EUR/USD Heading For 200-Day Moving Average

Technical Sentiment: Bearish

 

Key Takeaways

  • German Producer Price Index decreases by 0.1%
  • Euro remains pressured as ECB readies for action;
  • EUR/USD fails to correct upwards, eyes 200-Day Moving Average.

Traders were uneasy to push EUR/USD over the 1.3730 handle in recent sessions as Euro pressure mounts in direct correlation with the likelihood that ECB will act next month. The pair is expected to slowly grind lower ahead of US FOMC Meeting Minutes and Thursday’s Flash Manufacturing PMI releases. The Flash PMIs are expected to post small decreases, but if numbers disappoint too much we’ll be looking at a breach below the 200-Day Moving Average this week.

 

Technical Analysis

EURUSD 20th May

On the 15th last week, EUR/USD formed a bullish Pin bar which led traders to believe a correction was about to come after the drop from the 1.3992 area. The bullish price action pattern offered no follow through as EUR/USD flirted with the resistance at 1.3730 (just below the 100-Day Moving Average) yet never broke above it. If price crosses above this level, rallies won’t be capped until 1.3800/20.

Daily Stochastic remains in oversold territory but with bearish rejections off the resistance EUR/USD may continue the dip towards the next support, which in this case is represented by the 200-Day Moving Average at 1.3626. This level also coincides with a price pivot zone dating back to late 2013.

A breach of the 200-Day Moving Average will open the way for 1.3475 to be tested – the main support from February (level confirmed on multiple occasions between September and October 2013).

On the other hand, if EUR/USD does provide another bullish signal and corrects for a wave or two, rallies will aim to test the 100-Day Moving Average (1.3738) and the 50-Day Moving Average (1.3809), since these lines have been aimed at and respected by the market in recent months.

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

 

 

 

 

 

Thoughts from the Frontline: Special Updates from the Strategic Investment Conference: Day 3

By Worth WrayGood morning from 30,000 feet, somewhere over the great American West!

I admit to being a little overwhelmed as I write to you on my way home from the Strategic Investment Conference. After three days with two dozen of the finest investors, economists, and political scientists anywhere in the English-speaking world, it is going to take me weeks to think through the real-world implications of all I have learned.

While I will have to rely on my overloaded memory and late-night notes to reflect on the dozens of one-on-one conversations I had, I am so thankful to the folks at Mauldin Economics and Altegris for recording the sessions themselves, which will let me replay the experience over and over in the coming weeks. (You can do so, too, by ordering the SIC MP3/CD Audio Set at our discounted pre-event price. It’s available here.)

Much to my surprise, after two days of mind-blowing presentations and provocative conversations about debt overhangs, monetary policy, technological transformation, and the growing bubble in investor complacency, the conference ended on its strongest note yet!

Early in the day, GaveKal Research co-founder (and Europe’s preeminent financial journalist) Anatole Kaletsky shared a handful of variant perceptions that challenged my thinking and shattered my often self-deceptive sense of certainty. Contrary to the optimistic and technologically promising view of the future shared by John Mauldin, George Gilder, Newt Gingrich, and Jack Rivkin, Anatole suggested that the jury is still out on the future path of productivity growth. The still open question about productivity (which Anatole says may take 15 years to answer) has enormous implications not only for the climax and resolution of the global debt drama but also for the very structure of the global economy in the years ahead.

Looking to the shorter term, Anatole echoed a wise but too-often-overlooked comment from Gluskin Sheff Chief Economist & Strategist David Rosenberg on day 1 of the conference. Markets move as economic activity, liquidity conditions, and valuations get better or worse at the margin… and at the margin, Anatole suggests, the great and powerful headwinds on everyone’s minds may be slowly turning into tailwinds.

He laid out a powerful and actionable view of the future that I seriously need to consider in the coming weeks, starting with this question: Is the US stock market (an asset class that tends to dominate traditional investment portfolios) at the end of a five-year cyclical rebound and due for a correction…

… or are US stocks finally breaking out in a structural upswing after 14 years in a secular bear market purgatory?

While I remain concerned about the corrosive effects of dogmatic and irresponsible central bank policy – not to mention historically elevated valuations in the face of negative real interest rates – Anatole has learned to look past emotion and ask the uncomfortable questions. These are the moments when my brain goes into overdrive, and I feel absolutely alive.

What many people do not realize about Anatole is that he draws not only on the wisdom gained from a long career but also on an unparalleled personal network of legendary investors like George Soros, Stan Druckenmiller, and Kyle Bass… to name just a few.

The day ended with a lively debate, featuring an eye-opening range of competing views, that extended our conversation from questions about global markets and economies to geopolitics. While Harvard Professor Niall Ferguson expressed worries about the global dangers of US isolationism, the degeneration of American culture, and the troubling trajectory of government debt in the face of a dysfunctional political system, Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer argued that US ambiguity is far more dangerous than isolationism.  Hamstrung by a lack of support from the American people to enforce hollow threats over “red lines” in Syria and the Ukraine, the Obama administration has not actually said what it wants in the world… leaving US allies and enemies to assume the worst (a point that Anatole shared with great vigor).

I wish I could outline their entire conversation for you – ranging from the future of the Eurozone and the rising risk of Russian imperialism to the enormous risks of Chinese reforms – but it is time to hit the send button.

I am leaving the Golden State with more questions than answers… but then again, that’s the mark of a great conference! Hope you can join us next year, and feel free to drop me a line anytime on Twitter at @WorthWray.


Worth Wray
Chief Strategist, Mauldin Companies

 

Individuals who trade gold might be interested in recent climb above $1,300 per ounce

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Individuals who trade gold might be interested in the precious metal’s recent climb above $1,300 per ounce, as well as the factors that helped drive this appreciation.

Spot gold rose to $1,301.76 an ounce by 14:03 GMT on May 19, which represented a 0.7 percent gain for the session, according to Reuters. At this time, the dollar was 0.1 percent lower compared to a basket of other currencies. Gold tends to have an inverse relationship with the greenback.

In addition to the key role that the falling dollar played in bolstering the precious metal, anticipation surrounding the future policy moves of the European Central Bank was cited as having an impact on the value of gold, the media outlet reported.

Market participants will also look to the minutes released after the Federal Open Market Committee meeting to see any change that these key government officials are going to make, according to MarketWatch.

Individuals who trade gold have been scrutinizing the statements of central banks for the last several years. Many consider the precious metal to be an inflation hedge, and if the central banks announce a slowing of their quantitative easing, this development will cause the money supply to grow less quickly.

This in turn could give market participants less reason to buy gold in order to protect themselves against the possibility of sharp rises in the price level.

The post Individuals who trade gold might be interested in recent climb above $1,300 per ounce appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Why Western Areas Share Price Rose Today

By MoneyMorning.com.au

What happened to the Western Areas Share Price?

Shares of Western Areas [ASX:WSA] rose by 4.01% on Tuesday, closing at $4.41. This is close to its highest level since the beginning of 2013. The share price has increased over 85% since the start of this year.

Why did the Western Areas Share Price Rise?

Western Areas is Australia’s second largest sulphide nickel miner, producing roughly 25,000 tonnes per year of nickel in ore from its Flying Fox and Spotted Quoll mines.

The WSA share price has nearly doubled in price since the start of this year; a time when Indonesia, the world’s top supplier of the metal, began talking about enforcing a ban on nickel exports (now enforced).

On top of this, recently Vale SA [SA:VALE5] was ordered to shut down one of its largest nickel processing plants by the New Caledonia government. The plant encountered a spill of ‘acid-containing solution,’ a small amount of which entered a nearby creek. Vale is the world’s second largest nickel producer.

In this case, the nickel spot price continues its volatile climb. Spot nickel reached $21,625 per tonne on May 13, the highest level since February 2012. The price has increased roughly 43% this year.

What now for Western Areas?

The company is living up to its slogan, ‘Think Nickel, Think Western Areas’.

Fundamentally, the company’s nickel assets look good — very high grade and low cost.

Flying Fox is a very high grade mine with a current reserve estimate of 1.5 million tonnes at an average grade of 4% nickel. Nonetheless, with the company mining Flying Fox at a production rate of roughly 300,000 tonnes of nickel per year, the remaining mine life is just 4.5 years.

Saying this, there is significant exploration upside at deeper depths for the company, which could materially upgrade its mine life.

The Spotted Quoll mine is also very high grade nickel, at roughly 5.5%. The mine life and reserves are likely to extend beyond 10 years.

Nonetheless, the share price has nearly doubled since the Indonesian nickel export ban was enforced. Furthermore, with speculative interest focusing on nickel, the price is volatile.

The market is concerned about supply, mostly because of Indonesia’s export ban. If Indonesia decided to reverse its ban, Western Areas shareholders could be in for a lot of pain.

Western Areas looks like it will continue to be a roller coaster ride on the Nickel price.

Jason Stevenson+
Resources Analyst, Diggers and Drillers

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Why the Treasury Wine Estates Share Price Blew Up Today

By MoneyMorning.com.au

What Happened to the Treasury Wine Estates Share Price?

Shares in winemaker Treasury Wine Estates Ltd [ASX:TWE] exploded to the upside this morning, gaining almost 18% over the day. The stock has regained all of its year-to-date losses in just one trading day.

Why Did this happen to the TWE Share Price?

This morning TWE’s management announced that they had rejected an offer from US private equity firm KKR and Co. L.P. [NYSE:KKR] to buy TWE for $3.05 billion.

KKR’s bid valued Treasury at $4.70 per share. On the day TWE rejected the takeover approach nearly five weeks ago, its shares were trading at $3.70, so KKR’s proposal would have represented a 27% premium.

Speculation about mergers and acquisitions can push stock prices up with tremendous momentum…particularly when an offer comes in cash, like KKR’s bid for TWE. The prospect of a bidding war for their company has got TWE shareholders excited today.

What now for Treasury Wine Estates?

Long-suffering TWE investors should rightly be cheered by today’s price action. But you should recognise that buying any stock because it’s viewed as a potential takeover target is a high risk strategy. Potential suitors can get cold feet very quickly if financial markets turn sour.

You’ve also got to factor in a bruisingly competitive market, with crucial Chinese demand dampened by austerity measures. The company told us as much this morning when it admitted that ‘trading conditions in Australia continue to be difficult, underpinned by intense competitor activity and a challenging retail environment.’

And lest we forget, this company has form when it comes to failing to meet investors’ profit expectations.

Enjoy their products if you like, but there may be better opportunities for your investment dollar elsewhere.

Tim Dohrmann+
Small-Cap Analyst, Australian Small-Cap Investigator

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Why Fortescue Metals Share Price Went Higher Today

By MoneyMorning.com.au

What happened to the Fortescue Metal Share Price?

Shares of Fortescue Metals Group Ltd [ASX:FMG] gained nearly 4% Tuesday, following a week of price falls.

Why did this happen to the Fortescue Metal Share Price?

The company reported a 1.16 billion tonne increase to its Greater Solomon mineral resource. This takes the total resource at Greater Solomon to 2.66 billion tonnes. The mineral resource for the Solomon Hub, which includes the Firetail and Kings Valley projects, is now up to 4.5 billion tonnes.

What now for Fortescue Metals?

The Fortescue share price has come under a lot of pressure. Fortescue’s production costs are much higher than BHP Billiton [ASX:BHP] and Rio Tinto [ASX:RIO]. Furthermore, Fortescue has a huge amount of debt that it needs to finance through cash flows.

If the iron ore price or demand for iron ore from China fall, this could have a big impact on Fortescue’s ability to repay its debt.

There is plenty to be concerned about with Fortescue, but if China continues to move from an emerging market economy towards a more developed economy, the current low share price could prove to be a short term event.

Bottom line: for the Fortescue share price to improve iron ore prices need to remain above US$100 and demand from emerging economies needs to continue to grow.

Cheers,
Kris+

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Central Bank News Link List – May 20, 2014 – Australian interest rates to stay on hold, RBA minutes show

By CentralBankNews.info

Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

          http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

Sri Lanka holds rate, wants banks to pass on lower rates

By CentralBankNews.info
    Sri Lanka’s central bank maintained its monetary policy stance, as expected, saying pointedly that it expects commercial banks to pass on the benefits of its rate cuts since December 2012 “without further delay.”
    The Central Bank of Sri Lanka left its Standing Deposit Facility Rate (SDFR) at 6.50 percent and the Standing Lending Facility Rate (SLFR) at 8.0 percent. In January the central bank rejigged its policy framework with the SDRF rate replacing the previous benchmark repo rate.
    The central bank embarked on an easing cycle in December 2012 and has cut the repo rate by a total of 125 basis points, most recently in October 2013. The Statutory Reserve Requirement (SRR) on rupee deposits has also been reduced by 2 percentage points during the easing cycle.
    “Responding to the eased monetary policy stance, both market lending and deposit interest rates have adjusted downwards substantially, although there is further room for downward adjustment in long term lending rates,” the central bank said.
    Credit extended by banks to the private sector rose by 7.6 billion rupees in March with an increase of 15.3 billion in credit extended to the private sector from domestic banking units while repayments by BOI companies to offshore banking units dampened overall credit growth, the central bank said.

    “The sharp decline in pawning advances contributed largely to the continued low growth of credit to the private sector,” the bank said, adding its monetary board had approved the implementation of a credit guarantee scheme on pawning advances on behalf of the government in order to counter the effects of the continued decline in pawing advances on the productive sectors of the economy.
    The central bank cut its rates since December 2012 due to benign inflation and the bank said the outlook for inflation remains favorable.
    Sri Lanka’s headline inflation rate rose to 4.9 percent in April from 4.2 percent in March – well within the central bank’s 2014 target of 4-6 percent – while core inflation was steady at 3.4 percent.
    The central bank said it expects inflation to remain benign in the months ahead although weather-related supply disruptions could cause some “marginal variation” in some food items.
    In 2015 and 2016 the central bank will target inflation of 3-5 percent.
    The central bank noted that Sri Lanka’s trade deficit contracted by nearly 12 percent in the first quarter, boosted by high export volumes in March, with export earnings up by 28.6 percent year-on-year, surpassing US$ 1 billion.
   “Further, the outlook for export earnings remains positive on account of the firming up of the recovery in advanced economies,” the bank said.
   Inflows from workers’ remittances also rose strongly in March while earnings from tourism also rose in the first four months, with tourist arrivals surpassing the half-million mark in the first four months.
    End-March, gross official reserves were $8.1 billion and since then reserves have risen further due to the proceeds from the seventh sovereign bond issued in April.
   Sri Lanka’s economy expanded by 7.3 percent in 2013, up from 6.3 percent in 2012 and the central bank has forecast growth of 7.8 percent for 2014.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

   

Is China’s Economy Cooling or Overheating?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You may know the Doctor Dolittle stories.

One of the characters is the pushmi-pullyu. It’s a creature with two heads…one at each end of its body.

When the creature wants to walk, each end wants to walk in the opposite direction.

Needless to say, confusion ensues.

It’s a situation we see happening right now in the financial markets. News comes out and the market wants to go in two different directions.

Is it bad news or is it good news? The truth is it’s neither. It’s just news. And yet the market is determined to make something out of it.

What has the market fretted about most over the past few months?

That’s right, a slowing Chinese economy.

What else has the market fretted about over the past few months?

That’s right, the potential for an overheating Chinese property market.

So now what has happened? The markets are worried because China’s housing market has slowed. According to the Financial Times:

A report published over the weekend showed new home prices in the 70 cities tracked by the government rose 6.7 per cent in April from a year ago. In January, the annual pace of growth was 9.6 per cent.

It’s a classic case of worrying about one thing and then worrying twice as much when the opposite happens.

The long or the short

There’s no doubt there are a bunch of risks with China.

Our new emerging markets analyst Ken Wangdong has personal experience of living and working in China. He knows the exact details of those potential problems.

But he also knows about the potential to build enormous wealth by betting on a resurgence of the Chinese economy.

You can read more from Ken in tomorrow’s Money Morning (subscribers to any one of Port Phillip Publishing’s paid investment services can also read a bonus contribution from Ken in today’s edition of Scoops Lane, out this afternoon).

The simple fact is that right now the world’s economy is going through the post-boom bust.

This is where economies and businesses expunge all the excesses of the boom. The bust can happen (generally) in one of two ways. It can either be a quick and painful affair, resulting in high unemployment, economic contraction, businesses going bust, and low interest rates.

Or it can be a long and painful affair, resulting in high unemployment, economic contraction, businesses going bust, and low interest rates.

You’ll notice they are similar.

Regardless of the length of the bust, the symptoms and the outcome are the same.

After the 2008 meltdown, governments and central banks had a choice. They could choose the long version or the short version. They chose the long version.

Economies worldwide are feeling the effects of that today, six years later.

Just as we predicted

The thing is, this shouldn’t come as a surprise to contrarian investors.

At the time we predicted things would turn out pretty much as they have. We predicted there would be a big ‘blow off’ stock rally as the stimulus and low interest rates kicked in.

That happened.

We advised investors to load up on small-cap stocks to profit from it — something we also advise investors to do today.

We also predicted that the stimulus effects wouldn’t last. We said that the market would sink again, as the stimulus merely had the effect of delaying the downturn rather than preventing it.

That happened.

We advised investors to start taking profits on small-cap stocks towards the end of 2010. We copped a lot of flak for taking that position.

Of course, it’s impossible to predict things precisely. For example, we didn’t expect US stock markets to reach record highs this soon. But in terms of everything else, contrarian and non-mainstream investors and analysts got most things right.

But now is the time to move into the next phase of this market cycle. That means considering what comes after the bust — assuming, as we do, that the bust has just about ended.

Well, this is where it gets exciting.

Breaking news: cycles are cyclical

Remember that market cycles are called market cycles for a reason — because they are cyclical.

That means the economy goes through periods of booms, busts and recoveries. Once it has gone through that cycle it goes through it again…and again…and again.

It’s as regular as clockwork and as certain as the Sun rising in the east and setting in the west.

This is exactly why we’re beefing up our team of analysts to help you take advantage of the market as it shifts from the bust phase, into the recovery phase and eventually into a new boom phase.

It’s why we hired Sam Volkering last year to work on the Revolutionary Tech Investor project. And it’s why we’ve now hired Ken Wangdong to work on a new emerging markets project.

Historically, during periods of economic recovery and boom it’s the tech sector and the emerging markets sector that tend to perform best of all. You saw that in recent years following the dot-com bust and the 2008 financial meltdown.

On both occasions these markets led the way. But over the past two years the emerging markets sector has taken a drubbing. It has gone through the bust that many predicted — including our old pal Greg Canavan.

But now our bet is that emerging markets are about to hit the road to recovery. At the moment many analysts and commentators are talking as if the entire world is about to stop dead in its tracks. But that’s not how things work.

Even in the worst of times things still happen. Economies begin to grow, and entrepreneurs and capitalists begin to invest and innovate. Before you know it the economy begins to recover and investment markets begin to rise.

Unfortunately not many people can see that at the moment. Instead, all they can see are the headlines in the mainstream press about China’s economy overheating and cooling at the same time.

For a long time the mainstream press denied that the Chinese economy could ever slow down. At the same time contrarian investors said it was inevitable.

Well now it’s happened.

Finally the mainstream can now see what contrarians foresaw years ago, and they’re now calling for China to crash. So while they’re preoccupied with predicting the crash that has already happened, contrarian investors can grasp the opportunity to invest in high growth assets at beaten down prices.

Cheers,
Kris+

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Ink + Paper Doesn’t Equal Value: Prechter on Fiat Money

By Elliott Wave International

My dad will turn 84 this year. When he was born, you could walk into a Federal Reserve Bank or the Treasury and redeem your paper money for gold. It actually said you could on every piece of U.S. paper currency:

“Redeemable in gold on demand at the United States Treasury, or in Gold or lawful money at any Federal Reserve Bank.”

You can’t do that today, which helps explain why my dad is so grumpy.

But, seriously, I mention my father to make it personal. The move away from the gold standard did happen in the lifetime of some folks who are still around. Is that such a big deal?

Well, it is a big deal when the government unilaterally changes all economic and financial transactions, from having a basis in something, to …

… A basis in nothing.

Now, a discussion of what money is — and how society can have a convenient way to exchange goods and services — gets abstract in a hurry, so I’ll save that for another day.

I will use one not-so-common word, which is fiat. It sort of means what happened when God said “Let there be light.” Out of nothing comes something.

But in the story of our currency, what we have is fiat money. As in, the Treasury and Federal Reserve put ink on paper and say, “Let There Be Value!”

The problem is: You can’t create value from fiat.

Here’s some context: The Federal Reserve Bank was created in 1913. The idea was to keep the financial system from hurting itself.

Did it get less pain? Well — less than 20 years later — “hurting itself” only begins to describe the pain of the 1929 crash and Great Depression.

The depression is why President Franklin Roosevelt and Congress moved away from the gold standard in 1934.

Was fiat money a real solution? Mind you, the government didn’t make this huge change all at once. In truth it took about 35 years. (When things move slowly, fewer people notice.)

The real question is: Are we better off with fiat money?

Bob Prechter just published a full-blown reply to this question. He dedicated his entire March issue of The Elliott Theorist to answering it.

Please know that Bob doesn’t write dry boring history — because he’s not dry & boring. He does connect the dots to today’s banking system and economy. Read the entire issue for yourself — for free — by starting your complimentary Club EWI Membership >>

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline Ink + Paper Doesn’t Equal Value: Prechter on Fiat Money. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.