Daily Technical Analysis – EU Session


By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – Finally the Greek parliament approved the austerity measures late last night. Euro responded positively to the development and took out 1.3250 during the late Asian session. Early European session saw Euro printing a high of 1.3283. It is currently trading at 1.3266, up about 0.45%. The support may be seen at 1.3250 and below at 1.3190. The resistance may be seen at 1.3280 1.3350. The next task on the Greek deal is to pass the deal approved by the Greek parliament.

The sterling pound broke the 1.5800 levels during the early European session and printed a high of 1.5826. The pair followed the Euro trend in response to the passing of a deal by Greek parliament last night. The pair also took positive cues from the statement from Confederation of British Industry stating that UK is successful weathering recession. The pair is currently trading at 1.5812, up about quarter a percent. The resistance may be seen at 1.5825 and 1.5890. The support may be seen at 1.5800 and below at 1.5750.

The Greek effect was also seen in Australian dollar. The Australian dollar rose against the US dollar and printed a high of 1.0777. The pair is currently trading at 1.0765, up about 0.75%. The support may be seen at 1.0750 and below at 1.0700 levels. The resistance may be seen at 1.0770 and above at 1.0800 levels.

US dollar traded in a narrow range of 21 pips against the Japanese Yen. The high for the day so far is 77.77. It is currently trading at 77.50 and below at 77.30. The resistance may be seen at 78.

The USD/CHF pair is also expectedly trading in red by correlation. It held the 0.9100 level and is currently trading at 0.9120, losing about 0.35%. The support may be seen at 0.9100 and 0.9070. The resistance may be seen at 0.9150 and 0.9200. Producer and import prices data came from Switzerland which was below expectation. It remained unchanged while the expectation was an increase of 0.2%.

The dollar index is trading at 78.80. The low for the day is 78.68. It will be an action packed week especially for Euro since European leaders will vote on the Greek deal on Wednesday. After Greece there will be many countries like Portugal, Italy and Spain under the scanner.

 

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Price of Crude Oil On the Rise

Source: ForexYard

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After a brief dip in value last week, the price of crude oil rose back up this morning. Fears regarding the possibility of Greek austerity measures not being passed drove prices down toward the end of last week. With the news of fresh measures being approved by the Greek parliament last night, crude oil has steadily gone up in value. Since the news broke this morning, oil has gained 94 cents to $99.61 a barrel.

Traders will also want to note the international developments that are effecting prices. These include the impending European embargo of Iranian oil. As the situation in the Middle East grows increasingly tense, there is a possibility that the price of crude oil will remain relatively high. Traders will want to continue monitoring developments in the region for clues as to the direction the commodity will take.

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.

GBP/AUD Weekly outlook 13 Feb – 17 Feb

The sterling has been rapidly losing ground against the Aussie in recent months. Last week was a surprisingly choppy week for the pair with little happening; however, price action came alive later with the market closing out the week with a bearish Hikkake pattern.

Wednesday and Thursday were both inside bars, with Friday completing the bearish Hikkake pattern. The Inside bars were ‘coiled’ (the outside bar, followed by an inside bar, followed by another inside bar which is inside the previous inside bar), further strengthening their bias.

gbpaudweeklyoutlook13feb17feb

In the chart above we can see the Hikkake pattern. Although we’d have liked to have seen Fridays bar closing as a bearish pin bar, the fact it has falsely broken the highs and then retracing back within the outside bars range is a strong bearish signal.

The pattern is further strengthened as it formed rejecting a strong area of support/resistance as seen below. The area at 1.4800 supported the market back in the summer of 2011. January this year saw the pair falling back towards this area which did not hold as support this time round. The market broke though and has now retested it suggesting we could see a bounce back lower.

gbpaudweeklyoutlook13feb17febzoomedout

We’ll be looking to short the pair in the coming week at or around current levels (Friday close). Stops could be placed just above Fridays highs with targets initially being at last weeks lows, resulting in a good R:R trade

Article by vantage-fx.com

Gold Weekly outlook 13 Feb – 17 Feb

Last week saw the metal taking a breather from its recent bullish momentum with a slightly choppy week producing few trading opportunities. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday saw the market falling towards the both psychological and technical support/resistance level at 1700.

Friday’s daily bar closed as a bullish pin bar suggesting we could see the bulls returning in the coming week. Friday’s price almost reached the important level at 1700 but came just shy. Fridays pin shows a clear and strong rejection of lower support.

goldweeklyoutlook13feb17feb

As seen in the chart above, the level at 1700 has proven in the past to be both technically and psychologically strong. With Fridays Price closing the day a bullish pin we’ll be looking to long the metal with the anticipation of the bulls returning.

Initially we’ll look to target the next obvious resistance area which comes in at just above 1760. Should the market reach this area we’ll look for price action confirmation for further bullish momentum before exiting the trade or letting it run higher.

Article by vantage-fx.com

GBP/USD Outlook – Feb 13, 2012

Last week GBP/JPY moved as we indicated during the last weekend. The currency pair faced some good resistance just a few pips above the mentioned resistance level of 122.80 but then GBP/JPY broke over that resistance and moved as high as 123.18, found resistance there and closed for the week at 122.29.

gbp jpy

The price action and the facts that the resistance did not even cause a break of either 5-day EMA support or the Tenkan-sen support of daily Ichimoku cloud, indicate that the upward sentiments are still holding. The very significant point was a break over 122.80. As we had mentioned, the range between 121.80 to 122.80 had proved to be an extremely strong resistance zone during November 2011 end to December 2011 end.

For the coming week, initially we would expect some sideways move. Even we will not ignore the possibilities of some downward consolidation towards 121.30 but overall we remain favor of some more upward gains. On the upside, a break of 123.18 should take GBPJPY towards 124.20 and a break of 124.35 should also target a break of 125.00 psychological resistance to take GBP/JPY towards 125.60.

Please note that even with the above outlook, our overall outlook is not bullish and we remain in favor of another fall from one of the mentioned resistance levels.

On the downside, if the currency pair breaks below 120.80 then we would expect further downward move towards 121.30. A break below 120.20 would represent a break of Kijun-sen support of daily Ichimoku cloud as well as 22-day EMA. Below this another support expected will be near 120.70 (55-day EMA). At this level even the psychological support of 120.00 ranges will also start coming. Our focus will change back towards deeper moves with a a break of first 120.20 and then 120.00. In such case we would also expect some further downward move towards 119.20. Though we do not expect it during next week but any break below 119.20/119.15 will make our outlook bearish for GBP/JPY for a retest of the recent low of 117.28.

You may also check the weekly gbpjpy forecast/Outlook and daily gbp/jpy technical analysis at ForexAbode.

EUR/JPY Outlook- Feb 13, 2012

Last week EUR/JPY moved ahead of 101.46 without any resistance but then found some resistance a few pips below the next resistance level mentioned last week i.e. 102.52. This resistance was also broken and EURJPY went as high as 103.29 and closed for the week at 102.42.

eur jpy

The significant point was the break 102.52, which was the peak of the resistance zone during December 14th to December 27th, 2011.

The price action suggests that we cannot ignore some more upward movement even with the overall bearish outlook for EUR/JPY. For the next week, initially we will stay neutral and would expect some sideways move or even some consolidation/correction but then we would expect some more upward gains towards 103.70 and if the currency pair breaks over 103.70/103.80 resistance zone then further upward but slow move towards the psychological resistance of 104.80/105.20.

Euro movements can be very sensitive to any new updates and hence change of sentiments from Euro region. A small change of sentiments can cause some unexpected volatile moves and hence a very careful approach is required while trading with Euro pairs.
Please note that we are considering the current upward moves only as correction during the overall downtrend. We would be expecting a fall from one of the resistance levels mentioned.

On the downside any firm break below 101.60 will start changing the outlook for further upward correction for EUR/JPY. A break below 101.60 will represent a break of 22-day EAM as well as the break of Tenkan line support of daily Ichimoku cloud. Below 101.60 we would again expect frequent supports near 101.10, 101.55/101.60 and then 99.75. A break below 99.75 will change our focus back towards the resumption of the downward trend and the confirmation of this will come with a break below 99.20. With such a move we can change our focus back towards a retest of 97.03. As we have been mentioning for past couple of weeks that below 97.00 the strong psychological support of 95.00 would start working and any subsequent downward move should be slow and with frequent supports near 96.60 and above 96.20 and 95.60.

You may also check the weekly eurjpy forecast/Outlook and daily eur/jpy technical analysis at ForexAbode.

USD/CHF Outlook – Feb 13, 2012

Last week USD/JPY broke over the resistance of 77.40. The pair went as high as 77.80 and went into into a sideways mode. The weekly close was at 77.62.

usd japy

The strong upward move suggests that we can expect some more upward gains but we will be careful as overall the currency pair stays in the sideways mode. Also as we had mentioned during last weekend that the upward jump was expected because of the approaching psychological level of 75.00 ranges.

On the upside, above 77.80 we will expect a move towards 78.28 and only a firm break above that will make us expect some more convincing upward gains towards 79.54 or the high of October 31st, 2011. A failure of the break above 77.80 and then 78.28 should take USD/JPY back towards 77.10 and a break below 77.00 will change our focus back towards downside towards the support levels of 76.40 then 76.20 and then 76.00.

Please note that we do not expect much directional move from USDJPY before the currency pair breaks the psychological resistance and support levels of 80.00 and 75.00 respectively.

You may also check the weekly usdjpy forecast/Outlook and daily usd/jpy analysis at ForexAbode.

EUR/USD Outlook- Feb 13, 2012

Last week EUR/USD went as high as 1.3322 but dropped sharply from there to touch 1.3155 and closed for the week at 1.3197.

eur-usd

Initially for the coming week we will stay neutral and will watch for the break below the support expected near 1.3120 and then 1.3080 to expect further downward move and on the upside any break over the expected resistance near 1.3280 to expect further upward move to retest the recent 1.3322.

Euro movements can be very sensitive to any new updates and hence change of sentiments from Euro region. A small change of sentiments can cause some unexpected volatile moves and hence a very careful approach is required while trading with EUR/USD and Euro crosses.

On the downside if a firm break takes place below 1.3080 then we would expect EUR/USD to retest the recent low of 1.3027 and any break below but more importantly 1.3020 and 1.3000 psychological level will change the near-term outlook to bearish. But even in that case we would expect frequent supports near 1.2960 and 1.2930. Any firm break below 1.2920 should lead the way towards 1.2840 support and possibly further down.

On the upside, if EURUSD manages a break over 1.3080, as mentioned above, we will expect a retest of the recent 1.3322. A break over this recent high will change the focus again towards upside and that should take EURUSD towards the resistance zone of 1.3430 to 1.3485 resistance zone. Please note that 1.3434 represents the Fibonacci 50% retracement of the above mentioned move. Not only this, but the range of 1.3430 to 1.3550 had proved to be a very strong resistance zone during November 30th to December 9th, 2011. The psychological resistance of 1.3500 would also come into picture at those levels. However a break above this will bring up the possibilities of a test to 1.3620.

You may also check the weekly eur/usd forecast/Outlook and daily euro/usd  analysis at ForexAbode.

Other Techinicals:

1) ADX: Daily +DI line moved below -DI line once again and very weakly. There have been very frequent crossovers recently. ADX is well below 25 and is dropping (approx 12.00).

2) MACD: Daily MACD line remains over the signal line but started running flat with frequent touch downs with the signal line. Currently it is touching the signal line though has not moved below it as yet. 4-hourly MACD line’s last crossover signal was moving below the signal line.

3) Ichimoku Cloud: 2 weeks back Tenkan-Sen had crossed over Kijun-sen to give a weak bullish signal (you may please check our Ichimoku cloud page under technical analysis). The upward move had broken over the resistance of the upper edge of the cloud but then the price action, once again, had moved within the cloud. It found support well above the Kijun-sen level and moved above the cloud. Weekly closing was little above Tenkan-sen level. The gap between Tenkan-sen and Kijun sen has narrowed down. Over all the bullish configuration but indicating a loss of upward momentum.

Value Investing – Three Simple Rules for Picking Stocks

By MoneyMorning.com.au

On Friday, one of our colleagues mentioned he’d re-read Ben Graham’s value investing bible, The Intelligent Investor.

It got us thinking about the timeless principles of value investing again. And marvelling at how you can adapt them to suit any market.

Which is just as well…


Because from around 9:45 this morning, we watched the Greeks vote for austerity. Again.

They had to. Otherwise, Greek default.

But in case you missed it, the price of the bailout has jumped from $130 billion to $210 billion, too. Where did that extra $80 billion come from? Check out Zerohedge.com for the answer.

A few of our friends are turning away from stocks and moving into fixed-income investments. They’d rather miss out on share price gains than risk losing what they’ve already got.

Whether that mirrors your own investing strategy or not, we don’t know. (Like to let us know what you think/how you’re investing in this market? Email [email protected] … put ‘My Strategy’ in the subject line.)

But deserting the stock market just because things look scary isn’t always the best idea. Because that’s when the savviest investors find some of the stock market’s best valued stocks. All you have to do is follow these 3 timeless value investing principles. After all, they’ve worked for Warren Buffett.

Rule #1: Value the business, not the share


This is the number one rule of value investing. Focus on the company, not the stock.

That is, don’t worry about who is buying what – or how much a stock is climbing, or falling. It’s just noise.

You really need to look to invest in strong businesses that have sound fundamentals…

  • A solid business plan that brings in money
  • A product/service that is in demand today and probably still will be tomorrow
  • A manager that knows how to spend money the right way – that is, a manager who invests a lot of money in resources that will bring in more money rather than a reckless spender

Rule #2: Always invest with a margin of safety


If you want to make money on stocks, the simplest way is to pay LESS than what a share is worth… like buying a share worth $1 for 80 cents.

This is where good old-fashioned balance sheet analysis comes in.

The market capitalisation of a company is the value the market puts on a company. That is the number of shares on issue multiplied by the share price.

In an ideal world, a business that earns profits of $1 million a year and has $1 million in assets would have a market cap of $2 million.

But in reality, this never happens.

Earnings estimates, bullish stock price predictions cause people to buy and sell shares for almost no other reason than the hope that the stock will go up or down.

And that makes it possible for you to find ‘unpopular’ stocks that the market undervalues. I.e. a company with assets and earnings equal to, say, $20 million, but a market cap of $16 million.

That gap between the real value of the company and its perceived value is your margin of safety. And you often find it when people are feeling negative about stocks in a certain sector. (Like retail stocks before Christmas, for example.)

Rule #3: Focus on ‘fair range’ not precise value


You really only need basic math skills to work out a company’s intrinsic value… As long as you know which figures to look at…

But you need to accept you’ll probably NEVER estimate the ‘intrinsic value’ of a company to the exact cent.

No matter how much data you have about a company’s profitability and the macro outlook, you’ll probably NEVER get the intrinsic value spot on…

But you can do the next best thing…

And that is estimate a precise range of fair value… 20% above and below your best, most accurate estimate.

Once you pinpoint that ‘fair range’, you’re almost mathematically guaranteed your investments will make gains and avoid losses. Because it gives you the margin of safety that can help ensure you’re buying quality stocks at sensible prices.

Follow these simple rules and you’re on your way to almost mathematically guaranteed gains.

To find out more about how value investors are playing this market, click here.

Aaron Tyrrell
Editor, Money Morning

strong>From the Archives…

Picking the Big Investment Story for 2012
2012-02-10 – Kris Sayce

Attention: If You Have Australian Bank Stocks – Sell Them Now
2012-02-09 – Kris Sayce

Why This Bearish Indicator Means it’s Time to BUY Stocks
2012-02-08 – Kris Sayce

Why The RBA Uses The Terms of Trade Indicator… And Why You Should Too
2012-02-07 – Greg Canavan

Why the US Unemployment Rate is a Slippery Statistic
2012-02-06 – Dr. Alex Cowie


Value Investing – Three Simple Rules for Picking Stocks

Health, Wealth and Stealth Inflation in the Great Food Swindle

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Having good health, especially as you get older, is a form of enrichment. And if you’ve been to a doctor/specialist/hospital recently, you’ll know maintaining your health is not cheap.

If you’re interested in improving your health, or if you’re feeling sick, depressed or just lethargic, read on – this might be the most important essay you read all year.


But first:

Since the October lows, many global stock indexes are up about 20%. This really is some rally. But it’s still a bear market rally. Meaning the longer it goes on, the bigger the correction when it happens.

Stocks are not going up because the global economy is getting healthier. Businesses are paying off debt instead of expanding. Companies are laying people off instead of hiring. Banks are deleveraging instead of lending.

What you’re seeing in the markets right now – pure and simple – is central-bank-engineered asset inflation. It’s unsustainable.

So here’s the million-dollar question for Aussie investors: how do you successfully invest in a market with deflation as the over-riding influence, but punctuated by bouts of inflationary euphoria? Can you even make returns in such a market?
Over the Christmas break we did some serious thinking on this issue. We took some time on the beach (when it wasn’t raining) to relax…to step back from the rescue plans and bailouts… and focus on what’s REALLY going to matter for Australian investors this year.

The result is a report you can receive – here.

What we’ve come up with aren’t direct recommendations. They’re warnings. Or rather they’re three big mistakes we think many Australian investors will make this year that will lose them money.

We think you’ll find it good reading – and hopefully it will help you make some good investing decisions this year.

And now, from the health of the economy to the health of your colon…

We bring up the topic of health after recently watching a cracker of a show called ‘Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead’. It’s been around for a year or so. But this was the first time we’d seen it on TV.

It’s a documentary about a Sydney bloke named Joe Cross. Joe is an entrepreneur. He spent most of his early years focussing on building wealth. He worked hard and, judging from his physique, ate pretty hard too. By the age of 40, Joe was nearly 140 kilo’s and battling a rare autoimmune disease called chronic urticaria.

As a result he was necking the powerful steroid, prednisone, daily. If you’ve heard of this drug, you’ll know it has some nasty long-term side effects.

Joe realised he was in trouble. He needed to do something about it. So he went to America and put himself on a (medically supervised) diet of nothing but vegetable and fruit juice for 60 days.

The results were amazing. He dropped about 45 kg. More importantly he dropped the chronic urticaria and got off the prednisone. While that sounds impressive, there’s another character in the documentary whose story will blow you away.

By cutting out processed foods, which are full of sugar and fat, Joe (and the other bloke) restored their health. It required a lifestyle change. But they were on their way to an early grave and had no other choice. They don’t live on juice now of course. But they needed a circuit breaker and it worked.

Fancy that. By eating food provided by nature, we become healthy. By eating food processed to within an inch of its life, we slowly kill ourselves. Most of the food sitting on supermarket shelves has minimal nutritional value. In order to extend the shelf life, most of the nutrients are killed in the process.

Our diets are full of sugar, fat and sodium. These things are long-term, silent killers. And the unhealthier society becomes, the more national healthcare systems buckle under the, err…weight of the cost of looking after a sick nation.

Demand for drugs goes through the roof. Western nations are over medicated. The pharmaceutical companies make a bundle from treating the symptoms, not the cause. We waste billions of dollars going around in circles.

We’ve got a theory about how things have got to this point. It involves central banks, excess credit and stealth inflation.

But first, there’s a personal element to this. So we’ll slip into the first person…

A few years ago I suffered from a major bout of eczema. I had it pretty bad as a kid, but it went away…forgotten about.

Then, a number of highly stressful events brought it back. Face, head, eyelids, ears…I was an itching, weeping mess…and very miserable.

Several trips to the doctor yielded numerous prescription ointments. I got a referral to a highly paid skin specialist who gave me samples of branded moisturiser creams and told me to keep up with the prescription ointments. Cheers for that.

Thinking I might be allergic to certain foods, I arranged a blood test through the health system. Because my skin reacted to dust mites, the genius doctor advised me to thoroughly air out my room. Apparently it wasn’t eczema, I was allergic to dust mites. Thank you taxpayer.

Things got worse and my doctor prescribed prednisone. This stuff cleared up the eczema within hours. But you had to keep taking it. And as I said earlier, this is a nasty drug.

At a decent cost, the health care system attacked the symptom, not the cause. I was throwing hundreds of dollars at the problem for no result.

Feeling increasingly miserable, I decided to see a naturopath. I was put on a strict diet for 6 weeks. No booze, no coffee, no bread or wheat, no meat…just lots of water, fresh fruit and vegetables. After a month my eczema had gone. Completely disappeared.

The moral of the story? Modern living can make you sick. Nature, not prescription drugs, can make you better.

So why is the food we eat slowly killing us? Why is the ‘market’ providing consumers with a choice that is actually harmful to them? That’s not how capitalism is supposed to work, right?

No it’s not.

Here’s our theory as to why things have gone wrong.

For the past few decades, central banks have held the price of credit artificially low. This has created excess credit, which translates into increased demand or purchasing power.

But the benefits of this credit boom, in general, have not accrued to the middle and working classes. Yes they have become wealthier. But they have had to increase their debt considerably to display that wealth.

The abundance of credit and resultant financialisation and globalisation of economies around the world put the focus on cutting costs. It became about achieving ‘economies of scale’ – a fancy term for bigger is better and cheaper. Nowhere was that more prevalent than in the production and distribution of food.

This reorganisation of resources and the economic structure of food production didn’t lead to lower prices AND a better product. That’s the hallmark of real technological improvement and genuine capitalism in action.

Instead, it led to lower prices and a reduction in food quality. The government agencies that compile inflation data just looked at the price, not the deteriorating quality. As a result, CPI inflation remained low. This kept interest rates low and allowed the credit boom to continue.

In industries where there were real technological improvements like computing, the statistician made a ‘hedonic adjustment’ to account for the improvement. The result? Very low inflation all around.

This made central bankers look like geniuses. And the middle class thought they were becoming wealthier because debt was cheap and allowed them to have ‘stuff’ they couldn’t previously afford by taking on more and more debt.

Low inflation – known as the great moderation – is a fraud. We’ve had doctored low consumer inflation numbers at the expense of our food quality.

In the meantime, Australia and the US have been vying for the gold medal for the fattest nation on earth.

Maybe it’s just a coincidence that obesity has become a major societal issue at the same time as the global credit bubble expanded. Maybe, but we doubt it. The West has many economic problems associated with debt. It also has many health-related issues.

You might think the link is a tenuous one. But if you think about it hard enough, it’s there.

Greg Canavan
Editor, Sound Money. Sound Investments.

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in The Daily Reckoning Australia.

Greg Canavan will be appearing at After America: the Port Phillip Publishing Investment Symposium, March 14th-16th at Sydney’s Intercontinental Hotel. Greg has also identified three ways careless investors could lose money this year… and how you can avoid falling into this trap. To see Greg’s special report and take out a no obligation trial subscription, click here…


Health, Wealth and Stealth Inflation in the Great Food Swindle