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Profit Taking, Reduced Contango Suggests Oil Prices Could Stabilize

by shahid hussain on Tuesday, June 9, 2009,

The last three months have seen a remarkable oil rally that has doubled the price of oil from around $35 a barrel earlier this year, to nearly $70 today. During this bull run however, there has been one nagging thought spoiling the fun of the traders cashing in on this rise – there is no real reason for oil prices to have climbed so high, so quickly. Demand has not suddenly shot up and the economies of the major oil consumers have not improved significantly, so why the price increase?

In reality, the market is oversupplied with oil. Yes, OPEC reduced production but only nominally and US oil and gasoline reserves have not been this high in years, so again, why the increase?

Obviously, traders are banking on a quicker-than-expected recovery and are pricing this optimism into the market, but there are two factors that could soon stall oil’s climb – a strengthening US dollar and a reduction in the oil contango trade.

When the US dollar is under pressure, gold and oil are usually the recipients of extra demand as investors often turn to these two commodities to hedge a falling US dollar. Today, the US dollar bounced back after several days of losses to... Read more »


Forex News and Rumors

by shahid hussain

US Gov't to Allow Some Banks to Repay Loans

The US government is expected to announce today which of the banks that received funds under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), are now strong enough to begin paying back these loans. Several of the nation's largest banks have said recently that they are stable enough now to pay back the loans and emerge from the increased government oversight that came with the money. More

EU Expected to Slow Stimulus Spending

Finance ministers from each of the European Union member countries are meeting in Luxembourg today where they are expected to consider ways to slow the pace of stimulus spending in a bid to reduce deficit spending. More

UK Retail Sales Fall 0.8% in May

After a gain of 4.6 percent in April, retail sales in ... Read more »


European Banks to follow Americans!

by shahid hussain

The IMF has reasons to be concerned. In an article in this mornings UK Telegraph, it has called on the Euro-zone governments to take urgent steps to clean up the banking system as losses mount, and advised the ECB to prepare ‘all unconventional options’ in case the crisis deepens. Last week we listed 5-reasons why we would ‘not’ want to own the EUR. The biggest reason was transparency or lack there of. No-one truly knows the extent of the debt load that these financial institutions are carrying. Look at Ireland, once the ‘green emerald’ in the crown of European economic growth. Yesterday, it was officially downgraded because of its financial system; it is being artificially propped up by a Government who is on the verge of financial ruin. No wonder the IMF is talking! The US$ is weaker in the O/N trading session. Currently it is lower against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ trading range. Forex heatmap For most of this year we have focused on the ‘once mighty greenback’ and its weakness issues and specifically the reasons for that. Despite this, the


Imminent Crisis in Forex Markets?

by shahid hussain

The only thing predictable about currencies these days is that they will remain unpredictable. Forgive me for speaking in cliches, but when you consider that the last twelve months have seen both record rises and record falls, I think a cliche might be justified in this case. We’ve seen the Dollar soar, only to collapse again. On the other side, we’ve seen the bottom fall out from emerging market currencies, before rising 20-30% in a matter of weeks.

Volatility levels have certainly declined (see Chart below) from the record highs of October 2008, when Lehman Brothers collapsed. At the same time, the oft-cited VIX index remains well above its average over the last decade. This suggests that while investors may have been lulled into a relative sense of security, serious doubts remain.
vix-indexIf the current rally is to be seen as “legitimate,” then perhaps the worst of the 2008-2009 recession is truly behind us, and the global financial system has been given a reprieve from a meltdown. The concern going forward then will naturally shift past the steps that governments and Central Banks are taking to fight the crisis, towards the long-term economic impact of those measures.

Jim Rogers, a famous and perennially outspoken investor, is now sounding alarm bells over the possibility of “meltdown” in currency markets, due to inflation and currency debasement that he views as an inherent byproduct of quantitative easing and deficit spending.

Most of the attention is being focused on the US, whose stimulus and monetary programs are probably larger than all other economies in the world, combined. Offers one analyst, “We keep very low U.S. Dollar exposures because we think a further devaluation of the greenback is imminent, and we see a structural weakness for at least a number of years.” Meanwhile, there is speculation that the US could soon receive a ratings downgrade, following a similar threat by S&P directed towards Britain. But this remains highly unlikely.

The problem that Rogers (and all other investors who are worried about currency debasement) faces is how to construct a viable strategy to protect yourself and/or exploit such an outcome. Rogers himself has admitted, “At the moment I have virtually no hedges…I’m trying to figure out what to do there.” The difficulty can be found in the inherent nature of currencies, whose values are derived relative to other currencies. While you can short the entire stock market or the entire bond market (via market indexes), you can’t short all currencies simultaneously- at least not yet.

Instead, you can pick one currency or a basket of currencies, that you believed is best protected from currency collapse and buy it against threatened currencies. But how do you deal with an environment when all currencies appears equally questionable- when all governments all loosening monetary policy and risking inflation? Really, the only answer is to invest in commodities that you think represent good stores of value, such as oil or gold, or the currencies that benefit when prices of such commodities are high. Naturally, the relationship between commodities and currencies is not cut-and-dried, and if the currency system were indeed beset by meltdown, it’s not clear to me that commodities would hold their value. But that’s fodder for another post…


Japanese Yen Sinks with US Dollar, but at Slower Pace

by shahid hussain

Speaking of seven-month lows, did anyone notice that while the US Dollar was busy declining against pretty much every other tradable currency that the Japanese Yen was doing the same? The Yen has remained rangebound against the Dollar for the last three months - the period during which the market rally and Dollar decline have taken place - which just by simple mathematics explains why it has also fallen to a seven-month low around the same time.

yen-chart

The same set of factors that caused the Yen and Dollar to move in lockstep prior to the credit crisis seems to have coalesced again in March. Specifically, investor comfort with risk-taking have combined with low rates to make both very attractive candidates for carry trade funding currencies. Both countries’ Central Banks are holding rates close to 0% (for several years now, in the case of Japan) and appear unlikely to hike them anytime soon. Simply put, ” ‘Risk appetite is improving in the market, which has been attracting cash away from safe-haven currencies like the dollar’ and the yen. Investors are ‘searching for higher yields.’ ”

At the same time, both countries have been aggressive in using fiscal and monetary policy to tackle the economic downturn, both of which could be highly inflationary and lead to currency debasement. Then, again, nearly every economy has responded with the same policy measures, which suggests that low interest rates represent the most plausible factor. It could, however, explain why the Yen is rising against the Dollar, and is closing in on the 13-year high recorded earlier this year. In other words, while both currencies are being sold in the short-term to fund carry trades, investors may have determined that the Dollar will remain weaker in the long-term, due to inflation problems.

On a certain level, this is somewhat baffling. Japanese economic indicators make the US economic recession look like an economic boom by comparison. “Preliminary figures showed the world’s second-largest economy shrank at a record 15.2 percent annual pace last quarter,” which would be the worst on record. Meanwhile, Japanese corporations saw so-called recurring profits fall by “69.0 percent from a year earlier to 4.27 trillion yen (44.35 billion dollars) in the three months to March…the sharpest drop since comparable figures became available in 1955 and the seventh straight quarter of declines…Combined sales reported by corporate Japan both at home and abroad caved by a record 20.4 percent.”

In addition, the US has recorded a net capital account surplus with Japan of late, which implies that Japanese are net investors in the US- not the other way around. The government of Japan is equally confused, and is “in the middle of analyzing what is driving the yen higher.” Still, it insists that forex intervention is not currently on the table. If Japan’s economy contracts by another 15% next quarter, however, I wouldn’t be surprised if it did an about-face.


EUR/USD Rises for Third Day as GM Goes Bankrupt

by shahid hussain

Euro continued to advance sharply against the U.S. dollar today as the U.S. are witnessing their biggest bankruptcy case in history. Economic indicators that came out from the United States today (other than GM bankruptcy) were better than expected. EUR/USD is now trading near 1.4209.

Personal income rose by 0.5% in April after decreasing by 0.2% in March (revised up from -0.3%). Personal spending decreased by 0.1% in April, following 0.3% drop in March (revised down from -0.2%). Forecasts for both indicators showed -0.2%.

Construction spending at seasonally adjusted annual rate rose by 0.8% in April after 0.4% gain in March (revised up from 0.4% growth). Median forecast by the analysts pointed at 0.8% decline.

ISM in manufacturing sector rose from 40.1% to 42.8% in May — almost the same as expected (42%).


Forex Money Rain?

by shahid hussain

Money Rain Corporation is a Forex broker with a MetaTrader 4 platform that offers quite interesting conditions to its traders. Its description was uploaded to my site today. MRC offers trading mini accounts from $100. The most interesting advantage it has is the interest on the trade balance, which is quite generous. Trading accounts can be kept in several currencies — the yearly interest rate depends on the account’s currency and it’s quite close to the refinancing rate set by the central bank of the given currency. Other highlights of Money Rain broker include:

  • 1-3 pip spread on EUR/USD; depends on the account type.
  • Deposit funds via WebMoney, wire transfer and credit card.
  • Trade Forex, CFD, commodities and precious metals.


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