Loonie Advances on Crude Oil Surge and ECB Rate Cut Speculations

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) –The Canadian dollar rose against the US dollar the most in six weeks after crude oil climbed on speculation the European Central Bank may cut interest rate. The advance was also supported by the Chinese central bank decision to help the Euro region in dealing with the debt crisis. The loonie has advanced against most of its 16 major counterparts as commodity related currencies gain traction in the market. Risk appetite has emerged in the market since Friday, but it has been hampered by the recent opposition to the EU Summit decision.

Joe Manimbo of Western Union Business Solutions in Washington said that the current surge in commodity currencies is as a result of speculations that central banks around the world will offer stimulus to spur growth in the global economy. Shane Enright, an Executive Director at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Toronto said that the advance of the Canadian dollar will determined further by the US payrolls data expected on July 6. On the same day, the Canada’s Jobless report will be released and these two reports will determine how the Canadian dollar closes the week.

It is expected that jobless rate remained unchanged in June from May 7.3 percent; this report will be released by the Statistics Canada agency on July 6. Economists are also projecting an addition of 5000 jobs in the economy as compared to 7,700 jobs in May. In US, a government report is set to show that employers added less than 100,000 jobs in June.

However, the Canadian dollar added 0.5 percent against the dollar to trade at C$1.0122 as crude oil climbed by 5.1 percent to trade at $88.04 a barrel in New York. Further, the currency advanced as economists predict the European Central Bank will cut interest rate by 0.25 percent to set a new interest rate at 0.75 percent when they meet later this week.

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

Swedish central bank keeps repo rate unchanged at 1.50%

By Central Bank News
    The Riksbank, Sweden’s central bank, kept its benchmark repo rate unchanged at 1.50 percent to support the country’s economy as problems in the euro area cast a shadow.
    But the Swedish economy continues to grow and many of the country’s most important trading partners are expected to continue to expand, albeit at a slow pace, the Riksbank said in a statement.
    “There is considerable uncertainty concerning economic developments,” the bank said, adding that work on rectifying problems in the euro area is continuing but the economic downturn there is expected to be protracted, subduing Swedish exports.
    “The situation in the euro area is problematic and could worsen, which could have further negative effects on the Swedish economy. In this situation, the repo rate may need to be lower,” the bank said.

     “However, it is also possible that confidence in economic developments could return sooner than expected, which could lead to higher demand in the Swedish economy. This would justify a higher repo-rate path.”
    The bank said it expected to hold its repo rate at this level for just over a year and when inflationary pressures resume, the repo rate would have to be gradually raised.
    “This repo-rate path will contribute to stabilising inflation around 2 per cent and resource utilisation in the economy around a normal level. Compared with the decision in April, the repo-rate path has been adjusted downwards somewhat as a result of the poorer outlook abroad.”
   The bank’s new average quarterly forecast showed the repo rate falling to 1.4 percent in the fourth quarter of this year, down from April’s forecast of 1.5 percent, and then rising to 1.6 percent in Q3 2013, down from the April forecast of 1.8 percent. It is then forecast to rise to 2.4 percent in Q3 2014, down from a previous forecast 2.6 percent. It’s new forecast included an average repo rate of 3.1 percent in the third quarter of 2015.
    Inflation (CPI) is now expected to average 1.1 percent in 2012 and rise to 1.7 percent in 2013 and 2.8 percent in 2014.
    The Riksbank’s last rate cut was in February, when it was cut by 25 basis points to the current 1.5 percent.
    www.CentralBankNews.info



Why Government Intervention Hinders Progress and Innovation

By MoneyMorning.com.au

‘The success of Asian economies such as Korea didn’t happen through the ideological miracle of economic bushfires, where the conditions need to be just right for their creation naturally.

‘They were deliberately built through considered and targeted government policy – picking winners and planning for long-term growth.

‘The Samsung story itself is incredible.

‘Driven by government-sponsored credit and policy vision, Samsung now accounts for more than ten per cent of the country’s GDP.’

Paul Howes, National Secretary, Australian Workers Union

In one breath, Mr. Howes denies the existence of entrepreneurialism and creative destruction.

In Mr. Howes’ (and other central planners’) world, it’s government that creates jobs.

They believe that a nation needs a group of wise overlords to guide and direct the economy.

In their view, nothing happens without government intervention.

As they see it, governments come up with the bright ideas and it’s then up to the market to fulfil those ideas. If the market doesn’t do it, it’s not because the idea is rubbish, it’s because the market has failed.

But while Samsung may be a wonderful example of a government picking winners, let’s not forget the other side of the coin — the hundreds or thousands of South Korean businesses that failed, the money lost and the lives ruined because the government backed Samsung while not giving the same favours to others.

Or let’s look at an example of another global brand that received government support — Nokia.

Until recently, Nokia was the world’s leading mobile phone company. And it was Finland’s biggest company.

Government Intervention and the Lesson of Nokia

But having favoured status didn’t protect the company from error. It made two crucial business mistakes that would cause it to miss out on the two biggest trends in the mobile phone industry during the past 10 years.

First, it missed the trend towards ‘flip’ mobile phones. It stayed with the ‘brick’ style that had won it millions of customers over the years. But at the time consumers wanted compact and sleek phones. The kind you could neatly hide away in a pocket or handbag.

But as you know, technology changes quickly. The trend for compact and sleek phones didn’t last long. Perhaps if Nokia caught the next trend wave it would be fine.

But no, it missed that too. That was where consumers wanted the opposite of sleek and compact. Mobile phones (smart phones) became fashion accessories.

Consumers wanted big screens. The bigger the better. No longer were mobile phones stashed in pockets or handbags, now they were laid out on the table or desk where everyone could marvel at the size of your screen and the smallness of your pixels.

Nokia missed out. But Apple and Samsung didn’t.

The result is that Nokia’s share price has fallen from USD$40 in 2008 to just USD$2.82 today.

Success and failure come and go quickly in business, especially in technology. So the idea that any business should account for 10% of a nation’s GDP (gross domestic product) isn’t a point of pride, it’s a point of concern.

Take an example close to home. BHP Billiton [ASX: BHP] and Rio Tinto [ASX: RIO] made combined revenues of $127 billion last year.

That’s about 10% of Australia’s GDP. Again, that may sound great, but not so much when those revenues are at the mercy of a slowing Chinese economy.

So South Korea, like Australia, isn’t a poster-child for positive government intervention. Rather they are poster-children for what happens when a government intervenes and manipulates to create a lop-sided and fragile economy.

Of course, the idea that government intervention creates prosperity is nonsense.

Government Intervention Hinders, Not Helps

Government’s don’t create opportunities…or plan for long-term growth. Governments hamper opportunities. And they only ever plan for short-term growth (even though they pretend they’re planning for the future).

That governments take the credit for progress, wealth and high standards of living is a falsity that must be corrected. Progress and wealth comes from freedom and opportunity, not from central planning and State intervention.

Tomorrow, we’ll explain how it hasn’t been the increase of government intervention powers that has created so much wealth and progress. Instead, it was the end of centuries of human oppression and the reduction in government involvement.

Kris Sayce
Editor, Money Morning

From the Archives…

The Hard Lesson of a Stock Trader: No Pain, No Gain
2012-06-29 – Kris Sayce

How Gold Prices Look Set to Climb As Banks Crumble
2012-06-28 – Peter Krauth

‘Big Wednesday’ For the Aussie Dollar
2012-06-27 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Three Reasons Why Silver Could Take Off in 2012
2012-06-26 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Who is Winning the Battle Between the Bulls and Bears?
2012-06-25 – Kris Sayce


Why Government Intervention Hinders Progress and Innovation

The Interest Rate Banana Your Stocks Will Slip On

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Australian Bureau of Statistics has done it! That’s an odd statement in itself, but how about this next one: the statisticians have saved us all! How? By completely bungling employment data for the last two years, to the tune of 100,000 jobs. Apparently, the mistake tricked the Reserve Bank into interest rate moves. And now those moves are benefitting, as politicians would say, the working-family-fair-dinkum-Aussie-battler.

Australian house prices jumped a percent last month because of lower mortgage rates. And, according to the papers, it was the inaccurately pessimistic jobs data that made the RBA cut interest rates. Either way, home owners are now 1% richer. Except they still have exactly the same houses. Hmmm.

At least the price jump should offset the recent news in The Age that the, ‘Housing shortage [is] all smoke and mirrors’, and the number of vacant homes is just under a million.

Before you get too optimistic about lower interest rates saving the Australian economy, consider this: The Australian yield curve looks like a banana. That’s a very bad thing.

Australian Government Bond Yield Curve

Australian Government Bond Yield Curve
Source: Bloomberg

Or, if you prefer:

Australian Government Bond Yield Curve
Source: Alex Cowie

Yield curves are supposed to look more like this one, the German one:

German Government Bond Yield Curve

German Government Bond Yield Curve

>

Source: Bloomberg

So what’s bad about a yield curve shaped like a banana? The short answer is that a banana shaped yield curve predicts a recession, or at least a slowdown in growth. If you own shares, you’ll want to factor that into your expectations.

Remember, in 2008 a recession took place on the other side of the world, and Australian stocks halved. Imagine if the recession took place here.

How Interest Rates Signals Time Preferences

To get to the bottom of what the yield curve really means, we’ll begin with former math teacher Angela Lee Duckworth. Angela did an experiment with eighth graders. They ‘were given a choice between a dollar right away or two dollars the following week.’

That’s like offering them an annualised interest rate of around 5200%, or 100% in a week. You’d be a fool not to take it, right?

The New Yorker magazine explains that Angela ‘found that the ability to delay gratification…was a far better predictor of academic performance than IQ.’

Notice how the 5200% per annum interest is the key measure in deciding whether or not to delay gratification. If Angela had raised the bar to choosing between a dollar right away or two dollars fifty next week, more of the eighth graders would have agreed to delay their gratification because they would be getting a higher interest rate (7,800% p.a. or 150% per week). That would sweeten the deal for waiting.

In other words, the interest rate is the price of delaying gratification, or the reward for delaying your gratification. In the financial world, the reward comes about by saving and then lending a dollar for interest.

The interest rate is also what you miss out on for refusing to delay your gratification (by consuming instead of saving and lending). And it’s also the price you pay for using the gratification someone else has delayed (by borrowing their savings).

Putting all those statements together, you realise this: The interest rate is the price of time.

Understanding how the interest rate signals to the economy the state of delayed, present and future consumption is the secret to understanding and predicting the world’s current economic malaise.

So what determines the interest rate? The same factors that determine every other price in the economy: supply and demand. When people save, they increase the supply of money that can be lent. The people who want that money are the borrowers. The interest rate is the price that matches the savers and borrowers. The good they are REALLY dealing in is time — the point in time at which the money gets used.

So what do high and low market interest rates mean? Low interest rates mean there are plenty of people willing to save. They value present consumption only a little more than future consumption, and so are willing to delay it for a cheap interest rate. A high rate means people aren’t willing to delay their gratification unless there’s a large reward — a high rate of interest.

Australia’s Yield Curve

Taking a look at Australia’s yield curve, what do you see?

Probably not much, unless you know what a yield curve is, so here’s an explanation. A yield curve shows the interest rate paid on debt of different maturities. If you can borrow money from the bank for one year at 5%, two years at 6% and three years at 7%, your yield curve would be a straight upward sloping line connecting those three dots on a chart.

Australia's Yield Curve

Because government bonds are risk free (theoretically), the government yield curve is the purest one available for an economy.

Look at Australia’s government bond yield curve. Market interest rates are high for the government to borrow for 3 months, lower for three years and steadily higher after that.

Australian Government Bond Yield Curve

Australian Government Bond Yield Curve
Source: Bloomberg

You could say that, over the next three months, people aren’t that willing to delay their consumption. They want a high reward for saving and lending to the government. But go out three years, and people are quite willing to hand over their cash for a much lower interest rate. They are quite happy to be a saver and lender — a consumption delayer. Go out fifteen years and people want to consume again. They need a high interest rate to part with their money.

Now why would someone be willing to delay their consumption more or less for different time periods? Why might they prefer to save over some periods and borrow over others? Perhaps because they are worried about the state of the economy at certain times in the future. They are happy to spend when times are good and afraid to borrow when they are bad.

With Lower Interest Rates Prepare for a Slowdown

So lower rates show people are worried about the economy — they choose to save more and borrow less. Right now, people are worried about the next two to five years, for example. After that, they expect things to go well and their consumption and borrowing to rise.

We’ve isolated just one factor involved in a yield curve. There are many others. Not all borrowing is for gratification, for example. Some of it is for investing in production. And interest rates reflect other things, like inflation, in the real world. People might just expect inflation to fall for the next few years, which would also reduce rates.

If you focus on the delayed gratification side of things, the banana shaped curve tells you that a significant slowdown in borrowing and consumption is coming to Australia. Is your portfolio prepared for it?

Murray Dawes has spotted another banana skin your stocks are heading for. He’s calling it Big Wednesday, and he’s found a way to profit from it:

‘My technical analysis shows the market is about
to explode out of the long sideways distribution
it’s been tracing for two years.’

But which way? Up or down? Click here to find out.

Nick Hubble
Editor, Money Morning

Related Articles

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How Gold Prices Look Set to Climb As Banks Crumble

‘Big Wednesday’ For the Aussie Dollar


The Interest Rate Banana Your Stocks Will Slip On

GBPUSD moves sideways in a narrow range

Being contained by 1.5776 resistance, GBPUSD moves sideways in a narrow range between 1.5640 and 1.5720. The price action in a range is likely consolidation of the short term uptrend from 1.5484, another rise to test 1.5776 resistance is still possible after consolidation, and a break above this level will indicate that the longer term uptrend from 1.5268 has resumed, then next target would be at 1.6000 area. Support is at 1.5590, only break below this level could bring price back to 1.5400 zone.

gbpusd

Daily Forex Forecast

Is the U.S Housing Market Seeing a Long Awaited Recovery?

Source: ForexYard

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With the upcoming Nov.2 -3 FOMC meeting and the speculation of expansion of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve the main focus of the markets, this week’s economic data is expected to have great effect on investors’ expectations.

The main indicators to watch are the Housing and Consumer Confidence publications. The housing market, which was at the heart of the financial crisis, remains a drag on the economic recovery of the U.S as well the poor consumer confidence, mostly driven by the relentlessly high unemployment rate.

However, some stability may be finally evident in the embattled industry. According to Monday’s report, the sales of U.S. existing homes rose in September by the most on record with purchases increasing 10% to a 4.53 million annual rate from 4.12 million in August. Further indication of a rebound in the housing industry may come from tomorrow’s report of New Home Sales which is also expected to show an increase from the previous month. While the industry’s recovery will likely be dragged as the unemployment rate is forecasted to remain above 9% throughout 2011, it seems that the industry has already hit bottom.

Consumer confidence may also see some recovery this week as the CB Consumer Confidence which was released earlier today, rose more than expected. A similar rise in confidence is expected from the revised UoM Consumer Sentiment report, due Friday at 13:55 GMT. The increase in confidence may coincide with next week’s mid-term elections which are expected to see Democrats losing their majority in Congress.

The USD has been seeing a shaky recovery this week, aided by the positive data releases. A continuation of better than expected data releases throughout the week will likely boost the USD further, mainly by adding greater uncertainty to the quantitative easing expansion speculations. With the FOMC meeting minutes release on Nov. 2nd and the mid-term elections on Nov. 3rd, next week is expected to be very volatile for the USD and its crosses.

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.

US Home Sales On Tap

Source: ForexYard

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Today starts with Federal Open Market Committee statement, followed by GfK German Consumer Climate in Europe. The market disregards the European troubles. In the past week, the focus was on the Spanish credit crunch. Nevertheless, the Euro continued recovering, and so did other currencies, that truly enjoy good economies, such the Canadian Dollar.

American figures will dominate the scene today with New Home Sales expected to drop this month reaching 424K after the sharp rise in May’s report. The U.S. Dollar continued its consolidation last week falling against all the major world currencies and down especially against the commodities dollars of Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

Here’s an outlook for the major market moving events this Wednesday.

08:00 GMT EUR Flash Services PMI

Published on Wednesday, starting in France at 7:00 GMT, then in Germany at 7:30 and finally for the whole Euro-zone at 8:00 GMT. All the purchasing managers’ indices have been positive for several months, with the French services sector being the strongest at 61.4. And now, all of them are expected to remain positive, above 50 which mean economic expansion.

Although the Euro fell strongly in the past few weeks it is now stabilizing. Still, the European debt problems continue to loom over the single currency. But in the long term the Euro will resume falling and face more losses. In the meantime, range trading is more probable with the near-term support at $1.2220.

08:30 GMT GBP MPC Meeting Minutes

It’s a detailed record of the BOE MPC’s most recent meeting, providing in-depth insights into the economic conditions in U.K. In his last decision, Mervyn King made no change – he left the interest rate at the historic low of 0.5% and continued dismissing the rising inflation. We’ll now get to hear if any of the 9 member voted to raise the rate. Any outcome which isn’t unanimous will boost the Pound.

14:00 GMT USD New Home Sales

This indicator is expected to be different this time, and drop from 504K to 435K. Note that the impact will be rather muted due to the upcoming to rate decision. Nervous trading is predicted, as the greenback may continue weakening against the yen, pound and franc.

18:15 GMT USD Federal Funds Rate

The Federal Open Market Committee is expected to hold the benchmark interest rate at a record low range of zero to 0.25%. Employment is still problematic in the US, and inflation doesn’t pose a threat. Yet again, the focus won’t be on the Federal Funds Rate, but on the accompanying FOMC Statement. The greenback will likely to move higher after this release. A break down of 1.2220, the next major support line will open a way to 1.2160 & 1.20 in extension.

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.

Pound Set to Take Losses Ahead of British Housing Report

Source: ForexYard

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For GBP traders, the release of the Halifax HPI this week promises to inject some volatility into the marketplace. The HPI, a monthly index of home prices financed by the Halifax Bank of Scotland, is a leading indicator of the health of the British housing industry. With England still feeling the effects of the global recession, the changing value in home prices is a sure way for traders to determine where the economy is headed in the month ahead.

Last month, home prices in England rose by 1.4%. That was the 5th month in a row where prices increased by more then 1%, giving investors the impression that the British economy is headed in the right direction. The positive housing news was not able to save Sterling from loosing ground in the forex marketplace, especially against the Dollar.

This month, analysts are predicting a relatively modest figure of 0.6% for the HPI. If the forecasts indeed come true, this would mean housing prices increased marginally in the past month, a troubling sign for the Pound. Any figure below 1% will likely cause GBP to enter a bearish trend. At the same time, if the housing figure turns out to be in line with last month’s results, Sterling may be able to recoup some of its recent losses against the Dollar and Euro.

Don’t forget that you now have the option to trade mini lots of Gold and Crude Oil with a
Standard trading account at ForexYard.
Read more about ForexYard’s latest features
.

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.

U.S. Housing Market Update

Source: ForexYard

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Reports on manufacturing and housing this week will probably show evidence that the recession- stricken U.S. economy is bottoming out. The U.S housing recession that triggered the credit crisis and global slump is showing signs of bottoming as sales and construction have stabilized near historically low levels.

A Commerce Department report tomorrow may show housing starts last month rose 5.9% to a 485,000 annual pace, while Building Permits report, used as a predictor of future construction, may show builders began work on more houses as sales steadied and consumer prices rose. The data will be released Tuesday at 12:30 GMT.

In case the Housing Starts and Building Permits data will decrease below the expectations, the U.S dollar may weaken against its major rivals; the EUR and the British Pound. However, if the numbers will come in line with the expectations or higher, traders will see the USD trading become highly volatile.

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.

Major Events that will Affect the EUR/USD Pair This Week

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin)  – The euro closed the week on high as EU summit decided to give fund to rescue banks in Spain. However, there has been opposition to this decision from member countries which is raising doubts about the outlook for the region. The Italian and Final Manufacturing PMI for the region lead to a decline of the euro while the unemployment report has been overshadowed by the sentiments from the region that some countries are against the EU leaders’ decision. All these reports were released on Monday, and they have already caused the euro to decline against the sterling pound. However, the US economy has been faltering with ISM Index showing a contraction in the manufacturing industry. Today, the market is waiting for the PPI data. Other events that will affect this cross are as follows.

On Wednesday, the Final Services PMI for the region will be released at 0800 hrs GMT. The services sector has been contracting for the last five months and this time round a small rise to 46.8 is expected. If the data indicate a decline, this will cause the euro to drop further. Another report to be released on this day is the Retail Sales data. It is expected that data will show a small increase of 0.2 percent; however, with disappointing data from Germany, the final number might be lower. The final report to look out for on this day is the Final GDP data which will be released at 0900 hrs GMT. The market is expecting the report to show stagnation as German data showed an expansion of 0.5 percent.

On Thursday, one of the main events will be Spanish bond auction; this will come just hour before ECB rate decision at 1145hrs. Most banks in Spain were downgraded and some analysts are saying that they will on the safe side for now. German Factory Orders report will be published at 1000hrs where the report indicated a drop of 1.9 percent in April; the report is expected to show an increase by 0.2 percent for May. On Friday the main event will be the German Industrial production where a fall of 2.2 percent was registered last time; but an increase of 0.3 percent is expected this time round.

With these reports affecting the euro/dollar pair; it is expected that the pair will be neutral this week.

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