Charts “Pointing to Downward Move” for Gold, But Futures Cleanout “Leaves Gold in Better Position to Climb Higher”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Monday 22 October 2012, 07:15 EDT

AFTER Monday’s Asian session saw new six-week lows, the Dollar gold price recovered some ground to trade near $1725 an ounce Monday morning in London, while stocks and commodities were broadly flat and US Treasury bonds fell.

“Both the weekly and daily charts are pointing for an initial move to $1693,” says the latest technical analysis from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.

“Any bounce into the upper $1730s will be a sell opportunity.”

The silver price fell to its lowest level in seven-weeks this morning, hitting $31.75 per ounce, before it too recovered some ground in London trading.

At the end of last week the Dollar gold price dropped more than 1% in less than an hour during Friday’s US trading, while silver also fell along with US stock markets.

“Gold took out the week’s low [on Friday] and large stop loss orders were triggered,” says a note from Commerzbank, whose analysts say they expect physical gold demand “to pick up…at prices of just over $1700”.

“[This] is already evident in gold ETFs,” adds the bank’s Commodities Daily note this morning.
The volume of gold held to back the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), the world’s largest gold ETF, rose slightly on Friday to 1334.2, with 0.5% of its all-time high hit earlier this month.

Asian Dealers meantime reported improved demand from India as the Rupee gained against the Dollar.

In New York, the difference between the aggregate number of long (bullish) and short (bearish) contracts held by noncommercial gold futures and options traders on the Comex – known as the speculative net long – fell in the week to last Tuesday for the first time in over two months, weekly data published Friday show.

“After eight weeks of consecutive increases, net speculative length has fallen,” says Marc Ground, research strategist at Standard Bank.

“Investor uncertainty over the ability of QE3 to support prices and/or the longevity of Fed’s open-ended commitment to easing has now been acutely manifest in futures market positioning.”

“We view this clean-out as positive for gold,” says a note from UBS.

“By removing some of the excess froth the metal is in a better position to start climbing once again…[although] a further reduction is necessary.”

Over in Japan meantime, exports fell 10.3% last month, a sharper-than-expected drop, although the value of Japan’s trade deficit last month was smaller than expected, according to data published over the weekend.

“Global economic uncertainty remains high, and we must be vigilant to the effect of financial and currency moves on the economy and prices,” said Bank of Japan governor Masaaki Shirakawa Monday.

“The BoJ will continue to pursue easy monetary policy via steady purchases of assets.”

Last month the BoJ extended its quantitative easing program, following announcements of new open-ended asset purchase programs by the European Central Bank and US Federal Reserve.

Here in Europe, Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy’s party extended its majority in the regional assembly of Galicia, Rajoy’s birthplace, in elections held over the weekend.

In the Basque region, the Basque Nationalist Party won enough seats to allow it to lead a government in the regional assembly.

Speculation continues over when and whether the Spanish government will request a bailout, which would pave the way for the ECB to buy Spanish sovereign debt on the secondary market.

“[Rajoy will] want to hold off a couple of weeks before asking for the bailout to save face and show they weren’t waiting for the elections,” reckons political scientist Ken Dubin at Madrid’s Carlos III University.

“[But] it’s game on for budget cuts.”

“We think Rajoy should request European support before the Catalan elections,” adds Gilles Moec, London-based co-chief economist at Deutsche Bank.

“The market is likely to react quite negatively to yet another nationalist success.”

Catalans go to the polls in their regional elections on November 25.

Elsewhere in Europe, German chancellor Angela Merkel has said Ireland’s financial sector is a “special case” with “unique circumstances”, in a joint statement with Irish prime minister Enda Kenny issued Sunday.

On Friday, Merkel said that any direct recapitalization of banks from Eurozone bailout funds would not be retroactive, implying countries such as Ireland would have to absorb the cost of their banks’ existing bad debts themselves.

“While the use of terms such as ‘unique’ and ‘special case’ will presumably soothe some of the concerns that followed Merkel’s recapitalization remarks, the lack of any explicit commitments on the bank debt issue means that these concerns are unlikely to entirely go away,” says Philip O’Sullivan, economist at NCB Stockbrokers in Dublin.

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.

 

 

Canadian Dollar Down as Inflation Slows on Natural Gas

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – According to a report by the Statistics Canada, the Canadian consumer prices advanced less than the market was expecting. This has raised speculation that the Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney may not be under any pressure to talk about interest rate hike during the next BOC meeting to be held this week. According to the report, consumer price index advanced by 1.2 percent in September, while the core rate dropped to 1.3 percent from 1.6 percent registered in August. The market was expecting the CPI to drop to 1.3 and the core rate to drop to 1.4.

Carney, who had suggested that the BOC decision and statement on Oct 23 will reflect on the slow global economic recovery, has left the key lending rate at 1 percent for over years and he is expected to leave it unchanged in the next meeting. Dawn Desjardins, a Toronto-based economist at Royal Bank of Canada, indicated that the BOC governor has no pressure from the inflation perspective. The report showed that the pace of inflation was affected by a drop of 14.2 percent in the natural gas prices and a 2.2 percent drop in mortgage interest rates. The Statistic Canada report went ahead to point out that the largest contributors to the price gain were gasoline price, which rose by 4.7 percent and the rise in electricity prices by six percent.

According to Krishen Rangasamy, an economist in Montreal at the National Bank Financial said that growth and inflation in Canada seems to be very soft, suggesting that the next BOC meeting will likely lower the economic forecast as it scales back the hawkish language. The Canadian dollar dropped by 0.6 percent against the dollar to trade at 99.07 cent per US dollar at the start of trading in Toronto on Friday, closing the week lower.

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
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AUD/USD: Greenback to Shine as Markets Turn Risk-Off

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

A risk-off environment is foreseen to strengthen the US dollar opposite the Australian dollar to begin the trading week as soft US corporate earnings, a weak Japanese trade report and a downgraded assessment of the Australian economy added to the global doom.

Poor corporate earnings results pounded US stocks last Friday, forcing the Dow Jones industrial average to record its worst day in four months by falling more than 200 points, as widespread worries about companies’ abilities to keep producing better profits drove the market lower. Thomson Reuters estimates that through Thursday, with 115 companies in the S&P 500 reporting, earnings have dropped 3.7 percent in the September quarter compared with a year earlier. Financial analysts had previously forecast that earnings would fall compared to a year earlier, and that would be the first such decline in three years.

Disappointing outcomes from IBM, Microsoft, McDonald’s and General Electric mainly soured sentiment last Friday. IBM pointed to the European debt crisis and slowing business spending when it posted weaker revenue than expected. Meanwhile, dropping PC sales and European troubles took a toll on Microsoft’s net income, with its stock losing 86 cents or 3 percent. A strong dollar hurt McDonald’s international sales, which account for two-thirds of its business. As such, the S7P lost 1.7 percent while the Nasdaq composite index posted a 2.2 percent dip. Such sentiment is presumed to continue dictating trades today.

Grim news for the global economy continued to pile on earlier today after the Japanese Ministry of Finance reported earlier today that Japanese exports fell by a substantial 10.3 percent in September from a year earlier. The decline was the fourth consecutive fall, ominously suggesting that Japan’s ongoing territorial dispute with China is taking its toll on the economy. Exports to China, the top destination for its shipments, dipped by 14.1 percent to record its largest decline since January this year, while exports to Europe fell 21.1 percent.

Meanwhile, demand for the Australian dollar is foreseen to drop after the Australian government’s announcement of Billions of Dollars in new savings to help keep its promised budget surplus on track will likely pile further pressure on the RBA to cut interest rates further. The $16.4 Billion in new savings over four years will likely take additional momentum out of the Australian economy at a time when the mining boom is easing. Concerns of further economic weakening are deemed to prompt the RBA to lower interest rates in the coming month. Considering all these, a short position is advised for the AUD/USD today.

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

 

U.S. New Home Sales Boost Greenback Trading

Source: ForexYard

U.S. New Home Sales affected Friday afternoon trading as the greenback quickly made gains against its major currency rivals. Also, concerns about Spain’s requesting a bailout were largely responsible for losses that both the euro and gold took in morning trading.
This week, all eyes will be focused on the euro-zone data coming out on Wednesday and the U.S. news to be released on Thursday and Friday, especially Friday’s U.S. Advance GDP report. Analysts are predicting an increase over last quarter’s U.S. Advance GDP numbers, which will continue the gains seen from Friday if actualized.

Economic News

USD – FOMC Statement Release On Tap

Investors saw the release of positive U.S. New Home Sales Friday, which signaled a strengthening U.S. economy. Some pairs, like the NZD/USD, dropped significantly in trading upon the U.S. New Homes Sales release. The U.S. dollar steadily rose against the Swiss Franc Friday recouping small losses from last month’s declining trend.

Turning to this week, investors will see a bunch of big U.S. news events on Thursday: Unemployment Claims, Core Durable Goods Orders, and Pending Home Sales. But, it’s the quarterly release of the U.S. Advance GDP on Friday where investors may see the biggest impact on trading. Attention should also be given to Wednesday’s New Home Sales data and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) statement release. Today’s investors should note Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Sandra Pianalto’s speech regarding interest rates, if the forecast comes in better than expected, the dollar may continue to make gains in the market.

EUR – Spanish Bailout continues to affect Euro

The euro slipped against the dollar on Friday as a perceived lack of progress on a Spanish bailout request curbed demand for the single common-currency. Conversely, the EUR/AUD saw a low of 1.2578 in Friday’s midday trading before recouping its losses.
This week, euro traders will want to continue monitoring developments out of Spain, Germany, and Greece. Friday’s Spanish Unemployment Rate may be a good indicator towards Spain economic recovery. In addition, Wednesday contains a lot of important German economic news, such as the German Flash Manufacturing PMI, German 10-y Bond Auction, and German Ifo Business Climate. Positive signs could help the euro recover some of Friday’s losses.

Gold – Gold Falls Due to Spanish Concerns

Friday morning, Gold dropped to the price of $1731.21 an ounce before trending upward due to concerns regarding the euro zone bailout for Spain. In afternoon trading, Gold fell as expected on the positive news of U.S. New Existing Home Sales data.

This week, gold traders will want to pay attention to a batch of euro-zone and US news for clues as to the level of risk appetite among investors. Gold may recoup some of Friday’s losses if economic news towards recovery in Spain, Greece, and Germany are good out of the euro-zone. That being said, any better than expected news out of the U.S. could lead to dollar gains, which may further weigh down on the price of gold.

Crude Oil – Crude Oil Falls with Positive U.S. News Release

By early afternoon Friday, crude oil rose to the price of $93.02 a barrel due to less than positive news from Canada and the euro zone. Against expectations in Friday afternoon trading, crude oil fell on the positive news of U.S. New Existing Home Sales data.
This week, oil traders will want to monitor a batch of US news, most importantly Friday’s U.S. Advance GDP figures. Additionally, the Unemployment Claims, Core Durable Goods Orders, and Pending Home Sales could all potentially have an impact on the price of oil. Better than expected news may signal to investors that demand for crude oil in the US will go up, which could boost prices.

Technical News

EUR/USD

There is a fresh bearish cross forming on the weekly chart’s Slow Stochastic indicating a bearish correction might take place in the nearest future. The downward direction on the daily chart’s Momentum oscillator also supports this notion. Going short with tight stops might be the right strategy today.

GBP/USD

The GBP/USD cross has experienced a bearish trend for the week. However, it seems that this trend may be coming to an end. The Williams Percent Range of the weekly chart shows the pair floating in the oversold territory, indicating that an upward correction will happen anytime soon. Going long with tight stops might be a wise choice.

USD/JPY

The pair has recorded much bullish behavior in the past several days. However, the technical data indicates that this trend may reverse anytime soon. For example, the daily chart’s Stochastic Slow signals that a bearish reversal is imminent. Going short with tight stops might be a wise choice.

USD/CHF

The cross has been dropping for the past week now, as it now stands at the 0.9260 level. The Slow Stochastic of the weekly chart shows a bullish cross has recently formed, indicating that an upward correction is imminent. This view is also supported by Williams Percent Range. Going long might be a wise choice.

The Wild Card

Gold

Gold prices are once again dropping, and it is currently traded around $1724.60 per ounce. And now, the 8-hour chart’s RSI is giving bullish signals, indicating that gold prices might go up. This might give forex traders a great opportunity to enter a very popular trend.

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.

 

BOJ Stimulus Bets Declined as Yen Slid on Export Data

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The Japanese currency has continued to decline after a report showed that Japanese exports dropped to the least since last year. The yen has extended the longest stretch of decline since July 2005, as pressure on the Bank of Japan to add stimulus declined. The dollar index has increased for the second day as global stock losses spurred the demand for safety in the market. The 17-nation currency advanced against the yen after the Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras dismissed Nikos Stavrogiannis from New Democracy Party, increasing speculation that the country is getting closer to establishing austerity measures.

According to Junichi Ishikawa, a Tokyo-based analyst at IG Markets Securities Ltd, there is general assumption that the Bank of Japan will add stimulus, adding that the market is in a risk-off mood which is adding upward pressure on the dollar. The yen weakened as the MSCI Asian Pacific Index of stocks declined by 0.2 percent after the S&P 500 Index of US shares dropped by 1.9 percent on Friday Oct. 19. The yen also slid as a Finance Ministry report showed that Japanese shipments dropped by 10.3 percent in September from last years. Ishikawa predicted that the widening trade deficit will trigger short-term selling of the yen as the market will be expecting a shrinking current account surplus. He also added that due to the bleak economic outlook in Europe and Japan, the market would be going for the dollar as the safe haven currency.

According to Japanese economy Minister Seiji Maehara, Japan requires additional monetary stimulus to encourage growth. In its policy meeting on October 30, the BOJ board is expected to lower its projections for the 2012 and 2013 fiscal years and it will also release 2014 forecasts. The Japanese currency declined by 0.3 percent against the dollar to trade at 79.58 per dollar before the London session was opened today. This is the weakest it has been since August 20. The yen also declined by 0.6 percent against the euro to exchange at 103.90 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
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News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Stock Market ‘Barometer’ Speaks: The Bulls Won’t Like it…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

When we started writing last Friday’s Money Morning, the Australian stock market was down 20 points.

By the time you received it, the stock market was only down about five points.

By the end of the day, it had closed up 12 points.

We gave our market ‘barometer’ a tap to make sure it was still working. It had, after all assured us the stock market was set to slump.

We needn’t have worried.

In the US on Friday night, the S&P 500 index fell 1.66%, and this morning the Australian stock market looks set to open down 50 points.

This morning we consulted the ‘barometer’ again. It tells us there could be a storm on the way…

We remember our paternal grandparents had a barometer on the hallway wall. It had a dark timber frame that was just short of a metre tall and about 40 centimetres wide.

To be honest, we didn’t understand how it worked. We remember standing and watching it for minutes at a time. The needle never moved. It just kept saying the same thing.

Sometimes we get the same feeling with the stock market. We look at it every day. And every day for the past two months it has said pretty much the same thing — the market is fine; buy stocks while they’re cheap.

We knew that wouldn’t last. Because we know the stock market is fundamentally broken. Or rather, the economy is broken. It’s just that the stock market hasn’t figured that out yet.

But, with the stock market here and in the US now trading at a key level…and after Friday’s 200 point drop on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, perhaps the barometer has hit change…

Our old pal, Slipstream Trader Murray Dawes, certainly thinks it has. Here’s why…

Stock Market Instinct

Last week we explained why we knew the stock market was about to reverse. We didn’t base it on studying macro-economic data, studying company earnings reports, or analysing bond yields.

Instead, we knew the stock market was heading for trouble because on Thursday evening as we were about to leave the office, Murray looked like he was at the end of his tether.

That was all we needed to see to know that it wouldn’t be long before stocks copped a hiding. So we wrote to you about it last Friday.

Sure, it’s not the most scientific analysis you’ll ever read. But that’s the thing about the markets. It’s just as much about emotion as it is about lines on a chart or dollars in a balance sheet.

And the emotion is simple. An investor is always asking, ‘How will I make most money from investing?’

When the stock market is at its highest point in more than a year, it’s not unreasonable to wonder if stocks can keep going. After all, we’ve seen a 14% gain in five months, and an 11.2% gain since the start of the year.

To put that in context, the average annual stock market gain over the past 20 years is about 11%.

Because of that, active investors will weigh up the odds of more gains against the chances that the stock market will force investors to give up at least some of those gains.

And it’s that emotion that shows up in stock charts. Just as a cautious consumer can show up in a company’s profit and loss statement, as the company records fewer sales.

Stock Market Analyst Says ‘Watch Out Below’

So with all this in mind, this morning we asked the decidedly chipper Murray for his take on the stock market now. Here’s what he told us:

‘Friday night’s price action in the S+P 500 is exactly what I wanted to see. My view remains that the high from April this year of 1422 is a very clear line in the sand for the S+P 500. A failure below that level in coming days or weeks could ignite some very serious selling pressure. If you look at the chart you’ll see I have circled each time in the last few years that the 10 day exponential moving average has crossed below the 35 day simple moving average (My definition of the intermediate downtrend).

Source: Slipstream Trader

‘It’s quite clear from the chart that this definition of the intermediate trend has given very timely warning that the momentum of the market was about to shift. If you combine the intermediate trend signal with the fact that a false break of the high from April this year is about to take place, then you get a very powerful combination that could see traders racing for the exits.

‘I particularly like the fact that the S+P 500 has bounced from the 1422 zone twice in the last few weeks. My feeling would be that the third retest of 1422 may not find the same level of support. I would not be surprised at all to see another bad down night in the States sometime this week (even in the next few days). Once the false break of April’s high is confirmed on a weekly chart then I would be targeting the 200 day moving average as the next line of support. That would take the S+P 500 to 1370. If the 200 day moving average doesn’t hold, then the downside target is another 100 points lower at 1270. In other words, watch out below.’

Murray isn’t the only stock market analyst ringing the warning bell. This morning, the Age reports:

‘Westpac and NAB have been downgraded by investment bank Goldman Sachs on concerns lower loan growth and a [sic] weaker margins would limit share price growth.

‘In the latest bearish signal for the banking sector, Goldman Sachs lowered its rating on Westpac from “neutral” to “sell” as the outlook for returns softens.’

And it’s not just here. US wealth managers are telling their clients to lock in gains now…

Selling Stocks to Avoid Tax

Bloomberg News reports:

‘An investor who sells $100 of stock with a cost basis of $20 in 2012 would see proceeds — after capital gains taxes — of $88, said Robert Barbetti, managing director and executive compensation specialist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Next year, if Congress doesn’t act, earnings from the sale would drop to $80.96 if rates rise to 23.8 percent. That means the stock price would need to rise at least 9 percent for an investor to be better off selling in 2013, said Barbetti, who is based in New York.’

The reason for the difference is that from the start of next year, tax rates in the US are set to rise on dividends and capital gains.

In other words, if US investors don’t think the stock market will go up at least 9%, then they’re better off selling now. And seeing as the US stock market has more than doubled since the 2009 low, the higher tax rates will mean millions of dollars in tax savings for the wealthiest investors who sell now.

In short, after a dream six-month run for stocks, the outlook doesn’t look so great. And if Murray’s analysis is up to its usual standard, you could be looking at a bumpy ride for stocks over the next few weeks.

Cheers,
Kris

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report:
How to Make Money from the End of the Mining Boom

Daily Reckoning:
China’s GDP Growth Ponzi Scheme

Money Morning:
Why China Wants a Higher Gold Price Later, Not Sooner

Pursuit of Happiness:
Australia’s Seat on the UN ‘War Council’


Stock Market ‘Barometer’ Speaks: The Bulls Won’t Like it…

QE Infinity Won’t Work, But Here’s What Will

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher recently offered a stunning assessment about our policymaking central bankers down in Washington.

They’re winging it.

In a talk before a Harvard Club audience, Fisher presented a candid assessment about all the levers the Fed has been pulling in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. And that includes the recently announced QE3.

‘Nobody really knows what will work to get the economy back on course. And nobody-in fact, no central bank anywhere on the planet-has the experience of successfully navigating a return home from the place in which we now find ourselves. No central bank-not, at least, the Federal Reserve-has ever been on this cruise before.’

I don’t know about you, but the idea that four years and trillions of dollars into this quantitative easing voyage we’re still sailing without a compass isn’t just appalling.

It’s terrifying.

Yet this ship of fools sails on.

The problem is, Fisher is right: QE3 won’t work. QE1 and QE2 didn’t fix this mess. Nor will QE4, QE5, onwards to infinity.

What’s more, there’s a cottage industry of pundits and consultants who’ll agree.

Trouble is, just like Fisher and his colleagues at the Fed, none of them can tell you why it won’t work.

That’s what we’re going to do here today.

We’ll start by giving you the lowdown on how this nation’s central bankers view “Quantitative Easing.” Then we’ll show you how the Fed thinks QE is supposed to work.

Finally, we’ll punch some (actually, many) holes in in the Fed’s hull by discussing why it’s not working.

We’ll even demonstrate what could still be done to fix this wretched mess.

Quantitative Easing (QE) is a Great Theory, But…

The latest version of QE calls for the New York Fed (the central bank’s trading arm) to buy $45 billion of U.S. Treasuries and $40 billion of mortgage- backed securities a month from dealers and banks.

The Fed then intends to “sterilize” these purchases by selling 1- to 3- year bonds through the end of the year – until it runs out of short- term paper to sell. A “sterilized” intervention is one that doesn’t increase the money supply.

But beginning in 2013, the Fed plans to continue doing the same thing – effectively continuing “Operation Twist,” but without the sterilization, because it has no more short-term paper to sell.

In plain terms, this means the Fed will monetize nearly 50% of the entire U.S. budget deficit in 2013. That will boost its balance sheet from the current $2.8 trillion to approximately $4 trillion – or 24% of U.S. GDP – by the end of the new year.

There isn’t a big list of players here. And that’s extremely important to understand.

Even the Fed’s own website tells us there are only 21 counterparties – including U.S., Canadian, British, French, German, Japanese, and Swiss banks.

The upshot: The risks are highly concentrated – in just this list of financial institutions:

  • Bank of Nova Scotia, New York Agency.
  • Barclays Capital Inc.
  • BMO Capital Markets Corp.
  • BNP Paribas Securities Corp.
  • Cantor Fitzgerald & Co.
  • Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
  • Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC.
  • Daiwa Capital Markets America Inc.
  • Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
  • Goldman, Sachs & Co.
  • HSBC Securities (USA) Inc.
  • J.P. Morgan Securities LLC.
  • Jefferies & Company Inc.
  • Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated Mizuho Securities USA Inc.
  • Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC.
  • Nomura Securities International Inc.
  • RBC Capital Markets LLC
  • RBS Securities Inc.
  • SG Americas Securities LLC
  • UBS Securities LLC.

In theory, the Fed expects these actions to push bond yields down while removing “safer” investments from the market. To be fair, Treasuries and other forms of government debt will always be available – but at higher prices because there aren’t as many offered for sale.

This is not unlike buying the last egg at the grocery store…if nobody wants it the price will be low, but if everybody wants it, you can bet you’ll have to pay a premium.

The idea is that, flush with cash and with fewer opportunities for higher returns, the banks will take on more risk and boost their lending to businesses and consumers.

With more money available – and at cheaper “prices” (lower rates) – that money will then work its way through the economy.

Businesses would use the cheap money to expand their operations, make capital purchases, produce more and hire workers to make it all happen. Firms are expected, according to the model, to build inventory in anticipation of the higher demand to come.

Then there are the consumers, who in good times account for 70% of what makes the U.S. economy go. Those folks, too, will borrow more of this abundant, cheap money to pay for products and services.

That, of course, bolsters demand, boosts corporate profits, and spurs hiring. That hiring, in turn, puts additional money in consumer wallets, which accelerates spending, and starts the whole cycle anew.

Consumers are also expected to invest in housing. The Fed presumes both are the result of more or better wages ahead.

The Fed’s grand plan is also supposed to benefit the stock and bond markets. The yield-starved, zero-interest-rate environment the Fed is deliberately creating will force businesses and consumers to turn to stocks, bonds, capital purchases, and other assets in pursuit of higher returns. At least according to the Fed.

Over time, Team Bernanke hopes this will reflate everything from stocks to housing. It believes that increased demand creates jobs, stimulates new capital creation, raises housing values and leads to higher prices.

The hope is that there’s enough capital injected into the banking system to create a self-sustaining cycle of “capital creation.”

It’s a great theory.

But that’s the problem.

It’s a theory.

The central bank’s master plan is constructed mostly by academics and policy wonks with a decidedly political agenda – all of whom appear to believe in the fallacy of perfect information as part of their decision making.

So what are they missing? Let’s take a look.

What the Banks Are Really Afraid Of…

A key reason the Fed can’t clear away the financial-crisis fallout is that it doesn’t understand why the banks engaged in the risky behavior that caused the crisis in the first place. As Fisher’s comments suggest, it also doesn’t understand the implications of the moves it’s making now.

Given that, it’s no surprise our central bankers are so ill-prepared to deal with the witch’s brew they’ve now created.

Let’s start with FDIC insurance. When the Glass-Steagall Act (technically the Banking Act of 1933) was repealed in 1999, the protective wall that separated the more-staid commercial banking world from its risk-taking investment-banking counterparts was demolished.

The new “bank holding companies” could now reach through the proverbial firewall and finance their high- risk trading activities using FDIC- insured deposits as the anchor.

Some would say fuel.

Then, as part of the Commodity Modernization Act of 2000, derivatives and other exotic investments were specifically exempted from reporting and public-exchange requirements in a move that further incentivized and even encouraged risk-taking.

Taken together, it was as if Washington had dumped a barrel of jet fuel on an open campfire: It started a blaze that just about burned the whole forest down.

With access to an entirely new pool of capital and an implicit government guarantee, big banks moved rapidly out on the risk curve as CEOs like Dick Fuld (Lehman Brothers), Martin J. Sullivan (AIG), Charles Prince (Citi), and James Cayne (Bear Stearns) realized that trading – and not banking – provided a direct pathway to obscene profits.

Some experts don’t believe this could have happened in private markets, where risk is directly a function of capital on hand rather than the implicit guarantee of the U.S. federal government.

I agree. Banks would have had to quintuple their capital before anybody in their right mind thought about taking on that much risk. The markets would have made that impossible.

That brings us back to the present.

The Fed believes that it has to provide liquidity to these very same banks under the misguided assumption that the banks will turn around and release it to the public.

But not having enough money to lend was never the issue. It was the implicit federal backing and destruction of protective regulations that made too much money available the first time around.

Here’s the real issue – the one thing that terrifies these massive institutions.

They’re afraid of each other.

That’s right … they’re so afraid of each other, and of the potential implosion of the $648 trillion derivatives playground that they created and have now handcuffed themselves to that they’re forced to forever watch one another, and to hoard capital for that future “what if” day of reckoning.

And they need to be that afraid.

Thanks to the unholy combination of a fractional reserve system, leverage that at one point approached 100-1 on some instruments and the almost-total lack of supervision of unregulated trading activities for the last 12 years, estimates suggest there’s only one “real” dollar in the system for every $10 they’ve created .

And nobody knows who’s got it.

Practically speaking, the world of high finance has become murkier than ever. And traditional banking customers have become all but irrelevant.

Not surprisingly, this lack of clarity in the financial system translates directly into uncertainty in the business community. CEOs are responding in the only ways they can and, like banks, are hoarding cash.

Apple Inc., for example, is sitting on more than $117 billion in cash, 63% of which is offshore. Berkshire Hathaway is sitting on $162 billion. General Electric Co. has $122 billion tucked away.

The nation’s chief job-creation engine – the small business sector – is also adrift and listing. Small ventures don’t have the luxury of building up huge cash stockpiles, so they depend on various forms of revolving debt.

Many can’t get the loans they need despite flawless credit because banks obsessed with their own survival have tightened up their external lending standards so much that no money escapes.

The nation’s banks once went out of their way to find reasons to give money out. No longer. And America’s entrepreneurial spirit is being crushed in the process.

Companies of all sizes are holding down costs, delaying investments as long as possible, and are hiring only when absolutely necessary.

And, as the controversies over recent jobs reports underscore, that lack of hiring is the most damaging reality of all.

Until that changes, the economy isn’t going to get well again.

Having been badly burned by an orgy of easy credit and profligate spending, consumers have had enough, too. They’re deleveraging. Many don’t want debt – even if it’s free.

Unlike the government and the banks, which exist in some sort of fantasy land, consumers have to live within their means.

So growth slows to a crawl, or grinds to a halt. This results in balance sheet destruction once productive assets go into decline.

Ultimately, demand craters.

Once that happens, it’s only a short drop into a managed depression that lasts for decades – as we see in Japan, where an entire generation has lived its whole life in a functional depression, no-growth malaise.

The Path We Don’t Want to Travel

Indeed, Japan is now entering the third decade of what was supposed to be a single “Lost Decade.” The Nikkei is off 80% and that nation’s combined private, corporate and public debt is now over 500% of GDP.

And that brings me to where I believe the Fed’s plans are so badly flawed.

Money created in a vacuum that is not backed by real savings and real assets creates false economic signals. These false signals, in turn, lead directly to additional economic misallocations.

What I mean by that is the money gets diverted into areas of our economy that have marginal value (like the banking system) instead of being funneled to where it can do the most good (job-creating technology or manufacturing) to help those who need it most (America’s hard-working-but-still-struggling middle class households ).

So yes, the stock market will rally in the short term, but as the weight of these debt burdens becomes greater, the cumulative effect of each new round of stimulus lessens.

And that’s precisely what’s happening now.

Take a look. With each successive round of QE, the gains become smaller in magnitude and shorter in duration.

At some point in the future – a point that Fisher and his Fed colleagues readily admit they can’t identify – quantitative easing will fail to have any impact whatsoever.

But rest assured: Everyone is Washington is focusing their energies on making sure it happens on someone else’s “watch.”

Three Steps the Fed Can Take Now To Fix the Problem

To keep that from happening, we need to do what a long-winning sports team does when it falls on hard times – get back to the basics, to the fundamentals that made it great.

In this case, those “fundamentals” are the Fed’s basic mandate. According to that mandate, as amended in 1977,

‘The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Open Market Committee shall maintain long run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy’s long run potential to increase production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long-term interest rates.’ [emphasis mine].

And this kind of a long-run focus doesn’t include propping up a banking system with liquidity it neither needs nor deserves.

In fact, here are the three steps Fed leaders can take right now if they are truly interested in acting in accordance with their mandate:

  • Force banks to choose: Either you’re an investment bank or a commercial bank – but you can’t be both. If you’re lending to consumers and businesses, you get the FDIC insurance and the implicit backing of the U.S. federal government. If you’re trading derivatives, you’re on your own.
  • Reintroduce risk: All gain, no pain doesn’t work. It’s never worked. Success, by its very definition, includes the potential for failure. The Fed has to let failure happen. History, as legendary investor Jim Rogers pointed out to me years ago, “is littered with the bones of failed financial institutions.” Why should this time be any different? Printing money is a short- term fix that only digs us into a deeper hole.
  • Require capitalization: Lasting economic development is driven by real savings, not fiat money and financial engineering. Responsible parties assume the risks and deserve the profits. Today’s Wall Street robber barons aren’t responsible, and they aren’t deserving.

Of course, we can always continue on our current path. But as Fisher says, that will only take us even “deeper into uncharted waters.”

Along with Fisher, I think this country needs to “sober up” and get its act together.

More of the same isn’t a solution that will work this time.

Keith Fitz-Gerald
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Money Morning (USA)

From the Archives…

Why this Could be the Most Important Day of the Year for the Stock Market
19-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

A Back-Door Way to Invest in the Electric Car Industry
18-10-2012 – Kris Sayce

The Stock Market is Up, What’s Next?
17-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

Debt and Government Spending Means You Should Be Wary of this Stock Market
16-10-2012 – Greg Canavan

The Secret Investment to Buy When GDP Falls
15-10-2012 – Nick Hubble


QE Infinity Won’t Work, But Here’s What Will

USDCHF break above 0.9270 resistance

USDCHF break above 0.9270 resistance, suggesting that a cycle bottom has been formed at 0.9214 on 4-hour chart, and lengthier consolidation of the downtrend from 0.9971 (Jul 24 high) is underway. Further rise would likely be seen and next target would be at 0.9350 area. Support is at 0.9214, only break below this level could signal resumption of the downtrend from 0.9431, then another fall towards 0.9000 could be seen.

usdchf

Daily Forex Forecast

Central Bank News Link List – Oct. 22, 2012: Canada’s credit bubble a central banker’s dilemma

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.