Sunday, 25 December 2016

Is the stock market ignoring one of the most important risks of 2017?

MOBILE, AL - DECEMBER 17: President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a thank you rally in Ladd-Peebles Stadium on December 17, 2016 in Mobile, Alabama. President-elect Trump has been visiting several states that he won, to thank people for their support during the U.S. election. (Photo by Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images)

In an increasingly tense world, why is Wall Street looking so sanguine?
From a geopolitical perspective, 2016 has been the most volatile year in recent history, with historic elections in Britain, Italy, and the U.S. The election of Donald Trump as U.S. president has ratcheted up anxieties, with the real-estate mogul recently saying that he planned to “greatly strengthen and expand” the country’s nuclear capability, raising the specter of a Cold War-era style arms race.

However, observers may be hard pressed to discern any signs of the swiftly shifting political landscape in the equity markets. After a rocky start, trading this year was marked by a rally that has taken major indexes to repeated records, but despite the tilt higher Wall Street has mostly been marked by a historic level of quiescence.

The CBOE Volatility index VIX, +0.09% a measure of investor anxiety, recently fell to its lowest level since August 2015. According to LPL Financial, the average level for the “fear index” in 2016 was below 16, the fifth straight year it has averaged below 20, the level considered its long-term average. Readings below 12 suggests that the market isn’t betting on any sharp market swings.

Despite that, investors are nearly unanimous that the events of the year have injected huge amounts of uncertainty into the economy. It is unknown what the fallout will be to the U.K.’s vote to exit from out of the European Union, known as Brexit, or the populist movements sweeping Europe. President-elect Donald Trump remains a wild card, as his tweets hint at potentially massive changes to U.S. policy on China, in addition to calling out companies and Wall Street executives.

“The world economy and markets have embarked on a journey into the unknown,” researchers at Pimco wrote in a Dec. 15 note. The firm didn’t adjust its outlook for 2017, but wrote that “our confidence in any particular scenario is low. The reason: the world has now fully arrived in the radically uncertain, ‘stable but not secure’ predicament.”

The most commonly invoked aphorism on Wall Street is “markets hate uncertainty.” So why hasn’t “a journey into the unknown” devolved into wild price swings? Some analysts believe that we might get that at some point—but not yet.


Perhaps the biggest question mark among geopolitical issue involves Russia. On Monday, the Russian ambassador to Turkey was assassinated by a Turkish police officer, raising tensions that had already been elevated due to the country’s alleged hacking during the U.S. campaign; Moscow has been charged with stealing and leaking emails in an effort to interfere with the election in favor of Trump.

While top Senate Republicans have joined Democrats in calling for investigations into the issue, Trump has dismissed intelligence assessments of the hack, raising questions about the kind of response will be made by the government, if any.

“These are really big wild cards. You hear guys like [Sen. Majority Leader Mitch] McConnell saying that no matter what Russia did, they’re not our friend. And then Trump comes out to say he’s a fan of Putin—that’s a huge chasm, and we don’t know what side anyone is on,” said Michael Mullaney, director of global market research at Boston Partners, which manages $89 billion.

U.S. intelligence and Homeland security accused Russia of directing a series of cyberattacks to influence the outcome of the presidential election.

“If the election was tampered with, then there should be some kind of retaliation, which would fly in the face of both Trump and Tillerson, who is also very friendly with Putin. Those are significant curveballs, and all they do is add more uncertainty to the market,” said Mullaney.

Mullaney was referring to Rex Tillerson, the chief executive officer of Exxon Mobil Corp. XOM, -0.18% who was recently named Trump’s secretary of state and has had business dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Despite the uncertainty, equities have risen steadily since the election, with investors betting that the broad outlines of Trump’s expected economic policy proposals—which include massive corporate tax cuts, deregulation, and heavy infrastructure spending—will accelerate economic growth and spur inflation.
“Markets have factored in the prospect of lower taxes. That’s the numerical rationale for these gains; it’s not just euphoria about a business-oriented president,” said Kim Forrest, senior equity research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group. “We’re not that goofy, overall,” she said of market analysts.

Read: Wall Street’s Trump optimism comes with heavy dose of uncertainty
Trump has released few details about the policies he will pursue, making it difficult to evaluate their impact on the economy or corporate growth. Thus far, however, corporate optimism doesn’t seem to match the expectations conveyed by Wall Street’s rapid rise.

Nick Colas, chief market strategist at the ConvergEx Group, recently noted that 2017 revenue growth estimates for Dow components had fallen to 4.5% from the 4.8% that had been forecast before the election.
“If history is any guide, they will be trimming it further,” he wrote of company analysts in a newsletter. “Moreover, our first look at 2018 revenue [comparisons] for the Dow shows analysts expect top line growth to decelerate further, to just 3.7% versus 2017.”

Don’t miss: Stocks get Trump bounce, but not the real economy
Even if fundamentals don’t show signs of weakening, however, the prospect of elevated tension with military rivals like Russia, or with major trading partners like China or Mexico—both of which Trump has threatened to levy tariffs on—could be enough to bring markets down.

“If you look at headlines about our relationship with China getting choppy, or the degree to which we may become buddies with Russia, or about how Europe manages itself in this political age, then it’s easy to see why we expect volatility will come back into this market,” said Bill Belden, managing director at Guggenheim.

“The current lack of concern seems to be that the dust will settle in a way that’s not too dissimilar from what we have now, but even if that’s true, the path to the dust settling is uncertain.”


Global Economy Week Ahead: Kuroda Speech, Japan CPI, U.S. Pending Home Sales

Figures from the ECB are expected to show a continued modest rise in bank lending

A spate of data out of Japan, after a recent upbeat economic assessment by the country’s central bank, highlights this week’s calendar. Also, a peek at home sales in the U.S. for November will offer early clues on how the rise in interest rates is affecting the  housing market and U.S. economy

Morgan Stanley sees EUR/USD trading at $0.97 by end 2017

Currency strategist James Lord finds the euro susceptible to weakness and sterling cheap long-term

Tuesday, 20 December 2016

Head And Shoulders Could Spell Major Losses For The Swissy

Key Points:
  • Near-term slip looking highly likely due to double top formation.
  • Overarching Head and Shoulders pattern could cause substantial losses for the pair.
  • Confirmation of the pattern still needed moving forward.
The Swissy has reached a critical high point in the past few sessions which could be intimating that a reversal is now on the cards. Furthermore, the medium- to long-term implications of this reversal could result in some serious losses for the pair if the nascent head and shoulders pattern crystallises in the coming weeks.

Firstly, the evidence for why we might expect the recently bullish pair to make a relatively severe plunge lower is worthy of closer examination. As has already been mentioned, the post-election/post-rate hike surge in USD sentiment has recently come to somewhat of an impasse as the USDCHF has moved to challenge the 1.0326 level. This level represents a long-term high for the pair and, as a result, resistance has proven to be quite robust. In addition to the long-term zone of resistance, this spate of bullishness has pushed stochastics into overbought territory which will militate against any additional rallies.




However, zooming into the H4 timeframe reveals another underlying chart pattern which could also signal the high likelihood of a near-term tumble. Specifically, the “head” of the head and shoulders pattern is actually forming a bit of a double top structure which would certainly suggest that we could have a slip back to the neckline in the next few sessions. What’s more, this neckline is expected to hold firm as the 100 day EMA will be providing some dynamic support as will the 50.0% Fibonacci retracement.

After making this slide lower, the subsequent rally will be the deciding factor in confirming the existence of the overarching head and shoulders pattern. The move to form the right shoulder will need to be relatively clear as the implied downsides of the depicted structure are quite contrary to the recent fundamental bias. However, if the pair does move below the neckline after forming the second shoulder, it is likely that the daily moving averages will be in a highly bearish configuration which could signal that the USD’s resurgence has finally ended.

Ultimately, we still have some way to go before we can say for sure if this is a true head and shoulders pattern. As mentioned, the integrity of the neckline and the subsequent rally are vital in the confirmation of the structure which is why these will be the things to monitor moving forward. Furthermore, fundamentals are likely to remain highly disruptive as Trump’s presidency looms nearer and these should be watched especially intently as the pair moves back towards parity.


Dollar holds gains at 14-yr peak on Trump trade, yield allure

By Hideyuki Sano and Yuzuha Oka
TOKYO (Reuters) - The dollar hovered near a 14-year high against the euro on Wednesday, supported by expectations of U.S. interest rates rising more rapidly during the incoming Trump Administration.
In thin trading ahead of year-end holidays, the euro last stood at $1.0413 after slipping below $1.0352 on Tuesday, a level last seen in January 2003.
The weak euro helped to push the dollar's trade-weighted index against a basket of six major currencies (DXY) <=USD> to touch 103.65, also a 14-year high. The index was last at 103.30.
"The dollar looks pretty strong. Although there are no fresh trading factors as we head into Christmas, we see dollar buying whenever the currency slips," said Shinichiro Kadota, chief forex strategist at Barclays (LON:BARC).
"We haven't seen anything that could change its Trump-driven rally," he added.
The dollar index has risen 5.8 percent since Trump was elected. He has pledged big tax cuts and spending increases and threatened to impose tariffs on imports from China and Mexico.
Investors rushed to U.S. assets as they bet his expansionary fiscal policy will boost U.S. growth, inflation and interest rates.
The dollar was at 117.67 yen , coming within reach of its 10 1/2-month high of 118.66 touched on Dec 15.
Selling in the yen gathered pace after the Bank of Japan maintained its policy settings on Tuesday and when Governor Haruhiko Kuroda doused talk the BOJ might consider raising the target for the 10-year bond yield next year.
Kuroda also said he did not see recent yen falls as a problem for Japan's economy, noting that a weak currency helps accelerate inflation by boosting import costs.
"The markets took Kuroda's comments as rather tolerant to the weaker yen," said Yunosuke Ikeda, chief FX strategist at Nomura Holdings in Tokyo.
"Kuroda's remark encouraged the yen selling, as well as the widening U.S.-Japan interest rate differentials. Investors tend to make money from carry trade when markets are relatively quiet ahead of Christmas holidays," added Ikeda.
With central banks in Europe and Japan committing to very loose monetary policies, investors continued to pile into the dollar.
The Federal Reserve, which hiked rates last week, signaled three more increases next year, versus its previous projection of two.
U.S. Treasury yields rose after Fed Chair Janet Yellen's upbeat labor market comments on Monday reinforced convictions of more frequent U.S. interest rate hikes next year.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield (US10YT=RR) last stood at 2.566 percent, within the sight of a 27-month-high of 2.641 percent hit last week.
The British pound fell to one-month low of $1.2313 on Monday, pressured by renewed uncertainty over the process by which Britain will leave the European Union.
Looking ahead, traders are casting an eye on Italy's troubled bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MI:BMPS), which needs to raise 5 billion euros ($5.2 billion) by the end of the year to avoid being wound up by the European Central Bank.


Nearly 95% of all new jobs during Obama era were part-time, or contract

Investing.com -- A new study by economists from Harvard and Princeton indicates that 94% of the 10 million new jobs created during the Obama era were temporary positions.
The study shows that the jobs were temporary, contract positions, or part-time "gig" jobs in a variety of fields.
Female workers suffered most heavily in this economy, as work in traditionally feminine fields, like education and medicine, declined during the era.
The research by economists Lawrence Katz of Harvard University and Alan Krueger at Princeton University shows that the proportion of workers throughout the U.S., during the Obama era, who were working in these kinds of temporary jobs, increased from 10.7% of the population to 15.8%.
Krueger, a former chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, was surprised by the finding.
The disappearance of conventional full-time work, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. work, has hit every demographic. “Workers seeking full-time, steady work have lost,” said Krueger.
Under Obama, 1 million fewer workers, overall, are working than before the beginning of the Great Recession.
The outgoing president believes his administration was a net positive for workers, however.
"Since I signed Obamacare into law (in 2010), our businesses have added more than 15 million new jobs," said Obama, during his farewell press conference last Friday, covered by Investing.com.

Saturday, 17 December 2016

FX World Pioneers Rebate System Invented By James Gillingham



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