Gold Futures Drops Before US Labour Report

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold futures dropped lower on Friday, clearing gains seen in the previous session. As traders focus on the release of the monthly US reports due later in the day.

The yellow metal for April delivery came in at 0.18% to $1,350.50 on New York’s Comex at the time of writing, while silver futures for April settlement lost 0.23% to $21.555 an ounce at the same time.

The US dollar index, which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, dropped 0.03% lower to 79.64 points, while the greenback dropped against the 18-block euro after the European Central Bank kept its interest rates unchanged in the previous session.

Gold – US non-farm payrolls data in Spotlight

The market are focusing on the release of the US jobs data due later in the day, as the report may influence the Federal Reserve’s decision over its monthly bond purchases.

The US non-farm payrolls data is expected to show an additional 150,000 jobs to the world’s largest economy in February, rising from the previous figures of 113,000 seen in January. With the unemployment rate expected to remain at 6.6%.

While the initial jobless claims declined by 26,000 to 323,000 in the week ending March 1, the lowest level in three months and down from analysts forecast of 337,000.

Gold – Fed Tapering

Last week the Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said the US central bank would consider the pace of reducing its bond purchases if the economy weakens. Members of the Federal Reserve would gather for its next meeting scheduled for March 18-19. The Fed has announced a $10 billion reduction from its $85 billion monthly bond purchase at each of its past two meeting, currently leaving purchase at $65 billion.

 

Visit www.hymarkets.com   to find out more about our products and start trading today with only $50 using the latest trading technology today

The post Gold Futures Drops Before US Labour Report appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Oil Prices Trades Higher Amid Ukraine Crisis

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Oil Prices were seen trading higher on the last day of the trading week as the ongoing turmoil in Ukraine continues as Crimea  voted to be officially part of Russia and the US imposed sanctions on politicians from Ukraine and Russia.

Meanwhile, the market are focused on the US jobs data due later today, as analysts expects to see a rise in jobs added to the labour market.

The North American West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for April delivery climbed 0.34% to $101.91 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at the time of writing.

While Brent crude for April settlement added 0.34% at $108.48 per barrel at the same time. The European benchmark crude was at a premium of $6.54 to WTI.

 Oil  – Ukraine Conflict

On Thursday, the US President Barack Obama, mentioned the possibility of further sanctions on Russian and Ukrainian politicians for threatening Ukraine’s sovereignty, if Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government doesn’t respond.  So far, the US has imposed visa bans, financial sanctions and property freezes.

Voters in Crimea will finalize their decision on March 16 as to whether the Crimean Peninsula will join Russia or stay with Ukraine.

Russia produced 9.9 million barrels a day in 2012 and exported approximately 5 million, reports from the Energy Information Administration confirmed.

Oil  – US Jobs Data

Later in the day, the US non-farm payrolls data will be released and expected to show an additional 150,000 jobs to the world’s largest economy in February, rising from the previous figures of 113,000 seen in January.

While the initial jobless claims declined by 26,000 to 323,000 in the week ending March 1, down from analysts forecast of 337,000.

US Crude Stockpiles

According to reports from the EIA, the Energy Department’s statistical arm, crude stockpiles added 13.6 million barrels since Jan 10 while demand averaged over four week dropped to an eight month low.

While a separate report from the EIA revealed distillate stockpiles added 1.41 million barrels in the week ending Feb 28. Analysts forecasted to see a drop by 1 million barrels.

 

Visit www.hymarkets.com   to find out more about our products and start trading today with only $50 using the latest trading technology today

The post Oil Prices Trades Higher Amid Ukraine Crisis appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

News Trading Strategy On EURUSD – ECB

Article by Investazor.com

An interesting fact is that one of the most intense trading sessions for EURUSD in terms of market volatility occurs on the day the European Central Bank has its official Press Conference. 100 pips movements are very usual on these occasions, so it will be very important to know how to make the most of it and take advantage of that huge volatility. This is why I am going to take it from scratch and explain how to approach the ECB Press Conference and how to adapt your trading strategies.

In the first Thursday of every month at 15:45 GMT, ECB announces its rate decision, which is the interest rate on the main refinancing operation that provide the majority of liquidity to the banking system. This event tends to be overshadowed by the ECB Press Conference held 45 minutes later as the rate decision is often priced in the market. The usual effect is the following, an actual value higher than the forecast is good for the EUR.

As an example, right now the rate is 0.25%. If ECB decides to raise the rate to 0.5%, this means investors will pay a higher price in order to borrow money, so the currency will be more expensive to have and the effect will be the appreciation of the EUR vis-à-vis the US dollar. Vice versa, if the rate drops, EUR will be cheaper to have in possession, so EURUSD fall as US dollar will be regarded as being stronger than the EUR.

The post News Trading Strategy On EURUSD – ECB appeared first on investazor.com.

USDCAD: Bearish, Sets Up To Extend Weakness.

USDCAD: Although hesitating following its Thursday weakness, it continues to look weak and vulnerable in the short term. Further down, support lies at the 1.0950 level, its psycho level. A cut through here will aim at the 1.0909 level, marking its Feb 19 2014 low. Its daily RSI is bearish and pointing lower supporting this view. On the upside, resistance resides at the 1.1061 level where a reversal of roles is likely but if taken out, resistance resides at the 1.1159 level and then the 1.1192 level. This if seen will aim at the 1.1222 level. Further out, resistance resides at the 1.1300 level. All in all, USDCAD continues to face further bullishness.

Article by www.fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Better, Faster, Cheaper—You Can Have All Three in Medtech: Ben Haynor

Source: George S. Mack of The Life Sciences Report (3/5/14)

http://www.thelifesciencesreport.com/pub/na/better-faster-cheaper-you-can-have-all-three-in-medtech-ben-haynor

Given that medical technology is an easy target for payers looking to cut reimbursements, it’s important for investors to find device and diagnostic companies with the greatest efficiencies. Accuracy, speed and economy command a premium multiple because these features ultimately relieve pressure on margins, improve quality and reduce patient risk and institutional liability. In this interview with The Life Sciences Report, Senior Research Analyst Ben Haynor of Feltl & Co. shares his top two medtech names, which he expects will achieve outsized gains this year. He also delivers a couple of bonus names that investors could parlay into a profitable small- and micro-cap portfolio.

The Life Sciences Report: Ben, you currently follow micro- and small-cap companies in the medtech space, but previously you were the founder of two tech startups. How does one know when an idea can be marketable?

Ben Haynor: One of my startups was more of a hobby that I hoped would turn into a company, and what I learned from that experience came more from the mistakes that I made. A lot of people think that if you build a better mousetrap—if you’re slightly more clever than your competition—that will be enough. You find yourself thinking you’ve got greatest idea, you’ve thought through every aspect of what the user might want, all the features are great. . .and you wind up drinking your own Kool-Aid. Your product might have features that go well beyond what the competition has, but if the customer doesn’t care about those features, or they are just incremental changes, you can only compete on price or the level of service. Your product might not be something that commands premium pricing. I fell victim to that.

TLSR: Are you saying it’s not reasonable to think in terms of competing on price and service?

BH: No—competing on price or level of service is a completely reasonable business strategy. But when it comes to investing in a startup or starting a business, outsized returns are going to come from innovations that massively reduce the time it takes to accomplish something, hopefully by orders of magnitude.

For instance, one company I have under coverage (and also one of my two best ideas) is TearLab Corp. (TEAR:NASDAQ), with its TearLab Osmolarity System for detection of dry eye disease. What clinicians did prior to the TearLab test was stick a piece of litmus paper under a person’s eyelid, pull it out and measure how many millimeters of moisture had collected. This older diagnostic method is called the Schirmer’s test: It could take up to 10 minutes to complete and could be irritating to the eye. However, the American Academy of Ophthalmology has considered osmolarity testing the gold standard for diagnosing dry eye for a couple of decades plus. Prior to TearLab, there were no point-of-care tests available to do osmolarity testing. Additionally, the TearLab test has taken testing time down to 30 seconds or less, which is a couple of orders of magnitude in improvement. This is important because clinicians value their time.

The other thing I think helps—and would be something of a corollary—is developing a product that results in an immense improvement in accuracy or performance, such as coming up with a test that could improve predictive value. In this case, the Schirmer’s test had a 30–40% predictive value; the TearLab system takes that up to 80–90% predictive value. It’s innovative, and certainly good enough to take to market. I think TearLab is a good example of these ideas on the diagnostic device side.

TLSR: Your research focus is solidly in medtech—both diagnostics and medical devices. Is it preferable to improve on an idea by creating a technology platform that is more user-friendly, or cheaper, or broader in its application?

BH: I think in terms of the iron triangle, an old engineering adage that states if you’re trying to build something, the tradeoffs are such that you’re only going to be able to pick two of the three desired attributes—better, faster, cheaper—but never all three. This holds true in software development, an area where I have some experience.

But in other areas, you may be able to have all three. For instance, Novadaq Technologies Inc. (NVDQ:NASDAQ), which I follow and have a Buy rating on, has a better solution for visualizing blood flow and perfusion. It’s also faster than traditional methods, be it Doppler or some of the oximetry methods. The Novadaq system is also cheaper, as evidenced by published studies that suggest that hospitals can save a great deal of money by utilizing it in complex procedures where there are high complication rates and hospitals are ultimately on the hook. The Novadaq system is better, it’s faster and it’s cheaper for hospitals.

In my universe, I equate “better” to unique performance characteristics, and cheaper to a higher level of reimbursement, or less risk of creating complications that aren’t reimbursed. If a company can fit these into its offering, it has a product that can become standard of care and part of a real business. I think Novadaq and TearLab can ultimately accomplish this, given enough time.

TLSR: Your firm recently released its 2014 Top Idea List, and you have two names from your universe of coverage on that list—TearLab, which we’ve already discussed, and Cancer Genetics Inc. (CGIX:NASDAQ). What thought processes go into each name on that list? Is it about which company has a sure thing in its pipeline or product portfolio? Or is it about which company can be the top gainer for the year? Or is it about relative safety of investor capital?

BH: Each analyst gets to make two picks. Most of us have chosen stocks that we think will be the biggest gainers in a given year. Last year, my picks happened to be the two companies that I have mentioned—Novadaq and TearLab—both of which did quite well. This year, I’ve gone back to the well on TearLab. I think it’s still an underappreciated story, and there are only a handful of analysts who cover it.

My other top idea for this year is Cancer Genetics. I prefer underappreciated and underfollowed picks that I believe will demonstrate something in the coming year that will cause the Street to reevaluate, garner more interest from investors and ultimately drive the stocks higher.

TLSR: You initiated on this company back on May 21, 2013, when it was just under $12/share, with a target of $17.50/share. You presently have a $24/share price target. It was recently at about $19/share. Could you go ahead and talk about this company?

BH: Cancer Genetics is an oncology diagnostics company that had just a handful of salespeople one and one-half years ago. Over the past year or so it has gone public, raised a decent war chest of capital and has been able to hire more than a dozen experienced salespeople. Fewer than 1,000 people are selling into the oncology diagnostics space, so the fact that Cancer Genetics was able to get a practiced sales force to take its products to market is a very big deal. It’s also something that will bear fruit this year.

The company also continues to roll out new proprietary tests. Last year it launched a few new tests and updated some that were on the market already. The company’s initial focus is hematological cancers, and it has four different proprietary microarrays that are able to give clinicians not only a diagnosis, but also a prognosis and assistance in treatment decisions. To be able to subtype the disease and determine that the oncologist should use a specific receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor—or whatever the appropriate drug may be—is a very powerful service. That’s particularly true in blood cancers, where you can get a recurring revenue stream because these cancers can mutate quite often. Every year—or even every three or six months, depending on how aggressive the malignancy might be—the oncologist might run a Cancer Genetics test to make sure that a treatment decision is correct at any given point in time.

The company also recently launched a proprietary florescence in situ hybridization (FISH)-based HPV-associated cancer test (FHACT). It’s a DNA probe enabling determination of whether cervical cancer has progressed beyond cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) grade 2, which is considered the cutoff for determining whether the cancer is likely to progress further. The beauty of this test is that the conventional Pap smear sample is used, instead of doing a colposcopy, which costs $700–800 per procedure and may require the patient to be on pain medication and perhaps out of work for a few days. Now a clinician may forego the invasive procedure by using the Pap smear sample and running the Cancer Genetics FHACT test for $400–500. This saves the payer money, is also convenient and pain-free for the patient, and gives the clinician a good diagnosis.

TLSR: I note that you have Cancer Genetics doing $20.3 million ($20.3M) in revenue in 2014. For 2015, you forecast revenue of $48.9M, while growing gross margins from 37.2% in 2014 to 54.4% in 2015. I understand this company is a top pick because of its proprietary tests, but you really have to get out and show these services to pathologists—to oncologists, to OB/GYNs and to hospitals. How do you get that kind of growth?

BH: It is stunning growth. But if you look at the historical revenue ramps of some other companies that have had proprietary tests, they’re not all that dissimilar. In fact, a number of them have grown more quickly than I project Cancer Genetics to grow.

I think Cancer Genetics’ growth potential is really due to a combination of factors. You have the proprietary tests, as you mentioned, but the company also has relationships with a couple of biopharma companies—Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD:NASDAQ) and Roche Holding AG (RHHBY:OTCQX)—that seem to be ramping up its backlog. A year ago, there may have been $1M or $2M in biopharma backlog. Now, it’s more like $13M, and I believe that will continue to grow over the next 12–18 months. Plus, the company always has the opportunity to deliver another of these tests—or several—to help drive growth. It is a matter of driving the adoption of the proprietary tests that the company has already developed, and layering on new ones.

Cancer Genetics does have a joint venture with the Mayo Clinic, which is using next-generation sequencing (NGS) to go after lung cancer, multiple myeloma and follicular lymphoma. You should start to see some new and improved panels in the next year or year and a half. The company is going to continue to add new panels and proprietary tests; that activity and exposure will bring along some nonproprietary work as well, which will help drive the company’s revenue growth to the levels that I’ve estimated, hopefully.

TLSR: Is there another growth possibility for Cancer Genetics? Its business is primarily on the East Coast and in the Midwest currently. Is the company thinking about the West Coast?

BH: Yes, I think the company is definitely thinking about that. A West Coast lab would certainly help. I would expect Cancer Genetics would probably acquire a small lab that already has its certifications in place. It’s easy enough to do, and quicker than setting up a brand new lab, which means having all the inspections and the certifications before you can open it. If Cancer Genetics can buy one that’s already in place, that’s a pretty good expenditure of some of its cash.

TLSR: I’m noting that you follow diaDexus Inc. (DDXS:OTCMKTS). You have it rated Buy, which is interesting because the company seems to have lost a potential revenue stream with the failure ofGlaxoSmithKline’s (GSK:NYSE) phase 3 STABILITY trial testing darapladib, an Lp-PLA2 (lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2)inhibitor, to prevent major adverse cardiovascular events. The idea was that if this enzyme, Lp-LPA2, was elevated, you could give this drug to reduce a patient’s risk of heart attack. Would you discuss why this company is Buy-rated after the failure of that GSK trial?

BH: Sure. DiaDexus’ PLAC Test basically gives a patient an idea of how likely it may be that plaque within the coronary arteries might rupture. That, of course, causes heart attacks and strokes.

TLSR: You’re talking about vulnerable plaque exfoliation, a deadly event.

BH: Yes. I think this is a great test to offer to people. One of the ways that diaDexus has been successful over the past few years is that some specialty cardiovascular labs have bundled the PLAC Test with a number of other tests to give a more in-depth picture of a patient’s cardiovascular health and risk. These bundled tests are then sold to doctors. DiaDexus only has a 13- or 14-person sales force selling directly to doctors, but the salespeople also sell to these cardiovascular specialty labs, which then take the product out to many more physician practices. Collectively, diaDexus may benefit from as many as 500 salespeople who work with the big-eight nationwide cardiovascular specialty labs—none of which is public—taking its tests out to primary-care doctors. During 2014, diaDexus will probably sell a couple million PLAC Tests.

The PLAC Test looks at the Lp-PLA2 enzyme, which is the subject of two GSK trials, one of which was the STABILITY study (NCT00799903) that you mentioned. It did indeed miss its primary endpoint. However, the primary endpoint was a composite of time-to-first-occurrence of death due to a cardiovascular event, nonfatal myocardial infarction and nonfatal stroke. It showed some improvement in these patients, but it wasn’t statistically significant. One thing that could have skewed the data is that stroke isn’t caused by plaque rupture in up to half the instances, and therefore does not have the same etiology as a heart attack. My point is that this was a very broad primary endpoint. The STABILITY study did meet at least two of the five secondary endpoints. I speculate one of these was heart attack by itself.

On his most recent conference call, the GSK CEO talked about how he’s seen more data from the STABILITY study than the Street has. He characterized the signals they were seeing as encouraging, and briefly talked about how the company now has a whole development program around Lp-PLA2. So GSK clearly remains encouraged by the trial. We’ll see a second phase 3 study in the next couple months on darapladib, called the SOLID-TIMI 52 (NCT01000727) trial. This trial is in sicker patients, and it’s probably more likely that the drug will show effectiveness with the same primary endpoint. It will be interesting to see how that plays out.

TLSR: Ben, clearly the Lp-PLA2 test renders important information. It sounds like GSK is now evaluating subgroups from its darapladib STABILITY study, but subset studies never seem to turn out very well. I’m wondering: If the cardiologist, the internist or the family physician doesn’t have a good Lp-PLA2 inhibitor, why would he or she feel justified in doing the PLAC Test on a patient? The physician could say, “I’m doing everything I can by giving this patient statins and trying to modify his diet. If I don’t have a good inhibitor of Lp-PLA2, why should I run this test?”

BH: That’s a fair question. I can certainly see both sides. Maybe it comes down to adding value at the margins. I suspect that not everyone who has high cholesterol and is on statins treats their body as a temple. Physicians might want to scare them straight by running the PLAC Test, which is relatively inexpensive. The physician can then say, “Look, you have double the risk of heart attack and stroke based upon this test. Do you want to do something about it?”

Not every clinician is going to adopt this test overnight. But it’s an interesting test and is going to give both the doctor and the patient better information so that both can make better decisions about whether that patient should eat his oatmeal.

TLSR: You have a $2.90 target price on diaDexus, which is a 150%+ implied return from current levels. Is that a one-year target price?

BH: Yes. We do 12-month targets here at Feltl.

TLSR: The reason this diaDexus story is interesting is that other analysts seemed to be hanging their hats on the darapladib study. But not you.

BH: I treated darapladib as a call option. Yes, if it works, it will be a massive benefit to the company. Who knows? Maybe it turns out that the subgroup analysis of the STABILITY study uncovers something that makes the drug very useful in a subpopulation. Maybe that leads to approval of darapladib down the road. I think having more data for diaDexus is certainly a good thing.

Just one thought I’d leave you with. Back in October 2013, the Journal of the American Heart Association published a substudy of 6,500 patients—the Long-Term Intervention with Pravastatin in Ischemic Disease (LIPID) study, which showed a reduction in Lp-PLA2 levels while on statin therapy could reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. It’s one of the largest studies in the cardiovascular arena. The findings were that Lp-PLA2 is as good as, or is better, a marker than LDL cholesterol, which is a pretty big statement. Now that there is an appeals mechanism to the guideline decisions made by the American Heart Association (AHA), I would expect to see diaDexus take the data from the LIPID, STABILITY, and SOLID-TIMI studies to the AHA for elevation of the PLAC Test in their clinical guidelines, assuming the AHA does not choose to take it up on their own.

TLSR: Thank you, Ben.

BH: Nice speaking with you. I appreciate it.

Ben Haynor joined the Feltl & Co. research department in October 2010. Prior to joining Feltl, Haynor founded two technology startups—Taggart Communications and Spigot Games. Before launching those firms, Haynor spent five years in equity trading at RBC Capital Markets, with the last several years spent as a NASDAQ market maker. He is a CFA charterholder and a member of CFA Institute and CFA Society of Minnesota. In the most recent Wall Street Journal “Best on the Street” publication, Haynor took second in the Medical Equipment & Supplies category, and was also ranked the No. 1 stock picker by StarMine in the U.S. Health Care Equipment and Supplies sector as part of the 2013 StarMine Analyst awards. He earned a bachelor’s degree in finance with a minor in management information systems, from Pennsylvania State University.

Want to read more Life Sciences 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) George S. Mack conducted this interview for The Life Sciences Report and provides services to The Life Sciences 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 Life Sciences Report: Cancer Genetics Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Ben Haynor: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Cancer Genetics Inc., TearLab Corp., diaDexus Inc., Novadaq Technologies 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: Cancer Genetics Inc., TearLab Corp. 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.

4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.

5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.

6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

Streetwise – The Life Sciences Report is Copyright © 2014 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part..

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Life Sciences Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

101 Second St., Suite 110

Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8204(707) 981-8204

Fax: (707) 981-8998

Email: [email protected]

 

 

 

Fibonacci Retracements Analysis 07.03.2014 (EUR/USD, USD/CHF)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for March 7th, 2014

EUR USD, “Euro vs US Dollar”

Eurodollar rebounded from level of 61.8% and started new ascending movement. By now, pair has almost reached its target level at 1.3870. However, considering that this ascending movement was quite fast, price may continue growing up and reach its next target, which is at level of 1.3970.

As we can see at H1 chart, bulls are supported not only by level of 61.8%, but by several additional levels as well. According to analysis of temporary fibo zones, upper target levels may be reached in the beginning of the next week or even earlier.

USD CHF, “US Dollar vs Swiss Franc”

Fast correction was followed by fast descending movement. It looks like bears are going to reach minimum until the end of this trading week. Main target is near several fibo-levels close to 0.8720.

At H1 chart we can see, that yesterday Franc rebounded from local level of 38.2%. during the day, pair may form slight correction, after which I’m planning to increase my short position. According to analysis of temporary fibo zones, lower target levels may be reached by next Monday.

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.

 

 

 

Japanese Candlesticks Analysis 07.03.2014 (EUR/USD, USD/JPY)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for March 7th, 2014

EUR USD, “Euro vs US Dollar”

H4 chart of EUR USD shows bullish tendency. Upper Windows are broken, now they’re support levels. Three Line Break chart indicates current trend; Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm bullish tendency; price may form bearish patterns inside resistance area.

H1 chart of EUR USD shows sideways correction within ascending trend. Upper Window is broken, now it’s support level. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

USD JPY, “US Dollar vs Japanese Yen”

H4 chart of USD JPY shows correction, which is indicated by Tweezers pattern. Three Line Break chart indicates that ascending tendency continues; Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm bearish pullback.

H1 chart of USD JPY shows correction within ascending trend. Upper Window is support level. Three Line Break chart indicates current trend; Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm descending correction.

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.

 

 

 

 

 

GBPUSD moved sideways between 1.6582 and 1.6822

GBPUSD moved sideways in a trading range between 1.6582 and 1.6822. Key support is at 1.6582, as long as this level holds, the price action in the range could be treated as consolidation of the uptrend from 1.6252, one more rise towards 1.7000 is still possible after consolidation. On the downside, a breakdown below 1.6582 support will signal completion of the uptrend, then deeper decline to 1.6400 area could be seen.

gbpusd

Provided by ForexCycle.com

These Government Numbers Are Good News for Stocks…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

More people are joining our bull market bandwagon.

That means a time will come when we have to jump off…but not yet.

Those commentators in the mainstream that are jumping on our bull market bandwagon are a weak-willed lot.

They jump on, but on the slightest bit of bad news they flee the scene and head back to their hovels.

We’ll only jump off the bandwagon when it’s full of mainstream analysts who think nothing could ever go wrong again.

But based on what we’ve seen so far, that could be a long time coming…

The one thing you must know about Money Morning is that we don’t pretend to be a god.

We don’t claim to have 100% foresight on how everything will turn out. If we were perfect then all of our Australian Small-Cap Investigator stock picks would be in the money right now.

Instead, of the 32 open recommendations, 23 are up, one is flat, and eight are down. The overall average for the open recommendations is a 20.6% gain.

That’s pretty good in a market where a bunch of folks say it’s impossible to make money…but it’s not perfect.

Good Investing Doesn’t Mean Perfection

But that’s the thing with stock investing. You don’t have to be perfect.

What you have to do is spot the key trends and then back them. You won’t get this right all the time either. Again, if we did we’d have a 100% winning record in Australian Small-Cap Investigator rather than a 71.9% winning record.

But if you can spot those trends early it’s a great way to get into a potentially booming market before the rest of the crowd joins the party.

That’s something we did to good effect with dividend stocks in 2012, and tech and biotech stocks in 2013. But you shouldn’t think those were the only sectors we looked at.

One of our best performing Australian Small-Cap Investigator stock tips over the past two years is a company most investors had given up for dead by the time we tipped it in November 2012.

Today it’s up 143.4%.

There have been many other success stories. And it’s all thanks to looking for the big trends. The trend in that instance was low interest rates and the demand by investors for higher risk assets – stocks.

Government Numbers Back Our Stock Growth Forecast

But that’s not the only impact of interest rates. And it’s not the only driver of stock prices.

As the Financial Times reports:

Australia’s trade surplus has sky-rocketed to A$1.43bn, hugely ahead of market expectations and its highest since September 2011, thanks to an increase in exports.

Economists had forecast a skinny surplus of A$100m in January, partly because of a fall in the iron ore price that month.

It just goes to show how tricky it is to predict the future. Economists got their numbers wrong by $1.33 billion.

We don’t know why they bother making those kinds of micro-predictions. They’re too hard to get right. That’s why we stick to the bigger trends and then assess the impact on individual sectors and companies.

Our view has been (and still is) that the world economy would grow due to ongoing low interest rates worldwide, and the huge growth from China as its economy doubles over the next nine years.
And that wasn’t the only good news for the Aussie economy. Again, you can thank low interest rates. Still with the Financial Times:

Australian retail sales surged in the first month of 2014, indicating economic momentum continued into the new year after a better-than-anticipated fourth quarter. Retail sales soared 1.2 per cent in January, a ninth consecutive month of gains and the best reading in 11 months.

But how is this possible when the unemployment rate is edging up and consumer confidence is so low?

Rich Retailer Versus Poor Retailer

The answer is quite simple. It’s the story that played out in the US markets over the past few years. We can best show you with two charts of select US retailers.

First, a chart showing high end retailers Ralph Lauren Corp [NYSE:RL], Tiffany & Co [NYSE:TIF], and Nordstrom Inc. [NYSE:JWN]:


Ralph Lauren – green; Nordstrom – red; Tiffany – blue
Source: Google Finance

Click to enlarge

Those three stocks have gained an average of 366% over the past five years.

Now a chart of lower end retailers JC Penney Company Inc. [NYSE:JCP], Kohl’s Corporation [NYSE:KSS], and Sears Holdings [NASDAQ:SHLD]:


Kohl’s – green; Sears – yellow; JC Penney – blue
Source: Google Finance

Click to enlarge

Those three stocks have an average gain of just 10.7%.

We’ve picked those three stocks at random. There may be cases where higher end retailers have done poorly while lower end retailers have done well.

But the overall trend matches other evidence and anecdotal evidence that those in higher income white collar jobs have had a better time of things over the past five years than those in lower income blue collar jobs.

House Prices and Stock Prices Rise

The latest Aussie retail sales perhaps suggest that the local market is following the same trend.

Those with money and a secure future can afford to spend. Those at the other end of the scale – not so much.

Further proof of this is in the latest housing numbers. According to RP Data, Sydney house prices have gained 14.6% over the past 12 months.

House prices can only go up that much if there’s hot money flowing into the market and if interest rates are at rock bottom levels.

In short, this is great news for our forecast of the Aussie market hitting 7,000 points early next year and 15,000 points within five years.

That means it’s still not too late for investors to buy into good valued Aussie stocks. But for those investors who had the poise to back stocks two years ago, they’ve already built up good returns.

That’s why it pays to look past the immediate headlines and look at the broader trends. Right now, the trend for stocks is in one direction – up.

Cheers,
Kris+

Special Report: Three Aussie Miners Set to Lead the Resource Sector’s Epic Comeback

Join Money Morning on Google+


By MoneyMorning.com.au

Zimtu Capital Analyst Says All Roads Lead to the Athabasca Basin

Source: Tom Armistead of The Energy Report  (3/6/14)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/zimtu-capital-analyst-says-all-roads-lead-to-the-athabasca-basin

 To the World Nuclear Association, 2% uranium ore is high grade. At 14%, 16% and even 20% uranium, the grades in the Athabasca Basin are astounding analysts and investors around the world. Derek Hamill, Zimtu Capital Corp.’s new head of research, tells The Energy Report about where the investment dollars are moving in the Athabasca Basin, and what areas and companies are worth watching going forward.   

 The Energy Report: Derek, thank you for joining us. Why is the Athabasca Basin generally described as the most prolific uranium source in the world?

 Derek Hamill: There are a few factors that make the Athabasca Basin region of Saskatchewan and Alberta the best place to look for, and mine, uranium. Grade is the number-one factor. The average grades for a few of the bigger deposits in the Basin are above 15% U3O8, whereas the world average is far below 2% U3O8. The next important factor is that Saskatchewan is a great place to build a mine, and has been since the 1950s. There is all the necessary infrastructure (roads, power, mills) in most of the region. The western region of the Basin, including Fission Uranium Corp.’s (FCU:TSX.V) Patterson Lake South (PLS) project, does not have existing power or operating mills. But given how this deposit and potentially others are developing, it’s just a matter of time.

 TER: What are the shortcomings of the Athabasca Basin compared to other uranium-producing basins?

 DH: Infrastructure is a major factor that influences the economics of a potential mine. In the last few decades, the exploration in the western section of the Athabasca Basin has been markedly quiet compared to the east, where Cigar Lake, McArthur River and other mines and mills are located. The PLS area is relatively remote compared to the eastern section of the Basin. Additional exploration in the region will likely prove up another deposit, so over time the western side will build comparable infrastructure. However, there will need to be material investment to develop the necessary infrastructure in the western areas of the Basin.

 

Another shortcoming of some deposits in the western region is the depth. The Cigar Lake mine illustrates this point quite well. The deposit is located between 410–450 meters (410–450m) below the surface, far too deep for cheaper open-pit mining, and the entire deposit needs to be frozen in order to prevent flooding. In 2006, a breach of this freezing technology caused significant delays. The project had an original start-up date of 2007, and is now expected to be producing by the end of Q2/14. Keep in mind though that many deposits in the Basin, including the PLS project, are at conventional open-pit mining depths.

 TER: I have seen high praise lavished on Fission’s PLS deposit. What’s the reason for that?

 DH: As mentioned, most of the past exploration and all the production in the Basin comes from the eastern side of the Basin. PLS has brought renewed optimism for exploration in the southwestern areas of the Basin that surround the discovery. Additionally, PLS is close to the surface, meaning open-pit mining of fairly high-grade uranium is an option.

 TER: Is there another deposit in the basin that comes close to PLS?

 DH: Right now in production is McArthur River, and Cigar Lake should start producing this year. Both are operated by Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE). Average grades for both are listed as 14–16%. Once Cigar starts, McArthur and Cigar will be the two largest high-grade uranium mines in the world.

 Cameco is by far the largest producer in the Basin, followed by AREVA SA (AREVA:EPA). Denison Mines Corp. (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT) holds an interest in the McLean Lake mill and in several near-term producing deposits. Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK), which purchased the Roughrider deposit in 2012 from junior Hathor Exploration for $654 million ($654M), appears to be advancing its deposit fairly aggressively. UEX Corp. (UEX:TSX) is also a candidate for near-term production with its Shea Creek and Hidden Bay projects.

 TER: How does grade affect price?

 DH: The major uranium producers, such as Cameco, AREVA and Denison, generally negotiate the price of uranium on long-term contracts. These companies also process all the ore in the three mills situated in the eastern region of the Athabasca Basin. It is not like other commodities, where the final product is sold on a fluid or open market. The producers generally control the mining and milling of the ore into a product called yellowcake, which is about 70% uranium. At this point, the yellowcake is either further refined in Canada or shipped directly to customers in the U.S. or overseas.

 Cameco’s estimated cash costs at Cigar Lake could be somewhere around $18/pound ($18/lb) or less. High-grade ore can help control operating costs. Many uranium analysts believe that a long-term price of $60/lb U3O8 is needed to properly incentivize investment and maintain production for close to one-third of the world’s high cost production. I believe the fact that Paladin Energy Ltd. (PDN:TSX; PDN:ASX) is placing operations at its Kayelekera mine in Malawi on care and maintenance (after continued operating losses) illustrates the material difference in cost structures that exist for producers outside the Basin.

 There are also some external factors. Saskatchewan is a politically friendly, stable environment, with an established regulatory and tax environment. There’s technical expertise in the area as well. Grade is only one factor in the mining and milling economics of a deposit. The less material that you have to physically mine, truck and process, the more lucrative your operation.

 TER: You have reported the average compound annual growth rate of several forecasts of electricity generating capacity from 2010 to 2025 as 2.6% for nuclear and 6.3% for non-hydro renewables. That’s a higher growth rate for renewables than for nuclear. Why is nuclear a better target for investment?

 DH: Nuclear is not necessarily better; there’s actually tremendous room for both. Nuclear reactors can supply consistent electricity generation, night and day, over a long operating life, 40–60 years. The fuel costs represent 10–15% of the total cost of running a nuclear reactor. Even during the uranium price spike in 2007, operating costs for a nuclear reactor in the U.S. did not increase. That’s an attractive property. Of course, nuclear can help reduce CO2 and SO2 emissions, which also makes the technology attractive in places like China, where air quality is an issue.

 Energy Consumption: Nuclear Vs. Wind and Solar
Source: BP Statistical Review 2013

 

The biggest knock against nuclear energy has been the enormous capital costs of building reactors. Westinghouse Electric Co. is designing the AP1000, focused on simplifying the process—passive safety systems, fewer moving parts, etc. Hopefully, this kind of innovation can help control capital costs.

 

In China, nuclear power is growing at a 10-year compound annual growth of about 14.5%, but it still represents only ~2% of the country’s electricity production, so there is tremendous potential for nuclear power as well as renewables.

 

Nuclear Reactors Worldwide


Source: IAEA|PRIS, WNA

TER: Most analysts are expecting the price of uranium eventually to rise from its current low. How will a higher fuel price affect the growth rate of nuclear power generation?

 

DH: I doubt it will. As I said, fuel costs are only 10–15% of the nuclear reactor. The demand from nuclear electricity generation going forward will have a strong influence on uranium pricing, but the price of uranium shouldn’t have a huge influence on the decision whether to build nuclear reactors.

 

I know there’s been a lot of talk of a nuclear renaissance, but it’s complicated. The West, outside of France, hasn’t shown much of a commitment to nuclear energy. In fact, last year the U.S. prematurely closed four reactors. It doesn’t seem like there is much support for the industry. China appears committed, but will take a few years for the country to really become the uranium market mover. In the current environment, I don’t see uranium prices materially increasing. Again, that’s why the Athabasca Basin is an important region.

 

TER: Are Canadian uranium producers seeing any benefit from the termination of the Non-Resident Ownership Policy?

 

DH: Not in particular. I wouldn’t be surprised to see some Chinese utilities invest in the Basin, but I don’t see them becoming mine or mill operators. It would make more sense to partner with a company like Cameco.

 

TER: Is anyone visibly benefiting from the policy change?

 

DH: Companies out of Asia have expressed fairly robust interest in investing in the Athabasca Basin’s uranium exploration. This has more to do with long-term growth in commercial nuclear generating capacity in Asia than with any Canadian policy change.

 

TER: You have a half-dozen uranium companies in the basin under coverage. What are some of their strengths and weakness?

 

DH: Zimtu Capital Corp. (ZC:TSX.V) has equity exposure to several uranium exploration companies, including, most recently, Lakeland Resources Inc. (LK:TSX.V). The major strength we at Zimtu look for as a project generator are the people actively involved in a project.

 

Lakeland Resources is a great case in point. The company has a strong technical team with a clearly defined business strategy, and has added some serious uranium expertise to the advisory board. Lakeland has a large land package, much of which has historic data. Lakeland’s focus has been to enhance this historical data with modern at-surface geological and geophysical techniques before partnering the individual projects for drilling. In this way, the company is able to diversify some of the exploration risk by working on multiple targets at the same time. The large land package also allows Lakeland the freedom to act as a property vendor. If there is a weakness in this strategy, it is that by partnering, Lakeland sacrifices some of the upside in the event of a discovery.

 

NexGen Energy Ltd. (NXE:TSX.V) has benefited from its location near PLS, so it’s an attractive area play. NexGen has also proven to be able to raise capital during tough market conditions. Zimtu is a shareholder of the company.

 

Skyharbour Resources Ltd. (SYH:TSX.V) is part of a syndicate, the Western Athabasca Basin Syndicate, that shares in the costs of exploration. We don’t have any direct exposure to Skyharbour or the syndicate, but it is a different business model that, if done correctly, makes sense. Of course, efficient cooperation among four equal partners may take some work.

 

I’m not a geologist. My background is in finance, so I like to look at many different strategies and promote diversification.

 

TER: You have highlighted a lot of difficult variables in assessing the uranium space. Do you have some parting advice for people who would like to take a look at it?

 

DH: For investment in nuclear, in terms of mining and exploration, it’s a pretty simple strategy. You already know the major producers, such as Cameco and AREVA in Canada. In the U.S., there are a few smaller low-cost operations. So if you are a cautious investor, your money will probably be best with current producers. Next you have the near-term producers of which there are only a handful. Then there are the junior miners in Canada. Those that are in the Athabasca Basin hold a lottery ticket to a monster deposit. Hathor Exploration is an excellent example of a company that in 2006 had a market cap of about $6M, discovered the world-class Roughrider deposit in 2008, and was bought by Rio Tinto in 2012 for $654M. You need to look for a junior with a good portfolio of projects and the right people in order to make a discovery. I would caution people looking at uranium exploration companies to try to diversify. The Athabasca Basin is a low-cost producer. So if the uranium price remains under distress, the Basin should attract both domestic and foreign exploration dollars.

 

TER: Thank you, Derek.

 

DH: Thanks, Tom.

 

Derek Hamill completed his Master of Financial Analysis and Professional Accounting at La Trobe University, a leading Australian academic institution, and holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Calgary. Between degrees, Hamill worked for several years as an investment executive for ScotiaMcLeod, a leading Canadian wealth-management firm. As the newly established head of research for Zimtu Capital, Hamill provides long-term outlooks for various commodities and updates on key internal portfolio holdings. He has access to an impressive array of experienced and knowledgeable industry professionals who are associated with the Zimtu family. Zimtu’s circle of industry contacts includes all aspects of the mineral exploration and development process, from first acquisition of mineral claims to the cutting of the ribbon at mine opening.

 

Want to read more Energy 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) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for The Energy Report and provides services to The Energy Report as an independent contractor. He or his family owns shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Fission Uranium Corp., UEX Corp. and Zimtu Capital Corp. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Derek Hamill: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 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: Zimtu Capital has a financial relationship with both Lakeland Resources and NexGen Energy. To my knowledge we have no relationship with Skyharbour. 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.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

 

Streetwise – The Energy Report is Copyright © 2014 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part.

 

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

 

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

 

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Energy Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

 

101 Second St., Suite 110
Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8204
Fax: (707) 981-8998
Email: [email protected]