Yen Declines from Recent Gains on Japan Trade Deficit

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The Japanese yen dropped from its two-day gain against the greenback and Europe’s common currency on Monday after reports from the Japanese government revealed that the nation’s trade deficit increased to a record last year.

The yen dropped from a seven-week high against  the US dollar as Treasury yields in the US  advanced, while investors focus on the Federal Reserve’s two day meeting which is scheduled to begin January 28-19.

The Japanese yen dropped 0.3% lower to 102.66 per dollar, bouncing back from 101.75 seen earlier, the highest since December and weakened 0.3% to 140.45 against the 18-block euro.

Japan’s Ministry of Finance said the nation’s trade deficit widened in 2013 to a record 11.5 trillion yen , doubling the previous year’s trade shortfall.

Federal Reserve

Market analysts are predicting members of the Federal Open Market Committee will reduce its monthly bond purchases by $10 billion at every meeting to end the stimulus program by December year. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) next policy meeting is scheduled for January 28-29.

The figures for people in the US receiving unemployment benefits unexpectedly increased to 3.06 million in the period ended January 11, the most since July, reports from the Department of Labour confirmed yesterday. Analysts forecasted a decline of 2.9 million after the Labour Department data revealed the economy added 74,000 jobs in December 2014.

The yield on the US ten-year Treasury bonds climbed by 0.01 percentage point to 2.73%, while in Germany; the Ifo Institute’s business climate index is forecasted to show a rise for a third month to 110 in January.

 

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The post Yen Declines from Recent Gains on Japan Trade Deficit appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Short-Term Market Softness Abounds

by Mitchell Clark, B. Comm.

Along with railroad stocks, trucking enterprises are good benchmark indicators. When it comes to forming a stock market view, the Dow Jones Transportation Average is still very much an important index.

One of the major components of this index is J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. (JBHT), which just reported revenues in line with estimates, but missed on earnings per share. But even with the earnings miss, the company still reported a solid fourth quarter, and while Wall Street expectations are important, so is real double-digit economic growth from a mature enterprise.

The company said its total operating revenues in the fourth quarter of 2013 grew to a record $1.47 billion, up from $1.34 billion comparatively.

Fourth-quarter earnings also achieved a record $92.0 million, or $0.77 per diluted share, compared to $84.0 million, or $0.70 per diluted share, for a gain of 10%.

Full-year 2013 operating revenues grew 10% to $5.6 billion, while total earnings per share grew 11% to $2.87 per diluted share.

J.B. Hunt’s been an outstanding wealth creator since its March low of 2009 (up four-fold on the stock market). For a $9.0-billion company, 10% top- and bottom-line growth is very respectable. If the company missed earnings consensus by two pennies, then it did. The stock’s been due for a sell-off; this was the catalyst.

Noteworthy in the company’s numbers was a 17% gain in intermodal shipments within eastern networks. Transcontinental loads grew 11% during the fourth quarter, and operating income grew 17% within this important segment (almost two-thirds of total sales).

Another component company of the Dow Jones Transportation Average, Alaska Air Group, Inc. (ALK) reported excellent fourth-quarter numbers.

The company’s sales were in line with consensus estimates, growing seven percent to $1.2 billion. The big news with Alaska Air was its earnings growth; net income grew 77% to a record $78.0 million (excluding special items), or $1.11 per diluted share.

This is another stock selling off on earnings results. and deservedly so. (See “Earnings Finally Catching Up to Stocks This Reporting Season?”)

The numbers are mostly mediocre, so far, although large-cap companies are generally meeting either earnings or revenue metrics from Wall Street. This has been a continuing trend for the last several quarters, and it is representative of some volume expansion, pricing gains, and extreme cost control. It does seem like there’s plenty of cash available for new share buyback programs.

With the strong share price performance last year, a significant consolidation, even for the entire first half of this year, would not be unreasonable. I think equity investors should be prepared for little to no gains near-term with the exception of dividend payments.

This fourth-quarter earnings season is all about justifying current share price valuations. If a company beats consensus on revenues and earnings, then it should pop higher; but this is very much a market in which new buying is on the backburner. Valuations now have to be justified by current outlooks.

So far, most large-caps haven’t increased their guidance for 2014. This is the conservative play and not unusual. With financial reports coming in modest, more near-term softness is likely.

This article Short-Term Market Softness Abounds was originally posted at Profit Confidential

 

 

The “Big Thing” for Companies This Year

by Michael Lombardi, MBA

Last year, the “big thing” with companies was buying back their shares to boost per-share corporate earnings. In 2013, share buybacks hit their pre-financial crisis high. If big public companies didn’t buy back so much of their own stock in 2013, per-share corporate earnings just wouldn’t be that great.

This year, I expect share buybacks to continue at the pace we saw in 2013. Another “big thing” companies will do this year will be labor force reductions (cost-cutting) to make corporate earnings look better in light of generally weaker sales.

Companies have already started to lay out their plans for employee cuts…

Intel Corporation (NASDAQ/INTC) said it will be reducing its workforce by 5,000 this year. Here’s what the company spokesman, Chris Kraeuter, had to say: “This is part of aligning our human resources to meet business needs.” (Source: Randewich, N., “Intel to reduce global workforce by five percent in 2014,” Reuters, January 17, 2014.) Intel had flat fourth-quarter 2013 corporate earnings.

Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE/HPQ), another major company in the key stock indices, is taking a similar approach. In 2014, it is expected to cut its workforce. According to its long-term restructuring plan, 34,000 jobs, or 11% of the total workforce, will disappear.

And job cuts aren’t just happening at companies in the personal computer (PC) industry…

We see this phenomenon occurring across the board. Companies in the retail sector are struggling as well. Macy’s Inc (NYSE/M) said it will be reducing its labor force to reduce costs. As part of the company’s cost-cutting program to boost corporate earnings, it will be eliminating about 2,500 jobs in 2014. (Source: Timberlake, C., “Macy’s Forecasts Profit That Tops Estimates Amid Job Cuts,” Bloomberg, January 9, 2014.) Sales are soft for the retailers, and foot traffic is down.

And manufacturers could be looking at jobs cuts, too. Over the past few quarters, we have seen massive amounts of inventory build up in the U.S. economy. If this continues, businesses will eventually come to the realization that they need to stop production to get rid of bloated inventory. This will force them to reduce their operations and eventually cut jobs.

How long can companies in the key stock indices continue to use “financial engineering” to make their corporate earnings look better? With 2014 starting out as a terrible year for the stock market, big public companies will pull out all the tricks they can to make corporate earnings look better this year to relieve pressure on stock prices. But how many jobs can a company cut before service to customers starts to be affected?

With corporate earnings weakening, interest rates rising, and the underlying economy still very soft, stock prices, which have gotten far too ahead of themselves, will come under immense pressure in 2014.

 

This article The “Big Thing” for Companies This Year

was originally published at Profit Confidential

 

 

Wave Analysis 27.01.2014 (DJIA Index, Crude Oil)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for January 27th, 2014

DJIA Index

Index continues falling down. Probably, wave 2 is taking the form of flat pattern with bearish impulse [C] inside it. In the nearest future, instrument is expected to fall down a little bit inside wave (3), that’s why I opened sell order during correction.

More detailed wave structure is shown on H1 chart. Probably, Index is forming extension inside wave 3. On minor wave level, price is finishing the fourth wave. Most likely, in the nearest future instrument may break minimum of wave [3].

Crude Oil

It looks like Oil completed wave (2). Earlier, after completing zigzag pattern inside wave [B], price formed bearish impulse inside wave (1). Right now, I’m selling very carefully, but after instrument forms initial descending impulse I’ll increase my short position.

As we can see at the H1 chart, wave (2) took the form of zigzag pattern. On minor wave level, price formed wedge pattern inside wave 1. In the future, instrument is expected to continue falling down.

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.

 

 

 

 

Forex Technical Analysis 27.01.2014 (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, USD/JPY, AUD/USD, GOLD)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for January 27th, 2014

EUR/USD

Euro continues forming ascending structure inside the fifth wave with target at 1.4100. We think, today price may consolidate for a while at current levels and form continuation pattern to reach level of 1.3800. Later, in our opinion, pair may consolidate again for some time and continue growing upwards.

GBP/USD

Pound is still moving inside another ascending wave with target at 1.6670; market returned to level of 1.6475 to test it from above. We think, today price may continue moving upwards to reach above-mentioned target.

USD/CHF

Franc is still falling down. We should note that this pair continues moving inside descending trend towards level of 0.8300. This descending movement is expected to be quite fast and without any serious corrections. We shouldn’t expect the market to form proper five-wave structure during this descending movement until price reaches its main target.

USD/JPY

Yen reached target of its descending structure; right now market is forming continuation pattern. If price is able to break current minimum, pair may extend this structure up to level of 100.00. Alternative scenario implies that pair may form new correction and return to level of 104.00.

AUD/USD

Australian Dollar is still falling down towards target at 0.8400. However, we shouldn’t expect the market to form proper five-wave structure during this descending movement until price reaches its main target.

GOLD

Gold reached target of its first ascending wave. We think, today price may form correctional structure to fall down towards level of 1230. This movement is considered as the right shoulder of head & shoulders reversal pattern and may reach target at 1360.

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.

 

 

 

AUDUSD: Bearish Medium Term Despite Recovery Attempts.

AUDUSD: Despite its attempts at recovering higher, it continues to hold on to its broader medium term downside bias. With that said, we expect its current recovery attempts to fade at the 0.8755 level or maximum at the 0.8822 level if it does continue. Support lies at the 0.8659 level followed by the 0.8600 level where a breach will aim at the 0.8550 level. Further down, support is located at the 0.8500 level. Its daily RSI is bearish and pointing lower suggesting further weakness. On the upside, resistance resides at the 0.8755 level initially with a cut through there targeting the 0.8822/47 levels where a reversal of roles is likely to occur. But if this fails, expect more recovery to occur towards the 0.8915 level, its Jan 16’2014 high and next the 0.9000 level, its big psycho level. All in all, the pair remains biased to the downside in the medium term.

Article by fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

Where Are the Facebook Bodies Buried?

By WallStreetDaily.com Where Are the Facebook Bodies Buried?

Way back on July 19, 2012, I told readers to avoid Facebook’s (FB) stock “like the plague.”

Apparently, I was on to something.

Now, I’m not talking about the fact that – within weeks of my stern warning – shares dropped 40% to hit an all-time low.

I’m talking about the latest research out of Princeton, which went viral last week.

“Ideas, like diseases,” wrote John Cannarella and Joshua A. Spechler, “have been shown to spread infectiously between people before eventually dying out.”

Or, more simply, infectious diseases like the bubonic plague and social networks like MySpace behave in similar ways. Both spread rapidly and then die out quickly.

The implication?

Based on the “adoption and abandonment dynamics” of social networks, the researchers predict that Facebook “will undergo a rapid decline in the coming years, losing 80% of its peak user base between 2015 and 2017.”


Newsflash: Forget waiting until 2015; the decline is already unfolding. And that, my loyal readers, means it’s high time for us to position our portfolios to profit from the impending doom.

Debunking Princeton… or Not!

Obviously, the dire predictions from the Princeton researchers didn’t sit well with Facebook executives. Before long, Facebook’s data scientist, Mike Develin, launched a tongue-in-cheek rebuttal. In short, by using the same “robust methodology” as the Princetonians, Develin declared (emphasis added), “Our research unequivocally demonstrated that Princeton may be in danger of disappearing entirely.”

Good one!

But I’m afraid that even if Develin is right – and there’s only a flimsy connection between infectious diseases and social networks – there’s no refuting these cold, hard usage facts from iStrategy.


Since 2011, they found that 4,292,080 high school users and 6,948,848 college-aged users went missing on Facebook. That’s a total body count in excess of 11.2 million.

According to another study, funded by the European Union, young Facebook users aren’t “just on the slide… [They’re] basically dead and buried.”

Fear not. Their bodies aren’t actually buried anywhere. They’ve just migrated to new social networks – like Snapchat, Twitter (TWTR), Instagram and WhatsApp. (Whisper.sh could be their next destination.)

Heck, even President Obama notices it. He recently remarked in the presence of The Atlantic’s Robinson Meyer that “it seems like they don’t use Facebook anymore.”

No sir, they don’t.

And Facebook is smart enough to recognize its diminishing relevance, too. That’s why management keeps trying to emulate wildly popular features from other social networks, like incorporating #hashtags and a “trending” section (a la Twitter).

It’s all for the sake of preserving engagement – a critical ingredient for a business model that relies so heavily on serving up advertising to users.

Facebook is obviously not afraid to take more drastic defensive measures, either. Like simply buying the next up-and-coming social network. You’ll recall, Facebook scooped up Instagram for $1 billion in 2012.

But that tactic doesn’t appear to be working anymore. Late last year, Snapchat spurned a $3-billion offer from Mark Zuckerberg.

Bottom line: Come February, Facebook turns 10. In social network years, that’s an eternity. And while it’s in no immediate danger of extinction, signs of a mass exodus are, indeed, materializing.

“Facebook fatigue” is setting in, if you will. As the youngsters continue to flee for newer, more novel social networks, it’s only a matter of time before the underlying business fundamentals – and, in turn, the stock – begins to suffer.

If I were you, I’d make a low-risk, high-reward bet on a Facebook flop by buying some January 2016 $40 put options. Rest assured, I’ll check back in before they expire to write Facebook’s obituary and let you know it’s time to cash out your winnings.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Where Are the Facebook Bodies Buried? appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Where Are the Facebook Bodies Buried?

Monetary Policy Week in Review – Jan 20-24, 2014: Hungary, Jordan cut rates as volatility returns in 2014

By CentralBankNews.info
    Last week in global monetary policy the central banks of Jordan and Hungary cut their policy rates, while Turkey’s central bank carried out another of its stealth tightening operations as financial markets encountered their first bout of volatility in 2014.
    A surprising contraction in China’s manufacturing sector triggered a sell-off in stock markets and a fall in the currencies of most emerging markets as financial markets continued the adjustment started last summer to a world of reduced stimulus from the U.S. Federal Reserve and improving growth in advanced economies.
    So far this year the global trend toward lower official interest rates is continuing as five central banks – Uzbekistan, Romania, Tajikistan, Jordan and Hungary – have cut rates through the first four weeks of 2014 to shore up still sluggish economic growth, compared with the one rate rise by Brazil.
   While global growth prospects are improving, central banks are clearly alert to the possibility that financial markets can turn jittery and thus limit national policy options.
    Last week Hungary’s central bank acknowledged that a “cautious approach to policy is warranted due to uncertainty related to the global financial environment,” while Nigeria’s central bank said a “reduction of the US stimulus especially, could in addition, trigger capital flow reversals and put greater pressure on the naira exchange rate.”
    On Friday Reuters reported that the central banks of India, Taiwan and Malaysia were believed to have intervened to defend their currencies while Russia continued its recent policy of moving the rouble’s trading band after $350 million in hard currency sales.
    Paradoxically, news that the European Central Bank (ECB), the Bank of England (BOE), the Bank of Japan (BOJ) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) had decided to cease three-month U.S. dollar liquidity operations due to low demand, was seen as contributing to the view that central banks in advanced economies were turning less dovish and thus making investments in emerging markets even less attractive.
    While the U.S. Fed already started reducing its asset purchases this month and is likely to announce another modest reduction this week, the spotlight is now squarely on the BOE and how it will respond to improving growth.
   In August the BOE set out the threshold of a 7 percent unemployment rate for considering whether it would maintain its current policy stance or start to withdraw the extraordinary stimulus. It seems to have fallen on deaf ears that the BOE clearly said that no single indicator could summarize economic conditions and reaching a 7 percent jobless rate would not automatically lead to a rate rise.
   But at that point, the BOE anticipated a 7 percent jobless rate in 2016 and news that it fell to 7.1 percent in November has triggered speculation that the BOE will raise rates in the near term or even scrap its forward guidance.
    But there seems little justification for such views.
    In his speech on Friday in the Swiss resort of Davos, BOE Governor Mark Carney once again clearly said the “attainment of the 7% threshold will not be associated with any immediate need to raise the Bank Rate” and the forward guidance would be updated to reflect the better outlook for inflation and what the bank had leant about the behavior of supply in the economy.
   

LIST OF LAST WEEK’S (WEEK 4) DECISIONS:

OTHER STORIES:

TABLE WITH LAST WEEK’S MONETARY POLICY DECISIONS:

COUNTRYMSCI     NEW RATE           OLD RATE        1 YEAR AGO
JORDANFM4.25%4.50%5.00%
TURKEYEM4.50%4.50%5.50%
HUNGARYEM2.85%3.00%5.50%
MACEDONIA3.25%3.25%3.50%
NIGERIAFM12.00%12.00%12.00%
JAPANDM                 N/A                 N/A0.10%
CANADADM1.00%1.00%1.00%
THAILANDEM 2.25%2.25%2.75%
This week (Week 5) 12 central banks will be deciding on monetary policy, including Bangladesh, Israel, India, the United States, Malaysia, South Africa, Moldova, New Zealand, Fiji, Angola, Mexico and Trinidad and Tobago.

COUNTRYMSCI             DATE CURRENT  RATE        1 YEAR AGO
BANGLADESHFM27-Jan7.75%7.75%
ISRAELDM27-Jan1.00%1.75%
INDIAEM28-Jan7.75%7.75%
UNITED STATESDM29-Jan0.25%0.25%
MALAYSIAEM29-Jan3.00%3.00%
SOUTH AFRICAEM29-Jan5.00%5.00%
MOLDOVA30-Jan3.50%4.50%
NEW ZEALANDDM30-Jan2.50%2.50%
FIJI30-Jan0.50%0.50%
ANGOLA30-Jan9.25%10.00%
MEXICOEM31-Jan3.50%4.50%
TRINIDAD & TOBAGO 31-Jan2.75%2.75%

.

GBPUSD pulled back to 1.6474

Being contained by the upper line of the price channel on 4-hour chart, GBPUSD pulled back to 1.6474, suggesting that the upward movement from 1.6309 had completed at 1.6668 already, and consolidation of the longer term uptrend from 1.5854 (Nov 12, 2013 low) is underway. Deeper decline would likely be seen, and the target would be at the bottom of the channel. On the upside, as long as the channel support holds, the uptrend from 1.5854 could be expected to resume, and one more rise towards 1.7000 is still possible.

gbpusd

Daily Forex Analysis