Technical Analysis: USD/CHF

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The USD/CHF has continued to trade in a narrow range as risk returns to the market. The pair shed over a cent last week where it closed at 0.9438, and the increased Fed stimulus speculation is weakening the dollar further against the franc. The franc has edged upwards as Germany has confirmed its participation in the bailout fund. The technical levels that we are looking at as we close the week are inclined to downward trend.

From top, we are looking at a resistance level at 1.0136 which is followed by the line at 1.0066; this line was breached for the last time in 2010. The parity line has been firm throughout the year; this paves way for the line at 0.9915. The resistance line at 0.9719 has held firm; however, the resistance at 0.9584 has been weak as the pair has breached in the previous week. The resistance line at 0.9510 switched to a supportive role last week as the dollar increased.

The pair started the week with support at 0.9420 which is set to be broken as the dollar weakens. There is strong support at 0.9317 which has been firm since May. The Fed decision may push the cross below this line this week. Support lines at 0.9250 and 0.9182 are strong and they may hold firm this week. Other support lines in focus are 0.9093, 0.9016, 0.90, and 0.8918.

The USD/CHF pair continued to trade lower on Wednesday as the support line at 0.9420 was tested. The support line at 0.94 is a 200-day SMA and a break below this line will expose the 0.93 support line. At this level the pair will start to rise in line with trendline at 0.8930. The Fed policy is a key announcement that will determine dollar performance across the board. The franc is set to decline further against the euro as German Court decided to allow the formation of ESM.

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Market Review 13.9.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

The euro remained within reach of a four-month high against the US dollar last night, as risk taking among investors remained high following a German court ruling yesterday in support of the euro-zone bailout fund. Meanwhile, the US dollar sunk to a more than three-month low against the Japanese yen amid speculations that the Fed will initiate a new round of quantitative easing to stimulate US economic growth as early as today.

Main News for Today

US PPI- 12:30 GMT
• The PPI is forecasted to come in at 1.1%, significantly higher than last month’s 0.3%
• If true, the dollar could see temporary gains before the FOMC Statement later in the day

US Unemployment Claims- 12:30 GMT
• Unemployment claims are forecasted to come in at 370K, slightly higher than last week
• If the indicator comes in above its forecasted level, the dollar could extend its recent losses

US FOMC Statement- 16:30 GMT
• Speculations that the Fed will announce a new round of quantitative easing today have weighed down on the dollar in recent weeks
• If a new round of monetary stimulus is announced, the dollar could extend its recent losses

Read more forex news on our forex blog

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.

Why Does the World Still Trust This Man?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Everything’s looking great again.

The iron ore price is back up to USD$100, after dipping below USD$90 last week.

The German Constitutional Court has given approval for the 700 billion euro European Stability Mechanism (ESM)…although we prefer to call it the euro bailout fund (EBF).

China has kick-started a USD$157 billion stimulus program.

And according to a survey of economists by Bloomberg News, almost two-thirds of economists believe, ‘The Federal Reserve is likely to announce a third round of bond purchases tomorrow.’

In other words, get ready for the next round of central bank money printing.

Even our old pal, Slipstream Trader, Murray Dawes says he’s struggling to find a single Aussie stock to short sell right now.

So, is all this good news for stocks? It could be. But before you jump into the market, consider this first…

Before you get too excited about Murray drawing a blank with short trades, consider that he hasn’t found any new buy trades either.

And it’s not because he’s not looking. Each day he looks at hundreds of stock charts.

As he told us this morning:

‘I have pared back the Slipstream Trader portfolio to almost nothing. I want to be able to trade the [US Federal Reserve’s] FOMC announcement and not have to spend my time putting out fires. The market is now so heavily manipulated that you can throw any normal analysis out the window. I’m a bear, but I can’t keep shorting the market if it’s in strong long term uptrend. There’s a point where the central bankers will force my hand to buy the market even though I think it should be going down.

‘For now I’m resisting, because I think there’s a good chance we could see a false break of April’s high in the S+P 500 which could lead to a vicious sell-off over the next month or so. The outcome of the FOMC meeting will be crucial to the direction of the market over the next month so I would prefer to sit on my hands and not trade until that meeting is out of the way and I have observed how the market reacts.

‘The Fed might print, say, $50 billion a month to buy Mortgage Backed Securities and the market could spike on the news. But I fear the market has priced this in, so we may see an initial spike and then a sharp sell-off. On the other hand, if the Fed is too scared to act just before an election we may see them dangle the carrot, but do little else. In that case the market will gap down 2-4% in the blink of an eye. I don’t want this volatile market throwing me around like a ragdoll. I’d prefer to sit with very few positions on and wait until I get a clear signal of which way the market wants to go.’

Of course, when traders look at minute by minute moves, there’s always a chance his view could change between us writing this email and you receiving it.

But for now Murray seems pretty firm on sitting things out until the Fed releases a statement tomorrow.

So, will the Fed do anything? We can’t say for certain. But there is something we’d like to know…

One Big Reason Not to Print

The question we have for the goons who cheer for euro bailouts, China bailouts and Fed bailouts is: what happens when this plan doesn’t work?

Not that they’re thinking about that now. The shills are screaming at the central bankers to do more. The unnamed ‘Editors’ at Bloomberg News write:

‘If Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke fails this week to announce new measures to stimulate the U.S. economy, he’d better have a good reason. We can only think of a bad one, and we urge Bernanke to refute it explicitly.’

The bad reason — apparently — is that Bernanke may not want to announce more money printing before the US election that’s due in early November.

But aside from that, as far as Bloomberg’s ‘Editors’ are concerned, there’s no other valid reason for the Fed not to print oodles of freshly minted cash.

Perhaps we can help them, seeing as they can’t be bothered thinking for themselves. Because we can think of a reason, a big reason.

The Fed’s policy of money printing is destroying an already dying currency. The following chart from the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis shows how well the Fed has performed in one of its key mandates — ensuring stable prices:

Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis

The index has shrunk from over 1,000 in 1915, to just 43.6 today. In other words, the value of a US dollar over that time has fallen over 95%.

Even since 1980, its value has fallen 56.4%. So much for the mandate of achieving stable prices.

With a record that bad, you have to wonder why the markets still trust the Federal Reserve and Dr Bernanke.

It’s clear the last thing the Fed and other central banks are concerned with is stable prices. More important to them is maintaining the easy money and credit expansion of the past 40 years.

To do that, they need to keep printing money.

Brainless

Earlier this year, we thought the market would start getting bored with central bank meddling. We figured the big market players on Wall Street, Martin Place and in the City of London were smart enough to see the damage it was causing.

Turns out we gave them too much credit for having brains. Turns out they’re just as dumb as we always thought they were.

Based on market action, the big players still crave more central bank intervention. After four years of this policy repeatedly failing, the madmen in the madhouse keep cheering for more of the same.

And so, like Murray, we’ll wait to see what the Fed says tomorrow. You should be under no illusion that it will do anything to help the US or world economy, but it could give you a clue about how much longer this madness will last.

Look out for our thoughts on the Fed’s announcement tomorrow.

Cheers,
Kris

Related Articles

What You Must Do to Survive the Coming China Crash

Why the Latest Euro ‘Fix’ Could be Bad News for the US

The ECB is Only Fooling the Gullible


Why Does the World Still Trust This Man?

Luxury Firm Burberry Highlights the Chinese Slowdown

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Hopefully you weren’t one of the shareholders in Burberry who got a nasty shock.

The fashion brand saw its share price tank by 21% as it warned that a slowdown in sales would hit profits. Sales at stores open for at least a year were flat, and have turned negative in recent weeks.

Burberry may have been the first of its peers to warn on profits, but we suspect it won’t be the last.

China’s slowdown is bad news for luxury goods

What’s Behind Burberry’s Profit Warning?

Luxury goods analysts are desperately trying to work out how to pin the blame on the company itself. After all, if this is the result of a marketing screw-up by Burberry, or simply a shift in the fickle tastes of ‘fashionistas’, then the rest of the sector should be OK.

Burberry itself wasn’t particularly specific about the problems, according to the FT. The company has suffered a broad-based slowdown. That’s probably no surprise. These days, flaunting your expensive lifestyle choices is the equivalent of pinning a ‘tax me’ sign on your own back.

European tax collectors, for example, have come up with the crafty wheeze of using ostentatious displays of wealth to work out who has been fiddling their returns. As a result, if you’re in the market for a cheap Ferrari or other ‘supercar’, your best bet is to head to Italy, we’re told.

However, most investors jumped to one conclusion. It’s a sign that the fabled Chinese consumer is finally running out of steam. And indeed, Burberry’s finance director, Stacey Cartwright, admitted that ‘China is a significant contributor to the decline’.

This has been on the cards for a while. China’s slowdown has already hit the mining sector hard. Now more recent figures suggest that the slump is having a nasty trickle-down effect on other sectors.

For a start, taxes are going up. Local governments have been trying to raise money to plug the gaps left by poor land sales. So, as analysts at Chinese investment bank CICC point out, companies have been told ‘to pay full enterprise tax rate this year, rather than the preferential high- and new-tech enterprise tax rate they had been granted’.

Beyond that, costs are rising and the weak global economy is taking its toll on exports. The FT and S&P Capital IQ analysed corporate cash flow data from the past six quarters. Many industrial companies have seen cash flows turn negative recently. But both the consumer and retail sectors – the sectors that China is pinning its ‘rebalancing’ hopes on – are also suffering.

‘There is something more than a real estate and investment slowdown going on,’ as Louis Kuijs at RBS put it.

Like any other government confronted with the grim reality of a boom ending, China looks increasingly panicky. The original idea was to rebalance the economy away from infrastructure spending and more towards the consumer.

Now the plan seems to be to maintain growth in any way possible. China’s premier, Wen Jiabao, said that China will achieve 7.5% growth this year, and that it has room to stimulate the economy if it needs to. On top of that, last week, Beijing approved plans for $158bn in infrastructure spending.

Don’t Bet on a China Bounce

That cheered the mining sector, and arrested the recent plunge in the price of iron ore. We’d sell the bounce, rather than buy on the dips though. China’s banks already carry a lot of bad debt. The chances of another uncontrolled infrastructure splurge seem slim.

And we certainly wouldn’t touch the luxury goods sector. Bill Bishop, writing in his Sinocism blog, makes an interesting point. He reckons that a significant chunk (10-30%) of China’s 2008 stimulus package ‘disappeared through corruption.’ Much of this likely went into overseas investment (London property maybe?) or into luxury goods.

But that scale of stimulus package is unlikely to be repeated. And, says Bishop, ‘the government is now at crisis point dealing with corruption. I don’t think we should rule out its ability to make things a bit cleaner (it will never be clean). Both points are bad news for luxury firms.’

John Stepek
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in MoneyWeek

From the Archives…

Outright Money Transactions – Why ‘Free’ Money Costs You More
07-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Spanish Banks are in BIG Trouble
06-09-2012 – Bengt Saelensminde

With Iron Ore Prices Falling Will Fortescue ‘Break the Buck’?
05-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Brace Your Portfolio for a Hard Landing in China
04-09-2012 – John Stepek

Australian Resources Boom Curse…or Industrial Renaissance?
03-09-2012 – Nick Hubble


Luxury Firm Burberry Highlights the Chinese Slowdown

Big Advantages of Trading with the Wave Principle

Plus: Discover Where to Place “Protective Stops”

By Elliott Wave International

What advantages does the Wave Principle offer to traders?

Here’s one of the big advantages of using the Wave Principle when trading: you can increase your understanding of how current price action relates to the market’s larger trend.

Other tools fall short in this regard. Several trend-following indicators such as oscillators and sentiment measures have their strong points, yet they generally fail to reveal the maturity of a trend. Moreover, these technical approaches to trading are not as useful in establishing price targets as the Wave Principle.

Here’s another big advantage of using the Wave Principle in your trading, which comes directly from the free eBook “How the Wave Principle Can Improve Your Trading”

“Technical studies can pick out many trading opportunities, but the Wave Principle helps traders discern which ones have the highest probability of being successful.”

Indeed, this valuable free eBook shows you how to identify and exploit the market’s price pattern, as shown in the Elliott wave structure below:

The Wave Principle also helps you to identify price levels where you may want to place protective stops.

“…although the Wave Principle is highly regarded as an analytical tool, many traders abandon it when they trade in real-time — mainly because they don’t think it provides the defined rules and guidelines of a typical trading system.

But not so fast — although the Wave Principle isn’t a trading “system,” its built-in rules do show you where to place protective stops in real-time trading.”
“How the Wave Principle Can Improve Your Trading”

Before you attempt to identify price levels for protective or trailing stops, you should first become familiar with these three rules of the Wave Principle:

  • Wave 2 can never retrace more than 100 percent of wave 1
  • Wave 4 may never end in the price territory of wave 1
  • Wave 3 may never be the shortest impulse wave of waves 1, 3, and 5
The details and specific instructions for placing protective and trailing stops are in the BONUS section of the free eBook, “How the Wave Principle Can Improve Your Trading.”

Here’s what you’ll learn:

  • How the Wave Principle provides you with price targets
  • How it gives you specific “points of ruin”: At what point does a trade fail?
  • What specific trading opportunities the Wave Principle offers you
  • How to use the Wave Principle to set protective stops

Keep reading this free lesson now >>

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

 

 

Mozambique cuts rates to insure against global risks

By Central Bank News

    The central bank of Mozambique has reduced its benchmark lending rate by 100 basis points to 10.50 percent as an insurance against a worsening of the sovereign debt crises in the euro zone amidst positive trends in domestic growth and inflation.
    The Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of Mozambique (CPMO) said the country’s economy and inflation continued to develop along its short and medium-term projections for the year.
    “In this context, the CPMO considers its position to continue with the current accommodative monetary policy of greater stimulus to support the expansion of economic activity in an environment of macroeconomic stability and financial sector,” the bank said in a statement, adding:
    “The CPMO noted the risks prevailing in the international economic and financial environment, especially those associated with the worsening of the sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone countries and the risk of contagion.”
    The Bank of Mozambique has now cut lending rates by 450 basis points this year. 
    The bank said it was also cutting its interest rate on the Standing Deposit Facility by 100 basis points to 2.50 percent and it would intervene in the interbank market to ensure that the monetary base expands by more than 2 billion meticais to 37,406 billion meticais by late September 2012. The required reserve ratio remains at 8.0 percent.
    The bank said Mozambique’s economy expanded by an annual rate of 8.0 percent in the second quarter, according to preliminary data, up from a rate of 6.23 percent in the first quarter. Growth was fueled by mining, transport and communications, manufacturing and trade.
    The Bank of Mozambique said the aggregate annual inflation rate, in cumulative terms, was 4.73 percent in August. 

Forex Trading Systems – Which are the Best?

The world of Forex is very risky. In every move you take, there are rewards and risks involved. However, with the aid of trading signals, it would be easy for you to have a profitable trade. Usually, there are two main forex trading systems available. These are the discretionary as well as the mechanical forex trading systems. Oftentimes, people are not aware of what these trading systems are, and which the best between the two is. In connection with this, it is important for you to know the information regarding these trading systems in order to determine which the best is. 

The first type of forex trading system is the discretionary system. There are lots of advantages that you can expect from it. First is that the trading decisions will be mainly based from experience. Traders are able to determine which among the trading signals have a chance of becoming a success. Thus, the trade using this system will likely succeed. On the other hand, one of the disadvantages of this form of trading system is that it cannot be automated or backtested. This is because of the fact that there is definitely a tough decision that should be made. In addition to that, this requires some time in order for a person to earn the experience he needs to trade in a successful way.

Completing the forex trading systems is the mechanical type. One of the benefits of using this kind of system is that it can be backtested and automated in an efficient way. In addition to that, this comes with extreme rigid rules whether there is a trade or not. Not only that because those who are looking for Forex trading systems with less susceptibility to emotions will also benefit in using this one. Yet, there are also disadvantages you will experience. There are instances that this kind of system can be backtested in an incorrect way. Apart from that, this system might not work properly these times even if it has worked in the previous years.

Now, the question is “which approach is the best for you?” When it comes to this question, the right system is basically based on your personality. Like for example, in case you are a kind of trader who experiences a hard time in following the signals of trading, it is recommended for you to choose the mechanical type. On the other hand, those disciplined traders will benefit a lot in using the discretionary type. Both of these Forex trading systems will work fine when the right one is properly chosen. 

These are some of the things that you need to keep in mind when it comes to choosing the right Forex trading systems. These systems are proven effective based from one case to another. It is important to measure the applicability as well as the suitability of these Forex trading systems. This is to ensure that you will be able to come up with the right choice in the future.


About the Author:

Read Forex Reviews on the top Forex systems, FX courses and the best FX signals. You can also get Forex education and tips for free on our Blog. Visit us at http://www.forexreviewers.com.


The German Constitutional Court Has Spoken–The World As We Know It Will Not Be Ending

By The Sizemore Letter

The German Constitutional Court delivered excellent news Wednesday morning: the world as we know it will not be ending after all.

More accurately, the judges rejected a petition to block German participation in the Eurozone’s €500 billion bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism.  I don’t need to tell you that the stakes were high.

Had the court ruled the bailout fund unconstitutional under Germany’s Basic Law, it is highly likely that the entire Eurozone would have come unraveled.  Germany directly accounts for nearly 30% of the bailout monies pledged.  But more importantly, Germany’s leadership is what gives the entire scheme credibility.  You remove Germany, and the entire structure falls down like a house of cards.

ECB chief Mario Draghi has long cautioned that central bank operations would not be enough to save the euro.  Ultimately, it would depend of Europe’s politicians to build the institutions and take the actions needed to prevent the “irreversible” currency block from disintegrating.

The Court’s ruling further neutralizes Jens Weidmann, the President of the German Bundesbank, who had emerged as the highest profile critic of German support for the weaker euro members (see “The 5 Most Important People in the Eurozone”).   With the Court supporting Angela Merkel’s plans, she will have wider latitude to act, at least until the next German election next year.

Meanwhile, legendary hedge fund manager George Soros has weighed in on the matter, telling Germany to “lead or leave” the Eurozone in a recent Financial Times interview.

“Either throw in your fate with the rest of Europe, take the risk of sinking or swimming together, or leave the euro, because if you have left, the problems of the euro zone would get better,” Soros said, adding that “it is entirely dependent on Germany’s attitude.”

It’s hard to imagine Europe “getting better” without Germany, but Soros has a point.  The current German obsession with austerity for austerity’s sake is making the depression condition in Europe worse.  Germany’s worries about the ECB stoking inflation during a period of record unemployment and debt deflation is tantamount to fiddling while Rome burns (or perhaps more accurately Madrid).

In any event, the Court’s decision removes the last remaining roadblock to what I expect to be a blow-out fourth quarter.  As I recently wrote, the “Risk On” switch was flipped with Mario Draghi’s bond-buying announcement last week.  Investors who have been sitting on the sidelines should take this as an opportunity to jump back into the game.

 

Related posts:

BOE, ECB extend swap lines for another year

By Central Bank News
    The Bank of England (BOE) and the European Central Bank (ECB) have extended their temporary reciprocal swap agreements for another year, until Sept. 30, 2013.
    The swap line was set up in December 2010 to enable the ECB to provide sterling funds to euro area banks. If requested, the BOE would provide the ECB with sterling in exchange for euros up to a limit of 10 billion pounds.
   The swap line was initially authorised until September 2011 and then extended until the end of this month.
    The extension of the swap line was announced by both the ECB and the BOE.

    www.CentralBankNews.info
   

Ghana leaves policy rate steady, risks evenly balanced

By Central Bank News
    The Bank of Ghana (BOG) left its policy rate unchanged at 15 percent, as expected, saying the risks to inflation and growth were evenly balanced.
    The central bank of Ghana, which has raised interest rates by 250 basis points this year to contain inflation, said those rate increases and other measures to tighten liquidity had yielded positive effects and some stability had been achieved on the exchange rate front.
    “The challenge is to sustain the stability that has been achieved so far,” the BOG said in a statement following a meeting of its Monetary Policy Committee.
    Headline inflation in Ghana was steady at 9.5 percent in August, as in July, within the central bank’s target of inflation below 10 percent.

    The bank forecasts that inflation will remain within the target band during the year and said pass-through effects of exchange rate depreciation appear muted and the are positive indications that the impending harvest will have a moderating effect on inflation in the next months.
    However, it cautioned that fiscal policy could pose a risk to the inflation outlook, with liquidity injections, arrears, fuel and utility subsidies posing the main risks.
    “The Committee will remain vigilant and respond to any emerging risks appropriately,” the bank said, adding that the pace of economic activity had been sustained, “albeit at a much slower pace than last year.”
    “Economic assessments at this MPC round point to a moderating growth outlook, in line with trend. However, uncertainties in the global economy can affect domestic growth prospects,” it said.
     Ghana’s Gross Domestic Product rose 8.7 percent in the first quarter from the same quarter last year.
   
    www.CentralBankNews.info