Crude Oil Speculators added to bullish positions for 5th straight week

By CountingPips.com

Weekly CFTC Net Speculator Report

Crude

CRUDE OIL: Large futures market traders and speculators slightly increased their overall bullish bets in crude oil futures for a fifth straight week and to the highest level since March 4th last week, according to the latest Commitment of Traders (COT) data released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on Friday.

The non-commercial contracts of crude oil futures, primarily traded by large speculators and hedge funds, totaled a net position of +410,125 contracts in the data reported for April 22nd. This was a change of just +574 contracts for the week. The previous week had seen a total of +409,551 net contracts in the data through April 15th.

The total level of +410,125 bullish positions brings crude oil positions to the highest standing since March 4th when total net positions reached +425,818 contracts.

Over the weekly reporting time-frame, from Tuesday April 15th to Tuesday April 22nd, the crude oil price declined from $103.78 to $101.92 per barrel, according to Nymex futures price data from investing.com. Brent crude prices, meanwhile, edged up from $109.20 to $109.44 per barrel from Tuesday April 15th to Tuesday April 22nd, also according to prices from investing.com.

Last 6 Weeks of Large Trader Non-Commercial Positions

DateOpen InterestLong SpecsShort SpecsNet Non-CommercialsWeekly ChangeOil Price
03/18/20141623266492620108335384285-2254798.88
03/25/20141604566498080106906391174688999.19
04/01/2014164450750238911060639178360999.61
04/08/201416554725120351122483997878004102.33
04/15/201416742765234901139394095519764103.78
04/22/20141619737517023106898410125574101.92

*COT Report: The weekly commitment of traders report summarizes the total trader positions for open contracts in the futures trading markets. The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators). Find CFTC criteria here: (http://www.cftc.gov/MarketReports/CommitmentsofTraders/ExplanatoryNotes/index.htm).

Article by CountingPips.comForex Trading News

 

 

 

Inside Story: What It Means When the DJIA Goes Post-Industrial

By Elliott Wave International

Every time you use a new app on your smartphone, you may utter a silent prayer of gratitude for living in a post-industrial age. No more back-breaking heavy labor. Now, it’s all about technology and brain power.

But what does it mean when the Dow Jones Industrial Average enters the post-Industrial Average age? Here’s a hint from The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast that was published last October:

The Dow Jones Post-Industrial Average
Changes in the components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average don’t always come at stock tops, but they do sometimes. And when they do, the nature of the change tends to say a lot about the decline that is about to unfold. Intel and Microsoft, for instance, were added to the Dow in November 1999, a few months before the technology bubble burst in March 2000. In February 2008, four months after the Dow’s October 2007 top, Bank of America was added to the index, just as the banking calamity started to unfold. On September 10, 2013, Bank of America, Hewlett-Packard and Alcoa were replaced by Goldman Sachs, Visa and Nike. We think the timing will prove prescient again… .

Why? Get the inside scoop on what kind of leadership the financial, consumer debt and fitness sectors will provide now that they have taken their place in the DJIA by reading The State of the U.S. Markets – 2014 Edition. This 24-page report brings you all the in-depth and behind-the-scenes news that you need to protect yourself from complacency about financial markets, once you see more clearly how they are over-reaching now.

Start reading The State of the U.S. Markets – 2014 Edition from Elliott Wave International for free now.

 


Thoughts from the Frontline: The Cost of Code Red

By John Mauldin

(It is especially important to read the opening quotes this week. They set up the theme in the proper context.)

 “There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”

– Ludwig von Mises

“No very deep knowledge of economics is usually needed for grasping the immediate effects of a measure; but the task of economics is to foretell the remoter effects, and so to allow us to avoid such acts as attempt to remedy a present ill by sowing the seeds of a much greater ill for the future.”

– Ludwig von Mises

“[Central banks are at] serious risk of exhausting the policy room for manoeuver over time.”

– Jaime Caruana, General Manager of the Bank for International Settlements

“The gap between the models in the world of monetary policymaking is now wider than at any time since the 1930s.”

– Benjamin Friedman, William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy, Harvard

To listen to most of the heads of the world’s central banks, things are going along swimmingly. The dogmatic majority exude a great deal of confidence in their ability to manage their economies through whatever crisis may present itself. (Raghuram Rajan, the sober-minded head of the Reserve Bank of India, is a notable exception.)

However, there is reason to believe that there have been major policy mistakes made by central banks – and will be more of them – that will lead to dislocations in the markets – all types of markets. And it’s not just the usual anti-central bank curmudgeon types (among whose number I have been counted, quite justifiably) who are worried. Sources within the central bank community are worried, too, which should give thoughtful observers of the market cause for concern.

Too often we as investors (and economists) are like the generals who are always fighting the last war. We look at bank balance sheets (except those of Europe and China), corporate balance sheets, sovereign bond spreads and yields, and say it isn’t likely that we will repeat this mistakes which led to 2008. And I smile and say, “You are absolutely right; we are not going to repeat those mistakes. We learned our lessons. Now we are going to make entirely new mistakes.” And while the root cause of the problems, then and now, may be the same – central bank policy – the outcome will be somewhat different. But a crisis by any other name will still be uncomfortable.

If you look at some of the recent statements from the Bank for International Settlements, you should come away with a view much more cautious than the optimistic one that is bandied about in the media today. In fact, to listen to the former chief economist of the BIS, we should all be quite worried.

I am of course referring to Bill White, who is one of my personal intellectual heroes. I hope to get to meet him someday. We have discussed some of his other papers, written in conjunction with the Dallas Federal Reserve, in past letters. He was clearly warning about imbalances and potential bubbles in 2007 and has generally been one of the most prescient observers of the global economy. The prestigious Swiss business newspaper Finanz und Wirtschaft did a far-reaching interview with him a few weeks ago, and I’ve taken the liberty to excerpt pieces that I think are very important. The excerpts run a few pages, but this is really essential reading. (The article is by Mehr zum Thema, and you can read the full piece here.)

Speculative Bubbles

The headline for the interview is “I see speculative bubbles like in 2007.” As the interviewer rolls out the key questions, White warns of grave adverse effects of ultra-loose monetary policy:

William White is worried. The former chief economist of the Bank for International Settlements is highly skeptical of the ultra-loose monetary policy that most central banks are still pursuing. “It all feels like 2007, with equity markets overvalued and spreads in the bond markets extremely thin,” he warns.

Mr. White, all the major central banks have been running expansive monetary policies for more than five years now. Have you ever experienced anything like this?

The honest truth is no one has ever seen anything like this. Not even during the Great Depression in the Thirties has monetary policy been this loose. And if you look at the details of what these central banks are doing, it’s all very experimental. They are making it up as they go along. I am very worried about any kind of policies that have that nature.

But didn’t the extreme circumstances after the collapse of Lehman Brothers warrant these extreme measures?

Yes, absolutely. After Lehman, many markets just seized up. Central bankers rightly tried to maintain the basic functioning of the system. That was good crisis management. But in my career I have always distinguished between crisis prevention, crisis management, and crisis resolution. Today, the Fed still acts as if it was in crisis management. But we’re six years past that. They are essentially doing more than what they did right in the beginning. There is something fundamentally wrong with that. Plus, the Fed has moved to a completely different motivation. From the attempt to get the markets going again, they suddenly and explicitly started to inflate asset prices again. The aim is to make people feel richer, make them spend more, and have it all trickle down to get the economy going again. Frankly, I don’t think it works, and I think this is extremely dangerous.

So, the first quantitative easing in November 2008 was warranted?

Absolutely.

But they should have stopped these kinds of policies long ago?

Yes. But here’s the problem. When you talk about crisis resolution, it’s about attacking the fundamental problems that got you into the trouble in the first place. And the fundamental problem we are still facing is excessive debt. Not excessive public debt, mind you, but excessive debt in the private and public sectors. To resolve that, you need restructurings and write-offs. That’s government policy, not central bank policy. Central banks can’t rescue insolvent institutions. All around the western world, and I include Japan, governments have resolutely failed to see that they bear the responsibility to deal with the underlying problems. With the ultraloose monetary policy, governments have no incentive to act. But if we don’t deal with this now, we will be in worse shape than before.

But wouldn’t large-scale debt write-offs hurt the banking sector again?

Absolutely. But you see, we have a lot of zombie companies and banks out there. That’s a particular worry in Europe, where the banking sector is just a continuous story of denial, denial and denial. With interest rates so low, banks just keep ever-greening everything, pretending all the money is still there. But the more you do that, the more you keep the zombies alive, they pull down the healthy parts of the economy. When you have made bad investments, and the money is gone, it’s much better to write it off and get fifty percent than to pretend it’s still there and end up getting nothing. So yes, we need more debt reduction and more recapitalization of the banking system. This is called facing up to reality.

Where do you see the most acute negative effects of this monetary policy?

The first thing I would worry about are asset prices. Every asset price you could think of is in very odd territory. Equity prices are extremely high if you at valuation measures such as Tobin’s Q or a Shiller-type normalized P/E. Risk-free bond rates are at enormously low levels, spreads are very low, you have all these funny things like covenant-lite loans again. It all looks and feels like 2007. And frankly, I think it’s worse than 2007, because then it was a problem of the developed economies. But in the past five years, all the emerging economies have imported our ultra-low policy rates and have seen their debt levels rise. The emerging economies have morphed from being a part of the solution to being a part of the problem.

Do you see outright bubbles in financial markets?

Yes, I do. Investors try to attribute the rising stock markets to good fundamentals. But I don’t buy that. People are caught up in the momentum of all the liquidity that is provided by the central banks. This is a liquidity-driven thing, not based on fundamentals.

So are we mostly seeing what the Fed has been doing since 1987 – provide liquidity and pump markets up again?

Absolutely. We just saw the last chapter of that long history. This is the last of a whole series of bubbles that have been blown. In the past, monetary policy has always succeeded in pulling up the economy. But each time, the Fed had to act more vigorously to achieve its results. So, logically, at a certain point, it won’t work anymore. Then we’ll be in big trouble. And we will have wasted many years in which we could have been following better policies that would have maintained growth in much more sustainable ways. Now, to make you feel better, I said the same in 1998, and I was way too early.

What about the moral hazard of all this?

The fact of the matter is that if you have had 25 years of central bank and government bailout whenever there was a problem, and the bankers come to appreciate that fact, then we are back in a world where the banks get all the profits, while the government socializes all the losses. Then it just gets worse and worse. So, in terms of curbing the financial system, my own sense is that all of the stuff that has been done until now, while very useful, Basel III and all that, is not going to be sufficient to deal with the moral hazard problem. I would have liked to see a return to limited banking, a return to private ownership, a return to people going to prison when they do bad things. Moral hazard is a real issue.

Do you have any indication that the Yellen Fed will be different than the Greenspan and Bernanke Fed?

Not really. The one person in the FOMC that was kicking up a real fuss about asset bubbles was Governor Jeremy Stein. Unfortunately, he has gone back to Harvard.

The markets seem to assume that the tapering will run very smoothly, though. Volatility, as measured by the Vix index, is low.

Don’t forget that the Vix was at [a] record low in 2007. All that liquidity raises the asset prices and lowers the cost of insurance. I see at least three possible scenarios how this will all work out. One is: Maybe all this monetary stuff will work perfectly. I don’t think this is likely, but I could be wrong. I have been wrong so many times before. So if it works, the long bond rates can go up slowly and smoothly, and the financial system will adapt nicely. But even against the backdrop of strengthening growth, we could still see a disorderly reaction in financial markets, which would then feed back to destroy the economic recovery.

How?

We are such a long way away from normal long-term interest rates. Normal would be perhaps around four percent. Markets have a tendency to rush to the end point immediately. They overshoot. Keynes said in late Thirties that the long bond market could fluctuate at the wrong levels for decades. If fears of inflation suddenly re-appear, this can move interest rates quickly. Plus, there are other possible accidents. What about the fact that maybe most of the collateral you need for normal trading is all tied up now? What about the fact that the big investment dealers have got inventories that are 20 percent of what they were in 2007? When things start to move, the inventory for the market makers might not be there. That’s a particular worry in fields like corporate bonds, which can be quite illiquid to begin with. I’ve met so many people who are in the markets, thinking they are absolutely brilliantly smart, thinking they can get out in the right time. The problem is, they all think that. And when everyone races for the exit at the same time, we will have big problems. I’m not saying all of this will happen, but reasonable people should think about what could go wrong, even against a backdrop of faster growth.

And what is the third scenario?

The strengthening growth might be a mirage. And if it does not materialize, all those elevated prices will be way out of line of fundamentals.

Which of the major central banks runs the highest risk of something going seriously wrong?

At the moment what I am most worried about is Japan. I know there is an expression that the Japanese bond market is called the widowmaker. People have bet against it and lost money. The reason I worry now is that they are much further down the line even than the Americans. What is Abenomics really? As far as I see it, they print the money and tell people that there will be high inflation. But I don’t think it will work. The Japanese consumer will say prices are going up, but my wages won’t. Because they haven’t for years. So I am confronted with a real wage loss, and I have to hunker down. At the same time, financial markets might suddenly not want to hold Japanese Government Bonds anymore with a perspective of 2 percent inflation. This will end up being a double whammy, and Japan will just drop back into deflation. And now happens what Professor Peter Bernholz wrote in his latest book. Now we have a stagnating Japanese economy, tax revenues dropping like a stone, the deficit already at eight percent of GDP, debt at more than 200 percent and counting. I have no difficulty in seeing this thing tipping overnight into hyperinflation. If you go back into history, a lot of hyperinflations started with deflation.

Many people have warned of inflation in the past five years, but nothing has materialized. Isn’t the fear of inflation simply overblown?

One reason we don’t see inflation is because monetary policy is not working. The signals are not getting through. Consumers and corporates are not responding to the signals. We still have a disinflationary gap. There has been a huge increase in base money, but it has not translated into an increase in broader aggregates. And in Europe, the money supply is still shrinking. My worry is that at some point, people will look at this situation and lose confidence that stability will be maintained. If they do and they do start to fear inflation, that change in expectations can have very rapid effects.

To continue reading this article from Thoughts from the Frontline – a free weekly publication by John Mauldin, renowned financial expert, best-selling author, and Chairman of Mauldin Economics – please click here.

 

Gold Bounces Back Above $1,300 as Ukraine Crisis Escalates

By Jason Hamlin, GoldStockBull.com

John Kerry and other U.S. officials and once again banging the war drums. In the most recent comments, Kerry said that the United States is “ready to act against Russia.” The truth is that the U.S. has been acting against Russia for quite some time in various ways. The implication here is that the U.S. government is now ready to act militarily, however subtly it may have been stated. To get an idea of just how quickly the conflict has been escalating, here are some of the headlines from the past week alone:

On the positive side of things, Obama says: “I would ‘absolutely’ save Putin from drowning.” Good to know, but you might want to put a leash on your overly zealous secretary of state that is threatening military action against a nuclear-armed Russia. Otherwise, we may all face the possibility of drowning in a sea of radiation.

obama-putin-economic_warfareThere is no justification for the United States to be interfering in the internal affairs of Ukraine or Russia. We are antagonizing a nation with a formidable military and newfound wealth via growing energy exports. Digging deeper, it seems clear that the U.S. involvement is nothing more than geopolitical positioning and a desperate attempt to save the world reserve petrodollar.

Russia, China and other BRICS have been moving to abandon the dollar in international trade. There are plans for a massive $30 billion oil pipeline from Russia through China to India that could shift the geopolitical balance of power in the world.

Back in the U.S., Treasury bond auctions are failing to attract foreign buyers, leaving the FED as the buyer of last resort. Put in laymen’s terms, nobody want to buy U.S. debt anymore and the financially insolvent government must now rely upon debt monetization by the Federal Reserve in order to continue functioning. In essence, they are stealing wealth from dollar holders around the globe in order to continue with an insanely-bloated military budget and kickbacks for their political donors.

There isn’t too much that U.S. citizens can do about this theft, other than buying gold to protect from inflation or renouncing their citizenship and moving abroad. But sovereign nations around the globe are no longer putting up with it. They are publicly discussing dumping their U.S. debt and dollar holdings in favor of gold, amongst other assets. They are also trading in local currencies, decreasing the global demand for Federal Reserve notes.

The U.S. may have been able to squash this threat to the petrodollar’s reserve status by attacking Iraq and Libya when they started trading oil outside of the dollar or discussing a gold-backed currency. But there are limits to the military dominance of the United States and chicken-hawk politicians are now finding this out via the confrontation with Russia. Bullying tactics will also not work on China or a growing list of other nations that are no longer willing to cowtow to U.S. military might.

Further damaging the standing of the United States in the eyes of the world were the revelations of the NSA spying scandal by Edward Snowden. Apparently, even allies have a limited tolerance when their personal phone conversations are being recorded by U.S. government agencies. Once the envy of the world, there is now a growing perception of the U.S. as a bullying, hypocritical superpower skirting international law and order for their own benefit. Unfortunately, this criminal element within the U.S. government appears to be increasingly desperate to hold onto their power and willing to risk war with nuclear-armed nations in order to keep the banking system afloat and the benefits of being able to print the world reserve currency intact.

Anyone studying international politics or contemplating how to best allocate assets has to consider just how serious the implications would be if the rest of world stopped using dollars and stopped buying U.S. debt. In the short-term, how will the dollar and stock market react to an escalation of the conflict between the United Stats and Russia?

Nuclear deterrence worked well during the Cold War for fear of mutually-assured destruction. Has anything changed? Would the U.S. really launch a military attack against Russia? Could a minor miscommunication, rogue agent or unforseen accident plunge the human race into another world war? Would both sides restrain from using nuclear weapons?

In addition to a series of toothless sanctions, the rating agency S&P downgraded Russia to just above junk status this week. In response, Russia has proposed what amounts to all-out economic warfare against NATO countries. ZeroHedge reports:

Ahead of yet another round of western sanctions which appears imminent unless Obama is to look even more powerless than he currently is (granted, a difficult achievement), Russian presidential adviser Sergei Glazyev proposed plan of 15 measures to protect country’s economy if sanctions applied, Vedomosti newspaper reports, citing Glazyev’s letter to Finance Ministry. According to Vedomosti as Bloomberg reported, Glazyev proposed:

  • Russia should withdraw all assets, accounts in dollars, euros from NATO countries to neutral ones
  • Russia should start selling NATO member sovereign bonds before Russia’s foreign-currency accounts are frozen
  • Central bank should reduce dollar assets, sell sovereign bonds of countries that support sanctions
  • Russia should limit commercial banks’ FX assets to prevent speculation on ruble, capital outflows
  • Central bank should increase money supply so that state cos., banks may refinance foreign loans
  • Russia should use national currencies in trade with customs Union members, other non-dollar, non-euro partners

Whether the conflict escalates solely via economic means or turns into physical warfare, investors are likely to flee to safe-haven assets such as precious metals. Gold and silver prices have been very volatile thus far in 2014. After an initial rally from $1,200 to around $1,400, gold has since given back half of the gain. The metal was slammed down yesterday to $1,270 briefly, but quickly bounced back above $1,300. There appears to be strong buying support around $1,300 and I continue to believe that gold has plenty of upside remaining.

gold chart

The silver slamdown and recovery was even more pronounced, with the price dipping below $19 before recovering back towards $20.

silver-1

The longer-term chart remains bullish for silver as support at $19 has held on four occasions in the past year. The price is below the key moving averages, but a general trend of higher lows has been established and the RSI is pointing higher with plenty of room to run. This appears to be an excellent entry point for long-term investors.

silver chart

Lastly, gold mining stocks remain severely oversold and undervalued relative to the metal. After a bounce in early 2014, the HUI/Gold ratio is back to 0.17. This represents how much gold you could buy with one unit of the HUI Gold Bugs Mining Stock Index and the ratio is roughly half of the average level seen since the start of the gold bull market in 2001.

HUI Gold

In other words, there appears to be significant upside potential in gold stocks with limited downside risk at current prices. With several mining companies suspending operations due to the low gold prices, supplies should drop and force prices higher over the next few years.

In my view, precious metals appear to be one of the only asset classes that is not currently overvalued. Stocks, real estate, bonds and just about every other asset class looks to be in bubble territory by most measurements.

By contrast, quality mining stocks with low costs, high growth profiles, strong management and stable political jurisdictions look incredibly undervalued. They are trading at a fraction of their previous highs and at their lowest levels relative to gold since the start of this bull market. Even a moderate rise in the prices of gold and silver should send many of these stocks soaring. If the crisis in Ukraine continues on the current path of escalation, we are likely to see continued weakness in the stock market and much higher prices for gold, silver and the companies that mine these metals.

I am hopeful that cooler heads will prevail and a military conflict with Russia will be avoided. However, I believe it makes sense to hope for the best and prepare for the worst. And regardless of what happens in the current conflict over Ukraine, the fundamentals for gold and silver remain bullish. Increasing debt levels, runaway spending, money printing, quantitative easing, growing demand from China and several other factors are likely to push prices much higher in the coming years.

Newsletter_Cover_Small_3DIf you would like to view the Gold Stock Bull portfolio, see our top stock picks, receive the monthly newsletter and get email updates whenever we are buying or selling, click here to sign up for the premium membership.

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Article By Jason Hamlin, GoldStockBull.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investing in Technology — The Cheat’s Guide

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You’ve been reading the paper online.

And you’ve just started shopping online.

Like it or lump it, the only photos your adult children show you are the ones they post on social media platforms. They’d never think of printing them out for you to stick on your fridge.

And you suspect your six year old grandkid is a genius because they just debugged your computer for you.

Technology is everywhere.

Perhaps up until now you’ve been reluctant to invest in it.

After all, in Australian there are limited technology stocks to choose from

Pure tech or internet companies are hard to come by.

I mean, there are established internet businesses you can invest in like Seek Ltd [ASX:SEK ] or carsales.com Limited[ASX: CRZ]. Even the newcomer to the tech sector Freelancer Limited [ASX:FLN] could be an option.

Aside from those, technology investment opportunities in Oz are far and few between.

This means, if you’re keen to invest in tech firms, you really need to look at the American market.

But this poses its own problems.

Technology stocks in the US are far more volatile than Australian companies. This means as an investor, you need to be prepared for more risk.

And even then, what companies do you start with?

There are mature tech stocks like Microsoft [NASDAQ:MFST], Cisco [NASDAQ:CSCO] or IBM [NYSE:IBM]. Or social media stocks like Facebook [NASDAQ:FB] and Twitter [NYSETWTR].

And who wouldn’t want a few Apple [NASDAQ:APPL] or Google [NASDAQ: GOOGL] shares in their portfolio?

The thing is, many tech firms in America are very expensive. And because of restrictions on international broking accounts, you may have to use a larger amount of capital for one trade. Essentially leaving less to spend elsewhere.

However if you do want to invest in tech stocks, perhaps you should consider investing in a technology exchange traded fund (ETF) in the US. Some of which pay a dividend…

The advantage of investing in an ETF is it gives you exposure to companies you might not normally have thought of buying before.

Look at it this way.

By choosing a few ETFs you can easily gain exposure to not only the old-school stocks of technology like Microsoft, Intel, Cisco…but also access the social media craze without making a speculative punt.

Let’s have a look at your options.

But first, let me remind you that any investment in American ETFs will expose you to currency fluctuations in the Aussie dollar. This adds to your risk, and will affect your profits or losses, depending on whether the exchange rate moves against you or in your favour.

The four I’ve picked to show you today offer exposure to a variety of tech stocks.

Let’s start with the ETF that offers a good base of technology shares.

The First Trust Exchange Traded Fd VI [NASDAQ: TDIV], includes some of the biggest and most stable technology companies in America. The top three company heavy weights are IBM, Cisco and Apple. The next big three companies are Qualcomm [NASDQ:QCOM], Oracle [NYSE:ORCL] and Hewlett Packard [NYSE:HPQ].

Out of all of the technology driven ETFs, this is the least volatile. And it pays a 2.40% dividend. The TDIVs main focus is the captains of the US tech industry, and it has a minimal exposure to micro tech stocks.

Next to consider is the Technology SPDR [NYSE:XLK]. This one is about as volatile as the TDIV, and pays a slightly lower dividend of 1.80%

However, over 30% of the ETF is dedicated to Google, Apple and Microsoft. Basically, if you want access to Apple and Google stocks without forking over an entire pay cheque to end up with just two shares, this might be the ETF for you.

While investing in the pillars of the US tech industry is tempting, it’s hard to ignore the riskier, but potentially more profitable social media companies.

If you don’t mind having your heart in your throat every time the US market trades, there’s the Global X Funds Social Media ETF [NASDAQ: SOCL].

All of the social media giants are here. Facebook, Linked In [NYSE:LNKD], Yelp [NYSE:YELP], Google, and Twitter are all in top ten constituents of this ETF.

An added bonus is that half of the ETF is based on American social media companies, and the other social media firms come from Europe, Japan and China. Meaning your exposure isn’t limited to the American market.

But fair warning — this is a volatile ETF. It has outperformed the other ETFs I’ve mentioned today, but that performance comes with higher risk. So far this year, SOCL is down 9%. But in the previous 12 months it rallied a massive 38%.

Finally, there’s also a way you can ride the current enthusiasm behind cloud technology. In fact, I’ve declared it’s the ‘year of the cloud’ in America because of the nine cloud-based companies debuting on the market this year.

So if you want exposure to the cloud computing industry, perhaps look at the First Trust Exchange-Traded Fund II [NASDAQ:SKYY].

Aside from Facebook featuring in the top ten, the companies with the biggest weightings in this ETF aren’t well-known in Australia.

But that’s okay. They’re all big names in the US global cloud computing industry.

Now one of the advantages with ETFs is their constituents are reviewed quarterly. This means some of the companies with an IPO this year may end up getting a look in.

As you can see, all four of the ETFs I’ve discussed today have outperformed the S&P/ASX200 in the past year.

ETF’s TDIV, XLK, SOCL and SKYY Out-perform ASX200

Source: Google


I’ve only mentioned four today, but overall there are 42 tech ETFs to choose from in the US market.

And unlike some of the individual companies I’ve covered today, these tech ETFs are trading between US$15–$36. This makes them a far more affordable option than say Apple or Google on their own.

So which is the ETF for you? Well that all depends on the risk you’re willing to take. XLK and TDIV are the more stable of the four, as they are made up of tech giants that form the foundation of the US tech industry. Plus they offer an income stream through their dividends.

The SOCL and SKYY ETFs are weighted towards the new, riskier firms in the tech sector. There’s no income, but these are the new companies that are shaping the future of the internet and technology. They’re the second generation of tech stocks. And if you can stomach the risk, they have the potential to hand you much bigger gains.

Shae Smith,
Editor, Money Weekend

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Colombia raises rate 25 bps to avoid sharp hikes later

By CentralBankNews.info
    Colombia’s central bank raised its benchmark intervention rate by 25 basis points to 3.50 percent in what the central bank described as a “prudent” move to pull back on its expansionary policy now to avoid a sharper tightening of monetary policy in the future.
    The rate rise by the Central Bank of Colombia was not widely expected by financial markets and the bank said future policy decisions would depend on new information.
    But given the long time it takes for monetary policy decisions to affect inflation and growth, the central bank said its “board considered it prudent to increase the intervention rate by 25 basis points.”
     Colombia’s central bank had held rates steady since April 2013 after cutting them by 100 basis points in the first quarter of last year.
    “The (central bank’s) board considers that the current macroeconomic stability and the convergence of inflation towards the long term goal support a current position of a slightly less expansionary monetary policy,” the bank said, adding that a “gradual and timely” adjustment of its policy would reduce the need for sharp adjustments in the future and ensure macroeconomic stability.

    Improving growth and rising inflation had led most economists to first expect a rate rise in the coming months.
    Colombia’s headline inflation rate rose to 2.51 percent in March, the fourth consecutive month of rising consumer prices, and the central bank said the gradual convergence of inflation to its midpoint 3.0 percent target had led to lower real interest rates, with growth in total credit accelerating slightly in March, driven by commercial and mortgage loans.
    The bank added that inflationary expectations still revolve around the 3 percent level.
    Colombia’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 0.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013 from the third quarter for annual growth of 4.9 percent, down from 5.4 percent.
   Last year, Colombia’s economy expanded by 4.3 percent, up from 4.0 percent in 2012, and in March  the central bank forecast growth this year between 3.3 percent and 5.3 percent, with 4.3 percent the more likely outcome.
    “The macroeconomic forecast indicates that domestic demand will continue to grow steadily and the economy will approach full use of its production capacity in 2014,” the bank said.
    Capital inflow to Colombia has been improving recently, in line with a general decline of risk premiums of several emerging economies, which has led to an appreciation of currencies against the U.S. dollar, the bank said.
    Last week Colombia’s finance minister, Mauricio Cardenas, said the central bank had been speeding up its dollar purchases due to the rising peso.
    In March the central bank extended its dollar-buying program for the second quarter by up to $1 billion. The central bank has been intervening in foreign exchange markets for more than two years to keep down the peso and aid its export industry.
    The peso depreciated gradually through 2013 and fell sharply from mid-January through mid-March. Since then it has rebounded, but is still down 0.7 percent this year, trading at 1943.4 to the U.S. dollar today.

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CAD/JPY Takes a Stroll Outside The Range

Technical Sentiment: Bearish

Key Takeaways
• CAD/JPY range broke towards the downside;
• Immediate support is located at 92.25;
• Gloves come off below 92.25 where volatility will inevitably increase.
On 14th April CAD/JPY completed a 61.8% Fibonacci Retracement for March-April bullish swing. The technical bounce was short lived however, and the pair entered a perfect range between 92.57 and 93.27, with multiple confirmations for both levels. The potential of the range break-out may be severely limited by April’s Low.

Technical Analysis

Usually, a perfect range formation should not be taken too lightly, especially when price finally breaks outside its boundaries. Yet when all things are considered, CAD/JPY bearish break-out should be treated with extreme caution, as traders may be looking to test the 92.25 support before launching back up.

Price crossed below the 50-Day Moving Average and the 200 Simple Moving Average on the 4H. The real confirmation for a bearish continuation will come on a break and consolidation below 92.25, 61.8% Fibonacci Retracement and April’s Low. This would open the way lower, towards 91.20 and ultimately 90.64.

Stochastic is entering oversold territory on 1H, 4H and Daily. A second Fibonacci bounce at 92.25, preferably coupled with bullish price action signals, would immediately bring back the bullish factor and target 93.25 as a result.

Support levels: 92.25; 91.20; 90.64.
Resistance levels: 92.56; 93.25; 93.89; 94.86.

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Prepared by Alexandru Z., Chief Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mexico holds rate, watching inflation expectations, slack

By CentralBankNews.info
    Mexico’s central bank maintained its policy rate at 3.50 percent, as expected, saying it was closely following inflationary expectations, including the slack in the economy, and the effect of this on its monetary stance relative to that of the United States.
    The Bank of Mexico, which cut its target for overnight rates by 100 basis points in 2013, said inflation has been declining since the second half of January, as it expected, resulting in a downward revision of inflationary expectations for the current year to below 4 percent while long-term expectations have remained stable.
    Overall, the central bank said the balance of risks to inflation were unchanged since its previous meeting in March, while “the outlook for global economic growth has improved marginally, overriding certain downside risks.”

   

Russia raises rate by 50 bps, no plans to cut for months

By CentralBankNews.info
    Russia’s central bank raised its key policy rate by another 50 basis points to 7.5 percent due to rising inflation and said it did not intend to lower the rate in coming months to ensure that inflation remains below 6.0 percent by the end of the year.
    The Bank of Russia, which raised its rate by 150 basis points on March 3 in response to volatility in financial markets from investors’ nervousness over the conflict with Ukraine, said the probability of inflation exceeding the bank’s 5.0 percent target for 2014 had increased substantially, mainly due to the larger-than-expected impact of a depreciation of the ruble on consumer prices.
    The central bank also said Russia’s economy will continue on a downtrend this year with limited boost to activity from the ruble’s depreciation.
    Earlier this month, the central bank said the economy would probably expand by less than 1.0 percent this year and the finance minister said growth may be around zero, days after the Economy Ministry lowered its growth forecast to 0.5 percent from a previous 2.5 percent due to lower demand for exports, slowing consumer activity, capital outflows and a decline in investment.
    “Amid economic uncertainty and declining producer confidence there is a strong probability of a reduction in fixed capital investment,” the central bank said, its only direct reference to the impact on the Russian economy from the conflict with Ukraine and western sanctions.
    Russia’s headline inflation rate rose to 6.9 percent in March from 6.2 percent in February and accelerated further to 7.2 percent as of April 21, with weekly inflation at 0.2 percent, the bank said. Core inflation also accelerated to 6.0 percent in March from 5.6 percent the previous month.
    It attributed the rise in inflation to the pass-through effect of the ruble’s depreciation, a rise in inflationary expectations and “unfavorable” market conditions for diary products, sugar, pork and petrol.
    “Since monetary policy affects the economy with a lag, the probability of inflation exceeding the 5.0% target at end-2014 has increased substantially,” the bank said, adding that the rate rise would help ensure that inflation declines to no more than 6.0 percent by the end of 2014.
    The central bank expects inflation to remain around the current level until the middle of this year, with consumer prices decelerating in the second half due to lower planned rises in administered prices, falling inflation expectations and the economic activity that is below potential.
      “The current economic slowdown is predominantly structural by nature and thus does not exert any noticeable downward pressure on inflation,” the bank said.
    The central bank painted a dim outlook for the economy.
    Growth in labour productivity is “sluggish,” fixed capital investment is contracting due to falling profits, there is limited access to long-term financing in both international and domestic markets, and producer and economic confidence is low, and economic activity in most of Russia’s trading partners is weak, further restraining economic growth.
    Russia’s Gross Domestic Product contracted by 0.5 percent in the first quarter of the year from the fourth quarter for annual growth of 0.8 percent.
    Russia’s ruble started weakening against the U.S. dollar in February last year with the fall accelerating in January, along with many other emerging market currencies.
    An escalation in tensions between Russia and Ukraine sparked a further decline in the exchange rate in March with the central raising the threshold for adjusting the ruble’s trading corridor only after it spends up to $1.5 billion to keep it within the band, a threshold that was raised from a previous $350 million.
    Unnerved by concerns over further sanctions from the West and the escalating crises with Ukraine, the outflow of capital from Russia reached $50.6 billion in the first quarter of this year.
    The ruble was trading at 36 to the U.S. dollar today, higher than a low of 36.92 reached right before the central bank raised its rate in March, but down 8.6 percent since the start of the year.

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AUD/JPY Bears Keep the Pair Under Pressure

Technical Sentiment: Bearish

Key Takeaways
• AUD/JPY remains pressured towards the downside;
• Daily Bearish Engulfing Bar is activated;
• Pair eyes support levels from 94.45 down to 93.30.
After a small bounce off the 94.82 level, AUD/JPY has cleared stop losses below this level and consequently formed a Lower Low. A bearish continuation will lead the pair towards the support trendline of the 3-month bullish channel for starters, with the possibility of an even deeper retracement in May.

Technical Analysis

AUD/JPY formed a Bearish Engulfing Bar on Wednesday, at the same time confirming the support line at 94.82. On Thursday the price action bar was activated when price dropped below 94.82. The daily close below this level suggests more losses are next.

The pair is trading near the 200 Simple Moving Average on the 4H timeframe. Backed up by 7th March high and the 38.2% Fibonacci Retracement from 91.28 to 96.50; 94.45 represents the first support level to be tested. If the pair successfully crosses below the 200 SMA, the support trendline of the 3-month bullish channel and the 50-Day Moving Average – priced around 96.75 – will be the next target.

Towards the upside, due to Wednesday’s drop, AUD/JPY has to recover a lot of ground before it will be technically bullish again. The small top at 95.30, followed by the 50 and 100 Simple Moving Averages (94.45-95.55) on the 4H chart, represents the first resistance levels. Only above these levels AUD/JPY is likely to get rid of the current bearish pressure.

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Prepared by Alexandru Z., Chief Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets