Greece Concerns Pushes Euro to a Month Low

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The 17-nation currency dropped against the greenback to almost eight-week low as concerns about Greece’s in ability to secure bailout funds rose in the market. This spurred fears of a possible Greek exit. The euro declined against major peers after Antonis Samaras, the Greek Prime Minister, indicated that the austerity measures proposed will be the last one. He said this as Greek parliament prepares to discuss the proposed spending cuts which include wage and pension cuts. The dollar Index continued with an upward trend as US prepares to vote tomorrow. The Australian dollar was up as retail sales reports showed a better-than-expected performance.

According to Imre Speizer, who is a strategist in Auckland at Westpac Banking Corp., there are increased concerns on the ability of Greece to secure extended bailout money as the governing coalition is seen to disagree more and more. Imre predicted the euro to continue dropping if the issues in Greece are not resolved. According to Samaras, the Greek Prime Minister, the Greek society will not be able to take any more spending cuts. In a speech to lawmakers of New Democracy Party, the Prime Minister indicated that the proposed measures are the last one the country will make. The latest package will be taken to parliament for the first vote on November 7.

Greece has been involved in discussions with troika, a group comprised of its international creditors, who have expressed their intention to keep Greece in euro region. The International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and the European Union have been holding talks with Greece to come up with acceptable spending cuts for Greece to get bailout money. However, political leaders in Athens have continued to debate the terms of the latest package. The euro dropped by 0.4 percent against the dollar to trade at $1.2790 at the start of trading in London, after concerns rose of Greece position in euro area.  The common currency fell by 0.5 percent to 102.73 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. 

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Market Review 5.11.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

The USD/JPY remained within reach of its highest point since late April during the overnight session, as positive US employment data continued to boost confidence in the American economic recovery. That being said, uncertainty regarding the outcome of tomorrow’s presidential election limited any gains.

The euro extended its bearish run throughout overnight and early morning trading, as concerns regarding Greece’s ability to secure another round of bailout funds have weighed down on the common currency. The EUR/USD, currently trading at 1.2790, is at its lowest point in close to two-months.

After a brief upward correction during the Asian session, gold once again began falling and is now trading around the $1677 an ounce level, its lowest point since early September.

Main News for Today

UK Services PMI- 09:30 GMT
• The indicator is forecasted to come in at 52.0, slightly below last month’s figure of 52.2
• Any worse than expected news could push the GBP/USD, already close to a two-week low, lower during mid-day trading

US ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI- 15:00 GMT
• The indicator is forecasted to come in at 54.6, slightly below last month’s figure of 55.1
• Should the indicator come in above the expected level, the dollar could extend its recent bullish trend against the euro, JPY and CHF

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.

Happy Guy Fawkes Day

By The Sizemore Letter

Remember, remember the Fifth of November,
The Gunpowder Treason and Plot,
I know of no reason
Why the Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes, ’twas his intent
To blow up the King and Parli’ment.
Three-score barrels of powder below
To prove old England’s overthrow;
By God’s mercy he was catch’d
With a dark lantern and burning match.
Hulloa boys, Hulloa boys, let the bells ring.
Hulloa boys, hulloa boys, God save the King!

–Traditional English nursery rhyme

November 5 is Guy Fawkes Day, the day that the English remember one of their most notorious villains or one of their most celebrated heroes, depending on their mood.

On this day in 1605 Fawkes, a disgruntled English Catholic rebel, attempted to take down the entire English government—king, ministers, parliament and all—by blowing up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament.

Fawkes was discovered and promptly executed, but he is remembered—in typically dry English humor—as the last man to enter parliament with honest intentions.

As we approach a U.S. presidential election with two very unappealing candidates, pour yourself a drink and offer a toast across the Atlantic.

The post Happy Guy Fawkes Day appeared first on Sizemore Insights.

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Global Interest Rate Movements – October 2012: Almost half of central banks worldwide cut rates in first 10 months

By Central Bank News

    Almost half of the world’s central banks followed by Central Bank News (CBN) cut policy interest rates in the first 10 months of 2012, with banks becoming increasingly aggressive in easing as the global economic slowdown worsened.
    By the end of October this year, 47 percent of the 88 central banks followed by CBN cut interest rates, up from 34 percent at the end of the first half and 27 percent at the end of the first quarter.
    Demonstrating central banks’ determination to stimulate growth amid low inflationary pressure, rates were cut more times in the first 10 months than held held unchanged. In contrast, the most common decisions by central banks in the first six months of the year was to keep rates steady.
    In the first 10 months, 41 central banks cut rates compared with 37 banks that held rates unchanged. After the first six months of this year, 29 central banks cut rates while 48 kept rates unchanged.
    Monetary policy has in fact been loosened even more than reflected in these figures as they don’t capture the quantitative easing that has been adopted by the three major central banks that have already cut rates to effectively zero: the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England.
    In the month of October, 13 central banks, or 15 percent, cut rates while 73 banks, or 83 percent, kept rates unchanged.  Only two central banks, those in Serbia and Zambia, raised rates.
    Uganda has been the global leader in cutting rates this year, chopping its key rate by 200 basis points in October, boosting its cumulative rate reduction for the first 10 months to 1,000 basis points, reflecting a sharp drop in inflation.   

    Other major rate cutters this year include frontier market Vietnam, with 500 basis points cut in 10 months, Mozambique with 450 basis points and Moldova with 400 points.
    Brazil is not only the top rate cutter among emerging markets with 375 basis points cut so far this year, but also the fifth most aggressive rate cutter worldwide.

    AUSTRALIA ON TOP,  BUT EMERGING MARKETS AGGRESSIVE
    Australia is the top rate cutter among developed markets this year, having trimmed rates by 100 basis points.
    But, as expected, central banks in emerging markets have been the most aggressive in cutting rates this year, with 28 percent of emerging market banks cutting in October, compared with 15 percent of developed market central banks and 15 percent of frontier market central banks.
    Through October, a total of 71 percent of emerging market central banks have cut rates compared with 46 percent of developed market central banks and 40 percent of central banks in frontier markets.
    On average the 41 central banks that cut rates in the first 10 months reduced rates by 1.44 percentage points.

    The average rate rise by the 10 central banks that raised rates through October was 14.25 percentage points but that figure was skewed by Malawi’s 800 basis points hike. Excluding Malawi, rates were increased by 70 basis points, with 25 basis points the most common rise.

 INTEREST RATE CUTS, YEAR-TO-DATE IN BASIS POINTS, OCTOBER 2012:
COUNTRY      YTDCOUNTRY      YTDCOUNTRY      YTD 
UGANDA-1,000LATVIA-100NAMIBIA-50
VIETNAM-500MONGOLIA-100SOUTH AFRICA-50
MOZAMBIQUE-450PHILIPPINES-100SOUTH KOREA-50
MOLDOVA-400ALBANIA-75SWEDEN-50
BRAZIL-375GEORGIA-75NORWAY-49
TAJIKISTAN-330HUNGARY-75ANGOLA-25
KENYA-300ISRAEL-75EURO AREA-25
PAKISTAN-250KUWAIT-75INDONESIA-25
GAMBIA-200ROMANIA-75MACEDONIA-25
KAZAKHSTAN-200CZECH REPUBLIC-70MOROCCO-25
DOMINICAN REP.-175CHINA-56THAILAND-25
CAPE VERDE-150DENMARK-50T & T-25
AUSTRALIA-100INDIA-50W. AFRICAN STS.-25
MAURITIUS-50BULGARIA-19


Central Bank News Link List – Nov 5, 2012: U.S. fiscal cliff, Europe’s deb worries G20

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.

Super Fund Results: Whoopdeedoo

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Numbers don’t lie. Until an economist gets their hands on them. Then they sing any story you want them to. Here’s the latest story they’ll have you believe, from the Age:

‘Far from being squeezed, working Australians are better off than ever, the latest figures show, with lower costs from interest rates counteracting the higher costs imposed by the carbon tax.’

We’d wager that your latest figures matter more to you than economists‘. And you know whether you’re being squeezed or not better than they do. The sad thing is, it’s the people who can’t fight back that are paying for ‘working Australians’ being better off…

The Age article continues:

‘The stunningly low cost-of-living increase – half the official inflation rate – is because the Bureau of Statistics’ cost-of-living measure incorporates household mortgage interest costs, which have slid 6.7 per cent over the year to September and 2.5 per cent in the past three months. It also gives a high weight to motoring costs, which have slid 0.8 per cent in the past three months as a result of lower petrol prices.

‘[…] households for which mortgage charges and petrol prices are less important were harder hit. The Bureau of Statistics says the living costs faced by pensioners and households relying on Newstart climbed 2 per cent. The costs faced by self-funded retirees climbed 1.5 per cent.’

If you’ve given up work and rely on savings, falling interest rates are a big problem. It’s probably not the best idea to go into debt or buy a gas guzzler so that you can be in the ‘far from being squeezed’ group.

What about the retirement investments that these people made to provision for their future? How are they faring?

Nothing to Get Super Excited About

The Age reported that ‘finally, [super fund] contributors are back to the balances they held before the financial crisis.’ Whoopdeedoo.

If you’ve been reading Money Morning for a while, you’ll know we blame the central bankers for the boom and bust of the stock market. Not only are central bankers reducing income for savers, they’re playing yoyo with your shares.

By the way, the same Age article also helpfully points out that you would have been better off with a term deposit than a balanced super fund over the last 10 years. Well, it doesn’t admit that directly, but a 6.3% a year average return for the median super fund is about what you could have gotten from term deposits. Minus the worry.

If all this seems like pointless number fiddling, you’re onto something. After tax and inflation, are you really achieving much with any of these investments?

Just like anything in life, you don’t get paid for doing nothing. It just doesn’t make sense. There is one exception though. You can get paid for doing nothing if you own something that does the work for you. And pays you the income it earns.

We’ll be releasing a report on how you can build up a sizeable income for your retirement soon. In the meantime, there is another way you can go about this. One that allows you to stop caring about reports like the two from the Age we just told you about. One that puts you outside their system of measurement.

In what might be our favourite Daily Reckoning article yet, Bill Bonner outlines how to live a life that gives economists nightmares and yourself a good night’s sleep…

Nick Hubble
Editor, Money Morning

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: After the Bust

Daily Reckoning:
A Deflationary Conclusion to China’s Bubble

Money Morning:
How the Aussie Dollar is Caught in a Worldwide Game of Currency Chess

Pursuit of Happiness:
Political Parasites Never Die


Super Fund Results: Whoopdeedoo

The Greeks Giving Economists Nightmares

By MoneyMorning.com.au

We’ve been meaning to tell you why economists and policy makers were jackasses. We can’t remember what we intended, but this blank is easy to fill in.

Let’s begin by looking at an economic disaster area: Greece. It has a per-capita GDP of about $29,000 compared to nearly twice as much for the US. One out of four Greeks is unemployed. Half of young people are jobless. And the country is broke. Only the kindness of strangers in France and Germany keeps the lights on.

An economist would use a technical term to describe it – “basket case”.

But let’s look more specifically at a Greek… let’s look at Mr Stamatis Moraitis. Recently, he was the subject of an article in the New York Times. A remarkable man, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in 1976.

Given nine months to live, he decided to economise on his own funeral. In the US he figured it would cost $2,000 to put him in the ground. In his native Greece, on the other hand, he could be planted for less than $200.

This seemed like such a good deal, Mr Moraitis couldn’t afford not to take advantage of it. But as it turned out, his penny pinching seems to have saved his life. 36 years later, he’s still alive.

Yes, the Greek beat cancer. The poor grave diggers got no tip. The undertaker delivered no bill. The children got no inheritance. There being no deceased, his house was not put on the market; so, no sales commission was earned… no remodelling was done… no new kitchen was ordered… and no moving company was engaged.

In short, Mr Moraitis cheated the economy out of a boost. Not only that, but reading further, we discover that Mr Moraitis lives on a poor island, Ikaria. Not only that, he seems to have disappointed economists at every turn. He didn’t build a new house; he moved into a small, cheap, old house with his parents. No new furniture. No new appliances. No new granite countertops.

The man is practically an anti-consumer. He makes his own wine and tends his own garden. No wonder the Greek economy is so weak!

Despite having terminal cancer, he sought no medical treatment. No chemotherapy. No radiation. No drugs. In short, he threw no bones to the housing industry. None to the health industry. None to Home Depot. Nor to Best Buys. Nor any other buys.

Pity the poor islanders. Ikaria is a small place, with just 10,000 Greeks. A bum economy. And nothing to do. No malls to go to. Few jobs; unemployment on Ikaria is about 40%. Want a fancy restaurant? Forget it. Want a fast car? Nowhere to go with it on the island.

So, what do residents do? Well, they tend their gardens. They drink a lot of wine. They visit with each other… often until late at night.

The New York Times:

 ‘… their daily routine unfolded…wake naturally, work in the garden, have a late lunch, take a nap. At sunset, they either visited neighbors or neighbors visited them. Their diet was also typical: a breakfast of goat’s milk, wine, sage tea or coffee, honey and bread.

‘Lunch was almost always beans (lentils, garbanzos), potatoes, greens (fennel, dandelion or a spinach like green called horta) and whatever seasonal vegetables their garden produced; dinner was bread and goat’s milk. At Christmas and Easter, they would slaughter the family pig and enjoy small portions of larded pork for the next several months.

‘Local women gathered in the dining room at midmorning to gossip over tea. Late at night, after the dinner rush, tables were pushed aside and the dining room became a dance floor, with people locking arms and kick-dancing to Greek music.’

They spend their days in the sun and their nights in merriment. They beat cancer. And they seem to live a long time; Ikaria has one of the highest concentrations of 100-year-olds in the world.

But their economy is not growing.

Poor bastards.

Bill Bonner
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in The Daily Reckoning Australia

From the Archives…

More Bad News for the Asian Century
2-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Is the Asian Century Already Kaput?
1-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Has the Australian Dollar’s Luck Just Run Out?
31-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

How the Aussie Dollar is Caught Up in Big Bankers’ Games
30-10-2012 – Callum Newman

Does Excessive Government Spending Make You the World’s Best Treasurer?
29-10-2012 – Kris Sayce


The Greeks Giving Economists Nightmares

Why Hurricane Sandy May Not Be So Economically Stimulating

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Invariably, every major disaster comes with the pundits who promise it brings a silver lining.

With a price tag of $50 to $70 billion, some economic forecasters are already rejoicing about the economic ‘stimulus’that rebuilding from Hurricane Sandy will bring. If only it were so.

In fact, this paradox is well worn since it involves one of the central conflicts of economics itself. You may recognize it as a battle between Maynard Keynes vs. Frederic Bastiat.

It involves Bastiat’s famous ‘Parable of the Broken Window’.

You see, according to Bastiat (1801-50), the glazier who fixes the broken shop window earns money from it, and so he regards the broken window as economically beneficial. However, that’s only half of the story.

It doesn’t take into account what the shopkeeper might have done with the money he used to pay the glazier to fix the broken window.

As Bastiat points out there is a ‘hidden cost” within the broken window itself. The broken window made the shopkeeper that much poorer.

What’s more, if the glazier secretly paid the boy who broke the window to generate the ‘new’ business, he would be effectively engaging in theft from all the town’s shopkeepers.

On a net basis, it’s a no win ballgame.

Yet that is the effect of such misguided policies like the ‘cash for clunkers’ scheme of 2009, which paid consumers to junk their still-usable automobiles long before their time.

Likewise, it’s found in the same line of argument that somehow World War II rescued the United States from the Great Depression because it fails to properly account for the immense destruction of wealth (admittedly, mostly outside the U.S.) the war caused.

It seems easy enough – unless you’re a Keynesian economist.

That’s because Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) argued that if resources are not fully utilized, the multiplier effect of the shopkeeper paying the glazier does produce additional economic activity. So in a Keynesian world a broken window does indeed increase economic output.

But that’s true only if the glazier was not fully occupied elsewhere. If fixing the shopkeeper’s window forced him to neglect his other customers, overall economic output would not be increased.

Of course, Keynes also once suggested that the U.S. Treasury should fill old bottles with banknotes and bury them in abandoned coal mines, after which the private sector would labor mightily to mine the banknote-bearing strata, causing massive increases in employment and output.

Meanwhile, with Hurricane Sandy, what we are left with is a stimulus fallacy since we are well below full employment and in a state in which resources are not fully utilized.

Here’s the Fallacy Buried Beneath the Hope

One more interesting feature of the Hurricane Sandy episode is that the National Weather Center (NWC) and state governors seem to believe economic losses are eliminated when they are paid for by insurance companies.

In fact, I thought it was odd when the NWC downgraded Sandy from ‘Hurricane Sandy’ to ‘Post-Tropical Storm Sandy’ the second it crossed the New Jersey shore on Monday evening.

It now turns out that most insurance companies have much higher deductibles for hurricanes than for regular storms, so the authorities were trying to maximize the payout on voters’ insurance claims.

The problem is that insurance companies are people too, even if a quirk of the Constitution fails to give them the right to vote. Conniving at insurance fraud by pretending Sandy wasn’t really a hurricane is NOT the ethical behavior we should expect from those in authority.

And if you work for an insurance company, go picket the New Jersey State House in Trenton or New York’s City Hall. Mayor Bloomberg, of all people, ought to know better!

So how big are the damages caused by so many ‘broken windows’?

The disaster modeling company Eqecat currently estimates the insured losses on Sandy at $20 billion, with an additional $50 billion in uninsured economic losses. (Those include the lost opportunities caused by most of New York not showing up to work for a week.)

Contrary to popular opinion, the $20 billion covered by insurance are real losses; they will be reflected in higher insurance premiums going forward, otherwise the insurance companies would go out of business.

As a result of the higher premiums, some projects in the future will be shelved because their cost is too high, some houses will not be built because homeowners can no longer afford them.

You see, Keynes is wrong. The $20 billion is a real loss to the economy, and in the long run it will not simply come out of insurance company profits, but be passed on throughout the economic system as higher costs-which equals less money.

Similarly, the $50 billion economic costs of the storm are real.

To take one example, if Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) averages $100 million every day in trading profits, then having the exchange closed for two days will reduce their fourth quarter profit by $200 million, with no chance of making that up.

This effect will also be reflected throughout the larger economy. Many New York and New Jersey businesses will go bankrupt, because the losses push them over the edge. And if the state decides to refund the costs, the additional taxes in future years will push other businesses over the edge as well.

Yes, the money spent on reconstruction is real, but it just substitutes for other money that won’t get spent.

Maybe a restaurant is forced to rebuild using insurance money, and now has a larger, newer building. However, apart from the insurance premium increases discussed above, and any out-of-pocket cost to the restaurateurs, there may have been customers attracted by the old restaurant’s charm, who will be repelled by the antiseptic new one.

Certainly if I were told I could rebuild my 1911 house with a 2013 one of equivalent size I would refuse; instead I would search high and low for another house with as much charm as my current residence.

As in most economic matters, I am on the side of Bastiat, not Keynes.

In this case, many of the costs of Hurricane Sandy are hidden, or postponed to future years, but they are nonetheless real.

That’s true no matter what guys like New York Times columnist (and Nobel Prize winner – jeez) Paul Krugman say.

You may remember what Paul Krugman said in August last year when he proposed that we could somehow rescue the economy by preparing for an imaginary alien invasion, building huge laser-guided defense systems, none of which would be needed unless aliens surprised us by actually invading on schedule.

Needless to say Bastiat would disagree. With cool nineteenth-century logic he would point out that whether it’s an unnecessary window repair or an unnecessary atomic ray gun, if it’s useless it’s useless.

Our leaders should take Bastiat’s lesson to heart, and not just when there’s a hurricane.

Martin Hutchinson
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

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

From the Archives…

More Bad News for the Asian Century
2-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Is the Asian Century Already Kaput?
1-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Has the Australian Dollar’s Luck Just Run Out?
31-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

How the Aussie Dollar is Caught Up in Big Bankers’ Games
30-10-2012 – Callum Newman

Does Excessive Government Spending Make You the World’s Best Treasurer?
29-10-2012 – Kris Sayce


Why Hurricane Sandy May Not Be So Economically Stimulating

The Election Cycle – What to Expect in Stocks & Bond Prices

By: Chris Vermeulen – www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com

It is that time in the presidential cycle that gets everyone emotional and concerned with the future outlook of the United States. While everyone has their opinion on whom they think is best for America, I promised myself a long time ago to keep my thoughts to myself for two key reasons. ONE: only 50% of Americans will agree with me J, and TWO: I am Canadian so I do not experience what Americans go through on a daily basis.

My thinking is if Obama wins then we will see Quantitative Easing continue. And with the recent positive economic numbers on Friday it should give some confidence to investors that things are SLOWLY stabilizing (Bullish for Stocks). But, if Romney wins then we could see Quantitative Easing be cut or eliminated which is obviously bad for equities.

So, let’s just jump into the charts of what I feel will unfold in the next few days and months.

Using the season chart of the four year election cycle we can see what the Dow Jones Index has done in past election periods. Obviously every market environment is drastically different in each situation but overall we see stronger stock price. This is naturally a very emotional time for investors but once the election is finished most individuals become more confident simply because there is a leader that has four years to make things better and there is nothing they can do about it now and the campaigning and debating is over.

Dow Stocks Election Cycle Trading

 

DIA – Dow Jones Industrial Average – Daily Chart:

Looking at the chart of Dow DIA Index fund you can see a 5-6 month cycle in the market which has a positive skew. Just so you understand what a positive skew is I will explain.

Positive Skew is when the market is trending up making a series of higher highs and higher lows. Because there are naturally more buyers during a bull market each cycle upswing lasts longer then when the cycle down downswing. So you get longer rallies which sends your secondary indicators (stochastics, volatility, put/call ratios, advance decline line etc…)  in the overbought levels for extended periods of time. Those trying to pick a top continually get their head handed to them. The focus must be on buying the pullbacks. Keep in mind volatility is higher which meaning risk per trade is higher. Overall in the long run you stand a much higher chance of making money trading with the trend than trying counter trend trades (picking a top).

So as you can see below it looks like the stock market will be trying to put in the bottom over the next week or two which falls in line with our election cycle. It is very important to know that during intermediate cycle lows is where some of the biggest drops take place. These sharp drops are what is needed to cleanse the market one last time to shake as many traders with tight stops out of the market before it reverses and starts the next rally. I would like to see a 1-3 day market sell off as that would be the signature bottoming pattern I like to buy.

DIA Exchange Traded Fund Trading

 

Bond Prices – Moving Against the Norm…

Bond investors are some of the most conservative people in the market. They do not like to take risks so they dump their money into bonds to make a tiny profit in exchange for low risk (volatility). The nature of these investors put more money into bonds as we enter the election because they are nervous about not knowing who will be in control of the country.

After the election finished some money flows out of bonds and into stocks because there is now a president and direction for the country. Generally come the new year investors move to bonds as the safe haven as they try to figure out what their game plan is for new year.

So looking forward to this week and the next 2 months I would not be surprised to see bond prices rise or trade sideways while stocks move higher. This analysis is based on Obama winning. If Romney wins then I feel bonds will rally much more and stocks could sell off.

Bond Sentiment Election Cycle Trading

 

TLT Bond Exchange Traded Fund – Daily Chart:

Here is a chart of 20+ year bonds showing a possible reversal to the upside that could trigger as soon as next week. This chart is forward looking 1 – 2 weeks. Overall the trend remains down but if Romney wins I feel bonds breakout above the red resistance levels and trigger a new uptrend.  You can follow my stock charts and ETF charts live every day here: http://stockcharts.com/public/1992897

Bond TLT Exchange Traded Fund Trading

 

Election Year Trading Cycle Conclusion:

Next week is going to be very interesting to watch unfold. I generally do not like to trade or invest before news of this magnitude so trade smaller sizes if you do as price action could be wild.

Get my Daily Trading Analysis & Trade Setups at: www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com

Chris Vermeulen

 

Disclaimer:
This material should not be considered investment advice. Technical Traders Ltd. and its staff are not a registered investment advisors. Under no circumstances should any content from this website, articles, videos, seminars or emails from Technical Traders Ltd. or its affiliates be used or interpreted as a recommendation to buy or sell any type of security or commodity contract.
Our advice is not tailored to the needs of any subscriber so go talk with your investment advisor before making trading decisions This information is for educational purposes only.

 

U.S. Stocks On a Collision Course with Market History

The past offers answers about the future; market patterns do repeat themselves
November, 2012

By Elliott Wave International

Next time you look at a clear night sky, keep in mind that what you see is the distant past.

Most stars are so distant that it takes millions of years before the light is visible to us.

Even so, astronomers can learn much about the future of the universe by studying the past.

NASA astronomers announced they can now predict with certainty the next major cosmic event to affect our galaxy, Sun, and solar system: the titanic collision of our Milky Way galaxy with the neighboring Andromeda galaxy.

NASA, May 31, 2012

That collision is expected in some 4 billion years.

The Hubble Space Telescope also recently revealed the farthest-ever view of deep space. NASA noted, “The images allow us to follow the development of the universe.”

And back here on earth, Elliott wave practitioners study the market’s past price patterns to determine the probable development of the present trend.

You see, price patterns repeat themselves at all degrees of trend.

Indeed, Robert Prechter recently discussed how past wave patterns are similar to what’s unfolding now:

The … rallies of 1929-1930 and 1938-1939 are good examples.

The Elliott Wave Theorist, September 2012

Both of those rallies came after steep market declines. Likewise, the present rally of three and a half years commenced after the 2007-2009 market plunge.

Be aware: Both of those past rallies in turn fell back into severe market declines.

The Dow Industrials lost 86% on just the second leg of the 1929-32 bear market, and surrendered 41% during the 1939-42 downtrend.

U.S. markets are likely on a similar collision course with history. The present price pattern is unfolding at a larger degree of trend than those previous two periods.

Position your portfolio for what Prechter calls “History in the Making.”

To that end, EWI offers you a no-obligation education in Elliott Wave analysis. See below for details.

 

Learn the Why, What and How of Elliott Wave AnalysisThe Elliott Wave Crash Course is a series of three FREE videos that demolishes the widely held notion that news drives the markets. Each video will provide a basis for using Elliott wave analysis in your own trading and investing decisions.Access the Elliott Wave Crash Course now >>

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline U.S. Stocks On a Collision Course with Market History. 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.