No Tech Stock Bubble Here

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Since the NASDAQ fell 7.4% in three weeks, many headlines are suggesting this is the sign that tech stocks are in a bubble.

Time magazine declared ‘Every reason you should be worried about a destructive tech bubble.

An expert talking to Bloomberg is convinced the technology sector is frothy, ‘Shiller: Looks and feels like a bubble in Tech.

And Bloomberg Businessweek warns that it’s not time to party like its 1999, ‘Silicon Valley Hears Echoes of 1999.

The thing is, the NASDAQ overall is down only 3.7% since the start of the year. However, compared to this time last year, it’s still up a massive 21.39%…

As Kris noted in his World War D speech two weeks ago, many contrarian investors are too busy looking for a bubble or market crash. Rather than focusing on good investing opportunities, they focus on trying to avoid a bubble.

This reluctance means they miss on investment ideas.

Kris called it paralysis by analysis.

Like it or not, a share’s price at any given time is what the market thinks its worth.

There’s no denying tech stocks are very hot right now. Even some of the two most recently cloud based stocks have seen their prices soften a little.

Take Amber Road [NYSE:AMBR] for example. Amber Road made its market debut at US$16.95, which was well above the IPO price of US$13. Yet, in three weeks, it dipped 15% to US$14.41.

Another recent had-to-have cloud company was Rubicon Project [NYSE:RUBI]. It’s initial price was quoted from US$15-$17. It commenced trading at US$21.02, only to fall 2% since then.

Initial trading may have seen some speculative investing in these companies, but this doesn’t mean there’s a bubble brewing in the NASDAQ.

No Tech Bubble Here

The NASDAQ isn’t in a bubble.

Let me explain.

It’s still trading 26% below its May 2000 peak of 5,408.

And unlike 1999 and 2000, there are fewer initial public offerings (IPOs). During this time, 794 tech stocks went public on either the NASDAQ or the New York Stock Exchange.

Compare that to 2012 and 2013. As the NASDAQ slowly marched towards 4,000 again (the first time in 14 years) only 86 tech firms listed.

And although I declared this year, ‘the year of the cloud’ for stock listings in the US, so far only 10 companies have begun trading this in 2014.

It may seem that the valuations of tech companies are out of hand. Adding to the perhaps irrational exuberance when it comes to buying of tech stocks. But that’s not the case either.

During 2012 and 2013, over US$30 billion was invested in new public companies. However, that’s nothing compared to the US$82 billion invested in 1999 and 2000.

This year, barely US$1.6 billion in tech stocks have listed.

In spite of this, over at Reuters, they reckon the sign of a bubble brewing is the imbalance of voting rights of shareholders.

The best description of the stock being harked in this way is “coattails equity”. It offers little beyond a chance to tag along with entrepreneurs from Wall Street, Silicon Valley and China. Buyers of shares in IPOs such as those of Box, Grubhub, Moelis & Co, Virtu Financial and Weibo – and probably the $100 billion-plus giant Alibaba – must give up the rights that have traditionally accompanied the ownership of common shares, like a representative voice in corporate decisions.

What Reuters mean, is a dual class share system.

Now this isn’t actually uncommon. Many companies, especially tech ones have often favoured Class A and Class B shares to ensure control remains with the founders of a company.

However, the frequency which companies are choosing this option is changing. Rather than happening occasionally, most new tech firms listing are going with a dual class system. 

Take Box Inc’s recent filing to list. It’s offering two classes of shares, Class A and class B. In this case, Class A shareholders will get one vote per share, and Class B shareholders will get 10 votes per share.

Google is the same. The Class B shares have ten times the voting rights of Class A shareholders.

Recently, Google [NASDAQ:GOOGL] they spilt the stock and created another non-voting Class C stock [NASDAQ: GOOG].

The short of it is, this spilt was all about giving the Google founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page a greater portion of control over its company.

Facebook [NASDAQ:FB] did the same thing with its IPO.  The class system was skewed in Mark Zuckerberg’s favour.

It appears that the founders of the companies want to tap the market for funds, without handing over control. This isn’t a bad thing though.

When you buy tech stocks, a lot of the time you’re buying into the founder’s idea.

Becoming a shareholder means in one way, you support the founder, creator or investor of the technology. In addition, it means that you believe in their dream to take the company one step further with the technology or the product.

Reuters may think this further sign of a bubble. I disagree.

It’s more a case of company founders keeping control of their project.

After all, if you don’t like the direction a firm is taking, you can always sell your stake in it.

Shae Smith+

PS. If you haven’t seen technology analyst Sam Volkering’s latest report, I recommend you watch it here. In it, he explains why he believes the tech sector is the best place to invest your money today, and reveals a little about the four companies he’s backing for big gains over the next three years. Click here to watch it now.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

When the Major Equity Market Bubble Crashes, Michael Berry Will Take Refuge in These Gold Stocks

Source: JT Long of The Gold Report (4/14/14)

An overinflated equities market could be good news for metals and mining stocks. In this interview with The Gold Report, Morning Notes Publisher Michael Berry shares two scenarios that could follow an imminent crash and four gold companies that could be perfectly positioned to take advantage of a reset credit market.

The Gold Report: Mike, you’ve been watching the stock market and, by extension, the precious metals markets very closely for signs of a larger equity market blow-off that could send gold higher. What makes you think the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the NASDAQ are in a bubble? What are the signs that a crash might be imminent?

Michael Berry: I have been watching bubbles since 1987. In September of that year I correctly predicted the 25% crash of October 19. We have been blowing through mini and maxi bubbles for 30 years; this one is nothing new.

The solution to our macroeconomic issues has been to inflate new bubbles, to inflate asset values to soften the blow from the last bubble, all the while creating the conditions for the next one. That is how we ended up with the current equity market bubble. It is driven solely by the Federal Reserve’s liquidity. Always remember that liquidity begets liquidity. I also see a debt market that I consider to be a bubble. These markets are just not sustainable. I can’t say when, but we have an equity market decline coming, maybe a severe decline.

TGR: The housing bubble and the tech bubble were, by definition, confined to certain niches initially and then the impact reverberated to other sectors. Are you predicting a market-wide crash where everything falls or will it be confined to certain sectors?

MB: The correction will impact everything. As of April 8 I’m measuring the Dow technically, fundamentally and behaviorally, and I see a clear top by all three measurements. The top is not quite as clear for the Standard & Poor’s 500, but it’s certainly there. A major event could cause this bubble to burst and the markets turn down. I think it’s imminent, probably this year. With the Federal Reserve pulling back on its quantitative easing, I can’t see the equity market being able to sustain itself.

TGR: Are there any specific indicators that might tell when a crash is about to happen or will we only know after it happens?

MB: The money multiplier, M1, which is a measure of how well the banking system is working, is at its lowest level ever—0.69, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve. (It usually has been above 1.0). It has continued to decline for the last five and a half years. That is the sign of a disabled banking system, a coming bear market and a severe recession or worse. There’s no doubt about that. The velocity of money has been in a decline for quite some time. These indicators mean our banking system is not working properly. These conditions were last this serious during the Great Depression. Even Milton Freidman acknowledged this when he suggested the Fed’s problem will be dealing with its own drastically expanded portfolio. Freidman claimed that the Great Depression was the result of a falling multiplier and the failure to increase the money supply. That has not been the case this time but we are still in serious trouble.

Europeans are now concerned about deflation, the slowing of the economy and the falling of prices. The “D” word is actually spoken. The International Monetary Fund is particularly concerned. We’ve certainly seen falling prices in the metals markets over the last year and a half. China’s tightening and slowing along with the U.S. tapering its quantitative easing mean the economic winds are in our face, not at our back. Those are the things I am concerned about.

TGR: So when this bubble does burst, how might the different metals—gold, silver, copper—respond differently to a market crisis?

MB: That is a good question. The answer is it depends. If we don’t fix the broken credit cycle and deal with exploding government debt, we will probably begin to see disinflation and deflation. Then prices will fall. Gold, copper, silver, tin, lead and zinc will decline, but probably less than the valuations in the macroeconomic economy. That will be the time to buy metals because we will recover once we see a new credit cycle. However, it could be a three- to five-year hiatus. The Fed and others will have to deleverage. Only then will the economy be able to recover and break out of it torpor. We’ll see a new bull market in the commodities then.

On the other hand, if we were to inflate out of the crisis, which the Fed would prefer, we will see gold achieve very high prices. I wish I could give you a very clear answer. Personally I think deflation is much more likely.

TGR: If we experience inflation, and the gold price goes up, will the equity prices follow?

MB: Absolutely. When we have inflation—and we will as soon as a new credit cycle is in place—then we are going to see gold miners take off. A lot of them are really struggling—Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE), Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE), Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) are all down 50%. They are reacting to a lower gold price. We will see Goldcorp back up to $50/share, but right now there isn’t a bottom on the price of these stocks because if gold goes much below $1,250 an ounce ($1,250/oz), then the cost of producing gold is going to be a problem for the big gold producers. These stocks have been punished and are close to their bottoms now. People interested in precious metals and who are patient ought to be buying these on any declines in their current share prices.

TGR: Are some mining stocks going to come back faster than others?

MB: Yes. A lot of the big-cap miners are highly leveraged with debt. They need to deleverage, and that’s difficult to do in this environment. I look at a company like Goldcorp and I think it will recover much faster. Its balance sheet looks pretty good. It has a good set of assets. So I think investors want to be buying the big stocks that are not highly leveraged, and Goldcorp is certainly one of them.

The midtier producers have a real problem because they’re really not big enough to go to the next level in this kind of a capital market environment. We are going to see that quite a few of them will be taken out. Goldcorp made a bid and just upped its bid for Osisko Mining Corp. (OSK:TSX). We may see more of that.

The juniors and explorers have been decimated. It’s a bloodbath. There’s no other word for it right now. These stocks are trading anywhere from $0.07 to $0.40/share. They are worth a lot more, but not in this environment. I have a number that I follow that have good management and good assets, and the ability to sustain themselves over the next year or two until we see a recovery. Sustainability will be very important.

I like Pershing Gold Corp. (PGLC:OTCBB), especially its management. Steve Alfers is CEO and running Pershing. It is a derisked near-term production story. It has about 552,000 oz gold Measured and Indicated and 165 oz gold Inferred, and is building a very nice gold resource.

I like NuLegacy Gold Corporation (NUG:TSX.V; NULGF:OTCPK). Barrick is its partner in the Cortez Trend. It has done a couple of recent financings, which is a significant feat. NuLegacy is going to be drilling based on a fully funded exploration program. I think it has a real chance.

I like Terraco Gold Corp. (TEN:TSX.V). I like its proximity to Midway Gold Corp.’s (MDW:TSX.V; MDW:NYSE.MKT) Spring Valley project and, of course, the Barrick interest in Spring Valley helps. Barrick has invested $53 million ($53M) into Spring Valley.

TGR: Do each of these companies have the capital to stay in business until the price of gold goes up?

MB: I have a 10-point Discovery grid. The factor the market is valuing most right now is sustainability. The No. 2 factor is the quality of the asset and No. 3 is the strength of management.

Pershing scores well on all three. I like its shareholder base. Dr. Phil Frost is a big shareholder in the company. The management team will have access to capital. I also like the asset. The Relief Canyon mine property already has three open pits on the property and a finished processing facility. It has a good chance of being successful.

Over at Terraco Gold, I really like CEO Todd Hilditch’s view of the world. He saw this mining economy coming a long time ago. He acquired the royalties on Spring Valley, where Barrick has put more than $50M into development while showing significant gold reserves. That makes the royalty worth a lot more because I think Barrick, which has now earned in, will develop Spring Valley. So by waiting and focusing on the royalty play, Terraco management has been very shrewd.

Nulegacy is on the Cortez Trend. I like it because Roger Steininger is the COO, and he’s done a great job of exploration. He’s a brilliant guy. Barrick is the partner there and will probably take NuLegacy out eventually for a nice payoff.

TGR: Any other companies you think could benefit when precious metals prices take off?

MB: The final one I want to mention is U.S. Precious Metals Inc. (USPR:OTC). Nobody knows about it. I just visited its property in the state of Michoacán, Mexico, which is on the Pacific Coast roughly parallel to Mexico City. It has a 37,000-acre property. I actually call it my “pregnant virgin” because the gold and copper systems are visible, but it has never been properly explored. The Spanish were there in the 1500s and 1600s and there were adits from the Spanish but no real production records. You can pick up copper float on the ground so it is definitely pregnant. It is a huge mineralized system. We just don’t know how big it is yet. It’s a $0.12 stock. I don’t own it yet, but I will probably take a position in it at some point.

What’s really interesting about U.S. Precious Metals is that the management is using satellite-generated, ground-penetrating radar to identify the mineral composition of the anomalies. It also will be using a thermal process based on plasma torch for extracting the ore—eventually.

TGR: Tell us about the processing. How will this new technology make the project more profitable?

MB: Just as hydraulic fracturing revolutionized the oil industry and may make us energy independent in the next 30 years, I think plasma arc processing, developed here in New Jersey at Princeton University by Dr. Edgar Choueiri, could revolutionize mining. Plasma arc will be used to propel satellites. It’s the fourth state of matter, a state of ionized gas. This process increases the recovery of the ore significantly and with much less environmental impact. This is the most efficient way to separate minerals from waste. It could well be transformational for the mining industry. My understanding is that at present there is a pilot plant in operation at 29 Palms in California.

TGR: The other three companies that you mentioned were all in Nevada, a fairly safe jurisdiction. What are the risks of being in this part of Mexico?

MB: Whenever you talk about mining in Mexico, you worry about illegal activities. U.S. Precious Metals has decided put together a security force mainly because there’s a lot of gold that can just be panned from the dry riverbeds on this property in the Tierra Caliente region. So management has decided to provide its own security. But U.S. Precious Metals and its associates are very close to the Mexican government, so I believe the risks are minimized. When I visited the property I saw a road being built to the property by the Mexican government.

Mexico is still a country that has to be mined in spite of the new 7.5% tax. A lot of good players are there: Coeur Mining Inc. (CDM:TSX; CDE:NYSE), Hecla Mining Co. (HL:NYSE), Endeavour Silver Corp. (EDR:TSX; EXK:NYSE; EJD:FSE). U.S. Precious Metals is likely to become a big copper-gold play with a silver byproduct. I think management has really done a good job of minimizing the risk with respect to the cartels and the exploration risk.

TGR: Is this a long-term investment? When might the thesis for the processing and the thesis for the asset be proven?

MB: The plasma arc technology is proven. U.S. Precious Metals is the first to license it for processing the ore. The company is not yet in mining operations. Its property contains 37,000 acres in one land position and only several hundred acres have been explored.

So it is early days at U.S.Precious Metals, but a good investment for those people who like early exploration plays on potentially world class assets. Let’s face it, you do not find properties like this easily.

TGR: The silver market is more volatile than gold. What companies are worth looking at in that space?

MB: I love silver. I’m on the board of a couple of companies that have big silver plays. But the silver market is volatile; it’s a much smaller market and an industrial, as well as a precious metals, market. Gold is down 27%, but silver is down almost 45% from its October 2012 top. We produce about 800 million ounces (800 Moz)/year silver globally, and we basically use it all for everything from electronics to medical technology. The price can’t stay at $20/oz for very long because new silver mines are going to be required. Tahoe Resources Inc. (THO:TSX; TAHO:NYSE) has a new mine down in Guatemala, which I think will be a very good producer. But you don’t find new silver mines every day. So I’m very bullish on silver.

Right now, I think you have to look at Coeur and Hecla as two companies that are self-sustainable, generating cash, and are going to be around. I should point out Goldcorp itself produces a lot of silver from Peñasquito. So, it, too, has a significant upside as silver goes from its current $20/oz level to where it should be, $50/oz, which would not surprise me in 2014 or 2015.

Then there are companies that are midtier, and I think they are probably takeout candidates eventually. First Majestic Silver Corp. (FR:TSX; AG:NYSE; FMV:FSE) would be one. It produced 11 Moz silver last year. It has five mines, and is an $11 stock. It will likely produce 12 Moz this year.

Then there is Endeavour Silver. It produced about 6.8 Moz silver last year, and it has three operating mines.

Silver investors must be believers today. They must live with the volatility of the market and believe the price of silver will appreciate eventually. If you believe in silver and you believe in the ultimate limited supply/excess demand dynamic, then I think you ought to own a portfolio of these companies, put them away and let silver do its thing, because it will over time.

TGR: Would that same advice go for the other metals?

MB: Not exactly. Copper is a totally different market. I like copper a lot. I’m on the board of a company that has a big copper play. It is becoming increasingly difficult for companies to bring big mines on line. The Indonesians have done some things that hurt both Newmont and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX:NYSE) by disallowing them to ship ore overseas. Freeport actually declared force majeure in Indonesia. The Chileans and other South Americans have had some problems. There are problems in Mongolia with BHP Billiton Ltd.’s (BHP:NYSE; BHPLF:OTCPK) big copper facility there. That makes North American copper plays in Arizona, Nevada, Canada and, to a lesser degree, Mexico, a great place to be right now. Copper could go below $3/pound, but with the rest of the world growing a new middle class of consumers, we’re going to need more copper and that means more copper mines. It takes a long time to bring a copper mine into production, so I think copper is also very cheap today and should be considered selectively.

TGR: So these are long-term investments?

MB: Certainly. We are seeing a lot of private equity players now that are picking up properties for cents on the dollar. The private equity players can afford to sit with a property for two or three years until the commodity prices improve. Most junior mining management teams cannot do the same thing. Juniors are going to have to be able to survive over the next couple of years, so look for companies that can conserve resources. Some developers have stopped drilling. A few marginal producers have stopped producing. Everyone is, or should be, reining in costs, cutting costs. The Vancouver model of financing is broken right now. The capital market is telling us that nobody cares. If nobody cares, then it’s time to tread carefully in the exploration space.

TGR: Thank you for your insights.

Michael Berry served as a professor of investments at the Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia from 1982 to 1990, during which time he published a book, Managing Investments: A Case Approach. He was the Wheat First Professor of Investments at James Madison University. He has managed small- and mid-cap value portfolios for Heartland Advisors and Kemper Scudder. His publication, Morning Notes, analyzes emerging geopolitical, technological and economic trends. He travels the world with his son, Chris, looking for discovery opportunities for his readers.

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) JT Long 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 employee. She owns, or her 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: Pershing Gold Corp., Terraco Gold Corp., NuLegacy Gold Corporation and Tahoe Resources Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not affiliated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.

3) Michael Berry: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Pershing Gold Corp., Terraco Gold Corp. and Goldcorp Inc. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Terraco Gold Corp. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Ukraine raises rate 300 bps to 9.5% to boost hryvnia

By CentralBankNews.info
    Ukraine’s central bank raised its benchmark discount rate by 300 basis points to 9.5 percent to increase the attractiveness of the hryvnia currency and curb inflationary pressures amid a deterioration of economic confidence due to growing unrest in eastern Ukraine.
    The National Bank of Ukraine (NBU), which cut its discount rate by 100 basis points in 2013, also said it would double the overnight loan rate to 14.5 percent from 7.5 percent to help ease tensions in the money market and support liquidity.
    “In order to curb inflation and balance the situation in the money market, the NBU board deems it necessary to take steps towards increasing the intrinsic value of the national currency through the use of interest rate policy levers,” the central bank said.
    Ukraine’s headline inflation rate jumped to 3.4 percent in March from 1.2 percent in February. The central bank targets consumer price inflation of 4-6 percent this year and 3-5 percent in 2015.
    On Friday the hryvnia currency was down 32 percent against the euro since the start of the year and today it fell to 17.97 to the euro, down 8.1 percent on the day for a decline this year of 37 percent.

    The central bank said there were risks of higher inflation due to the lower exchange rate and the government’s plans for economic reform, and it would take other measures to increase the attractiveness of bank deposits.
    Elena Shcherbakov, director general of the central bank’s monetary policy department, was quoted as saying that “Ukraine has a rich experience of unusual situations in the money money market,” and the best course of action is to provide maximum liquidity support to banks so they can meet their obligations and increase the value of the currency to limit the speculative demand and help restore banks’ deposit base and thus ensure normal operation of the banking system and help maintain price stability.
    Ukraine’s banks have seen a steady stream of withdrawals since early February when political unrest first erupted in Kiev. The central bank has also seen its reserves drop as it has been intervening in foreign exchange markets to defend the currency’s decline.
    On February 7 the central bank introduced limits on foreign currency transactions but this only halted the decline in hryvnia temporarily.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

Will the interest rate increases leave the winter hibernation?

Bond yield Outlook from Jyske Bank with the Senior Strategist Ib Fredslund Madsen.

He explains the latest ups and downs on yields.

Winter has faded and that should also mean a strengthening of the economic data, especially in the US. Bond yields is also starting to see the thaw.

Jyske Bank’s main scenario is that short term interest rate increases should be moderate. Long term yields should rise.

Legal information

Video by en.jyskebank.tv

USD/JPY Forecast For April 14 – 18

Article by Investazor.com

USDJPY had a downfall last week amid a selloff of the US dollar, pushing the quote again towards the 101.00 level. Even though the macro indicators from the Nippon economy were weak, the most important one, current account, managed to stabilize around a deficit of -0.04T which was the forecasted value, giving some force to the bullish investors. The event that basically led to the selloff of the US dollar and made the price to break the 103 support line was the BoJ Monetary Policy Statement and Press Conference.

Governor Kuroda left the monetary stimulus untouched and did not hint to any further additional one for the next period.  Also, last week we had some intensification of the US-Russia conflict that helped safe haven assets to soar, which of course benefited the Japanese yen. The week finished in a rosy tone for the US dollar and we will see in the following paragraphs if the USDJPY can stage a comeback next week.

Economic Calendar

Revised Industrial Production m/m (5:30 GMT)-Wednesday. This is the second version of the indicator and it has a low impact as the preliminary release is the earliest and thus tends to have the most impact on the markets. It measures the change in the total inflation-adjusted value of output produced by the manufacturers, mines and utilities. It is forecasted to have a fall of 2.3% for April.

 

BoJ Governor Kuroda Speaks (1:30 GMT)-Thursday.  He is due to speak at the Branch Managers Meeting in Tokyo. It is important to keep an eye on his speeches as volatility is often experienced during them as traders attempt to decipher interest rates clues.

Consumer Confidence (06:00 GMT)-Thursday. This indicator is an index based on surveyed households, excluding single-person homes. It is important to watch it as financial confidence is a leading indicator of consumer spending, which account for a majority of overall economic activity. This month it is expected to rise from 38.3 to 40.2

Tertiary Industry Activity m/m (0:50 GMT)-Friday. This one is a medium impact indicator and measures the change in the total value of services purchased by businesses. It is also a leading indicator of economic health. For April it is forecasted a reduction from 0.9% to 0.2%, so it will be interesting to follow its publication because it can create some volatility.

Technical View

USDJPY, Daily

Support: 101.25, 100.70, 100.00

Resistance: 102.15, 103.00, 104.00

usdjpy-daily-forecast-april-14-18-resize-13.04.2014.png.png

The daily view of the USDJPY chart still paints a pretty undecided image. We can see up and downs for the last two months, but the ups are getting more powerful in intensity than the downs. Last week also finished in the uncertainty mode if we look at the daily candlestick, but was a victory for the US dollar as the quotation was rejected by the support line from 101.25. The MACD Histogram presents an increase in the power of bears while Friday the bulls won the battle. Hence, it is a sort of a disconnection here which could hint towards a continuation of the selloff. Let’s go now to the hourly chart to see what it tells us.

 

USDJPY, H1

Support: 101.25, 100.70

Resistance: 102.15, 103.00

usdjpy-h1-forecast-april-14-18-resize-13.04.2014.png

On the H1 chart there is drawn a reversal price pattern called falling wedge. After the abrupt downfall from Tuesday, the price managed to stabilize and to form the pattern mentioned. The MACD Histogram is like the silence before storm, so you should pay attention if the price make a breakout above the superior line of the falling wedge and closes as well beyond 101.70, because this could mean that the price could retest the resistance line from 102.15.

Bullish or Bearish

Overall, there are big chances to see a bullish movement for the USDJPY next week and the price to move again above the 102.00 level as the US dollar was seriously hit last week and a retracement is very likely. On the other hand, we should not underestimate a potential re-escalation of the US-Russia conflict that could give strength to the Japanese yen and other safe haven assets, so a moderately bullish outlook is the best way to approach the markets next week.

The post USD/JPT Forecast For April 14 – 18 appeared first on investazor.com.

NZD/USD Forecast For April 14 – 18

Article by Investazor.com

The retracement we were talking about last week did not seem to matter too much for the NZDUSD bulls as the quotation broke the resistance level from 0.8700 and flied to a new annual high of 0.8745. Well, the macroeconomic data had its part as the good numbers that came from the economy showed that the recovery is stable. The NZIER Business Confidence had the same value as last month, while the Business NZ Manufacturing Index increased from 56.5 to 58.4, REINZ HPI indicators soared to 3.4% from 2.1% last month.

Also, the New Zeeland dollar took advantage of an international selloff momentum of the US dollar after the macroeconomic data from the United States economy fall short of the analyst expectations and it seemed that maybe investors did hurry up with the possibility of hiking the interest rates earlier than it has been forecasted.

Economic Calendar

Due to the fact next week is poor in macroeconomic publication from New Zeeland, I will add the most important indicators from the United States that could have an impact on the NZDUSD quotation.

USD: Core Retail Sales m/m- (1:30 GMT)-Monday. It is the version of the indicator that measures the change in the total value of sales at the retail level, excluding automobiles. Automobile sales account for about 20% of Retail Sales but they tend to be very volatile and distort the underlying trend. For April it is forecasted an improvement from 0.3% to 0.5%.

USD: Core CPI m/m (1:30 GMT)-Tuesday. This indicator measures the change in the price of goods and services purchased by consumers, excluding food and energy, which are volatile. Even though is a high impact indicator, in the last five months did not create too much surprise, being constantly at 0.1%, the value which is forecasted for April as well.

NZD: CPI q/q (23:45 GMT)-Tuesday. This indicator is released quarterly and even though this is extremely late relative to inflation data from other countries, it is the primary gauge of consumer prices and tends to create hefty market impacts. For the first quarter of the year it is expected a rise from 0.1% to 0.5%, so it will create some serious volatility if there will be any surprises.

USD: Unemployment Claims (1:30 GMT)-Thursday. It measures the number of individuals who filed for unemployment insurance for the first time during the past week. It will be interesting to follow this indicator as last week we had the best reading since 2007.

Technical View

NZDUSD, Daily

Support: 0.8620, 0.8500

Resistance: 0.8740, 0.8850

nzdusd-daily-forecast-april-14-18-resize-13.04.2014

On the daily chart there still can be drawn a rising wedge, a bearish pattern, but the outlook is far from bearish right now. The Friday candlestick has a large inferior shadow that suggests the buyers were in control. The same story tells the MACD Histogram, that shows us how the bears are losing their power and it approaches a crucial point that could give the bulls some strength.

NZDUSD, H1

Support: 0.8510, 0.8620

Resistance: 0.8740, 0.8800

nzdusd-h1-forecast-april-14-18-13.04.2014

On the hourly we can see how the quotation bounced between the support line from 0.8620 and the resistance line from 0.8740, leaving behind an undecided picture. The MACD histogram is decreasing, but the two moving averages seems to point towards another wave of buyers, so we can see a continuation of the ascending trend next week as well.

Bullish or Bearish

As a final conclusion, I think the US dollar was oversold last week and we could see a retracement and an appreciation of the green buck in the week to come. On the other hand, the strength NZDUSD showed recently makes me to see a moderately bullish perspective for the New Zeeland Dollar and we could see a week in which the quotation will close on green, but by a narrow margin.

The post NZD/USD Forecast For April 14 – 18 appeared first on investazor.com.

Buyers are wary; NZD/USD consolidates above support

Technical Sentiment: Neutral

Key Takeaways

  • NZD/USD consolidates above the 0.8630 support;
  • Daily trend remains bullish, towards 0.8845, as the higher lows configuration is intact;
  • Below  0.8630, bearish pressure abruptly increases towards 0.8514-0.8550

Analyzing the configuration and direction of the swing highs and lows, in direct correlation with the main S/R levels and the major Simple Moving Averages (50, 100 and 200) , can provide an accurate story of the chart. Weaknesses in the trend can be identified early, along with key levels where traders ditch or reverse their positions.

NZD/USD reached a fresh multi-year high last week, at 0.8745, 100 pips shy of 0.8842, 2011 high. While US data continues to beat expectations,  Core Retail Sales at 0.7%, 0.2% higher than the forecast, and Retail Sales up 1.1% vs 0.8% forecast; reactions are muted as traders are waiting for Yellen’s Speech and of course tomorrow’s Speeches from FOMC Members Plosser and Kocherlakota.
The US Dollar inaugurated this week vigorously, prompting NZD/USD to test an intermediary support for the second time. Traders who are trailing this pair higher should pay close attention to possible exhausting signs.

Daily View

NZDUSD Daily 14th April

The 4h and Daily uptrend configuration is intact, as the pair is always keeping up with it’s higher swing lows and higher highs. Daily RSI is showing a small negative divergence; albeit it doesn’t amount to much while the most recent lows at 0.8623 remains intact.

Intraday Consolidation Signs
NZDUSD 1H 14th April

The 1H chart shows strong consolidation between 0.8630 and 0.8700. The pair has bounced for the second from off the 200 Simple Moving Average, 50.00% Fibonacci Retracement level and March’s pivot zone. It should be noted that only above 0.8700, above the short term lower high, the main uptrend will fully resume and consequently target 0.8745, then 0.8800-0.8841 area.

Failure to cross above 0.8700 will leave price in a short term triangle formation, which will most likely be broken out of tomorrow. If the lower high remains intact and NZD/USD falls below 0.8630, then we will see a larger correction towards 0.8545, the 200 SMA on 4H chart, and 0.8514, the main price pivot zone from March-April.

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

 

 

 

 

Crude Prices Boosted by Escalated Tension in Ukraine

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Crude prices were lifted on the first day of the trading week, boosted by the escalated tension between Ukraine and Russia over the weekend increasing concerns that the energy supplies in Europe may be disrupted.

The North American West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery rose by 0.51% higher, trading at $104.27 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at the time of writing. While the European benchmark Brent crude for May settlement added 0.54% to $107.92 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe exchange at the same time.

Crude – Ukraine Crises

Over the weekend, rebels took over the police and government buildings in several cities across the eastern region of Ukraine after a Ukrainian secret service agent died in a shooting near the city of Slovyansk.

Russia has called an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council to discuss the recent turmoil, while officials from US and Ukraine blamed Russia for the violence which could lead to additional sanctions against the country.

Meanwhile, oil traders are worried that Russia could stop exporting oil and gas to Europe, which would weigh on the European Union (EU) economy. Russia supplies approximately 35% of oil and 32% of gas into the EU.

A drop of exports the European Union could affect Russia’s economy and income, in which 60% of its total income comes from oil and gas export.

Libya

In Libya, the country’s oil shipments may increase, as the country’s state-run National Oil Corp. succeeded in loading a tanker of crude from the Hariga terminal, one of the four ports which were seized by rebels last year.

Crude production in Iran climbed to its highest in almost two years, as it surpassed the one-million -a-day level, according to the International Energy Agency. Iran shipped 1.65 million barrel per day of oil in February.

 

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Euro Slides Lower After ECB Comments

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The 18-nation currency weakened against most of its 16 major peers on Monday, clearing previous gains after the European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi intervened against the euro over the weekend.

“Mario Draghi said, and he’s said it before, the currency does come into their views on monetary policy, it does naturally act as a handbrake on inflation,” said Chris Weston, the chief market strategist at IG Ltd.  In Melbourne. “He’s basically trying to defend the $1.39 level. Above $1.39 you’re getting to the top of the longer-term range,” Weston added.

The euro weakened to $1.3840 per dollar on Monday, after climbing to $1.3884 on Friday. The 18-nation currency also fell against a basket of its major currencies. The euro stabilized slightly and traded 0.21% at $1.3856 at the time of writing.

“I’ve always said that the exchange rate is not a policy target, but it’s important for price stability and growth,” Draghi said on Saturday. “And now, what has happened over the last few months, it’s become more and more important for price stability.”

Meanwhile in Germany, the eurozone’s strongest economy; exports from the country dropped 1.3% lower in February, compared to the 2.2% climb seen in the previous month, a survey showed on Wednesday.

Euro – Fed Speeches

This week, investors will be keeping an eye for major data’s which will be released this week, such as retails sales, housing and building permits and most importantly the Federal Open Market Committee members’ speeches which are scheduled to hold through the week.

The Federal representatives that are expected to give speeches this week include Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser in Stone Mountain on Tuesday, Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday and Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota at the Town Hall Forum on Wednesday.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen is also expected to speak on Wednesday at the 2014 Financial Markets Conference in Stone Mountain and on Thursday she will attend the Economic Club of New York.

 

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Elliott Wave Weekly Review For GOLD, OIL and S&P500

S&P500 has turned nicely to the downside last week from 1865/1870 resistance area where wave 2/B completed a corrective rally. Market already reached a new swing low but based on downside fib. projections and strong bearish momentum price could be moving down in wave 3 towards 1765 zone. Only rally above the upper resistance line of a current downward channel would put market back in bullish mode.

S&P500 4h Elliott Wave Analysis

Crude oil exceeded 102.20 swing high last week which makes rally from 97.00 more complex but still corrective. We are looking at a three wave move with a triangle placed in wave b), so current leg from 99.87 can be wave c), final leg within a corrective advance, so we  should be aware of a bearish reversal. An impulsive sell-off back to 101.50 will be an important sing for a completed recovery. In that case we would be looking for short opportunities again. Until then staying aside may not be a bad idea.

Crude OIL 4h Elliott Wave Analysis

Gold is recovering from 1277 low but still showing a corrective personality because of an overlapping price action. Therefore we think that rally from the low is temporary; ideally it’s wave (b) that is part of a larger downtrend. We see price now moving into 1320-1342 reversal zone from where a new sell-off may occur. A decline in impulsive fashion will confirm a downtrend continuation for this market.

GOLD 4h Elliott Wave Analysis

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