Market Review 17.8.12

Source: ForexYard

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The euro extended yesterday’s gains against the US dollar last night, following comments by German Chancellor Angela Merkel that she will actively work to preserve the euro-zone and the common-currency. The EUR/USD traded as high as 1.2373 before moving slightly downward to its current level of 1.2360. Crude oil was able to maintain yesterday’s gains during Asian trading, as tensions in the Middle East continue to fuel supply side fears among investors.

Main News for Today

US Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment-13:55 GMT
• Analysts are forecasting today’s news to come in at 72.5, slightly higher than last month’s figure
• If true, confidence in the global economic recovery could receive a boost, which may lead to risk taking and additional gains for currencies like the euro and Australian dollar

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

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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.

Monetary Policy Week in Review – Aug. 18, 2012: Turkey prepares to loosen, Chile takes note of rising peso

By Central Bank News

    The past week in monetary policy saw interest rate decisions by two central banks around the world (Turkey and Chile), with neither bank changing rates. Both central banks saw weak global growth.
    Turkey’s central bank signaled that it was ready to loosen its policy stance a bit, saying it may narrow its interest rate corridor in the future. It also raised the portion of lira reserves that banks can hold in foreign exchange, a move that adds liquidity to the banking system.
    Chile’s central bank noted that international financial conditions had improved but growth in advanced economies was weak and emerging markets have slowed more than expected.
    The bank made a specific reference to an appreciating peso, a sign that it may be concerned over the currency, which has risen over 7 percent against the U.S. dollar this year.
    LAST WEEK’S MONETARY POLICY DECISIONS:
COUNTRY
        NEW RATE
      PREVIOUS RATE
        RATE 1 YR AGO
TURKEY
5.75%
5.75%
5.75%
CHILE
5.00%
5.00%
5.25%
    NEXT WEEK:
    The central bank calendar for next week also looks quiet, with only Poland and Iceland scheduled to hold monetary policy meetings.
    Neither bank is expected to change interest rates.
COUNTRY
         MEETING
       CURRENT RATE
        RATE 1 YR AGO
POLAND
21-Aug
4.75%
4.75%
ICELAND
22-Aug
5.75%
4.50%

The Solution for the Global Economy: Less Government

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The European economy is turning from stagnation to contraction. Financial journalists are concluding that “austerity” is the reason.

They say that forced reduction in government services is sending not only the continent, but the U.K. into an economic tailspin and – heaven forbid – the same could happen to the United States. Look and panic: America’s various levels of governments are contracting, laying off workers and cutting services.

The whole civilized world is doomed, they say, by this reduction in government. To their minds, an expanding government leads to an expanding economy, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP). Cuts in government do the opposite.

But have there been actual cuts? Veronique de Rugy of Mercatus has looked at this claim government by government and finds throughout the U.K. and Europe mostly higher taxes, higher spending, more regulation, and a near absence of serious and substantial structural reform. The cuts that have taken place have been forced by economic reality.

If for one night a drunk can’t get to the slot machines, this does not amount to gambling austerity.

Government Doesn’t Create Wealth

But here is a more-important question: Does government drive the economy? Look around at all the things you love, all the services that are most beneficial to your life, all your material aspirations and dreams. How many of them were or are produced by politicians and bureaucrats?

As Albert Jay Nock said, government has no resources or power of its own. Everything it has it has taken from us. It produces nothing, but exists only to the extent it can feed off its host – wealth creation aimed at serving customers in the private economy.

It seems like a simple and incontrovertible observation, but it must not be, because otherwise-intelligent people seem to miss it. The New York Times’ Eduardo Porter complains about Americans and their aversion to taxes. He was just in Italy, he says, with an economy in shambles, a government bloated with debt and corrupt bureaucracy, yet his son, who developed an untimely rash while vacationing, was served lickety-split by an Italian doctor, gratis.

Porter figures that’s government as it should be.

A good share of Italians may be unemployed and their economy may be shrinking, but their social safety net stretches farther and supposedly their poverty rate is lower. Their free health care covers even tourists.

To believe Porter, the laws of economics have been repealed in Italy. Great food, great wine, free health care, and no one has to work in this paradise.

According to Porter, America has plenty to learn from Italy and countries like it that tax their citizens at an appropriate level, unlike the good old US of A that can’t seem to get its citizens to cotton to the idea of handing over more of their property to the state.

Porter doesn’t talk about individual tax rates. He focuses on the percentage of taxes collected to GDP. That percentage in the developed world averages 35%, while America is falling behind, at less than 25%. Only Mexico and Chile are less taxacious.

Of course, as Bill Bonner told the Agora Symposium crowd in Vancouver, GDP is just another phony government number. He wrote in Whiskey & Gunpowder in 2010:

‘GDP growth alone is a fraud. The gross number just doesn’t tell you anything worth knowing. It doesn’t really matter how fast an economy is growing. What counts is how fast it is growing per person… and whether that “growth” is real or phony.

Growth is not the same as prosperity…

Someday, we promise you, modern economists will be ranked below doctors who bled their patients to death and jungle tribes who threw maidens into volcanoes. They are quacks.’

According to Porter, America is not only not taxing enough, it’s not taxing the right way. Consumption needs to be taxed, instead of taxing labor and capital ‘that damp people’s drive to work and invest, putting a drag on economic growth,’ Porter writes. ‘And the tax code is riddled with preferences and loopholes that further distort people’s economic behavior.’

I agree with his point about distortions and disincentives to work and invest, but he’s implying that governments in the rest of the world are living off the VAT (value-added tax) exclusively and not taxing income and capital gains.

This, of course, isn’t true. Europe taxes everything. And despite taxing everything, their countries are broke, and getting more so.

As Margaret Thatcher once said, ‘The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of someone else’s money.’

In the U.S., private business is adding workers, but as Shaila Dewan and Motoko Rich report in the Times, governments are handing out pink slips, and that is hurting the recovery. Some 706,000 government positions have been axed since April 2009:

‘The unfortunate reality is our revenue streams have not rebounded,’ said Timothy R. Hacker, the city manager of North Las Vegas, which has cut its workforce to 1,300 from 2,300 and is about to lay off 130 more. ‘Shaking this recession is becoming increasingly difficult…’

More than a quarter of municipal governments are planning layoffs this year, according to a survey by the Centre for State and Local Government Excellence. They are being squeezed not only by declining federal and state support, but by their devastated property tax base.

The federal and state governments depend upon private-sector economic growth that can be taxed. In turn, local governments are dependent upon that same economic vitality – none of which is generated by the government. It’s backwards to think government jobs create economic growth when, in fact, government jobs can be supported only by economic activity in the private sector.

State and local governments expanded mightily with the housing boom. Mr. Hacker’s employer – the city of North Las Vegas – moved into lavish new digs during the bubble. Each and every demand made by the public employee unions was accommodated because the city’s growth was thought to be endless.

When local housing markets crashed, so did local government finances.

US President Obama Doesn’t Understand Economics

But President Obama doesn’t understand economics or cause and effect any better than those writing for The New York Times. He thinks the public sector must grow to compensate for the private sector, not hiring. ‘Each time there was a recession with a Republican president,’ Obama says, ‘we compensated by making sure that government didn’t see a drastic reduction in employment.’

The Wall Street Journal makes the same claim. Without increases in federal spending, the recovery doesn’t have a chance, writes Ben Casselman and Conor Dougherty:

‘Recent economic data show that long before the fiscal cliff hits, federal spending already is falling – and taking a toll on the recovery. Federal spending and investment fell at an annual rate of 0.4% in the second quarter and has fallen 3.3% in the past year. Federal employment has fallen by more than 52,000 jobs in the past year and for the first time is lower than when the recovery began.’

They even found an economist to provide a juicy quote to support their argument. ‘It’s unbelievable how much the economy is getting hurt already by the sharp drop in federal spending,’ Deutsche Bank chief U.S. economist Joe LaVorgna said.

All of this implies that all jobs are homogeneous. If a worker isn’t needed in the private sector because consumers aren’t buying that particular good or service, then government can just replace that job with a job in government doing something that consumers in the private marketplace won’t pay for.

Politicians and Keynesians believe that swapping these two jobs will preserve economic growth. Life will go on as before.

This is nonsense. The worker had a job because he or she produced more than he or she cost the employer in the pursuit of satisfying customers. Fewer customers means fewer jobs are needed. Less economic activity means fewer tax dollars going to government. Fewer tax dollars means government doesn’t have the resources to hire more people.

The idea that hiring more government workers stimulates economic activity stands reason on its head.

Economics professor Tyler Watts makes the point in The Freeman online:

‘Perhaps we’ve been spoiled by hundreds of years of a generally prosperous and growing market economy into assuming that all workers necessarily add to economic output by exactly the value of their paychecks. There is a strong tendency toward this result in a strictly market-based competitive economy.’

But professor Watts quickly makes the point that government workers don’t provide the same value. There is no market test to determine if government workers are generating value. Only political rules apply.

The fact that government employment is shrinking is only a signal that economies worldwide are attempting to recover from decades of debt and malinvestment, which includes too much government.

Government layoffs are a good thing. They put more resources into the private sector, which is the only real source of growth. Whether the GDP number is up or down doesn’t mean a thing. After all, since everyone believes China’s GDP number is inflated, why shouldn’t we assume governments deflate the number when it suits their purposes?

Government austerity is, in the long run, a blessing to the rest of the population.

Douglas E. French
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Laissez Faire Today

From the Archives…

Trusted With Trillions, Bankers Can’t Even Work Out a Two Dollar Puzzle
10-08-2012 – Kris Sayce

What This ‘Junk’ Tells You about Stock Prices
09-08-2012 – Kris Sayce

How to Defeat Your Worst Enemy in Investing: Yourself
08-08-2012 – John Stepek

The Mining Boom is Over
07-08-2012 – Dan Denning

Why the Doc Should Have Flown Further West
06-08-2012 – Kris Sayce


The Solution for the Global Economy: Less Government

The Unlikely Benefit from the Currency War on the Australian Dollar

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Currency Wars author Jim Rickards is bullish on three currencies, but you might only guess one.

They’re gold, the euro and the Australian dollar. More on that in a moment.

The Wall Street veteran was in Sydney this week and spoke to a hundred or so Port Phillip Publishing subscribers in a special ‘Strategy Session’.

His position hasn’t changed since he published his book last year.

The world is in a currency war. The combatants are the United States, Europe and China.

With their domestic economies struggling, all of them are trying to devalue their currencies to increase their exports.

As his book lays out, the problem for the world is that the failing US dollar is the reserve currency. Practically everything pivots off it.

But devaluing the dollar erodes trust in paper money, and unintended consequences will collide with complex systems. So prepare for some huge shifts as international finance and global capital start to unbalance.

Until recently the only credible alternative to the US dollar was the euro. But right now no one is sure if it’s even going to survive.

The old global financial system is dying. The only question is how the new one will come about.

Currency Wars Are Nothing New

The cycle to currency devaluation goes something like this. With consumers looking to pay down debt or unwilling to spend, there is weak demand. In the face of weak demand, there’s less investment.

Governments can only spend so much in their vain attempts to prop up a struggling economy. That leaves one area of potential growth possible – exports. The fastest way to boost exports is to make them cheaper.

But it’s really a covert way to ‘steal’ growth. The world as a whole is no better off. And eventually there’s a retaliation.

The catch is no one can win. Depreciating your currency does not work in the long term. It has never worked. And the major problem with trade wars is that they can lead to shooting wars.

That doesn’t mean politicians won’t try it.

The precedents for this were set last century. Rickards says this is the third currency war since 1900.

The first was from 1921-1936, in the aftermath of the First World War.

The second was 1967-1987 after the Bretton Woods system broke down.

At that time, US President Richard Nixon told America’s trading partners to revalue their currencies higher against the US dollar or the US would tax every foreign product coming into America. An agreement saw the US dollar devalued against such currencies as the yen, mark, franc and sterling.

From Currency Wars:

‘[It] was extremely popular in the United States and led to a significantly rally in stocks as investors contemplated higher dollar profits in steel, autos, aircraft, movies and other sectors that would benefit from increased exports or fewer imports, or both…Unfortunately, those euphoric expectations were soon crushed. Less than two years later, the United States found itself in its worst recession since World War II, with collapsing GDP, skyrocketing unemployment, an oil crisis, a crashing stock market and runaway inflation.’

Faith in the US dollar took a trashing in the seventies, with high inflation that cut its purchasing power in half. There was a genuine fear of a run on the dollar. Foreign investors started to pull their money out of the United States.

One of the symptoms of this panic was the super spike in the gold price. Gold ran from the mid-$600′s to a peak of $850 in four days.

The other effect was huge capital flows that fled to smaller, and supposedly safer currencies such as the Canadian dollar and German mark. This caused those currencies to rise in value too.

This is happening to the Australian dollar now.

Australian Dollar Benefits from Global Turmoil

Today, Australia has a similar problem to the Swiss. Money has flowed into the Swiss franc, mainly from investors diversifying out of the euro. This put pressure on Switzerland’s exporters as their goods became prohibitively expensive.

So the Swiss central bank continues to deliberately intervene in the market to sell francs and buy euros and other foreign currencies to hold down the value of the franc. This maintains the peg with the euro.

It also means Swiss foreign exchange reserves are growing – plenty of which are Australian dollars. Bidding from central banks like this is one factor behind the strength in the Aussie dollar.

Usually a currency forms its value based on fundamental things like money supply, terms of trade, foreign reserves and, in the case of Australia, commodity prices.

With commodity prices down and the terms of trade worsening, you’d normally expect the Australian dollar to fall from these bearish indicators.

The ‘risk off’ trade causes capital to flee Australia to the perceived safety and huge liquidity of such markets as the US dollar or Japanese yen.

Jim Rickards says that right now those factors are irrelevant. The fundamentals get shoved aside.

The big players that direct global capital think Australia is the place to hide as the currency storm worsens.

And he warns that the Australian dollar might get even stronger. This would mean new all-time highs measured against the US dollar and the euro.

That means no relief for Australian manufacturers or tourism operators, who prefer a weaker currency.

And it also means more gold for your Aussie dollars while it lasts…

Gold Bound to Be a Part of New System

‘The path of the dollar is unsustainable and therefore the dollar will not be sustained.’

That’s the first line of Jim Rickard’s conclusion to Currency Wars. His opinion is that the US dollar is in terminal decline. That means the anchor of the global financial system is lost. This will result in volatile and unstable markets (and societies) with diminished world trade until a new system emerges.

He doesn’t rule out complete chaos beforehand. In fact, Rickards suggests it’s more likely than anything else. What he means is that the system will simply cease to function properly. Emergency controls could be put in place.

Of course, it’s not the only possibility, but even an attempt to stabilize the current dollar against gold considering the inflated money supply would rerate gold much higher than today’s price.

For the moment though, gold is getting cheaper in Aussie dollar terms. Rickards advice is to use the strength in the Aussie dollar to diversify into the currency most likely to survive intact in the new financial system coming.

Sounds like a smart move to us.

Callum Newman
Editor, Money Weekend

The Most Important Story This Week…

For a long time Kris Sayce, editor of Money Morning and Australian Small-Cap Investigator, has had a negative outlook on green energy, including solar energy. Then something happened to change his view. Government cost cutting removed subsidies.

This impacts on the entire industry. In sounds counter intuitive, but it’s a blessing. Now, solar and alternative energy might have a significant role to play in the energy landscape. Investors prepared to take a stake could see very healthy profits. See what he says in Why I’ve Done a U-Turn on Solar Energy.

Other Recent Highlights…

Merryn Somerset Webb on China’s Economy and the Mother of All Property Bubbles: “Local governments have also taken out huge loans backed by land grants to finance their increasingly extreme-looking infrastructure projects, while on some estimates a good 50% of China’s GDP is linked to the Chinese property market one way and another. That makes it pretty much the biggest emerging market property bubble ever.”

Jeffrey Tucker on The Amazing Ethanol Scam in the USA: “Everyone blames the drought, as if the market can’t normally handle a supply change. The real problem is that the corn market is fundamentally misshaped by government interventions that have made a mess of this and many more markets. The distortions are never contained, but spread and spread.”

Dr. Alex Cowie on Are Gold Stocks About to Turn?: “With such drastic falls, gold stocks now look ridiculously cheap…Of course, I’m not the first to make that claim. Many, including myself, have had their fingers burnt trying to call the bottom for gold stocks this year. But there are growing signs that the worst is now behind us.”

Peter Krauth on The Dumb Money Hates Silver, It’s Time to Go Long: “I’ll show you, right now a number of technical, seasonal, and sentiment indicators are pointing upwards for this volatile metal. This could well be the critical turning point silver investors have been waiting for. One of these indicators is the resilient price of gold. Let me explain.”


The Unlikely Benefit from the Currency War on the Australian Dollar

Central Bank News Link List – Aug 17, 2012

By Central Bank News

    Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news

Euro Up on Merkel’s Support for ECB Decision

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The 17-nation currency increased against the Japanese currency after German Chancellor Angela Merkel showed support for the European Central Bank decision to deal with debt crisis in the region. The euro has gained for the last five days against all the sixteen major peers prior to a meeting between Angela Merkel and French President Francoise Hollande next week. The two will also meet Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras. The Japanese currency has decreased against most of it peers, declining to almost two-month low against the US dollar. Commodity related currencies increased as the Asian stocks appreciated.

Currency strategists have suggested that the recent euro advance might be signs of a changing trend as euro area leaders are seen to effective make decisions geared to solve the debt crisis. Investors are starting to show some confidence on the decisions taken by the ECB. The euro has increased by 0.5 percent versus the greenback, which is the highest weekly increase since the week ending July 27. The Japanese currency is set for a 1.4 percent weekly drop against the US dollar, which is the largest drop since June 22.

It has been revealed that the German Chancellor will meet France President one day before Greek Prime Minister’s visit in Berlin. The Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti will meet Merkel on August 29 while on September 6, Merkel will travel to Madrid to meet with Spanish Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy. The meetings are set to establish the necessary political atmosphere for the ECB to act. Angela Merkel has insisted that the ECB is counting on euro-area political action to be able to restart its sovereign bond buying program.

The 17-nation currency advanced to 98.18 against the yen, the strongest since July 6. However, it pared these gains and it traded at 97.99 yen yesterday in Tokyo trading session. The euro increased by 0.5 percent against the dollar to trade at $1.2356 in New York. However, the dollar increased against the yen to trade at 79.38 yen.

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.
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AUD/CAD: Loonie to Edge the Aussie for a Second Week

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

In the currency skirmish to close out the week’s exchanges, the Canadian dollar is presupposed to beat its Australian counterpart today. The Loonie currency looks to take advantage of reports out earlier that the Reserve Bank of Australia could ease its monetary policy. On the economic docket today from the Maple Leaf is the nation’s inflation
reports that could likely sustain the Canadian currency’s advance. Also seen to influence the currency pair’s price activity is a report from the United States regarding the financial confidence of consumers from the world’s largest economy.

The Loonie currency is set to best the Aussie for the second consecutive trading week as it likewise extends its gains against its primary trading partner’s monetary exchange. Trades for the AUDCAD today are projected to remain bearish, and a sell bias is proposed.

In a report on the Australian Treasury’s website entitled “Understanding the appreciation of the Australian dollar and its policy implications,” it states that “the Australian dollar is overvalued compared to its medium-to-long run equilibrium value. Though the Treasury admitted that the estimate is still subject to considerable uncertainty, this opens up the possibility for the RBA to further cut its interest rate. The Aussie fell quite sharply as a result of the news.

Meanwhile, inflation data out today from StatsCan is estimated to be moderate. Both CPI and Core CPI for the month of July are forecast to be at 0.2 percent for the past
month. After a 0.4 percent beating in the previous release, a rebound in the nation’s inflation is believed to push the Canadian Loonie higher.

In addition, the preliminary reading for the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment is estimated to go up by two ticks from the upwardly revised 72.3 point release for July. Economists project a grade of 72.5 for this month. Though the rating has yet to improve more than the year’s average of 75.9, this should still account for more than the last August’s 55.7 figure.

Improving conditions in North America provide a lift to the demand for the Loonie ComDoll. Considering these factors, a sell position is advised for the AUDCAD today.

 

For more news, analysis, technical charts and candlestick analysis, visit AlgosysFx.

 

Central Bank Stimulus Hopes “Give Boost to Gold”, Merkel says ECB’s Draghi “Completely in Line” with Euro Politicians

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 17 August 2012, 07:15 EDT

SPOT MARKET prices for buying gold bullion traded just below $1620 per ounce during Friday morning’s London session, very slightly below where they ended last week, while stock markets also gained, amid renewed speculation over central bank stimulus measures.

Silver bullion traded around $28.30 per ounce, slightly up on where it started the week, while other commodities were also broadly flat.

The volume of gold bullion held by the world’s biggest gold ETF, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), rose to a one-month high of 1263.6 tonnes Thursday, a day which saw gold continue its recovery from Wednesday’s lows.

“Hopes that central banks will launch more bullion-friendly stimulus measures boosted the yellow metal [on Thursday],” says a note from Swiss refiner MKS.

On the currency markets, the Euro managed to hold its ground against the Dollar this morning after rallying above $1.23 yesterday, following comments from German chancellor Angela Merkel that appeared to endorse the position of European Central bank chief Mario Draghi.

Last month, Draghi said that the ECB would do “whatever it takes to preserve the Euro”, comments that were followed immediately by rallies in stocks, precious metals and the single currency itself.

“What he said is something we repeated time and again since the beginning of the Greek difficulties more than two years ago,” Merkel said yesterday, speaking during a visit to Canada.

“We feel committed to do everything we can to maintain the common currency. The European Central Bank, although it is of course independent, is completely in line with what we have said all along.”

Reporters asked Merkel her thoughts on the possibility that the ECB might start buying government bonds again, as it did in the case of Spain and Italy last summer.

“[Recent ECB actions] have made it clear that the European Central Bank is counting on political action in the form of conditionality as the precondition for a positive development of the Euro.”

“It is becoming clear,” says a note from Citigroup, “that the ECB purchases [of a country’s sovereign bonds] have to be conditional on the implementation of austerity and structural reform measures in that country.”

Spanish lender Bankia will soon begin receiving funds as part of an agreed €19 billion rescue, a spokeswoman for Spain’s economy ministry said Thursday. Spain agreed a credit line of up to €100 billion in June to fund the restructuring of its banking sector.

The European Commission meantime will propose next month that the ECB meantime be given supervisory powers over all major European banks, German newspaper Handelsblatt reports, citing sources at the Commission.

By Friday lunchtime in London, the gold price in Euros looked set to end the week down around 0.8% following the Euro’s gains against the Dollar.

“The market is still moving on changing expectations of central bank actions,” says Nick Trevethan, senior commodity strategist at ANZ.

“[Gold in Dollars] is so far unwilling to push prices out of the $1590 to $1630 range.”

Over in the US, the benefits of another round of quantitative easing from the Federal Reserve are “very dubious”, Philadelphia Fed president Charles Plosser said this week.

“There are diminishing returns to these actions,” Plosser said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal Wednesday.

“The evidence is not strong that somehow more [QE will] help the unemployment rate move faster to where we’d like it to be. I don’t see that there is much benefit.”

By contrast, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco president John Williams said last Friday the US economy is “at the point where it is definitely tilting toward [the Fed] taking further action”.

The Philadelphia Fed is not due to become voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee, which decides US monetary policy, until 2014, with San Francisco becoming a voting member the following year.

Chinese premier Wen Jiabao meantime said Thursday that China has “the conditions and capabilities” to meet economic and social development targets this year, despite recent data suggesting China’s economy is slowing down.

“We continue to think that more policy support will be announced soon,” says Qinwei Wang, economist at London-based consultancy Capital Economics and a former employee of China’s central bank.

“A further cut to the required reserve ratio, and…more infrastructure projects proposed by local governments will be given the go-ahead.”

“For the time being, major central banks will let go of the mandate of price stability in favor of spurring growth figures,” reckons Bayram Dincer, analyst at LGT Capital Management.

In South Africa meantime, more than 30 people have died after police opened fire on striking mineworkers at the Marikana platinum mine Thursday, which is operated by London-listed Lonmin.

Gold’s premium over platinum prices, which hit an all-time high earlier this week, has narrowed after platinum rose by more than 3% since the start of Thursday’s trading to hit $1450 per ounce by this morning.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

 

US Data Leads to Additional Dollar Gains

Source: ForexYard

The US dollar hit a fresh one-month high against the Japanese yen after a better than expected US Building Permits helped boost confidence in the US economic recovery. That being said, the dollar did take losses against some of its higher yielding currency rivals during afternoon trading, after the positive news led to risk taking among investors. As markets get ready to close for the weekend, traders will want to pay attention to US Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment figure, set to be released at 13:55 GMT. If the news signals additional improvements in the US economy, the dollar could see further upward movement against the yen.

Economic News

USD – Consumer Sentiment News Set to Impact Dollar

Risk taking in the marketplace following better than expected US news led to a mixed trading session for the US dollar yesterday. On the one hand, the greenback advanced to a new one-month high against the Japanese yen at 79.39 during mid-day trading. The dollar eventually staged a minor downward correction before stabilizing at the 79.25 level. On the other hand, higher yielding currencies, including the Swiss franc, were able to capitalize on the positive US news. The USD/CHF fell more than 80 pips to trade as low as 0.9709 by the end of the European session.

Turning to today, the US Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment figure is forecasted to generate dollar volatility during afternoon trading. Analysts are currently predicting today’s news to come in at 72.5, which if true, would represent a slight improvement over last month’s figure and may signal to investors that the US economic recovery is gaining momentum. In such a case, the dollar could see bullish movement against the yen before markets close for the weekend.

EUR – Euro Recovers amid Increase in Risk Taking

After tumbling against the British pound and US dollar in morning trading yesterday, the euro was able to stage a recovery later in the day after positive US news led to risk taking among investors. The EUR/GBP fell more than 30 pips following a better than expected UK retail sales report. After trading as low as 0.7811, the common currency was able to bounce back, eventually reaching as high as 0.7842 during the afternoon session. Against the greenback, the euro was able to advance more than 75 pips over the course of the European session to reach as high as 1.2339.

Today, in addition to US consumer sentiment data which could have a significant impact on risk appetite, euro traders will also want to pay attention to any announcements from euro-zone officials regarding the region’s debt crisis and any plans to lower borrowing costs in Spain and Italy. Positive developments with plans to revive the euro-zone economic recovery could lead to broad gains for riskier currencies, including the euro, before markets close for the weekend.

Gold – Gold Gains Following US News

The price of gold advanced more than $11 an ounce during European trading yesterday, amid an increase in risk taking brought on by better than expected US news which boosted investor confidence in the global economic recovery. By the beginning of the evening session, the precious metal was trading just above the $1612 level.

Turning to today, whether or not gold can extend its recent gains further will largely be dependent on US consumer sentiment data, set to be released at 13:55 GMT. If the data comes in above expectations, investors may seek out higher yielding assets, which could help boost the price of gold before markets close for the weekend.

Crude Oil – Middle East Tensions Send Oil Higher

Supply side fears due to an increase in tensions between Iran and Western powers sent oil prices to a three-month high during European trading yesterday. In addition, an increase in oil consumption in the US, the world’s leading consuming country, drove prices higher. Overall, crude advanced more than $1 a barrel to trade above the $95 level.

Today, news out of the Middle East is likely to continue influencing the direction oil takes. Any escalation in the dispute with Iran may result in additional fears that global supplies could be disrupted and drive the price of oil higher.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The weekly chart’s Bollinger Bands have begun to narrow, signaling that a price shift could occur in the near future. In addition, the MACD/OsMA on the same chart has formed a bullish cross, indicating that the price shift could be upward. Traders may want to open long positions ahead of a possible bullish correction.

GBP/USD

While the Williams Percent Range on the daily chart has crossed over into overbought territory, signaling a possible future downward correction, most other technical indicators place this pair in neutral territory. Traders may want to take a wait and see approach, as a clearer picture is likely to present itself in the near future.

USD/JPY

In a sign of an impending shift in price, the Bollinger Bands on the weekly chart are narrowing. Furthermore, the Williams Percent Range on the daily chart has crossed into overbought territory, indicating that the price shift could be downward. Traders may want to open short positions ahead of a possible bearish correction.

USD/CHF

The Relative Strength Index on the weekly chart is approaching the overbought zone, signaling a downward correction could occur in the coming days. Additionally, the MACD/OsMA on the same chart has formed a bearish cross. Going short may be the wise choice for this pair.

The Wild Card

USD/CAD

A bullish cross on the daily chart’s Slow Stochastic points to a possible upward correction in the near future. Furthermore, the Williams Percent Range on the same chart has crossed below the -80 level into oversold territory. Forex traders may want to open long positions for this pair ahead of a possible upward correction.

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.

 

A Housing Bubble… Upon Bubble… Upon Bubble

By MoneyMorning.com.au

If the Eurozone’s GDP is twelve times larger than Australia’s, how much bigger is their financial sector?

It’s a trick question. Australia’s financial sector is bigger, if you rank it by stock market capitalisation:

Australia's financials Mkt Cap

These two comments come to mind: ‘Holy smokes Batman,’ and, ‘Where there’s smoke there’s fire.’ At some point, Australia’s obese financial sector has to revert to a more normal size. The housing bubble’s bust is likely to trigger just that.

Banks and other financial institutions will plunge in price once Australian house prices do. (If you’re thinking ‘it can’t happen here’, we’ll be telling Daily Reckoning readers about Australia’s own subprime lending scandal on the weekend. That ‘can’t happen here’ either.)

But this article is about the other part of the 62% of the ASX/200 that’s toast.

‘…no two sectors dominate Australian portfolios more than banks and resources. Financials (excluding property) make up just under 40 per cent of the S&P/ASX 200, and materials just under 22 per cent, not counting the related industrials and energy sectors that comprise about another 13 per cent. All five of the nation’s largest stocks – BHP Billiton, Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, ANZ and NAB – are within this group, with fellow heavyweight Rio Tinto not far behind.’

What the Australian Financial Review article fails to mention is that Australia’s mining industry is just as dependent on the housing bubble as the financial sector. It’s just a different country’s housing bubble – China’s. That’s where all the iron ore and copper goes, after all. And when it stops going, the 22 percent of the ASX200 that hasn’t crashed because of Australia’s housing bubble will crash because of China’s housing bubble.

One Housing Bubble Begets Another

What makes the story really interesting is that China’s housing bubble is based on another country’s housing bubble – America’s. And the golden thread that ties them all together is our very favourite haunt – monetary policy.

Some people still haven’t figured out that printing money leads to housing bubbles. That’s what makes housing bubbles so predictable. Cases in point are Switzerland and Germany. They missed out on housing bubbles in the 2000s because interest rates were kept at appropriate levels.

But now, interest rates in those countries have plunged, and the money supply has skyrocketed.

Euros Flood Europe

ECB Balance Sheet

Source: Sober Look

Switzerland intervened in foreign exchange markets instead of interest rate markets like the Europeans, but with the same effect on its money supply:

Swiss Monetary Base

Swiss Monetary Base

Source: Sober Look

Sure enough, the media in both countries has picked up on booming house prices. What a surprise.

Switzerland: ‘the biggest real-estate boom in two decades’ and ‘surging prices’.

Germany: ‘Germany’s house price bubble is only just getting started’

Is China’s Housing Bubble Set to Pop Australia?

Anyway, it’s China we’re worried about as Australians. And over there, the housing bubble story is even more obvious. Not only are the money supply and prices jumping, but so is debt, government intervention and construction.

At least, they were jumping. Greg Canavan of Sound Money. Sound Investments. reckons the worm has already turned. You can watch his presentation on just what’s really going on here.

The biggest factor in China’s bubble is the same as Switzerland’s one. The Chinese pegged their exchange rate to the US dollar, just like the Swiss pegged theirs to the euro. That means the Chinese had to print money each time the Americans did – they effectively imported America’s monetary policy. And we know how that worked out for US house prices. A big boom and then a big crash.

You’ve probably heard about the ghost cities in China. And the vast stockpiles of unused Australian resources piling up in Chinese ports. These are all symptoms of the breakdown of a housing bubble.

Nick Hubble
Editor, Money Morning

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A Housing Bubble… Upon Bubble… Upon Bubble