Monday, March 7, 2011

Dollar sags as key E.U. decision looms

by BRIAN DOLAN


The Dollar sags as key EU decisions loom
The greenback slumped further as violence in Libya escalated and fears continue to mount of unrest spreading to other, more economically significant countries in the region. Despite the largest gain in jobs since census-induced hiring in mid-2010, and other signs of improvement in US labor markets e.g. further declines in initial claims, the buck limped out at its lowest level for the year according to the USD Index. But the USD’s performance was mixed against most currencies other than the EUR, which rallied across the board on ECB rate hike expectations (see below). All in all, it could have been much worse for the USD and this suggests a safe-haven bid may be returning to the greenback. US stocks declined and Treasury yields fell on safe-haven buying of US Treasuries in spite of the ostensibly upbeat Feb. jobs report. Precious metals and commodities also continued to gain ground on the Mid-East upheaval. The focus there is firmly on efforts to oust Libyan leader Gaddafi and we would suggest it is a question of when, not if, he disappears into exile, potentially setting up a rapid reversal in safe haven assets. In the meantime, civil conflict in Libya is likely to drag on and the dollar’s descent seems likely to continue, though probably less of a rapid collapse and more of a slow grind.

Over the next several weeks, EU leaders will be meeting to tackle their debt/financial crisis, culminating in the March 25 summit that aims to produce the comprehensive crisis resolution mechanism. The end of next week will see the ‘European Competitiveness Pact’ unveiled, which aims to strengthen economic and fiscal coordination among member states. Indications are that deep divisions remain on many of the key issues, such as establishing concrete debt reduction goals, increasing the size of the bailout fund, and whether to allow it to buy peripheral government debt. The risk to recent EUR gains is that EU leaders fail to produce a credible mechanism and markets conclude sovereign defaults remain a serious threat, which may see EUR come under pressure despite rate hike expectations. Lastly, we would note the relatively minimal gains in EUR/USD since the relatively surprising ECB announcement (only about 120 pips), which we interpret as a sign most of the move was already priced in.

We see immediate upside potential for EUR/USD while the 1.3800/50 area holds. Initial resistance is at 1.4020/50, above which gains to the 1.4180/1.4200 are our expectation. Overall, a Fibonacci wave extension suggests 1.4420/25 as a potential target for the current advance, once above 1.4050.

The ECB takes its anti-inflation medicine
ECB Governor Trichet surprised the markets last week with an explicitness he has saved until the last 6 months of his term in office. He reverted to the verbal code words he used during the Bank’s previous tightening cycle when he said that “strong vigilance” is warranted with a view to continuing upside risks to price stability. In the past this signaled that a rate hike was imminent. Now the market expects Trichet to announce a rate hike at April’s meeting. But it wasn’t this stock phrase that surprised market watchers, it was Trichet’s candidness.

Although he said the ECB never pre-commits to a rate decision he added that he expects rates to rise by 25 basis points and that a rate hike next month would not signal the start of a tightening cycle. This was central bank communication at its most clear. Immediately investors scrambled to re-adjust interest rates armed with this new information. 3-month euro Eonia swap rates surged 10 basis points to their highest level in 2 years, while Euribor – the inter-bank lending rate – also surged on the news. The extra yield boosted EURUSD, and it is now on the brink of 1.4000.

Up until last week the markets had been expecting the Bank of England to hike first. After the ECB press conference the yield differential between German and UK yields widened considerably which boosted EURGBP to 0.8600.

So why did the ECB bite the bullet? The most likely reason is that rapidly rising oil prices don’t warrant extraordinarily accommodative interest rates. Indeed, Trichet omitted to mention that the interest rate was appropriate; instead he said the current stance of monetary policy was “very accommodative.”

But will one hike be enough? We would say probably not. Inflation in the Eurozone is running at a 2.3 per cent annualized rate. Even with a 25 bp increase real interest rates will still be negative, so the ECB aren’t going to stamp out inflationary pressure with a small, one-off rate hike. So if the Bank is serious about inflation a series of hikes seems more likely. The market has rushed to price in a more than 50 per cent chance that rates will rise to 2 per cent (they are currently 1 per cent) in 12-months’ time.

The ECB and the Federal Reserve are now at either end of the policy spectrum, with the latter seemingly committed to providing the full $600bn allotment of QE2 to the US economy until June. The diverging paths of the two largest global central banks should benefit EURUSD. So far it has failed to break above 1.40, but in the coming weeks, based in its yield advantage, we see EURUSD back at the 1.4250 highs last reached in November 2010.

Commodities continue to stay aloft amid tensions in MENA
This week crude oil prices rose to fresh 29-month highs ($104.30/35) amid the rapid deterioration of stability in Libya and the threat of it spreading to other MENA (Middle East/North African) nations. The persistent violence has caused supply disruptions in Libya of approximately 1 million barrels a day, which is over half of their daily output. While news that Saudi Arabia guaranteed to use spare oil capacity if needed – Saudi’s spare oil capacity is estimated to be 5 million barrels a day, temporarily calmed the markets, it’s not an exact match since Arabian oil is much heavier than Libya ’s light sweet crude and is thus problematic since it needs additional refining. With the current geopolitical environment riding high emotionally, fundamentals are likely to remain in the rear-view mirror. Furthermore, even prior to the political unrest in the Middle East we saw signs of demand growth picking up in China and India, and with today’s U.S. unemployment rate falling to 8.9% it signals demand in the west may begin to pick up as well. Lastly, market participants are beginning to envision a weaker USD moving forward, based on diverging interest rate expectations between the Fed and the ECB and BoE, which has caused greater demand for commodities and ultimately adds more “fuel to the fire”.

The “flight-to-safety” trade has not just been all about oil, but was also present in precious metals as well. As noted in this week’s Commodities Corner, “with tensions in the Middle East unlikely to subside anytime soon, this flight-to-safety trade could be stronger and last longer than the market currently anticipates, subsequently traders are beginning to take action.” Over the past week gold broke to new nominal all-time highs near $1440/oz. and silver just made fresh 30-year highs of $35.35/40 at the time of this writing. Going forward, price action should remain volatile, however pullbacks could be shallower than one would anticipate as investors who have missed the current move higher in commodities may look to jump on board in the not too distant future. A resolution to the Libyan turmoil, on the other hand, could see a more serious set-back.
 
The BOE gets pipped at the post
After the events in the Eurozone, it now seems unlikely that the Bank of England will be the first of the major central banks to hike interest rates. The Bank meets next week to decide on policy, but it is expected to remain on hold. In fact, since the last meeting the market has slightly reduced its bets that rates will rise in the UK over the next few months as economic data has disappointed especiallyQ4 2010 GDP and the PMI services sector survey for last month. Sonia rates – GBP swap rates - have fallen from their peak and 3-month UK Libor (inter-bank lending rates) remains within its near-term range. This has thwarted the rise in sterling and for now the top in GBPUSD is 1.6300.

EURGBP looks ripe to outperform in the near-term. After 0.8600, the 0.8900 high reached in October comes back on the radar.

Kiwi under pressure ahead of RBNZ
On Thursday March 10, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand meets to decide on interest rates. The outlook for the island nation has been very bleak after the tragic 6.3 magnitude earthquake which struck Christchurch on Feb. 22. This was the second major earthquake in 6 months, the previous quake occurring on Sept. 4. Both quakes are estimated to have cause as much as NZ$20 billion in damage and have delivered a blow to growth prospects with the risk of a relapse into recession as indicated by Q3 GDP which contracted by -0.2%.

The 90-day bank bill rate has plummeted from about 3.20% on Feb. 21 to current levels of around 2.86%. Additionally, Prime Minister John Key said he would “welcome” an interest rate cut. He went on to say “the market has priced in a cut from the Reserve Bank. That would probably be my expectation, that the Reserve Bank would cut, but it’s for them to determine that”. While some market participants are anticipating a rate cut, the distribution of expectations is relatively balanced with about half of analysts forecasting no change in rates. Of those expecting the bank to slash rates, about half are looking for a 50bps cut while the other half is anticipating a 25bps decrease. With recent weakness in the NZD, it appears that a cut may be priced in which indicates that the risk is to the upside.

Technically, NZD/USD is facing a significant pivot around its 200-day sma which currently comes in at about 0.7380 and the Dec. lows which are around the 0.7345/50 area. The pair is trading below the daily ichimoku cloud which suggests a downward bias. A daily close below the 200-day sma and Dec. lows is likely to see further downside. Key levels to the upside include the daily Tenkan line which is around 0.7480 ahead of the daily cloud base and Kijun line which are around 0.7580/90 – just below the 0.7600 area where the 55 and 100-day sma’s converge.

HOW HIGH IS THE WALL OF WORRY?

by Cullen Roche

While many short-term indicators point to complacency in the markets the Wall of Worry indicator still points to a healthy level of skepticism with regards to the bull market.  The Wall of Worry, which accounts for the level of worry in the market by taking the inverse summation of a series of long-term sentiment indicators, declined in February to 77.93 from January’s reading of 79.43.  This is down substantially from the 4th quarter of 2010 and is consistent with the rapid rise in market optimism.  This level, however, is still consistent with a relatively high level of skepticism in the market and reflects a belief that the rally in stocks is likely unsustainable.

The latest reading is well off the highs of 93.5 in March 2009, however, is also well off the lows seen in past cycles.  This long-term indicator is currently consistent with levels that occurred closer to the beginning of the last two bull markets than the end.  During the 2003-2007 bull market this indicator first declined t0 current levels in January 2004.  During the 1990′s bull market the Wall of Worry indicator first touched current levels in July of 1993.  If the market truly does climb a wall of worry it’s safe to say that the current wall of worry remains relatively high.

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ALTOS RESEARCH: HOME PRICE DECLINES CONTINUED IN FEBRUARY

by Cullen Roche

The double dip in housing continued in February according to Altos Research, a real-time provider of home price data.  Altos says national prices fell 2%, but are showing some signs of early seasonal strength.  Scott Sambucci of Altos Research elaborates:
“Spring 2011 is imminent and with it the much-anticipated Spring Real Estate Market. While the headline pricing metric 90-day rolling average still shows monthly declines, week-over-week data are beginning to show signs of improvement, indicating a good start to what is, typically, the strongest sales period of the calendar year.
In February 2011, the Altos 10-City Price Composite decreased by 2.01% to $433,573. Once again, prices were down in each of the 27 markets tracked by Altos, with the most marked changes seen in San Francisco, Washington, DC, and Detroit. Of note are sharp increases in listing inventory in several major markets, most notably in San Jose (8.81%), Washington, DC (7.99%), and San Francisco (7.96%), which is likely an indicator of sellers hoping to take advantage of heightened buyer activity this season.
March 2011 Highlights
  • The Altos 10-City Composite is now at $433,573, off 3.44% over the last 90 days.
  • All 27 of the major markets tracked by Altos showed price decreases during the most recent quarter, most significantly in San Francisco and Washington, DC metro markets which showed declines of 9.31% and 8.13%, respectively.
  • Housing inventory is up by 3.75% nationwide, though increases should be expected, as sellers hope to capitalize on seasonal upturns in real estate activity.
The Altos Research 20-City Composite
This month’s featured chart returns to the median price of the Altos 20-City Composite. Weekly price samples turned above the 90-day rolling average. This trend indicates stronger price resiliency than 2010 though not as strong as the tax credit and stimulus-driven bounce of early 2009.”


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Sunday, March 6, 2011

+ 7.75 % Also In February Fifth Good Consecutive Month For Our Galaxy Portfolio Systems

Nella sottostante tabella sono raffigurate le equity line mensili dei trading systems che compongono il nostro portfolio systems Galaxy ed il riassunto MTM dell’operatività dal Novembre 2009. Galaxy chiude con un ottimo risultato anche il mese di Febbraio, dopo un equivalente risultato nel mese di Gennaio, portando a 15.29 % la performance del 2011. Quello appena chiuso è il quinto risultato utile consecutivo a livello mensile dopo la breve pausa alla fine dell’estate dello scorso anno. L’equity continua a svilupparsi in maniera armonica mantenendo un’inclinazione positiva e costante grazie all’elevata diversificazione all’interno del portfolio. I risultati storici di Galaxy Portfolio System sono disponibili ai seguenti link: http://www.box.net/shared/static/nz7u0ztnbp.xls, http://box.net/shared/b9cg6kfa6s. I risultati dei singoli trading systems sono a disposizione al seguente link: http://www.box.net/shared/5vajnzc4cp

In the table below you can see the monthly equity line of the trading systems that make our Galaxy portfolio systems and the MTM performance summary since November 2009. Galaxy ends with a good result also the month of February, after a similar result in the month of January, bringing the performance to 15.29 % in 2011. One just closed is the fifth consecutive positive months after the brief pause at the end of the summer last year. The equity continues to grow in harmony while maintaining an upward slope and steady thanks to high diversification within the portfolio. Historical results of Galaxy Combined Portfolio System are available at the following links: http://www.box.net/shared/static/nz7u0ztnbp.xls, http://box.net/shared/b9cg6kfa6s. Historical results of single trading systems are available at the following link: http://www.box.net/shared/5vajnzc4cp

Galaxy Risultati Febbraio

Equity Line Trades, Giornaliera e Mensile di Galaxy / Trades, Daily and Monthly Galazy Equity Line
Galaxy Trades Galaxy Time Galaxy Settimanale

Performance MTM Mensile di Galaxy Portfolio System con un capitale iniziale di $ 200.000
Monthly MTM Performance of Galaxy Combined Portfolio System with $ 200K initial capital

  Jan
  Feb
Mar
Apr 
May
Jun 
Jul  
Aug
Sep
Oct 
Nov 
Dec 
2009










1.19 %
2.90 %
2010
(4.28 %)
24.49 %
2.99 %
1.76 %
15.62 %
4.35 %
10.60 %
(0.41 %)
(4.73 %)
1.75 %
12.80 %
1.50 %
2011
7.54 %
7.75 %











Material in this post does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation and do not constitute solicitation to public savings. Operate with any financial instrument is safe, even higher if working on derivatives. Be sure to operate only with capital that you can lose. Past performance of the methods described on this blog do not constitute any guarantee for future earnings. The reader should be held responsible for the risks of their investments and for making use of the information contained in the pages of this blog. Trading Weeks should not be considered in any way responsible for any financial losses suffered by the user of the information contained on this blog.

Stock and Currency Market Triangle Price Patterns Pending Breakouts


Stock indices in Asia and major currency pairs are closing in on the conclusions of large triangles that have been in formation since around 2008. 

Shanghai Composite:

Source: Yahoo Finance

Nikkei:


Australian index:


Are these indices lagging the West and about to break out upwards? Or have Western indices begun a topping process which will be accompanied by a breakdown in Eastern indices?

We see a similar formation behind the scenes of the S&P500 action, looking at market breadth:

Source: Astrocycle / Stockcharts

The Mclellan oscillator typically produces a positive or negative divergence ahead of a move in the stock market. It has been teasing us for some time by narrowing in its range, and it has been one indicator diverging from the rally. Keep an eye on it for a lead move, particularly downwards.

Turning to the major currency pairs, and relations between USD, GBP and Euro:

Euro / GBP:


Euro / USD:


GBP / USD:

Breakout against the dollar? Is the big move coming to be a breakdown of the US dollar, associated with a breakout for long term treasury yields and a big move up in gold?

Source: Yahoo Finance


Source: Gold Scents

In all the above scenarios, a safe strategy is to await a breakout, then a successful backtest of the breakout (to ensure it is not a fakeout), before trading in the direction of the breakout.
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Tech Stocks Set to Fuel Resurgent U.S. IPO Market


Jason Simpkins writes: After falling off the radar for three years, the U.S. IPO market is off to its best start since before the financial crisis. And with several high profile technology companies set to go public this year, it's likely to carry that momentum forward.

Companies around the globe have raised more than $26 billion through initial public offerings (IPOs) this year, a 20% increase over last year and the best start on record, according to Dealogic. Globally, 15 IPOs were crammed into the first two weeks of February - a month that last year had seen a total of just four IPOs.

Not since 2007, when 17 companies listed, has the IPO market been so active. By comparison, just three companies listed in February 2009 and four in 2010.

A big reason for the increase was a flurry of activity in the United States, which had previously lagged the Asia Pacific region. There were 24 U.S. IPOs in the first month and a half of the year, compared to 13 during the same period in 2010, according to IPO research firm Renaissance Capital in a Feb. 23 report.

The largest IPO so far this year has been Kinder Morgan Inc. (NYSE: KMI), which raised $2.86 billion through its Feb. 10 offering. The company raised a total of $3.29 billion after underwriters exercised an overallotment option, making it the largest U.S. energy IPO in more than a decade. 

With Kinder Morgan taking the lead, U.S. IPOs raised a total of $8.1 billion by mid-February - up from $1.9 billion last year, according to Renaissance.

"After strong IPO issuance in November and December, the IPO market seems to be sustaining the momentum seen at the end of 2010," Renaissance said. "These are signs that the IPO market is back to normal levels of issuance that is expected in a growing economy."

The firm said the United States would continue to lead the world, as 34 companies are still on tap for IPOs this year. Dealogic's IPO backlog stands at $48 billion, with about a third of that destined for U.S. markets.
What's more impressive, though, is that the U.S. companies set to go public in the weeks and months ahead are healthy prospects with solid fundamentals - not paper tigers.

"Most of the companies that are in registration or are starting the process, are companies that have really good prospects," Mark Baudler, a partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, told MarketWatch. "It's not fly-by-night companies hoping beyond hope that there is a way to get out the door. The pipeline is so good that the best companies are at the front of the line." 

One such company is Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) Holdings, which aims to raise $3.5 billion when it lists on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) next week.

HCA is the largest non-governmental hospital operator in the United States and a leading comprehensive, integrated provider of health care and related services. 

Hospital companies have been in an upswing for the past six months, with four of the most commonly followed stocks up 49% on average in the last six months. Community Health Systems (NYSE: CYH) is up 43%, Health Management Association Inc. (HMA) is up 47%, Tenet Healthcare Corp. (NYSE: THC) 61%, and Universal Health Services Inc. (NYSE: UHS) is up 45%.

Still, the most fertile ground for IPOs has been the technology sector. The seven technology companies to go public in the first month and a half of the year raised a total of $700 million, according to Renaissance.
Nielsen Holdings NV (NYSE: NLSN) was the headliner, raising $1.75 billion in its listing.

Most all of the tech companies to go public this year - Nielson, Demand Media Inc. (NYSE: DMD), InterXion Holding N.V. (NYSE: INXN), BCD Semiconductor Manufacturing Limited (Nasdaq: BCDS), and NeoPhotonics Corporation (NYSE: NPTN) - are trading above their IPO prices.

"Investors want to play the big themes in technology, such as cloud computing data storage and security, and it is hard to get that exposure by owning big technology companies," Eric Mandl, global head of software and large-cap tech banking at UBS AG (NYSE: UBS) told the Financial Times.

Right now, no technology theme is hotter than social networking, and three big players are about to go public.

In the Pipeline
Though none of them have set a date, Groupon, LinkedIn Corp., and Skype Ltd. are among the tech heavyweights expected to list this year.

With so much buzz surrounding Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. - neither of which have announced any intention to go public - these companies are often overlooked. But these are three of the world's most unique and successful social networking companies.

And more importantly, they have demonstrated profitability, scores of potential and valuations that aren't quite as overblown as Facebook and Twitter.

Groupon, the deal-of-the-day site that spurned a $6 billion takeover offer from Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG), may have the biggest offering this year. The company expects its debut to raise $15 billion or more. NeXtup figured a potential $40-per-share price for Groupon, based on an initial public offering of 165 million shares.

The company just raised a record $950 million from big investors, including Fidelity Investments, T. Rowe Price Group Inc. (Nasdaq: TROW) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS).

The Wall Street Journal recently cited a memo from Groupon Chief Executive Officer Andrew Mason as saying his company's revenue rose to $760 million in 2010 - a 20-fold increase from $33 million in 2009.
"The earth is super old - thousands of years, some say - and no one has ever done anything like this," Mason said in the memo to his employees. "You should all exude a borderline-annoying sense of pride in what you've achieved. You should be wearing a big, toothy grin - the kind that makes people want to punch you in the face. No one deserves to be as happy as you are right now."

Groupon offers its members discounts of up to 70% on local services, provided enough members sign up for any single offer. It then takes a commission of 30% to 50% from the merchants who provide the services.
The company grew to 50 million from 3 million users across 500 cities in 40 countries over the course of 2010.

LinkedIn, the social networking site for professionals, has more than 90 million users in 200 countries. The estimated value of the company is about $2 billion, following a $20 million investment from Tiger Global Management last July. It is seeking to raise another $175 million in its IPO. 

LinkedIn's sales more than tripled from 2007 to 2009, led by increased revenue from advertising, premium accounts, and job listings. The company posted a profit of $1.85 million in the nine months through September 2010 and revenue doubled to $161.4 million. That compared with a net loss of $3.4 million and revenue of $80.8 million a year earlier. 

Skype is set to have a comparable listing. The Internet calling service aims to raise $100 million in an IPO this fall. The company claims to have 27 million users online during its peak hours, up from 15 million a year ago.
The company's goal is to collect 1 billion users; analysts say that's achievable if more businesses adopt the technology. 

Skype over the past several years has already built a loyal user base.

"As a result, businesses will give Skype a chance," Peter Fader, a marketing professor at the Wharton School of Business told Telemanagement. "The Skype name is already a verb [as in 'skyping' with someone] and can certainly go down the business-to-business path. That's where the money is."

Indeed, unlike the tech boom of the late 90s, Groupon, LinkedIn, and Skype have solid fundamentals and huge potential. And they're likely to keep the U.S. IPO market churning through 2011.

"I think the IPO market is as healthy now as I have seen it in 15 years, and that is because it is still very selective," Lise Buyer, principal of Class V Group in Silicon Valley, which guides private companies through the IPO process, told MarketWatch. "Companies have truly compelling stories, acceptable fundamentals and a truly strong management team."

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