Metro Pacific Investments Corp. (MPI) Inching Higher

 metro pacific investments corp., MPI philippine stocks, pennant, manny pangilinan, ron acoba, daily stock picks, stock market trading

Manny Pangilinan’s Metro Pacific Investments Corporation or MPI in the Philippine Stock Exchange is slowly getting under the market’s radar.  

Despite the company’s solid fundamentals, its shares have been laggard for the past several months. From a high of PHP 4.44 last November 2010, it even found itself to a low of PHP 3.11 less than a month ago. However, it was able to pick itself up since that low. After clearing the PHP 3.40 resistance, it sprung towards PHP 3.80 before it consolidated to what appears to be a bullish pennant pattern. And guess what? MPI just broke out from this pennant yesterday. So if we use the height of the pennant’s pole to gauged it’s upside, we would arrive to a minimum upside target of PHP 4.10 in the near term. Not bad. Any dip here and there of course would also be a good pick up level in my opinion.

By the way, this was one of  our stock picks from the Absolute Traders event “BULL pa ba or BEAR na ba??? last March 25 which my colleague presented along with DMCI Holdings Inc. (DMC) and Philex Mining (PX) just before they broke out (kindly check here).

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Stocks Of Cebu Air, Inc. (CEB) To Crash Land?

 

Cebu Air, Inc. is a Philippine company engaged in the aviation industry offering scheduled flights to both domestic and international destinations. For those who do not know, they are a subsidiary of JG Summit Holdings (JGS) which is majority owned by the Gokongwei family.

Also known as Cebu Pacific or CEB in the Philippine Stock Exchange, it hit the 11th spot in today’s top losers list. Its 3% decline to PHP76.90 triggered the recent breakdown from the symmetrical triangle chart pattern. As a fresh breakdown, the stocks could further hit lower grounds in the coming days. Actually, adding the height of the triangle’s base to the breakdown point, I’m looking at PHP63.00 as the target price for CEB but before it reaches that level, buying pressure could be experienced at the PHP74.50 all-time low. On the upside, in case the stocks head north once again, the immediate resistance could be the triangle’s support. If that hurdle gets cleared out, the next resistance could be the 5-month downtrend.

On the side note, my technical sentiments on CEB will be bearish until the MACD moves to the positive territory, the stocks break above the 50-day moving average and the 5-month downtrend line gets broken. Although the flight sales of Cebu Pacific is skyrocketing right now as more people fly in and out of town or country for the summer vacation, I’d rather buy the stocks given a bright technical entry.

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Bullish Market Lifts Riskier Assets, Weighs on USD

Source: ForexYard

Wednesday’s relatively thin market conditions have apparently granted support to the euro and other commodity-linked currencies. Tensions appear to be easing in regards to recent flare-ups in debt woes in the US and Europe, which have helped temper risk aversion in the market and pull down on safe havens like the USD.

Economic News

USD – USD Drops after Existing Homes Sales Data Boosts Risk Appetite

The US dollar lost some ground yesterday as positive figures from the existing home sales data helped generate risk appetite. This shift in sentiment has spurred a rebound in higher yielding currencies like the euro, British pound, Swiss franc and Canadian and Australian dollars as traders pulled out of safe havens and into currencies with slightly higher yields.

Wednesday’s relatively thin market conditions have apparently granted support to the euro and other commodity-linked currencies. Tensions appear to be easing in regards to recent flare-ups in debt woes in the US and Europe, which have helped temper risk aversion in the market and pull down on safe havens like the USD.

Coupling the home sales data with yesterday’s bullish figures out of Europe also helped the EUR/USD push up from Tuesday’s losses. Traders may begin to anticipate a modest bump in the pair as fundamentals tilt more and more towards riskier currencies. With today’s manufacturing and unemployment figures out of the United States, there is a chance that a positive reading out of today’s indicators may help drive investors deeper into riskier assets, further pulling down on the greenback.

EUR – EUR Bullish as Investors Turn to Higher Yielding Assets

The euro experienced an uptick yesterday as global investors took bullish reports out of Europe and the United States as a sign to buy into riskier assets. The EUR/USD bounced off its 1.4206 support line and currently trades near the 1.4530 level as of this morning. This week’s thin market conditions from the Easter holiday and Spring Break vacation period provides little support to move the price in either direction, but fundamentals appear to be shifting in favor of the euro as of mid-week.

Monetary policy adjustments have many currencies trading more volatile than they have been recently, with Sweden’s Riksbank the most recent example with a lifting of rates by 25 basis points yesterday. The British pound has experienced a few price swings and the move into and out of carry trades has made trading the Swiss franc, Japanese yen and even US dollar more unpredictable. But yesterday’s shift into riskier assets is providing some normalcy for short-term traders who now see riskier assets pushing higher against their rivals.

The economic calendar today is focused more intently on Britain and North America. Overall, traders are eyeing tomorrow’s retail sales figures out of Britain and Canada for a fuller picture of what is to come after the Easter holiday this weekend. Traders will want to keep a lookout for tomorrow’s German Ifo Business Climate report since it will be the last significant figure published by the euro zone in this week’s trading. It could push the EUR higher if it comes out above expectations, especially considering the recent move into riskier assets from positive fundamentals.

JPY – Yen Mixed as Risk Appetite Gains Momentum

This week’s talk of rising risk appetite may have found solid ground yesterday as American existing home sales data helped highlight growing consumer optimism, lower oil inventories signaled positive industrial growth in the US, and Australian import prices and inflationary data grew more than expected, leading many to speculate a tightening of monetary policy by the Aussie giant. The impact has been for safe havens, like the Japanese yen, to find its feet swept out from underneath it, but mixed versus other safe havens, like the US dollar and Swiss franc.

The yen has fallen against most of its currency rivals since yesterday. The USD/JPY, however, has remained flat near 82.50 since Monday. Against the British pound, traders have also witnessed a leveling-off effect as the pair consolidates around 135.50. With the economic calendar today focused on British and Canadian economic news, the yen will likely not experience much change unless the US economy continues to release positive data. If that is the case today, traders may want to anticipate a second rise in risk appetite as traders move to higher yielding currencies.

Crude Oil – Unexpectedly Sharp Drop in Inventories Lifts Oil Price

US crude oil inventories revealed an unexpectedly steep decline of 2.3M barrels this week. Traders have begun to assess what impact this will have on price and what it may mean for global industry. The connection of US stockpiles to the price of crude oil is difficult to gauge, however. A decline could either represent a short-fall in supply or simply an expansion of usage from bolstered demand. Either way it tends to suggest an increase in price, which is what traders witnessed yesterday.

The other side of this equation, however, may be that the US decided to release more of its inventories to alleviate pressure at the pumps since US gas prices have climbed to nominal record highs over the past few weeks. No matter what the reason, this shortfall in stockpiles is helping to fuel a buy-in on crude oil’s spot and futures market driving the price to an 8-day high. Traders may expect a corrective downturn if the USD finds support soon, otherwise it may be a safe bet to join the bullish trend.

Technical News

EUR/USD

Most technical indicators are showing that this pair is overbought, and is likely to see a downward correction in the near future. On the 4-hour chart, the Williams Percent Range has crossed into the overbought zone, while the 8-hour chart’s Slow Stochastic shows a bearish cross has formed. Going short appears to be the wise choice today.

GBP/USD

The Stochastic Slow on the 8-hour chart has formed a bearish cross, indicating that downward movement is likely to occur. This theory is supported by the Relative Strength Index on the 4-hour chart, which is currently well into overbought territory. Traders will likely want to short this pair today.

USD/JPY

The Williams Percent Range is currently well into the oversold zone on the daily chart, indicating that an upward correction may occur today. In addition, the Relative Strength Index on the 8-hour chart is also oversold. Going long may be the wise choice today.

USD/CHF

The Stochastic Slow on the 4-hour chart has formed a bullish cross, indicating that an upward correction is likely to occur in the near future. The Williams Percent Range on the daily chart is currently at the -90 level, giving further support to the theory of upward movement today. Going long with tight stops may be the preferred strategy today.

The Wild Card

AUD/USD

The Williams Percent Range on the 4-hour chart of this pair is currently in overbought territory, indicating that a downward correction is likely to take place. This theory is supported by the Stochastic Slow on the same chart, as well as the 8-hour chart’s Relative Strength Index. Now may be a great time for forex traders to open up short positions before the downward breach occurs.

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.

USDJPY stays in a falling price channel

USDJPY stays in a falling price channel on 4-hour chart, and remains in downtrend from 85.51. Key resistance is located at 83.09, as long as this level holds, downtrend could be expected to continue, and next target would be at 81.50 area. However, a break above 83.09 will indicate that a cycle bottom has been formed, and the fall from 85.51 has completed at 82.18 already, then the following upward move could bring price back to 83.45 zone.

usdjpy

Forex Signals

Options Report: April 20, 2011

On the call side, Dish Network calls are seeing a lot of activity today, currently at close to 24 times their average volume. Williams Companies calls are over 17.5 times their average volume as investors are bullish on the sector today. CIT Group calls are at close to 15 times their normal volume after news that a cease and desist order against the company was lifted. Prudential Financial calls are at just over 9 times their average volume after the analyst raised their price target on the company. Finally, Cheesecake Factory calls close out the list at over 8 times their average volume ahead of their quarterly earnings report. Taking a look at the put side of the ledger, Ariad Pharmaceuticals is seeing a large amount of volume today, currently trading are close to 20 times their average volume. Stillwater Mining puts are at just over 5 times the average volume after being downgraded by analysts. Western Digital puts are not far behind at 4.6 times their average volume. VMWare puts are very active today, currently trading at around 4.5 times their average volume despite a strong quarterly earnings report. Finally, Amgen puts close out the list at just over 4 times the average amount ahead of their quarterly earnings report.

4-20-11 MTS Video: Earnings, Earnings, and more Earnings

Market guidance and momentum being clearly driven by earnings. Lots of active money managers not being fully invested motivated by defensive posture on perception of still existing Geo-political Risk :Still issues in Mid east, still no clear quantified cost on Japan, etc.

FOREX Update: Existing-Home Sales rise in March. US Dollar lower as Commodities, Stocks rise

By CountingPips.com

U.S. existing-homes sales data rebounded in March after declining in February, according to the monthly report produced by the National Association of Realtors (NAR). The NAR report showed that existing-home sales including single family homes, co-ops and townhouses rose by 3.7 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.10 million units. February’s existing-homes sales data had decreased by a revised 8.9 percent to a 4.92 million home rate.

On an annual basis, March’s existing-home sales is lower by 6.3 percent than the March 2010 level.

Today’s data beat market expectations as  forecasters had predicted the sales data would rise by 2.5 percent in March to a 5.00 million unit sales pace.

NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun commented in the report about the rebound in sales figures, “Existing-home sales have risen in six of the past eight months, so we’re clearly on a recovery path. With rising jobs and excellent affordability conditions, we project moderate improvements into 2012, but not every month will show a gain – primarily because some buyers are finding it too difficult to obtain a mortgage.”

Existing-home sales in the Northeast increased by 3.9 percent in March while the Midwest sales rose by 1.0 percent. The West saw its existing-home sales edge lower by 0.8 percent while sales advanced by 8.2 percent for the month in the South.

On an annual basis, the Northeast sales were lower than the March 2010 level by 12.1 percent with the South (-1.0 %), West (-3.1 %) and Midwest (-13.1%) all showing lower levels on an annual basis.

FOREX: US Dollar lower across the board. Stocks, Commodities higher

The U.S. dollar has been on the decline in the forex markets today while US stocks have traded higher as investor risk sentiment has been on the rise in the U.S. trading session today. The dollar has decreased lower today versus the euro, Swiss franc, British pound sterling, Japanese yen, Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar and the Canadian dollar, according to currency data by Oanda.

The U.S. stock markets, meanwhile, have had a positive trading session today on positive earnings news. The Dow Jones closed up by over 186 points, the Nasdaq rose by over 57 points and the S&P 500 increased by over 17 points.

In commodities, oil has increased by over $3.00 to the $111.34 per barrel level while gold has been higher by $5.80 to settle at the $1,500.30 per ounce level.

USD/CHF Hourly Chart – The US Dollar falling to a new low against the Swiss franc today in forex market trading. The USD/CHF has touched an intraday bottom at 0.8878 today.

 

Markets Surge On Earnings And Dollar Smack Dow

With some positive earnings from Intel and others and a major collapse in the Dollar, the markets surged to the upside. The upside given to the markets after Monday’s decline was a perfect call based on light holiday volume and propping.

Learning Economics from a Pencil

Learning Economics from a Pencil

We always enjoy reading the mainstream press reaction after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) releases the minutes of its monthly meetings.

There’s inevitably talk about how the RBA thinks current rates are “appropriate”, and how the RBA is going to “steer the narrative back towards the big story” – whatever that means.

It’s the whole idea the RBA is driving the Australian economy.  That without its influence you, I and the entire economy would be flailing around like one of those inflatable waving arm guys you see by the side of the road:

Inflatable man or directionless economy?

I mean, really, would the economy be in such a muddle if the RBA didn’t exist?

Of course not.  People and businesses don’t need a central economic command post calling all the shots.

Take the above photo as an example.

Your editor asked the guys in the editorial office what these things were called.  Because we didn’t know, we had to insanely wave our arms around like a madman.

But they got the idea.

Two suggestions were “inflatable waving man” and “inflatable doll thing”.  Being at work, we were reluctant to type “inflatable doll” into the old search engine for fear of what we’d get!  So we went with the former.

No sooner had we typed “inflatable waving…” into the search engine, than Google gave suggestions of what we were after – “inflatable waving arm guy” seemed the closest match and Bob’s your uncle.

It’s a perfect example of how a free market economy works.  There’s no directive or law passed by government instructing Google to offer search suggestions.

Google does it because it’s helpful.  Because it’ll help searchers find what they’re looking for, and potentially – shock, horror – result in Google making more advertising money.

Not only that, but there’s no regulation or decree from government mandating that a photo of an “inflatable waving arm guy” be made available on the Internet.  It’s just there.  For whatever reason, it’s there.

That’s how markets work.

Steering through a crossroads

Besides, can you imagine a government bureaucrat sitting in an office having to think of every possible thing someone may want to search for?  It’s not possible – even for a super-brainy pen pusher.

Anyway, back to central banking.  Our old pal, the Sydney Morning Herald’s, Jessica Irvine wrote this just over a week ago:

“Glenn Stevens is going to have to work for every dollar of his $1 million-plus pay packet this year.  The Australian economy is at a crossroads, as a resurgent mining boom fires up parts of the economy but inflicts pain on others.

“The task of steering the economy through this intersection is made all the more difficult by this year’s cyclones, floods and earthquakes, which play havoc with official jobs, economic growth and retail figures.  Setting interest rates is often likened to driving a car by only looking in the rear-view mirrors, thanks to the uncertainty of the future and inevitable time delays in collecting and publishing of historic economic data.”

There you have it, the RBA has the “task of steering the economy…”

To be honest, we pity the entire thought process of those who believe in the omnipotence of bureaucrats.

There’s the old saying of “those who can, do; those who can’t, teach.” But we never use it.  Mainly because ‘er indoors and half the in-laws are teachers.  Besides, it could just as easily be said that “those who can, do; those who can’t, write financial newsletters!”

But either way, the more appropriate saying would be, “…those who can’t, become bureaucrats and central bankers.”

The idea the likes of Glenn Stevens, Dr. Ben S. Bernanke, Mervyn King or Jean-Claude Trichet are able to accurately “steer” an economy like a driver steers a car is ridiculous.  It can’t be done.

Why?

Because of the vast number of moving parts in an economy.  It’s impossible for a central banker to move an interest rate and for it to have a uniform impact on an economy.

Let me give you another example.  Whenever we read articles such as Ms. Irvine’s we laugh.  But when we recover, we head directly for a particular essay.

I am a pencil

It’s only a short essay, something you should be able to read in less than fifteen minutes.  It was written in 1958 by a chap called Leonard E. Read.  The title is: I, Pencil.

You can click here to read it in full now.

The essay relates a first “person” account from a pencil’s point of view – crazy huh?!  The pencil explains what goes in to making a pencil… from the woodchoppers in Oregon to the graphite mines in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) to the rape-seed oil from the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia).

None of those hundreds of firms or thousands of people were directed to make a pencil by a central planner.  In fact, in most cases they probably don’t even know or care what the graphite or rape-seed is used for.

Leonard Read writes:

“I, Pencil, simple though I appear to be, merit your wonder and awe, a claim I shall attempt to prove…

“Simple?  Yet, not a single person on the face of this earth knows how to make me.  This sounds fantastic, doesn’t it?  Especially when it is realized that there are about one and one-half billion of my kind produced in the U.S.A. each year.”

The point is, that simple as a pencil seems, it’s impossible for a single person to possess the knowledge, the skill and the resources to single-handedly make a pencil.  And neither would you want to when you can buy a whole box of the things for a couple of bucks.

That’s the beauty of the division of labour.  There’s no need to gain the skills to do everything when others can specialise in specific skills that go towards making the end product.

As Milton Friedman points out in his introduction to the essay:

“It is even more astounding that the pencil was ever produced.  No one sitting in a central office gave orders to these thousands of people.  No military police enforced the orders that were not given.  These people live in many lands, speak different languages, practice different religions, may even hate one another – yet none of these differences prevented them from cooperating to produce a pencil.”

The reality is an economy doesn’t need a central bank to interfere.  Things just happen.

We’re often asked, “Hey wise guy, you say the government shouldn’t provide health, education, police and stuff, so how would it work then eh?”

In all honesty, we don’t know for certain.  But we know private health, private education and private security are already provided by the free market.  Do we really need to stretch our imagination so far to think these things are possible without government interference?

Free food or free health

To those who say only the government can provide health and education, we say, which is more important to your survival, food or education?  The answer is obvious, yet government doesn’t mandate free food for all.

The entire population isn’t starving because the government has failed to provide free food.  Yet somehow we all manage to eat.  How is that possible without government intervention?

It’s possible because of markets.

Think about that the next time you buy something you want from a shop.  Why does the local milk bar stock cans of soft drink and packets of chips?  Is it because the RBA has steered the economy that way?

No, it’s because the milk bar owner judges that based on past buying patterns and customer demand, people will continue to make these purchases.

If anything, the central bankers can only steer an economy in the wrong direction.  As central banks the world over (including the RBA) have done by keeping interest rates low.

The fact is, central bankers are bad drivers.

Look at how the US Federal Reserve has steered the US economy.

Or how the Bank of England and European Central Bank have steered those economies.

Now, don’t fall into the trap of blaming everything on the private banks for creating all the toxic derivatives.  Sure, they’re to blame for financial manipulation.

But the banks could only create those toxic derivatives and manipulate the market due to the presence and approval of the central banks and government.

What about the RBA?  Is it doing any better?

Steering the economy into a ditch

If you read the mainstream financial numpties you’d think the RBA are a breed apart in terms of economic “steering”.  You’d think the pen pushers at the RBA are the Michael Schumacher of the central banking world.

But as we’ve pointed out before – which even the mainstream admits – the Australian economy isn’t in as good a shape as you’re led to believe.

A couple of weeks ago we pointed out that for the last financial year all the profit growth for the top twenty Australian listed companies came from the resources and banking sector.

The rest – the retailers, manufacturers, services companies – had seen profits drop.

If the RBA was so good at driving the economy in the right direction then how come all but the resources and banking sector are taking a hit to the bottom line?  It doesn’t make sense does it?

Right now your editor is reading up on the real heroes of the economy – entrepreneurs – for the April issue of Australian Small-Cap Investigator.

Entrepreneurs are people who come up with ideas.  They pitch these ideas to capitalists (investors) who then decide if the idea makes sense.  If it does, they invest.  If it doesn’t, they don’t.

The entrepreneurs, capitalists and individuals are the true drivers of the economy.  And only they can steer it in the right direction.

Unfortunately for the economy, you’ve got central bankers putting up signs trying to point you in the wrong direction.  In other words, an economy grows in spite of central bank intervention, not because of it.

Cheers.

Kris Sayce
Money Morning Australia