GBR Market Wrap: Halftime Reports and Happy Fourth!

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In this Week’s Issue: July 1, 2011

Weekly Snapshot
• Euro area seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate was 9.9% in May (Eurostat)
• Purchasing managers’ indexes in Asia and Europe at multi-month lows (Reuters)
• Japan’s Tankan survey shows sentiment worsened sharply after quake (WSJ)
• U.S. corn futures have suffered their steepest fall in 15 years (FT)
• The Fed ended its $600 billion bond-buying program (QE2) on June 30th (Reuters)
• The European Central Bank signaled rate hikes as inflation stays high (Reuters)
• Euro area inflation is estimated at 2.7% in June 2011 (Eurostat)
• BofA to pay $8.5bn to settle claims over mortgage-backed securities (WSJ)
• Greece passed an unpopular austerity plan critical to avoiding a debt default (Reuters)
• Christine Lagarde was named the new head of the International Monetary Fund (AP)

Market Barometers

stock market 7-1-11FX chart 7-1-11


Halftime Reports
Time flies they say.  Yes, the first half of 2011 is already over.  This calls for a mini-review of how the markets faired during the first six months of this year.  Please find the charts below indicating the performance of the major stock markets as well as the returns of the major currencies and commodities. It has been an interesting and choppy first half so far.  The curious investor’s mind is waiting to see what’s next…

StocksH13FXH13

Recommended Read/Audio
Here’s an interesting take on the inflation debate. Please consider: Recalculating the Consumer Price Index by David Gura.

Listen to this podcast.

Best wishes for a wonderful 4th of July week-end!


Clemens Kownatzki, MBA is an adjunct professor of financial risk management at the Graziadio School of Business and Management, as well as the founder and CEO of FX Investment Strategies, a Registered Investment Advisor. In addition to running his investment advisory firm, he is a contributing author at SeekingAlpha.com and BusinessInsider.com. He also authored the book, Money Music 101, available on Amazon and Kindle, in addition to publishing the popular investment blog www.fxinvestmentstrategies.com along with a weekly newsletter.Disclaimer

Neither the information nor any opinion contained in this communication constitutes a solicitation or offer by us to buy or to sell any securities, futures, options or other financial instruments or to provide any investment advice or service. Each decision by you to do any investment transactions and each decision whether a particular investment is appropriate or proper for you is an independent decision to be taken by you. In no event should the content of this communication be construed as an express or an implied promise, guarantee or implication by or from us that you will profit or that losses can or will be limited in any manner whatsoever. Past results are no indication of future performance. Please note that there is no requirement and no commitment to make any payments to FX Investment Strategies LLC in order to access our published information be it via email or via website publication. All information is publicly available without any required monetary consideration.  Any payments or donations made by you are deemed to be voluntary and cannot be considered as payments for investment advice given to you.

GBR Market Wrap: June 24, 2011

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In this Week’s Issue

Weekly Snapshot
• Chinese premier Wen Jiabao declares inflation victory (FT)
• New orders for durable goods in the U.S. increased 1.9%, to $195.6bn (ESA)
• U.S. real GDP grew at an annual rate of 1.9% in the first quarter of 2011 (ESA)
• U.S. new home sales down 2.1% from April level, but up 13.5% a year ago (ESA)
• International Energy Agency will release 60 million barrels of oil next month (MSNBC)
• The Fed held interest rates, no hint of further asset purchases (FT)
• Fed cut its forecast for 2011 GDP growth to 2.7% to 2.9% from a 3.1%-3.3% (AP)
• U.S. existing home sales fell 3.8% in May; down 15.3% from a year ago (AP)
• Bank of England hints at second round of quantitative easing (Reuters)
• John Paulson’s hedge fund lost $500m from investment in Sino-Forest (Economist)
• Greek Prime Minister survives vote of confidence (FT)
• Japan’s exports fall 10.3% yr/yr versus forecast 8.4% drop (Reuters)

Market Barometers

Stock Market Barometer 6-24-11

FX-Commodity Market Barometer

Weekly Charts

Lots of interesting developments in the commodities markets this week.  Here’s a neat chart, courtesy of FT.com, reminding us how energy markets and political developments have always been deeply interconnected.

Historic Petrol Politics

Source: www.ft.com

All About Oil
When the International Energy Agency decided to release 60 million barrels of oil from its strategic oil reserves over the next month, the markets were taken somewhat aback. Oil prices tumbled on the news putting more downside pressure on an already shaky commodity weakened by a sluggish economic recovery. The announcement stirred up quite a bit of a debate among analysts. A perfectly timed announcement one might think as the West sends a clear signal on oil to some of the oil producing countries who elbowed OPEC into not increasing the supply of oil in their recent meeting.

Although the IEA’s role is not to manipulate prices, several said they saw it as a more of a policy move designed to bring down commodity prices at a time when western governments are struggling with unemployment that remains high and consumers that are hurting from high commodity prices.

Libya’s conflict and the often quoted supply-disruption argument is clearly visible in the difference between the two most widely watched oil futures contracts: Brent Crude Oil traded in London and Light Sweet Crude Oil (West Texas Intermediate Contract) traded at NYMEX. In recent months the roughly $15 premium of Brent Crude over Light Sweet Crude had many traders baffled into thinking this would be a temporary anomaly. Not quite, as we learned…

Daily Spot Oil Prices

This unusual price difference was recently examined by Izabella Kaminska in her post: WGO – What’s going on in Brent-WTI?

Whether it is the supply shortage or the rise of a new type of contract that will dominate prices in this market remains unclear.  It also remains questionable to what extent the IEA and other governmental organizations can actually influence commodity prices in the long term. However, we have now arrived at a price level that has captured some traders’ attention as they evaluate technical and momentum factors in their next trading decision.  Although we don’t like to commit to a specific price target, you can rest assured that oil prices won’t stay here for an extended period of time. Traders already staked out numerous price targets on both sides of the trend line. Having just taken some profits from this week’s clear sell signals, I am staying on the side lines for now. But like many others, I will be watching closely to see which side of the trend line these prices will be on next week.

Crude Oil

Connecting The Dots
It isn’t every day that the president of a country writes an op-ed piece, let alone the premier of a major global economic power like China. Please consider: How China plans to reinforce the global recovery by Wen Jiabao. I’m not quite sure what to make of this article but it does feel strange it would appear now.

Similarly, one must question the intent and timing of this week’s IEA’s decision to try and keep a lid on energy prices. This leaves us to wonder what, if any, alterior motives might be at play here. Below are some recent events and news stories that cry out for someone to connect the dots and tell us if there are indeed too many coincidences. Who would like to connect the dots?

• Fed cuts U.S. economic growth forecast
• Fed holds interest rates on hold but is concerned about inflation
• $14.3 trillion U.S. debt ceiling—out of cash in August
• IEA decides to release 60m barrels of oil from strategic reserves
• Oil price plunges over 4% on Thursday
• China’s food price inflation is at record levels
• Concerns about Chinese property prices persist
• Hedge fund loses $500m from investment in Sino-Forest
• Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao writes an op-ed piece in the Financial Times
• Hang Seng snaps three-week losing streak, ends up 1.9%
• Shanghai up 2.2%, its biggest intra-day gain in four months
• Chinese banks see biggest jump on HK and Shanghai bourses

Good luck and good investing!


Clemens Kownatzki, MBA is an adjunct professor of financial risk management at the Graziadio School of Business and Management, as well as the founder and CEO of FX Investment Strategies, a Registered Investment Advisor. In addition to running his investment advisory firm, he is a contributing author at SeekingAlpha.com and BusinessInsider.com. He also authored the book, Money Music 101, available on Amazon and Kindle, in addition to publishing the popular investment blog www.fxinvestmentstrategies.com along with a weekly newsletter.Disclaimer

Neither the information nor any opinion contained in this communication constitutes a solicitation or offer by us to buy or to sell any securities, futures, options or other financial instruments or to provide any investment advice or service. Each decision by you to do any investment transactions and each decision whether a particular investment is appropriate or proper for you is an independent decision to be taken by you. In no event should the content of this communication be construed as an express or an implied promise, guarantee or implication by or from us that you will profit or that losses can or will be limited in any manner whatsoever. Past results are no indication of future performance. Please note that there is no requirement and no commitment to make any payments to FX Investment Strategies LLC in order to access our published information be it via email or via website publication. All information is publicly available without any required monetary consideration.  Any payments or donations made by you are deemed to be voluntary and cannot be considered as payments for investment advice given to you.

GBR Market Wrap: June 17, 2011

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In this Week’s Issue

Weekly Snapshot
• U.S. leading economic index increased 0.8% in May to 114.7 (Conference Board)
• U.S. headline inflation rate in May rose 3.6% from a year earlier (Economist)
• Euro area annual inflation was 2.7% in May down from 2.8% in April (Eurostat)
• U.S. housing starts up 8.7% from April and 5.2% above May 2010 (US Census)
• India raises key interest rates by 0.25 percentage point to 7.50% (WSJ)
• Yields on Spanish 10-year bonds at 5.6% – highest in a decade (FT)
• U.S. trade deficit increased to $119.3 billion in the first quarter of 2011 (BEA)
• Chinese consumer prices rose 5.5% in May; biggest increase in 3 years (FT)
• China’s politically sensitive food prices surged by 11.7% (Economist)
• S&P cuts Greece’s longterm credit rating by three notches to CCC (FT)
• The Bank of Japan has kept its key interest rate at 0%-0.1% (Bloomberg)

Market Barometers

Stock Market-2011-06-17FX-2011-06-17

Weekly Charts

It was all about the Greek credit crisis again this week.  Images of violent protests in the streets of Athens sent shock waves through the financial markets squeezing the nervous investors’ arteries just a little tighter still. Greek government bond yields spiraled into stratospheric levels. After some of the ratings agencies dealt Greece a final blow declaring them essentially at default level, the yield on the 10-year Greek government bond touched 18 percent. Worse still, the two-year and three-year bond yields shot up to about 30 percent. Unthinkable for a European country one might assume; then again, investors’ memories are notoriously bad.  Those who had witnessed the Greek financial tragedy early last year had been warned that there might be a slight problem with Greece’s ability to pay back its creditors.

In our article: A Series Of Unfortunate Events For Europe, we highlighted some of the important events leading up to the crisis.

Greek yields

The ongoing struggle to implement austerity measures has run its course; no significant improvement of their government coffers have been made which is why Greece is back to square one.  Worse than that in fact, since they now have to borrow at essentially twice the cost of capital from a year earlier.  When Monsieur Sarkozy and Frau Merkel embraced in harmony to come up with yet another negotiated bailout compromise of some sort, the market breathed a sigh of relief for a moment. While the Euro fared remarkably well, all things considered, it remains questionable how much longer the Greek tragedy can continue. Greece is clearly at a point where it will be increasingly difficult to find able and willing creditors. In this country we know what it means to “kick the can down the road” all too well.  Lessons to be learned?

Greek-yields-2

Lines In The Sand
Last week, we discussed the notion of lines in the sand suggesting that a price level of 1250 for the S&P 500 might be one of those important technical support levels upon which many traders hinge their next moves.  The line in the sand has been holding but we came fairly close to it when the S&P 500 touched the 200-day moving average on Thursday.

SPX-2011-06-17

Since March 2009, the market has made a remarkable recovery. Considering a still rather sluggish recovery on main street, the market is now looking for the next impetus to move higher. What is your take? Will 1250 hold or will we step back into the uncomfortable bear market territory again?

current-market-snapshot

Recommended Video
If you were to leave it up to Professor Robert Schiller, the question above would turn into a rather gloomy prediction. He believes that stocks are about 40 percent overvalued based on his cyclically adjusted PE ratio (CAPE). Please consider his explanation as to why markets are in for more downward pressure.

Good luck and good investing!


Clemens Kownatzki, MBA is an adjunct professor of financial risk management at the Graziadio School of Business and Management, as well as the founder and CEO of FX Investment Strategies, a Registered Investment Advisor. In addition to running his investment advisory firm, he is a contributing author at SeekingAlpha.com and BusinessInsider.com. He also authored the book, Money Music 101, available on Amazon and Kindle, in addition to publishing the popular investment blog www.fxinvestmentstrategies.com along with a weekly newsletter.

Disclaimer
Neither the information nor any opinion contained in this communication constitutes a solicitation or offer by us to buy or to sell any securities, futures, options or other financial instruments or to provide any investment advice or service. Each decision by you to do any investment transactions and each decision whether a particular investment is appropriate or proper for you is an independent decision to be taken by you. In no event should the content of this communication be construed as an express or an implied promise, guarantee or implication by or from us that you will profit or that losses can or will be limited in any manner whatsoever. Past results are no indication of future performance. Please note that there is no requirement and no commitment to make any payments to FX Investment Strategies LLC in order to access our published information be it via email or via website publication. All information is publicly available without any required monetary consideration.  Any payments or donations made by you are deemed to be voluntary and cannot be considered as payments for investment advice given to you.