New Zealand Dollar Rebounds Near 3-month Low; RBNZ Test Works

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The New Zealand dollar rebounded from its ten-week low against the greenback on Thursday after the country’s business  confidence rose close to a 15-year high. However, the gains remained lower after the central bank data revealed its loan restrictions to curb the intense housing sector been working, without the interest rates hikes.

The New Zealand dollar rose 0.25% higher to $0.8167 as of the time writing, after it dropped to a low $0.8113 in the previous session.

The ANZ Bank Business Outlook advanced to 60.5 in November, rising to its highest since 1994, up from the 53.2 reading seen in October.

The short-term technical picture remains at low, as the kiwi hovered close to a three-week low. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) revealed its loan restrictions on low equity mortgages worked.

The low-deposit lending saw a huge drop in October, as just 11.7% of new home lending was written on a deposit of 20% or less, down from 25.5% seen in September.

“RBNZ’s foreign exchange transactions data showed that the Bank bought a net NZD 7 million, contrary to some speculation of a step-up in net NZD selling,” RBC Capital Markets analysts noted in a market commentary on Thursday.

RBNZ Trail

“The reduction in high-LVR lending will help to reduce the risks of sharp correction in house prices in an already overvalued housing market,” RBNZ Deputy Governor Grant Spencer stated in the statement on Thursday. ”Such a correction could be damaging for the financial sector and broader economy,” he added.

The central bank has been dealing with the inflation in the housing sector. Governor Graeme Wheeler introduced restrictions on leveraged lending to control the inflating housing bubble. The experiment was introduced to steadily deflate the inflation in the housing sector without harming the rest of the economy.

 

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Germany Unemployed Figures for November Slightly Rises

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The unemployment figures in Germany slightly rose in November, compared to the previous month, the official data revealed on Thursday.

The unemployment figures rose by 10,000 in November, a report from the German labour agency (Bundesagentur fuer Arbeit) confirmed.  The unemployment rate came in at 6.9% on a seasonally basis.

The report covered the registered unemployed, which is defined as a person who is temporarily without a job or work for less than 15 hours per week and expected to be available for placement activities by any employment agency for basic security benefits.

 

ILO Figures

A reading from the international Labour Organization for October showed that the unemployment rate in Germany remained unchanged compared to 5.2% in September. The unemployment figures rose by 20,000 and reached 41.864 million, according to the data.

 

GDP data

Germany saw its growth expand by 0.3% in the third quarter, compared to 0.7% seen in the previous quarter.

“Final consumption expenditure of households and of government was somewhat higher than in the previous quarter,” the German statistics office stated. “Also, there was an increase in gross fixed capital formation both in machinery and equipment and in construction compared with the second quarter of 2013.”

“The balance of exports and imports, however, had a downward effect on GDP growth. While imports continued to increase, exports were less dynamic when compared with the previous quarter,” the office added.

 

PMI data

Germany’s manufacturing sector rose in November, while the services sector also showed an improvement, the flash data showed.

Germany’s flash Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the manufacturing sector edged 52.5 points high in November, up from the previous reading of 51.7 seen in October. While the flash reading for the services sector advanced to 54.5 points in November, up from 52.9 points seen in October.

“November’s survey suggests that the German economy has built up a head of steam through the final quarter of 2013 and is well on track to achieve growth of close to 0.5% for the calendar year. There are also signs that solid growth momentum should be sustained over the months ahead, as new business received by private sector firms increased at the steepest pace for almost two-and-a-half years,” Senior economist at Markit , Tim Moore, stated in the release.

 

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On the Trail of Juniors with Blue-Sky Potential: Eric Coffin

Source: Kevin Michael Grace of The Gold Report (11/27/13)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/on-the-trail-of-juniors-with-blue-sky-potential-eric-coffin

As the price of gold rose upward, junior miners chased ounces at all costs. This was a huge mistake, says Eric Coffin, because it resulted in unexciting projects, low margins and a depressed market. In this interview with The Gold Report, the publisher of Hard Rock Analyst explains that new discoveries with high margins are the essence of the junior, and he considers eight explorers with blue-sky potential and one producer with excellent prospects for expansion.

The Gold Report: Federal Reserve of Dallas President Richard Fisher gave a speech in Australia declaring that quantitative easing (QE) must end or it would “fuel the kind of reckless market behavior that started the global financial crisis.” If the Fed isn’t going to end QE until employment improves, how will this end?

Eric Coffin: Fisher gets to voice his opinion at Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings, but he won’t be a voting member until January. He hasn’t been comfortable with QE from the start and has said so repeatedly. There isn’t any news in that quote.

I don’t think you’ll see much change when the FOMC gets four different members next year. Janet Yellen, who will become chairman, is more dovish than Ben Bernanke. I think she was the right choice, not because she loves creating money from nothing but because she’s probably been the most accurate forecaster of the bunch.

TGR: What about the bubble that Fisher fears?

EC: If you want to be cynical, you can make the argument that a bubble is exactly what the Fed has been trying to create. It wanted to get equity markets to go up because that increases wealth and raises consumer confidence. About half of the Fed’s QE program is buying mortgage bonds. It is trying to keep mortgage rates down and resuscitate the housing sector.

Fisher is right in a sense, but I don’t think we’re at the point where I’d be terribly concerned about things running out of control. I have to admit, though, that based on the growth of the economy, the U.S. equity markets are probably getting a little bit ahead of themselves. Most consumer inflation measures have been trending down, not up. Personally, I’m more worried about deflation, which is far harder for a central bank to fight than inflation.

TGR: The Q3/13 gross domestic product (GDP) report shows 2.8% growth.

EC: Right now, I’m kind of neutral on the economy. The data quality is going to be crappy for a month or two because of the government shutdown. The economy grew 2.8% because there was big growth in inventories, which is not the reason you want. Without that it came in at 2%, which was the expected number. You’re probably going to see production cut a little bit this quarter because more stuff was made than could be sold.

TGR: Karl Denninger pointed out that the gross change in GDP from Q2/13 to Q3/13 was $196.6 billion ($196.6B), but the Fed’s QE program injected $255B. So the economy actually shrank during Q3/13.

EC: I think he’s oversimplifying a little bit. QE is really swapping paper, creating money out of thin air and using that to buy bonds that inject money into the economy. But the velocity of money has been very low since the crash. It’s not as if the banks are taking that $85B/month and lending it all. That’s where the real multiplier effect is. Right now a lot of the money created through QE has ended up in bank’s excess reserves, not in the wider economy. Karl is a bit of a permabear, but I would agree with him that it wasn’t that great a report.

TGR: Let’s assume that QE continues at its present rate until June 2014. How will that affect gold and silver?

EC: When the Fed starts tapering, we have to assume gold and silver prices will get hit. Of course, if it doesn’t actually start tapering until well into next year, we could see gold and silver go up for two or three months before that. That doesn’t preclude later increases in the gold price based on physical demand, but the short term traders are completely fixated on QE (or lack thereof) and will be sellers once the taper starts, and the market will have to get past that before recovering.

TGR: What if it becomes clear we are going to get QE forever?

EC: Then I think gold goes to $2,000/ounce ($2,000/oz).

TGR: At the Subscriber Investment Summit in Vancouver last month, you compared the 10-year chart for gold to the 10-year chart for junior resources. The first chart looks good, but the second looks terrible. Why?

EC: For all the money thrown at exploration—and, of course, that number has been tumbling dramatically for the past two years—not many good discoveries resulted, especially in the last couple years. That’s one reason. The chart below shows the amount of gold discovered each year since 1990, counting only new gold discoveries above 2 million ounces (2 Moz). You can see how few discoveries there have been in the past couple years. Compared to the 1990s the numbers are tiny.

The other reason is that when the gold price was rising continuously many companies were looking for what I referred to in Vancouver as “crappy ounces.” Their intentions were good. They weren’t trying to hoodwink anybody. They made the reasonable assumption that with gold going up and up, economic cutoff grades would keep dropping. But you can’t produce gold at ever-lower grades with difficult metallurgy and infrastructure and make more money.

As it turned out, costs rose almost in lockstep with the gold price. A lot of the ounces that were marginal at $500 or $700 or $900/oz haven’t been salvaged by the gold price going to $1,300/oz. Many of those resources are still uneconomic and would require more capital expenditures with longer payback periods than larger producers are willing to accept.

TGR: You said that juniors have a major credibility issue, specifically, that preliminary economic assessments (PEAs) and feasibility studies do not match production realities.

EC: There are a couple reasons for that. I’ve already mentioned costs. And when the sector recovered after 2000, there was a real capacity issue. There weren’t enough geologists or engineers. There weren’t even enough people who make truck tires.

Many NI 43-101s, PEAs and feasibility studies have been written by people who lacked experience. To be fair to the engineering companies, miners can have cost overruns of 20% and still be within the stated margin of error, but people never read the fine print. They just look at the production cost, so when it comes in $100–200/oz higher, everybody freaks out.

TGR: Juniors chased lousy projects because gold was soaring, and money flooded into the market. Now that gold has fallen 30%, will this engender the return of old-fashioned values?

EC: I think it already has. The large mining companies, having spent huge amounts of money on capital expenses (capexes) that didn’t add to their bottom line, are now saying, “Show me margin.” Large and medium companies will now pick up deposits smaller than what they would have touched 10 years ago because they have the grades, the geometry and the metallurgy to enable low-cost production.

TGR: So is margin now more important than grade?

EC: Grade is king, but margin is the key. Majors are focused on margin per ounce produced. You can get high margins with a lower-grade deposit if everything goes right but, by and large, the higher grade the better the margin should be. It comes down to net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR). Companies now want gold projects that can be built for $100–150 million ($100–150M) with NPVs of $300M or $400M and all-in cash costs of $600-800/oz—assuming they’re big enough. They don’t want to go too small because they can spread themselves only so thin. I don’t see majors like Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE) picking up 50,000-ounce-per-year (50 Koz/year) deposits, but we might see them picking up 100–150 Koz/year projects, when a few years ago few majors would look at a deposit unless it was capable of generating 250 Koz/year or more.

In Sonora, Mexico, half a dozen mines that began production in the last five years don’t have grade. They’re 0.8, 0.7 or 0.6 grams per ton (0.6 g/t), but they have fantastic combinations of logistics, costs, workforces, metallurgy and geometry, and they produce at $500–700/oz cash costs.

TGR: Why are new discoveries so important to the junior sector?

EC: That’s what the juniors exist for. The market wants something new, with blue-sky potential. The companies with really big runs in the last year or two are, almost without exception, companies that made discoveries. They don’t always work out, but that’s the risk you take.

If you go back to the pretty spectacular bull market in the mid-1990s, it was driven by companies going international for the first time in a long time, juniors going to South America and Africa and finding 3, 5 and 10 Moz deposits. Gold prices rose in the mid-1990s, but discoveries drove the bull market.

TGR: You called Reservoir Minerals Inc. (RMC:TSX.V) a “classic discovery story.” Why?

EC: Most of its exciting concessions surround the Bor mine in Serbia. It’s a big camp. Reservoir has a joint venture with Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX:NYSE), with Freeport holding 55% of the Timok project and Reservoir 45%. It’s a high-sulfidation epithermal system. One of the first holes was 5.13% copper and 3.4 g/t gold over 291 meters (291m).

A real back-of-the-envelope calculation (because the holes are still pretty widely spaced) is that Timok has 30–40 million tons (30–40 Mt) of quite strong-grade gold-copper material. Freeport is a great partner. It has lots of money, and it has direct experience operating bulk tonnage and also block-cave underground mines, which Timok would probably end up being.

TGR: Reservoir’s Sept. 9 Timok press release announced 260m of 3.93% copper equivalent. Is the early promise being fulfilled?

EC: It’s a fantastic discovery, definitely one of the best of the last few years. Assuming Freeport goes all the way to feasibility—and I’d be pretty shocked if it didn’t now—Reservoir essentially gets carried until then at 25%, which would still be significant value, considering the deposit.

TGR: What about other companies near Timok?

EC: The one that got my attention is Mundoro Capital Inc. (MUN:TSX.V). The company had originally gone into China and picked up a gold project that it expanded to 8 or 9 Moz with pretty good grades. Unfortunately, one of the state gold miners liked it even more, so Mundoro was shown the door and given $20M on the way out. It has lots of cash.

Teo Dechev is the president; her family comes from Eastern Europe and the VP of Exploration is based there. Mundoro picked up concessions there. Mundoro wasn’t chasing Reservoir; it just liked the geology. The initial drill program at its Borsko Jezero property didn’t come up with a Reservoir-style discovery, but its Savinac property has had some pretty interesting trench assays.

TGR: As high as 30 g/t gold and 171 g/t silver over 12m.

EC: I’m not assuming every trench is going to look like that, but it’s a good start. The other two trenches were pretty decent, too. Mundoro may actually have something there, probably an epithermal system. The company has another project in Bulgaria I’m expecting to see results from it soon and a lot of other ground near Bor that has targets at earlier stages. The story is by no means over.

It’s trading at only $0.24/share but has about $0.30/share in cash, enough for three years. So there’s lots of leverage, if it makes a discovery.

TGR: You mentioned in Vancouver other companies with discoveries that are not as “classic” as Reservoir’s but still have potential.

EC: I gave two examples. The first is GoldQuest Mining Corp. (GQC:TSX.V) in the Dominican Republic. It’s trading at $0.29/share. It had a high of $2/share, and I’d be much happier if it traded closer to that, but it was $0.07/share before it discovered Romero. GoldQuest just released an initial resource estimate: 2.38 Moz gold equivalent Indicated and 790 Koz Inferred.

Keep in mind that Bill Fisher, the chairman, and Julio Espaillat, the president—Julio is Dominican—have done this before. They put Cerro de Maimón into production. This is a small but very profitable mine that was taken out for $3.20/share in 2011. Having management with direct mine building experience in country is a huge advantage.

TGR: How does GoldQuest stand for cash?

EC: About $12M right now, enough to take it most of the way to feasibility. Romero needs some infill drilling and more metallurgical testing. Most of the maiden resource is Indicated already so it shouldn’t need to do a huge amount of additional drilling for the feasibility study. Metallurgical work should improve the economics. The old tests indicated 75% recovery, but those were simple bottle roll tests. Romero will be a sulfide plant and recoveries in the 90% range for both copper and gold are more common for that sort of operation.

TGR: What was the other company?

EC: Colorado Resources Ltd. (CXO:TSX.V), which has the North ROK porphyry discovery in northern British Columbia. This is one of those situations where the best hole is the first hole: 0.63% copper and 0.85 g/t gold over 242m. Colorado has since drilled decent intercepts, but none like the first, and the market has punished it.

We won’t know for certain until the company puts out the remainder of its pending drill holes, but hole 9 looks as if it has hit a structure. If the zone doesn’t continue SE of Hole 9 North ROK could still contain 100–300 Mt, and 300 Mt happens to be the size of Imperial Metals Corp.’s (III:TSX) Red Chris mine, which is going into production down the road. Colorado’s president, Adam Travis, told me in Vancouver that the company is still figuring out the controls on the mineralization. But its logistics are really good, the best in the area, so this is a legitimate discovery, which may well be economic.

TGR: How much cash does Colorado have?

EC: It should have $5–7M after drilling. The company will probably get the rest of the holes and an initial resource estimate out before worrying about raising more money. Porphyries take a lot of drilling. If North ROK turns out to be a moderate-size, moderate-grade resource, Colorado may look for a partner.

TGR: Which discovery stories do you like in Africa?

EC: I like a couple. Actually, the first, True Gold Mining Inc. (TGM:TSX.V) in Burkina Faso, is now long past being a discovery story. It also has quite good logistics. The deposit is probably about 3 or 4 Moz, but right now the company is focusing on the oxides. The idea is to get a heap-leach operation into production, because that’s a much lower capex, and leverage that to build a sulfide plant later. I expect to see a feasibility study early next year.

True Gold has very strong management. Mark O’Dea ran Fronteer Gold before it was taken out by Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE). He’s done something I hope we see more of—he brought in a completely unrelated company, an insurance company, which put a large placement into True Gold. O’Dea has done a good job of funding, admittedly with more dilution than I would have liked, but that’s just the market we’re in. The company certainly has enough to get through feasibility. We’re probably looking at a $100–120M capex for a mine that should be able to do, say, 100+ Koz/year for 10 years. A feasibility study should be out within a couple months.

TGR: And the second African discovery?

EC: Roxgold Inc. (ROG:TSX.V), also in Burkina Faso. The 55 Zone of its Yaramoko project is a high-grade, steep-vein setting. It put out a PEA and mineral resource in September: 850 Koz gold at 13.88 g/t. This will be a small but very high-margin operation.

TGR: What other companies with new discoveries do you think have potential?

EC: Mirasol Resources Ltd. (MRZ:TSX.V) is a very successful explorer and project developer. It sold a high-grade silver discovery in Argentina to Coeur Mining Inc. (CDM:TSX; CDE:NYSE). Thanks to that, Mirasol has about $40M in cash and Coeur shares, which, coincidentally, is the same as its market cap. For political reasons, no one is a fan of Argentina these days, but the company also has large projects in northern Chile that look pretty interesting—early stage but big.

San Marco Resources Inc. (SMN:TSX.V) is focused on northwest Mexico, an area I’ve always liked and still do. The company is not cash rich but has strong joint-venture agreements with Exeter Resource Corp. (XRC:TSX; XRA:NYSE.MKT; EXB:FSE) on its Angeles and La Buena projects. Exeter has to spend $10M on Angeles and $15M on La Buena to get 60% of each. La Buena is just north of Goldcorp Inc.’s (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) Peñasquito mine and a lot of the geochemistry and geophysics are similar. San Marco has started drilling the Julia zone, and I hope we’ll see drill results sometime this month. It is a riskier play but has a $3M market cap, so if it makes a discovery, there’s a lot of upside.

TGR: What other companies do you want to talk about?

EC: SilverCrest Mines Inc. (SVL:TSX.V; SVLC:NYSE.MKT) announced a silver resource of 199 Moz at La Joya. It’s a low-grade, polymetallic skarn: silver, copper, gold, lead and zinc. The company followed that up with a pretty good PEA: an after-tax NPV% of $93M and a 22% IRR for a “starter pit” operation that is focused on the highest grade portion of the resource.

TGR: How do you rate its management?

EC: That’s the main reason I like it. Chairman Scott Drever, President Eric Fier and CFO Barney Magnusson have been a team since day one. They are all well experienced in both exploration and putting mines into production.

That experience really showed with Santa Elena, SilverCrest’s Sonora mine. It has good grades and pretty much an even mix between gold and silver in value. The team has managed to get it financed at the bottom of the market in 2009, which was no easy feat, and built it for a little more than $20M, which is pretty amazing. It’s producing silver equivalent at $8.50/oz. That’s quite a bit better than most.

TGR: What are the prospects for Santa Elena expansion?

EC: It’s most of the way through one now. Santa Elena started out as a heap leach, but SilverCrest is building a mill, which should start production early next year. That should bring the company up from, say, 2.5 Moz silver equivalent to close to 3.5 Moz next year. As the mine gets into deeper, higher grade material, it should surpass 4 Moz silver equivalent in 2015. La Joya will be more difficult, but I definitely wouldn’t bet against management building it on time and on budget and making sure it makes money.

TGR: SilverCrest is in Mexico, and the new mining regime proposed by the Mexican government has been met with threats by mining companies to close operations and cease investment. Is this premature?

EC: I think some of this is politics and not just on the part of the Mexicans. If someone raises your taxes, you jump up and down. I don’t want to underestimate the seriousness of this, but it gets called a royalty when it really isn’t. It actually comes off the net. I think it will reduce after-tax profits by 10%, which isn’t wonderful but I don’t think it will suddenly make economic mining projects uneconomic. What it will do is raise the bar a bit on projects still in development. Some operations that already looked a bit marginal might not get built now.

That said, Mexico, especially the northwest where SilverCrest operates, is one of the few areas in the world where companies can put mines into production fairly painlessly, with a well-understood permitting regime and low capexes. Miners that produce gold at $500 or $600/oz cash costs are not going to become unprofitable because of a tax increase from 30% to 37%.

TGR: Eric, thank you for your time and your insights.

EC: You’re welcome. I have a new report available for your readers that is free to download—it is actually an interview with one of the companies I have discussed above, which I think is a very worthwhile read. We also have a special subscription offer included in this report.

Eric Coffin is the editor of the HRA (Hard Rock Analyst) family of publications. Coffin has a degree in corporate and investment finance and has extensive experience in merger and acquisitions and small-company financing and promotion. For many years, he tracked the financial performance and funding of all exchange-listed Canadian mining companies and has helped with the formation of several successful exploration ventures. Coffin was one of the first analysts to point out the disastrous effects of gold hedging and gold loan-capital financing in 1997. He also predicted the start of the current secular bull market in commodities based on the movement of the U.S. dollar in 2001 and the acceleration of growth in Asia and India. Coffin can be reached at [email protected] or the websitewww.hraadvisory.com.

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Report as an independent contractor. He or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold Report: Colorado Resources Ltd., Mundoro Capital Inc., Roxgold Inc., SilverCrest Mines Inc. and True Gold Mining Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not affiliated with The Gold Report. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Eric Coffin: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Colorado Resources Ltd., GoldQuest Mining Corp., Mundoro Capital Inc., Reservoir Minerals Inc., Roxgold Inc., San Marco Resources Inc., SilverCrest Mines Inc. and True Gold Mining Inc. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Murray Math Lines 28.11.2013 (AUD/USD, EUR/JPY, SILVER)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for November 28th, 2013

AUD/USD

Australian Dollar started new correction so I decided to close my sell order to decrease risks. Stop on my second order is near local maximum. If price isn’t able to stay above H4 Super Trend for a long time and breaks it downwards, market will start new descending movement towards the 0/8 level.

It’s very important how pair will move near the 2/8 level at H1 chart. If market rebounds from this level, bears may continue pushing price downwards to test the -2/8 level and even break it.

EUR/JPY

It looks like pair is going to break the +2/8 level; I’m planning to close one of my by orders right at this level. Pair is expected to continue moving upwards, that’s why I’ll keep my second buy order. I’ll place Take Profit on this order after lines at the chart are redrawn.

Levels at H4 and H1 charts are completely the same. Possibly, pair may correct for a while near Super Trend and the +1/8 level during the day, but later it is expected to break the +2/8 one.

SILVER

Silver is in drawdown, but may yet continue this correction. However, if price breaks the -2/8 level and lines at the chart are redrawn, then during short pullback, I’ll try to open sell order with new bearish targets.

At H1 chart, we can see that price is consolidating below the 1/8 level. If bulls are strong enough to break Super Trends, I’ll increase my long positions. Otherwise, my Stop Loss may work and I may open new sell orders.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

 

Gold’s decline illustrates key nature of economic data and tapering speculation

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The depreciation that gold experienced on Nov. 27 illustrated the key role that tapering speculation plays in the price of the metal, and how the expectations surrounding the eventual reduction of this stimulus are impacted by the release of economic data.

Individuals who want to make money by trading gold might benefit from being aware of the relationship between these various factors. People who want to take part in such activities should be aware that gold is frequently thought of as being a safe haven asset, and if economic news that makes people more risk averse is released, they have a tendency to seek this precious metal as a store of value.

Economic data crucial to tapering speculation
The data that is released related to the economy also has an impact on the speculation surrounding the future plans of the Federal Reserve in terms of quantitative easing. Information that points to economic strength makes it seem more likely that the central bank will be able to taper these bond purchases sooner rather than later.

Alternatively, data that indicates weakness in the general business climate makes it seem like the purchases of the Fed will need to be conducted for some time. Speculation such as this, that the financial institution will use these transactions for an extended period, is generally thought of as providing upward pressure for the precious metal. However, predictions that QE will be cut short in the near future are frequently considered bearish for gold.

Consumer data and QE expectations
A perfect example of robust data pushing gold lower happened on Nov. 27, as consumer sentiment improved in November, according to Bloomberg. During the month, the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment experienced an increase that exceeded expectations. The strength of this data bolstered hopes that QE will be tapered sooner rather than later. This provided downward pressure for the precious metal.

"The U.S. confidence number is telling us that the economy is on the right track, and that's not so good for gold," Bart Melek, head of commodity strategy for TD Securities in Toronto, told the news source. "While physical demand is a nice story, the support from it is limited."

Another factor that helped to boost speculation that the bond purchases of the Fed will be reduced soon was jobless data provided by the U.S. Department of Labor, which revealed that during the most recent week, the number of these initial applications for unemployment assistance experienced an unexpected drop, according to Reuters. ABN Amro analyst Georgette Boele noted that the impact that information such as this has on the value of the precious metal.

"Gold remains very sensitive to the U.S. data, and we saw that it cut initial gains after today's mixed numbers,'' Boele told the news source. "It looks like investors are looking for reasons to push the price lower, and any bounce higher runs quickly out of steam.''

Individuals who want to make money by trading the precious metal can benefit from knowing that the strength of future economic reports will be important to when QE is tapered, and therefore the future of gold prices.

The post Gold’s decline illustrates key nature of economic data and tapering speculation appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Japanese Candlesticks Analysis 28.11.2013 (EUR/USD, USD/JPY)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for November 28th, 2013

EUR/USD

H4 chart of EUR/USD shows support from upper Window. Hammer and Evening Star patterns indicate descending movement. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

H1 chart of EUR/USD shows correction, which is indicated by Tower pattern. Three Line Break chart indicates current trend; Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm that correction continues.

USD/JPY

H4 chart of USD/JPY shows bullish tendency. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

H1 chart of USD/JPY shows ascending trend. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

Brazil raises Selic rate 50 bps to 10%, no bias indicated

By CentralBankNews.info
    Brazil’s central bank raised its benchmark Selic rate by 50 basis points to 10.0 percent, as widely expected, and did not issue any guidance for the future direction of monetary policy.
    The Central Bank of Brazil has now raised rates six times in a row by a total of 275 basis points this year to contain inflation.
    “Continuing the adjustment of the basic interest rate process, which began in April 2013, the Committee decided unanimously to raise the Selic rate to 10.00% pa, without bias,” the central bank’s policy committee, known as Copom, said.
    Copom’s statement omitted any reference to the policy decision contributing to reducing inflation and ensuring that this trend would persist into next year. In recent months this sentence has accompanied the statements announcing the rate rises.
    Economists had expected the central bank to raise its rate today and continue to raise rates next year to 10.50 percent, according to the central bank’s survey of 100 analysts published this week. The next meeting by Copom is in January.
    Brazil’s inflation rate eased slightly to 5.84 percent in October from 5.86 percent in September, continuing its decline since hitting a year-high of 6.7 percent in June. The central bank targets annual inflation of 4.5 percent, plus/minus 2 percentage points.
    Brazil’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 1.5 percent in the second quarter from the first for annual growth of 3.3 percent, up from 1.9 percent, and the fourth quarter of accelerating growth.  
    The central bank has forecast economic growth this year of 2.5 percent, up from 0.9 percent in 2012.
   
    www.CentralBankNews.info

USDCHF continues its downward movement from 0.9249

USDCHF continues its downward movement from 0.9249, and the fall extends to as low as 0.9040. Key resistance is at the downward trend line on 4-hour chart, as long as the trend line resistance holds, the downtrend could be expected to continue, and next target would be at 0.8950 area. On the upside, a clear break above the trend line resistance will suggest that the downward movement from 0.9249 has completed, then the following upward move could bring price back to 0.9450 zone.

usdchf

Provided by ForexCycle.com

AUDUSD: Faces Further Bearishness.

AUDUSD: Having continued to weaken, we see risk of further downside towards the 0.9000 level where a break will target further downside towards the 0.8950 level. Further down, support stands at the 0.8900 level. Its daily RSI is bearish and pointing lower supporting this view. On the upside, resistance resides at the 0.9150 level followed by the 0.9202 level. A cut through here will aim at the 0.9250 level. Further out, resistance comes in at the 0.9300 level. All in all, the pair remains biased to the downside.

By fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

There’s No Technology Without Mining

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The last time you bought a car, did you suddenly notice other cars of the same type on the road?

We did. We noticed it last year when we upgraded our car.

Suddenly, there were Porsche’s everywhere. Only kidding. We upgraded to a Subaru Forester. But it was the same effect. We now see Forester’s everywhere.

And since we launched a technology investment advisory service six months ago, we now look at the whole market in a completely different way…

We no longer see companies as mining companies, healthcare companies or car companies.

Instead, we see them as different parts of one big technology industry.

Take cars. Mercedes-Benz has just released its new S-Class model. It’s just a car right? Albeit a super-luxury car. Well, it’s more than that. It’s actually one big piece of technology.

And like any other piece of technology, the pace of innovation doesn’t hang around for anyone. It’s unstoppable. As the Age reported on the Aussie S-Class launch:

Mercedes-Benz admits the rapid pace of technological advances has meant it can no longer afford to hold them [innovations] back for each generation of S-Class, which, due to its relatively low volumes and high development costs, generally only comes around each decade.

You know the story. Mercedes-Benz used to launch new tech in its luxury brands. This tech would then trickle down to the lower end models. Not anymore. Technology moves too fast for that.

Disruptive Technology

Due to the fast pace of technology, Mercedes-Benz has to change its entire business plan.

That’s what you call ‘disruptive technology’.

It simply means that innovations have a lasting and altering impact on industries. We’re not talking about the destruction of one industry (such as typewriters) to be replaced by another (computers).

Here we’re talking about small or large changes that push an industry down a certain path.

The evolution of mobile phones into smartphones is a good example.

Innovations in mobile technology, graphics, processors and electronics didn’t destroy the concept of mobile phones; they just nudged it into a different orbit.

Mobile phones are no longer just a device you use to call a friend or to keep in contact with business associates. The mobile phone has evolved into a personal data centre and tracking device.

Just by turning on your phone you create a beacon by which someone could (and probably does) track your movements – even in real time. When you send a text or interact on a social media website you leave packets of data on your device and online detailing where you’ve been, what you’re doing and where you’re going.

It’s no wonder tech savvy folks have found ways to conceal their tracks online. Technology analyst Sam Volkering explored this topic a few weeks ago in a video for Revolutionary Tech Investor subscribers. You can find out how to access Sam’s video here.

No Technology Without Mining

Of course, it’s not just the communications and the car industry that you can call tech industries.

What about mining?

It seems odd when you first think about it. For most people mining is the polar opposite of technology and innovation.

That’s until you start learning about the industry. You’ll find out that technology exists in the mining sector at almost every step of the process. It’s in exploration, production, the finishing, and the application of the product.

Think of rare earths or lithium. It’s not just the drilling technology needed to find these minerals and metals. It’s not just the high-tech machinery used to refine the product. It’s also the fact that without rare earths and lithium tablet computers and smart phones wouldn’t exist.

It’s true. There’s lithium in the computer or phone battery. And you’ll find rare earths behind every high-resolution display screen.

The most modern and advanced technology  you use today doesn’t appear from thin air; it needs raw materials. And for the most part those raw materials come from deep beneath the ground.

This is another reason why we laugh when we hear people say the mining industry is finished. They say the world economy is now so sophisticated. That’s junk. The fact is if you want progress and further advances in technology, you need the mining industry.

They are inseparable. You can’t have one without the other.

Cheers,
Kris+

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By MoneyMorning.com.au