see downward movement in the coming days. This may be a good time to open short positions ahead of a possible downward breach.

USD/JPY

Long term technical indicators are providing mixed signals for this pair. While the daily chart's Williams Percent Range is in oversold territory, meaning that upward movement could occur, the weekly chart's MACD/OsMA has formed a bearish cross. Taking a wait and see approach may be the wise choice for this pair.

USD/CHF

A bearish cross on the daily chart's Slow Stochastic indicates that this pair could see downward movement in the near future. This theory is supported by the Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart, which has just crossed over into overbought territory. Going short may be the wise choice for this pair. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox