tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33522782930709672212024-03-12T18:20:03.277-07:00EURO/USD Holistic AnalysisForex , Forex Market, Forex Trading, Technical Analysis, Fundamental Analysis, euro/usdUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger127125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-52504133080521749132008-10-21T17:03:00.000-07:002008-10-21T17:08:49.716-07:00Trade Team UpdateTwo words can be used to describe today's market action... ill-liquidity and risk. While it seemed many traders were scratching their heads to figure out what the problem was today, we're basically just seeing a repeat perfomance of yesterday with even less liquidty and more risk aversion behaviors.<br /><br />Whenever the market begins to confuse me or I see disjointed price behavior between the EUR/USD and the market correlated variables the very first place I turn for answers is the bond market. I don't know any bond traders but I think I'd like to meet a few because these market participants are usually very fundamentally sound and being in the bond market means they are typically a step ahead of the herd.<br /><br />The price action of Treasuries is one of the best tools I can use as a trader to help me make smart decisions about the euro. As always, interest rates (bond yields) will give the first clues. At one point today we saw the yield on the 10-year plunge over 18bps. Does it get any more clear what little liquidity are in the global markets are flooding into Treasuries?<br /><br />That move right there in Treasuries is enough to signal extreme risk aversion which means the euro will be dead in the water, the dollar will be supported, and that it likely won't matter much if gold and crude go up because of what's happening with Treasuries and their yields/prices and the way money-flows are moving through the markets.<br /><br />I was watching the euro's price action for hours on end looking for trades. As I mentioned last night I didn't feel comfortable shorting it down around the 1.3300 level but I also didn't feel comfortable buying. Finally a few hours after London opened I saw the potential for Treasuries to get bought up today which gave me a euro short bias and by just after 0800 EST my confirmations were in and I started shorting at the 1.3200 level.<br /><br />I don't offer this example to brag but to explain a technique that was successfully used to get clarity on how to trade the euro under these extreme conditions. I've heard a few traders so they can't possibly make money under these conditions and I just do not feel that way at all. Yes it's a 100 times more difficult to make money while we're under the worst financial crisis since the 1930s but I think if traders step up their game and really look at the market instead of the up-and-down painted lines on a candlechart they will see where the money's hiding.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />Today's CDS event has proven to be a mostly non-event as we expected. I'm sure market participants safe-havened their way into the dollar today, which certainly didn't help the euro, cable, and a few other majors. Once again we have almost no new data tomorrow. The only key piece of data is Crude Inventories.<br /><br />Crude is just a flatout mess right now. Crude lost more than $3 today and if it's barely hanging on to the $70 level. The strength of the USD Index and the dramatically reduced to demand for crude and gas products will keep the downside pressure on crude at least in the short-term in my view.<br /><br />Yesterday the talk was about a bottom being in on equities and strong USD fundamentals. I got so bored with CNBC and Bloomberg I didn't even watch them today. I have no idea what the "flavor of the day" is but I don't buy into the idea of a bottom being put in on anything... Dow, S&P, USD, EUR, crude, gold, you name it... I think it can all go lower because markets are still re-pricing assets and the re-valuation process will continue as markets re-price.<br /><br />Any talk of USD fundamentals getting stronger is the stupidest stuff I think I've heard yet. They are getting worse. Three months ago we said they would get worse in Q3 and Q4 and this is playing out as expected. We're going to see a round of layoffs that will bring the US employment and consumer sector to its knees.<br /><br />I think between now and December 31st we could see as many as 100,000 or more total layoffs across the board in all major sectors in the US. I expect the unemployment rate to hit 7.0% or better in the beginning of Q1 of 2009. I expect we see between 6.5% and 6.8% by the end of this year.<br /><br />Let me give you an example... Ticketmaster just announced another round of layoffs. They are letting 1,000 employees go. So let's connect some dots on this one... if the US's largest entertainment and event ticket company is laying off workers what does this mean for the sports, music, and the general entertainment/amusement industry? That's all a multi-billion dollar industry. During most recessions the entertainment industry is usually mostly unaffected but this recession is so painful already that even the once immune are sick.<br /><br />Sears, a major US retailer just announced they are closing four stores. KMart, whic is a discount consumer retailer like Wal-Mart just announced they are closing eight stores. Both Sears and KMart mostly serve middle-class shoppers and people looking for bargains on clothes, food, and general consumer goods. I cannot understand how some analysts are saying the US fundamentals are getting better when I see discount retails have to close their stores during a season when the discounters are the only businesses getting the consumer's cash right now. Only a crackhead analyst would say things are getting better.<br /><br />As far as the euro goes, for now it seems all bets are off. To think of taking a euro short in the 1.3000's sounds crazy but after the way I played things this morning I'm prepared to do what seems crazy because that's what's been profitible for me under these extreme conditions.<br /><br />I remember two years ago when I was just starting to come up through the ranks the euro was in the 1.2400's and then it went on a bull run against the dollar. Then in the middle of February of 2007 it was at the 1.3000 level and that's where it started another bull run against the dollar. I don't see any bull run happening but I'm also not going super heavy short down here mostly for the fact of what time of year it is and what's happening with the amount of USD being flooded into the markets. At some point the sheer volume of USD flooding the markets will have to be reckoned with.<br /><br />I can't predict what tomorrow will bring for the EUR/USD. But I'm prepared to see more downside and more pain for the euro. I do believe the price action will largely depend on what we see with equities and how money-flows are affecting Treasuries. There's really no news. If the risk aversion gets set aside and market participants decide to grow a pair the euro may find support tomorrow.<br /><br />Some levels to keep an eye on between now and Frankfurt would be 1.3042, 1.3004, and 1.2967 on the downside. On the upside 1.3098, 1.3121, and 1.3144. Trading conditions are at their most risky and extreme right now. The liquidity has just about completely evaporated. I see no evidence at all of major market participants trading currencies right now. That's why we can see the euro move 500+ points so far this week.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-61386513324561606512008-10-20T17:20:00.000-07:002008-10-20T17:23:05.677-07:00Trade Team UpdateThe only word I can use to describe today's market activity is weird... maybe it's just me but nothing really made a whole of sense today... oil is up, gold is mostly stable, global equities rallied, overnight LIBOR rates eased, money-flows have been light going into Treasuries... add to that Bernanke's idiotic speech and rhetoric and you have all EUR+ factors yet the euro gets hammered by the dollar.<br /><br />Could it be market participants are starting to think about the fundamentals of Europe now that other sectors of the global markets are showing signs of stability? I think it's too soon to make that call but it's certainly an issue I'm considering.<br /><br />I think Bernanke was mostly responsible for sending Wall St. up today. These comments are what did it:<br /><br />"With the economy likely to be weak for several quarters, and with some risk of a protracted slowdown, consideration of a fiscal package by the Congress at this juncture seems appropriate." And then... "If the Congress proceeds with a fiscal package, it should consider including measures to help improve access to credit by consumers, home buyers, businesses and other borrowers. Such actions might be particularly effective at promoting economic growth and job creation."<br /><br />Well... more rate cuts, more government bailouts, more debt, more pressure on the deficit, more foreign funding needed, more manipulated growth data, more inflation, and more cheap money. Sounds like a brilliant plan to me. If there was a law against stupidity, Bernanke would be getting a body cavity search right now before being introduced to his cell mate Bubba.<br /><br />Crude showed some gains today as OPEC continued to put out the production cut rhetoric. I'm sure at their emergency meeting they will all agree to cut crude production by a million or more barrels a day and then pledge to further reductions in the near-term. Beware though... the market could be buying the rumor only to sell the news on this one...<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />Your guess is as good as mine for tomorrow... we have absolutely no euro or dollar data and there are no Fed speeches scheduled between London and NY. We have no bigname Eurozone speakers tomorrow. I think the market will remain disjointed tomorrow.<br /><br />We do have that big CDS event tomorrow. I cannot even begin to predict how that will go or what affect it may have on the market. My personal feeling is that it's most likely going to be a non-event. Several traders have asked me to explain the CDS (credit default swap) situation.<br /><br />Lets pretend my home's mortgage was sold to me by Bank of Earth. And lets pretend Bank of Earth sold mortgages to 500 other families in the community. Well, Bank of Earth packages up those mortgages and created a debt instrument, a security, and this security is sold as an investment product, rated as AAA debt, given an attractive yield.<br /><br />Now lets pretend Bank of Earth sold this mortgage debt product to the Bank of Jupiter. Well, as good investors, these banks want to purchase insurance on the mortgage security. Here's where we run into a problem... Bank of Jupiter is the holder of the mortgage security but because this insurance aspect is unregulated in the open market Bank of Saturn, Bank of Mars, Bank of Venus, and Bank of Mercury buy insurance (CDS) on Bank of Jupiter's mortgage security.<br /><br />I think you can see the issue there... again, I'm not sure how tomorrow's CDS event will affect the markets but be prepared for some shenanigans just in case.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />At this early point in the week I still have no bias on the EUR/USD. The way the euro behaved was not orderly or proper based on how the market correlated variables were behaving today. I have an extremely low risk appetite for the market right now. The liquidity is almost non-existent and the market's overall appetite for risk seems muted.<br /><br />As far as trading goes, I did buy at 1.3307 this morning but the euro just seems stalled right now and is looking to make another run at the 1.3280 level. There will be stops sitting around the 1.3260 and 1.3220-1.3200 levels. It's possible we may see Asia take a run at the stops... I'm open to this possibility playing out. The afternoon euro range has been extremely tight and we've been failing around the 1.3335 level as of the writing of this update.<br /><br />Based on what I saw the euro do today I cannot even say with a high degree of probability that lower LIBOR, higher equities, and supported commodities are going to help the euro this week. It's still early, however, and we may get a better idea when London opens on Tuesday whether or not we'll have another disjointed market on Tuesday.<br /><br />I have to mention that the third week in October, during the past two years, has marked the beginning of a euro bull run against the dollar. It happened last year between Halloween and Thanksgiving and it happened the year before that. Will these past price action patterns emerge and play out yet again?<br /><br />I can't say for sure but part of my trade plan absolutely involves buying the euro on these dips like we took today. If we make a 200+ point drop, I'm buying the euro. I will take risk buying the dips in the event the market does what it has done in the past. If we do make a bull run back to the 1.3800 level or better, I certainly do not want to be stuck short down here at these levels.<br /><br />I wish I had some really exciting crap to say about the euro but I really have nothing else at this point in the week. Risk management is imperative, especially between 1700 EST and 1900 EST today... the liquidity will be eerily low.<br /><br />Be smart with your risk and money.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-88919881917983482252008-10-19T16:20:00.000-07:002008-10-19T16:36:53.512-07:00EUR/USD Weekly Outlook 10/19 thru 10/24 2008Guess what? This weekend I did something I almost never do. I was stuck at home with a bad cold and as I was going stir crazy I decided to do some research to see how other analysts, gurus, and traders are viewing the markets presently. I was mostly interested on their views for this week. Fundamentally there’s just not much on the books. The only big fundamentals out of Europe this week are manufacturing and those should be terrible. The only big events out of the US this week are a speech by Bernanke, Existing Home Sales, and Initial Claims.<br /><br />The vibe I’m getting from the analysts is that this week will be orderly, the credit markets will flow nicely, and these issues we’ve been dealing with for the past few weeks will miraculously disappear. I’m going to take the contrarian view as I approach this week’s trading with an understanding the risks will be enormous and the volatility will be chaotic at times.<br /><br />The fundamentals will absolutely come into play this week but not the “textbook” definition of fundamentals. First, Wall St. will get earnings reports this week from major US corporations like Caterpillar, Google, Intel, 3M, Microsoft, Boeing, McDonalds, and Amazon just to name a few. Why does any of that matter to EUR/USD traders? Reason being is because Wall St. money-flows are a major determining factor in the daily trends of the EUR/USD and I do not see this correlation going away this week.<br /><br />If poor earnings or shocks on Wall St. lead equities lower and Treasuries higher the dollar will be the likely beneficiary of this move and the euro will be punished. That has been the clear correlation and I see no reason why this correlation evaporates this week. This week I will be watching the S&P 500 more closely to give me direction indication for the euro.<br /><br />The reason I’ll be focusing more on the S&P 500 is because of the issue we still have within the credit markets. As a value weighted index, the S&P 500 has more connection to the credit market and to credit flows as compared to the Dow. While the Dow is a great overall indicator, right now I’m seeing more of an important correlation with the S&P 500. The thing you have to remember about correlations is that they should not be considered as constants. Real-time market conditions dictate the relative overall strength or weakness of a market correlated variable’s pull on the EUR/USD.<br /><br />Interest rates will absolutely factor into this week’s trading. Towards the end of last week we finally saw overnight dollar LIBOR rates ease. While this didn’t send the euro rocketing back up I believe the easing of dollar LIBOR rates helped keep the euro from sustaining a break of the 1.3400 level as we closed out the week. While it’s encouraging to see LIBOR cooperating with the EUR/USD, I do not think we’ve been given a guarantee the credit markets have to operate in an orderly fashion this week just because they did last Thursday and Friday.<br /><br />Its true Wall St. made a nice comeback at the end of the week which brought more talk of a bottom in equities. I do not subscribe to this kind of thinking. The fundamentals of the US economy will keep deteriorating. Our forecast on this has been clear and has been proven to be a reality. I do not see how it’s possible for equities to truly bottom when some of the worst is yet to come, especially in housing. I find it hard to believe market participants cured themselves of their panic, knee-jerk behaviors.<br /><br />How this all ties into trading is quite clear in my view… should Wall St. find stability this week and equities make consistent gains I believe this will take downside pressure off the euro and will give the euro a fighting chance. But the same must hold true for interest rates. If we have a bank failure situation in Europe or more troubles on Wall St. this could send dollar LIBOR rates back up which would benefit the dollar against the euro.<br /><br />Consumers and Global Economies:<br /><br />For the past month I’ve been focusing a lot of commentary on the US consumer because I believe the consumer sector is a fundamental area putting an extreme amount of downside pressure on the economy and on growth. I stand by the forecast that the consumer will bring the economy to its knees during Q4 and Q1 of 2009.<br /><br />Over the weekend I asked a friend who is very observant and detail-oriented to do some field research for me. I asked her to go to the top two upscale, high-end malls in Nashville and then to hit the two lowest-end malls. The task was to observe traffic, get an idea of how many bags were in shopper’s hands, what stores they were from, and which mall was “performing” the best.<br /><br />Green Hills Mall, the most upscale in Nashville had the least amount of shopper traffic, the highest amount of “window shoppers” and the lowest amount of purchases per shopper as compared to the other three malls. The lowest-end mall had the most traffic and the most purchases per shopper. When classifying a mall as “low-end” I’m specifically referring to retailers who offer products that are priced for middle-class and poorer consumers… it’s like the difference of spending $58 for a shirt at Abercrombie compared to $14.99 at Old Navy.<br /><br />Nashville serves as a great consumer indicator because our region has been largely unaffected by the recession. Nashville is the financial center of the South and is a major player in the healthcare and entertainment industries. When I see a mostly recession-proof economy like that of Nashville getting hit I can only come to the conclusion that areas of the country nailed by foreclosures, plunging home prices, job losses, and recession are suffering terribly.<br /><br />In the US we have these things called food stamps. Food stamps are subsidized by the government and are available to individuals and families that are below a certain poverty level. According to government statistics, the number of individuals receiving food stamps has jumped by over 2 million between May and October of this year. Those are staggering numbers and further prove the state of the US consumer is abysmal and families are in serious financial jeopardy.<br /><br />In any welfare state you will have a certain segment milking the system, this is what lazy and dishonest people do but I believe a good number of those 2 million new individuals receiving government subsidized food assistance did so out of dire necessity. The US consumer can no longer use their home as an ATM machine, the credit cards are maxed out, the easy access to lines of credit are all gone, and the entire mindset of the average US consumer will have to change, it simply cannot be any other way.<br /><br />Under normal circumstances this situation with the US consumer would absolutely hammer the dollar into the ground. While I do believe at some point the dollar will have to pay for the dramatic decline of the consumer, the affects of this intense consumer/retail slowdown will be felt by the global economies as a whole. Under normal circumstances the euro would obviously benefit from a weaker dollar caused by a weaker consumer but the fundamental situation in Europe does not necessarily make this a possibility.<br /><br />The US consumer will lead economies in Asia, South America, Latin America, and the Middle East to even lower points. I have not heard much talk at all about the stronger dollar’s negative affect on US exports, on the Trade Balance, and on big players like Caterpillar, John Deere, Boeing, etc. And what about all those savvy European and Asian carmakers who pulled up stakes in their own countries and set up shop in America to benefit from the weaker dollar and high consumer demand?<br /><br />The lure of the worthless dollar brought giants like BMW, VW, Nissan, and Toyota to set up manufacturing plants in the US, mostly here in the South where taxes are low, land is cheap, and economic conditions are favorable (were favorable). That’s just one of many examples of how wide-ranging an affect the beaten-down US consumer is going to have on global economies.<br /><br />Crude:<br /><br />Crude has been a mess and the unwinding of crude has no doubt benefited the dollar. Now I see a new potential factor arising if crude is allowed to stay to the downside. I’m talking civil unrest in oil producing nations. Oil producing nations budget a barrel of crude at a specific level and they use this targeted price to determine how much to budget towards three things specifically:<br /><br />1. Infrastructure and expansion<br />2. Sovereign wealth fund capital<br />3. Government subsidies (human control)<br /><br />Based on my limited understanding of how crude plays a roll in the budgets of OPEC nations and other oil producing nations, I’m seeing that if crude sustains a break of between the $68 and $65 levels and stays below there for even a brief period of time that this will dramatically alter the spending plans of oil producing nations. They basically cannot have oil stay at or below $65 a barrel for the foreseeable future.<br /><br />The first areas that will get hit are subsidies and expansion projects. This is where the civil unrest part can play a role. Again, I am not an expert on precisely how oil-producing nations handle their politics but I do know they use oil money as a way to subsidize the citizenry in order to wield a certain level of control and power. In nations such as India and China and certain parts of the Middle East the poorer classes have risen into a middle-class lifestyle almost overnight. This global economic slowdown put those folks in jeopardy of returning back to where they came from. They may not want to get downgraded without putting up a fight. I wouldn’t.<br /><br />Add to that the taking away of government subsidies and programs funded with oil money and you have a decent recipe for a good civil uprising. This type of geo-political event would absolutely cause a tremendous amount of chaos and volatility in not only the crude market but also for the EUR/USD. This type of event won’t happen in the blink of an eye but it’s an issue we need to keep monitoring so long as crude stays at these lower levels.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />As I said I expect trading conditions to remain frustrating, chaotic, volatile, and erratic this week. I see no reason for this to change. As far as trading goes I would like to offer a suggestion for traders who are serious about risk and money management… do yourself a favor and consider staying out of the market this evening and wait for the overnight dollar LIBOR rates to come out between 0630 EST and 0700 EST on Monday morning.<br /><br />If you can be patient enough to wait for this fundamental interest rate data from LIBOR it may serve to give some clearer direction for the trade day. If we see a drop in overnight dollar LIBOR rates this will be a good indicator the euro at least has a fighting chance on Monday. The next indicator will be how equities are responding.<br /><br />At this point on Sunday afternoon I have absolutely no bias for the dollar or the euro. I don’t even really need a bias because my trade plan will mostly depend on what the market correlated variables are showing me and what the euro price action is showing me. These conditions call for taking quick hits on the market, banking the profits, and getting out while you wait for the next trade opportunity to emerge.<br /><br />Lets be real here… trying to pick a perfect bottom on the EUR/USD is just a complete waste of time and energy under present market conditions. It must not be forgotten that Europe’s banking system is as much a mess as the US banking system, if not more.<br /><br />At least at the start of the week some important levels to keep an eye on are 1.3382, 1.3317, and 1.3263 on the downside. Topside levels to be aware of are 1.3584, 1.3648, and 1.3737. After the market opens and we get a few hours under our belt it may provide a clearer view of how market conditions may go.<br /><br />Overall I’m going to say the euro does have a fighting chance to make some gains this week. This means I will be much more cautious with adding euro shorts unless I see the market give me the clear green light to keep shorting the euro, otherwise I will take risks buying the euro this week.<br /><br />Risk and money management is imperative for all traders this week. I cannot stress this enough. Be smart with your trades and do not be greedy this week. Greed is an enemy that only the most disciplined and focused trader can beat. Please practice strict risk management!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-35441460830513040092008-10-16T16:09:00.000-07:002008-10-16T16:11:46.745-07:00Trade Team UpdateI'm not sure how great today's update will turn out... I got hit with a nasty cold early this morning and have not been very active in the market today, but there's a few key issues I want to cover...<br /><br />Overall I'd say today's swings should not have come by any surprise. For weeks I've been talking about the re-pricing and re-valuing process taking place in the markets and this morning we saw more evidence of this process wielding its affect on the EUR/USD.<br /><br />This morning several hedge funds were forced to liquidate and unwind heavy gold positions. Due to the already ill-liquid conditions in all markets, the hedge fund unwinding caused an intense amount of downside pressure on gold as it fell over $55 almost as soon as the gold liquidations began. At the very same moment the hedge funds were unwinding their positions and bringing gold down Treasury yields went up.<br /><br />From this we see money flows stream out of commodities and into Treasuries. Then later in the afternoon I observed Treasury yields begin to rise while the Dow was beginning to rise. As this event was taking place, the euro was putting in a bottom at the 1.3380 level to eventually wind up pushing towards the 1.3500 level.<br /><br />So as we look at today's events to make sense of why the markets did what they did, we simply connect the money-flow dots and its makes perfect sense why the markets behaved the way they did... as the money flows came out of commodities and equities, the euro dropped and stayed under downside pressure. Once the liquidation process with the hedge funds was over and those money-flows made their way back into equities, benefiting the Dow and S&P, this helped bring the euro back up.<br /><br />These are the correlations of the market right now... they've been clear and will remain this way as long as market participants decide to respond this way during the re-pricing process. This doesn't exactly make trading easy because of the ill-liquidity and volatility but at least it makes sense.<br /><br />Fundamentals:<br /><br />Well I was wrong -- on Sunday I gave an opinion that I believed the fundamentals would take a bigger role in the market this week. This is not the case at all. Today's USD data was some of the worst seen since the 1970s. My overall forecast for worsening USD fundamentals is playing out but we are not seeing any punishment being given to the dollar.<br /><br />Industrial Production fell a staggering 2.8% which is the worst drop since 1974. The Philly Fed Index printed at -37.5. It hasn't printed that low since 1990. The NAHB housing index printed its lowest number ever in the history of the index. The numbering of continuing jobless claims reached its highest level in five years. And we still have Wall St. Wonderboy Hank Paulson telling the world the fundamentals of the US are strong.<br /><br />CPI printed flat... no rise in price pressures month-over-month. In this data we see further evidence of massive and rapid deflation... speaking of deflation, look at the gas pumps. The price of fuel is tumbling around the nation. Here in Nashville gas has dropped a $1 a gallon from its summer highs. That is a big deal to a lot of people here in my town!<br /><br />I can already see the affect of fuel deflation -- the social establishments are more crowded now that fuel is cheaper. I see more people in restaurants and bars and in the tourist areas of town. These are very good things during times of recession and potential depression.<br /><br />At some point the dollar will have to pay for these abysmal fundamentals because the negative affects will be seen in the deficit, Trade Balance, Current Account, TIC, and GDP data.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />Tomorrow we get key housing and building data along with the important Michigan Sentiment. I'm forecasting all three pieces of data to print USD-. If that's how it plays out the bad could downward pressure on the Dow which would put downward pressure on the euro heading into the weekend.<br /><br />Trading conditions tomorrow could be classified as schizophrenic... what I expect for tomorrow is terribly low amount of liquidity, a good deal of book squaring, and few bigger players with a little bit of liquidity to play with throw their weight around to make some end-of-week profits to satisfy whatever needs at the moment.<br /><br />If the Dow can somehow manage to perform in the green I would expect the euro to find support against the dollar. Once again dollar LIBOR rates eased and during London the euro found support and strength to move up... it's a very simple process -- if LIBOR continues to ease the euro will be given more breathing room to gain against the dollar.<br /><br />The hedge funds may do more liquidating tomorrow and this will cause some wild price swings. Crude remains a mess along with gold. I cannot even begin to predict what those two will do tomorrow, they could be brutalized again.<br /><br />I got a report today from a company called TrimTabs. When I first heard the name I thought they were pushing diet pills or something but it turns out they do market intell. In one of their reports they showed over $43 billion was liquidated within the hedge funds in September. That is a monumental amount to evaporate from the markets. Margin call city...<br /><br />In that report on the hedge funds we see proof that these markets are terribly ill-liquid and easy to push around, causing the violent and chaotic price swings. Trading tomorrow will carry an extremely high level of risk so please understand this before you decide to pull the trigger.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-69385172568059341842008-10-15T16:54:00.000-07:002008-10-15T16:58:34.838-07:00Trade Team UpdateYet again we have another day of brutal US economic and financial data, panic on Wall St., and somehow the dollar comes out smelling like a rose. While it doesn't come as a surprise it's certainly frustrating... as I indicated last night and this morning, the Dow would likely come under pressure and take a hit which would pull the euro down with it.<br /><br />We did see this scenario play out today as the Dow plunged 500 points by early afternoon, dragging the euro back into the mud. Crude has remained an unstoppable mess and for good reason. Crude demand fell a staggering 6.2% in September in just the US alone. I haven't had the time to even see what kind of demand decreases there are for the other industrialized nations and emerging markets but I can't imagine the news is good.<br /><br />O/N dollar LIBOR rates continued to ease albeit slightly. But we can clearly see the benefit of this slight easing because the euro has been gaining ground on the dollar after London opens and especially after the LIBOR rates are fixed and released. The euro runs into problems when Wall St. enters the game.<br /><br />Overall, interest rates continue to remain at the forefront of the markets... the MBA reported the rate on 30-year fixed mortgages rose a whopping 40bps in just one week. Remember when we said rate cuts and bailouts won't fix the issues facing the housing market? Is the Fed so nieve to think that rate cuts would really help the housing market?<br /><br />What the rate cuts and what the US fundamental data is doing is affecting money flows into Treasuries in a very negative way. If bond yields go up mortage rates have to go up, it simply cannot be any other way. The 10-year bond is the key Treasury to watch as it relates to mortgage rates. Money flows have sent Treasury yields soaring the past week and this is only going to serve to put added pressure on mortgage interest rates which is going to keep housing and re-fi's under pressure.<br /><br />Fundamentally, we received some of the worst US retail and manufacturing data in years. It's abysmal. I forecasted a nasty retail number and it even exceeded how bad I thought it was going to be. Retail sales plunged 1.2% in September which is the worst print in over three years. For weeks I've been talking about the non-functioning consumer and today we have our first good evidence of this. The consumer will entrench further as the year drags on. Retail sales will come under more downside pressure as the job losses continue, the bills pile up, and the discretionary spending dwindles to almost nil.<br /><br />I believe this is going to be an extremely rough winter in the US and likely around the world. In the early 1990's I think the US had some sort of a recession. My dad a decent job in the financial industry back then. He lost his job when the company downsized and eventually went out of business. I seem to recall him saying he lost his job due to the recession.<br /><br />I was still fairly young and nieve and I didn't understand anything about recessions and economics in those days. I remember my dad lost his job right before school let out for the summer. By winter things were really bad at home financially. The next few years we were flatout poor. Times were tough for our family and many families in our community. I remember during the worst winter we were so poor we couldn't afford to heat our house in the evenings and it got so cold in my room that the frost was on the inside of the window.<br /><br />I see these types of situations playing out this winter for many families. The sheer number of unemployed people, coupled with high consumer staple prices, families taking substantial investment losses, and mounting debt obligations makes for a recipe of hardships for millions of families who are already on the edge, just barely scraping each day.<br /><br />I'm not trying to hit anybody with the doom and gloom stuff but this is what I see likely happening over the next few months. What this means for us as traders is more volatility, more ill-liquidity in the markets, more price swings, more government interventions... all the good stuff we've been dealing with since July...<br /><br />The worst has not been seen or felt yet.<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />Once again we get some extremely key fundamentals tomorrow... CPI, TIC, Industrial Production, Philly Fed, and Crude Inventories. Fundamentals are clearly taking a backseat to the other market correlated variables like equities and commodities but this data is important nonetheless because at some point it will matter and the dollar will be punished for this madness.<br /><br />Today's Eurozone inflation data printed as expected but next month could certainly print to the downside. There is certainly cause for concern with the Eurozone inflation data. The ECB has clearly swtiched gears to a more balanced growth/inflation stance in light of the financial crisis. That policy shift has served to put the euro under a considerable amount of pressure.<br /><br />Should US CPI print below forecast this could put an added dose of downside pressure on the euro. Typically, weak inflation data would be bad for the dollar but the markets are treating the fundamentals in a different kind of way while we're operating under this chaotic conditions.<br /><br />The TIC data may not be as USD- as some are expecting. Don't forget this data is two months behind and as the financial crisis was kicking into high gear we saw heavy money flows pour into Treasuries. What we don't know is how much of that was foreign. A decent print on the TIC data shouldn't negate the fact that the US debt situation is on shaky ground.<br /><br />With the $1 trillion+ of newly printed money flooded into the money supply and with the clear recessionary affects being seen in the economy, what would motivate foreign investors to buy US debt? I cannot see or understand how US debt would be attractive right now. And this presents a problem because the US will need more foreign buyers of US debt than ever before. The US deficit is skyrocketing. At this point it's not even sustainable. This is all just a terribly USD- situation but only the markets can decide when to punish the dollar for this.<br /><br />I'm fully expecting the fundamental "battle of worsts" between the euro and dollar to rage on as we close out 2008.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The euro remains at the mercy of the market correlated variables -- equities, commodities, and money-market interest rates. Any idea of "dollar strength" is purely a myth. The fundamentals of the USD are in their worst shape since 2001 and will only get worse. But as I've explained a dozen or more times, the dollar has to remain supported under these types of recessionary conditions.<br /><br />As of the writing of this commentary I see that the 1.3508 downside key level has put up a considerable fight in the midst of all the pressure on the euro. It's possible we see a clean break of this level during the Asian session. But it's been tested for hours on end now and is miracuously holding steady.<br /><br />On Sunday I talked about downside testing for the euro and I'm still not rulling out another test of the 1.3320-1.3280 levels before the week comes to a close. If crude continues to plunge along with the Dow it's quite probable those levels will be tested. I gave some downside levels on Tuesday for crude of $75-$72 and I'm not ruling out a possible break of the $70 level as long as these conditions persist.<br /><br />Gold seems to be stuck in some sort of state of confusion. I really don't have much to say about gold because it's behaving strange and I just don't care to deal with it right now, there are other factors moving these markets and they have zero to do with gold.<br /><br />I can list several reasons the euro should find support and move up but at this point I believe the euro's health will remain largely dependant upon LIBOR, equities, and how money-flows are moving through the markets.<br /><br />As far as trading goes the clear and safest game plan is just to wait for a euro rise and then to grab a short. I've tried buying the euro and it just doesn't work right now. It's much easier path to profits by sticking with the short game plan, take quick hits on the market and then getting out with your profits.<br /><br />I cannot even begin to stress the value and dependability of the EUR/USD 30-minute price patterns. Even in the thick of the worst financial crisis since the 1930s the old euro price patterns continue to pay out time and time and time again. To be honest, the only time a trade has gone against me this week is when I've ignored the 30-minute price action data thinking I could sneak out a quick 20 or 50 pips. I highly encourage all traders who are taking risks in this market to stick to the proven and tested 30-minute EUR/USD price patterns.<br /><br />The 1.3508 downside key level is critical and continues to hold as of right now (1546 EST). Be smart with your trades and be vigilent with your risk and money management.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-27033116230370630652008-10-13T16:20:00.000-07:002008-10-13T16:28:19.656-07:00Trade Team UpdateAs Sarah Palin would say, I'm feeling pretty dog-gone, gee-golly, aw-shucks good today... not because the global financial crisis is fixed and not because Jessica Biel returned my phone call... in my opinion I believe we saw the very first positive and potentially productive step towards stabilizing the markets and towards liquifying the markets in order to bring a return to order and functionality.<br /><br />What I'm talking about is the move being made in Europe to stabilize the interbank lending market by providing liquid capital and loan guarantees. The Germans have offered €400 billion in loan guarantees and €80 billion in accessible liquid capital. France said it would guarantee up to €320 billion worth of liquid for European banks.<br /><br />On the back of this news over €1.1 trillion in new loans were approved within the European money markets. That's what I like to see -- instant positive reaction to a plan that actually can accomplish the goal of unfreezing the credit market and easing LIBOR. The markets needed a confidence boost and I believe the interbank plan not only provides that boost but also provides the resources for these banks to ease their way back into the lending and credit process.<br /><br />Tomorrow will be this plan's first test -- now I need to see follow through. I need to see consistency. I need to see dollar LIBOR rates come down tomorrow morning. I need to see the euro hold ground against the dollar that it normally would have lost due to high USD interest rates. I need to see some of this newfound confidence sustain in Europe. If we can see these liquidity measures do what they are intended to do the euro may have half a chance against the dollar this week. So, let me say I'm cautiously optimistic about what I've been seeing today.<br /><br />Equities have been on fire today as just about all global markets are rallying on the latest offerings from the central banks. Once again, I need to see some follow through and sustainability with these moves. It's great to see the Dow go up over 700 points but if it gives back all those gains tomorrow, we go back to square one again.<br /><br />Commodities sit in an interesting spot, especially gold. I see the $830-$820 as an important testing zone along with $75-$72 on crude. If crude and gold can find some support and bring out the buyers this would certainly help support the euro. Money flows out of Treasuries should also help the euro and I'll be watching for evidence of this.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The euro's first fundamental test is tomorrow with ZEW and Industrial Production. I cannot call ZEW EUR+ at this point. I think the panic that has been running through Europe the past two months is going to weigh heavy on ZEW and I would expect to see a downside print. The key will be seeing how strongly the market wants to react against the EUR should we get a downside number.<br /><br />Trichet will be in NYC to deliver a speech and I'm sure he will refer to monetary policy as it relates to the financial crisis. I will be listening for any clues or signs on future rate moves. The markets are speculating on Trichet's next move on rates... will be another cut or a hold? That is the burning question right now. I believe if the European banking plan finds some success it will give Trichet a reason to keep rates steady.<br /><br />As far as trading goes, I'm working through a different risk strategy right now that is more negative on the dollar and slightly more positive on the euro. My appetite to keep buying the dollar has eased back today. Believe me, I've not turned into a euro bull but I have growing concerns with the dollar, mostly with the sheer number of dollars that have been pumped into the money markets and money supply.<br /><br />We're talking well over $1 trillion in hot-off-the-presses greenbacks flooding the market. I'm trusting that at some point in the near future market participants are going to finally wake up and realize the depriciative affects of an additional $1 trillion+ of USD being flooded into the global financial system. That is just a terribly USD- thing in my view. Eventually I believe the dollar will have to pay for Bernanke and Paulson's transgressions.<br /><br />I'm also thinking that low rates + access to credit + high money supply = strong gains for equities. The printing of money creates inflation and the equities market loves inflation... a season of loose monetary policy and inflationary conditions created by a more liquified monetary base should send Wall St. soaring again.<br /><br />Now if equities go up because of the cheap interest rates and easier access to credit that should mean that Treasury prices should go down and yields would go up. Money flows would come out of Treasuries and back into equities as risk aversion would be set aside. And in this scenario it should be good for the euro and bad for the dollar. If we can add to this scenario weak TIC data and that my friends is a nice little recipe for a good 'ole fashioned USD butt-kicking.<br /><br />The USD fundamentals are not going to turn around this year, we will see weaker data as the year rolls along, that I am very sure of. There's also new talk of another US economic stimulus plan that is even bigger than the $160 billion plan from earlier this year. Lets see... the last plan didn't do much, it's had no longterm positive results, it created more debt, more inflation, and we want to do it all over again and do it bigger? Yeah, that's going to be real great for the dollar... there's very little that shocks me and yet somehow I still get shocked by the stupidity in DC.<br /><br />The other factor that is giving me caution against buying the dollar is the seasonal price patterns of the EUR/USD. The prior two years the euro begins to make strong gains against the dollar starting around the third week in October and lasting at least through to the end of November. If this old price pattern returns I do not want to be stuck with euro shorts down here at these levels.<br /><br />The fundamentals, of course, are different this year compared to last year and the year before. The euro is clearly in trouble and has severe fundamental issues to deal with. But I have to forecast some very weak dollar fundamentals in Q4. The Q3 growth, retail, and consumer data should be abysmal and I'm forecasting a nightmare holiday shopping season.<br /><br />I think retailers will be at the mercy of a terrified consumer who won't bust out the credit card unless they see some serious discounts. I see the retailers and consumers having a battle of wills... the consumers holding out for the sales and the retailers holding out for the consumer to bend and begin to buy. Overall I see a very USD- scenario here.<br /><br />The realist, idealist, and optimist side of me is thinking along these lines as it relates to trading the EUR/USD. At this point I'm not willing to take too many risks on the euro but I certainly do not want to be stuck in low euro shorts should market participants finally wake up and see what a mess the dollar is and why this smoke-and-mirrors strength cannot sustain over the longterm view.<br /><br />In terms of where to put risk, my trade plan calls for taking risk on the euro unless the market shows me otherwise. I still may short the rises but as I said, I'm getting cautious with euro shorts at these levels. I don't think the euro is all healed up and back in the fight but if we can get some of these factors working I believe the dollar comes under selling pressure.<br /><br />Right now we need the credit markets to stabilize and confidence to return to market participants in addition to dollar LIBOR easing. Tomorrow will be our first real test to see if this is actually possible.<br /><br />Please be smart with how you handle your risk and money under these evolving conditions. Don't listen to me, take everything into consideration and mostly trust your gut and what you're seeing in the markets. The risks are enormous right now and most on the retail side should be sitting out until the markets stabilize.<br /><br />The end-of-day surge in the Dow gave the euro a real nice boost in late afternoon... keep an eye on how Tokyo decides to respond to what Wall St. did today. If market conditions allow, I will post some key levels later on this evening. Overall, keep an eye on the 1.3720-50 level on the upside and the 1.3540-1.3480 level on the downside during Tokyo.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-89993847069778374582008-10-12T16:44:00.000-07:002008-10-12T16:51:29.439-07:00EUR/USD Weekly Outlook 10/12 thur 10/17 2008Once again we start the week with more questions than answers, more unknowns, more speculation, and more save-the-world rhetoric from the world’s top central bankers, finance ministers and politicians.<br /><br />One thing I will not do in today’s update is regale you with numbers, facts, and figures. There’s an art and science to analyzing and trading markets. As I’ve said in the past, I am not the “science” of the market, I’m more the “art” of the market. If you want the “science” part (facts, figures, and technical views) I suggest you read John Mauldin’s latest commentaries. Mauldin is the only market analyst I trust these days and the only market participant I will endorse.<br /><br />Overall, here’s what the markets will be dealing with this week… reaction to the G7, reaction to rhetoric and moves made by the central banks, reactions to moves made on the global equities and commodities market, and yes, we will see a return of the fundamentals this week. The fundamentals have largely taken a back to the other issues market participants have been responding to but this week we have key inflation, growth, retail, consumer, and foreign investment data. I am certain the fundamentals will play a bigger role this week as compared to weeks past.<br /><br />G7:<br /><br />Over the weekend central bankers and finance ministers were led by the IMF in a series of meetings designed to give the global markets a decisive plan to not only calm all world markets but also to instill confidence in the banking system, to unfreeze the credit markets and to stabilize the rapidly declining asset values of investors.<br /><br />I’m thrilled to report the G7 accomplished none of this. The G7 communiqué is a joke. In the midst of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s the best the G7 could come up with is a plan filled with more empty rhetoric. There is no exact and definitive plan of attack given in the communiqué. There is no step-by-step course of action. I wouldn’t even line the bottom of a birdcage with that piece of trash.<br /><br />Reading the communiqué made me dumber, I think. At the risk of making you dumber, I’m going to cut and paste a few gems from the communiqué just so you can get an understanding of how this G7 plan offers absolutely nothing to the global markets:<br /><br />Take decisive action and use all available tools to support systemically important financial institutions and prevent their failure.<br /><br />Take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets and ensure that banks and other financial institutions have broad access to liquidity and funding.<br /><br />Ensure that our banks and other major financial intermediaries, as needed, can raise capital from public as well as private sources, in sufficient amounts to re-establish confidence and permit them to continue lending to households and businesses.<br /><br />Ensure that our respective national deposit insurance and guarantee programs are robust and consistent so that our retail depositors will continue to have confidence in the safety of their deposits.<br /><br />Take action, where appropriate, to restart the secondary markets for mortgages and other securitized assets. Accurate valuation and transparent disclosure of assets and consistent implementation of high quality accounting standards are necessary.<br /><br />That’s it… those five points right there is how the G7 intends to fix the markets. In there we read rhetoric that says “take action” and “take steps” and “programs”. Gee that’s great but what are these programs and what are these actions? When do they begin? What will they cost? What segment of the market will be tackled first? Will the US get the G7’s help first or will Europe? Why are the Asian market participants so quiet?<br /><br />Those were just a few questions I thought of within the first 30-seconds of reading that garbage. The central banks of the world are playing a game with the markets and I do not believe this game will work. These central banks are using monetary action and monetary policy as a form of psychotherapy on the markets.<br /><br />But what these brilliant men do not understand is that the markets are using psychotherapy on the central banks. It’s what you call getting the tables turned on you. All participants involved know it’s nothing but a lose-lose situation… during this painful and violent re-pricing and re-valuing process the majority loses and a small minority of smart players come out unharmed.<br /><br />The central bankers think they are in control but they are not. The markets have the central bankers by the throat and they won’t let go until they’re ready. The markets wanted lower rates and they got lower rates. Of course this didn’t fix anything, but hey, at least money is cheaper now. The central bankers of the world are getting played by the numbers they see on Bloomberg and read in the Financial Times. They are being pressured by the publically-traded and privately-owned banks they have undisclosed relationships with.<br /><br />Bernanke, Trichet, and Paulson are behaving like children in their responses to this financial crisis. These are grown adult men who are clearly powerless to stop the runaway freight train of the re-pricing process. When I read between the lines of this communiqué I read nothing but disagreements and uncertainty between the world’s financial leaders.<br /><br />I shouldn’t even call these men leaders because they are followers. They are leading nothing and I think it’s painfully obvious these men do not even believe the G7 plan will work or that any plan will work. Central bank monetary policy is the catalyst for financial booms and busts. Surely these educated men of economics understand these events happen at their hand.<br /><br />I’ve watched a few clips of the central bankers and finance ministers at the G7 meeting. I was observing how they were interacting with each other. After studying the G7 communiqué, watching images from their meetings, and then reading their comments it struck me that these men have no common plan of attack and it would likely take weeks or months for this group to get on the same page for how to solve the issues faced by the global markets.<br /><br />I grew up in the Southern Baptist church. That won’t mean much to our friends here from other countries, but when I was growing up we had a lot of preachers talking about the New World Order – a one-world government, the rise of the anti-Christ, war with Russia… all kinds of doom and gloom they could conjure up out of the book of Revelation.<br /><br />I’ve sat through a few old timey Southern Baptist tent meetings hearing how the governments of the world would band together to form a single government entity with the goal of controlling all peoples of the world so the anti-Christ could rule. Now I’m not saying that won’t happen but the point is, after what I observed with this G7 meeting in regards to the utter lack of agreement, I can’t imagine how the governments of the world are going to be able to unify in a way to solve the issues facing the financial markets let alone create a one-world government.<br /><br />My opinion – the G7 accomplishes only one thing – adding more confusion and volatility in the markets.<br /><br />Fundamentals:<br /><br />Unlike the past few weeks, some of the fundamental data we get this week will weigh on the market in my opinion. Of course all speeches by Trichet, Bernanke, and officials from the Fed and ECB can and will move the market this week. But in addition to that we get extremely key inflation data out of Europe and the US. CPI and PPI are critical right now.<br /><br />If Eurozone CPI prints at or below expected you can be sure this will put downside pressure on the euro because it will cause the markets to believe the ECB has room to cut rates even lower. Trichet has clearly backed away from his over-the-top hawkishness on inflation. The same may also be true for the US if Core CPI comes in cooler than expected. Many believe Bernanke is willing to take rates down to 1%.<br /><br />Retail Sales is another key piece of data we get this week. I am forecasting a USD- print on this data. My preliminary research shows a very sharp pullback from the consumer in the month of September. The US consumer is basically non-existent at the moment and will likely remain as such throughout the rest of 2008.<br /><br />We also get the Treasury International data this week. TIC data is two months behind but last month’s print showed a dramatic pullback in foreign investment. My forecast is for more USD- TIC data. The print may come in as expected. Reason being is because we have seen heavy money-flows into Treasuries the past two months and this may help the print but overall it’s still going to be very bad for the US deficit.<br /><br />In addition we also get manufacturing, production, and consumer sentiment data. I have to remain extremely bearish on both the US and European economies and I believe their fundamentals reflect the weakness these nations are suffering from. Many regions in Europe are a flat out mess. I don’t know any other way to put it.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />As of the writing of this update the euro was at 1.3518 during weekend trading but it may open lower than that. I am certainly not ruling out another test of the 1.3320 to 1.3280 level sometime this week. I am still very bearish on the euro and will use more caution buying the dips. That being said I’m not at all bullish on the dollar either.<br /><br />In my opinion the EUR/USD will remain correlated with equities this week in addition to more of a correlation with commodities. Some of those key fundamentals will come back into play this week. LIBOR will also be a factor in this week’s trading. If dollar LIBOR rates manage to come down this may take some pressure off of the euro.<br /><br />Crude is a disaster. Crude closed down 17% last week and while I do not believe we’ll see another massive loss like that, I do think crude can go lower which would put more downside pressure on the euro. If crude goes much lower I expect OPEC to start stepping up the rhetoric. A break of the $70 level on crude could cause an emergency OPEC meeting and a large supply cut. There’s only so much of a hit OPEC is willing to take before they decide to manipulate the crude market.<br /><br />Rate cuts will continue to be speculated on this week. Over the weekend ECB Almunia basically said there’s more room to cut rates. He says:<br /><br />“Supported by the easing of commodity prices, the presently high inflation is on a downward trend and long-term inflation expectations are stabilizing at a lower level consistent with price stability, if confirmed, these new developments could justify some monetary easing in the near-term”.<br /><br />That is a very cut-n-dry statement right there. There is also speculation that the Fed will cut rates again on October 29th. I think rate cuts are possible for both banks if the financial crisis drags on because rate cuts are what these bankers think will help solve the problems.<br /><br />The rate cuts will supply the markets with cheap money. The central banks want market participants to start buying equities with cheap money. This isn’t happening. So, what the central banks do next is cut rates lower and then they print more money in addition to keeping loose monetary policy. There’s all this cheap money and quite an abundance of it in the monetary base. This is inflation.<br /><br />The cheap money, the abundance of money, and the inflation are the exact three things needed to re-inflate equities. Equities thrive when there’s tons of cheap money and high prices (inflation). The central bankers answer is to pump up the equities markets therefore restoring confidence to investors and all market players.<br /><br />As far as trading goes, expect more chaos, more volatility, more price swings, more choppy and confusing price action and no real slowdown in the crisis-conditions. The markets will remain extremely ill-liquid this week. These are purely speculative markets. The risks of trading this market are astronomical. Whatever you decide to risk in the market this week you should be prepared to lose because violent price swings could happen at any moment.<br /><br />Don’t forget US banks are closed on Monday which means the liquidity will be almost nothing and that can give certain market players who might be slightly more liquid than the rest the ability to move the market whichever direction they desire. I’m just bearish, bearish on anything and everything. I think I could make money shorting anything right now. The worst has not been seen in my opinion.<br /><br />After the market is open for a few hours I hope to see some signs of direction and to get a better idea of how the market may want to respond after London opens. The Frankfurt and London openings will be key. The euro typically benefits from G7 meetings, so I will be looking for signs of possible euro strength.<br /><br />Be smart with your trades and do not take any unnecessary risks. We could see some very violent moves this week that you do not want to be caught on the wrong side of. Risk and money management is imperative under these extreme conditions.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-13240766839621411312008-10-09T16:34:00.000-07:002008-10-09T16:40:37.737-07:00Trade Team UpdateHere's a fun dose of irony... exactly one year ago the Dow and S&P hit all-time highs and today I think we can officially declare Wall St. crashed... what does this have to do with the EUR/USD? A lot.<br /><br />It is Wall St. has the focus of the global markets and international market players... what's happening with Wall St. right now is directly affecting the euro, commodities, and bonds. The Dow/Euro correlation has especially kicked into high gear the past two trading sessions and I expect this correlation to be there tomorrow.<br /><br />Crude is an absolute mess right now. Crude was down another $4 today and broke below the key $85 level. Gold, on the other hand, has a mind of its own and is trading under a completely different set of fundamental circumstances right now. At this point I'm really not evening using crude and gold as trading indicators as I do under normal circumstances. I'm trying to keep it as simple as possible and just following the market correlated that is more connected to the EUR/USD, and right now that is the Dow.<br /><br />The coordinated rate cuts had some initial affect on the European bourses and it did bring dollar LIBOR rates down to more comfortable levels but overall the desired affect has not been felt and may not be felt as long as these types of conditions persist.<br /><br />Last week I talked about markets having to go through a re-pricing process. The re-pricing of markets is the only reason I can give traders to explain what we've seen the past 12-weeks and will likely see through the rest of 2008. All markets are being re-priced and this re-pricing process is a necessary function and one that must accompny the deleveraging process -- the two always go hand-in-hand.<br /><br />What does re-pricing mean? It's a very simple but painful process the market goes through when price can no longer be supported for lack leverage, lack of liquidity, and lack of available credit. In all markets there's always a re-pricing process happening because markets are always in a re-valuing process.<br /><br />Lets use the euro as an example. Between September of 2007 and April of 2008 the euro was on a relentless bull run against the dollar. We're talking roughly 2,500 points with very little retracement along the way. That was a re-pricing process for the euro and the dollar and as the market was in the re-pricing process for the EUR/USD, the euro bulls took command of the re-valuing aspect as the underlying fundamentals led market participants to re-price and re-value the EUR/USD to the upside.<br /><br />During the second week of July the deleveraging process began as liquidity dried up and the central banks stepped in to manipulate the markets into thinking "deflation". This deflation we're experiencing right now comes with the deleveraging and the re-pricing of all asset classes.<br /><br />The more overleveraged a market is, the more painful the deleveraging process is -- the once great investment banks of Wall St. are a perfect example of what being overleveraged can do to your capital when your card gets pulled. And now we have the first sovreign nation facing total economic collapse... Iceland is the most overleveraged sovreign nation on earth and they are the first sovreign nation to "margin call" and suffer the pain of their actions.<br /><br />Look who comes to Iceland's rescue... it wasn't the US, UK, Japan, China, or any of Iceland's allies. An enemy of Iceland has stepped up to liquify their economy -- Russia. And Iceland will have to do the deal. The Russians are smart and they are just doing as JP Morgan did during the Great Depression... where others are seeing disaster, they are seeing opportunity. Iceland is rich in natural resources that Russia needs. It will be interesting to see how that relationship evolves in the months to come.<br /><br />I hope my explanation about re-pricing of the markets is clear. I'm not saying it's right, I could be on another planet with my view but this is the only reason I can give to traders who are seeking answers for why markets and certain asset classes are collapsing.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />Clearly the market is unsure of how to handle the EUR/USD after the joint Fed/ECB rate cut. The liquidity is almost non-existent right now but it has provided for some great intraday opportunities on both the long and short side.<br /><br />Our big data tomorrow is the Trade Balance. I absolutely cannot see how this data will be USD+. With global economies in recession or on the brink of recession, with the freezing of credit, the terrified consumer, and strong dollar I find it impossible to believe this data could be good for the dollar.<br /><br />So if the Trade Balance is USD- and the Dow can somehow stop bleeding to death tomorrow the euro may actually have a fighting chance. The price action is extremely choppy but I am seeing evidence of buying and I have been buying the euro on a strictly intraday basis.<br /><br />Don't forget we have a monumental G7 meeting this weekend. Most G7's cause some Sunday volatility but then it goes away. I'm expecting the communique released by this G7 to rock all global markets. In addition to a strong, over-the-top communique it's possible the G7 will take action in the markets -- this could mean another coordinated rate cut, a liquidity injection, manipulation in the FX market, they may even announce a plan to start buying equity indexs on the open market... expect anything!<br /><br />This means that whatever price your broker closes your platform at will be different when your broker opens your platform for trading on Sunday. I am certain the banks will move the market throughout the weekend as news and rhetoric comes out of the G7 meeting. Get your house in order before market close tomorrow, it's imperative.<br /><br />The volatility tomorrow could be massive as liquidity will be low and it's likely market participants will do round after round of profit-taking to square up their books before the weekend. I cannot reccomend any trader try to make money tomorrow but if you can't help yourself be smart with your margin.<br /><br />We may see 1.3500 tonight or we could see 1.3800 tomorrow and then another sell-off at that level. I'm just depending on my numbers, the 30-minute price openings, and the real-time price action to lead the way. I have to keep trading as simple as possible with as few distractions as possible.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-6831254755787482772008-10-08T16:41:00.000-07:002008-10-08T16:44:27.600-07:00Trade Team UpdateThis is a very rare thing, but I'm mostly at a loss for words... obviously the big news is the nuclear bomb the central banks of the world dropped on the markets this morning... this move is certainly a game-changer here going forward...<br /><br />Clearly the big question on the mind's of traders is how the ECB cut will affect the euro and how the Fed cut will affect the dollar. That's what we're going to look at first tonight. For those looking for a definitive, "should I go long or should I go short" analysis let me save you the time and say that I don't have an answer to that question at this point.<br /><br />This is not the first time that the major central banks of the world banded together to do a joint rate cut. Apparently it was rather popular in the 1980's and according to the historians these types of moves have mostly worked to bring order to the markets.<br /><br />Just because it worked in the past doesn't give me any comfort that today's coordinated rate cut will do the trick. I was skeptical of the idea and I'm skeptical now that it's a reality. The markets were all over the shop today... equities went from red to green to red and back to green... the euro went up, then down, then up, then back down.<br /><br />This is the kind of price action I'm expecting to see in the markets at least the rest of this week. I do believe the rate cuts will bring overnight LIBOR rates down and that would be a good thing for the euro. The ECB's rate cut should also lift some of the doom and gloom off of Europe.<br /><br />Trichet was under tremendous pressure to cut rates and yet he would not relent from the hawkish price stability stance. In my opinion this whole thing was the Fed's idea and they pushed it on Trichet. Trichet was surely the hardest one to convince to go along with it but the ECB's cut may have the most impact out of all the banks who cut rates.<br /><br />Most market participants were looking for a 25bps cut and Trichet gave them 50bps in one shot. This should raise investor confidence and hopefully take some pressure out of the European money markets. This rate cut does not solve the issues facing European banks and the fact they are highly overleveraged and many are facing insolvency issues.<br /><br />The rate cut may change Europe's growth fundamentals in the next few months, so that is an area we need to keep a close watch on. As far as the rate differential between the US and Europe is concerned, it's a wash. The Fed is at 1.50% and the ECB is at 3.75%. But the fact that the European rate of return is 50bps lower than yesterday is certainly cause to consider other sources that pay better rates.<br /><br />At this early stage in the game it cannot be realized how this joint rate reduction will affect the EUR/USD. If it was just the Fed that cut rates the trade would be a no-brainer. If the ECB had cut 50bps and the Fed had held rates steady, again, it would be an easy call to make.<br /><br />I think it will be required to give market participants some time to consider the implications of a European rate reduction and then to begin speculating on Trichet's next move. With Fed Funds a 1.50% and the ECB still at 3.75% it's possible market participants will look at the ECB has having more room to drop rates further. Trichet did make a comment today about not expecting more rate cuts but don't forget two months ago he told the markets that the ECB would hold rates steady through 2009.<br /><br />Back in January we forecasted the first ECB rate cut to happen during the second half of 2008 and while that was expected, I certainly did not expect it to go down this way. As far as trading goes it's imperative that all traders realize that there is no known pattern behavior based on this joint rate cut event.<br /><br />Let me explain... since the euro was introduced and allowed to float on the open market at no time has the Fed and ECB cut rates on the same day, or during the same quarter, or the same exact amount. So when I say there is no known pattern behavior based on this event it means that the market will be trading in unchartered waters at least for the short-term while market participants reposition and align themselves based on the euro and dollar interest rate differentials.<br /><br />The billions of dollars worth of liquidty the banks provide to the market has been absent ever since we started the summer session and that liquidity has yet to return as the summer session turned into the worst financial crisis in modern history.<br /><br />If these coordinated rate cuts serve to bring some order to the markets we may see some of that liquidity come back. And it may take that liquidity, which provides order, to get a feel for how the market is going to punish either the dollar or the euro for their respective rate cuts.<br /><br />Both the euro and dollar fundamentals are both abysmal. I'm expecting both Eurozone and US GDP to show negative prints for Q4. I'm expecting more uncertainty about future monetary policy, and I'm still expecting much stress within Europe's banking system.<br /><br />It never seems to get less complicated does it? I know traders will be anxious to know whether the trade is euro long or short but it will be important to keep in mind that the this coordinated rate cut effort is less than 24-hours old and the markets will need time to digest and position themselves. As always we will do our best here to keep reading the market's behavioral patterns and trying to give the most accurate forecasts as possible.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />Tomorrow's big fundamental even will be Initial Claims. Focus and attention will be on other matters of course... equities, commodities, and the market's response to today's actions will likely dictate where the EUR/USD goes from here.<br /><br />The euro was very correlated with the Dow today... as the Dow went up the euro went up and vice versa. Gold and crude seem to just have a mind of their own right now. They are moving for totally different reasons right now, so we have a quite a mixup on our correlations. But, there's always a correlation that can be used a great trade indicator and today the Dow was one of those great indicators.<br /><br />The 1.3730-50 resistance level is still holding solid so far. There is some support at 1.3620 and 1.3580 levels currently. Overall my bias is still bearish on the euro but I'm now opening my mind to the possibilities of buying the euro again should the market cooperate. I will be more cautious with adding shorts at these levels. I'm not yet ruling out another possible downside test below the 1.3500 level. And I'm also not ruling out a test of the 1.3800 level before the market closes on Friday.<br /><br />Tokyo was closed when the rate cut announcement hit the wires so we will need to see how they respond in Asia. My guess would be that the Nikkei enjoys the news. If the Dow shows strength tomorrow is possible the euro moves up right alongside.<br /><br />I am expecting a test of the 1.3600 level during Asia and possibly lower. Current price action is more to the downside right now but we could find some buyers on a 1.3580 level break.<br /><br />Just be extremely smart with your risk and money. Allow this to develop and allow yourself the time to read these new patterns of behavior we're about to see in the short-term. If you're not feeling the market and you don't see your trade, just wait it out. The market will always be here and you don't have to be in every second.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-52858236440097038862008-10-05T14:38:00.000-07:002008-10-05T14:45:16.291-07:00EUR/USD Weekly Outlook 10/5 thru 10/10 2008Financial booms and financial busts are nothing new to United States. The financial crisis of 2008 in many ways is just a repeat performance of the first great economic depression that started in 1837 and did not end until 1843.<br /><br />By the early-1830’s the US was in a height of economic superiority. Foreign capital, especially from Great Britain was pouring into the US. Commodity prices were at staggeringly high levels. Hard currency (gold and silver) was being “avoided” by banks. The money supply rose 200% during that time. The US government was issuing debt and foreign money flows helped vast infrastructure expansion throughout the States.<br /><br />At the very center of this financial boom was – real estate. It wasn’t referred to as real estate in those days, it was known as land speculation and the investment banks were the financiers of this land speculation which contributed to an overall time of strong economic growth, a manufacturing boom, a strong bull market for commodities, small business growth, and western expansion.<br /><br />The whole boom was backed by easy credit and floated on debt. The appetite for gain was fed by the banks as they gave loans to just about anybody with a heartbeat. High leverage, quick access to credit and loose lending standards was the common theme of the day. In a short period of time land values skyrocketed and prices rose accordingly.<br /><br />By 1835 the dance was about to be up. The US Trade Balance was in terrible shape as imports greatly exceeded exports. In the summer 1837 the entire house of cards came crashing down as commodity prices depreciated with fury. The speculative land market crashed. There was a major crop failure. Foreign money flows dried up.<br /><br />The panic began when President Andrew Jackson issued an order that basically called for a return to hard currency. As the panic set in foreign banks and investors demanded immediate payment. US banks refused to make payment and as you can imagine a series of financial failures… bank failures, land foreclosures, and defaults on debt repayments.<br /><br />In 1837 Andrew Jackson plundered the central bank and redistributed the banks funds to smaller regional banks. Meanwhile the US financial system was collapsing and it was spreading to foreign investors who made high risk loans and investments in the US.<br /><br />Unemployment hit 10%. Poverty hit record levels in the US for that time. New York City was hardest hit and the depression caused by the panic of 1837 wiped out over half of those employed in the NYC financial sector. Ultimately the roots of the Civil War can be traced backed to what happened during this period of time that started with the Great Panic of 1837.<br /><br />That’s the “Readers Digest” version of what happened, but what we learn from history is this first great depression in American history was rooted in cheap credit, debt, real estate, and politics. Sound familiar? Do we find any similarities between the depression started in 1837 and the recession started in 2008? I think it’s hard not to see the correlations.<br /><br />I will not go as far as to call our current situation a depression but it’s certainly a recession and can certainly get much worse than what we are experiencing now. We need to keep a few issues in perspective… during the Panic of 1837 and the Great Depression of 1929, how many citizens had the type of access to credit as they had between 1998 and 2008? The other issue is what role did housing play during those two financial disasters?<br /><br />Consumers did have credit during both of those historical depressions but it was not nearly to the degree as in the late 20th-centruy and early 21st-century. The average US consumer that uses credit lines holds nine or more credit cards – there were no such things as credit cards and home equity loans in those days. In our modern financial landscape we have an economy driven by the consumer, by debt and credit, and by the ability to use assets to obtain more credit and leverage.<br /><br />This landscape did not exist during the Great Panic and Great Depression and I believe those issues further complicate the current financial crisis that has fully engulfed the US economy and world economies. In other words, history is being repeated and history is about to be made.<br /><br />All the time I hear talking heads saying how great it is to have Bernanke leading during this crisis because he was a student of the Great Depression. I fail to see the benefit of this because if Bernanke was truly a student of the Great Depression his policies would not continue to intensify the very issues he’s been appointed to fix.<br /><br />It was easy credit and loose monetary policy which contributed to the housing and commodity boom. Based on my study of the bailout bill I see that the Fed and Treasury have a plan to inject liquidity into the money markets, creating more debt, and taking on risk by purchasing assets that cannot be priced by the free market and have no determinable market value.<br /><br />I won’t deny the credit markets have been tight and money has been more “expensive”. The dollar’s “strength” is just a byproduct of a market that is hoarding cash and needing the USD. Supply and demand issues coupled with high USD interest rates on the money markets create the perfect storm for the dollar to stay relentless against some of the majors.<br /><br />So the Treasury is going to unfreeze the credit markets by injecting billions of dollars of cheap money at low rates… and this ultimately solves the problem how? I really do not see how this solves major issues of an inflated money supply, a dismal trade balance and current account, and a plunging jobs market.<br /><br />The past 12-weeks have been a time of massive and dramatic deflation. Between the investment banks deleveraging, crude, gold, and the euro giving up all their 2008 gains… they were all booms that went bust. Just about all asset classes that made historically high gains the past two years have deflated. The biggest boom that went bust has been the housing market.<br /><br />The Fed and Treasury have now used politics to achieve what basically looks like a plan to add some boom back to that busted market. Some of the methods are what caused some of those other asset classes that are now bust to potentially go boom one more time. The market will ultimately decide and only time will tell how this all plays out.<br /><br />If this season of hyper deflation comes to a halt and inflation returns to the global economies you can be sure equities will make a strong recovery. If the Fed, BOJ, ECB, and BOE want to re-inflate their equities markets it will take inflation to do so. The S&P 500, Dow, Nikkei, and the European bourses will not truly begin to recover until the deflation stops and the inflation kicks up again.<br /><br />The trillion+ worth of liquidity that has been and will be pumped into the markets should eventually weigh on inflation and within a year or so inflation levels should be moving back up noticeably. Right know it is very likely we’ll see CPI data come in slightly better than expected in the near-term which will give the central banks justification to maintain loose monetary policy. The market will keep begging the central banks to liquefy them as long as the central banks continue to show a pattern of being at their beck and call.<br /><br />I do not believe we have seen the worst of the worst yet. I have little faith in this bailout to really accomplish much and I believe retailers will suffer this Christmas and the housing market will continue to weaken throughout the rest of the year. Credit has dried up for the American consumer and for many Americans this will mean a total lifestyle adjustment. I see this being a painful process for the economy to go through but one that is necessary. The re-pricing process of markets must not be manipulated or else the next boom will come faster than the last and the bust that follows it will be more painful.<br /><br />Fed and ECB:<br /><br />There is strong talk going around the markets about a Fed cut of 50bps and an ECB cut of 25bps happening at any moment. Like a coordinated rate cut type thing. Fed Funds futures are showing a 100% probability of another 50bps cut before the end of the year. The banks are calling for an ECB cut in November.<br /><br />So what would the EUR/USD do if the Fed and ECB both cut rates at the same time this week? Nobody can say because it’s never been done before. It would be a completely unique event unlike the markets has ever seen. My best educated guesstimate would be that the dollar would likely benefit because it would be more of a shocking move on the ECB’s part and it would send the markets into a panic that the ECB has taken their focus off of their number one mandate of price stability and they are cutting rates to fight the European recession and stimulate growth.<br /><br />I won’t say a surprise rate cut can’t happen as early as this afternoon or at any point this week. Nothing will shock me any more. A move by the Fed or ECB would not surprise me at all whatsoever and I’m ready to do some nasty battle with the market should we get a crazy move on interest rates. All traders should be ready just in case this scenario plays out. I don’t see how a Fed rate cut would benefit anything but this is Bernanke we’re talking about…<br /><br />Fundamentals:<br /><br />The fundamentals this week will be more about the Fed and ECB. Bernanke is speaking and Trichet will be speaking several times this week. Other members of the Fed and ECB are speaking throughout the week and this means the central banks will be using their opportunities to manipulate the markets and to sell whatever ideas they are trying to get the markets to buy this week.<br /><br />As far as fundamental data is concerned, we do get key housing, production, and growth data. We have Pending Home Sales, Trade Balance, Initial Claims, and Crude Inventories. Out of Europe we German Factory Orders and German Industrial Production.<br /><br />If this week’s housing data is bad that will cast doubt on whether the Treasury can turn a profit on the mortgage debt they are purchasing. If credit is truly as seized up as Paulson and Bernanke are saying, this should correlate into USD- homes data. The weak jobs market would also be a contributing factor to a downside print on the data.<br /><br />In my opinion this week’s fundamentals are all about the Fed and ECB and what they have to say to the markets. The fundamental events we need to be most concerned about is a surprise rate cut, a bank failure, or some sort of financial rescue plan out of Europe. I don’t expect great data out of the US or Europe this week and the battle of the worsts will continue to rage on…<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />At this early point in the week buying the euro is not a part of my trade plan. That being said, I’m open to the idea of buying the euro and I believe the euro may actually have a fighting chance if the following factors begin to work in favor of the euro and against the dollar:<br /><br />LIBOR: dollar interest rates have to drop, plain and simple. If the overnight USD lending rates on LIBOR continue to stay elevated and exceed the Fed Funds Target Rate and ECB Key Lending Rate, this shows there is strong demand for USD and this demand will translate into USD strength no matter how bad the USD data is or what commodities are doing.<br /><br />USD Demand: this is tied into LIBOR as well. If the strong appetite and demand for dollars subsides this week and there is a renewed demand for euros, this would help the EUR/USD gain some traction to move up.<br /><br />Commodities: it will be imperative for crude and gold to find support and find buyers in order to put some sort of roadblock in front of the dollar to slow it down. I’m not too worried about gold because a case to buy gold can be made. Crude worries me. I don’t see any reason why we cannot test the $88 level this week if crude stays on this course. Another leg down on crude and the crude may take another leg down with it.<br /><br />Rate Cut: if the Fed did a surprise rate cut of 25bps or more and the ECB held rates steady at 4.25% we should see money flows go back into the euro and out of the dollar just based on Europe offering an ever more attractive rate of return. Now if the ECB does a surprise cut I would expect a test of the 1.3200 level this week.<br /><br />Wall St.: this will be our first test of how Wall St. and the global markets respond to the reality of our new bailout package. Trying to predict how these markets will respond would fry too many brain cells that I can’t afford to lose right now. I am hoping the markets realize what a massive amount of debt will be created the next year and remember how many dollars have been flooding the market and decide to respond accordingly.<br /><br />Europe: Over the weekend the leaders of the top four European economies along with Trichet and the EU Commission met to discuss the financial turmoil in Europe and to begin working towards a coordinated plan to intervene. I’m trying to figure out how they could actually do a joint effort because their entire financial, economic, and banking system runs differently than the US system. Europe doesn’t have a “Treasury” and they don’t have a Hank Paulson, thank God. Based on the ECB mandate and Maastricht Treaty, I cannot see how there is a possibility to bailout the European banking system.<br /><br />The UK is clearly in trouble. Gordon Brown seemed a little stressed at the weekend meeting. I don’t follow UK politics much so maybe he’s always that way, but he was extremely vocal about putting together a plan to not let a single bank fail in Eurozone and that included the UK. I could be wrong but I have a feeling Mr. Brown is not too thrilled about Ireland’s plan to backstop Irish banks with deposit and bond guarantees. If I lived in Europe right now you better believe my money would be pulled from my bank and I’d have a new bank account set up with an Irish bank.<br /><br />If the rest of the European countries follow Ireland’s lead we could see some renewed faith in the European banking system. I don’t see how they can avoid doing what Ireland did. If they don’t I would think most Europeans would start opening bank accounts in Ireland to get that guarantee.<br /><br />How good is an Irish guarantee? I have no idea. I can’t speculate on that but the problem with this guarantee is that it could cause a liquidity issue with the EUR. And what if the Irish are pressured by their old adversaries in Great Britain to repeal the guarantee and they take it back? That means there would be a run on Irish banks and that could start a chain reaction of European bank runs and that would destroy the euro. This stuff just doesn’t get any easier does it?<br /><br />As far as trading goes my plan is to continue shorting the euro on the rises and I will not take risk on buying the euro unless I see some of those factors from above begin working in favor of the euro and against the dollar. The euro will have a fighting chance if calm returns to Europe and the markets go from panic mode to more of a normal mindset. The optimist in me believes at some point the markets will realize what terrible financial and economic shape the US is in and how terrible the fundamentals and the bailouts are for the dollar and they will respond accordingly against the dollar.<br /><br />I’m going into this week expecting to see the same kind of volatility and chaos we’ve seen the past four weeks and I will be pleasantly surprised to see normal price action should the markets decide to calm themselves down and start behaving like adults. I don’t see anything that says order should return this week, so I’ll expect the worst and be happy with the best.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-85439827658878940612008-09-25T21:21:00.000-07:002008-09-25T21:22:08.671-07:00oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens updatesMany traders have been wondering about oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens. For the past six month's he's been making crude calls that have been some of the worst calls made this year. A trader sent me this:<br /><br />Reuters<br />Pickens funds down about $1 billion this year: report<br />Wednesday September 24, 7:14 am ET<br /><br />(Reuters) - Texas oil magnate T. Boone Pickens' hedge funds have lost around $1 billion this year, including $270 million of personal losses, The Wall Street Journal said.<br /><br />One fund focused on energy stocks was down almost 30 percent through August, the paper said adding that a smaller commodity-focused fund is down 84 percent.<br /><br />"It's my toughest run in 10 years," the paper quoted Pickens as saying.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-16247263841688967962008-09-25T21:20:00.000-07:002008-09-25T21:21:20.579-07:00Key levels updatesWe had our largest ever bank failure in U.S. history go down tonight and the story has been completely ignored by the markets... clearly the markets are focused on this bailout fiasco and will be paralyzed and panicked until it's either passed or we find out what the actual details of the plan are. If we go through the trade day this morning and throughout tomorrow without any kind of comfort from DC the markets could be a mess.<br /><br />From the AP wires:<br /><br />NEW YORK - JPMorgan Chase & Co. Inc. came to the rescue of Washington Mutual Inc. Thursday, buying the thrift's banking assets after WaMu was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in the largest failure ever of a U.S. bank. This is the second time in six months that JPMorgan Chase has taken over a major financial institution crippled by bad bets in the mortgage market.<br /><br />The deal will cost JPMorgan Chase $1.9 billion, and the bank said in a statement it planned to write down WaMu's loan portfolio by approximately $31 billion. JPMorgan Chase, which acquired Bear Stearns Cos. last March, also said it would sell $8 billion in common stock to raise its capital position.<br /><br />Here the key levels. Keep in mind when I'm posting these and that any piece of news or rumor could totally change the ballgame.<br /><br />Key downside levels:<br /><br />1.4621<br />1.4602<br />1.4574<br />1.4552<br />1.4528<br /><br />Key upside levels:<br /><br />1.4689<br />1.4721<br />1.4755<br />1.4784<br />1.4815<br /><br />I wanted to add that I'm not buying the USD. I will not short the euro. I've bought the dips today and this evening and will stick to that game plan for now. All of these events happening are very bad for the USD and if the market does as it should do we should expect to see the USD sold-off.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-13239718741570785712008-09-25T21:15:00.000-07:002008-09-25T21:20:35.681-07:00Trade Team UpdateWell it looks like we've ended the day exactly where we started yesterday... the euro's in the same spot, there's no bailout bill passed, the market's continue to panic and speculate, and the erratic moves continue across the board in all markets.<br /><br />As far as the bailout plan goes, it appears as if congress has made some progress on the fundamental aspect of the plan but it seems clear the Republicans are not sold will drag this process out.<br /><br />That may have more to do with the fact Republican voters are pressuring their legislators much more than Democrat voters. This makes sense because of the Republican view on government intervention, but the longer this painful process keeps the markets in limbo, the longer it's going to take to return to order.<br /><br />There's very little concensus on exactly how the bill will affect the markets, especially the EUR/USD because we don't really know the details of the plan and the argument for it being USD+ or USD- can be made. There just happens to be a much better argument on the USD- side when you take the situation as a whole in light of the U.S. fundamental landscape.<br /><br />Speaking of fundamentals, the data continues to prove my view that the fundamentals of the USD are getting worse, not better. New Home Sales fell to their worst levels in 17-years. The average new home price fell in August by 11.8% to $263,900. That was the biggest one-month drop on record. The median home price was down 5.5% to $221,900. These kind of numbers are pointing to a possible negative print on the next GDP...<br /><br />Here's what I would really like to know... with home prices continuing to fall and inventories continuing to rise, how in the world can the Fed and Treasury properly price the mortgage-backed securities they intend on purchasing from the banks?<br /><br />Under the plan as we know it, the market will not get an opportunity to price the mortgage assets, the Fed will do this and then attempt to sell the assets back to the market for a profit. I believe this plan can be done but what I do not understand is how these assets can be valued when the physical asset that is supposed to give the paper its value is declining every 30-days?<br /><br />I just don't believe an asset can be price-fixed by the government nor can the asset be properly valued while the product that is giving that asset its worth or lack thereof is unstable and is on a downward trend.<br /><br />There is no bottom in housing and I see no signs of a bottom. Unless I've missed it or I'm completely off in left field, I just cannot understand how these banks, the government, and potential buyers can value a mortgage security whose worth is based on the health of the housing market and the prices of homes.<br /><br />And that really gets to the bottom of why I do not believe the plan, as we know it, is actually going to solve any problems in the housing market. It's not going to stop foreclosures, it won't stop home prices from plunging and inventories from staying at elevated levels.<br /><br />Credit markets are siezed up and there won't be much relief there. Every morning the central banks are injecting liquidity to ease LIBOR and to keep credit flowing. I'm not convinced this bailout will solve those issues either because in my view, it all still goes back to the housing market issue in the U.S.<br /><br />U.S. and Europe:<br /><br />At this point I don't believe we'll have the bailout bill passed tomorrow. Just a few moments ago this came over the wires:<br /><br />Sen. Shelby says that he does not believe there is an agreement, still opposed to the bailout 9/25/2008 5:00:26 PM<br /><br />The fight will go on as these legislators juggle the political pressures, constituent pressures, and pressures from Wall St. and the other central banks.<br /><br />Europe needs this bailout just as bad as the U.S. does. A few days ago I told you the big European banks came crawling to Paulson to get a piece of the bailout money. Well, now we find out that European banks are leveraged as much as 50 times.<br /><br />There is a catastrophic meltdown waiting to happen within the European banking system. I made this call at least three months ago and I'm sticking to it because I do not believe every single overleveraged European bank can escape unharmed.<br /><br />If Europe doesn't get a piece of this taxpayer money they better have a clever Plan B. Fundamentally, I'm calling the Eurozone in recession. Europe's overall growth situation has been plunging too far to the downside and the challenges moving forward are mounting, especially as the fundamental landscape of the U.S. continues to crumble<br /><br />The Eurozone has contracted for four straight months now. Compared to the U.S., Europe does not have a total disaster in the housing market, but there are certain sectors within EU countries like Ireland and Spain where the housing bubble has burst and they are suffering many of the same affects seen in the U.S. housing market. It's a very bad situation in certain pockets of Europe but gets little media attention because of the mess across the Atlantic.<br /><br />Growth, production, and manufacturing are all falling at there fastest levels in Europe in over five years. GDP may print negative for Q3 and Q4. There's growing pressure on Trichet to cut rates immediately. Add in the high probability of a large European bank failure and you have your recipe for why the euro can't gain any real traction against the dollar.<br /><br />Today's Initial Claims printed well below market expecations and further show the jobs market is in recession and will keep shedding jobs throughout the rest of 2008. I believe we'll end up having twelve straight months of negative growth and the unemployment rate should rise to over 6.2% in the near-term.<br /><br />If the credit and money markets do not accomodate the business and corporate and manufacturing sectors, companies will be forced to layoff employees in order to fight for their lives.<br /><br />Employees will be the first to go in order to cut costs and reduce benefits. There may be wage pressure as employees will seek higher wages to pay for elevated food, fuel, mortgage, and general living costs.<br /><br />If these issues with credit, housing, employment, and the consumer persist even just a few more weeks I think that could spoil this year's holiday spending season. I think we could see anywhere from an 8% to 10% decline in holiday spending in the U.S. A decline of that magnitude would put serious pressure on the economy and the USD.<br /><br />Bottomline is, there's a lot of really bad crap that could go down between now and the end of the year. This is going to make trading very complicated and stressful. I'm not into the doom and gloom stuff, but these are real issues happening in the U.S. and Europe and I think we need to be aware of what's happening.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The only big data we get tomorrow is the Michigan Sentiment which should print USD-. Tomorrow could very well be chaotic. It's the end of the week and the end of the last full week of trading in September. Add the drama with the bailout plan and the panic on Wall St. and we're likely in for more volatility between now and market close.<br /><br />I think the euro took a hit on some profit taking that started around the 1.4730 level. Gold had a rough day and crude didn't do much to support the euro.<br /><br />Even though the euro continues to get rejected on the topside, I still do not feel comfortable buying dollars right now and would rather take my risks buying the euro on the dips. If we can stay supported above the 1.4660 level I believe we can make a run to the 1.4850 level. On the downside it's important that the euro maintain support above the 1.4545 level.<br /><br />Speaking of risks, that's exactly what this market is right now -- a giant risk. Putting a penny into this market under these conditions is basically a gamble... you're playing scratch-off's at the 7-11...<br /><br />Some traders have been mentally abused by this market. I don't really see conditions getting any better or more normal any time soon. Reason being is because the herd still needs to be thinned.<br /><br />The global money-markets are highly overleveraged and their equity has run dry and it's time for a worldwide margin call. The traders that are not overleveraged are the ones learning a priceless lesson that will result in good profits once conditions stabilize.<br /><br />Things will get back to normal. This is not the Great Depression Part II. But I tihnk the markets still need to purge themselves. The unproductive are the ones that get zapped from the market... those banks that were leveraged 40 times and were upside down on their assets couldn't anymore. They were unproductive because their hands were tied, their accounts were tanking, and their ability to produce was taken away from them.<br /><br />So I think in order for markets to find equilibrium the herd will need to be thinned even further. This afternoon a broker sent an email promoting some thing where you could open a mini account with as little as $25.<br /><br />There's nothing wrong with a $25 mini account if that's your risk tolerance, but the advertisement looked desperate to me. I'm sure FX brokers would like to fill the herd right about now...<br /><br />If you're taking the risks of trading this market use smart risk management because things could change at any moment based on a piece of news, a rumor, or an announcement.<br /><br />I will not buy the USD at all. I'm not ruling out downside testing but if I take a trade, I will buy the euro because I think we can go back up to the 1.4800+ level and it's possible to do it tomorrow as long as market conditions are working as they should.<br /><br />I will try to post some key levels later. Be smart going into the weekend. If the bailout bill isn't passed on Friday it could be passed over the weekend and cause chaos on Sunday. Something has to get done and has to get done soon.<br /><br />Expect the unexpected.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-78658157681431978582008-09-24T18:36:00.000-07:002008-09-24T18:40:41.088-07:00Trade Team UpdateAs the debate in DC and the panic on Wall St. rages, all markets have basically come to a grinding halt today. Volumes on global exchanges are near non-existent and the liquidity within the FX market is at severely diminished levels.<br /><br />Bailout:<br /><br />Overall, I do not think today's testimony did much to comfort the legislators who are under pressure from their constituents to tell the Fed and Treasury to screw off while trying to manage the pressure Bernanke and Paulson are putting them under to get this bill passed ASAP.<br /><br />This may just be political grand-standing, but I get the sense that DC lawmakers are not sold on the main facets of the plan and this is why almost every lawmaker asks the same questions:<br /><br />1. Why does it have to be $700 billion?<br />2. Why does the Treasury have to buy toxic assets at prices higher than the true market value?<br />3. What exactly will happen if the Treasury doesn't get authorization to access all $700 billion?<br />4. How will the bailout fix the housing market?<br /><br />Will the bill be passed into law by Friday? No, I don't think so but I believe DC and the Fed are eager to give the markets something they can hold on to and work with in the time being.<br /><br />Bernanke:<br /><br />Bernanke made some very interesting comments today... comments we need to consider as FX traders.<br /><br />Bernanke's claim is that if this bill doesn't get passed that unemployment will rise rapidly, access to credit would completely dry up, growth would come to a standstill, the housing market would suffer, and Wall St. would take billion-dollar hits.<br /><br />Excuse me Ben, but haven't those issues been happening for at least the past 16 months? I remember not too long ago the unemployment rate was comfortably under 5.0%... where are we at now?<br /><br />Other idiotic comments included Bernanke saying this bailout plan would not cause any inflation and that inflation would continue to moderate over the medium-term. I almost fell out of my chair when I heard that. They must have stopped teaching at Princeton that creating debt and printing money, and adding currency to the money-supply is the true cause of inflation...<br /><br />When questioned about how this creation of debt would affect fiscal issues and deficit issues, Bernanke threw Paulson under the bus... his response was that Paulson's Treasury was responsible for handling those deficit issues and it wasn't the Fed's concern.<br /><br />Bernanke did say that the $700 billion bailout would, and I quote, "add difficulty to the economy and fiscal health". Great, so he admitted it after throwing Paulson under the bus and passing the buck his way.<br /><br />What could end up hurting the euro is Bernanke's comments on rates... he basically said current interest rates are artificially low and that they would rise sooner than later... the dollar bulls enjoyed hearing that comment today.<br /><br />Paulson:<br /><br />Paulson failed once again at selling his plan. We did get an interesting confession from Paulson... he said, "A rescue plan was studied over a period of months, hoped it would not become necessary; did encompass small banks as well as larger institutions".<br /><br />A period of months? Wait a minute... just a few short weeks ago Paulson was saying the fundamentals of the U.S. economy are sound and that our banking and financial sector was sound.<br /><br />If that was the truth why would they have started this process months ago while telling the markets everything is A-OK? You can see what kind of crap we're dealing with here... lies, cover-ups, politics, glad-handing, and a whole bunch of BS.<br /><br />The Solution:<br /><br />Many traders have asked me what I would do in this situation and what the solution is. I don't have the brains, the arrogance, or the wisdom to answer that question.<br /><br />But, traders are asking so I'll going to throw an idea out there anyway...<br /><br />I hate to say this, but I do believe government involvement is required. But, only to get the process started and not any more involvement than putting the wheels in motion of handling the toxic assests and selling them back to the market.<br /><br />I think it is wrong for the Treasury to basically write a multi-billion check to Wall St. in exchange for all of their near-worthless assets. Those assets aren't totally worthless and this is where I think the government can come in to act as an "auctioneer" of these assests.<br /><br />Under the current plan, the Fed and Treasury price these assets at what they believe they're worth. This is price-fixing. Price-fixing is not going to solve the issue because these assets need to be valued by the market and not price-fixed by the government.<br /><br />In order for the Treasury to eventually sell these assets back to the market, only the market can decide what they are worth and not the Treasury. The Treasury wants to use the free market to participate in solving the issue, but the free market can't do what free markets do if the assets are pre-priced by the government.<br /><br />That is one of my biggest issues with this plan and why I think it's potentially disasterous to go about it that way. In my view, I think the Treasury can ease the equities and securities markets and comfort the credit markets by stepping in to orchestrate an auction type situation where the free market could value the mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and then the Treasury could facilitate the transaction between the seller and the buyer.<br /><br />The Treasury could then set-up an escrow facility to minimize the risk and give comfort to the markets that the government is in control of the risk and that the free market is in control of deciding prices. The Treasury could collect a small transaction fee or maybe charge 1 point per transaction.<br /><br />That's a very primitive and simple plan. I don't have an economics degree so that idea may not even be workable. But the bottomline is, the Fed and Treasury almost have to be involved, DC has to back the plan, and the taxpayer exposure and debt burden needs to be kept at the absolute rockbottom minimum.<br /><br />If the Treasury creates billion of dollars worth of debt, it's going to hurt securities and both of those factors are USD-. If the Treasury does a bailout job and can do it significantly cheaper than $700 billion, both of those factors are USD+.<br /><br />For every $12 dollars the Treasury gets in taxpayer money, $1 goes to paying debt holders back for buying our securities. Under the Treasury's plan, at least $700 billion worth of new debt will need to be created, the defecit level will be raised to over $11 trillion, and because of economic conditions taxes cannot be raised. Plus, fewer securities will be purchased by foreigners.<br /><br />I think you can see the risks there...<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />Home sales fell 2.2% vs. an expected fall of 1.6%. Home sales are down 10.7% year-over-year. There's a 10.4 month supply of unsold homes which is an improvement but still at recessionary levels.<br /><br />Median home sales are continuing to plunge, falling 9.3% year-over-year. This is the largest plunge in the data's recorded history. The dollar should be paying a price for this data. It didn't today but that doesn't mean it won't in the near future.<br /><br />Tomorrow we get a ton of data... New Home Sales, Initial Claims, Durable Goods, and a bunch of Feds speaking all over the place. Fundamentally I have no real views for tomorrow. I can make an argument for the data to be USD+ or USD-. It may not even matter if the market's are focused on this bailout bill or we have big moves in commodities or a potential breakdown in Treasuries or a surprise event.<br /><br />Basically, there's a crapload of stuff happening right now and these issues and potential events can change the market in the blink of an eye. The trends can change with every passing rumor that market manipulations want to throw out to the wolves.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The longer the euro stays in this range between 1.4600 and 1.4720, the closer we get to making a bigger and more exagerrated move. I'm still very cautious on buying the USD.<br /><br />It's frustrating to see the euro running out of steam up at these levels and there's certainly room to correct more, but what I know about these issues on Wall St, with the USD fundamentals, and issues happening with Treasuries, I see risk on the dollar and I do not want to be caught should the market make a sharp move against the dollar.<br /><br />The euro is not without its own risks. The pressure growing on Trichet to cut rates and the possibility of a large European bank failure make the euro a risky trade. Basically both currencies suck.<br /><br />The euro is still showing bullish signs within the price action but the upside momentum is sporadic and is preventing it from holding onto gains. The lack of decent buying liquidity is also a factor weighing on the euro and no one can predict if and when this buying liquidity will return.<br /><br />Today's low (ask) was on my downside key level of 1.4611 and so far that level is proving to be solid support after several tests at the close of NY and start of Asia.<br /><br />This whole bailout plan is nothing but USD-. Why the market isn't burning the dollar at the stake doesn't make much sense to me but we have to play the hand we're dealt.<br /><br />The 1.4611 level is still very key right now. A sustained break there shold send us down to test 1.4580 and then potentially to the key 1.4550 level. I still have longs at 1.4555 and will hold those open for now.<br /><br />We need to make a sustained break of the 1.4730 and then the 1.4790 levels in order to even think about getting above the 1.4800 level at this point. Maybe now that the testimonies are over the markets can refocus on the the tasks at hand and we'll see more volatility. This is what I'm expecting.<br /><br />As always, use strict risk management and do not overleverage.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-32913383723592631212008-09-23T21:04:00.000-07:002008-09-23T21:05:04.971-07:00buffet updatesThis move by Warren Buffet to invest $5 billion into Goldman Sachs is a total game-changer I think. It already caused a Japanese bank to announce an investment into Goldman.<br /><br />I believe we see Wall St. rally tomorrow based on this news. This announcement by Buffet is huge. He's pulling a JP Morgan move and it's very smart and will certainly be welcomed and applauded by the Fed, Treasury, and the lawmakers in DC.<br /><br />I would expect the Nikkei to rally and Wall St. to rally tomorrow which means volatility in the yen crosses and likely for the euro.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-5437230816192686062008-09-23T20:59:00.000-07:002008-09-23T21:03:35.448-07:00Trade Team Update - - 9/23/08Most all markets were relatively quiet today, a lot quieter than I expected them to be. I guess global market players were busy watching the Fed and Treasury testify in front the lawmakers and were left confused by the political grand-standing we saw in DC.<br /><br />Circus comes to town:<br /><br />I don't really like the circus too much, it's kind of weird to me but I did enjoy today's circus on Capitol Hill. The clown car brought in Bernanke, Paulson, and Cox to testify before a Senate banking panel. Some of the politicians hit the Fed and Treasury hard, I was surprised.<br /><br />Several Senators ripped up the plan and basically called it unworkable. Paulson's clause to give him free reign in decision making was challenged. Most Senators offered an alternative that made much more sense and wouldn't cost nearly $700 billion.<br /><br />The idea is to tackle the issue a piece at a time and work through it sensibly and economically instead of creating a mass amount of debt and a mega burden being placed on the taxpayer at a time when the taxpayer (consumer) has gone into survival-mode.<br /><br />From the wires:<br /><br />Senator Dodd: Draft legislation from Treasury is unacceptable in current form - Insists it remains possible to get lawmakers to pass the plan before the November election if changes are made. 9/23/2008 2:34:05 PM<br /><br />Senator Shelby: Reiterates that Congress will not rubber stamp the Treasury plan, will consider alternatives 9/23/2008 2:34:37 PM<br /><br />As I said, I do not believe this program will get signed this week. The Senators overall displayed very strong concern and showed a real lack of faith in Paulson and Bernanke.<br /><br />Paulson never expected this fight. He's up against the ropes and he's not pushing the plan through as easily as he expected. He has no real answers to offer and keeps repeating the same lines about how the plan must get signed this week in order to save Wall St. from Armeggedon. DC isn't buying it.<br /><br />Paulson did more stuttering and circle-talking than selling. Bernanke was way more comfortable and more forthright with his answers. Bernanke said in very plain terms that the cost could exceed $700 billion and that the plan "might turn a profit, but couldn't be sure". At least he was honest about that...<br /><br />Bernanke also made it clear risk was on the taxpayer. Bernanke painted a different picture of the bailout compared to that of Paulson. Paulson is a spaz and he's not doing a very smart job selling this to the lawmakers.<br /><br />I think Paulson's in for a bigger battle tomorrow. Our favorite politician, Ron Paul, will get a shot at the goon squad and it should be at least entertaining. I really hope Ron hammers the Fed on this plan.<br /><br />We knew there was going to be a political battle and we're seeing it play out in real-time. I do believe the legislation gets passed eventually, but it won't come easy. Americans are bombarding their legislators with calls and emails and telling them not to let the Treasury have the $700 billion. People are really pissed and are pressuring their representatives.<br /><br />Stay tuned...<br /><br />EUR and USD Risks:<br /><br />Today I was talking with a respected trader and wanted to relay our conversation... we were talking about the EUR/USD and the risks on the pair -- equal risks on the euro and the dollar. This is food for thought type stuff, but issues that must be considered as we draw close to the extremely volatilie October through December session.<br /><br />One of the equal risks is that of a rate cut. The Fed and ECB are both in positions to cut rates. The ECB has a slight advantage over the Fed and is not as likely as the Fed to cut, but there's a high enough probability the ECB gets forced to cut in the near-term.<br /><br />How would the market handle a dual Fed and ECB cut? I can't answer that question because it will put us in unchartered waters. And speaking of unchartered waters, the EUR is also at risk because we've yet to have a real fundamental or financial disaster in Europe.<br /><br />The market has not had to deal with a failure or a large downside shock out of the Eurozone. I'm still very much concerned about a larger European bank failure and what that could do to the euro.<br /><br />Paulson has urged the ECB to enact a similar bailout plan for European banks. And as I said yesterday, we know Credite Suisse, UBS, and a few other big European banks have come to the Treasury for a piece of the $700 billion. Does Paulson know a failure is probably going to happen in Europe?<br /><br />Look at this comment that came over the wires today:<br /><br />EU Bank Supervisory: EU financial system exposure to LEH and AIG are somewhat muted 9/23/2008 1:52:18 PM<br /><br />Lets read between the lines... this dude is not saying Europe's financial system isn't exposed to risk from those companies. So, if he's not saying there's no exposure, then he's probably saying there is exposure, especially when you read the last part of his comment about the exposure being "somewhat muted".<br /><br />The question is, we know they are at risk, but what does "somewhat muted" in liquid cash terms?<br /><br />I think any signs of weakness or some big downside surprises in the euro fundamentals, or a shocking bank failure, or a surprise move by the ECB cannot be ruled out and taken off the table. Those are valid risks and just another reason why we cannot establish a clear trend under current market conditions.<br /><br />Bernanke made a comment this afternoon that was related to an issue I've been talking about with bonds. He said something about not knowing how the credit rating agencies would look at the U.S. debt. Two seconds later the euro started moving up and made an 80 pip retracement in under an hour. That's a miniscule example of what the euro would do if a bond downgrade were to happen.<br /><br />Fundamentals:<br /><br />Most of today's euro data was worse than expected and shows further proof that growth is weak in Europe. Today's Home Price Index showed that home prices dropped a dramatic 5.3% y/y in July. We are not close to a bottom. The bailout will not fix these housing issues, it won't stop foreclosures, and it won't create easier access to credit.<br /><br />Bernanke said that if the House doesn't pass the bailout plan the U.S. "might" go into recession. We're already there based on what we've seen in the housing, consumer, and jobs sectors. Forget this "two negative quarters of growth" textbook crap. We're not in the Great Depression, but overall economic condition points to recession. The fundamental landscape is worse now than when the euro was at 1.6000. Europe is not far behind...<br /><br />Fundamentally, we have another big day with the circus show part II. We get German IFO and the Eurozone's Current Account. I don't expect any big downside surprises with tomorrow's euro data.<br /><br />Existing Home Sales is the big piece of data in addition to Crude Inventories. I have mixed view on the home data. Mortgage apps have been stabilizing and based on some reseach I believe we could see a print at expected or even above. I would be more surprised to see a strong downside number.<br /><br />Obviously the big event is on Capitol Hill. I really hope this next group of politicians hammer Bernanke and Paulson on two fundamental issues that don't sit well with me...<br /><br />1. Allowing foreign banks to get a piece of the bailout money.<br />2. Adding credit card debt and student loans to the bailout plan.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The euro retraced just as we expected. Our low today hit my 1.4621 downside key level to the pip and held before moving up after Bernanke's credit comments.<br /><br />I'm not ruling out further downside testing and I have not taken any new longs above the 1.4550 level. I'm short from up at these levels above 1.4720. I mostly sat on the sidelines today and may do the same tomorrow if the markets behave the way they did today.<br /><br />Now is not the time to get impatient about trading. With this bailout plan potentially getting signed into law at any moment, the whole ballgame could change in a matter of seconds. I don't want to get caught up in that kind of risk and chaos.<br /><br />If the Asian markets are quiet we may see some decent ranging during Tokyo. I expect to see the volatility pick up after London and we'll hopefully get a better idea of the markets at that time.<br /><br />1.4660-1.4680 is a key area to watch along with 1.4620 and 1.4580 levels on the downside. There's some decent resistance ahead of the 1.4730 and 1.4775 levels.<br /><br />Today's key levels worked out well so I will post more later on. Be smart with your trades and your risk management.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-7941209179840800882008-09-22T21:18:00.000-07:002008-09-22T21:19:55.030-07:00Key LevelsRight now we're in the expected downside retracement from the 1.4860 level. We do have some more room to drop but there's downside resistance within the real time price action currently.<br /><br />With more normalized market conditions, I'm going to post some key levels to watch. News or panic trading could certainly affect these numbers, but we'll see how they hold up.<br /><br />Key downside levels:<br /><br />1.4752<br />1.4727<br />1.4684<br />1.4666<br />1.4621<br /><br />Key upside levels:<br /><br />1.4838<br />1.4856<br />1.4883<br />1.4918<br />1.4944<br /><br />I don't see any reason we can't make another attempt at sustaining a break of the 1.4800 level sometime before London opens. The 1.4760 level is initial key support. There should also be a battle between the 1.4680 and 1.4700 level should we drop that low.<br /><br />Tomorrow's events in DC could play havoc on the markets, especially if no confidence is instilled in the markets and the panic trading continues.<br /><br />A few traders have asked who I would recommend reading to get other points on the current situation facing the markets.<br /><br />Here's my no-BS list:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.2000wave.com/gateway.asp">John Mauldin</a><br /><br />Mauldin is the only commentator/analyst I read. Where my analysis might be the art of the market, he's got the science. He's a trader too and he does his homework.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.ft.com/home/us">Financial Times</a><br /><br />I prefer to stick to the news that comes over my newsfeed because it is what it is... they don't have copywriters manipulate the data or the delivery of the data.<br /><br />But I like the FT when I want to see how certain events are being reported. I don't trust any newspapers, but FT stands out.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-16288834369994104532008-09-22T21:15:00.000-07:002008-09-22T21:18:15.458-07:00Trade Team Update - - 9/22/08It finally felt like the good old days today... you remember those days when the euro would kill the dollar, gold and crude would go up, the Dow would get hammered, and treasuries would sell-off... now you can see why I've been saying there's a tremendous amount of risk on the USD right now.<br /><br />The EUR/USD moved over 400 points bottom to top today, which is the single biggest gain by the euro against the dollar since 2001. Crude was up over 16% today marking its best gains in history. Gold was up over $35 and the Dow closed down over 370 points.<br /><br />The 10-year yield has been skyrocketing and bond prices are falling dramatically. We are seeing a continuation of panic trading as money flows are pouring out of securities and into the safety of gold.<br /><br />I think everybody is buying gold... the central banks, the conspiracy-theorist goldbugs, hedge funds, daytraders, and institutional players. At one point crude was up $25 today. Today was the last day of the October crude contract and going into the final two hours the bulls ambushed the bears and put on a short squeeze. It was certainly a beautiful move and one unlike we've ever seen.<br /><br />I believe all of this is stemming from the continued uncertainties surrounding the Treasury bailout plan and the political tensions that are beginning to rise. There will be no comfort for the markets and little respect for the USD during this process and while the markets are left in limbo waiting for facts and the actual legislation to be signed into law.<br /><br />One of our senior FXI members posted an article by these people called the London Forex Blog and these folks are already calling the Treasury's plan an "absolute success". This is irresponible commentary in my opinion. I caution all traders to beware of this mindless rhetoric.<br /><br />Obviously smart money doesn't agree with with this London group. If smart felt the same way then gold, crude, and the USD Index would not be sitting where they're at now. I told you yesterday that these issues could send commodities and the USD Index to very dark and scary places... I think we saw some of this today.<br /><br />We do not even have full disclosure of the entire plan, let alone government approval to carry it out. It may not even happen this week. Here's what Senator Reid said:<br /><br />"A rubber stamp of the market rescue plan will not be tolerated, Congress taking situation seriously and necessity for legislation."<br /><br />Senator Shelby says he:<br /><br />"Has concerns that the Treasury rescue plan is not workable or comprehensive; wants to explore alternative solutions. More discussion is needed and not swift passage of the current plan."<br /><br />Neither Democrats or Republicans are 100% sold on the bailout. I may be wrong but I believe Paulson submitted a measly 3-page report outlining the entire plan and basically expecting the Senate and House to pass it in a day or two. I don't believe we'll even see it completed this week.<br /><br />We don't even know the market value of the assets the Treasury is offering to buy from the holders of the toxic MBS's. As I said yesterday, there are a lot of unanswered questions and too much speculation for the markets.<br /><br />The markets have no confidence and this is why we see keep seeing extended and exaggerated moves almost every 24-hour period. An unconfident market is ill-liquid, and the brave money will use what liquidity they have to move their positions to into profits.<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />The euro will be tested tomorrow as we get consumer data out of France and manufacturing and services data out of Germany and the Eurozone. Fundamentally the euro has very weak to the downside. I haven't found a whole lot of evidence to show a strong turnaround the past 30-days, so we may see EUR- data.<br /><br />If this price action momentum sustains into London and we get strong EUR data I expect we move up again.<br /><br />But the real risk is with the testimony of Bernanke and Paulson. Each goon will be testifying before a different government committee and I would expect the exchange between Bernanke, Paulson, and the politicians to get heated at times.<br /><br />These testimonies could cause quite a bit of volatility in our market and within the global markets. I can't stress that this is a high risk event. Any mispeak or confusing rhetoric could send the markets into panic selling again.<br /><br />The other issue is that both Bernanke and Paulson know they're in front of the entire world markets, everyone will be watching and looking for clues. If they want to, they will use the opportunity to manipulate the markets. If the Fed and Treasury have gone back to being uninterested in a strong USD, they will not stop themselves from making commentary they know will weaken the dollar. If they want to prop the dollar up they will do this as well. Be prepared for anything.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />Right now some of the upside momentum has eased but the risk is still clearly on the USD at this point. This move on the has more to do with gold's strength and the lack of confidence market players are feeling.<br /><br />The euro is not suddenly getting strong overnight because the fundamental and financial problems in Europe haven't magically disappeared.<br /><br />I've been waiting months for a big European bank to fail and the failure hasn't materialized. Today we discovered that UBS, Credite Suisse, and a few other big name banks have come to the Treasury with their hand's out, asking for a piece of the bailout cash.<br /><br />It's not fun having to borrow from others, so if these European banks supposedly have no exposure to the same issues Wall St. banks have, why would they go to the Treasury for bailout money?<br /><br />It's been great seeing the euro move up, but my concern remains on the possibility of a European bank failure going down soon. If this were to occur, I think there would be a run on European banks, the images would get broadcast all over the world of the nervous pensioners beating on the doors of their village bank, demanding their savings. That would put a hurting on the euro.<br /><br />As far as the USD is concerned, all of these events on Wall St., the planned bailout, and the mass exodus out of Treasuries is very USD-. If commodities keep running and the market keeps buying crude and gold on dips, the euro should keep moving up towards the 1.5000 level this week. Strong EUR fundamentals will help the upside momentum.<br /><br />After running a solid 400 points I would expect to see some retracement over the next 12-hours at some point. Price action is currently not showing a whole lot of retracement but things can change fast under these market conditions.<br /><br />Be smart with your entries and your risk and be advised tomorrow could be extremely volatile.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-16937589081717875832008-09-21T14:41:00.000-07:002008-09-21T14:46:05.330-07:00EUR/USD Weekly Outlook 9/21 thru 9/26 2008 part 2EUR/USD:<br /><br />This week will start with a lot of questions that are unanswered. In reality, nothing has been fixed. The government has dropped a nuclear bomb on the markets and will take the responsibility for cleaning up the mess and rebuilding. Politics have become part of the equation. Banks will still fail, Wall St. will still panic at times. More jobs will be lost and more turmoil will hit the economy.<br /><br />I don’t like to get emotionally caught up in panic, rumors, and speculation about anything extreme happening, but I do believe the USD fundamental landscape is in worse shape now then when the Fed stopped cutting interest rates. In the near-term I expect the unemployment rate to continue rising, job losses will stay at elevated levels, manufacturing should remain to the downside, and growth should remain non-existent.<br /><br />I don’t care what the GDP numbers tell us, the U.S. economy is not growing and expanding. Those strong growth numbers we saw this summer were the result of the stimulus program. The next round of GDP data in the next quarter should be USD-. There is little access to credit right now. LIBOR is stressed and banks are hesitant to lend.<br /><br />The U.S. economy will only truly begin to recover when the housing market finds a bottom, home values stop falling, inventories drawdown, and potential buyers get easier access to secure credit. I do not see a housing turnaround happening the rest of 2008.<br /><br />The euro made a nice dip early Friday morning but as the market regained some of its sanity, the dollar bulls began covering their short positions and euro bulls returned with strong buying to drive the euro back up towards the 1.4500 resistance level.<br /><br />All markets have been disjointed while this mess on Wall St. plays out. On Friday I finally saw some order in our market and I saw some proper price action behavior. Everything the Fed and Treasury are proposing is USD-. If the market decides to respond the correct way, we should expect to see the USD sold-off across the board.<br /><br />As you know, the market’s not being behaving properly the past few weeks and I believe this is mostly due to the intervention and manipulation we’ve seen from the central banks and the utter lack of liquidity. If the big money movers decide to test the waters and do the right thing by selling the dollar, we will see the EUR/USD make its way back to the 1.5000+ level. A bottom should be in at the 1.3880 level and we should begin making higher lows and testing higher highs – if the markets do the right thing.<br /><br />This doesn’t mean I’m closing from euro shorts from the 1.5800 and 1.5600 levels, but it does mean I’m going to take risk by buying the euro on dips and make an attempt to play the “logical” side.<br /><br />I really don’t have much to say about the EUR/USD until the market opens, and I have adequate time to watch the price action and run my numbers. London will change the ballgame this morning as will NY and Wall St. money flows. So, be advised conditions are likely to be volatile, exaggerated, and we could see erratic price swings as the markets work through this mess.<br /><br />Trading:<br /><br />My view is clear: these events on Wall St., the government’s bailout plan, and the current fundamental health of the U.S. economy are all USD-.<br /><br />On Friday I began scaling out of my USD long positions. My GBP/USD short at 2.1105 was closed at 1.8304 on Friday. All other dollar long positions in other pairs were closed for profits. I will not close my euro shorts from 1.5600 and 1.5800, they will remain open but I may begin closing euro shorts from 1.4600 and lower.<br /><br />If you’re still holding short EUR/USD at 1.6010 and higher, you may want to consider taking some profits… maybe close a portion of the trade and lock in that tremendous ROI. I know some of you are still patiently holding, now you may be the time to reward your patience.<br /><br />I will take risk on the euro long side. Last Thursday I gave strong warning against USD long positions on any of the majors. This warning remains even though we could see the euro test the 1.4300 level or lower. I believe there is now more risk on the dollar than on the euro even though the euro’s fundamentals remain weak.<br /><br />I’m not really a yen trader, but watch out for those pairs. As these issues on Wall St. and on all global markets persist, the yen crosses will keep going schizo and the volatility will remain heightened. Trading any of the yen pairs is well beyond the realm of my risk tolerance and I urge strong caution there.<br /><br />The best thing to do is keep a level head and not go into panic mode. It’s not the end of the world and these markets will eventually work themselves out no matter what. Most of you should not even be trading under these conditions. The risks are extremely high. What should may not always be what is.<br /><br />I do not think the entire global financial system is collapsing and I do believe the markets will work toward equilibrium in the weeks ahead. None of this has come unexpectedly and we knew it would be ugly. Markets will be disjointed, volatile, and ill-liquid for at least the short-term.<br /><br />I expect trading conditions this week to remain extremely difficult. As I said, I do not believe anything has really been fixed, but we’ve just seen a lot of political maneuvering and manipulation in order to calm the irrational and panicked market participants.<br /><br />Expect the guerilla warfare conditions to continue this week. The games between the banks and brokers and retail traders will surely stay at criminal levels. Nothing can be done about this. Some brokers are worse than others, but they will all be playing games.<br /><br />The fields are ripe to run stops this week… on both sides of the EUR/USD. As the central banks calm the markets I believe we’ll see more players come back, big time and smalltime players alike. Some risk will get put back on the table and we should see some higher liquidity levels.<br /><br />Trading won’t be easy but it’s not impossible to pullout profits from this market. Many here have been doing it week in and week out despite the chaotic conditions. Traders here have reported ROI of 5% or more per week. Not only are those traders beating Wall St., they are beating impossible odds.<br /><br />Be smart tonight and this week. Use strict risk and money management and do not overleverge. If you can be disciplined to do just that much, you will not only survive this market, you will come out of this mess better than when you went into it.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-78473489504918963622008-09-21T14:33:00.000-07:002008-09-21T14:38:40.237-07:00EUR/USD Weekly Outlook 9/21 thru 9/26 2008 part 1USD:<br /><br />Is the great dollar bull run of 2008 over? Possibly, but in my view, it never existed and was mostly smoke and mirrors. The dollar’s unstoppable run the past ten weeks, in my opinion, was manufactured by the Fed and ECB. Here’s why I believe this to be true.<br /><br />First, look at the timing of the dollar’s rise. It happened while market participants were on summer holiday and the markets were completely ill-liquid. The field was ripe for harvest and the odds were in the Fed and ECB’s favor to manipulate the dollar during this timeframe. While Europe was on a seven-week holiday and the rest of the financial markets were focused on Wall St., the Fed and ECB used verbal and physical intervention to push the USD Index up and drop commodities. In fact the ECB started the gold sell-off which helped fuel the dollar’s run.<br /><br />Do you remember our good friend Jean-Claude Juncker from the ECB? Do you remember how he shocked the markets three weeks ago by saying “the euro is overvalued in real terms”? He said that two times and both times he used that verbal intervention it pushed the EUR/USD down several hundred points. I do not believe it was pure coincidence he made those comments right before the U.S. financial markets melted down to the point they did last week.<br /><br />The Fed and ECB knew all along what Wall St. would come to. Both central banks knew the government would have to take the entire U.S. financial system into receivership. And they knew what this was going to do to the dollar – destroy it. I’m not ruling out the possibility of more manipulation because this mess could ultimately send the USD Index and gold to places that are very dark and scary.<br /><br />At this point we do not have full disclosure on the Fed and Treasury’s plan to save the financial system and to bailout Wall St., and to stop the housing market from collapsing. Basically, the U.S. government is going to buy bad mortgage assets, take on the risk, fund the programs with taxpayer money, and overtime re-price and resell these almost worthless assets to banks and financial institutions for a higher premium than what they are worth now.<br /><br />For example, if Lehman Brother’s is only able to get $0.20 on the dollar for an asset, the Fed may be able to get $0.40 on the dollar. Then the asset is in the hands of another creditor, the original debt holder is off the hook for the worthless paper, the Fed makes a small profit, and everybody’s happy. That’s how it’s supposed to work, but the fact government is handling this delicate operation means it could be a disaster.<br /><br />The Treasury says the plan will cost $700 billion and last a minimum of two years. The Treasury is raising the national debt ceiling to $11.3 trillion from its current level of $10.6 trillion. I put the cost at $1 trillion minimum. This is $1 trillion we don’t have and $1 trillion that will be created out of thin air. Debt must be created by the Treasury and sold to foreign investors. I’m not convinced that will happen right now, but more on that later.<br /><br />We joke about the Treasury’s “printing presses”. It’s not a joke anymore because the presses will run. Bernanke and Paulson will have to inflate the money supply. You know what that means… inflation. That is the true definition of inflation – printing money – adding money to the economic system. We won’t really know how much money the Treasury prints because we don’t get M3 from the Fed.<br /><br />But it makes sense now that we saw a season of dramatic deflation because the central banks knew we were headed into a prolonged period of inflation caused by flooding the money supply with a worthless currency. And that is the exact reason why I say the dollar’s bull run could be over.<br /><br />Only further manipulation can prop the dollar up now. This is economics 101. This is the epitome of what Austrian economics teaches us. The Fed and Treasury’s programs and the money it’s going to take to run them are inflationary and suck the value right out of the dollar.<br /><br />The dollar should be slaughtered. Gold should steadily rise. Foreign investment in U.S. debt instruments should continue to decline. More banks should fail. More panic should ensue in the weeks to come. And, in a perfect world, the dollar should be sold-off. Will it happen the way it “should”? Only the markets can decide the fate of the dollar… and if the dollar does get heavily sold-off I would expect to see more intervention.<br /><br />Politics:<br /><br />Politics are now coming into play and that’s a very bad thing. We are going to see some political battles over this plan to completely bailout the entire U.S. financial sector. Republicans and Democrats will battle and each party will use this disaster for their own political advantage.<br /><br />The involvement of politicians means it will cost the taxpayers more money, it will be mismanaged, and it may even decide who the next president is. Both McCain and Obama are already using the issue to gain political leverage.<br /><br />Last Thursday McCain said he would have fired the chairman of the SEC and on Friday he said he would not bailout Wall St. McCain better be sure all of his constituents and supporters and political allies feel the same way he does before he keeps running his mouth…<br /><br />There are only two politicians in DC that I trust to do the right thing – Ron Paul and Jim Bunning. Paul and Bunning are the only two that understand free market capitalism and the problems with fiat currencies, inflated money supplies, and big government. They will be ignored during this process even though they are the only two voices of reason in DC.<br /><br />Both Obama and McCain will fail miserably at their jobs as it relates to the economy and fixing the financial system. It’s a losing situation for both candidates. McCain knows as much about economics as I know about multivariable calculus (I never made it past algebra 1.2). McCain believes interest rates should be at 0.00%. Enough said.<br /><br />I’m not real clear on what Obama thinks about the situation or what his plans are to fix it if he’s elected because he never says anything that makes sense. He talks in circles but you never get a definitive answer on anything. What I do know about Obama doesn’t give me any comfort that he has a clue.<br /><br />McCain has a few big name corporate CEO’s and business people are aligned with him, but that doesn’t mean much to me. Warren Buffet is aligned with Obama… that doesn’t mean much to me either. No matter what, we’re in for a painful political war that will drag on while Wall St. continues to go from euphoric to schizophrenic and back again.<br /><br />Bonds:<br /><br />For weeks I’ve been talking about irregularities with U.S. bonds. I’m getting extremely concerned about bonds and it gives me just another reason to believe the dollar’s run could be over. When Paulson announced his bailout plan at the end of last week, bond yields shot up, prices dropped, and money flows poured back into equities.<br /><br />This is a problem. The bailout plan is going to need heavy money flows going into bonds and not necessarily into stocks. We know that in July foreign buyers of bonds dried up to almost nothing. This is terribly USD-.<br /><br />There are some very smart bond traders and very smart strategists in the bond market. I have to think they see what I see, which is a potential collapse of certain U.S. bonds and or the possible default by the Treasury.<br /><br />Right before the big bailout plan was unveiled, panic-money poured into the 3-month T-Bill driving the yield to almost negative. I’ve never seen anything like that, it was shocking. But now that Wall St. is saved, money is going into equities and out of securities. The other issue is that I think the foreign view on the U.S. will be downgraded while this mess in the financial sector gets political and continues to drag on.<br /><br />The U.S. government relies on billions of dollars of foreign money to buy debt in order to feed the deficit and keep the lights on in DC. If we see panic in the bond market or a collapse or the Treasury defaults, the dollar is going to take a whipping unlike anything we’ve ever seen.<br /><br />As a currency trader I usually only focus on bond yields but now the prices matter because if the yields keep flying up that means the prices are dropping. If the prices collapse, we have issues. If we see a panic collapse with treasuries or treasuries get downgraded or the Treasury defaults on debt re-payments there will be a violent dollar sell-off. The central banks could try to intervene against that but the point to understand is any of those events would be highly USD-.<br /><br />Fundamentals:<br /><br />The data on the books this week is only going to serve to further complicate the issues were dealing with right now. We get a lot of growth data out of Europe. The bulk of this week’s fundamentals will come out of the U.S. as we get key housing, consumer, growth, and inflation data. Overall, I’m not expecting to see strong USD+ data this week.<br /><br />Let’s not forget the fundamental landscape is not in great shape either. We’re still going to have a battle of to see whose data is worse, the USD or the EUR. But more important than this week’s data are the numerous speeches we get from the Fed and ECB this week.<br /><br />The markets will be watching and listening for any clue, sign, or signal from the Fed and ECB on future monetary policy. Many believe the ECB will be forced to cut rates by at least 50bps before 2008 is over. I expect this speculation to ramp up as the pressure is put on the central banks to provide cheap money and easier access to credit.<br /><br />We hear from Trichet, Bernanke, and Paulson this week. We also hear from several ECB’s plus we get Fed speeches from Fisher, Plosser, Warsh, Bullard, Lacker, and Evans. Bernanke and Paulson will be on Capitol Hill testifying.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-52408366993440155852008-09-18T18:32:00.001-07:002008-09-18T18:38:10.007-07:00updatesOnce again the Fed and Treasury is propping up the dollar as news starts to emerge about this new plan to take on all the billions of dollars worth of bad assets from financial institutions.<br /><br />The dollar may continue to gain on this news and especially as details are released. But take note, when the government used this plan in the late 1980's to bailout the Savings and Loans the U.S. taxpayers lost almost $80 billion on that deal...<br /><br />Equities should rally on this news and the euro, gold, and crude may find themselves back under pressure.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-88025881803622509122008-09-18T18:32:00.000-07:002008-09-18T18:36:03.160-07:00Trade Team UpdateThe chaos and carnage continues... market events were happening so quickly today that if you blinked you probably missed the latest development. What we're dealing with is a global-wide lack of liquidity and pure panic seizing market participants.<br /><br />In today's update I'm going to give you my best "hillbilly economist" perspective on today's events... I never went to school for finance or economics, I'm a very simple person so the best I can offer is a simple view on these markets.<br /><br />Wall St.:<br /><br />The Dow closed up over 400 points today. The Dow literally went on a 400 point run when a rumor hit the markets right before Wall St. closed shop for the day.<br /><br />I call it a rumor because that's exactly what this is, a rumor, it's not been verified by the Fed or Treasury. The rumor is about a new government bailout program where either the Fed or Treasury sets up a depository for the banks and financial institutions to dump their bad mortgage debt, their overleveraged mortgage backed securities (MBS), and these institutions can concievably take those bad debts off their books and put them on the government's balance sheet for an extended period of time.<br /><br />This is a disasterous plan in my view. This bailout puts the taxpayer at risk, it adds default risk to the government's balance sheet, it adds downside pressure to the deficit, and relieves the overleveraged lenders of their responsibilities to clean up the mess they got into. We're talking about hundreds of billions of dollars of bad overleveraged debt going under the obligation of the U.S. taxpayer.<br /><br />But Wall St. loved it... they bought the rumor, but they may have to sell the fact. I think there will be a few lawmakers that are going to take the Fed and Treasury to task on this plan, at least I'm hoping they do because this is one of the worst ideas I've heard yet.<br /><br />If you trade the yen pairs be on guard for how the Asian equities markets react this evening. We could see heightened volatility within the yen crosses tonight and early tomorrow morning.<br /><br />Central Bank Manipulations:<br /><br />Early this morning the Fed, ECB, BOE, SNB, BOJ, and BOC tag-teamed to pump $180 billion into the markets. Not $180 billion of their own respective currencies but $180 billion USD.<br /><br />Here's how this works... Europe, UK, Switzerland, Japan, and Canada take USD from the Fed and in return give the Fed their own currencies. Then, those central banks auction off the USD in their own money markets.<br /><br />I've been telling you for over a week now that there's a vicious demand for the dollar and I'm not seeing any pullback on this ferocious demand for U.S. dollars. Today's tag-team liquidity injection prove this to be true.<br /><br />Global banks are hoarding cash... like stuffing it under the mattress kind of thing. Banks are not lending. When banks don't lend interest rates go up. LIBOR goes up and these high USD interest rates and strong demand for the dollar keeps the EUR/USD stronger to the downside.<br /><br />Now as soon as news hit the wires of this liquidity injection the dollar was sold-off. This is a great sign in my view. Not only did the $180 billion bring down the USD interest rates it caused a strong euro rally. Maybe the markets are finally getting the idea...<br /><br />All of this is nothing but USD- no matter how you slice it. As I explained yesterday, the Treasury creates a product to sell -- this product is called debt -- what gives this product re-sale value is the full faith and gaurantee of the U.S. government to honor the debt obligation with points paid.<br /><br />By selling debt products the Treasury can print money. The Fed gets their money from the Treasury. The NY Fed coordinates with the Treasury to ship varying amounts of dollars to the regional Fed banks who then distribute it in their district.<br /><br />The other aspect is what we've seen this week where the Treasury will "manufacture" billions of dollars worth of "products" to sell to central banks and lending institutions. The lenders get "risk free" assets to put on their books and the Treasury creates money it can't afford to pay back with interest.<br /><br />Finally, the other aspect is that the Treasury will accept collateral from banks to lend money to and then after a specified period of time the cash is returned to the Treasury with points paid.<br /><br />No matter how you slice it, it's a flawed system and it's all USD-, and I really hope that market participants realize how much these actions by the Fed and Treasury are devaluing the dollar over the long-term.<br /><br />Commodities:<br /><br />Gold certainly enjoyed the news as it went on a near unstoppable run above my key $910 level. The commodity was unable to hang on to gains and as soon as the last batch of bailout news hit the wires, gold sold-off hard.<br /><br />Crude made a cameo appearance above the $100 level but was sold-off and has been hovering around the $98 level. I believe as long as we stay above the $88 level crude can make a few more attempts at sustaining a break above the $100 level.<br /><br />There's still not a very strong correlation between the EUR/USD and commodities right now. It's there a bit, but not strong during normal market conditions. I believe there may be a gold contract expiring tomorrow.Nonetheless keep an eye on gold and crude tomorrow.<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />Today's jobless claims were crap and very USD-. The only event on the books tomorrow is German PPI which should print showing a decline in producer inflation.<br /><br />As far as the euro goes, I still see bullish signs within the price action. We did have another choppy day but it was somewhat more orderly today than it was yesterday, which is another good sign.<br /><br />At this point I have to stay very cautious of the dollar. I don't like these events that are happening and each one are strongly USD-. The problem is that nobody is buying euros. I don't see a strong dollar right now like I did even just last week.<br /><br />I see the market not having an appetite for euros and I see a lot of panic trading. Making problems worse is the complete lack of liquidity in the market. This is the worst I've ever seen and it makes finding a trend and picking levels almost impossible.<br /><br />Anybody who is banking daily profits and not taking losses is beating all odds and should be commended.<br /><br />The bullish signs of the euro continue to show in the price action and it's been good see crude and gold make upside gains. I don't trust anything right now so that means my trading is limited and conservative.<br /><br />If you are shorting the euro or buying the dollar on any other pair I would use good risk and money management. Things are happening by the minute in these markets and the price swings should be expected to continue.<br /><br />Going back to this liquidity injection issue, I'm expecting to see another tag-team event go down during London or early NY tomorrow morning. Watch those LIBOR rates as they will give you great clues. LIBOR has been a tremendous indicator for me this week while the money markets are in turmoil.<br /><br />I still have the 1.4500 level as a resistance area. 1.4350 level is one to watch for signs of the euro deciding to make an extended move in either direction. 1.4200 level should hold decent support under current market conditions.<br /><br />Be smart with your trades and do not overleverage.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-3334593537174007112008-09-17T18:30:00.001-07:002008-09-17T18:37:51.537-07:00Bond TroubleI'm watching the bond market extremely closely now and I see that the U.S. 3-month T-bill is trading with a yield of 0.0456%. The 3-month T-bill is about to collapse and the 6-month T-bill is right behind it.<br /><br />If the yields on the major bonds like the 2-year, 10-year, and 30-year continue to plunge we could be looking at an emergency Fed rate cut situation happening.<br /><br />As I said earlier, do not get into new dollar long positions. Stay out of the dollar. I am not letting EUR/USD shorts that are in profit go into drawdown, I have +1'd all profitible shorts that are in this market range.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-85478368000836068692008-09-17T18:30:00.000-07:002008-09-17T18:36:43.773-07:00Trade Team UpdateJust when you think you've seen it all... another historic day in the markets as gold closed up over $90 marking a single-day gain of 11%. This is an unprecendted move unlike the markes have ever seen.<br /><br />What happened to gold? That's the big question on trader's minds as we close out the day... in my view that's a move rooted in pure panic buying. It's not even a fundamental move, it's a strong emotional reaction to what's happening in the U.S. financial system.<br /><br />But there was one piece of news that hit the wires this morning that gave gold the fuel it needed to run all the way up to the $865+ level. And this piece of news ties directly into something I talked about a few weeks ago. From Standard and Poor's securities rating division came these comments:<br /><br />Pressure is building on the AAA US sovereign rating, notes the ratings remain stable - says the AIG bailout weakens the US fiscal profile, the AAA rating must be earned, its not guaranteed<br /><br />Pressure building on the 2-year, 10-year, and 30-year Treasury debt? Ratings not guaranteed? I called this issue in the 8/24/08 EUR/USD weekly outlook:<br /><br />I believe it’s possible the Treasury might have to tell debt holders that the Treasury can’t pay and may have to offer some kind of buyout for pennies on the dollar. When I say debt holders I’m specifically referring to buyers of U.S. debt – bonds. I’m talking U.S. government issued bonds.<br /><br />One of the reasons bonds are called securities is because they are considered “no risk”. The U.S. government has never once defaulted on paying a debt holder. If budget deficit or monetary reasons somehow for some reason prevent the Treasury from meeting their debt payment obligations the effect on the dollar would be disastrous and could even start a military conflict. I only give this less than a 10% probability of ever happening, but it’s something I’ve thought of anyway.<br /><br />It was a crazy call at the time but now that we have the S&P ratings agency telling the markets pressure is mounting on the spectacular AAA rating on U.S. debt was a real wake-up call to the markets.<br /><br />Nobody listens to me but they listen to players like S&P and when S&P comes out with comments like that it's only natural to see "safe-haven" buying of gold. It has to be that way.<br /><br />Let me be clear -- if U.S. debt gets downgraded it's very likely we'll see the single biggest move ever against the dollar. That being said, if the U.S. either defaults on debt or has to enact some kind of deferred payment plan not only will the USD die we could be looking at an international incident leading to a world war. No, I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I don't get into that crap but I'm telling you what's going to happen should this issue with U.S. treasuries keep unfolding in a negative way.<br /><br />A trader commented today that I "have no idea about anything". Well, I called the post-Labor Day meltdown of the financial system and referenced this issue with bonds. So, keep throwing hate and I'll keep working harder to predict and forecast moves in these markets that nobody else will make or even thinks of.<br /><br />Wall St.:<br /><br />The Dow was massacred today losing another 450 points. Wall St. is an absolute mess. AIG stockholders are well on their way to seeing their stock zeroed out. Morgan Stanley was on the hot seat today, selling off hard. You might recall just a few short days ago Morgan was at the bargaining table to supposedly help bail-out Lehman Brothers.<br /><br />As of this afternoon Wachovia was putting together a bail-out plan to save Morgan Stanely. This is madness. And this mess on Wall St. is not going away anytime soon. This proves the Fed and Treasury are putting on another smoke and mirrors act and using big household Wall St. names as props to bail-out our entire financial system.<br /><br />The Fed nationalised AIG and the U.S. taxpayers are on the hook for at least $85 billion. Oh, and guess what, the U.S. taxpayers now own the popular English football team Manchester United! I love it... how's that for some irony! Go Chelsea!<br /><br />Some rough numbers show the Fed has put out over half a trillion dollars of taxpayer money in Wall St. bail-outs starting with Bear Stearns all the way to where we're at today. I believe that number is higher because I know the Fed makes backroom deals with these firms to sweeten the pot.<br /><br />The Fed is in trouble and they are running out of cash in their reserves. The Fed's reserved are so low that the Treasury had to create a $40 billion debt auction this afternoon. Basically, the Treasury is going to create $40 billion worth of debt out of thin air and then sell this debt.<br /><br />The proceeds from the sale of magical debt will be given to the Fed. It's amazing how the central bank can avoid securing credit and liquid cash like normal people do. Now do you see why the Fed is unconstitutional and will be the ultimate financial demise of America?<br /><br />These debt auctions will get more frequent and will get even bigger. Watch.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />The crazy thing is that all these events and issues are terribly USD-. The Wall St. bail-outs, the printing of money, the creation of debt, the pullback in foreign investment, the expanding Trade Balance and Current Account, the sharp decline in growth, the increase in unemployment... all USD-.<br /><br />Our financial and economic condition is worse now then when the Fed first started cutting interest rates. It's worse now then when they stopped cutting interest rates and started getting hawkish about inflation.<br /><br />Right now inflation is not the top economic priority as it was a few months ago. We're in a period of massive delfation with commodities unwinding and the dollar rocketing up the USD Index.<br /><br />Inflation is an issue but price pressures have dropped dramatically since July. The real inflation issue is going to arise in a few months because real is the creation of money without the backing gold. Real inflation is created when the Treasury runs the printing presses and adds physical currency to the money supply through the creation of credit and debt. It's a flawed system and now the system is sick and has no one but itself to cure the illness.<br /><br />The euro made strong gains today. With what's happening in the bond market, on Wall St., and with our continually weakening fundamentals I must urge strong caution against holding USD long positions.<br /><br />It's a fact the dollar has been on a historic run, especially against the euro. The dollar has just beat the crap out of the euro and it's showing few signs of letting up.<br /><br />In a "normal" world the EUR/USD should be above the 1.5000 level right now based on what's happening within the financial and banking system in America. A few weeks ago we spoke about the Fed needing the dollar to be strong knowing a meltdown was on the way.<br /><br />So for me and my trading, I'm going to do whatever I can to keep my positive open euro shorts from going into drawdown. If the market decides to come back to earth and realize what a mess the Fed is making and that the USD printing pressures are working 24/7, market players could send the euro up rapidly. You don't want to be caught in a move like that.<br /><br />The market correlated variables are in shambles. All correlated markets have broken down and are operating with minds of their own. Today the euro was slightly correlated with crude and the Dow, and then it finally tried to catch up with gold. Tomorrow it could be a different story.<br /><br />Tomorrow we get the Philly Fed Index and Initial Claims. I don't expect to see USD+ data from either one of those. It may not even matter. We could have a new catastrophe to deal with in the markets tomorrow and the fundamentals may not even matter.<br /><br />I literally cannot count on or trust anything right now in these market conditions and season of extreme volatility and risk. The only thing that can be trusted is our own instincts and trying to keep an advantage on the markets.<br /><br />The euro made a nice run, but I don't exactly trust it yet. Today's move had a lot to do with profit-taking on euro longs. That run up from the 1.4100 level to the 1.4300 level showed some big profit-taking within the price action. But there is serious risk with adding new shorts because of the financial turmoil.<br /><br />No trader can trade on "hope". That's not part of the equation, but it is my hope that the market finally realizes what a mess the dollar is in and the powers that are proping up the dollar can no longer hold the euro back from crushing it. I don't think the manipulation can go on forever.<br /><br />If you're trading, use strong risk and money management with your trades. We've seen wild moves this week and they could get even wilder before the week's closed out.<br /><br />Be smart.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3352278293070967221.post-27867794532976981782008-09-16T19:41:00.000-07:002008-09-16T19:44:38.477-07:00Trade Team UpdateAnother day, another bail-out... we might as well cover the latest news first... the biggest potential failure of all, AIG, was bailed-out this evening by none other than our good friend Hank Paulson. And just a reminder, Paulson said he wouldn't be putting the taxpayers at risk by bailing out AIG.<br /><br />This bail-out won't be referred to as a bail-out but don't be fooled. The government is brokering an $85 billion loan to keep AIG afloat and they are taking control of 80% of the firm.<br /><br />There's not a private sector firm on earth that has the money to save AIG. All of the details are not out yet, so I don't have much to say, but I believe the shareholders are going to get screwed on this bail-out and of course the taxpayers are at risk and under added burden.<br /><br />Fed:<br /><br />As you know by now the Fed held rates at 2.00%. That was expected by us here. We put out the no-cut call on Sunday and never flip-flopped even when Fed Funds Futures showed a 100% probability of a cut and just about every talking head was calling a 50bps cut.<br /><br />The idea that the Fed could cut rates was driven by pure emotional reactions to the volatility of the markets and the meltdowns we had on Wall St. yesterday. Now is not the time to get caught up in these speculations and predictions.<br /><br />Everyone voted to hold rates steady. That's what saved the euro from a massive sell-off. If the hawk Fisher had voted for a cut again I think the market would have hammered the euro, but all voters were on the same page.<br /><br />The FOMC statement was tempered with dovish and hawkish rhetoric. The Fed was hawkish on inflation but as we can all see, there's a major round of deflation happening in the real-time as commodities continue to collapse.<br /><br />The Fed was dovish on growth, as expected. There were no real surprises in the FOMC statement and Bernanke didn't give the market any special reason to buy up dollars.<br /><br />I'm sticking to the call that the Fed is going to hold rates steady through the rest of the year unless we get some major catastrophe on Wall St. Speaking Wall St., they weren't happy with Bernanke's decision but they'll get over it. The fact that the Fed held rates has no real negative impact on Wall St.<br /><br />TIC:<br /><br />One of the pieces of the puzzle came together today. The data that shows foreign money flows into Treasury debt instruments during the month of July was only $6.1 billion vs. $55.0 billion expected. That's some of the most abysmal data I've ever seen. I thought it was a typo when it came over the wires. And the total TIC Flows were -$74.8 billion vs. $40.0 billion expected.<br /><br />This is one of the explanations for why the USD has had to rapidly appreciate. Starting when? Mid-July. I don't think that's a coincidence at all. Without foreign investors funding the deficit and the U.S. government through buying bonds, the dollar would have to be strengthened in order to cover that major hit.<br /><br />Now things make a whole lot more sense to me after finally getting the July TIC data. Bottomline is, that data is terribly USD- and I'm shocked the market hasn't responded, but I can understand why with everything else melting down.<br /><br />It would be cool if the market could take a look at this TIC data and understand what a vulnerable spot this puts the USD in.<br /><br />Tomorrow:<br /><br />Yes the madness will continue tomorrow as we get Housing Starts, Building Permits, and Crude Inventories. I have found some signs within my research that indicate we could see a USD+ print on the homes data.<br /><br />Crude Inventories is anybody's guess. Over 92% of all energy production in the Gulf is shutdown right now. Ten platforms are offline. And the last I heard, there was still at least one oil platform adrift and unaccounted for. Be advised this data should cause added volatility.<br /><br />The fundamentals may not be the only factors the market is responding to tomorrow, so be prepared for that.<br /><br />EUR/USD:<br /><br />If you're even trading the pair, you're definately taking some big risks. There are no real established price patterns, trends, or strong support and resistance zones being established.<br /><br />The euro was quickly rejected out below the 1.4100 level but I'm not calling that a clear sign of support. The price action is erratic and not at all behaving the proper way. This morning it took a 50 pip nosedive in under five seconds. Never saw that before.<br /><br />As for my trading I'm just taking quick hits on the market and attempting to limit market exposure under these extreme trading conditions. I don't need to be sidelined but the risk management is imperative.<br /><br />All market correlations have gone out the window. Crude continues to plunge and is showing no signs of stopping. I still believe we can see the $88 level or lower on crude. Gold has been doing well and lending support to the euro. If gold's support gives way and corrects it would likely bring the euro down with it.<br /><br />Wall St. will continue to weigh heavy on our market and on the EUR/USD. The Dow finished the day up 140 points but this doesn't mean it will have a strong day tomorrow. We still have to get all the details from the Fed on AIG. It could be a wild ride. The bulls may get some control playing off this AIG news... we'll find out tomororw.<br /><br />The euro has shown some bullish signs the past few hours but this could easily change once we get into later Tokyo and then when London enters the market.<br /><br />If you're trading, be smart with your trades and manage your risk with precision. Do not overleverage or get greedy.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0