EUR/JPY Breaks Bullish Stride; Eyes 140.00

Technical Sentiment: Bearish

Key Takeaways

  • German Factory Orders in March 2014 were down a whopping 2.8%;
  • French Industrial Production dropped by 0.7%;
  • Traders put pressure on EUR/JPY to break the Higher Lows configuration;
  • Major support lies at 140.00

Since 142.46 was reached, EUR/JPY longs have stopped pushing for new highs. After failing to capitalize from overall positive Euro news on Tuesday, traders were quick to sell today’s disappointing German Factory Orders (-2.8%) and French Industrial Production (-0.7%) reports. Having cleared stops below 141.25, the pair has a technical bearish bias until the ECB Press Conference on Thursday.

Technical Analysis
EURJPY 7thMay
 

Albeit volatility has been greatly reduced in the last few weeks, EUR/JPY has thus far respected all boundaries and technical patterns, without wild stop hunts or nonsensical whipsaws.

Since last week the pair failed to print fresh highs within April’s bullish channel, leading to the formation of a small triangle. At the time of this writing, EUR/JPY is attempting to break both the triangle and the bullish channel. The most recent Higher Low, priced at 141.27, has already been invalidated as price broke below the 50, 100 and 200 Simple Moving Averages on the 4H timeframe.

The pair has to stabilize and close below the 141.26 (100-Day Moving Average) for 140.00 to be a valid target. A rally above 141.50, within the triangle/bullish channel, will reduce the chances of a deeper bearish continuation.

In the current market conditions, chart pattern traders should pay less attention to the long term triangle formation and instead focus on 140 and 143.50 boundaries of the inner range developing since March.

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

 

 

 

 

 

How Technology and Innovation Will Make China’s Economy Stronger

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The Google [NASDAQ:GOOG] initial public offering (IPO) in 2004 raised US$1.67 billion.

The Facebook [NASDAQ:FB] IPO in 2012 raised US$16 billion.

Those are both big numbers. But there’s an even bigger number coming as part of an even bigger IPO.

Not surprisingly, the financial whiz kids are fighting over the spoils.

And while we can’t promise to help you get a piece of the action, we can help you take part in what could be the biggest economic game-changer in more than 140 years…

We’ve had our new emerging markets analyst Ken Wangdong in town for the past two days. This afternoon he heads back to his temporary base in Sydney.

With Ken in town we’ve looked for his take on where China’s economy will go over the next decade and beyond.

Over the coming weeks you’ll see Ken’s analysis for yourself here in Money Morning. We’re sure you’ll like what you read. But if you think Ken’s take on China involves blindly cheerleading for the country’s economy, you’re wrong.

China’s doing it bigger

The Chinese economy is at an interesting point. Over the past 40 years it has come from nowhere to now be on the verge of becoming the world’s biggest economy.

That’s some feat.

But it hasn’t been an easy path. And it won’t be an easy path in the future either. But the more China’s economy grows and the more it integrates with the West, the more it becomes like the West.

Importantly, it means investors will need to understand that the focus of world financial markets is slowly changing.

Two years ago the big IPO was Facebook. It had shot to the fore in just a few short years to dominate the new ‘social networking’ scene.

In a way, Facebook’s quick rise shares a common trait with China’s rise. Both came from nothing to become the dominant player. And now as technology improves and China becomes a big player in the world economy, its influence is changing too.

China isn’t just a ‘cheap labour’ economy. It’s not just about making cheap goods and exporting them. It’s also becoming a story of innovation and entrepreneurs.

A sign of that is the upcoming IPO of online mega-company Alibaba Group. As the Financial Times reports:

Alibaba’s prospectus is expected to be filed imminently, people familiar with the matter said. The company is seeking to raise anywhere between $15bn and $25bn at a valuation as high as $200bn…

A potential US$200 billion valuation is huge. To put it in perspective, Facebook has a market cap of US$157 billion. IT giant International Business Machines [NYSE:IBM], the venerable 103 year-old company, has a market cap of US$199 billion.

Who does this Alibaba upstart think it is by gate-crashing on the world’s markets?

When it needs to innovate it will innovate

This is part of the change. Get used to it. However, as we mentioned above, it won’t be an easy transition.

The Alibaba IPO is exciting. If you’re not familiar with the company, it’s an online marketplace to connect business-to-business and business-to-consumer buyers and sellers.

As a comparison, it’s a cross between eBay and Amazon.com that includes deals at a commercial level. (It also has elements of a little known Aussie firm uncovered by small-cap analyst Tim Dohrmann that’s set to make big waves in Aussie online retailing.)

And in terms of size, to put it in perspective, according to The Economist in 2012 ‘two of Alibaba’s portals together handled 1.1 trillion yuan ($170 billion) in sales, more than eBay and Amazon combined.

But as impressive as that sounds, there’s one problem — it’s not exactly an innovative business model. Alibaba has copied successful Western online business models and replicated them for the Chinese market.

It’s that ‘copycat’ approach rather than the innovative approach that we talked about in our presentation at the recent World War D conference in Melbourne. At the conference we made the point that the last innovations to come out of China were paper and gunpowder…thousands of years ago.

Having taken that view, we wondered what our new emerging markets analyst Ken Wangdong would say to that claim. It turns out he’s on the same page.

It’s not that China can’t be innovative. It’s just that it hasn’t had to be innovative. Due to China’s lower cost structure it has made more economic sense for businesses to simply ‘copy and paste’ Western business models and ideas.

Why invest millions or billions into research and development when there’s easier ways to make money? To use an old expression, China has simply taken the low-hanging fruit.

The biggest change in 142 years

The question now, as China’s cost base begins to rise, is if China can compete in other ways. Doing so it will mean innovating.

It’s crunch time for China. How does Ken see this playing out? Like your editor, he says there is an entrepreneurial and greed spirit in China. People want better things. They want a better life.

If the Chinese can innovate to create new industries and businesses then it can only be a matter of time before China takes the top spot as the world’s biggest economy.

But it’s by no means certain. And it won’t happen overnight.

The US finally took over from the UK as the world’s biggest economy in 1872. At the time the US faced many challenges. That included Reconstruction after the Civil War.

No doubt many doubted the ability of the US economy to grow at the time. In the same way, many doubt China’s ability to grow today.

But the US did do it. It has stayed there for 142 years and counting. That reign is about to end, and the odds are on China taking over the top spot…soon. As an investor and a speculator, it’s hard to think of an event over the past 14 decades that had the potential to be as big as this.

In our view it’s not a matter of if China will take the top spot, but when. And we have absolutely no intention of missing out on the extraordinary investing opportunities as this transition takes place.

Cheers,
Kris+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Secure and Protect Family Wealth for Generations

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Will China become a formidable innovation heavyweight in the future?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Phil Libin of Evernote once said jokingly: ‘The amount of innovation in a company is inversely proportional to how often they use the word innovation…I once met someone who was the Vice President of Innovation in the Cloud, that’s the trifecta!

Today, we’ll dig into whether China’s economy is and will be an innovation heavyweight in the world, and the reasons behind that.

But first, let’s define innovation and decide on a way to measure it.

There can be many types of innovation , but typically they are original invention (a product, process, trademark or design) that can generate a meaningful impact on the world. The impact can be small or big. When the impact is big, we usually refer to it as ‘disruption’.

But how can you measure innovation? The most straightforward way to measure it is through patent counting. Every day, inventions, processes, trademarks and designs are sent to various intellectual property offices around the world, these counts are aggregated and published by the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).

Patent count in third place

In 2013, China’s patent filings under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) ranked third in the world, growing 15.6% year on year (YoY). China’s patent filing growth outpaced global growth in 2013, which was 5.1%YoY.

The US ranked first with 57,239 patent applications, 2.7times more than China; Japan ranked second with 43,918 patent applications, two times more than China.

Among the top five categories of patent areas are: electrical machinery, apparatus, energy; computer technology; digital communication; medical technology; and measurement. Panasonic ranked first as the top applicant, followed by two Chinese tech-companies, ZTE [HKG:763] and HUAWEI [SZ:002502], listed in Shen Zhen).

China has been particularly strong in digital communication patents, ranking second after the US in 2012. Computer technology, transport and basic materials chemistry saw the US, Japan, Korea and Germany taking the top spots.

In terms of trademark applications, China ranked 7th globally in 2013. Germany ranked first, with 2.9 times more trademark filings than China. Japan ranked 8th, below China.

The top five categories in trademark application are: computer and electronics; services of business; technological services; clothing, footwear, headgear; and pharmaceuticals & medical preparations.

In terms of design applications, China isn’t in the top 10 list. European countries dominated design applications in 2013, with Switzerland ranking first.

The answer is YES and NO

From the data that the WIPO presented, we know that China is becoming a top innovator in an absolute sense, particularly in digital communication and technology. However, it’s still catching up in creating brands; and it has some serious work to do in the design field.

Just to put it into perspective, China’s (excluding Hong Kong) patent applications accounted for 30% of the world’s total patent applications in 2012; this number increased in 2013.

However, if we take into account population and study patent application per capita, then the story is very different. While the US has more patent applications and less population, its per capita patent application volume is 0.0017, which means in every 500 people there is likely one patent application.

China on the other hand, has a 0.00048 per capita patent application, meaning in every 500 people, there are roughly 0.25 patent applications. So it takes 2,000 Chinese to innovate at a level that 500 US people would generate.

ZTE and Huawei alone generated more than 4,000 patent applications in 2013; this accounted for 20% of China’s patent applications. One can expect that companies will play a leadership role in innovation in China, especially in the area of brand and trademark creation.

We can assume a number of things here. China’s urbanisation rate is just over 50%, so with more urbanisation will come more access to urban industrial facilities, schools and capital. This is likely to boost the per capita patent application rate in the future. 

The ‘software’

Will China become a formidable innovation heavyweight in the future?

The answer is there is a high likelihood that it just might. What China needs to do is improve its ‘software’, which is the facilitating factor to innovation. I’m talking about:

  • Grants to institutions, schools and individuals
  • An even higher focus on increasing R&D centre counts (the 12th five-year plan has done a good job in spearheading towards that direction)
  • ‘Steal’ the Silicon Valley model
  • Attract more high-end talents to return to China to work after their studies (Dr Michio Kaku, a renowned astrophysicist at the forefront of string theory, once said somewhere between 50%–70% of US university research staff are of foreign origin. As more top talents are retained within their country or return to their country of origin, one should not be surprised to see India and China playing catch-up fast), and;
  • Engender a strong culture of innovation in societal life and education.

Knowledge is power and power is a forbidden word

Chinese have learned some painful lessons in the past 5,000 years.

When knowledge flourishes, a nation grows strong. That results in intellectuals questioning the status quo, particularly in government. One of the most famous history lessons in China came from the Qin Dynasty (221BC) when the emperor of Qin, after unifying China, burned all the books nationwide and buried scholars alive.

He did that because he knew that the biggest threat to him was people with ‘brains’. Religion and monarchy ruled China until the Qing Dynasty (ending in 1912), when its naval fleet, the largest in Asia at the time, was defeated by a much smaller but technologically and ideologically more advanced Japan naval force.

The rest is history.

So the point is clear. Both the biggest supporter of, and the potential threat to China’s innovation, dare I say, is the state of the Chinese government. Right now, China is led by intellectuals, they are capable men and women with industry and government experience; decisions are made by a group of people.

Although its government isn’t as transparent and democratic as a Western democracy, it’s still functioning well due to the capability of the central group.

In the case of China, innovation is only as good as its government allows it to be.

Ken Wangdong,
Emerging Markets Analyst, Money Morning

From the Archives…

China’s Middle Class Doesn’t Look Like it Used to…
03-05-14 – Shae Smith

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

What Stops A Trader From Pulling The Trigger And Entering A Forex Trade? – PART 1

Why do some traders have such a hard time entering live trades? To break this article up and make it easier to digest I will be publishing it in two parts. The first part of this article will discuss the issues that prevent a trader from actually pulling the trigger and entering live trades. Whilst, the second part will go through the mechanisms we can put in place to prevent any hesitations when a trade setup presents itself.

Hopefully, by the end of this article, struggling traders will have learnt how to pull the trigger on trades without any hesitation and to conquer their inner fears. Whilst, also knowing exactly the reasons why they were hindered previously and how to keep the demons at bay.

Making the leap into live trading

Let’s start at the beginning, so you’ve been very sensible and taken all the right steps to get your trading career off to the best start. Studied as much as you can about the key areas required to trade the Forex markets correctly. Gained valuable attributes like, patience, discipline, trading rules and where to look for trades to form. Been cautious enough to wisely open a demo account to practice your trading and master your setups. From the demo account you have proof of a consistent, profitable technique, with profits being made consistently for three months.

Great, you’ve made all the right choices so far!

So what next? – live trading!!

When the time has come, after putting in all that hard work, you have to begin trading with actual money, with a live account. At this point some overzealous traders may well think that if they have proved themselves demo trading then live trading is a cinch and maybe even consider the next step is to sit back, watch the money roll in and open the latest Aston Martin brochure and start choosing which colour your DBS will look best in.

Well, unfortunately you still have a long way to go before you are able to enjoy the high life. The conversion to live trading can be the downfall for even the most profitable demo traders out there. It may not seem like such a big step but rest assured going live needs a rock solid mind set and nerves of steel.

Why going live can prevent traders from entering trades?

Somehow the ease at which you were able to enter trades on a demo account can start to elude a trader when faced with placing live trades. If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Most traders will experience a slight stutter when converting from demo to a live account. It is completely normal and will just need some adjustments and experience to conquer the change.

I wonder how many traders reading this have seen a setup, looked at it for a while and although it looks perfectly good, found themselves unable to enter the setup. Then later on you come back to the trade that you didn’t take and it’s moved exactly how you expected it would. The word annoying doesn’t really sum it up but please don’t think you are the only trader out there who this happens to. We all get these moments from time to time. There are lots of reasons why we sometimes find it hard to pull the trigger and I will now go through the main factors.

Fear, experiencing the sensation of fear in trading can have a devastating effect on any trader’s ability to pull the trigger. Whether it be the fear of being wrong or the fear of losing money, the results tend to always be negative. The main problem with fear is that if unchecked, it grows and grows, becoming an overwhelming emotion which takes over our trading. Fearing what might happen to a trade is pointless, all we need concern ourselves with is how to manage a trade and allowing the markets to do the rest. Accepting losing trades and understanding that trading is just down to taking high probability trades and using this knowledge to act as our edge, is all we can do.

Lack of confidence, being confident your trading technique is profitable on demo is one thing but proving it under pressure is another. If you have any doubts regarding an area of your trading, the markets will undoubtedly expose it to the fullest. The faintest sniff of indecision or lack of confidence in any particular setup you use, will cause questions to be raised as to whether or not the trade should be taken. If you don’t trust your trade setups, you lose your edge.

Over analysis, staring at a trade for a few minutes still unsure what to do, should send alarm bells ringing. A trade setup should be glaringly obvious and be visible as soon as you open the chart. If you need to try and find extra points to validate a setup, you may be tricking yourself into opening a trade that just isn’t there. The problem is when we over analyse setups, we tend to open up a can of worms and can find ourselves completely lost as to whether the trade is valid or not.

Bad run of trades, letting a run of bad trades affect the next trade decision is really tough, even the traders with the strongest of mind sets will have stored what has gone on in the past. Having a good routine and trading rules will help neutralise this but sometimes just good old fashioned balls of steel is the right approach.

Breaching the risk threshold, the amount a trader is comfortable with risking on each trade is their risk threshold and going beyond the risk threshold puts a trader vulnerable to mistakes. When a trader bypasses their risk threshold and starts risking too much on a trade, it can completely destroy a trader’s ability to allow a trade to play out properly. The risk threshold for a trader will always vary but is something a trader can improve and increase in relation to the growth of their trading account. If a trader is aware they are risking too much money on one trade, they will inevitably find it difficult to enter a trade without hesitation.

Wrong mind set, unfortunately life has a habit of throwing up lots of difficult challenges from time to time, which can affect our mind set. It may be a personal/family matter or due to illness but don’t be naïve and think these conflicts will not influence or affect our trading. Sometimes, even the common cold can reduce our trading effectiveness and this in turn affects our ability to pull the trigger.

Expectations set too high, no trade can be deemed a certainty, not by any trader. Being realistic and not taking trades too personally is very important. The ability of a trader to set realistic targets is also paramount.

Belief the markets are against you, a very common feeling that traders can experience is that the markets are in some way “out to get them”. It stands to reason, with so much talk of stop loss hunters, smaller Forex retail traders may well feel exposed or vulnerable. Like their trades are being picked off and stopped out by the big boys.

Over personalising trading, is a very big issue for lots of traders and feeling victimised when a trade fails exposes the traders who allow their trading to become way too personal. Trading is not personal, it’s just an elaborate game of probability. With the traders who have an edge gaining profits from the traders who have no edge.

What have we learnt?

To summarise, the inability of traders to pull the trigger and enter live trades is a very common and frustrating issue. Unfortunately, there is not just one simple fix to eradicate all the factors mentioned above, it’s a complex problem with our minds being the biggest obstacle.

The process of learning how to re program our mind set and control our emotions, including applying realistic expectations has a lot to do with gaining the right experience and focusing only on the information we need to make a consistent trade decision.

Probably, the strongest force which causes traders to hesitate is the “fear” factor.

The second part of this article will follow shortly and explain the ways a trader can resolve these complex issues, to start trading and entering trades without any hesitation what so ever.

 

Author

This article was written by Jeremy Poor, the head price action trader at dontlettheforexdriveyouupthewall.com. Learning to trade the Forex markets can be a daunting challenge, Jeremy helps traders to see the markets as they should be and where to look for the best trade setups to form. With lots of free Forex educational articles and videos designed to help traders find out more about price action trading, dontlettheforexdriveyouupthewall.com is a great place to start your Forex trading career.

 

 

Time to Admit That Gold Peaked in 2011?

By Jeff Clark, Senior Precious Metals Analyst, Casey Research

Have you seen this “real price of gold” chart that’s been making waves? Among other things, it purports to show the gold price adjusted for inflation over the past 223 years. Notice the 1980 vs. 2011 levels.

The chart makes it seem that on an inflation-adjusted basis, gold has matched its 1980 peak in 2011, or nearly so. A mainstream analyst who still thinks of gold as a “barbarous relic,” a government official who doesn’t want people to think of gold as money, or an Internet blogger looking for some attention might try to convince you that this proves that the gold bull market is over, arguing that the 2011 peak of $1,921 is the equivalent of the 1970s mania peak of $850 in January of 1980.

The logic is flawed, however; even if it were true that gold has matched its 1980 peak in inflation-adjusted prices, it would not prove that the top is in this time. This is not the 1970s, the global economy is under very different pressures, and there’s no rational basis at all for saying the top this time has to be at the same or similar level as last time.

That’s even if it were true that gold has matched its 1980 peak—but it hasn’t.

Inflation-Adjusted Gold Has NOT Matched Its 1980 Peak

First, if you go by official US Bureau of Labor Statistic numbers, $850 in 1980 is equivalent to $2,320 in 2011, when gold hit its peak thus far in the current cycle. (It’s $2,403 in 2013 dollars, as is said to be used in the chart.)

We don’t know what data the authors of the chart used, nor their inflation adjustment method, so it’s hard to say what the problem is, but at the very least, we can say the chart is very misleading.

But there’s more. As you probably know, the government has made numerous changes to the way it calculates inflation—the Consumer Price Index (CPI)—since 1980. So, even the BLS number we’ve given grossly underestimates the real difference between the 2011 and 1980 peaks.

For a more apples-to-apples comparison, we should adjust for inflation using the government’s 1980 formula. And for that, whom better to ask than John Williams of Shadow Government Statistics (AKA Shadow Stats), the world’s leading expert on phony US government statistics?

I asked John to apply the CPI formula from January 1980 to the $1,921 gold price in 2011, to give us a more accurate inflation-adjusted picture. Here’s what his data show.

Using the 1980 formula, the monthly average price of gold for January 1980 would be the equivalent of $8,598.80 today. The actual peak—$850 on January 21, 1980—isn’t shown in the chart, but it would equate to a whopping $10,823.70 today.

The Shadow Stats chart paints a completely different picture than the first chart. The current CPI formula grossly dilutes just how much inflation has occurred over the past 34 years. It’s so misleading that investment decisions based on it—like whether to buy or sell gold—could wreak havoc on a portfolio.

This could easily be the end of the discussion, but there are many more reasons to believe that the gold price has not peaked for the current bull cycle…

Percentage Rise Has Been Much Smaller

Inflation-adjusted numbers are not the only measure that matters. The percentage climb during the 1970s bull market was dramatically greater than what we experienced from 2001 to 2011. Here’s a comparison of the percentage gain during both periods.

From the 1970 low to the January 1980 peak, gold rose 2,346%. It climbed only 535% from the 2001 low to the September 2011 high—nowhere near mimicking that prior bull market.

Silver Scantly Participated in the 2011 Run-Up

After 31 years of trading, silver has yet to even reach its nominal price from 1980. It surged to $48.70 in 2011—but it hit $50 in January 1980.

On an inflation-adjusted basis, using the same data from John Williams, silver would need to hit $568 to match its 1980 equivalent.

The fact that silver has lagged this much—when its greater volatility would normally move its price by a greater percentage than gold—further shows that 2011 was not the equivalent of 1980.

No Bubble Characteristics in 2011

I’ll get some arguments from the mainstream on this one. “Of course gold was in a bubble in 2011—look at the chart!”

Yes, gold had a nice run-up that year. It rose 38.6% from January 1 to the September 6 peak. Anyone holding gold at that time was very happy. But that’s not a bubble. One of the major characteristics of a bubble is that prices go parabolic.

And that’s exactly what we saw in 1979-1980:

  • In the 12 months leading up to its January 21, 1980 peak, gold surged an incredible 270%.
  • In contrast, the year leading up to the September 6, 2011 peak, the price climbed 48%—very nice, but hardly parabolic, and less than a fifth of the 1970s runaway move.

No Global Phenomenon in 1980 (Next Time It Will Be)

In the 1970s, the “mania” was mostly a North American phenomenon. China and most of Asia didn’t participate. When inflation grips the world from all the money printing governments almost everywhere have engaged in, there will be a much greater demand for gold than in 1980.

When that day comes, there will be severe consequences for those who don’t have enough bullion. Not only will the price relentlessly move higher, but finding physical gold to buy may become very difficult.

Comparable Price Moves? So What?

The argument we started with is really the clincher. It doesn’t matter how today’s gold prices compare to those from prior bull markets; what matters are the factors likely to impact the price today. Are there reasons to own gold in the current environment—or not?

First, a comparison: Apple shares surged 112% in 2007. After such a run-up, surely investors should’ve dumped it, right? Well, those who did likely regretted it, since it ended that year at $180 and trades over $590 today. In fact, even though it had already risen dramatically and in spite of it crashing with the market in 2008, there were plenty of solid reasons to buy the stock then, not the least of which was the introduction of the iPhone that year.

So should we sell gold because it rose 535% in a decade? As with the Apple example above, that’s not the right question.

There are, in fact, several more relevant questions for gold today:

  • What will happen with the unprecedented amount of money that’s been printed around the world since 2008?
  • Why are economies still sluggish after the biggest monetary experiment in history?
  • Global debt and “unfunded mandates” are at never-before-seen levels; how can this conceivably be paid off?
  • Interest rates are at historically low levels—what happens when they start to rise?
  • Regardless of your political affiliation, do you trust that government leaders have the ability and willingness to do what’s necessary to restore the economy to health?

If these issues were absent, maybe we’d change our position on precious metals. But until the word “healthy” can honestly be used to describe the fiscal, monetary, and economic state of our global civilization, gold should be held as an essential wealth-protection asset.

Today’s volatile world is exactly the kind of circumstance gold is best for.

The message here is clear, my friends. Regardless of the measure, gold has not matched its 1980 peak. And the reasons to own it have not faded. Indeed, they have grown. Continue to accumulate.

Learn about the best ways to invest in gold—how and when to buy it, where to store it for maximum safety, and how to find the best gold stocks—in the free 2014 Gold Investor’s Guide.

 

 

The article Time to Admit That Gold Peaked in 2011? was originally published at caseyresearch.com.

Malcolm Shaw: Why Is the Market Ignoring These Companies?

Source: Tom Armistead of The Mining Report (5/6/14)

http://www.theenergyreport.com/pub/na/malcolm-shaw-why-is-the-market-ignoring-these-companies

Malcolm Shaw is looking at a modern-day map to buried treasure. He sees a company operating a shale-oil well that has tested at a free-flow rate of 590 barrels per day, a junior producer in Argentina working naturally fractured shale, an unrecognized frack sand resource, and a company that owns one of the most exciting uranium discoveries on the planet. Yet Shaw, a partner at Hydra Capital Partners Inc., is sometimes mystified by the lack of investor interest. In this interview with The Mining Report, Shaw talks about these projects and more, explaining how a savvy investor can profit from diamond-in-the-rough opportunities.

The Mining Report: Malcolm, uranium’s spot price is at a 52-week low. What is your forecast for the uranium price moving forward?

Malcolm Shaw: The spot price is still depressed from overhang in the spot market that stemmed from the Japanese reactor shutdown in 2011. Japan was widely expected to begin reactor restarts this summer, but it appears that may be pushed back to early fall. It should be the starting pistol for a move in the spot price. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the spot price recover, maybe to the $40–45/pound ($40–45/lb) range, by the end of the year. But it’s really going to depend on the pace of those Japanese reactor restarts.

TMR: Analysts keep saying that we are looking at a uranium supply deficit and rising prices by 2018. Why isn’t the market responding to these threats?

MS: The uranium market is a little different than a market like copper or gold or oil. Spot prices are around $33/lb and term prices are around $47–50/lb right now. Spot’s really only relevant if you’re looking to secure supply for very near-term delivery, whereas term is what an end-user would expect to pay for guaranteed delivery in the future, some years down the road. In the near term, and maybe even the medium term, there’s no shortage of uranium out there. But when you consider the new reactors coming online in the coming years, the supply deficit is staring us right in the face. The number of new reactor builds underway in Asia is significant, and when you look at the growth of electricity demand and the concurrent decline in air quality in a country like China, it’s no mystery why nuclear has to become a larger part of Asia’s energy mix.

Spot prices are generally important for market sentiment, which ultimately correlates with capital inflows and investment in the sector. Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE) is the best market barometer that I can think of for sentiment in the uranium sector. It’s been trading fairly well, up about 50% in the last six months, though it’s been a little soft lately. I can’t say when the market will respond, but I really do think it’s a “when” not an “if.” At the current spot and term prices, new production would be very difficult to finance.

TMR: How will the isolation of Russia and the nuclear reactor restarts in Japan affect the uranium as well as the oil and natural gas spaces?

MS: Russia is a juggernaut in the uranium sector. It has been one of the main suppliers for the U.S. reactor fleet for about 20 years now under the Megatons to Megawatts program. That program is over now. There are transitional supply agreements in place to meet demands of U.S. reactors in the coming years. To me, that seems like a suboptimal situation from a U.S. perspective. I think it should encourage development of domestic uranium resources.

Russia is also jockeying with Saudi Arabia for the position of largest oil producer in the world and is critical to the gas supply of Europe. To sum it up, Russia is an energy powerhouse, but there are alternatives. The U.S. is becoming increasingly less dependent on foreign oil, and I think we’ll probably see the U.S. become a real exporter of natural gas in the coming years. Gas prices are much lower in North America than other markets, like Asia and Europe, where they can be twice as high or higher. It’s not hard to imagine that liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects will start to take advantage of that arbitrage.

Pretty much any time a foreign dependence on one commodity or another is highlighted as a result of geopolitics, as we’re seeing with Russia right now, the market tends to react to decrease that dependence. It should have regulators in Europe looking to increase LNG import capacity and should also drive them to more aggressively pursue domestic gas sources. North Africa could also see some increased interest from energy investors as a lot of European gas comes from North Africa.

TMR: Are you expecting to see more uranium mining in North America?

MS: I would think so. In terms of domestic companies that are active, we’re looking for producers like Energy Fuels Inc. (EFR:TSX; EFRFF:OTCQX; UUUU:NYSE.MKT),Uranerz Energy Corp. (URZ:TSX; URZ:NYSE.MKT), Ur-Energy Inc. (URE:TSX; URG:NYSE.MKT), Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC:NYSE.MKT) and maybe even an early-stage project like Powertech Uranium Corp. (PWE:TSX.V) to get the market behind them, maybe get their equity values a little higher so they can raise some money and advance their projects. Energy Fuels, Uranerz and Ur-Energy are all pretty advanced. Each of them has production and is well financed, but again, their equity prices aren’t reflecting the underlying value of their assets if you believe in a higher uranium price in the long term.

TMR: In your last interview, you were excited about the early reports from the Patterson Lake discovery by Alpha Minerals Inc. and Fission Energy Corp. How has that panned out?

MS: The two companies merged late in 2013, and the combined company is now called Fission Uranium Corp. (FCU:TSX.V). Patterson Lake has turned out to be one of the most exciting uranium discoveries on the planet. The ultimate size of the resource is still unknown, but it has all the hallmarks of a world-class deposit in terms of the holy trinity of scale, grade and depth.

One of its holes came back recently with a grade thickness of 992. That’s equivalent to almost 100 meters (100m) of 10% U308. It’s hard to describe how good that hole is. For its depth, it’s probably one of the best mining exploration holes ever drilled for any commodity. The true thickness of that intercept is still unknown and uranium deposits are often irregular in shape, but to be in a system that can produce a hole like that at a depth of only about 60m from surface is very impressive. Ultimately a deposit like that will almost certainly be bought by a larger player. For me the only question is when.

TMR: So, what does the future look like for the company? Is it going to buy up or is it going to be selling out?

MS: Again, it does own 100% of Patterson Lake. I expect Fission to take that project through to an NI 43-101 resource estimate so that investors can have a formal idea of what the resource size is, because there are a lot of numbers being tossed around by the market. Ultimately, in terms of buyers, it’s a relatively select club of companies that would make an acquisition like that, but any time you have a deposit with this kind of grade at that depth you’re talking about a best-in-class deposit, and those tend not to stay in the hands of juniors.

TMR: Are there any other companies that are getting comparable results in the Athabasca?

MS: It’s almost an unfair question. Patterson Lake has set the bar so high that other companies really can’t be expected to compare. There’s a reason why Patterson Lake gathered so much attention despite a sluggish spot market in uranium: When you make a world-class discovery, the commodity price tends not to matter quite as much. It will be tough to follow up, but companies can always try. NexGen Energy Ltd. (NXE:TSX.V) is on trend to the northeast. It has some pretty interesting-looking rock and a few of its holes drilled from the winter program, but the assays are still pending.

TMR: Changing focus, natural gas appears to have escaped the bargain basement $3 per million Btu ($3/MMBtu) price range. What was the catalyst for that?

MS: It was definitely the cold winter that we just went through coupled with historic lows in gas rig counts. Those two things together made the 2013–2014 winter season a real outlier in terms of storage drawdowns. The Energy Information Administration reported storage levels for natural gas right now are about a trillion cubic feet (1 Tcf) below the five-year range for this time of year. That’s just a huge deficit to make up for, and rig counts are only starting to pick up for natural gas.

TMR: Is the $4/MMBtu range where gas is going to live now?

MS: I think so. With the storage levels that we’re seeing right now it’s hard to see us getting into an oversupply situation any time soon, unless the summer is unusually cool and the next winter is warm. It’s not like you can just crank up gas production on a dime. It takes time to move rigs and people to increase that production, and the gas delivery system itself only has so much capacity to deliver gas to storage. We should be stable in this $4 range, maybe even $5.

TMR: So your expectation for the gas price this year is to continue some upward pressure?

MS: Yes. I really try not to forecast gas or oil prices, but directionally I would say my price bias for gas is positive. As an investor I would generally look to be long gas producers.

TMR: You were talking about LNG exports. Is the rising price of gas going to have any influence on that?

MS: Basically it’s transportation arbitrage. If you can buy gas cheaper in North America and make money by shipping it to Asia or Europe as an LNG company, you’re going to do that. If gas prices go to $8 per thousand cubic feet ($8/Mcf) in North America, there’s going to be a lot less incentive to ship that gas offshore. However, I don’t see those price levels coming to North America any time soon, which is why I would be biased towards the view that LNG projects will move ahead and that will provide more stability in the North American pricing. I think we’re unlikely to see those lows that we saw in the past year or so.

TMR: What companies are having luck drilling shale internationally?

MS: One of the themes that I see is that shale oil and shale gas are here to stay. Producers are literally going straight to the source in the hydrocarbon industry. Drilling and completion technology has given us the ability to unlock resources that were previously beyond our reach. It’s a paradigm shift. North America is showing us what’s possible with the right services and technology, but, geologically, the same resource potential exists elsewhere in the world as well. I’ve been looking for resource plays internationally where I can get low-cost exposure to companies looking to take North American know-how abroad.

Canacol Energy Ltd. (CNE:TSX) is a Colombian producer. Colombia has a long history of hydrocarbon exploration and production. I think that over the next year or so we’re going to hear a lot more about the La Luna, Tablazo and Rosa Blanca shales. These Colombian shales are proven and prolific hydrocarbon source rocks and are comparable to the names like the Bakken and the Eagle Ford in a lot of ways. One of the key differences is that they are 1,000–2,000 feet thick. That’s anywhere from 3–10 times thicker than any comparable Bakken or Eagle Ford in North America. That means that the oil-in-place numbers can get very large very fast.

Canacol has over 500,000 net acres of exposure to these plays in Colombia, which puts it second only to the state oil company, Ecopetrol S.A. (EC:NYSE; ECP:TSX). To put things in perspective, Canacol has seen Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM:NYSE), ConocoPhillips (COP:NYSE) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDS.A:NYSE; RDS.B:NYSE) all farm into its acreage within the last year or so, all in separate blocks, but all in the same play.

The first well, drilled by the Canacol/Exxon joint venture into a naturally fractured section of La Luna, was tested at 590 barrels/day (590 bbl/d) oil earlier this year. The test was short term, but it was under natural-flow conditions, which means that the oil is literally free-flowing to surface at that rate. I’m pretty amazed that the market appears to be completely ignoring this shale option value right now. I can make a case for the company trading at 0.6–0.7 times its net asset value on its existing conventional production alone and there’s no lack of running room there either. The company’s recent discovery at its Pantro-1 exploration well really firms up the Leono-Pantro development area, and I think it’s reflective of the overall potential of their LLA-23 block in terms of production growth and prospectivity. I really like the risk/reward on Canacol.

Crown Point Energy Inc. (CWV:TSX.V) in Argentina is similar to Canacol in the sense that the company is backstopped by existing production from its conventional assets while offering huge leverage to another one of the hottest international oil shale plays out there, the Vaca Muerta. We’re seeing this trend where the majors are coming into these plays to secure reserves for future growth because it’s very hard for them to move the needle any other way. The Vaca Muerta is being pursued by Exxon, Chevron Corp. (CVX:NYSE), Royal Dutch Shell Plc , Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales (YPF:NYSE), Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas) and Total S.A. (TOT:NYSE), to name a few.

The Vaca Muerta is very thick and a very proven source rock in the early stages of exploitation. There was a successful Vaca Muerta test by YPF to the south of Crown Point’s land in 2012, but YPF hasn’t followed up on that despite the fact that there are a number of proven, producing fields in various formations on trend to the south. We know Crown Point’s acreage is in an oily area. Crown Point has about 100,000 acres of Vaca Muerta that is modeled as being in the oil window. It’s outside of the main area of activity, but the data in the company’s area of interest is very compelling. It’s 6 kilometers (6 km) from a pipeline in an area of proven historic production and only 4 km from a Vaca Muerta well that tested about 350 bbl/d in the 1990s.

Recently, Crown Point drilled into a naturally fractured volcanic section that’s embedded within the Vaca Muerta shale, which should be tested probably by the end of May. That well had persistent oil shows during the drilling of that section. That naturally fractured volcanic reservoir is interesting for a couple of reasons. First, it means that development might not require the expensive horizontal drilling and fracking typically associated with shale oil because the natural fractures may act as high-permeability conduits for the oil. Second, there’s analog production from fractured volcanics in a field directly to the south, where this play type has been proven to be productive. We still need to see a test, but right now I think it looks pretty good.

Industry valuations per acre in the Vaca Muerta can range anywhere from $1,000 to $10,000/acre depending on who you talk to and where the acreage is. My math has Crown Point valued at around $200/acre. I’m finding that pretty compelling.

Crown Point is going to start a 10-well drilling program very soon in Tierra del Fuego, which should continue to build on its current core production of about 1,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day (1,700 boe/d). It should provide some additional material exploration upside, because eight of those wells are development wells and two of them I would characterize as being low-risk exploration wells. One of those exploration wells is a target called Puesto Quince that probably has the potential to double corporate reserves if it’s successful. It’s covered by a 3-D seismic survey and is flanked on three sides by production, so I like that target a lot.

TMR: There’s been a long-running civil war in Colombia, and Argentina has a record of nationalizing. What is the political risk for companies operating there?

MS: There’s always political risk. I joke sometimes that there’s political risk in Canada. A number of years ago we saw Alberta overhaul royalties, which caused a lot of fuss and has since been straightened out, but I see your point. The FARC, a guerilla group, is active in Colombia, typically in the border regions with Venezuela and Ecuador. Since about 2000, maybe 2002, the Colombian government has taken a pretty hard line against the FARC. It started with President Álvaro Uribe, and President Juan Manuel Santos has continued that. I see no sign of that diminishing in the future. It’s simmering in the background and it’s flared up a little bit lately with elections coming up. From everything I’ve seen, though, the FARC has really been marginalized.

People also like to talk about nationalization in Argentina, and it has happened. The Repsol-YPF debacle was forefront on everybody’s minds. That dispute has been settled. Repsol (REP:MC) was recently compensated for the assets that it did lose. There’s a relatively long story and history between Argentina and Repsol that surrounds that. I would encourage people to look up some of that history. But a junior company is really too small to be on the radar of the Argentinean government for expropriation, I think.

TMR: You’re very impressed with Canacol’s shale-oil flow rate in Colombia. Why aren’t other investors equally impressed?

MS: I think because it’s early, for one. The Canacol/Exxon well test was literally one of the first well tests from the La Luna Shale in Colombia in recent memory. There have been historical producers out of that formation, but they were viewed more as outliers, and they were drilled back in the days before we really recognized the potential of oil shale resource plays. I also think that the market may have had unrealistically high expectations of something in the 1,000–3,000 bbl/d range. Also, Colombia is still working on regulations for unconventional resource plays. It is expected that they will follow a North American model in that regard, and when those regulations are in place, I think it might be a trigger for the market.

Any time you get a well that’s free flowing at surface at a rate of 600 bbl/d, that’s a very good oil well. That means you literally have 600 bbl flowing out of the ground unassisted. There were two 24-hour tests, so some people may find that production test a bit short, but again, it’s early days in the play. The well should soon be on long-term production test and all signs are positive so far. If I was paying anything for the shale option in Canacol, I might have a different opinion. Like I said, with the core assets underpinning the value of the company, I could see the stock trading at $10/share just based on the existing conventional assets. To also get that kind of leverage to the shale for free, that’s what gets me excited.

TMR: Which of the companies you cover offers the best value for an investor and why?

MS: Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. (AAV:NYSE; AAV:TSX) is an interesting value play. It’s not the cheapest stock in terms of valuation metrics, but it is just a prime chunk of Montney gas acreage in Alberta. It has 1.7 Tcf of Proven and Probable reserves, and industry-leading finding and development costs in the $1 to $1.25/Mcf range. Its operating costs are also industry-leading at around $0.30/Mcf. Even though it’s generally dry gas, the economics are great. You’re talking recycle ratios in the 2–2½ times range, even at current gas prices. Advantage has really executed and it has recently been trading really well, so I think the market has started to take notice.

One last company that I’d like to touch on is called Athabasca Minerals Inc. (ABM:TSX.V). I’ve followed this company for years and I bought it about six months ago. I think it’s on the verge of a major rerate by the market. The company has been quietly working away on a frack-sand project called Firebag, which is just off a main highway about 100 km north of Fort McMurray. I would expect that project to get permitted sometime this year. Canada uses around 2.5 million tons per year of frack sand and something like 70% or 80% of that comes from places like Wisconsin in the U.S. That’s a long way to ship sand. Athabasca’s deposit is so much closer to the Alberta market; I can’t imagine how a foreign sand resource could compete once Athabasca Minerals Firebag project is up and running. Firebag would be one of the closest frack sand sources in a business where proximity is everything and transportation is by far the largest cost in the equation. For perspective, Firebag is about 2000 km closer to the core of the Alberta Deep Basin than any competitor out of Wisconsin would be.

The company has already secured land at the end of the Canadian National Railway Co. (CNR:TSX; CNI:NYSE) line just south of Fort McMurray for infrastructure; you need a place to load that sand onto rail. Athabasca’s had its sand independently tested and it compares favorably with all the existing frack-sand industry benchmarks. I get excited about it. Frack sand is just an absolutely essential component of the energy industry now. For anyone even thinking about LNG shipping from British Columbia in the future, you have to consider that those gas molecules are going to be unlocked by frack sand at some point, and that’s on top of the domestic gas market. I think Athabasca’s Firebag project could be a strategic asset down the road. It’s a real, “made in Alberta” solution.

Athabasca Minerals also has a history of profitability from its core gravel operations in the Fort McMurray area, which is closely tied to development activity in the oil sands. I should point out that there is no NI 43-101 on the sand resource yet, but my back-of-the envelope math says that there are decades of supply there. I expect margins to be quite robust. I think once the market figures out what’s in play here, the stock has a very good chance of being quite a bit higher.

TMR: To wrap up, can you recap your investment advice for uranium and then for oil and gas?

MS: For any industry, I would encourage investors to look for a backstop in value and then look for good management teams focused on giving investors exposure to good upside. I like to find companies where I know the valuation is underpinned by the existing assets. To me that’s a big deal. The other thing that I look for is long-tail optionality on the upside. I highlighted some of those names today with some of the shale oil plays and this frack-sand opportunity. If people gear themselves towards thinking about the downside first and then thinking about what they’re paying for the upside, it can make for much more successful investing in the long run.

TMR: Malcolm, thank you very much for your time. This has been a good discussion.

MS: Thanks for having me.

Malcolm Shaw is a partner at Hydra Capital Partners Inc., a group of buy side and sell side industry professionals focused on underfollowed companies. Shaw holds a Master of Science in geology from the University of Toronto and has 13 years of experience spanning the resource and investment industries. He started his career as a geoscientist at PanCanadian Petroleum (now EnCana), before transitioning into the investment industry as an international energy research analyst at Wellington West Capital Markets. Before joining Hydra, Malcolm was a vice president at K2 & Associates Investment Management, where he focused on the energy and materials sectors.

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DISCLOSURE:

1) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, 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 Streetwise Reports: Fission Uranium Corp., Energy Fuels Inc., Uranerz Energy Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.

3) Malcolm Shaw: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Canacol Energy Ltd., Crown Point Energy Inc., Uranerz Energy Corp., Energy Fuels Inc., Athabasca Minerals Inc., Cameco Corp. and Powertech Uranium Corp. I also own bonds in Advantage Oil & Gas Ltd. and warrants in NexGen Energy Ltd. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Apple Cracks the Sky With $600 Shares

By WallStreetDaily.com Apple Cracks the Sky With $600 Shares

The services sector has expanded at its fastest pace in eight months, bumping stocks a little higher. The escalating violence in Ukraine is keeping gains in check, however. A late Friday warning from JP Morgan Chase (JPM) put financial stocks under pressure. But, for the first time since October 2012,  Apple (AAPL) closed above $600 per share.

Target (TGT) is still under a big shakeup with its Chairman and CEO Gregg Steinhafel’s departure, in light of the tragic data breach that hit Target’s profits over the holiday shopping season.

Jim Finkle, Reuters Cyber Security Correspondent, says: “What they haven’t done yet is name a new chief information security officer. A lot of companies have chief information security officers and have had them for some time, and the fact that Target, being such a large company, didn’t have one to begin with is seen as a failing of the CEO and may be one of the reasons he is leaving.”

What’s more, the retailer’s financial results have been short of great for some time. And Target’s investors have lost faith in a major turnaround, sending its shares down by more than 3%.

Speaking of faulty systems, General Motors (GM) just added to its list of recalls. GM sent out 52,000 new model SUVs that incorrectly measure their fuel count. Therefore, GM is reeling the defected vehicles back in – totaling seven million vehicles on its recall list so far this year. And Target isn’t the only one saying “Goodbye” to a top game player, because GM is losing another top engineer. GM’s shares finished lower on the day.

While Target and GM may be fine cutting the chords, Pfizer (PFE) is not. It refuses to take a “No” from AstraZeneca (AZN). So far, AZN has rejected three offers from its suitor. After reviewing Pfizer’s results, it’s become quite apparent why this drug maker won’t let go of AZN. Its sales hit 2.5% below forecasts.

Overseas news: Markets were closed in London, but other major indexes were mixed. Worries over Ukraine and the Chinese economy played a big role in Europe’s markets.

The post Apple Cracks the Sky With $600 Shares appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Apple Cracks the Sky With $600 Shares

Why Hasn’t The U.S. Gone After Gazprom?

By OilPrice.com

Amidst the deepening war of words over Moscow’s annexation of Crimea, U.S. President Barack Obama on April 28 added more Russian individuals and companies to a sanctions list that already included influential members of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle and Bank Rossiya, which has close ties to the Russian leadership. The new list freezes the assets of Igor Sechin, head of Russia’s major oil company, Rosneft, six other individuals and 17 companies.

Significantly, the new U.S. list does not include Alexei Miller, CEO of the Russian natural gas state monopoly, Gazprom.

Although the European Union has imposed its own tough sanctions on 48 Russian individuals, Gazprom is arguably where daylight exists between the Obama administration and the EU on the issue of penalizing Moscow for its actions in Ukraine.

The numbers make it clear why. Russia is the EU’s third-biggest trading partner, after the U.S. and China; in 2012, bilateral EU-Russian trade amounted to almost $370 billion. The same year, U.S. trade with Russia amounted to just $26 billion.

More than half of Russia’s exports go to Europe, and 45 percent of its imports come from Europe, according to the EU EUROSTAT agency. Out of 485 billion cubic meters of gas consumed by the EU annually, Russia supplies about 160 billion cubic meters, or almost one-third the total volume.

Germany, the EU’s economic powerhouse, has been explicit about the costs for the German economy from increased sanctions. Anton Borner, the president of Germany’s main trade group, BGA, warned that more than 6,000 German businesses with $105 billion of turnover are interlinked with Russia and stand to lose if sanctions are ratcheted up.

U.S. Representative Lois Frankel (D-FL), who recently visited Ukraine with a Congressional delegation, has offered the likeliest official explanation for why the White House left Gazprom and CEO Miller untouched in the most recent round of sanctions.

In an April 28 appearance on MSNBC, Frankel said, “I think our president is taking a cautious approach warranted because our European allies are…trade partners with Russia, they depend on Russia’s energy. And so we have [to] be careful because sanctions against Russia also have the good probability of hurting our allies.”

Other members of Congress have shown less willingness to accommodate the EU’s delicate economic position. In recent days, senior members of the U.S. Senate have increased their calls for the White House to move against Gazprom. Carl Levin (D -MI), John McCain (R-AZ) and Bob Corker (R-TN) want Obama to use an executive order that allows him to punish broad sectors of the Russian economy in response to Russia’s actions in Crimea.

The lawmakers’ statements on the issue have been widely covered in the Ukrainian and Russian press.

In an April 12 letter to Obama, Corker, a ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “Unless Russia ends its destabilization of eastern Ukraine and drastically reduces troop levels on the Ukrainian border immediately, further sanctions against strategic sectors of the Russian economy, particularly targeting Gazprom and additional important financial institutions, should be imposed within days.”

After the latest round of U.S. sanctions this week, Corker repeated that call in a joint statement with Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), the ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee, in which he said, “Until Putin feels the real pain of sanctions targeting entities like Gazprom, which the Kremlin uses to coerce Ukraine and other neighbors, as well as some significant financial institutions, I don’t think diplomacy will change Russian behavior and de-escalate this crisis.”

During an April 25 visit to the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, Levin told reporters, “The existing authority is sufficient to take very strong sanctioning action against Russian banks that have correspondent accounts in the United States. The authority exists. It should be used, and that includes Gazprom.”

McCain advocated in an April 25 press release, “The United States needs to expand sanctions to major Russian banks, energy companies, and sectors of its economy, such as the arms industry, which serve as instruments of Putin’s foreign policy. NATO needs to move toward a robust and persistent military presence in central Europe and the Baltic countries, including increased missile defense capabilities. We need a transatlantic energy strategy to break Europe’s dependence on Russian oil and gas,” which would include sanctions against Gazprom, according to his office.

McCain recently suggested he has a broader agenda in mind when he said, “The strategy of the U.S. for saving Ukraine must be built in opposition to Russia’s gas strategy, as this will be the end of Putin and his empire.”

Given Gazprom’s centrality to the Russian economy, it’s unlikely that Putin won’t react if and when the company comes in for Western sanctions. In preparation for that possibility, Gazprom’s subsidiary, Gazprombank, Russia’s third largest, last month transferred nearly $7 billion to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation.

Gazprom has already warned that further Western sanctions could disrupt gas exports to Europe.

And Russian Natural Resources Minister Sergei Donskoi has made it explicit that there will be consequences for Western energy firms that comply with sanctions. Speaking on April 24 to journalists in Russia’s far eastern city of Birobidzhan, Donskoi said, “It is obvious that they won’t return in the near future if they sever investment agreements with us, I mean there are consequences as well. Russia is one of the most promising countries in terms of hydrocarbons production. If some contracts are severed here, then, colleagues, you lose a serious lump of your future pie.”

Donskoi also expressed the certainty that if Western firms leave Russia, other foreign energy companies would take their place.

That kind of threatening rhetoric will only make it harder for U.S. officials to sell an already nervous Brussels on the idea of more sanctions, if it comes to that, and on targeting Gazprom, in particular.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Why-Hasnt-The-U.S.-Gone-After-Gazprom.html

By John C.K. Daly of Oilprice.com

 

 

 

 

Foreign Exchange Market Is In A Sleepy State

The EURUSD Stands Still For the Entire Day

The new trading week has started, however the market continues to stand still. The EURUSD steeped in a 20-points range, so there is nothing to add to the previous outlooks. The forecast remains the same: a breakout through 1.3905 will open the way to the highs at the level of 1.3966. A breakout through them will cause testing 1.4000. In turn, a fall below 1.3800-1.3772 will weaken a bearish impulse and give a reason to presume the formation of a top.

eur

The GBPUSD Sticks In 30-points Range

Yesterday appeared to be unsuccessful for both the EURUSD and the GBPUSD. The only difference is that the pound was fluctuating in a 30- points range. Today, the pair is approaching the 69th figure, however it is still unclear if it is the beginning of a movement, or it enters another range. Thus, the forecast remains the same: bulls` perseverance can lead to testing the psychological level of 1.7000, but the MACD doubts now regarding their ability to move significantly higher than current levels. A fall below 1.6765 will give a reason to assume the formation of a top.

gbp

The USDCHF Stands Still

There were not any movements both in the EURUSD and in the EURCHF, so the USDCHF stood also still. Thus, the overall picture was not changed yesterday. The dollar remains under pressure, and it still trades below a descending resistance line that testifies about preservation of a descending trend. Nevertheless, the 87th figure has not been tested yet and, correspondingly, it was not overcome that could lead to the formation of a base and the development of an ascending correction. Bulls need to overcome the resistance around 0.8951 for this. Loss of the 87th figure will open the way to 0.8568.

chf

The USDJPY Still Can Test 101.59

Yesterday, the USDJPY started declining to 101.86 where it was bought out, and it returned to 102.11. The rest of the time it was within these levels. Risks to test and to break through the support around 101.59-101.22 are kept. To weaken bearish pressure bulls need to overcome the 103rd figure and consolidate above. In this case they can reckon on testing the 104th one.

jpy

provided by IAFT

 

 

 

 

 

 

AUD/CAD Switches to Bullish Configuration

Technical Sentiment: Bullish

Key Takeaways

  • AUD Cash Rate remains at 2.50%;
  • Canadian Trade Balance comes out at 0.1B, below the 0.4B forecast;
  • AUD/CAD eyes 1.0255 next.

AUD/CAD declined in the last three weeks, forming a clear bearish configuration of lower highs and lower lows. Even the Daily uptrend has shown weakness when AUD/CAD managed to temporarily dip below 1.0150, forming a lower low before recovering above the support. Right now the pair is either correcting the recent bearish move or the uptrend is taking over; it all depends on how far up the pair goes.

 

Technical Analysis
AUDCAD 6th may

During the European session, AUD/CAD rallied from the 1.0150 (higher low) support all the way up to 1.0217 (higher high). This puts the bearish move on hold for now and brings up the possibility of a bullish correction.

The first resistance is around 1.0230, where the 50% Fibonacci retracement is backed up the 200 Simple Moving Average on the 4H. The secondary resistance is another confluence, priced at 1.0255, between 61.8% Fibonacci Retracement and April’s price pivot zone.

If the pair will eventually rally above 1.0255, where the correction should be capped, the uptrend will continue all the way up to the tops at 1.0340.

The main support is 1.0150, also backed up by the 50-Day Moving Average. Below this level AUD/CAD immediately switches to a negative bias and enters bearish territory.

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