The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has just released a working paper on central bank communication on inflation, which examines whether the clarity of central bank communications have changed with the economic environment. The key finding of the paper is that there are “no strong indications that central banks were less clear in explaining their policies when faced with higher uncertainty or a less favorable inflation outlook.” However, the authors note that the global financial crisis “did have a negative impact on clarity of central bank communication.” The paper’s authors are: Bulir, Ales; Cihák, Martin; and Jansen, David-Jan.
Gold Trend Forecast for 1st Quarter of 2012
By Chris Vermeulen: www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com
Over the past five months gold has fallen sharply and is no longer headline news which it once dominated back in 2011 when it was making new highs every day. The shiny metal has been under pressure because traders and investors started to pull some money off the table to lock in gains. Gold prices had surged so fast most advanced traders knew that final high volume surge was not sustainable. But the main reason gold topped out in my opinion was because the US Dollar index had put in a bottom and started to build a base. As we all know a rising dollar typically means lower stocks and commodity prices.
I have posted some charts below covering gold in detail using multiple time frames. The weekly which is long term, daily which is the intermediate trend and the 4 hour chart which shows gold momentum and intraday action. At the very bottom I talk about the US Dollar and what is happening with that.
Gold Weekly Long Term Trend Analysis
The weekly chart is not the most exciting time frame to follow as you will grow old watching it. That being said it is crucial for understanding the long term trend, price and volume analysis.
Below you can see that gold’s recent pullback has been a 3 wave correction, which is a normal pullback for any investment. But taking into account the rally from 2008 – 2011 I feel this pullback will have one more low put in before bottoming out. This would make for a 5 wave correction much like what happened in 2008.
Daily Chart of Gold Showing the Intermediate Trend
The daily chart allows us to see gold intra-week price action and use the 150 moving average which is my preferred daily moving average. As you can see we are getting a similar pullback as 2008 with gold now trading under the 150 MA.
I would like to see gold make another lower low in the next 2-3 months. If that happens I feel it complete the correction and trigger a strong multi month or multiyear rally in gold.
4 Hour Intraday Chart of Gold
The 4 hour chart of gold allows us to see all the intraday price action which would normally not be seen with a daily chart. It also gives us enough data to build our analysis upon.
My preferred setup for gold which I feel if happens will trigger major buying in the yellow metal. If/when we get a rally in gold would also likely mean some more economic uncertainty has entered the market either from within the USA, Europe or China…
Weekly Dollar Index Long Term Analysis
The dollar has the potential to rally to the 87 – 88 level before putting in a major top. For this to happen we will need to see the Euro crumble (both currency and countries divide) in my opinion.
If you look at the weekly chart of gold and this chart of the dollar index you will notice that gold topped when the dollar bottomed. Over the past couple year’s gold and the dollar have had an inverse relationship to each other.
With all kinds of crap about to hit the fan overseas I think it’s very possible gold will rally with the dollar. Reason being there is way more people overseas who want to unload their euro’s and with all the negative talk and doubt with the US Dollar individuals will naturally want to buy more gold.
Weekend Trend Trading Conclusion:
In short, I expect a bumpy ride for both stocks and commodities in the first quarter of 2012. With any luck gold will pull back into my price zone shaking the majority of short term traders out just before it bottoms. And we will be positioning ourselves for a strong rally buying into their panic selling.
To just touch base on the general stock market quickly. I have a very bearish outlook for stocks. If the dollar continues to rise it is very likely the stock market will fall into a bear market. So I am VERY cautious with stock at this time.
If you would like to receive my Weekly reports, updates and trading education videos each week join my free newsletter here:www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com
Chris Vermeulen
Upward Pressure to Remain on Brent Crude in 2012
Upward Pressure to Remain on Brent Crude in 2012
by David Fessler, Investment U Senior Analyst
Monday, January 16, 2011
Oil prices have traded off a few dollars from their recent highs. The factors that will keep Brent above $100 a barrel for 2012 are the same ones that kept it above $100 all of last year.
Take a look at the graph below, courtesy of the Energy Information Administration.
Brent spot prices averaged $111.26 a barrel for 2011. That was the first time in the history of oil that Brent averaged over $100 a barrel for an entire year.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) averaged $94.87 a barrel, up $15 a barrel from 2010. WTI pricing reflected a discount to Brent based on supply constrains emanating from the Cushing, Oklahoma storage depot.
What’s Going to Keep Crude High in 2012?
Let’s start with the Arab Spring that’s already turned into the Arab Year. If Iran goes ballistic (no pun intended) and Iraq comes apart at the seams, it could turn into the Arab Decade.
Any sudden supply loss resulting from the closing of the Straight of Hormuz will send prices soaring. Even if nothing happens, prices will stay high until the standoff settles down.
Now let’s talk about demand. In the face of all the unrest that threatens 17 million barrels per day of world supply, we have increasing demand. As I write this, China is negotiating with Iran for cheaper prices on oil.
The country gets about 11% of its oil from Iran, and now it can get it cheaper, since its oil is effectively isolated from the rest of the world. The boycott takes Iran’s 2.6 million barrels per day off the world’s supply.
But China, India and the Middle East all experienced increasing demand for crude in 2011. During the first six months of last year, crude demand for countries not part of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) saw demand increase 4%.
Even with declining OECD demand, overall world demand for crude increased by 1.2% in 2011. That growth will continue in 2012, keeping upward pressure on prices.
The third factor keeping crude prices high this year will be continued transportation bottlenecks. The giant Cushing Oklahoma crude storage facility is capacity limited to get crude out to Gulf Coast refineries.
The reversal of the Seaway Pipeline this June will partially alleviate this. The real problem is that crude production is ramping in Alberta’s oil sands, and North Dakota (the Bakken) and Texas’ (Eagle Ford) shale plays.
More oil is flowing into Cushing than can flow out. The facility is adding storage at a frenetic pace, and should have the capability to store an additional three million barrels later this year.
The lack of access to West Texas Intermediate (the Cushing benchmark) caused it to trade at a significant discount to Brent last year. In September, that discount was nearly $30 per barrel.
You can see the price of the two benchmarks in the graph below.
Right now the spread is close to $10 a barrel, which is wide by historical standards. I expect that to continue to remain in the $10 to $20 per barrel range, since there’s little that will improve the accessibility of WTI in the short term.
The bottom line is this: Don’t expect oil prices to drop. Increasing demand and geopolitical unrest will keep Brent crude prices above $100 for a second year in a row.
Good Investing,
David Fessler
Article by Investment U
The Senior Strategist: Focus back on Greece
Grece is back in the spotlight this week. The negotiations with privat investors on a greek haircut was put on hold Friday.
Senior Strategist Ib Fredslund Madsen takes a look at the week ahead.
Video courtesy of en.jyskebank.tv
Forex CT 16-1-12 Video News Update Outlook
Video courtesy of ForexCT – A leading Australian forex broker, liscensed by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission, offers the MetaTrader4 and PROfit Platform to retail traders. Other services include Segregated Accounts, Trading workshops, Tutorials, and Commodities trading.
Euro Tumbles Following Ratings Downgrade
Source: ForexYard
The combination of a worse than expected Italian debt auction and the credit downgrading of several euro-zone countries on Friday, caused the euro to slip to fresh lows once again before markets closed for the week. Today, with US markets closed for a bank holiday, trades will want to pay close attention to any news out of the euro-zone, particularly the speech from the ECB President scheduled for 18:00 GMT.
Economic News
USD – USD Stages Reversal to Close out Week
After taking mild losses against its main currency rivals for the majority of last week, the USD was able to rally on Friday, as poor euro-zone news caused traders to shift their assets to safe-haven currencies. The EUR/USD hit a fresh 16-month-low after credit ratings for a number of euro-zone countries were downgraded. In addition to making gains on the euro, the greenback also turned bullish against both the Japanese yen and Swiss franc.
Turning to today, traders should note that US markets will be closed for a bank holiday and the dollar’s direction will likely be determined by news out of the euro-zone. Traders may want to pay careful attention to a speech from the ECB President later in the afternoon. With no dramatic announcements expected from the speech, investors may decide to extend the safe-haven dollar’s bullish run for another day.
Looking ahead to later in the week, news out of the US housing sector is forecasted to impact the dollar. The US housing crisis has been one of the biggest obstacles to economic recovery. Should this week’s data reinforce that sentiment, the USD may see some setbacks against some of the other safe-haven currencies, specifically the CHF and JPY.
EUR – EUR Hits Fresh Lows Following Credit Downgrades
The EUR finished last week on a decidedly bearish note, following the credit downgrade of a number of euro-zone countries. The common currency hit a fresh 11-year low against the yen and dropped to a 16-month low against the US dollar. In addition to the credit downgrade, investor pessimism in the euro-zone was also fooled by an apparent breakdown in talks over a Greek debt-swap and a worse than expected Italian debt auction on Friday.
This week, all eyes remain on the euro-zone to see if any viable solution to the current crisis will be announced. Today, the euro may see slight gains during the morning session as traders could deem the dollar overvalued and unload some of their short EUR/USD positions. Later in the day, a speech from the ECB President may set the tone for the common currency during evening and overnight trading. Traders will also want to pay attention to the German ZEW Economic Sentiment figure on Tuesday. As the biggest euro-zone economy, German fundamental indicators tend to have a significant impact on the euro.
JPY – EUR/JPY Hits Fresh 11-year Low
The Japanese yen finished off last week on a bullish note, as the currency hit a fresh 11-year high against the euro. The EUR/JPY fell following poor fundamental euro-zone news that highlighted just how fragile the current European crisis is. Investors responded to the news by shifting their assets to the safe-haven yen. Among the majors, the JPY is often viewed as a stable, less risky currency. Against the US dollar, the yen was not as fortunate as the USD/JPY shot up to close out the week at 76.95.
This week, the yen will once again be guided by euro-zone and US fundamental news. Further negative news out of Europe may lead to additional gains for the JPY against the common currency. What will be more interesting to see is how the yen reacts to a batch of US housing and manufacturing data set to be released later in the week. Last week’s US fundamentals came in below expectations. Should this week’s follow the same trend, the JPY may be able to recoup some of its recent losses against the greenback.
Crude Oil – Crude Continues to Fall Following EU News on Oil Embargo
Crude oil closed last week on a bearish note, after news that any EU ban on imported Iranian oil will likely be phased in over the next several months. The news helped settle investor fears that oil imports into Europe would not be disturbed in the immediate future. Crude oil finished out the week below the psychologically significant $100 a barrel level, following weeks of bullish movement due to Middle East tensions.
This week, traders will want to keep an eye on any developments in the Middle East. Further escalations in the conflict between Iran and the West will likely drive the price of oil significantly up. In addition, any news regarding the EU debt crisis is likely to influence the price of crude. The price of oil tends to rise and fall along with the euro. Should the common currency maintain its bearish trend, oil may follow.
Technical News
EUR/USD
Most long term technical indicators place this pair in oversold territory, meaning an upward correction is possible in the near future. The daily chart’s Williams Percent Range is around the -95 level, while the weekly chart’s Relative Strength Index has drifted below 30. Going long this week may be a wise choice.
GBP/USD
Following last week’s bearish trend, technical indicators are now showing this pair trading in neutral territory. The daily chart’s Relative Strength Index is currently at 40, which typically signifies that no significant movement is expected in the near future. Traders may want to take a wait and see approach for this pair.
USD/JPY
Most long term technical indicators are placing this pair in neutral territory, meaning that it may maintain its current trend for the time being. That being said, the Bollinger Bands on the daily chart appear to be tightening. If this continues, a price shift may take place. Traders will want to take a wait and see approach for this pair.
USD/CHF
Technical indicators on both the daily and weekly charts are placing this pair in overbought territory, meaning a downward correction may take place. A bearish cross appears to be forming on the weekly chart’s Stochastic Slow, while the daily chart’s Williams Percent Range has gone above the -20 level. Traders may want to think about going short in their positions.
The Wild Card
EUR/GBP
Following last Friday’s bearish run, technical indicators are now predicting an upward correction for the pair. The 8-hour chart’s Williams Percent Range is currently below the -80 level, while the 4-hour chart’s Stochastic Slow has formed a bullish cross. Forex traders may want to consider going long in their positions today.
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.
Gold Gains Alongside Dollar, “Clear Winner” from S&P Downgrades is Germany as “Only Bond Haven Left in Eurozone”
London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Monday 16 January 2012, 08:45 EST
U.S. DOLLAR spot gold prices climbed to hit$1647 an ounce Monday morning in London – 0.8% below last week’s high – while stock and commodity markets were broadly flat as markets absorbed Friday’s news of cuts to nine Eurozone sovereign credit ratings.
“Spot gold [however] is expected to fall to $1417 per ounce over the next three months,” warns Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao in the newswires Q1 2012 commodities outlook published Monday.
“[The] medium-term downtrend that started at the Sept. 6 high of $1,920.30 will continue.”
Spot silver rose to $30.10 per ounce – 0.9% up on Friday’s close.
The Euro meantime fell 1.8% in Monday’s Asian session – hitting its lowest level since September 2010 – before stabilizing as Europe opened. Conversely, the Dollar Index – which measures the US currency against six others – hit a 16-month high at 81.7.
Spot gold in Euros hit its highest level since December 8 at €41803 per kilo (€1300 per ounce) – 5.4% off September’s all-time high.
Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has cut its credit ratings for nine Eurozone members, having placed fifteen members on CreditWatch negative at the start of December. S&P cited “insufficient” policy initiatives from Eurozone governments as the main driver for the decision, as well as its concern that fiscal austerity measures could prove “self-defeating”.
Those affected include France, which had its rating cut by one notch from AAA to AA+. Five others, including Germany, had their existing ratings affirmed. S&P’s move, which was announced after markets closed on Friday, leaves only three triple-A rated Eurozone members – Finland, the Netherlands and Germany. Of those, only Germany has a ‘stable’ outlook, with S&P’s outlook for the other two given as ‘negative’.
“S&P’s action has reinforced the market’s view that the only haven in the Euro region bond market is Germany,” says Peter Chartwell, fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole in London.
“Germany comes out as a clear winner,” agrees Jacques Cailloux, chief European economist at Royal Bank of Scotland.
“The French downgrade will complicate future negotiations around fiscal integration and comes at a delicate time domestically…[Germany] will have its position at the negotiating table strengthened even further.”
“There are a lot of risks still ahead of us and we don’t think gold has priced in these risks,” reckons Societe Generale commodity strategist Jeremy Friesen, adding that S&P’s decision “is one of the incremental pushes for gold to appreciate.”
Representatives of Europe’s banks meantime are considering asking French president Nicolas Sarkozy and German chancellor Angela Merkel to try to break the deadlock in negotiations over the size of losses private sector Greek bondholders should take, after talks broke down on Friday, the Financial Times reports.
European leaders agreed last October that private sector involvement (PSI) should amount to losses of 50%. However, “some [Eurozone government] collaborators are not following that decision,” says Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute of International Finance, which is negotiating with Greece on behalf of private sector bondholders.
Germany has long been a proponent of PSI as a key component of any Greek crisis solution. French banks meantime have the highest exposure to Greek sovereign debt of any major European banking sector, according to Reuters data.
In China meantime, protesting workers at the Sanyo electrical factory, have clashed with police in the southern city of Shenzhen, according to Chinese press reports. The protests over pay and job security are the latest to hit China’s manufacturing sector.
Last week, workers at Foxconn, which produces Microsoft’s Xbox, threatened to jump off the factory roof in a dispute over severance pay and job transfers, while production was halted at an LG Display factory last month after workers went on strike.
China’s Q4 2011 GDP figures are due to be released Tuesday, with many economists forecasting that growth will have dropped below 9% to its slowest pace since early 2009.
Here in London, representatives of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority met with UK Treasury officials today to discuss steps aimed at making London a major offshore center for Chinese currency dealing.
Demand for gold jewelry in India grew between 5% and 7% last year – and is set to grow by up to 15% in 2012 – according to Mehul Choksi, head of India’s largest jewelry retailer said Sunday.
However, dealers in India report that last week’s rise in spot gold prices has curbed demand at the start of the harvest season, which began yesterday.
The difference between bullish and bearish contracts held by noncommercial gold futures and options traders on New York’s Comex exchange – the so-called speculative net long – rose 2.7% over the week ended last Tuesday to the equivalent of 433.7 tonnes of gold bullion, ending four weeks of declines, according to the latest data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
“The change in the net position was the result of speculative shorts being unwound,” says Standard Bank commodity strategist Walter de Wet.
“Although only a modest improvement this past week, the decline in short positions is encouraging. Perhaps the speculative market is becoming less apprehensive about gold’s prospects.”
Gold value calculator | Buy gold online at live prices
Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.
(c) BullionVault 2011
Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.
Is Your Investment Advisor Capitalizing on Your Fear?
Is Your Investment Advisor Capitalizing on Your Fear?
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, January 09, 2012: Issue #1687
Make no mistake. Investors are petrified right now. And they’re telling their investment advisors about it.
The question is: “What is he or she doing in response?” If the answer is adjusting your asset allocation, focusing on your long-term investment goals, or doing a bit of handholding, you probably have a good one.
But if they’re preying on your emotional state with unsuitable investments or all-or-nothing advice, beware.
The story is as old as equity investing itself. When times are good, investors get complacent, take too much risk and generally regret it. When times are bad, investors become anxiety-ridden, take too little risk and generally regret it. Seasoned advisors know this and try to keep you on the right track. But less knowledgeable or less scrupulous advisors may try to take advantage of your worries.
For instance, your investment advisor may recommend that you load up on variable annuities in this uncertain environment. Not a good idea. Some annuities are right for some people. They offer tax-deferred compounding (like an IRA) and a principal guarantee. But the typical annuity is ridiculously expensive, offers mediocre insurance coverage, restricts your investment choices to so-so mutual funds, lacks liquidity and comes with enormous surrender penalties.
Too many investors learn these things about annuities after they’ve plunked for one. Hence, you’ll often hear investors complain that they are “stuck in an annuity” for several years. Investigate these insurance contracts before you invest. On the whole they are oversold, frequently misrepresented and completely inappropriate for many folks.
Another sign that you have a misguided (or unethical) investment advisor is if he suggests that you abandon proven investment principles. For example, if your investment plan is based on a broker’s economic forecast or market timing advice, good luck. You’re going to need it.
No one can accurately predict the economy with any consistency. And it wouldn’t really matter if they could. Stocks routinely rally during the bad times and sell-off during the good ones. If your investment advisor doesn’t know this, you shouldn’t be using her. If she does and is still trying to convince you to flee the market, that’s even worse.
Also beware investment advisors who are paid on a transaction basis and therefore have an incentive for you to trade more frequently. Some brokers today are telling their clients that the old rules no longer apply, that you need to jump in and out of the market and from stock to stock. For a commission-based broker, this can be entirely self-serving advice. And it is almost certain to end badly… at least for the client.
I know it’s tough to buy – or just hang in there – when the outlook is dark. But look back at history. The market was a screaming “Buy” after the crash of ’87, the bear market of 1990, the tech wreck of 1994, the Asian Contagion of 1997, the 2000 to 2002 bear market, and even during the depths of the financial crisis in 2008.
If you’re using an advisor who insists that “this time it’s different,” you might reasonably examine his experience, his ethics and his disciplinary history. And seek out more-qualified advice.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
Article by Investment U
Crown Castle Acquires Assets From Wireless Capital Partners For $180 Million Cash
Crown Castle (NYSE:CCI) agreed to acquire a portfolio of ground-lease related assets from Wireless Capital Partners in a deal valued at $180 million in cash and the assumption of $320 million in debt.The portfolio includes 2300 ground lease related assets, including over 150 related to CCI towers.The assets generate annual cash flow of $42 million, with 80% generated from big four carriers.The deal is expected to close in the first quarter.
Crisis in Europe: Prepare for Repercussions from Credit Rating Downgrades
By MoneyMorning.com.au
After months of buzz about how the debt crisis in Europe will trigger credit ratings cuts, Standard & Poor’s issued credit rating downgrades for at least three European countries.
France and Austria were both lowered one notch to AA-plus. According to an Italian news agency, Italy was also going to be lowered two notches to BBB-plus.
A source told Reuters that Spain and Portugal also face downgrades.
“Remain alert tonight when U.S. markets close,” the Eurozone source told the news agency.
The markets had mostly priced in the moves, but the euro still fell 1% to trade at [USD] $1.2679. The euro had rallied Thursday after a sale of Spanish and Italian bonds was met with stronger demand than expected.
While S&P downgrades for debt-stricken Eurozone countries were expected, the move could lead to a credit ratings downgrade for the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF), the main lender behind countries suffering from the European debt crisis.
“The main problem is on the European Financial Stability Fund, the facility that borrows to lend to the naughty PIIGS,” said [US] Money Morning Global Investing Strategist Martin Hutchinson. “That has been AAA rated, but since it depends on Eurozone country guarantees, if the countries are downgraded it may no longer qualify as AAA.”
If EFSF is downgraded, it will have a much harder time financing the aid packages it has promised to Greece, Italy, and Spain. Germany is now the only large AAA-rated country underwriting the EFSF, which will try to raise $1.9 billion (1.5 billion euros) Tuesday in a bond auction.
Even though France remains rated AAA by other agencies, that status could also change. Fitch Ratings Inc. has it on “negative” outlook and Moody’s Corp. (NYSE: MCO) announced in October it would review the country’s credit rating.
The biggest concern behind the Europe downgrades is the global financial domino effect that the move triggers.
“The real issue is one of repercussions – when ratings drop there will be corresponding triggers in credit default swaps, currency swaps and collateral requirements at clearing firms worldwide,” said [US] Money Morning Chief Investment Strategist Keith Fitz-Gerald.
Fitz-Gerald said with so many banks lending out money deposited as collateral, they’re creating a “daisy chain” where one banks’ liabilities become another’s assets. “If there is a hiccup anywhere in the chain, the effect is one of instant collateral collapse as everybody in the chain is forced to buy back, or recall, their assets. The effect is not unlike a colossal global “short” on world markets,” said Fitz-Gerald.
More “hiccups in the chain” are surely on the way as the crisis in Europe continues, and Fitz-Gerald offered the following advice for investors.
“Short specific banks or the broader financial sector as a whole. But be prepared for a bumpy ride,” Fitz-Gerald said. “Also, continually ratchet up trailing stops to protect gains. Why the markets rally is not important, that you capture profits as they do is. It is absolutely possible to be a market bull and an economic bear.”
Kerri Shannon,
Associate Editor, Money Morning (USA)
Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in Money Morning (USA).
From the Archives…
Why Fallen Commodity Prices Mean This Sector is Worth a Punt
2012-01-13 – Kris Sayce
Why Australian Banks Are a “Suckers” Investment You Should Avoid
2012-01-12 – Greg Canavan
The Fed’s Funny Money Merry Go Round
2012-01-11 – Kris Sayce
Silver Price Ready to Explode
2012-01-10 – Dr. Alex Cowie
Will the Gold Bull Keep Running in 2012?
2012-01-09 – Dr. Alex Cowie
For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]
Crisis in Europe: Prepare for Repercussions from Credit Rating Downgrades