Saturday, August 13, 2011

Week-end update Forex

The Ozzie is poised to head north. Action above 1.0350 is buying time.

The €, on the other hand, is stuck in heavy traffic. My gizmos show it as being both neutral and as wanting to quit being neutral. But with France's woes added to PIIGS, ???

The £ is also neutral, although it does a dance that is separate from the €.

The Loonie is bearish against $US, but...

The $US seems to be trying to get turned around against ChF and ¥.



Week-end update Stocks, Bonds, Energy

The 30 year market is set up for a decline. It's first target is just above 132. The 10 year is set up to drop to the 127 '20 area, and likely further from there.

Sept. emini is headed first for 1212, then 1244 -- unless we get a very surprising change in course Monday and Tuesday.

88.20 then 91.20 are the current targets for Sept. crude. NGas is looking for at least 4.310-4.320. High Grade looks to want to go to around 4.24-4.25 for now.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Week-end update Gold, Silver

 Gold has been a run-away train for some some time now. Gold bugs are sure it will last forever, for, in their infinite stupidity, they think(?) gold is the only true 'currency,' the only true store of value, the only standard by which a country can run a monetary system. At least the gold cranks say those things.

In the real world, gold is, for now, well above any possible "true value." Gold, like all other traded creatures, is either over-valued or under-valued, passing through fair value on the way from one to the other extreme. If you are wondering what gold's fair value is... so is everyone else except gold bugs.

Silver leads its own mundane, reality based existence, a rather different creature now than glamorous gold. But a few years ago, silver had a huge price run-up not shared by gold. There was money to be made on the trip up, and as much to made, even more quickly on the way down.

Gold is, as we all can see, clearly in a bull market. Silver was in a bear phase at the beginning of July, only to turn to the bull side, yielding a fairly easy $4/oz. Now it is flirting with going into a bear market.

What next? Volatility, I should imagine. Gold ran up 20% from early July to yesterday's high. That is too much too fast.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

End of Day Aug 11

Energy had good days, and look like they want to go up even though still in a variety of bear market.

The bond market did not care for the mediocre cover ratio of today's 30 year auction, even though yields were down 44+ basis points. Technically, the 10yr looks like it will go to 130 and the 30 yr to 124 '20.

The emini hasn't really turned up yet. Nevertheless, it seems like it wants to make a run at 1212 or maybe 1244 (or maybe turn into a bull market?)

In Forex trading, the Yen was sideways, ChF down, $A, $C, £, € were all up, but no trends, not even prospectively, are evident.

Grain reports were out today. Some of the follow up hoopla called for a $2 to $3 increase in the price of beans. Maybe so, but yesterday I was talking about beans possibly rising because the Chinese are buying -- or have already bought, given they usually do their buying before press releases announce it. Beans were up, but not any sort of break-away move. Other grains were quite ho-hum about the numbers. While I'm clearly bullish on corn, and don't see how wheat and beans can fail to follow, at this moment none of them are in what I would describe as a bull market.

30 Year Auction

Today's auction dropped yields "only" 44-45 basis points (44.8 on the average accepted bid). That scared the futures market, or disappointed the players, engendering a quick 64+ tick sell-off. That selling took prices through yesterday's lows where the bond bulls stepped in, bringing prices back up a bit.

Stocks were up a bit on the news, but currencies were basically flat.

Beans

From the China Daily: "China will maintain an upward trend in soybean imports with the rise being driven by the widening profit margins of soybean oil crushers and the recovery of the hog production industry."


We shall see whether that picks up bean prices in the US

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Daily Blatt August 10 2011

Bonds had an inside day after the players over-reacted to yesterday's Fed announcement.

Equities were down today, giving up most of yesterday's gains. Copper went with them while energy managed to hold on for only small losses.

Grains & rice were weighed down by the negativity of the stock market.

The $US was clearly stronger against $A, $C, £ and €. Muted against ChF and  Yen.

Prediction for tomorrow: continued volatility and indecisiveness.

Interest Rates

This month's 10 year bond auction went off without a hitch. Yields were 2.140%, down about 0.75% from last month.

If the mortgage lenders are competitive, which they were ten years ago, mortgage rates should drop at least 0.25% with 0.50% a more reasonable amount.

Morning Thoughts

Equities are in limbo. A rally lasting days, weeks or months is very likely. But not today. Structural problems of so-called post-industrial economies, meaning Western Europe, the US and to a lesser degree Canada & Australia, have not been solved. Nor will they be solved so long as corporations are allowed limitless size and power, be it economic or political.

Industrials commodities are holding up pretty well, implying the users think a rebound in attitude is likely, and that rising equities will allow the commodities prices to rise.

Bonds are having an inside day to the upside.

The USD is rebounding against all save the Yen.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

End of Day Aug 9

Equities had a strong showing today, likely putting an end to the decline. Bonds were up very strongly on the Fed announcement, but gave back most of the days gains by the close. Natural gas is the strongest of the industrial components, but both copper and crude followed equities. My biases for tomorrow are (1) leave bonds alone, and (2) any trading of this group tomorrow likely should be from the long side.

Gold was up but silver down. Were I going to trade, I'd trade silver from the short side.

In Forex, it appears that the appreciation of the USD is over, and we will be returning mostly to the USD down. Specifically, $A and $C both traded at parity against the USD, but both seemed to have reversed course. The next moves look to be against the USD. The € and the £ are too choppy to provide decent risk/return ratios for position traders.

Corn is in neutral. I think the bull market will resume there, taking prices up very considerably. My current target for corn is 820. Wheat is in neutral with a bearish bias. Beans are in bear mode, but I don't much like trading the short side this time of the year. Rice is in neutral but my target for it is just under 1900. Oats, like beans are in bear mode.

emini update

The emini recaptured half its losses from Friday's high to Monday night's low, then eased off, awaiting the Fed report. Not a good time to be in the market unless one is really long term, and even then...

3 yr auction at 10

This doesn't usually generate waves, but in the current fearful environment, you never know. If you're short USD/ChF or BP/USD, consider protecting your position.

Waiting for the Fed: general update

It would seem that all eyes are on the Fed today. Trading Fed announcements is tricky business. Sufficiently tricky that I, for one, have never come up with a reliable approach -- perhaps you have.

At this moment, the e-mini is hugely off its overnight lows; bonds are down a little; the USD is a lot sideways; crude is back above $80 ($82k in fact) and gold is down.

Grains have been hurt by the falling equities prices and general fear. There is some recovery there as well.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Yuan will rise sooner rather than later

Below is the Chinese CPI. The government has tried almost as many ways to slow it without raising the Yuan exchange rate as the US Tea Party has found ways to reduce the US Federal debt without raising taxes. Neither will work; neither can work. If the world wants to make the Yuan the reserve currency, it will benefit the US considerably. The second chart shows the PPI which implies accelerating, not declining future CPI numbers. Look for a rate hike followed by an increase in the value of the Yuan. A sufficiently valuable Yuan will stifle inflation -- but it won't be good for exports.



Half way through Black (?) Monday

Equities are sharply lower, but so far, they haven't dropped as much as they "should." If they hold on, or better, rally after lunch, we could see an end to selling sooner rather than later.

Despite Standard & Poor's efforts to undermine the (rather randomly run) US political process, the US bond market looks strong indeed. Hard to square that with hopes of an equities rally, but there it is.

Crude is down to $83, and copper is at $4, a 7 day drop of 11% or so, quite a lot for copper.

Ozzies have done nothing but go down for six days, and have given up 7¢ to the USD. Now they are, surprise, oversold -- as they were Friday.

€ and £ continue to go up yesterday, down today, sideways net. No decisions in the offing, at least none visible on the charts.USD continue to rally against $C. Another penny or so will bring parity, which we haven't had since January.

Gold is in the clouds. Looks like a good time to release any longs. Silver is not joining the tea party, which implies that gold's lofty price is craziness. But gold bugs are crazy and anyone who thinks gold and silver are the correct currency is worse than crazy.


Sunday, August 7, 2011

BP trade

BP mildly overbought. Cash them in or hope they don't go back to entry point.

GBP trade

Trying to switch back to bullish are GBP. Buy 6442 stop.6476,89 &7500 are upside targets of the break out.

emini trade

hourly close below 1160 is a short with lesser targets of 1135 & 1127 and a main target of 1119

cable trade

An hourly close below 16400 triggers a short. Early targets are 6356, 6343 with main target at 6328

10yr trade

Best was an hour ago at 127 '05. Long ZN with a target of 128 '04

Euro & Ozzie trades

An hourly Ozzie close below 370 should set up a move down. Primary target is 10222 with lesser targets of 10253 & 10284

An hourly Euro close below 4318 should trigger more selling. Primary target is 4215; lesser targets are 4236 & 4257

After the US credit down grade

6:15 EDT sees the e-mini down and attacking Friday's lows. Bonds are down mildly. The dollar is up against the $A and looks like it might go more. The Euro started off up vs. the USD, but looks like it will not hold on.

If London and New York start selling equities, look for the USD to strengthen and bonds to rise, to hell with the dumb-ass "ratings" firms that were primary causes of the banking disaster of three years ago.