NZD/USD Forecast February 17 – 21

Article by Investazor.com

NZDUSD had a good week, winning 120 pips after the American economy gives some tiredness signals. New Zeeland macro indicators were mixed with the REINZ HPI being reported weaker than last month’s (-2.4% vs. -1.0%) and the FPI which increased by 1.2% after last month came in negative territory. The Chinese economy helped the kiwi to advance in front of the US dollar with a trade balance way better than the market expectations. NZDUSD closed the week at 0.8369 hitting the best level in one month.

Economic Calendar

Retail Sales q/q (4:45 GTM)-Sunday. This indicator is of high importance as it is the primary figure of consumer spending and tends to create a powerful market impact. It is expected an increase of 1.7% for the last quarter.

PPI Input q/q (4:45 GTM)-Wednesday. It is a leading indicator of the consumer inflation as it measures the change in price of goods and raw materials purchased by manufacturers. It has a medium importance, but a surprise could trigger some action and we could have some volatility.

As you can see, this week is rather poor in economic indicators from New Zeeland, but do not forget about the American ones which always can create some surprise, especially now when the stock markets are preparing for new all-time high and gold seemed to pick up.

Technical view

NZDUSD, Daily

Support: 0.8190, 0.8050

Resistance: 0.8430, 0.8540

nzdusd-daily-forecast-february-17-21-resize-16.02.2014

The daily chart shows how NZDUSD surged for the last two weeks and closed above the 76.4 Fibonacci level, showing that the bulls are in charge. The next target for the kiwi would be the local high from 0.8430, level which is also a daily resistance. If we will see a strong number in the retail sales, NZDUSD could easily break the 0.8430 level and go after the next resistance at 0.8540.

NZDUSD, H1

Support: 0.8300, 0.8190

Resistance: 0.83900, 0.8430

nzdusd-h1-forecast-february-17-21-resize-16.02.2014

On the H1 timeframe, NZDUSD drew a consistent uptrend, but with high chances of a reversal if the rising wedge gets confirmed.  A downward movement to H1 support at 0.8300 will be the validation of the reversal pattern whereas a breakout above the H1 resistance will invalidate the descending hypothesis and would send the kiwi towards the resistance at 0.8430.

Bullish or Bearish

The daily and hourly charts seem to me kind of mixed, so I think that NZDUSD will have a zigzag type of movement for the next week. On intraday term I see it slightly bearish, so I would not be surprised to have a week in which the bears to come back in charge and to send the NZDUSD towards 0.8300.

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USD/JPY Forecast February 17 – 21

Article by Investazor.com

USDJPY lost ground overall last week after the American economy continued to surprise on the downside, but the Japanese one is not doing better either. The greatest disappointment came from the current account indicator, which was published way below expectations (-0.2 T), being the widest current account deficit on record for the Nippon economy. Retail sales and the industrial production fell short of the expectations with a decrease of -0.4%, respectively -0.3% while the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment saved the week with a better than expected reading for the United State economy.

It has been a week when Janet Yellen testified in front of Congress and managed to help the stock markets and depreciate the dollar by her comments. Another interesting fact was the correlation between the capital markets and gold, which moved upwards for the last days. The yen won the battle with the American dollar because of its safe haven status and the weakness that the American economy is showing it right now.

Economic Calendar

Preliminary GDP (6:50 GTM)-Monday. The first release of GDP and thus tends to have more impact, so do not miss this publication as the last quarter was a 0.3% increase and this time it is expected 0.7%, so it will be interesting to see how the GDP will turn out.

Empire State Manufacturing Index (8:30 GTM)-Tuesday. It is a leading indicator of economic health and give the investors an idea about how the manufacture industry is going in the United States. A reading above 0 means improving conditions. The expected value is 9.9, while last month was 12.5

BoJ Monthly Report and FOMC Minutes-Wednesday. The latest insights into the economic and financial conditions. A more hawkish than expected tone is good for currency.

Core CPI m/m (8:30 GTM)-Thursday. Is the change in the price of goods and services purchase by consumers and it is important because is correlated with inflation, an aspect of the economy the Federal Reserve keeps an eye on.

Existing Home Sales (10:00 GMT)-Friday. It has more impact than home sales indicator and it is a leading indicator of the economic health. For the last four months has been published below expectations.

Technical view

USDJPY, Daily

Support: 102.00, 103.30

Resistance: 101.00, 100.00

usdjpy-daily-forecast-february-17-21-resize-16.02.2014

The Japanese yen scored another week in which advanced on the US dollar weakness and after last Thursday even broke the 38.2 Fibonacci level, Friday managed to close below this level, aspect which looks pretty bearish to me. For the moment USDJPY is at 101.77 and this week could be a moment of consolidation between 38.2 and 50.0 level, with a high probability to go under 101 by the end of the next week.

USDJPY, H1

Support: 101.00, 101.55

Resistance: 102.65, 103.30

usdjpy-h1-forecast-february-17-21-resize-16.02.2014

The bearish outlook we have seen on the daily charts is shared by the hourly one if we take into consideration the symmetrical triangle that is forming. This kind of pattern is a continuation one and indicates that the principal movement, in our case downwards, is going to continue. A close on a H1 timeframe below the 101.55 support could trigger a descending trajectory towards the daily support at 101.00.

Bullish or Bearish

Overall, both the intraday and daily signals seem to point towards a bearish week for USDJPY and I expect the US dollar to keep losing ground. On the other hand, I am still maintain a cautious approach for the intraday trading decisions as some American macro indicator could surprise us on the upside and to see a rally for the USDJPY.

The post USD/JPY Forecast February 17 – 21 appeared first on investazor.com.

EUR/USD Forecast February 17 – 21

Article by Investazor.com

The Euro Area single currency managed to close the week on a positive territory in front of the US dollar. The way there wasn’t that easy, but actually quite bumpy. On Wednesday Euro plunged after an official of the ECB brought back on the table the possibility of getting to negative interest rates. After hitting a low at 1.3565, investors’ enthusiasm brought it back above 1.36 on Thursday, helped also by the low retails sales from the US. On Friday the price of EUR/USD got higher thanks to some very good GDPs published for France, Germany and the entire Euro Area.

Next week the main publishes will be the German ZEW economic sentiment, Flash Manufacturing PMIs for the Euro Area and the Core CPI for United States of America. Continue reading this article to see what will be the most important economic indicators released for US and Euro Zone and what are our technical perspective for the most traded currency pair, EURUSD.

Economic Calendar

Tuesday

EUR: Current Account (09:00 GMT). This month current account released for the Euro Area is expected to be around 19.8B. In the last month of 2013 its release was of 21.8 above analysts forecast, same was in January 2014.

EUR: German ZEW Economic Sentiment (10:00 GMT). The ZEW Economic Sentiment is one of the most important leading indicators for Germany. In January was published 61.7, bellow its forecast. This month it is expected to be around 61.7. If the release will come as a surprise it might influence the evolution of EURUSD on the short term.

EUR: ZEW Economic Sentiment (10:00 GMT). The same type of indicator is also published for the entire Euro Area at the same hour, but it is considered to have a lower indicator than the one for Germany. The last two releases were above expectations and for this month the markets are waiting for it to be around 73.9.

USD: TIC Long-Term Purchases (14:00 GMT). The most important indicator released for US on Tuesday is the TIC. It had an ugly fall in January to -29.3, even though the analysts forecasted it around 42.3. For February is expected to remain on negative ground, around -24.7B.

Wednesday

USD: Building Permits (13:30 GMT). Wednesday will be the day for the US releases. First of them are the building permits. Analysts managed to correctly forecast its last two releases. In December was 1.01M, while on the first month of 2014 was 0.99M. In February is expected around 0.99M.

USD: PPI m/m (13:30 GMT). At the same hour the producer price index is to be released for the US. In January was at 0.4% and now it is expected to get to 0.6%. I don’t believe investors are thinking of a higher PPI, so a lower one will not be a surprise.

USD: FOMC Meeting Minutes (19:00 GMT). The detail report of the FOMC’s most recent meeting is scheduled for this week. If there are details unexpected and untold at the last meeting, we might witness some high volatility.

Thursday

EUR: German PPI (07:00 GMT). The German producer price index is expected to gain 0.3% after it raise 0.1% in January and dropped 0.1% in the last month of December.

EUR: French Flash Manufacturing PMI (08:00 GMT). 2014 started with the right leg for the French manufacturing sector. The flash PMI published for last month surprised with a 48.8 reading, above analysts’ expectations but still under the 50.0 level. This month it is expected to get 49.6. If it will be published above this level, we might see some rallies for the Euro.

EUR: French Services PMI (08:00 GMT). Less important than the manufacturing, but still a medium impact indicator, the services flash PMI for France is expected to hit 49.5 this month.

EUR: German Flash Manufacturing PMI (08:30 GMT). This is consider to be another important leading indicator for the German economy. From October 2013 it didn’t disappoint the market with a reading below analysts’ forecast. This month it is expected to rise above last month, at 56.4. Its publication usually trigger higher volatility.

EUR: German Flash Services PMI (08:30 GMT). Scheduled at the same hour, the services flash PMI for Germany it is expected to be above last month release, at 53.4.

EUR: Flash Manufacturing/Services PMI (09:00 GMT). For the Euro Area it is expected a flash manufacturing PMI at 54.2 and a services flash PMI of 51.9.

USD: Core CPI m/m (13:30). Everyone has their eyes on the consumer price index for the United States. In January it gained only 0.1% and the same value is expected also for this month. It is an important indicator for the economy, because there are motives to believe that it might rally in the future.

USD: Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (15:00 GMT). This is one of the most important indicators for the US manufacturing index. It usually triggers volatility especially when it is releases as a surprise. In December it went all the way to 9.4 points and this month it is expected to remain in this area, around 9.2 points.

USD: Fed Chairman Yellen Testifies. On Thursday Janet Yellen is due to testify on the Semiannual Monetary Policy Report before the Senate Banking Committee, in Washington DC.

Friday

EUR: EU Economic Forecasts (10:00 GMT). This report includes economic forecasts for EU member states over the next 2 years, and covers about 180 variables. Source changed release frequency from twice per year to three times per year as of Feb 2012.

USD: Existing Home Sales (15:00 GMT). This is an important indicator for the US real estate sector. For the past two months it has been released under analysts’ forecasts. For next week it is expected to be around 4.73M.

Next week will be full of scheduled economic releases. Even though on Monday it will be quite relaxing with the USA bank holiday, from Tuesday the party will begin. We have brought up the most important releases which could not only trigger high volatility for EURUSD, but also change its short term direction.

Technical View

EURUSD, Daily

Support: 1.3400, 1.3550;

Resistance: 1.3700, 1.3800;

eurusd-daily-forecast-february-17-resize-21-16.02.2014

The price of the Euro continued to gain in front of the US dollar for a second week in a row. On a daily chart we can see that the upside line of the down channel was broken and the breakout was confirmed. This could mean that the price might continue it’s up move to 1.3800. On the longer time frame the price is still bubbling between 1.3400 and 1.3800. I don’t believe that without a strong reason the price will break this range next week.

EURUSD, H1

Support: 1.3683, 1.3600, 1.3682;

Resistance: 1.3712, 1.3730, 1.3800;

eurusd-h1-forecast-february-17-21-resize-16.02.2014

From the Wednesday dip the trend was up and quite smooth with no big corrections. On Friday it consolidated itself just under the 1.3712 resistance and 1.3682 support. I believe that a fall under the local support could send the price lower to retest the 1.3650 support. On the other hand a rally above the 1.3712/30 area could mean that investors are willing to get the euro higher, targeting the 1.3800 resistance.

Bullish or Bearish

On a lower time frame I believe that Euro will force its way higher and touch 1.3800 next week. This if there will be no strong negative surprises from the scheduled economic releases. On the medium term, as I said for the Daily Technical Analysis, I am not expecting a breakout from the 1.34/1.38 range, holding my range position.

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A Second Look at Bonds

Guest Post By Dennis Miller

If you remember bond drives in school, please raise your hand. There are still a lot of us out there. I recall my teacher holding up a US Savings Bond, encouraging us to tell our parents to buy them. She went to great lengths emphasizing that they were the “the safest investment on earth.”

That same teacher gave us ten new words each week that we had to spell and define. “Safe” and “risk” both had their day. Here is how Merriam-Webster defines them:

safe

adjective \sāf\

: not able or likely to be hurt or harmed in any way : not in danger

: not able or likely to be lost, taken away, or given away

risk

noun \risk\

: the possibility that something bad or unpleasant (such as an injury or a loss) will happen

Safety is the absence of risk. When we lived in Texas, we had to take our cars in for a safety inspection. The inspector would hook up a computer and out came a checklist of items with a pass or fail mark. It’s time to do a safety inspection for those high-quality bonds considered “the safest investments on earth.”

Risk #1: Default. The risk that a loan won’t be repaid is the primary risk when lending money to anyone. When it comes to bonds, rating agencies judge that risk for you. The safest way to lend—in terms of getting your money back, anyway—is with federal government bonds or certificates of deposit, which are federally insured.

Corporate bonds are rated with a series of letters beginning with AAA. Anything below the B-ratings are generally not considered investment grade and are commonly referred to as junk bonds. If an investor sticks to AAA bonds, they will earn a little higher interest than they would with US Treasuries to make up for the increased default risk; however, that risk is very low, generally less than 0.5%, on average.

A person buying a US government bond or AAA corporate bond has close to a 100% probability of being paid back with interest. Check off the first item on the inspection sheet. PASS!

Risk #2: Inflation protection. The interest rates paid by a bond (net after income taxes), must be higher than the inflation rate throughout its life. If not, when our principal is returned and added to the interest received, our buying power will be less than it was before we bought the bond. How big of a risk can that be?

In a recent article, we looked at the high inflation during the Carter administration. We took a hypothetical investor who bought a $100,000, 5-year, 6% CD on January 1, 1977. He was in the 25% tax bracket. At the end of five years, the balance on the account was $124,600. While it sounds like more money, his buying power had actually dropped by 25.9% because of inflation.

If, on January 1, 1977, a luxury car cost $25,000, he had enough to buy four of them. Assuming the price of that car rose with inflation, it would have cost $37,500 five years later; he would have had enough for just three with a little gas money left over. I realize no one needs three or four luxury cars, but you get the picture.

Inflation feeds the illusion of wealth, but it is just that: an illusion. If your retirement nest egg does not keep up, you are getting poorer by the day. This is called “negative real rates.”

Losing ground to inflation happens with high inflation and/or very low interest rates. The following chart shows the ten-year Treasury rates compared to the inflation rate and the net yield to the investor after taxes (assuming 25% tax rate).

Unlike the days when bonds paid 6% or more, since 2010, low-interest, 10-year Treasuries have not kept up with inflation. Currently, 10-year Treasuries are paying 2.77% and 30-year issues are paying 3.80%.

We need to red flag this one. The “safest investment on earth” is a surefire loser for seniors and savers. Do you want to invest your money for 10 to 30 years in Treasuries knowing you will lose buying power to inflation the minute you buy them, and possibly lose even more in the future? Obviously not! FAIL.

Risk #3: Loss of resale value in the aftermarket. Let’s take a look at corporate bonds to better understand this concern. Currently 10-year AAA corporate bonds are paying 3.75%. If we invested $10,000, we would receive $375.00 in interest every year. Now suppose the market interest rates change, which they will. Should we want to sell our bond in the aftermarket, we have to adjust our aftermarket selling price to the competition—meaning bonds offering the current market interest rates.

Should interest rates drop, our bond will be worth more because we have a higher-than-market rate and should receive a premium. If interest rates rise, our resale value drops and we are left with two choices: we can sell the bond at a discounted price, or we can hold it to maturity and receive interest at a below-market rate.

How radically could our resale value drop? The term used for calculation is “duration.” The duration of a 10-year AAA bond paying 3.75% interest is currently 8.38. In the resale market, it serves as a rule of thumb. If interest rates rise by 1%, you can expect to discount your bond by $838.00 to sell it—that is over two years of interest payments. By comparison, if there were only five years remaining, the duration drops to 4.58, meaning you would have to discount it by $458.00.

Can anyone guarantee interest rates, which are historically low, are going to remain that way for the life of a long-term bond? With the Federal Reserve flooding the banks with money, how much longer before our international creditors are going to demand higher interest rates to hold US dollars? Safety is the absence of potential loss or harm. It’s clear that potential for loss or harm is present, not absent, in today’s world.

Grade for Risk #3: FAIL.

Combining inflation and interest-rate risk. The real challenge is guessing what might happen to inflation and interest rates during the life of the bond. Here is what happened to inflation during the Carter years:

  • 1977—6.5% inflation
  • 1978—7.6% inflation
  • 1979—11.3% inflation
  • 1980—13.5% inflation
  • 1981—10.3% inflation

What happened to interest rates? The prime rate reached 21.5% in December 1980, the highest rate in US history. If you held long-term bonds prior to 1977, then you had to choose between large inflation losses or huge losses if you had tried to liquidate your low-interest bonds in the aftermarket. Seniors and savers attempting to protect their nest eggs are trying to avoid those sorts of catastrophic results.

At the time, investors buying higher-than-inflation interest rate bonds did very well. The current 3.75% rate is well below the interest rates that were available during that time frame. When interest rates rise well above the inflation rate, the safety scales will once again tilt in our favor.

Don’t let the high rating or federally insured label fool you. If a broker or fund salesperson is trying to sell you safe investments, ask them to clearly define the word “safe.” Does it include all three factors mentioned above?

Don’t judge a bond on the credit rating alone. While you may have an almost 100% probability of return of your money, the potential for inflation loss or early liquidation losses must be factored into your investment decisions.

Why have bonds changed so radically? A decade ago, bonds were a central part of any retirement nest egg. A retirement portfolio would not be complete without a balance of top-quality Treasuries and corporate bonds paying 6% or more. They did much of the heavy lifting and were considered the epitome of safety—particularly when compared to the volatile stock market.

Negative interest rates, however, have significantly elevated the risk on low-rate, fixed-income investments. As a result, investors are forced into the stock market in order to protect their nest eggs. Swinging the pendulum too far in the other direction is just transferring our capital from one high-risk investment to another. At the end of the day, we still have too much risk. There is a better way.

What is our winning strategy? Just because high-rated, low-yielding, long-term bonds are surefire losers in today’s market does not mean we should avoid bonds all together. Quite the contrary, we just have to use the right criteria to evaluate and pick them. There are literally thousands of types of bonds available in the market today, and many of them can fit nicely into your retirement portfolio.

Our team of analysts has done their homework and found excellent opportunities that meet all three checkpoints with excellent passing grades. How? By following Doug Casey’s rule to look where no one else is looking.

You can learn more about our “winning approach” by downloading your free copy of our timely special report, Bond BasicsClick here to begin reading your copy now.

 

 

 

 

EURUSD: Bullish, Risk Targets The 1.3736 Level And Beyond

EURUSD: EUR looks to extend its bullish offensive with eyes on the 1.3739 level. A cut through here will aim at further upside towards the 1.3800 level, its psycho level. Further out, resistance is seen at the 1.3850 level and then the 1.3900 level. Its weekly RSI is bullish and pointing higher supporting this view. Conversely to annul its past week gains it will have to return to the 1.3561 level where a break will turn focus to the 1.3476 level. Further down, support comes in at the 1.3400 level, representing its psycho level where a breach will aim at its weekly 200 ema at the 1.3346 level. Additionally, support stands at the 1.3300 level and then the 1.3250 level. All in all, EUR remains biased to the upside on further recovery.

Article by www.fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

 

 

 

Weekend Update by The Practical Investor

     

 

Weekend Update | www.thepracticalinvestor.com

February 14, 2014

— VIX made an 85% retracement of its initial rally to 21.48.  The resistance levels are between 13.94 and 14.44.  Short-term VIX dropped today to its lowest on record, suggesting that market complacency is at record highs.

SPX closes above the Wedge formation.

After piercing the lower trendline of its Orthodox Broadening Top (Megaphone formation) at 1748.00, SPX continued its reversal above the Wedge trendline.  This completes phase 7 of that pattern.  The Phase 8 may be a potential crash, since this is a major reversal pattern.  The Bearish Wedge implies a probable reversal to its origin.  A new record high will not negate the effects of a Bearish Wedge.  It only postpones it.  Bearish technicians are now bullish.

(ZeroHedge)  “Our bearish view on the S&P 500 is wrong,” remarks BofAML’s Macneil Curry, as yesterday’s close above 1,823 points to the larger uptrend resuming. However, despite the equity strength, Curry says “stay bullish Treasuries” as price action points to further gains.

NDX makes a new 13-year high.

NDX rallied to its Broadening Wedge top (red line).  This type of rally is a bull trap, keeping investors reassured that all is well.  This weekend is a key reversal time for all the indices, according to the Cycles Model.

 

(ZeroHedge)  Nasdaq is now up 1.7% on the year and broke to new highs not seen since Dec 2000. There was a clear effort to get the more critical S&P 500 to unch in 2014 but it failed – despite slamming VIX to 13.5% (and STVIX to record lows). High-beta Nasdaq and Russell outperformed on the week and Trannies lagged.

The Euro may have a head fake.

The Euro closed above weekly Short-term and Intermediate-term support.  This may not be indicative of a new bull run in the Euro.  The inability to make a new high indicated this may be a bearish head fake.

(NYTimes)  The euro zone economy grew slightly faster than expected in the last three months of 2013, an official report showed on Friday, bringing welcome news for the global economy amid signs of slowing in the United States and China.

Although growth in the 18-nation currency union is still weak, at a 1.1 percent annualized rate, it was the euro zone’s third straight quarter in positive territory, indicating that the bloc is well beyond the year-and-a-half recession that ended in mid-2013.

The broader 28-member European Union also grew, though weakly, for the third consecutive quarter. The Union, with a market of 500 million consumers and an economy worth about 11.7 trillion euros, or $16 trillion, is one of the pillars of the global economy, and the extended weakness there has been a major source of concern for officials in the United States.

The Yen challenging Intermediate-term resistance.

The Yen slipped beneath weekly Intermediate-term resistance at 97.97, but closed above it on /Friday.  Further decline is anticipated by the Cycles Model. The next break of the Head & Shoulders neckline may bring the Yen beneath its 2008 lows.

 

(Bloomberg)  Japan’s Topix index fell, erasing its weekly advance and capping a sixth week of declines, as the yen reversed losses and consumer lenders tumbled.

All but one of the 33 Topix (TPX) industry groups retreated. Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s biggest carmaker, decreased 1.3 percent after rising as much as 1.1 percent. Aiful Corp. plunged 10 percent, pacing declines among consumer lenders, after saying it would not provide a full-year forecast as the outlook is “uncertain.” Kirin Holdings Co., Japan’s biggest beverage maker, tumbled 9.2 percent to lead declines on the Nikkei 225 Stock Average after its net-income forecast missed estimates.

U.S. Dollar fell beneath its Triangle trendline again.

The dollar declined back through its Triangle trendline at 80.40 again.  The next level to watch is the December low at 79.50.  A reversal above that level reinstates the bullish view on the Dollar.  The Cycles Model suggests that it has about a week to confirm the decline or reverse higher.

 

(Bloomberg)  The dollar declined to its weakest level in almost two months after factory production in the U.S. unexpectedly declined in January by the most since May 2009, adding to evidence severe winter weather weighed on the economy.

“With this week’s U.S. data generally subdued and euro-zone data modestly firm in tone, the greenback is ending the week on a defensive note,” Nick Bennenbroek, the head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in New York, wrote in a client note. “We expect the U.S. dollar’s softer bias could continue into next week.”

Treasuries bounce off the Broadening Wedge.

Treasuries bounced off its Broadening Wedge trendline and weekly Intermediate-term support at 130.93.  It is probable that declining overhead resistance may be tested again this coming week.  Unfortunately, the Cycles Model suggests a renewed decline into the end of February or early March.

(Bloomberg)  Treasuries rose for the first time in three days as U.S. retail sales unexpectedly fell in January by the most since June 2012 and initial claims for jobless benefits rose more than forecast last week.

U.S. government securities extended gains as the Treasury sold $16 billion of 30-year bonds at a yield of 3.690 percent, the lowest since August. Current 30-year yields dropped from almost the highest this month. Ten-year note yields after inflation, called real yields, were at almost a three-week high. The drop in retail sales amid inclement weather came as the Federal Reserve plans to keep reducing bond purchases.

Gold rockets to Long-term resistance.

 

Gold rose over 4% to challenge its Long-Term resistance at 1313.36 and closed above it.  Unfortunately, the rally may be over, or nearly so, after making a 54.5% retracement of the prior decline.  The Cycles Model calls for a month-long decline that may break through the Lip of a Cup with Handle formation.  The potential consequences appear to be severe.  See the article below to gauge the sentiment of the analysts.

(Bloomberg)  Gold prices are poised to extend their 2014 rebound and reach $1,400 an ounce, the highest since September, according to technical analysis from Citi Futures and RBC Wealth Management.

Prices yesterday settled above the 100-day moving average for a second straight day for the first time since October. The metal has also closed above its 50-day measure in every session since Jan. 23. The pattern signals prices will rally 8.5 percent by the end of March, Chicago-based Sterling Smith of Citi Futures said.

Crude falls short of a 50% retracement.

Crude peaked on Wednesday, an important pivot day, and eased down into the close.  It had only managed to complete a 47% retracement of its decline from 112.24.  There is a Head & Shoulders formation at the base of this rally, which, if pierced, may lead to a much deeper decline.

(CBSMoneywatch)  Oil prices slipped closer to $100 a barrel Friday as fresh U.S. economic data and higher-than-expected crude supplies pointed to weaker demand.

By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark U.S. crude for March delivery was down 16 cents to $100.19 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Thursday, the Nymex contract eased 2 cents to close at $100.35.

A report showed that cold weather caused U.S. retail sales to drop in January for a second straight month as Americans spent less on autos and clothing and at restaurants during a brutally cold month. Weekly jobless claims were also higher than expected.

China stocks challenge resistance.

The bounce from the January 20 low may be nearing completion if not already so.  The Shanghai Index rallied up to weekly Long-term resistance at 2828.33, the target for this retracement.  Once accomplished, the secular decline resumes with the next significant low in mid-March.  There is no support beneath its Cycle Bottom at 1951.53.

(ZeroHedge)  The bailing out of the much-watched ‘Credit equals Gold #1’ wealth management product and safe liquidity-strewn (CNY375 billion from the PBOC) survival of the lunar new year liquidity crunch has many believing the worst is over. Though we discussed this fallacy in great depth here, the following chart of the total collapse in the largest Chinese coal producers says this is far from over. Trading at or below book values, investors are clearly signaling concerns about the quality of assets summed up perfectly by one local analyst – China’s coal industry (whose loans back a massive amount of the wealth management products) is “dead.”

 

The India Nifty bounces at Long-term support.

The CNX Nifty bounced from its Long-term support at 5983.06, closing above it.  CNX Nifty may attempt another probe to Short-term resistance at 6186.85, but the rally may not last.  The potential loss of Long-term support could be deadly for India stocks.  The Cycles Model calls for a decline through mid-May. Could there be some economic disappointments ahead?

(ZeroHedge)  A week ago, the Dell dude warned that it’s going to be a layoff “bloodbath” as the recently LBO-ed firm began firing 15,000. Now it’s IBM’s turn.

According to WRAL Tech Wire, the company which has underperformed Wall Street’s expectations for many quarters, has begun “cost-rationalizing” terminations in India – the country that hosts some 100,000 of IBM’s employees and where IBM reportedly employs the greatest number of workers. The unit targeted is the Systems Technology Group which is the troubled hardware group selling its low-end x86 server business to Lenovo for $2.3 billion and where Big Blue’s executives have launched “Resource Action”, also known as “rebalancing” but best known as mass, across the board terminations where by some estimates up to 13,000 of IBM’s 434,000 workers are set to be let go.

 

The Banking Index breaks, then retraces to its trendline.

BKX attempted a challenge of weekly Short-term resistance at 68.93, but failed to close above it.  The uptrend line is broken and, more importantly, stands as a resistance to any further rally.  The Cycles Model suggests a new low may be seen in the next two weeks.  Might there be a flash crash?

(ZeroHedge)  We recently cited the work of Sean Darby, equity strategist at Jefferies, regarding the exposure of Hong Kong banks to the Mainland (see: “How Dangerous is China’s Credit Bubble for the World” for details). Although Hong Kong is technically part of China, it is a foreign country in terms of its economic system and currency, and should therefore be regarded as a foreign creditor. In fact, the incentives that mainly influence the business decisions of Hong Kong’s banks include the US Federal Reserve’s monetary policy as a very important factor, due to the fact that the Hong Kong dollar is pegged to the US dollar via a currency board.

Mr. Darby has in the meantime continued to dig into topic of foreign bank exposure to the Mainland, and has recently released his latest findings. Here is a Bloomberg chart that shows how these claims have grown since 2005:

(ZeroHedge)  Chinese capital markets are quietly turmoiling as debt issues are delayed and demand for “Trust” products – the shadow-banking-system’s wealth management ‘investments’ – is tumbling. As Nikkei reports, since January, 9 companies have postponed or canceled issuance plans (around $1 billion) and is most pronounced in privately-owned companies (who lack an implicit government guarantee). This, of course, is exactly what the PBOC wanted (to instill some fear into these high-yield investors – demand – and thus slow the supply of credit to the riskiest over-capacity companies) but as non-performing loans in China surge to post-crisis highs, fear remains prescient that they will be unable to “contain” the problem once real defaults begin (as opposed to ‘delays of payment’ that we have seen so far).

(ZeroHedge)  Those of our readers focused on the state of the housing market will undoubtedly remember this chart we compiled using the data from the largest mortgage originator in the US, Wells Fargo. In case there is some confusion, as a result of rising interet rates (meaning the Fed is stuck in its attempts to push rates higher), the inability of the US consumer to purchase houses at artificially investor-inflated levels (meaning housing is now merely a hot potato flipfest between institutional investors A and B), and the end of the fourth dead-cat bounce in housing (meaning, well, self-explanatory), the bank’s primary business line – offering mortgages – is cratering.

(RollingStone)  Call it the loophole that destroyed the world. It’s 1999, the tail end of the Clinton years. While the rest of America obsesses over Monica Lewinsky, Columbine and Mark McGwire’s biceps, Congress is feverishly crafting what could yet prove to be one of the most transformative laws in the history of our economy – a law that would make possible a broader concentration of financial and industrial power than we’ve seen in more than a century.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-vampire-squid-strikes-again-the-mega-banks-most-devious-scam-yet-20140212#ixzz2tM1XXbxz

Have a great week!

 

Anthony M. Cherniawski

The Practical Investor, LLC

P.O. Box 129, Holt, MI 48842

www.thepracticalinvestor.com

Office: (517) 699.1554

Fax: (517) 699.1558

 

Disclaimer: Nothing in this email should be construed as a personal recommendation to buy, hold or sell short any security.  The Practical Investor, LLC (TPI) may provide a status report of certain indexes or their proxies using a proprietary model.  At no time shall a reader be justified in inferring that personal investment advice is intended.  Investing carries certain risks of losses and leveraged products and futures may be especially volatile.  Information provided by TPI is expressed in good faith, but is not guaranteed.  A perfect market service does not exist.  Long-term success in the market demands recognition that error and uncertainty are a part of any effort to assess the probable outcome of any given investment.  Please consult your financial advisor to explain all risks before making any investment decision.  It is not possible to invest in any index.

 

The use of web-linked articles is meant to be informational in nature.  It is not intended as an endorsement of their content and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Anthony M. Cherniawski or The Practical Investor, LLC.

 

P.O. Box 129  Holt, MI  48842  (517) 699-1554  Fax: (517) 699-1558

Email: [email protected]  www.thepracticalinvestor.com

 

 

 

The Week Ahead On USDCHF

USDCHF: Follows Through Lower, Set To Extend Weakness.

USDCHF: With a follow-through on the back of its previous week losses occurring at the end of the week, further downside is expected. As long as USDCHF trades and holds below the 0.9156/0.9079 levels this view remains valid. Minimum support lies at the 0.8902 level, its Jan 24 2014 low where a violation will push the pair further lower towards the 0.8850 level. A cut through here will pave the way for a run at the 0.8800 level, its psycho level. Its weekly RSI is bearish and pointing lower supporting this view. Conversely, to reduce its downside pressure, the pair will have to overcome its resistance residing at the 0.9033 level, its Feb 12 2014 high followed by the 0.9100 level and next the 0.9156 level, its Jan 21 2014 high. Further out, resistance resides at the 0.9200 level, its psycho. All in all, the pair remains biased to the downside in the medium term.

Article by www.fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

 

 

Stem Cell Technology: The Most Important Medical Treatment in History

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Occasionally we come across technology that’s not really technology in its truest sense. Sometimes, technology is really an assistant to nature. This is particularly evident in certain functions of the human body.

The human body has an amazing ability to repair and regenerate itself. You might be thinking right now, ‘no it doesn’t, we’re not salamanders.’ But believe me, there’s plenty in the body that can regenerate, though not in the sci-fi sense that many people think.

The terms ‘regrow’ and ‘regenerate’ often make people think of regrown limbs. Agreed, that’s not entirely possible…for now. But the body can regenerate thanks to ‘wonder-cells’ known as stem cells.

Although stem cells are naturally occurring, the latest technology is maximising their potential. Thanks to scientists and researchers we can do more now with stem cells than ever before.

It All Just Works Like Magic!

Stem cells can repair and regrow vital systems in our body. And encouragingly stem cells occur naturally in all of us. In fact the reason we are who we are is because while we’re embryos stem cells chop and change about to make all the bits that make us human.

Without getting too bogged down in the biology and science, there are effectively two types of stem cells. The first kind is embryonic stem cells, also known as pluripotent stem cells. These have the ability to become every type of cell in the body.

The second kind is adult stem cells, also known as multipotent stem cells. These have the ability to become only certain types of cells in the body.

These wonder-cells are vital to the future of regenerative medicine. That is the practice of medicine that repairs and regenerates the body. The potential lies in the ability to one day rewind the entire process of aging.

Stem cells are so important for a few key reasons. The Australian Stem Cell Foundation outlines these on their website,

Stem cells are different from other cells in the body in three main ways:

1. Stem cells are unspecialised. They have not developed into cells that perform a specific function.

2. Stem cells can differentiate. This means they can divide and produce cells that have the potential to become other more specific cell types, tissues or organs. These new cells and tissues are used to repair or replace damaged or diseased cells in the body. Once cells have differentiated, they have less capacity to form multiple different cell types, and become ‘committed’ to becoming a particular cell type. Skin stem cells, for example, give rise to new skin cells when needed, to assist regeneration after damage and as part of the normal ageing process.

3. Stem cells are capable of self-renewal. Stem cells are able to divide and produce copies of themselves which leads to self-renewal. Once a cell has become specialised (has differentiated) to a particular tissue or organ, it has a very limited capacity to self-renew (produce new stem cells) but instead produces only cells relevant to that organ.

Medical technology means scientists and researchers can use stems cells in a number of ways to cure disease and ailments like what I’m about to explain below. In what seems like a magical trick, scientists have even brought ‘dead’ organs back to life using stem cells.

And there’s growing evidence that stem cells hold even more potential than first thought.

The Human Element of These Amazing Cells

David Pyne is 60 years old. He lives in Manchester, England. He has four children and is a Grandfather. David got the worst news of his life in August 2012. He had leukaemia. He had about 12 to 18 months to live.

One way to treat leukaemia is to get a bone marrow transplant. However a global search resulted in no match for the required transplant. Time was running out and so were his options to stay alive.
Thankfully two babies were born. One in America, one in France. And even better was both mothers had decided to donate their umbilical cord blood.

This was so significant because one of the richest sources of stem cells is umbilical cord blood. It also just happened that these two donors were a good match for David.

With no other option the doctors treated him with the new stem cells. He spent six weeks in hospital hoping this would be the solution he so desperately needed.

As reported in The Mirror, the director of the hospital where David was treated said,

Umbilical cord blood is very rich in stem cells, which being so immature have phenomenal regenerative powers. These were a great alternative source of cells for David, in fact the only option, as after a worldwide search he had no other donor.

The stem cells worked, and David is now in remission. The regenerative powers of the stem cells have literally saved his life.

With more and more research every year, there’s seemingly endless potential in what stem cells are capable of treating. And in some cases stem cells might even improve parts of the body better than they were before.

Think about it like this. Over time, as you get older you reach a point where perhaps your joints aren’t what they used to be. And it’s impacting your day to day life. Your GP says you’ve got Osteoarthritis.

However your local GP has a ‘bank’ of stem cells. With the right stem cells injected into the joint, not only does your hip get better, but it now has the same flexibility as when you were a teenager.

This isn’t fanciful dreaming.

One relatively unknown Aussie company is working on stem cell technology that’s going to change the lives of millions. In Revolutionary Tech Investor we uncovered this amazing company and their regenerative medicine technologies back in November. Since then the stock has climbed over 70%.

Companies with technology like this can change people’s lives. They hold the key to improving the health of millions. And they also have the potential to completely change the financial lives of smart investors.

But financial glory aside, the impact of stem cell technology is turning the practice of medicine on its head. Continued advances in the use of stem cells means there’s much more to come from these wonder-cells.

Already research is underway for the treatment of everything from cardiac problems to orthopaedic issues and even eye and brain disease. Such is the reach of stem cells that they could be the single most important medical treatment in the history of mankind.

Regards,
Sam Volkering+
Editor, Tech Insider

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Yellen Translated: Investing Opportunities Ahead

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Janet Yellen, Quite possibly the most powerful woman in the world, told the world what it wanted to hear when she gave her first testimony to the US Congress as chairwoman.

That said, [bond] purchases are not on a preset course, and the Committee’s decisions about their pace will remain contingent on its outlook for the labour market and inflation as well as its assessment of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases.

The markets were happy. The Aussie market rallied 2% this week on her calming words.

That is in spite of a Greek tragedy unravelling our economy.

You know what I’m talking about, all that bad news we’ve been pestered with.

No automotive manufacturing sector within four years…

Unemployment numbers rising to 6%, the highest in a decade…

And Treasurer Joe Hockey telling Australians that mums and dads should invest their retirement money in ‘state and federal government‘ infrastructure assets that have a ‘guaranteed return‘.

So judging by the market rally, Aussie investors liked Yellen’s comments.

However, Jim Grant, founder of the Interest Rate Observer, said this supposed plain speaking Federal Reserve chairwoman didn’t clearly say what she actually meant.

On CNBC, he translated what she really meant.

The Fed continues in this unprecedented exercise in price control… What we mean to do is continue to nationalise the yield curve. We want to make the federal funds rate, a government rate, and we would like to enlist the stock market in a program of wealth creation for the security holders of America.

He then adds: ‘The Fed has manipulated interest rates for 100 years, but never – until now – has it manipulated the stock market as if it were a lever of public policy.

Basically, he reckons Yellen left out that they were more interested in seeing the stock market move higher than restore any sort of stability to markets.

Well, good. We’ve got that out of the way. The Federal Reserve will continue to fiddle with the market and try to control the possible bubble it’s blowing.

So American markets were happy, which meant the Aussie market was happy.

But I can’t lay the blame just with American central bankers. The Aussie branch of central banking boffins isn’t much better. In fact, inflation rose 0.7% in February and our central bankers seem pretty keen on leaving the cash rate where it is.

After all, retail trade data was up 0.7% and 0.5% in November and December respectively. And the Australian Bureau of Statistics confirmed house prices were up 9.3% across Australia. So it’s good news all round!

So what’s an investor to do when central banks meddle with cash and debt?

Normally, I’d suggest stocking up on a little more gold to protect your dollars from inflation. But Diggers & Drillers resource analyst Jason Stevenson reckons the precious yellow metal could fall further before its next bull run.

‘I still see some downside in the gold price. In fact, it could still fall another 15%’ he told Money Morning readers back in December.

Righto then. So hold off on your gold buying spree until it takes a little more of a belting.

But what can you do right now? Active investors don’t sit on their hands and wait for the right time. Because there never is a perfectly right time. There are always some risks. However, regardless of risks, there are times to invest in the right opportunities.

In Thursday’s Money Morning, Kris Sayce wrote:

‘…it’s a circumstance we’ve seen many times before over the past twenty years.

‘There’s no doubt that governments have put the ‘inflation train’ back on the rails. That means more stimulus and money printing for years to come…

‘And boy do we like what we see in terms of long term investment opportunities. Until the day of reckoning arrives (for central banks) investors have a great opportunity to make the most of some potentially spectacular returns.’

For now, central bankers will continue to fiddle with markets and befuddle investors. And if they’re going to fill the stock market with cash, it’s worth paying attention to the opportunities available to investors to take advantage of this quantitative easing rally… 

Shae Smith
Editor, Money Weekend

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Global Monetary Policy Rates – Jan 2014 – Average jumps to 5.56% as emerging markets respond to Fed’s tapering

By CentralBankNews.info
    Global interest rates rose by 675 basis points in January as four major emerging market central banks raised their policy rates to quell inflationary pressures from a depreciation of their currencies, in effect transmitting the U.S. Federal Reserve’s tapering of asset purchases across borders.
    After pumping $85 billion into the global economy every month since September 2012, the Fed took the first step toward normalizing monetary policy in January after the global financial crises by trimming its monthly purchases of U.S. Treasuries and mortgage-related debt by “a modest” $10 billion to $75 billion.
    Although the Fed’s exit from extraordinary accommodative policy was flagged in May and first given the green light in December, the reduced liquidity being pumped into global markets is affecting exchange rates and asset prices far beyond expectations and even triggering recriminations against the Fed for being selfish and not considering the global implications of its shift toward tighter policy.
    But criticizing the Fed for not acting as the world’s central bank and surprising markets with its decision to start winding down asset purchases misses the point.
    An increasingly transparent Fed, one of the legacies of now former chairman Ben Bernanke, has clearly communicated its thinking around quantitative easing, so much that it may even have ended up confusing markets. And, the Fed, like all other central banks, are legally bound to fulfill domestic goals and are part of national governments, not supra-national organizations.
    The real issue is that global policy makers have yet to come up with a workable model for global economic governance for the 21st century that balances sovereign rights versus the common good.

    January’s interest rate hikes by Brazil, India, Turkey, South Africa – four of the so-called “Fragile Five” – totaled 675 basis points, almost twice the highest monthly rise seen in the last 12 months.
    In addition, Gambia’s central bank maintained its rate at 20 percent, according to its policy statement from Jan. 31.  However, it is unclear when Gambia actually raised its benchmark rediscount rate as the previous policy statement stems from June 21, 2013 when the rate was raised by 400 basis points to 18 percent at an emergency committee meeting. Until further notice, Gambia is therefore counted as raising its rate in January for the purpose of tracking rates and calculating a global average.
    In contrast, five central banks (Romania, Hungary, Jordan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan) cut their rates by a total of 335 points for a net increase in January of 540 points. (675 points plus Gambia’s 200 points minus 335 points)
    This pushed up the Global Monetary Policy Rate (GMPR) – the average rate of the 90 central banks followed by Central Bank News – to 5.56 percent at the end of January, up from 5.41 percent at the end of December, but still below 2013’s average GMPR of 5.61 percent and 2012’s 6.20 percent.
    The actual rise in January’s GMPR, however, was less than indicated as the rate already rose to 5.47 percent with the start of the new year as Latvia joined the Eurosystem, subordinating its monetary policy to that of the European Central Bank (ECB).
    Although the global economy remains fragile and rates were raised rate in response to inflationary pressures from lower currencies rather than from strong demand, January brought further evidence that the trend in global monetary policy is turning toward a tightening.
    Of the 41 decisions taken by central banks in January, 12 central banks (Malaysia, Uganda, Korea, Brazil, Turkey, Nigeria, Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Bangladesh and Mauritius) specifically referred to inflationary risks in their policy statement.
    Emerging market central banks remain under pressure to raise rates further to ensure that the real yields on their domestic assets remain internationally competitive as they balance the dampening impact on economic activity from higher rates against rising inflation from a decline in their exchange rates.

    New Zealand stands out because it’s the only advanced economy that is preparing to raise rates.
    If the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) meets expectations and raises its policy rate in March, it will be the first rate rise by an advanced economy central bank since January 2011 when the Bank of Israel (BOI) raised its rate, followed by Sweden’s Riksbank the next month. Both Israel and Sweden reversed course later that year as the global economy weakened.
    Unlike the emerging market economies, New Zealand’s dollar has maintained its strength ever since it soared on safe-haven demand in 2009. More recently, the dollar – known as the kiwi – has drawn strength from yen-based carry trades. Nevertheless, the central bank is getting ready to raise rates to ensure inflation doesn’t exceed its 2.0 percent target due to growing pressures from booming construction, projected prices rises by companies and an expected decline in the kiwi.
    After warning in July last year that it would have to start removing monetary stimulus, the RBNZ has gradually been ratcheting up its language and in January said this change in policy was expected to start “soon,” a sign that rates are very likely to be raised at the bank’s next policy meeting in March.
    Manuel Ramos-Francia, deputy governor of the Bank of Mexico, summed up the current trend in global monetary policy on Feb. 3:
    “What is probably very certain is that interest rates in the U.S. are going up, and interest rates in the rest of the world are going up,” he said at an event sponsored by Credit Suisse in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

GLOBAL MONETARY POLICY RATES (GMPR) 
                   (Changes in January 2014 in basis points)

COUNTRYMSCI                JANUARY CHANGE
RATE CUTS:
UZBEKISTAN-200
TAJIKISTAN-70
JORDANFM-25
ROMANIAFM-25
HUNGARYEM-15
SUM:335
RATE RISES:
INDIAEM25
BRAZILEM50
SOUTH AFRICAEM50
GAMBIA200
TURKEYEM550
SUM:875
NET CHANGE:540