Banks and the $2.6 Trillion Set Up

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Just five years after they played a primary role in engineering the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, America’s big banks are quietly setting the world up to do it all over again.

Only this go-round the costs will be far higher and the damage much worse. This time the fall could be $2.6 trillion or more.

Let me explain.

It started back in the mid-2000s. Wall Street was busy packaging low-rated subprime loans into securitized offerings that were somehow worth more than the sum of their parts.

In reality, what they were doing was little more than laundering toxic debt while raking in obscene profits along the way.

You know the rest of the story as well as I do. Not long after, the stuff hit the proverbial fan and it was not evenly distributed.

Well here we go again…

Both JPMorgan and Bank of America are quietly marketing a new scheme designed to “transform” sub-par assets into quality holdings that will serve as [US] Treasury-quality collateral needed to meet the new capital requirements that come into effect in 2013 as part of the Dodd-Frank Act.

Wall Street Is Up to Its Old Tricks

This may sound complicated but it’s not. It works like this.

When you trade on margin like these mega-institutions do, you are required to post collateral to offset counterparty risk. That way, if the trade busts and you are unable to deliver on your side of the trade, there is recourse.

If you have a mortgage or a car loan, you know what I’m talking about. Your lender can seize both if you default or otherwise fail to meet your payment obligations.

Trading collateral works the same way. In years past, trading collateral has most commonly taken the form of U.S. treasuries (or other securities) that meet stringent requirements with regard to ratings, liquidity, value and pricing.

However, since the financial crisis began, Treasuries are in increasingly short supply.

Investors and traders who have preferred safety over return are hoarding them.

Consequently, traders like JPMorgan’s London-based “whale,” Bruno Iksil, who want to write increasingly bigger, more sophisticated trades are in bind. They find themselves unable to trade because many times the clients they represent can’t post the collateral needed to “gun” the trades.

As you might imagine, Wall Street doesn’t like that because it means billions in profits and bonuses get lost as trading volumes drop.

So they’ve gone to the unregulated woodshed again and come up with yet more financial hocus pocus designed to circumvent rules in the name of profits.

At the same time, they’re once again hiding the true extent of the risks they are taking – and that’s the outrageous part.

These same banks that have already driven the world to the brink of financial oblivion and been bailed out once may need another $2.6 trillion dollars or more to backstop the unregulated $648 trillion derivatives playground they’ve created for themselves.

And don’t think for a minute that your money isn’t at risk either…

We’re talking about trillions of dollars’ worth of sovereign and agency debt. Think the United States, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Germany here, along with the bets on that debt – all of which has been “backed” by central bankers, effectively removing the risk of failure from the financial markets and specifically from the firms engaged in these kinds of trades.

Of course, Wall Street has just pulled the wool over everybody’s eyes by marketing most of these derivatives as “insurance” against default. In reality, they are king-sized bets levered up to levels so high that they now place entire nations at risk of default, not just individual traders or institutions.

That’s because derivatives allow traders to effectively bet on directional changes in everything from interest rates to markets and currencies. They also allow firms to effectively arbitrage the relative risks between various financial instruments or lock in specific prices on everything from bonds to commodities.

The Biggest Margin Call of All Time

Here’s where we get to the meat of the matter.

As part of new rules driven by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, traders will have to drive the majority of privately-traded derivatives contracts through clearing houses like the Chicago based CME or the London based LCH. Clearnet, which was formerly known as the London Clearing House.

Previously they didn’t because upwards of 90% of the derivatives were privately negotiated and therefore exempt from centralized exchange requirements, including margin.

In the process, they’ll have to post additional collateral that can be “perfected,” meaning seized and converted to cash, in the event of a counterparty failure or default.

As reported by Bloomberg, estimates from Morgan Stanley suggest the new requirements could mean the banks trading in derivatives have to come up with $481 billion in top-rated collateral on the low side to $2.6 trillion on the high side, which is what the Massachusetts-based Tabb Group projects.

My own estimate is somewhere in the $4-5 trillion range, because I believe the total value of the derivatives markets is still being understated by banks and trading houses not keen to let skeletons out of the proverbial closet.

And therein lies the problem. Neither the trading firms nor their clients have the additional collateral.

What’s more, they likely won’t be able to get it because the vast bulk of the $33 trillion in worldwide top-tier AAA- or AA-rated debt is already pledged as collateral or otherwise accounted for in separate transactions.

Were these banks and their clients living like the rest of us, they’d simply conclude they were “tapped out” and their resources exhausted because there would be nothing left.

But noooooo……Under the terms of both the JPMorgan and Bank of America programs, clients not meeting the new collateralized quality standards can pledge other less-than-Treasury-quality assets to the bank against a “loan” of Treasuries from the trading firm that’s then posted by the trading firm as collateral acceptable to the clearing houses.

In other words, the trading firms are going to loan Treasuries to clients who are incapable of meeting liquidity requirements while accepting lower grade assets in exchange. Details are hard to come by at the moment with regard to the fees they’ll rake in, but you can bet “transforming” lemons into lemonade won’t be cheap.

This is similar to what happens in the commercial “repo-market” where banks and trading firms temporarily pledge their assets in exchange for cash loans. Nor is it much different than pledging your paycheck at an instant loan store. In both cases, you are pledging assets against transactions that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to conduct.

The fundamental question boils down to this: If we know that billions in improperly assessed risks led to the first blowup in 2007, how on earth could this be any different– especially with trillions now on the line?

You can’t wave your hand over a pile of less-than-Treasury-quality assets and have them suddenly, miraculously become Treasury quality because they are grouped together.

Yet, this is exactly what Wall Street is doing here.

An Unlikely Solution

And just like before, Wall Street’s latest scheme is expressly intended to disguise risk and circumvent the specific rules about to be put in place to prevent excess leverage from potentially destroying the world’s financial system.

Is there a fix?

I can think of one, but it’s from a source you’d never believe in a million years would come out of my mouth: Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.

Congress can’t balance its checkbook. Our politicians can’t make tough decisions. Our regulators are out-lobbied and outmanoeuvred at every turn. No president can ask his nation to take its medicine regardless of party affiliation.

But Bernanke can. Supposedly – emphasis on supposedly – he’s apolitical.

Acting under the Fed’s dual mandates of maintaining “monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy’s long-run potential,” Chairman Bernanke could bypass the entire political, regulatory and lobbyist morass in one fell swoop by declaring that the United States government will not back any derivatives trades – or any firm that engages in them – worldwide in the event of default.

Not only would this re-introduce the concept of failure into capital markets but it would do what neither Congress nor our regulators have been able to do – put an immediate end to the kind of “profit at all cost regardless of risk behavior” that exemplifies everything wrong with Wall Street.

I can only imagine the disclaimer on one of those Uncle Sam posters more commonly associated with wartime military recruiting. It might read: “Counterparty Beware.”

Until then, it’s investors who should be “aware.”

Keith Fitz-Gerald
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in Money Morning (USA)

From the Archives…

What the Central Banks Are Doing to Your Money
14-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Luxury Firm Burberry Highlights the Chinese Slowdown
13-09-2012 – John Stepek

Gold Up, but Gold Stocks Up More
12-09-2012 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The ECB is Only Fooling the Gullible
11-09-2012 – Dan Denning

Why This ‘Ludicrous’ Investment Keeps Going Up
10-09-2012 – Kris Sayce


Banks and the $2.6 Trillion Set Up

USDCHF breaks above trend line resistance

USDCHF breaks above the downward trend line on 4-hour chart, suggesting that lengthier consolidation of the downtrend from 0.9607 is underway. Range trading 0.9239 and 0.9350 would likely be seen in a couple of days. Resistance is at 0.9350, as long as this level holds, the downtrend could be expected to resume, and another fall towards 0.9000 is possible after consolidation. Support is at 0.9239, a breakdown below this level could signal resumption of the downtrend.

usdchf

Daily Forex Forecast

Australian Dollar Drops Prior To China and Eurozone PMIs

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The Aussie dropped against most of its peers today prior to reports that are projected to show signs of decline in global manufacturing. The South Pacific dollars dropped before the release of a report on Chinese factory output and a similar report on European purchasing managers’ index by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics. The Aussie declined to 0.1 percent from a week’s low versus the US dollar while New Zealand dollar’s declines were limited after a report showing the nation’s current account deficit was less that market expectation.

According to Joseph Capurso, a Sydney-based Strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, global sentiments are going to push the Australian dollar down. He indicated that the China and Euro Zone PMIs to be released this week constitute a downside risk for the Aussie. Analysts are predicting that the Aussie will rise by 1.9 percent this quarter while the kiwi is projected to increase by 3.1 percent in the same period. Australia is enjoying good ratings with the Standard and Poor’s as it affirmed its AAA credit rating today. According to a statement to the press, Australia has ample fiscal and monetary flexibility, public policy stability, economic resistance and its financial sector is sound. The country is also highly ranked by Moody’s and Fitch rating companies.

The Australian dollar dropped as speculation that a Euro-Zone composite index for manufacturing and services sector will be at 46.6 this month and another report from Markit and HSBC for China Manufacturing will indicate a reading of 47.6 spurred concerns that global manufacturing is declining. The New Zealand dollar decreased after a report from Statistics Bureau indicated that current account deficit was at 4.9 percent of the country’s GDP less than the market expectation on 5.2.

The Australian dollar declined by 0.3 percent against the US dollar to trade at $1.0430 from its yesterday’s rate of $1.0457. the New Zealand currency was slightly changed against the dollar, exchanging at 82.64 US Cents down from 82.72 cents yesterday.

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

Yen Advances Prior to BOJ’s Rate Decision

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The Japanese currency pared its losses before the Bank of Japan policy makers conclude their meeting today. The yen strengthened against the euro as economists speculate a report from the 17-nation trading bloc will indicate that services and manufacturing contracted last month, making it the eighth month in a row. The euro also dropped against the greenback as Spain prepares to sell its bonds in tomorrow’s bond auction. The country is also seen as considering to formally request for bailout from the European Central Bank.

According to Daisuke Karakama, the Bank of Japan is likely to keep the monetary policy unchanged. Karakama is a Economist at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd in Tokyo. He added that the move is likely to strengthen the yen further against major currencies. The central bank had increased its asset purchases fund by 5 trillion yen in July, to make a total of 45 trillion yen in asset purchase kitty. Most economists are predicting that the policy makers will change the monetary policy by October, but very few are expecting such a move today. A Nikkei report indicated that the company thinks the bank is likely to act in today’s meeting as they consider the risks to the economy.

According to Emma Lawson, a Currency Strategist in Sydney at the National Australia Bank Ltd, the risk that prevails is that the BOJ may underwhelm the market hence causing the dollar-yen pair to go down below the support level at 78. Marito Ueda, a Tokyo-based Senior Managing Director at the FX Prime Corp predicted that the euro is likely to weaken in the long term, stating that the economic outlook for the euro zone is bleak.

The yen advanced by 0.3 percent against the euro to trade at 102.54 yen per euro at the start of trading in Tokyo today, down from its close in New York. The Japanese currency rose by 0.2 percent against the dollar to exchange at 78.66 yen per dollar.

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

Russian Dividend Stocks: Not An Investment For Widows and Orphans

By The Sizemore Letter

In case you had any concerns about the safety of Russian stocks, you can now set those fears aside. By Kremlin decree, Russian stocks will now start paying higher dividends.

As the Financial Times reported this week, “One of the reasons why Russian companies trade at a discount to their global peers is their historically low levels of dividend payments. In a bid to raise market valuations ahead of a series of privatizations, the Kremlin has been calling on state companies to share a larger proportion of their profits with investors.”

What a spectacular showing of shareholder-friendly management from the former bastion of international communism. If he wasn’t displayed in a glass coffin in Red Square for all to see, I might assume that Comrade Lenin was spinning in his grave.  Yay, capitalism.

Of course, another reason why Russian companies “trade at a discount to their global peers” is that they are located in Russia.

This is a country that still imprisons capitalists when they no longer toe the Kremlin line.  Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former Chairman and CEO of oil giant Yukos and once Russia’s wealthiest man, has been rotting in prison since 2005 and is unlikely to see his freedom so long as Vladimir Putin rules the country.  But hey, maybe his wife and kids will appreciate the higher dividend payouts promised to Russian shareholders.

I have written for years about the virtues of dividend investing, and I firmly believe that the regular payment of a cash dividend encourages both honestly and managerial discipline.  It’s a lot harder to cook the books or waste shareholder money by chasing empire-building acquisitions when you are committed to writing a check to investors every quarter.  Furthermore, it guarantees that investors realize a return even during a flat market.

But does any of this apply when we are talking about a country that is effectively ruled by thugs and Mafiosi?

Make no mistake; I’m glad to see Russia encouraging its companies to pay a dividend.  All else equal, this is a step in the right direction.  But would I consider buying Russian dividend stocks for my conservative, income-focused investors?  If I did, I would hope that someone would lock me in a mental institution or, at the very least, strip me of my trading responsibilities.

And this is not to pick on Russia; I have been a buyer of Middle Eastern and African stocks in recent weeks via the iShares MSCI Turkey ETF (NYSE:$TUR) and the MarketVectors Africa ETF (NYSE:$AFK).  But I consider both to be highly-speculative positions that would only be appropriate for the most aggressive portion of a client’s portfolio.  And while I don’t complain about receiving a dividend on either, the dividend is not a major factor in my decision to invest in these regions.

(This ties into a broader theme that I’ve covered recently and that bears revisiting: Investors should NEVER chase yield.) 

In the case of Russian stocks, the payment of a dividend does not mitigate the risks posed by the absence of the rule of law in the country.  Given the risks, investors should only trade Russian stocks with a mind towards short-term price appreciation.

Investors looking for both high current income and emerging market growth should look instead to what I like to call “emerging markets lite.”  Look for established American and European firms with large and growing businesses in the emerging world.

Two I particularly like are Anglo-Dutch consumer products company Unilever (NYSE:$UL) and Dutch megabrewer Heineken (pink:$HINKY).

Disclosures: Sizemore Capital is long AFK, TUR, UL and HINKY.

Related posts:

Bank of Japan “Following Global Trend” for Looser Monetary Policy, Gold Seen Breaching $1800 in Q4

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Wednesday 19 September 2012, 07:45 EDT

THE SPOT gold price fell to $1772 an ounce Wednesday morning in London, a few hours after hitting its highest level for nearly seven months after the Bank of Japan became the latest central bank to announce further quantitative easing measures.

“It seems that the stars are now aligned for gold to move higher,” says Anne-Laure Tremblay, analyst at BNP Paribas.

“The next hurdle to overcome will be the $1800 an ounce level, which we expect to be breached decisively in the fourth quarter.”

The silver price fell to around $34.60 an ounce – having hit $35 a day earlier for the first time since March.

Stocks and commodities were little changed on the day by lunchtime, while US Treasuries gained.
Japan’s central bank announced Wednesday that it is increasing the size of its asset purchase program from ¥70 trillion to ¥80 trillion, pushing the deadline for the end of the program to the end of next year.

The Bank of Japan has also abolished the minimum bid yield of 0.1% on JGB and corporate bond issues.

“Japan’s domestic demand is still firm,” BoJ governor Masaaki Shirakawa told a news conference today.

“However, exports and output look weak, and a decline in oil prices is weighing on Japan’s consumer prices…we judged that further monetary easing was necessary now to ensure that Japan’s economy does not slip from a path towards sustained growth with price stability.”

“Further easing is still possible this year because the BoJ is emphasizing uncertainties in its outlook,” says Masamichi Adachi, Tokyo-based senior economist at JPMorgan Securities.

The BoJ’s move follows last week’s announcement by the US Federal Reserve that it will buy $40 billion of mortgage backed securities each month until the US labor market improves “substantially”, as well as the European Central Bank’s unlimited sovereign bond buying program unveiled earlier this month.

“The main message from today’s decision is that the BoJ is following the global trend set by the Fed and the ECB,” says Junko Nishioka, chief Japan economist at RBS in Tokyo.

“Whether central banks intend it or not, there is a competition for loosening monetary policy around the world,” agrees Izuru Kato, chief market economist at Tokyo-based financial consultancy Totan.

“[Shirakawa won’t want to seem] reluctant to compete in the race.”

Shirakawa however denied the BoJ’s move is a direct response to other central banks’ policies.

“I do not think any central bank would act simply because another central bank acted,” he said.

“If it is a question of comparing the BoJ to the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank, I think the issue is not of methods but of the impact of those methods…. I think monetary conditions are easiest in Japan. I do not think that you could argue that the BoJ is less bold that the Fed or the ECB.”

Shirakawa also denied the move is a response to anti-Japanese protests in China, which have seen some Japanese firms repatriate their staff.

The Yen fell around 0.7% against the Dollar immediately following the BoJ’s announcement, although by lunchtime in London it had regained around half its losses.

The gold price in Yen meantime rose to within 5% of last year’s all-time record, while the gold in Dollars set a new six-month high at just below $1780 per ounce.

“Gold is given a boost on the back of anything that is a form of quantitative easing,” says Bernard Sin, head of currency and metal trading at refiner MKS in Geneva.

“At some point there’ll be some profit taking but we’ll continue to trend higher.”
Here in the UK, the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to leave its main interest rate at 0.5% and maintain the size of quantitative easing at £375 billion when it met earlier this month, minutes from the meeting published Wednesday show.

“For most members this decision was relatively straightforward,” according to the minutes, “although some of these members felt that additional stimulus was more likely than not to be needed in due course, while others saw the risks to inflation in the medium term as being more balanced around the [2%] target.”

UK inflation as measured by the consumer price index was 2.5% in August – the 33rd consecutive month it has been above the Bank’s target.

Over in Europe, Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann yesterday warned of the “potentially dangerous correlation of paper money creation, state financing and inflation”, adding that Goethe’s play ‘Faust’ highlights “the core problem of today’s paper money-based monetary policy”, the Financial Times reports.

“The state in ‘Faust Part Two’ is able at first to rid itself of its debts while consumer demand grows strongly and fuels a strong recovery,” Weidmann told an audience in Frankfurt.

“But this later develops into inflation and the monetary system is destroyed by rapid currency depreciation.”

Elsewhere in Europe, €326 billion was withdrawn from banks in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain in the 12 months to the end of July, according to data published by Bloomberg Wednesday.

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. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

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.

 

 

USD/CHF Is Sinking Deeper

Introduction
USD/CHF is sinking deeper
For sometime now, the bears have maintained a solid control of the USD/CHF. The pair has been trading lower since early this month. How far will it go?

Factors Affecting
It seems the general dollar weakness, which has been present in the market has also favored the performance of the Swiss Franc. The recently released dovish FOMC statement has ignited risk taking in the marketplace. As such, traders have been avoiding dollar denominated assets. And, with the absence of major economic reports from Switzerland, the appreciation of the Swiss Franc has been propelled by this.

Technical Analysis
As earlier mentioned, Forex technical analysis on the USD/CHF reveals it’s trading in a strong downtrend. If the pair continues with this move, it may encounter support at 0.9140 before moving lower. On the other hand, if the pair starts receding upwards, it may encounter resistance at 0.9400 before moving higher.

Forecast
The pair is on a downtrend. Thus, traders who were short in it should continue holding on to their positions as long as the bearish pressure is still evident.

Open Free demo account to check yours opportunity to profit in the Forex market.

DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER:
THE ABOVE IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS SPECIFIC TRADING ADVICE. RESPONSIBILITY FOR TRADE DECISIONS IS SOLELY WITH THE READER.

 

EUR/USD: Re-emerging Spanish Concerns Weigh on the Euro

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

The Euro gave up gains in the previous European trading session as confidence among German investors remained in the negative region, although it improved to -18.2 points in September. The single currency also remained lower than the Greenback as a delay in Spain’s bailout request is expected to make worse the European debt crisis. In today’s European session, the shared currency is expected to extend losses versus the Buck on renewed concerns about Spain.

Spain is facing increasing pressure to request for a full-blown bailout, but Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said that the government is still considering the terms of the bailout, causing some investors to become impatient. If Spain eventually makes a request, some analysts still believe that it would not be that encouraging for the Euro Zone as the imposition of painful spending cuts is seen to hamper efforts to steer the economy back on track.

Tomorrow, Spain is set to auction 3- and 10-year bonds, which would be a key test of investor confidence. 10-year borrowing costs have declined to 5.9 percent from the Euro-era record of 7.75 percent on July 25, since the ECB revealed its new bond-buying program on September 6 to help lower bond yields. The Euro Zone manufacturing and services PMI reports are also up for release and are expected to show contraction of the sectors as projections are below 50 points. With renewed concerns over Spain, the shared currency is set to drop versus the US dollar. Thus, a short position is suggested in today’s European exchanges.

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

EUR Takes Losses despite Positive German News

Source: ForexYard

Despite a better than expected German ZEW Economic Sentiment figure yesterday, the euro took moderate losses over the course of the day, after hitting four-month highs against the USD and JPY earlier in the week. Expectations that the Bank of Japan will soon intervene in the currency market to limit the yen’s recent bullish movement helped the USD/JPY bounce back from a recent seven-month low. Today, a batch of US news is likely to generate substantial volatility in the marketplace. Traders will want to pay attention to the Building Permits and Existing Home Sales figures. If either of them comes in higher than expected, the dollar could see gains against the euro and JPY.

Economic News

USD – US Data Set to Generate Volatility Today

After dropping to a seven-month low against the JPY last week, the US dollar extended its upward correction throughout the day yesterday, as speculations that the Bank of Japan will soon intervene to limit yen growth caused investors to revert back to the greenback. The USD/JPY traded as high as 78.75 during early morning trading, well above last week’s low of 77.13. The greenback also saw bullish movement against the Australian dollar yesterday. The AUD/USD dropped to the 1.0400 level, well below last week’s high of 1.0623.

Turning to today, dollar traders can anticipate substantial volatility in the marketplace following the release of the US Building Permits figure at 12:30 GMT and the Existing Home Sales at 14:00. The greenback may extend yesterday’s upward momentum if either of the economic indicators signals growth in the US economy. At the same time, should any of today’s news come in below their expected levels, the dollar could reverse its recent gains.

EUR – Euro Comes Off Recent Highs

After hitting four-month highs against both the US dollar and Japanese yen earlier in the week, the euro saw bearish movement against several of its main currency rivals yesterday, leading some analysts to speculate that the currency has peaked for the time being. The EUR/USD spent most of the day trading around the 1.3050 level, well below its recent high of 1.3171. Against the JPY, the euro fell more than 50 pips during the first part of the day to trade as low as 102.60.

Today, euro traders will want to pay attention to a batch of US news set to be released during mid-day trading. Should either the Building Permits or Existing Home Sales come in above better than expected, the euro could extend yesterday’s losses against the greenback. Tomorrow, traders will not want to forget to pay attention to several potentially significant pieces of euro-zone news, including manufacturing and services data out of Germany and France, the EU’s largest economies.

Gold – Gold Stages Downward Correction

The price of gold fell over the course of the day yesterday, as investors became concerned that the precious metal was overbought after hitting a near seven-month high last week. Gold spent most of the day trading around the $1755 an ounce level, well below the $1777 level it hit after the Fed announced a new round of quantitative easing in the US on Thursday.

Today, gold traders will want to carefully monitor news out of the US and its impact on risk appetite among investors. Any better than expected news could help the US dollar extend its recent upward movement, which may result in the price of gold falling further. Typically, a strong US dollar causes foreign investors to shift their money away from gold, as it becomes more expensive for them.

Crude Oil – US Inventories Figure Set to Impact Crude

After tumbling more than $4 a barrel earlier in the week, crude oil saw another bearish day yesterday, as investors continued to sell off riskier currencies and commodities. Crude spent much of the day trading around the $96.50 level, well below last week’s high of $100.38.

Today, oil traders will want to pay particular attention to the US Crude Oil Inventories figure, set to be released at 14:30 GMT. Should the indicator come in above expectations, it may signal to investors that demand in the US has gone down, which could result in the price of crude slipping further during afternoon trading.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart has crossed into overbought territory, signaling that a downward correction could occur in the coming days. Furthermore, the Slow Stochastic on the same chart appears close to forming a bearish cross. Going short may be the best choice for this pair.

GBP/USD

A bearish cross on the weekly chart’s Slow Stochastic indicates that this pair could see downward movement in the near future. In addition, the Relative Strength Index on the daily chart has crossed into the overbought zone. Going short may be the best choice for this pair.

USD/JPY

While a bullish cross has formed on the daily chart’s MACD/OsMA, most other long term 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/CHF

The weekly chart’s Williams Percent Range is in oversold territory, indicating that this pair could see upward movement in the coming days. Furthermore, the daily chart’s Slow Stochastic has formed a bullish cross. Traders may want to open long positions for this pair.

The Wild Card

CHF/JPY

The Relative Strength Index on the daily chart has crossed into overbought territory, signaling that a downward correction could occur in the near future. Furthermore, a bearish cross on the same chart’s Slow Stochastic points to possible downward movement. This may be a good time for forex traders to open short positions for this pair.

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.

 

Market Review 19.9.12

Source: ForexYard

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The Japanese yen fell to a one-month low against the US dollar after the Bank of Japan initiated a new round of monetary easing during the overnight session. The USD/JPY is currently trading at 79.13, up from 78.56 at the beginning of Asian trading. The euro saw gains last night against the USD and JPY, but has failed to break past the four-month high it hit earlier this week. After falling more than $1 a barrel during afternoon trading yesterday, crude oil saw a modest upward correction last night but remains well below the four-month high hit last week.

Main News for Today

US Building Permits- 12:30 GMT
• Forecasted to come in at 0.9M, slightly below last month’s 0.81M
• Any worse than expected news could result in the euro extending its recent gains against the greenback

US Existing Home Sales- 14:00 GMT
• Forecasted to come in at 4.57M, which would be an increase over last month’s 4.47M
• Any better than expected news could help the dollar extend last night’s gains against the JPY

US Crude Oil Inventories- 14:30 GMT
• Forecasted to come in at -0.2M, well below last week’s 2.0M
• If the inventories figure comes in as forecasted, investors may take the news as a sign that demand for oil in the US has gone up, which could result in the price of crude turning bullish

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