Daily Market Review for the 07.04.2011

EUR-USD

Daily time frame

Time: 01:00 Rate: 1.4330

Strategy: long

In yesterday’s daily market review it was mentioned that the price broke out the level of 1.43 the uptrend will continue. Indeed the price broke out this resistance level with an impressive length of the candlestick. We believe that a further increase up to the level of 1.4475, with a possibility for inter daily retracement to approximately 1.43 level.

As can be seen by the graph bellow:   

 

4 hour time frame

It can be seen an increase price structure, while each high that breaks out by the price was then served as a support level, and brought additional upward movement. Even now while the last high level 1.4250 broke out most likely that we will see an additional upward movement.

Potential Trade

Long

Enter: 1.4370

Stop: 1.4240

Target: 1.4475

As can be seen by the graph bellow:

 

GBP-USD

Daily time frame

Time: 01.00 Rate: 1.6327

Strategy: long

As was written in the daily market review yesterday, indeed the price continued in an upward position and got to the resistance level of 1.6345. The break out of the price at this level, and most probably will continue until the upper side of the parallel asymmetric triangle (increased red slope line connecting between the last highs).

As can be seen by the graph bellow:

 

4 hour time frame

After the break out of the upper level of the range 1.6200, the formation of the upward movement, one may see that the price stopped at the level of 1.6360. The new break out of the price by this level will bring in the first step to the target range, and in the second step the depth of the current retracement upward.

Potential Trade  

Long

Enter: 1.6365

Stop:1.6255

First target: 1.64

Second target: 1.6470

As can be seen by the graph bellow:

 


Important News for the 07.04.2011

Time 14:00 GBP – official bank rate

Time: 14:45 EUR- Minimum bid rate

Time: 15:30 CAD- Building permits m/m

Time 15:30 EUR – ECB Press conference

Time 15:30 USD- Unemployment claims

 

 

 

 

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Euro-Zone Minimum Bid Rate Set to Dominate Markets Today

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The euro-zone Minimum Bid Rate, scheduled to take place at 11:45 GMT, is likely to be the dominant force driving markets today. Analysts are unanimous in predicting that the European Central Bank will raise interest rates to 1.25%, a move which is likely to boost the euro above its recent highs against the Japanese yen and US dollar.

Here is a roundup of today’s other main economic indicators:

12:30 GMT- Canadian Building Permits

The monthly Building Permits figure has proven to be an effective gauge of Canadian economic growth and as such, tends to influence CAD pairs. The loonie turned bearish against the dollar yesterday. If today’s figure comes in at the predicted 1.6%, the USD/CAD could stage a downward reversal.

12:30 GMT- US Unemployment Claims

Following last week’s surprisingly positive US Non-Farm Payrolls figure, investors will be closely watching today’s unemployment number. Analysts are predicting a slight decrease in the number of people filing for first time jobless insurance. If the figure comes in at or below the expected 385K, it may help blunt the losses the dollar is expected to take following the euro-zone Minimum Bid Rate.

GBPUSD pulled back from 1.6363

Being contained by 1.6400 previous high resistance, GBPUSD pulled back from 1.6363, suggesting that a cycle top is being formed on 4-hour chart. Range trading between 1.6200 and 1.6363 would likely be seen in a couple of days. However, the fall from 1.6363 is treated as consolidation of uptrend from 1.5936, another rise towards 1.6600 is still possible after consolidation.

gbpusd

Daily Forex Analysis

Who Else Wants a Share in the Most Stolen Commodity of 2010?

Who Else Wants a Share in the Most Stolen Commodity of 2010?

By Aaron Tyrrell

The South African Chamber of Commerce and Industry reports $36.7 million dollar’s worth of copper was flogged on the black market in South Africa last year…

Phil Locker wrote in the Santiago Times: ’842 miles of copper wire were stolen in Chile [in 2010], enough to stretch between Santiago and Montevideo, Uruguay’.

There was a case in Tweed Heads in March 2010 of one bloke stealing copper from Country Energy.

These two got pinched selling $100,000 worth of copper wiring for scrap…

And, Dan Denning wrote back in December:

“The one [crime] that has increased almost beyond belief is copper theft”.

You get the picture.

Crooks want copper. Because, for them, copper is as good as gold.

You can click the links to read more about copper thefts:

Or you can skip them and read on…

Dan Denning wrote in the Daily Reckoningon Monday,

The Financial Times reports that copper prices are down 8% from their all-time high of $10,190 in February. “There’s no question that Chinese consumption has slowed and we are seeing a build-up of stocks in many of the warehouses in the region,” said one senior metals banker. “The copper market is getting a bit tired at the moment.”

It might be ‘looking tired’, but China’s Minmetals’ $6.5 billion bid for Equinox Minerals – a Sydney-listed copper producer – should tell you copper is still desirable as ever.

And that got me thinking.

Is now the right time for you to cash in on copper stocks?

I asked Diggers & Drillers editor, Dr Alex Cowie for his thoughts on copper this morning…

Here’s what he said:

‘Copper may as well be a precious metal. It ticks all the boxes I look for in a commodity.

‘Supply is inadequate. Not enough new major mines coming online. And demand from emerging economies (China in particular) is enormous. Testament to that, we’ve just seen China’s Minmetals make a bid for our biggest copper producer, Equinox.

‘The copper price is down two per cent in a month. It went up to just about $10,000 per tonne in February. And it’s down to $9,300 now…

‘I think it will struggle to get past $10,000 if only because it’s such a psychological barrier and it’s had a huge run already. This huge run is remarkable considering this is a huge market, which is now worth about $200 billion a year. That makes the copper market 50% bigger than the New Zealand economy.

‘I expect it to hover between $8500 and $10,000 for the rest of the year. (Though I hope to be proven wrong…)

‘But the fact is that even if the copper price was to fall to $6,000 a tonne, copper producers would still be laughing all the way to the bank.

‘If the copper price goes up 10 per cent, a good quality copper stock could go up 20 or 30 per cent – or more…

‘I’m actually going on a site visit to a copper company next week, as I’m looking to recommend another copper stock in the next couple of months.’

So that’s a tip for Diggers & Drillers readers to look forward to.

According to ANZ Commodity Research, high metal prices mean companies could spend an extra 40% on exploration in 2011.

More exploration might mean more discoveries.

And that could mean Mr Market gives copper shares a bit of a boost.

Now might not be the right time to buy. If the market is tired, as the FT reckons, you might want to wait for prices to lie down a bit longer before you invest.

But it could make now a good time to start investigating small-to-mid-cap miners who could make you big gains if and when the copper price starts to rise… which is exactly what Dr. Alex Cowie is doing for his readers.

Aaron Tyrrell
Money Morning

Government Debt Could Weigh Down Your Portfolio

Sara Nunnally, Editor, Smart Investing Daily, taipanpublishinggroup.com

U.S. Treasuries have been called one of the safest investments you can make. The idea that the U.S. government would default on its obligations used to be akin to a snowball’s chance in hell.

Now, some analysts aren’t so sure.

From Bloomberg:

[Bill] Gross [who runs the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co.] said in an interview March 11 that he eliminated government-related debt from his Total Return Fund because investors aren’t being adequately compensated for the risk of quickening inflation.

He’s not alone. Bloomberg also reports that Warren Buffett has been advising against holding long-term fixed-dollar investments like Treasuries. He told investors at a conference in New Delhi, “If you ask me if the U.S. dollar is going to hold its purchasing power fully at the level of 2011, 5 years, 10 years or 20 years from now, I would tell you it will not.”

Indeed, in the first quarter of 2011, Treasuries showed a 0.1% loss… And that’s on top of the 2.7% loss in the last quarter of 2010.

And now, even the debt-guzzling Federal Reserve is warning of inflation.

Richmond Fed President Jeffery Lacker told CNBC on Friday that the Federal Reserve could raise rates before the end of the year. But will they stop buying up billions of dollars in government bonds? Not likely. Kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy, then, eh?

The Federal Reserve buys more government debt, which hammers dollar value, which causes inflation, which causes the Fed to raise rates.

CNBC reports that the bond markets could take the first hit if this happens.

Citing Rob Lutts, chief investment officer at Cabot Wealth Management, “For bond investors, they’re in a huge bubble. The valuations in bonds are just as extreme today as in 2000 for tech. The valuations on short-term Treasuries and even the 10-year is not rational in this environment.”

Here’s my take on it… Nobody wants to be the bad guy. Nobody wants to tighten the monetary supply because GDP will suffer.

I’d argue that GDP growth isn’t nearly as good as it seems with a falling dollar valuation.

Why not take the hit now, and get back to real growth?

They say desperate times call for desperate measures… Well, we’ve seen how desperate moves by the Federal Reserve have put us in an even tighter pinch than we really need to be. And these moves have effectively blinded the market to inflation concerns.

That’s why these analysts’ comments on the current bond market are so important. They’re like the canary in the coal mine, and a popping of the bond market bubble could mean a huge decline in the stock market as well.

I mean, we’re starting to see some irrational risk-taking again.

(Investing doesn’t have to be complicated. Sign up for Smart Investing Daily and let me and my fellow editor Jared Levy simplify the stock market for you with our easy-to-understand investment articles.)

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that subprime bonds are back, and that long-term investors are buying them up!

The ultra-safe, low interest rates the Federal Reserve has been issuing makes these investments look like a sweet deal, especially with the markets rallying. But if we understand that this rally is built with fake money, then those longer-term investments don’t look so shiny…

And here’s something interesting: The hedge funds are mopping up these loans. The bonds are yielding between 5% and 7%, and have doubled in price over the past two and a half years. They stand to make a hefty profit…

If everything works out well for our economy, and we keep growing, and we’re able to cut back on the amount of government debt we (and the rest of the world) are buying, then I’ll probably be eating my words.

But if not, then we’ll be heading into a high inflation era, and you’ll need to protect your portfolio.

The next three to six months will be really interesting. In mid-summer, the Federal Reserve will end its second round of quantitative easing, and we’ll either be talking about QE3 or raising interest rates.

Now’s the time to take a look at your portfolio. Are you holding government debt?

If so, you might want to balance that out a bit. According to Harry Browne’s Permanent Portfolio strategy, you should be holding long-term bonds in times of deflation. But in times of inflation, which we are surely edging toward no matter what the Fed decides, you want to be holding gold.

Gold, or another hard asset denominated in dollars… That could be platinum or silver, or even oil or agricultural commodities.

Just look at this chart comparing the U.S. Dollar Index to gold over the past six months:

NYMEX Chart
View larger chart

The inverse correlation is pretty obvious at the mid-February mark. It’s even more pronounced in this chart comparing the U.S. Dollar Index to oil…

NYMEX Chart
View larger chart

These two charts show just how powerful dollar-denominated hard assets can be when the value of the dollar falls.

It’s investments like these that will help you protect your portfolio.

What specifically should you be buying? It depends on your investment experience.

The most direct way to take advantage of these types of dollar-hedging investments is through futures or options on futures. If you have experience with these types of investments, than you can also play the short-term waves in both the dollar-based commodities and the U.S. Dollar Index itself.

(And if you’re super-savvy, you can take playing the U.S. Dollar Index to the next level by using futures and options in international currencies… Double the impact by choosing currencies from resource-rich countries, like we did in our collaboration with EverBank to create the Ultra Resource Basket CD.)

The next “purest” investments are commodity-based exchange-traded funds and notes (ETFs and ETNs). These ETFs and ETNs actually follow the price of their underlying commodity, be it oil, silver or gold. Many times, these ETFs and ETNs own the commodity itself, so the shares are backed in part by the specific commodity.

This is different than investing in ETFs that basket a number of commodity-based companies, like oil producers or gold miners.

These investments, along with investing in these companies individually, are another level away from the actual hedging power of dollar-based commodities. They have their worth, and can generate swift and significant gains, but they also have costs that factor into their share prices, like fuel and personnel.

But through any of these three hedging possibilities, you can find a bit of security for your portfolio.

Again, the next three to six months will be very important. Keep an ear to the ground when it comes to the Fed, but always look to their actions for their true beliefs about the economy.

And right now, the Fed has no plans to halt its QE2 debt-buying spree.

Editor’s Note: At this moment, a ruthless government conspiracy is cannibalizing American jobs… crushing hopes for an economic recovery… and setting up the single greatest profit opportunity of the last 83 years. Act now, and you could be $97,500 richer. Here are the details for this special investment report…

About the Author

Sara is Managing Editor of Smart Investing Daily. As Senior Research Director and global correspondent, Sara Nunnally’s diverse resume includes studies in art history, computer science and financial research. She has appeared on news media such as Forbes on Fox, Fox News Live, and CNBC’s Squawk Box, as well as numerous radio shows around the country. Most recently, Sara co-authored a book with Sandy Franks called, Barbarians of Wealth.

As Senior Research Director, global correspondent and managing editor of Smart Investing Daily, Sara has traveled all over the world in search of the best investment opportunities to recommend to her readers, be they in developed economies like France and Italy, in emerging markets like the Czech Republic and Poland, or in frontier terrain like Vietnam and Morocco. Her unique “holistic” approach of boots-on-the-ground research has given her an edge in today’s financial marketplace as she searches for the next investment opportunities in hot sectors like alternative energy, currency markets and commodities.

 

OECD Says Canada to Lead G7

The Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said Tuesday that it expects Canada will lead all G7 countries in economic growth for the first half of 2011. According to the OECD, the Canadian economy will expand by about 5.2 percent for the first quarter ended March 31st, and suggests further growth of 3.8 percent for the second quarter.

The OECD also upgraded its forecast for Germany putting it second behind Canada with predicted growth of 3.7 percent for the first quarter, followed by France at 3.4 percent, and the United States at 3.1 percent. The OECD declined to provide a prediction for Japan given the recent events, but overall, the OECD says the G7 economies are performing better than earlier expected.

As a leading exporter of resources, Canada continues to benefit from stronger commodity prices especially crude oil prices which are at a two-year high. In January and February alone, Canada added over 84,000 new jobs and if the employment report scheduled for release this Friday comes in as expected, Canada could add another 30,000 new positions. As a result, the unemployment rate is expected to fall to 7.7 percent from 7.8 percent as of the end of February.

In addition to an improving job market outlook, the Canadian dollar is also benefitting from a growing tolerance for investment risk. The dollar – known as “the loonie” because of the waterfowl image on the reverse of the dollar coin – traded at 96.70 U.S. cents on Tuesday to match the highest price for the loonie against its American counterpart since November 2007.

The downside of the currency appreciation of course is that it makes Canadian exports more expensive for buyers who must exchange weaker currencies into Canadian dollars. The Bank of Canada – which is scheduled to announce its next interest rate announcement on April 12th – noted the “considerable challenges” exporters face from a strengthening loonie in a policy statement released on March 1st.

Most analysts believe the Bank of Canada’s April statement will leave interest rates unchanged at one percent, but there is a growing recognition that the Bank will be forced to hike rates later in the year to contain inflation.

Scott Boyd is a currency analyst at OANDA and blogs on MarketPulse FX.

AUD/NZD May See Bullish Reversal

By Dan Eduard

Over the last week and a half, the AUD/NZD has experienced a bearish trend that has brought the pair down over 300 pips. Technical indicators are now showing that the pair may be in store for a bullish correction in the near future, providing forex traders with an excellent opportunity to open up long positions for some potentially significant profits.

We will be looking at the daily chart for AUD/NZD, provided by Forexyard. The technical indicators being examined are the Relative Strength Index, Stochastic Slow and Williams Percent Range.

1. The Relative Strength Index has recently crossed into the oversold zone, in what is typically a sign that a reversal is likely to take place. Furthermore, it appears that the indicator is beginning to angle upward in a clear indication that the pair may turn bullish in the near future.

2. The Stochastic Slow has recently formed a bullish cross. Traders can take this as a clear sign that a trend reversal may be imminent.

3. Finally, the Williams Percent Range has crossed well below the -80 level, in what is the clearest sign yet that the pair is in oversold territory. Traders will want to pay attention to this indicator. When it begins to turn upward, it will be a likely sign of impending bullish behavior.

tech 6.5

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

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Switzerland Consumer Prices rise more than expected. Swiss Franc boosted in Forex Trade

By CountingPips.com

Consumer price inflation increased by more than expected in Switzerland for the month of March, according to the latest data release provided by the Switzerland Federal Statistics Office. Consumer prices, a key measure of inflation, rose by 0.6 percent in March following a 0.4 percent increase in February.

The March data easily surpassed market forecasts that were expecting a 0.2 percent increase for the month.

On an annual basis, consumer prices rose by 1.0 percent from the March 2010 to the March 2011 time-frame following a 0.5 percent annual rise in February. The annual advance was double the market forecasts which were expecting an increase of 0.5 percent.

Swiss franc trades higher in Forex

The Swiss currency has been boosted today in forex trading against the other major currencies following the higher-than-expected inflation data. The franc has risen against the Japanese yen, US dollar, euro, British pound sterling, Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar, according to currency data by Oanda in the morning of the US session.

Eurozone GDP steady at 0.3% growth in fourth quarter

Out of the Eurozone today, the gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of 2010 grew at a rate of 0.3 percent a seasonally adjusted basis. This data was unchanged from the previous estimate.

On annual basis, the GDP rose by 2.0 percent in the fourth quarter from the fourth quarter of 2009 and was also unchanged from the previous estimate. Gross fixed capital for the fourth quarter declined by 0.5 percent while household consumption rose by 0.4 percent and government expenditure edged higher by 0.1 percent.

The Eurozone will be in focus tomorrow as the European Central Bank is widely expected to raise its interest rate by 25 basis points to the 1.25 percent level.