USDCAD continues its sideways movement

USDCAD continues its sideways movement in a range between 0.9841 and 1.0050. As long as 1.0050 key resistance holds, the price action in the range is treated as consolidation of the downtrend from 1.0422 (Dec 14, 2011 high), and one more fall to 0.9600-0.9700 area is still possible. One the other side, a break above 1.0050 resistance will indicate that the fall from 1.0422 has completed at 0.9841 already, then the following upward movement could bring price back to 1.0400 zone.
usdcad
Daily Forex Analysis

 

Euro Drops on ECB Bond Purchases Concerns

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – The 17-nation currency dropped against most of the major currencies today as fears of ECB’s unwillingness to restart government bond purchases program were reignited. Klass Knot, who is a member of the ECB governing council, indicated that there was no justification why the bank should buy Spanish securities. These sentiments are against the market expectation that the ECB will restart bond buying instead of embarking on another program of bank loans. These concerns have come at a time when the sovereign debt crisis is worsening.

The Euro/dollar cross broke below uptrend support that has accompanied the pair for the last two months. The fears concerning Spain and other peripheral economies in the region has refused to leave the market and this is expected to push the cross below 1.30. Europe’s crisis is further compounded by the slowing down of Chinese economy which grew at a lower rate than it had been estimated. According to Vassili Serebriakov of Wells Fargo & Co. in New York, the market have resumed of fundamentals looking for economic growth in the region rather than the fiscal consolidation efforts that have been going on.

Wagers have placed their bets on the decline of the Euro against the dollar to the greatest level in five weeks. As such, the euro has declined against the dollar by $1.3078; it had gained 0.8 percent in last two trading days. The dollar fell by 0.1 percent over the last week. The 17-nation currency further declined against the yen by 0.8 percent to trade at 105.83 yen per euro. In the previous week, euro had lost 1 percent against the yen.

Euro’s current bearish trend was sparked by the Spanish bond auction disappointment and later the Italian auction soliciting sentiments that the ECB efforts are losing their effects. Sentiments from government and ECB officials have also foiled efforts to erase losses gained over the last week.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Major Events This Week

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – Last week ended with the dollar able to erase some of the losses; however, bad reports from the Jobless claims report and comments from Fed officials continued to pull the dollar market down. This week, Europe will be waiting from the German ZEW Economic Sentiment while the dollar is expected to be affected by the US retail Sales and unemployment claims.

Monday

US Retail Sales for March will be released on Monday at 12:30 GMT. The report is expected to show an increase of 0.4 percent with Core CPI expected to climb 0.6 percent. Another major event will be the US TIC Long-Term Purchases. This report will be released at 13:00 GMT and it is expected to show that US Treasury International Capital dropped after it had surged in January to $101.0 billion from $19.1 billion in December. Economists are expecting to see a drop to $41.3 billion.

Tuesday

Tuesday will be a busy day with three major reports expected. In Europe, the German ZEW Economic Sentiments report will be released at 9:00 GMT; this report is expected to show a decline to 20.2 from 22.3 registered the previous month. The same day at 12:30 GMT the housing industry will release US Building Permits. It is expected the report will show a decline to 710,000 from 717,000 registered in the previous month. Another major event on Tuesday is the BOC rate decision. This is expected at 13:00 GMT where traders and economist expect the BOC to keep the current rates.

Wednesday

Wednesday will be pretty quiet with only one major event expected. At 8:30 GMT, the UK labor department will release the UK employment data. People claiming unemployment benefits are expected to reduce to 6,600 from the 7,200 reported in February.

Thursday

This will be a busy day with three major reports expected from the US. The labor department will be releasing the US unemployment claims at 12:30 GMT. People applying for unemployment claims are expected to reduce from last week’s high of 380,000 to 370,000. Another major event is the US Existing Home Sales report that will be released at 14:00 and economists are expecting a higher value of 4.61 million units sold from 4.59 million. US Philly Fed Manufacturing Index will be the third major report to be released at the same time. A small decline to 12.1 is expected from the 12.5 registered in March.

Friday

Euro-zone German IFO Business Climate is forecasted to drop to 109.6 from 109.8 registered in March. It will be released at 8:00 and later Canadian Inflation Data will be released at 12:30. A decline to 0.3 percent is expected from 0.4 registered in March.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

How China is Driving the Gold Price

By MoneyMorning.com.au

It was a perfect sunny autumnal day in Melbourne yesterday.

Conditions were perfect for a barbie. So in honour of my sister visiting from England, we laid on a spread at Cowie HQ yesterday afternoon.

There was a mix of poms, pommie ex-pats, and true-blue Aussies in my backyard, and the talk quickly turned to sport. Someone might have said something about a certain urn being back at a certain cricket ground. The Aussie reply was that ‘well we got our own back by sending Warnie in to sort out Liz Hurley, mate’. Fair point.

Then we got onto just how expensive it is for Brits to come over here now.


Ten years ago, a pound sterling bought about $3s. Now it buys just $1.50. The Aussie has doubled in that time. Not just that but the higher cost of living makes it more unaffordable for visitors. So, if you see a hungry looking backpacker walking around Melbourne today, it might be my sister, so please offer to buy her some lunch!

How China is Using Gold to Internationalise

Around the time we were chatting about the exorbitant Aussie dollar, China announced it would increase the trading range on its currency, the renminbi, from 0.5% to 1.0%. This means the currency has more scope to rise and fall in response to economic forces.

It has been a long five year wait since China last relaxed the trading band. The reason this is such a big deal is this is a big step towards the renminbi (RMB) becoming a floating currency like the Aussie, euro or yen. This is an essential step if China wants to ‘internationalise’ its currency.

China has been building the foundations for the RMB’s use internationally over the last few years. The latest milestone has the China Development Bank planning to offer loans in renminbi to the other BRIC countries, Brazil, Russia, India – as well as South Africa.

Having an international currency promotes trade, cutting the US dollar out of the equation. The ultimate goal may be to pitch the renminbi as a reserve currency to compete with – or displace – the US dollar.

To really sell the RMB as an international currency, it helps if it is backed with a significant amount of gold. China would never openly admit this, but a snippet from an embassy in China, via a wikileaks story, as good as confirmed it last month:

“The U.S. and Europe have always suppressed the rising price of gold. They intend to weaken gold’s function as an international reserve currency. They don’t want to see other countries turning to gold reserves instead of the U.S. dollar or Euro.

Therefore, suppressing the price of gold is very beneficial for the U.S. in maintaining the U.S. dollar’s role as the international reserve currency. China’s increased gold reserves will thus act as a model and lead other countries towards reserving more gold. Large gold reserves are also beneficial in promoting the internationalization of the RMB.

China has long been the world’s biggest gold producer, with all of this gold staying within its borders. China is now adding to this with huge gold purchases on the international market. Every time the price dips, as it is now, China buys dozens of tonnes of gold. Chinese buying started in earnest halfway through last year. At the current rate, China will overtake India as the world’s biggest gold consumer.

Chinese gold imports – now the biggest driver of the gold price

Chinese gold imports - now the biggest driver of the gold price

Source: Reuters

With China buying on the dips in a big way, it will be hard for the gold price to fall far. So why isn’t it soaring? India is the other big gold importer, and a few factors have slowed gold buying down there.

Last year India imported 969 tonnes of gold (roughly 20% of total gold imports in 2011).

But Indian gold imports slowed down towards the end of last year.

The main reason for this slowdown is that the value of the Indian currency, the rupee, fell 17%. This effectively added 17% to the price of gold for Indian buyers. And because the gold price was rising at the time, it meant Indian buyers had to pay as much as 35% more for gold in the second half of last year. Imports fell as Indians waited for the price to come back to a more affordable level.

Falling rupee made gold too pricey for the world’s biggest gold importers

Falling rupee made gold too pricey for the world's biggest gold importers
Click here to enlarge

Source: stockcharts, D&D edits

Looking at this chart, you can see that after falling for the last four months of 2011, the gold price in rupees has now come back to its long-term trend. This is partly thanks to the rupee rising by 6% this year. This should help more Indian gold buyers come back into the market, and increase imports again.

Keep An Eye on Gold Buying by India

There is another reason Indian gold imports should increase from here. Indian jewellers have just finished a three-week-long strike in protest of a new 4% tax on most gold jewellery. So for nearly three weeks, they all shut up shop until the government agreed to back down. For most of March, the world’s biggest army of gold buyers had nowhere to buy gold. Imports into the country all but stopped. Now they have re-opened, there is three-weeks-worth of buying to catch up on.

With this latent buying hitting the market, and the Indian gold price falling back to trend, we should see Indian gold imports rise. And with the world’s biggest consumer back in the game, the gold price should start to recover.

I heard over the weekend that India has already come back into the physical market in size. Even if Indian demand doesn’t recover straight away, this is an opportunity for China to pick up what India can’t afford.

In the Market for Gold Mines?

I think what China will need to do to step up its gold purchases, and secure future supply at a good price, is buy gold mines around the world.

This has started happening.

Late last year, China Gold International Resources Corporation, one of China’s largest gold producers, acquired a mine in Central Asia, and now might pick up more in Canada and Mongolia.

A Shanghai-based group has since picked up a controlling interest in an Eritrean gold project, Zara Mining.

And just last week, Zijin Mining Group made a bid for an Aussie gold stock, Norton Goldfields (ASX:NGF). This is a 150,000-ounce-a-year producer with plans to increase production to 220,000 ounces over the next four years. You can expect to see a lot more of this, if China wants to seriously ramp up its gold reserves.

A serious move by China to increase gold reserves by acquiring projects is great for gold investors. Firstly, speculation over takeovers can often give share prices a nudge.

More importantly, because these mines have a long mine life, it tells investors China’s plans to buy gold take a long-term view.

China Builds its Gold Reserves

China has been busy, but its official gold reserves are only worth US$55 billion. The core Euro countries of Germany, Italy and France have around US$430 billion of gold, and the US claims to have US$424 billion of gold.

But it’s been three long years since the People’s Bank of China last updated us on its gold holdings in 2009, when the count was 1054 tonnes. This was almost double the gold it had when it reported before that in 2003. We can safely assume China has been adding to its official reserves in the last three years. It’s anyone’s guess how much by.

If the amount of gold the Euro nations and the US government have on their books is any guide, you can see that China needs eight times more gold than it last reported to confidently back its currency for internationalisation. That would take the world’s entire annual mine output for at least three years.

This makes Chinese gold demand the most important of all the gold price drivers, and a very good reason to be bullish on gold long term.

That’s why I read yesterday’s news – that China has made another important step towards internationalising its currency – as being a very bullish result for the long-term gold price outlook.

China’s gold demand should support higher gold prices, but it’s not all good news for gold bugs. China’s growth also means a growing military power. And this may pose a threat to some of the gold producing countries close to its borders that Aussie gold producers are operating in.

Over the next four years, China’s military budget will grow to almost half that of America’s. There is growing geopolitical chess game playing out between the two. With the arrival of US marines in Darwin, it is a game that Australia is firmly part of.

What this means for investors is a story for tomorrow.

Dr. Alex Cowie
Editor, Diggers & Drillers

The Conference of the Year “After America” DVD

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How China is Driving the Gold Price

The New Cycle Forming in the Oil Market

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The energy sector’s surge may lead some to believe that the rush is now on.

Well, not so fast.

We need to understand the primary concerns moving forward.

Those are direction and conviction.

The energy sector got slammed worse than the overall market as a whole when it was going down, and it advanced quicker when it increased.

So, what will happen from this point onward?

The safe answer is to suggest mostly lateral movement over the next several months. And that is what most of the TV pundits are doing.

And as usual, they are going to miss another boat.

What has happened is the first wave in the next move up. It is, therefore, actually the end of a beginning cycle that will put both prices and volatility for energy in general – and for oil in particular – back on the radar.

No move up in oil is accomplished by regular, easy to calculate increments.

But one genuinely new factor has emerged.

And it will dictate more of our investment moves.

Riding the Wave of Anticipation

The return of instability, marked by price acceleration both up and down (but on aggregate leading to higher price levels), will be taking place over shorter periods.

This is an important new wrinkle to understand. It introduces a novel risk element into the equation while, at the same time, setting the stage for increasing profits. Those profits will develop over shorter time periods for the investor who is capable of riding ahead of this curve.

I call this development compression, and it has a pervasive impact on how you should approach to the market.

Traditionally, major market swings were thought to be rare. They were thought to be infrequent enough to be discounted by longer (and relative) periods of apparent stability. Value destruction or inflation would take place, but then a protracted period of consolidation would follow.

With the introduction of volatility indices (VIXs) – for the Dow, S&P, more focused market sectors, oil – analysts began charting the instability and (surprise, surprise) paper cutters found ways to trade derivatives off VIX figures.

Today, just about every TV talking head will tell you that volatility is subdued, at inordinately (some are even saying “historically”) low levels. What they don’t factor in is a very important subsector pressure that is rapidly developing.

(Remember, these are the guys who predicted seven of the last two market swings!)

This is not hitting the market across the board, although when it erupts it will have market-wide effects. It is centred in the energy sector and in oil investments specifically.

Compression takes place when considerable change occurs over a short period.

More of the result takes place in a rapid advance or contraction.

We are now about to witness a similar development in the broader oil market.

Some of this (as ever) is the result of geopolitical events – primarily the approaching European embargo of Iranian oil imports, the simmering “Arab Spring,” global demand levels, and emerging regional supply imbalances. Other causes include the continuing spread between Brent crude oil prices set in London and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) set in New York.

That spread increases volatility on both sides by distorting actual supply-demand calculations and magnifying pricing distortions for the bulk of daily oil trades worldwide using these two benchmarks as a base.

We have become so accustomed to those factors that they serve as 30-second “explanations” for the TV folks.

Unfortunately, these explanations do not really explain anything about the real wave coming.

Two Aspects of the New Reality are Coming Fast

Two new factors will undermine the previous way of looking at things. The new reality will not look much like the old one.

First, the cycles of compression will intensify.

In other words, not only will more be happening over shorter periods, those periods will be occurring with greater regularity. The time between peaks or valleys will itself compress, as will the activity within the deviations.

The usual assumption that a “normal” period will follow the instability, allowing the market to repair itself and establish a new trading equilibrium will be severely tested.

The technicians will have greater difficulty reading and interpreting their graphs.

Measuring the ripples from throwing a rock into the water is one thing. What we are going to experience is the equivalent of somebody throwing a handful of rocks in a short period of time.

It will distort the ability of traditional analysis both to define and explain what is taking place.

Second, once this cycle begins, it is likely to be derailed only by a major outside (exogenous) event.

The 2008 oil-pricing spike did not end because of something that happened within the oil market. It ended because of the demand and credit constriction resulting from an external collapse – the subprime mortgage mess.

I have been writing for some time now that the usual internal safety valves tempering oil-pricing fluctuations are having less and less success. That sets the stage for accelerating movements in oil being subject to more extreme outside restraints.

These continuing compressions will ultimately lead to an energy equation that demands significant change, both in terms of sourcing and usage. But that is still some time off.

What we have now is rising instability and pricing dynamics that will provide some real opportunities to make substantial profits.

There is a new trading environment emerging.

What we are experiencing is not the beginning of the end, but the curtain is coming down on the first act of a new play.

This is the end of the beginning.

And as the new rush moves in, we intend to trade in advance of it.

That’s where the big money is going to be.

Dr. Kent Moors
Global Energy Strategist, Money Morning (USA)

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in Money Morning USA

From the Archives…

The Deep Ocean Frontier For Mining Profits
2012-04-013 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The Turkish Economy: Knocking At The Door
2012-04-12 – Karim Rahemtulla

Inflation and Sovereign Debt – Why The Best Is Yet To Come
2012-04-11 – Nick Hubble

How to Make the Most Out of Small Cap Investing
2012-04-10 – Kris Sayce

Why You MUST Speculate
2012-04-09 – Kris Sayce


The New Cycle Forming in the Oil Market

If Ron Paul Were US President…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Imagine a possible future where Ron Paul wins the Republican nomination and goes on to beat Barack Obama come November.

Of course, all the establishment pundits tell us that’s implausible, if not downright impossible. And if Paul does win, do you think they’ll eat their words? No way: the papers, airwaves, and cyberspace will brim with grumbles, moans, and howls about the terrible fate that has befallen America and the West.

As usual, the pundits will be wrong.


Of course, Ron Paul has made a variety of promises to make dramatic changes including: abolish the Fed, bring all American troops home, end the war on drugs, get rid of the income tax, pardon all prisoners jailed for non-violent crimes, get the Feds out of the marriage law business, repeal Roe vs. Wade, and cut $1 trillion from the budget.

No wonder the establishment Republicans, Democrats, and foreign policy wonks have declared war on Ron Paul: it’s always hazardous to one’s health to threaten to take away somebody’s rice bowl.

As a candidate, a major attraction decidedly in Paul’s favour is that he appears to be a man who will keep his word. One only has to think of Barack “Dubya” Obama, Mitt “where does he stand today?” Romney or Newt “WTF did he just say?” Gingrich to realise how rare a quality that is in a politician. (Only Gary Johnson, the likely Libertarian Party nominee, has a similar quality.)

Since Paul has been saying pretty much the same thing since before he first ran for Congress in 1976, let’s assume he won’t change his spots if he’s inaugurated next January.

So in this possible (or impossible – take your pick) future, by the end of 2012 America and the world will be a totally different place.

Well…


…unfortunately for Paul supporters, probably not.

For example, come budget time President Paul will send his proposed budget, including spending cuts of $1 trillion, to…ah…Congress.

Congress in 2012 will be a slightly different place than it is today. Lacking Congressman Ron Paul in the House of Reps, there’ll only be one vote (instead of two) he can count on: his son’s, Rand Paul in the Senate.

Not enough.

Paul’s budget will go through the normal Congressional meatgrinders and come out the other end looking more like spaghetti that the document that went in.

President Paul will have to veto it.

So it will go back to Congress which, with enough votes to override Paul’s veto, will pass it unchanged just to spite him.

Many of his other promises will face a similar fate. Repealing the income tax requires a constitutional amendment – which has to be proposed by two-thirds of both houses of Congress (or two-thirds of the state legislatures)! Then, three-quarters of the state legislatures must sign on. It’s hard to imagine all those “representatives” giving up their pork barrels. Altruism is something politicians recommend unto others, not something they practice themselves.

Alternatively, President Paul could include, as part of his budget, cutting the income tax rate to zero. Like his proposals to end the war on drugs, abolish the Fed, get the Feds out of the marriage law business, and repeal Roe vs. Wade, they all require an act of Congress.

Don’t Hold Your Breath


That said, there’s still a hell of a lot President Paul can do. After all, American presidents since Lincoln (if not before) have firmly established the precedent that presidents can rule by decree (ah…”executive orders” in politically correct speech) whether Congress or the Supreme Court likes it or not.

And: just because Congress authorises a budget of $X trillion in expenditure, it doesn’t follow that a president has to spend it; just because Congress passes a law, it doesn’t follow that a president has to enforce it.

So President Paul could repeal all the decrees he doesn’t like, bring all American troops home (along with the “drug warriors” around the world) – by decree. Congressmen can scream all they want: after all, most of those troops were stationed abroad without Congress’ direct approval, so how can they disapprove if Paul brings them back?

But Congress isn’t the only opposition President Paul would face. As president he could direct the bureaucracy to stop enforcing Roe vs. Wade, the drug laws – and he could even order the IRS to stop auditing tax returns. (Imagine that!)

In theory, that would mean if Californians all want to get stoned and cheat on their taxes, President Paul’s Feds won’t stop them.

But would all those bureaucrats follow orders?

They should. But in practice, every government bureaucracy has finely-honed skills directed to achieving its own ends despite the desires of its political masters.

One is the “go slow.” Everyone complains how slow government agencies are getting things done. Imagine how slow they could if they put their minds to it!

And one thing a president cannot do is order a court to do anything. While a law’s still on the books, a court can make a judgment which goes again a president’s expressed desires.

But a president has the power to pardon anyone convicted of a federal crime. How long do you think the police would bother prosecuting, or the courts trying, someone they knew would be pardoned immediately after they were convicted?

And then, while President Paul is doing his best to ensure that all those laws are not enforced, what will Congress do? Pass a law telling the president he must enforce the law? Go to the Supreme Court and seek a writ of mandamus (Latin for “we command”) ordering the president to enforce the law? (Would the Supreme Court rule that unconstitutional? These, days, who know?)

Whatever Congress, the bureaucracy, the Supreme Court, and the military-industrial complex do, it will be fascinating to watch.

One thing Paul will achieve if he wins: the nature of the policy debate in America will change dramatically and probably forever. For example, if the world doesn’t fall apart after four years without America as the world’s policeman and Californians (and God knows who else) all with their minds blown, the pundits’ prognostications of doom and gloom will look pretty stupid and won’t get much support.

And think of the alternatives. Without Ron Paul in the race, American voters face a hardly-inspiring choice of a Republican administration (Mitt Romney or whoever) or a Republican administration with health care (Barack “Dubya” Obama).

President Ron Paul would be a helluva lot more fun!

Mark Tier
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: Mark Tier, an Australian based in Hong Kong, is the author of The Winning Investment Habits of Warren Buffett & George Soros. His latest book is Trust Your Enemies, a political thriller.

From the Archives…

The Deep Ocean Frontier For Mining Profits
2012-04-013 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The Turkish Economy: Knocking At The Door
2012-04-12 – Karim Rahemtulla

Inflation and Sovereign Debt – Why The Best Is Yet To Come
2012-04-11 – Nick Hubble

How to Make the Most Out of Small Cap Investing
2012-04-10 – Kris Sayce

Why You MUST Speculate
2012-04-09 – Kris Sayce


If Ron Paul Were US President…

Euro Weakens Ahead of Spanish Bond Auctions

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

During the Asian trading session, the 17-nation currency weakened against its major currency rivals prior to tomorrows expected auctioning of Spanish Bonds.

Just before 10am Tokyo time, the Euro slipped 0.5 percent to $1,3017 versus the U.S dollar after falling to a month-low of $1,3013, a market rate last seen Mid-March.

The single currency also lost ground with the Japanese Yen and the British Pound.The Euro dropped 0.4 percent versus the Yen to hit the 105.38, after previously falling to 105.29, the lowest rate since February 21. Versus the Sterling, the Euro also dropped 0.4 percent to 82.21, its lowest since September 2010.

Following the Spanish Bond Auction tomorrow, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will make a speech.Draghi’s speech could possibly create a short term trend for the Euro.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Forex: Currency Speculators raise US Dollar long positions. Euro, Pound, Aussie positions drop

By CountingPips.com

The latest Commitments of Traders (COT) report, released on Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), showed that large futures speculators added to their overall US dollar long positions last week to the highest level since last June while euro positions deteriorated to a net amount of over 100,000 short contracts.

Non-commercial futures traders, including hedge funds and large speculators, raised their total US dollar long positions to $23.199 billion on April 10th from a total long position of $17.8 billion on April 3rd, according to the CFTC COT data and calculations by Reuters which calculates the dollar positions against the euro, British pound, Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar and the Swiss franc.

Individual Currencies:

EuroFX: Currency speculators decreased their sentiment for the euro currency as euro net short positions or bets against the currency rose to 101,364 contracts on April 10th from the previous week’s total of 79,480 net short contracts. Euro contracts on April 3rd were at their best position since November 15th when short positions totaled 76,147 contracts before the turnaround last week.


The COT report is published every Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and shows futures positions as of the previous Tuesday. It can be a useful tool for traders to gauge investor sentiment and to look for potential changes in the direction of a currency or commodity. Each currency contract is a quote for that currency directly against the U.S. dollar, where as a net short amount of contracts means that more speculators are betting that currency to fall against the dollar and net long position expect that currency to rise versus the dollar. The graphs overlay the forex spot closing price of each Tuesday when COT trader positions are reported for each corresponding spot currency pair.

GBP: British pound sterling positions decreased last week following three consecutive weeks of improvements that had brought pound positions to their best placement since August. British pound positions saw a total of 18,784 net short contracts on April 10th following a total of 8,807 net short contracts registered on April 3rd.

JPY: Japanese yen speculative contracts edged lower as positions were close to their lowest level since 2007 (marked on March 27th) and reversed the previous week’s slight gain. Yen positions fell to a total of 66,084 net short contracts reported on April 10th following a total of 65,108 net short contracts on April 3rd.

CHF: Swiss franc speculator positions improved for a second consecutive week as of April 10th. Speculator positions for the Swiss currency futures registered a total of 9,919 net short contracts on April 10th following a total of 14,676 net short contracts as of April 3rd.

CAD: Canadian dollar positions edged lower after advancing the previous week. Canadian dollar positions declined to a total of 27,967 net long contracts as of April 10th following a total of 29,487 long contracts that were reported for April 3rd. CAD positions on March 20th had reached their highest position since May 3rd 2011 when long contracts equaled 54,041 before declining retreating.

AUD: The Australian dollar long positions declined for the second consecutive week last week. Australian dollar positions fell to a total net amount of 39,429 long contracts on April 10th after declining to 49,319 net long contracts reported as of April 3rd. The AUD speculative positions are now at their lowest level since long positions totaled 32,637 on December 27th 2011.

NZD: New Zealand dollar futures speculator positions rose higher for a second consecutive week. NZD contracts increased to a total of 7,170 net long contracts as of April 10th following a total of 5,846 net long contracts on April 3rd. NZD contracts on March 27th were the lowest level for New Zealand dollar contracts since January 3rd when contracts equaled 2,436 net long positions.

MXN: Mexican peso speculative contracts declined lower following increases the previous two weeks. Peso long positions decreased to a total of 68,600 net long speculative positions as of April 10th following a total of 84,503 long contracts that were reported for April 3rd.

COT Currency Data Summary as of April 10, 2012
Large Speculators Net Positions vs. the US Dollar

EUR -101364
GBP -18784
JPY -66084
CHF -9919
CAD +27967
AUD +39429
NZD +7170
MXN +68600

Other COT Trading Resources:

Trading Forex Using the COT Report

 

The Scramble For the Arctic

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Millions of miles of barren ice, freezing temperatures and months of continuous darkness make the Arctic Circle one of the most inhospitable places on earth. The landscape is so unforgiving that it was only in the last century that humans reached the North Pole. Indeed, with earlier claims now widely discounted as bogus, historians believe 1926 was probably the first time a modern explorer crossed the Pole.


So while 20th-century trade and population growth created metropolises in the plains of Africa, the deserts of the Middle East and the jungles of Asia, the Arctic remained untouched. Apart from the odd scientific mission or Cold War-era radar base, the sole inhabitants of the Arctic Circle – a ring that begins at latitude 66.46° north and covers almost 6% of the world’s surface – remained native peoples, such as the Inuit, who have lived there for over 1,000 years.

But that’s changing fast. One reason for this is our apparently insatiable demand for resources. Prices for most commodities have surged over the past decade. Given time, rising prices encourage explorers to look for more resources and make it profitable enough to justify the high costs involved in setting up in more remote or hostile regions. Even if a slowdown in China ends up hurting commodity prices, at least some of these projects will continue.

The other reason is that the Arctic looks set to become more accessible: Arctic sea ice is becoming less widespread. As The Economist points out, “that Arctic sea ice is disappearing has been known for decades. The underlying cause is believed by all but a handful of climatologists to be global warming brought about by greenhouse-gas emissions”.

It is important to note that Arctic ice cover is always subject to seasonal swings. Every winter the ocean is completely covered with ice, which starts to melt away in spring. By summer, normally half of the ice has melted away. Cloud cover and ocean currents also play an important role in determining the extent of the ice cover.

But within those seasonal changes another trend has emerged. Every year the summer melt has begun to turn more and more ice into water. Records only stretch back to 1979, when US satellites could monitor total ice cover from space, but there is no doubt that sea temperatures are rising and ice cover is falling. Scientists have long noted the trend and the consensus used to be that we would see a totally ice-free summer Arctic in 2100.

That consensus has now fallen to 2050, as the melting has happened more rapidly than expected. Lower down, in the landmasses that reach into the bottom of the Arctic Circle, changes are also visible. Glaciers in Greenland are shrinking at a faster rate, while permafrost – the frozen land that dominates the barren Arctic landscape – is melting and retreating further north.

Clearly, this is disruptive. It could mean huge changes to the region’s ecosystem, which is bad news for the animals that rely on it as a habitat. While melting Arctic sea ice doesn’t change sea levels, if the ice on land melts, that would have an impact, particularly on the world’s coastal regions.

However, the changes may also bring economic benefits – for some parties at least. The rising temperatures and melting ice will make it easier to extract the region’s considerable natural resources, while new Arctic shipping routes could also transform trade. In the longer term, the unreliability of climate change models makes it difficult to know exactly how things will pan out. But for now, the greatest opportunities will be found in the Arctic Circle.

What’s Up for Grabs?


Energy, for starters. The Arctic Circle includes the northern-most parts of Canada, Russia, America, Sweden, Norway, Iceland and Finland. Some of these countries have already explored for oil and gas. To date more than 400 fields have been found with proven reserves of around 240 billion barrels of oil and oil equivalent natural gas (BBOE).

That’s about 10% of the world’s known conventional hydrocarbon resources. But scientists from the US Geological Survey (USGS) think there is a lot more. “Most of the Arctic, especially offshore, is essentially unexplored with respect to petroleum… The extensive Arctic continental shelves may constitute the geographically largest unexplored prospective area for petroleum remaining on Earth.”

After studying samples from the region’s sedimentary basins and rocks, the USGS estimates there is a further 90 billion barrels (bbs) of oil and a further 1,669 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of natural gas to be found.

Around 80% of these new discoveries are likely to be found offshore. If those figures are right, the discoveries would add almost 7% to existing oil reserves and 25% to existing gas reserves. That’s not even taking into account the possibility of unconventional deposits.

Russia’s Truce With Big Oil


Given this massive potential, it’s little surprise that energy firms have already begun to search the Arctic for oil and gas. Russia has by far the largest Arctic territory but, up until recently, many Western oil observers had long given up on the country. When the then-president Vladimir Putin came to power, he wrested control of large swathes of the country’s vast energy resources from the private sector. The dismantling of Yukos, a huge private Russian oil firm, and the nationalisation of a large chunk of Shell’s stake in the Sakhalin Island stood out as clear warnings to foreign energy firms.

But in the last few years, the Russian government has changed tack and encouraged foreign investment in the energy industry. As a result, deals have started to flow. Exxon recently signed a $3.2bn partnership deal with Russian oil producer Rosneft that will give it access to the Arctic Kara Sea. Exxon says its share of the investment is likely to rise to “several tens of billions of dollars”.

Unsurprisingly, US rival Chevron is now keen to pen a similar deal and met with the Russian Ministry of Resources in early March. As The New York Times put it: “Once seen as a useless, ice-clogged backwater, the Kara Sea now has the attention of oil companies.”

BP, which missed out on a deal with Rosneft when it was sued by Russian partners in its TNK-BP project, recently shelled out for a $10bn pipeline that will allow it to send new Arctic oil to China. In total, TNK-BP plans to spend $45bn on developing Arctic oil and gas during the next ten years. Meanwhile, Norwegian firm Statoil and France’s Total are working on an Arctic project with another Russian state-controlled energy company, Gazprom, in the Barents Sea.

So why have Putin and the oil firms learned to be friends again? Because they need each other. Russia’s economic resurgence has been based on oil, which it churns out at a dizzying rate. It ‘only’ has 5.6% of world oil reserves, but accounts for 13% of global production. The trouble is, at that rate it will run out of oil far more quickly than more cautious producers in the Middle East. Given that oil and gas make up about 25% of its GDP and two-thirds of its export earnings, it can’t allow that to happen.

Russia aims to keep producing 10 million barrels a day until 2020, but its traditional fields in the more hospitable parts of Siberia are being rapidly depleted. The Energy Ministry reckons Russia will need investment of $300bn over the next ten years to keep production at those levels. Without any investment, production will drop by 20%, says the Ministry.

Not content with the deals already signed, in February Putin – who is returning as president after a spell as prime minister – said that he is considering changing the law to allow foreign firms to develop Arctic assets on their own. “We made a decision that only state-controlled companies may work offshore in the northern seas. This, to my mind, constrains production development. We have to work out what more should be done to increase opportunities.”

It’s not just foreign investment that Putin is after – he also needs international expertise. Constantly changing ice cover, freezing temperatures, months of darkness and a lack of supporting infrastructure make the Arctic the world’s most challenging oil province. Moving icebergs could wreck rigs and pipes, while cold temperatures mean that if there is an oil spill, very little of it would evaporate.

Norway’s Arctic Success Story


These challenges have made other countries with potential access to Arctic oil more cautious about exploiting it, but Barack Obama’s administration in the US recently signalled that exploration blocks in the Arctic Ocean would be ready for auction by 2015.

It’s believed that the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas off the coast of Alaska could hold 26 billion barrels of oil. The US Interior Department has finally granted Royal Dutch Shell conditional approval to drill exploratory wells in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska’s coast starting next year.

Canada has also stepped up its Arctic oil and gas programme recently. It had already sold exploration rights to BP and Exxon Mobil, but in December last year the national energy regulator released updated regulations paving the way for offshore Arctic drilling to begin.

Despite their ‘green’ image, most of the smaller Scandinavian countries that border the Arctic are just as eager to exploit its resources. Norway has proved to be one of the most successful offshore Arctic explorers. Last year, state-controlled oil firm Statoil found two major offshore fields in Norway’s Arctic region.

The discoveries in the Barents Sea are estimated to hold up to 600 million barrels of oil equivalent. In November, the Norwegian government unveiled a 20-year plan to unlock the region’s oil and gas and deliver them to foreign markets. “It is the project of a generation,” said foreign minister Jonas Gahr Støre. “As the ice melts, new transport routes are opening up, resources are becoming accessible and human activity is drawn to this region.”

Denmark has unveiled an Arctic strategy to open up the area to industry and trade. “Previously, the discussion about the Arctic region has focused on the environment, on whether we oughtn’t to turn the region into one large, natural preserve. But Denmark, Greenland and the Faroe Islands have agreed that we want to utilise the commercial and economic potential of the area,” says Danish foreign minister Lene Espersen in The Wall Street Journal.

Greenland’s Bid For Independence


Danish protectorate Greenland is especially keen to promote Arctic exploration as a means of achieving financial independence from the mainland. Danish subsidies still make up about 40% of Greenland’s GDP. Greenland has already issued offshore exploration licences for its west coast, although so far, the only firm to drill there, the UK’s Cairn Energy, has generated more negative publicity than oil (see below).

Greenland is also at the forefront of Arctic mineral extraction. It’s home to vast amounts of copper, nickel, zinc, gold, diamonds, uranium and platinum. But what’s really getting investors excited is its huge deposits of the ‘rare earth’ metals needed to make fancy electronic equipment from iPads to fighter planes. More than 90% of Greenland is covered in ice, but as that starts to melt, it is becoming easier for the dozens of international mining companies now active in the country.

The same is true elsewhere in the Arctic. For example, in Arctic Canada, steel conglomerate ArcelorMittal is planning a giant open-pit iron ore mine. “Places like Baffin Island have always held a treasure trove of minerals, but low commodity prices, coupled with the high cost of operating in the Arctic, left many deposits undeveloped,” says Paul Waldie in Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail. But soaring prices have made “mining’s last frontier… financially viable.”

Melting Arctic sea ice means that “mining in the Arctic has become logistically possible as well, because sea lanes stay open longer due to thinner ice and railways can operate year round”. As a result, old mines across the Arctic are being reopened and new ones developed.

A New Era For Trade


The Arctic investment story isn’t just about extracting resources, however. As the area warms up and the ice melts, new trade routes are opening up too. These new routes, shown on the map below, could potentially cut journey times between Asia, Europe and America by around 40%. Russian mining companies are already acting on the opportunity.

OAO GMK Norilsk Nickel, Russia’s largest mining company, plans to spend $370m to double its shipments across the Arctic Ocean by 2016. It will send the goods from Russia’s Murmansk port, near Finland, to China and South Korea as melting ice allows the route to rival the journey through the Suez Canal. While the journey still requires the use of icebreakers as escorts, or ice-class transportation vessels, it takes 18 days, compared with about 40 through Suez, justifying the costs.

Meanwhile, Novatek, Russia’s second-largest gas producer, has sent tankers loaded with gas condensate through the Northern Sea route. Several Arctic countries are now planning new deep-sea ports while shipping companies worldwide have already built 500 ice-class ships, with more under construction.

The Scramble For the Arctic


As a hub of natural resources and shipping, the Arctic will undergo a switch from being a deserted outpost to becoming one of the world’s most important strategic areas. As a result, the geopolitical assumptions governing the area are being rapidly re-written.

At present each one of the eight Arctic countries controls the sea next to its border, while regional issues are discussed at the Arctic Council. The council is made up of the eight countries found in the Arctic and representatives of indigenous groups, but now other countries, such as China and South Korea, are pushing for greater involvement.

China’s interest in the Arctic is both commercial and military. As the world’s greatest trading nation, it has a lot to gain from new routes that could make its goods more competitive, and also it likes the idea of having greater access to extra resources to fuel its growth.

The Arctic also has profound military implications for China. Until now, it was thought that in a war with India, its largest Asian rival, the maritime action would centre on an Indian attempt to blockade the Indian Ocean. Now, however, the melting Arctic is undermining half a century of military strategy.

Similar examples apply around the world as the opening of the Arctic changes strategic assumptions. Given the region’s new-found importance, it’s little surprise that countries around the world are beefing up their Arctic military capabilities. Russia recently sent extra brigades to its northernmost bases while Norway is planning to buy 48 F-35 fighter planes to bolster its Arctic defences.

Canada is also getting in on the act. It recently staged its largest-ever Arctic military manoeuvre and has ordered a new fleet of patrol ships and icebreakers. Even more telling are the actions of non-Arctic powers. China has upgraded its aircraft carrier to be seaworthy in ice, and India is building an icebreaker.

In short, it’s clear the region is about to undergo a huge investment boom.

James McKeigue
Contributing Editor, MoneyWeek (UK)

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in MoneyWeek (UK).

From the Archives…

Disruptive Technology Stocks For Smart Small-Cap Investors
2012-04-06 – Kris Sayce

ASX 200: This Market is Toast
2012-04-05 – Murray Dawes

Why Every Bank Will Soon Be a Tax Collector for Every Government Everywhere
2012-04-04 – Merryn Somerset Webb

Not Even Saudi Arabia Can Save Us From High Oil Prices
2012-04-03 – Jason Simpkins

Good News For Oil and Resource Investors
2012-04-02 – Dr. Alex Cowie


The Scramble For the Arctic

Energy Beats Volatility

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Weeks like this remind us of the old saying, “from crisis comes opportunity.” Never let a good crisis pass without extracting the real opportunities you’re presented.

If there is one conclusion we can reach about financial markets right now, it’s this: it’s easy to get caught up in the drama. From the crumbling Spanish economy to slowing Chinese growth to the fiscal predicament in Japan – there’s plenty of it. And we need to tailor our investment strategy with these things in mind.

But at some point all of it becomes a distraction when looking for stocks to invest in.

As Kris Sayce says at the beginning of his latest report released earlier in the week:

“Stuff the Eurozone. Stuff the bailouts. Stuff the global debt crisis.”

Perhaps you saw this recent headline in The Australian Financial Review: ‘Small Cap Funds Set Hot Pace’: To quote:

The key to managers’ strong returns was their ability to conduct in-depth stock research and accurately select companies that provide the biggest opportunities for growth, said Tom Whitelaw, research manager at Morningstar.

“Opportunities for growth” is exactly what Kris Sayce has been emphasizing in both Money Morning and Australian Small-Cap Investigator. Especially in one key sector: oil and gas.

Calculated Risk is the Key

At the recent After America investing conference, the title of Kris Sayce’s presentation was “Energy Beats Volatility”.

It was a key point to get across.

Stock markets are volatile by nature. You can try to time them if you like. But that’s a difficult task. Kris reckons the more profitable strategy is to focus on the underlying trends that will make certain businesses profitable, even in a bear market.

Are there really industry trends that can defy a bear market and benefit you as an investor? Well, if there ARE such trends, then energy is surely one of them. The world needs energy, no matter what happens in the share market. The demand for energy is not correlated to rising or falling stock prices.

There are some intriguing developments within the energy industry – the kind of developments that can be good for investors. First up, energy production (whether it’s oil or natural gas or unconventional gas) is an extractive industry, just like hard rock mining. But to extract a resource, you have to find it. And not only do you have to find it, you have to extract it profitably.

Today’s energy industry requires more innovation than ever before. Companies are looking on-shore, off-shore, and in every nook and cranny for new resources to tap. And the changes in the energy business – new methods of extraction, new markets to supply and previously undiscovered resources in untapped locations – is driving a huge level of growth and investment.

It’s Happened Before

In the 1970s, business conditions were poor as “stagflation” (inflation but no growth) stuck shares in a bear market and the economy went nowhere.

But oil rose in the 1970′s from $2.80 to over $40 a barrel. Crisis investors who looked for oil drilling stocks, rig suppliers, oil explorers, gas stocks – everything related to the energy industry while demand outstripped supply – made money.

Investor Jim Rogers laid out his strategy at the time (and in general) in the John Train book Money Masters of Our Time:

“Look for change. And by change I mean secular change, not just business cycle change. I’m looking for companies that are going to have good performance even when the economy is going down, like the oil industry in the seventies. A major ten-year change took place in the oil industry.”

As Kris points out in his latest report, great companies always outperform the market eventually.

The advantage of the current environment is volatile swings in price at least give you a chance to buy in at low prices. Instead of fearing these price swings, you can take advantage of them. Most people won’t. For some strange psychological reason, most investors only by stocks once they’re rising. They refuse to buy them when they’re on sale.

Well, shares are going on sale all over the place. If there is any time to embrace risk, it’s when investors are selling and the mood is negative. At some point that negativity becomes fully priced in. Value becomes revealed. Kris thinks that moment is now.

He put it like this in a recent Australian Small-Cap Investigator issue:

“You look for stocks few others are prepared to buy. Then you figure out if they’re undervalued. If they are, you want to know by how much. A lot hopefully. Because ideally, as a small-cap investor you want explosive growth… triple digit percentage gains. Where the market has almost ignored a company’s growth potential.”

To find out five great small-cap stocks Kris believes the market is completely ignoring right now, watch his latest video, right here.

Callum Newman
Editor, Money Morning

The Most Important Story This Week…

One of key ratios in finance is risk versus reward. Without risk, there is no reward. The flipside is there is always a probable chance of making a loss. When investing in a volatile asset class like shares, the key is to have a risk management system. Slipstream Trader Murray Dawes excels in this area. He takes a calculated approach to minimise losses and maximise gains. He does it in the knowledge that a trader will lose occasionally, but his accumulated winners will leave him ahead over the long term.

Kris Sayce recognises the same thing. Shares that have small market capitalisation – his specialty – are higher risk. But they provide one of the biggest opportunities in the share market for huge percentage gains. These can be the engine of your overall portfolio performance. And while only risking a minimal amount of your hard-earned money. Current volatile swings in shares prices give you a chance to buy in at a lower price. It’s one way to take advantage of the uncertain financial market today. Kris adds more in Why You MUST Speculate.

Other Highlights This Week…

Shae Smith on Why Inflation Figures Are Deceptive Government Statistics: “Inflation numbers are a joke… Rather than being a measure of the cost of living, it’s about the US government reporting the lowest inflation number possible. In this article, we’ll show you why you can’t trust these statistics, who you can trust, and how to minimise the impact inflation has on your purchasing power.”

John Stepek on QE: Why We Can Expect More Money Printing from Central Banks: “What’s really worrying is that, as Justin Knight of UBS tells the FT, ‘the international investors who have left the Spanish bond market will probably not come back’. That suggests that the poor appetite for the bonds means that Spanish banks – the main buyers these days – might be ‘running out of LTRO money and therefore stop buying as well’, which would be ‘serious news for the market’.”

Karim Rahemtulla on The Turkish Economy: Knocking At The Door: “Turkey does have a reputation for instability when it comes to politics. One of the main reasons for this is the struggle between those with a religious agenda and those with a secular one. Throw in a very active military sworn to protect Turkey’s secular constitution and the possibility for volatility exists.”

Nick Hubble on Inflation and Sovereign Debt – Why The Best Is Yet To Come: “Was it good while it lasted? A world where Australia dug, China made, America consumed and Europe united. Doesn’t matter much anymore. It’s over. The really important questions are: what’s next? And what do you do about what’s next? “


Energy Beats Volatility