Bund, Tbond e la matrixiana allo yen vm18 (1 Viewer)

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
As nervousness among investors mount in the wake of the gyrations of financial markets, the key question remains whether something more serious than a normal (and overdue) mid-cycle correction is starting to manifest itself.

On the fundamental front, the credit bubble would appear to have been irreparably punctured and, failing bail-out actions by the Fed, it could take a while for the turbidity to dissipate. More so, hedge funds and LBO players, who have fuelled part of the stock market’s excitement on the back of easy credit, have had their wings clipped for the time being.

To add insult to injury, the Japanese yen is rallying strongly and threatening the carry trade, thereby removing one of the most powerful headwinds of the global equities bull market. The following graph depicts the strong inverse relationship between the yen index (blue line) and the Dow Jones World Stock Index (as a proxy for global equities) (black/red line):


In search of direction, let’s have a look at what the stock market itself is telling us. The prognosis, unfortunately, is not particularly good, as shown by the weekly chart of the S&P 500 Index.


The most important observation is that the 200-day moving average, very often seen as an indicator of the market’s primary trend, has been broken. Yes, false breaks do occur, but the fact that the decline was characterized by heavy volume gives more credence to the break. The MACD oscillator, now only in its second week in negative territory, also points to more downside potential.

One of the worst casualties of the stock market sell-off has been small caps as illustrated by the Russell 2000 Small Cap Index below.


Also focus on the bottom section of the diagram, which shows that small-cap stocks are underperforming badly relative to large caps. This is typical of down-markets as large caps are seen as being more defensive and it provides further evidence that there could be more declines in store for stock markets in general.

One of the few safe places to hide from the markets’ turmoil over the past two weeks was US bonds as yields declined sharply as shown by the weekly graph of the US 10-year Treasury Note yield.


Here again we see the 200-day moving average being broken (although a fair bit of whiplashing was experienced in the past), together with a sell signal from the MACD indicator. This is telling us that the bond market is expecting weaker economic activity – a scenario not liked by the stock market as a result of the possible negative implications for corporate earnings, the principal driver of stock prices over time.

Market participants’ greed and complacency have at long last started making way for concern. I am cognizant of the fact that many parts of the world economy are performing very well, and that they will probably continue to do so for many years as infrastructure is being established for billions of new entrants into the economic system. Although this can soften the impact of the credit squeeze and limit price declines, I have a nagging feeling more fear first needs to set in before great value will return to stock markets and the current chapter play itself out.

Talking of fear …
 

quicksilver

Forumer storico
stupidamente non mi ero accorto che la MM200 dell'indice nasdaq100 è a 1841 quindi quel target di 1850 non è poi per nulla difficile

anche il DJ è ancora distante dalla MM200 a differenza dello S&P500 che l'ha gia presa e superata

il russell2000 infine è su un supporto di lungo (agosto 2005)
 

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
QuickS ha scritto:
stupidamente non mi ero accorto che la MM200 dell'indice nasdaq100 è a 1841 quindi quel target di 1850 non è poi per nulla difficile

anche il DJ è ancora distante dalla MM200 a differenza dello S&P500 che l'ha gia presa e superata

il russell2000 infine è su un supporto di lungo (agosto 2005)

:up: :up:

UBS - Morning Advisor Europe

Retaining a USD bullish stance:

… continued warnings about tightening lending conditions and the performance of financial institutions continue to encourage outflows from the US, while demand for Treasurys and other “quality” assets have not been able to offset the withdrawal. To a certain extent, the dollar has not managed to sustain recent risk-aversion gains because of the continued lack of repatriation flows. Last week’s price action in risk assets such as equities and the carry suggest significant residual risk sentiment remaining in markets. Our global asset allocation team notes that the jump in risk premiums has occurred when fundamental conditions are otherwise benign. As such, we believe buoyant ex-US growth fundamentals are preventing investors from acknowledging a full structural shift in risk sentiment is at hand as a result of a drop in general liquidity. Higher risk premiums are expected ahead and repatriation back towards the US-which has been one of the main sources of global asset investment due to easy credit-is a necessary component in such a shift. The Fed may voice some concern over market conditions at the FOMC meeting this week but also stress the necessity of a correction in risk appetite. Markets may then be encouraged to continue to adjust in a stable manner and we expect the dollar to benefit accordingly. On the economic front there may be reduced concern with regard to inflation but we do not expect any material change in their hawkish message. We continue to see value in the USD at these levels and remain short EURUSD as a trade recommendation.

ABN Amro - Daily FX Strategy

On how the Fed may navigate its way through the turmoil:

The FOMC’s last statement was extremely well written and truthfully could still be used on Tuesday without any alterations. That statement noted that “economic growth appears to be moderate…despite the ongoing adjustment in the housing sector” and that “a sustained moderation in inflationary pressures has yet to be convincingly demonstrated.” However, the issue that the FOMC faces is that financial markets have tightened credit dramatically in the last two weeks, while oil prices have risen. In effect, markets have tightened monetary policy dramatically, so much so that the Fed MAY need to ease policy to achieve its dual mandate of ‘maximum employment’ and ’stable prices.’

… ideally the FOMC would probably turn the ship slowly. One possible way of doing so would be to adopt a neutral balance of risks in the upcoming statement. Another would be to re-write the last ‘masterpiece’ statement with more expressed worries about growth and less about inflation, but the same balance of risks paragraph. This is the tact I suspect the FOMC will take this time around. If needed, the FOMC can follow up in mid August with some type of extraordinary remark that it stands ready to fulfill its obligation to provide liquidity, if the market ever needs it. Truth is, the FOMC still has an inflation problem, but it may now have a growth problem as well. Staring at down both barrels of its mandate, Bernanke will now be truly challenged, and he may have good reason to be glad that neither mandate has a hard numeric measurement.

Further evidence of risk reduction from the weekly CFTC/IMM statistics:

Bets were reduced in every single currency, but the biggest reduction was in JPY positions. A big reduction in JPY shorts would be expected given the drawdowns and losses such positions experienced. However, speculators holding short-EUR positions experienced gains from the prior week, but those positions were also trimmed. The same occurred with short-GBP trades. Reducing trades that are going their way is unusual for IMM speculators. I believe it speaks to the stress experienced by financial markets participants in asset classes other than FX. And it is important to remember that the survey is from Tuesday; the most stressful days for equity and fixed income markets were Wednesday and Friday. Speculative FX positions are probably substantially smaller now. The big FX position reduction suggests that when FX speculators finally decide it is safe to leg back in to carry trades, those trades will rally substantially.

For the past two weeks bad US news has perversely caused EUR-USD to decline on position reductions. With speculative positions now out of the way, EUR-USD is likely to rise on bad US news like it normally would, and like it finally started to do Friday.

Dresdner Kleinwort - FX Strategy

On equity correlations, increased risk aversions, narrowing US-EU rate spreads, and the potential for the USD to test new lows following tomorrow’s Fed meeting:

The direction in equity markets will continue to play a decisive role for the direction of JPY and CHF crosses with weekly correlations between S&P 500 & DAX and EUR/CHF & EUR/JPY standing above 0.7 (calculated with % changes).

With the VIX (S&P 500 vol) closing at the highest level since April 03 and rumours about further subprime casualties in the German banking industry, risk appetite will struggle to have a meaningful comeback in the days to come.

However, in contrast to the beginning of last week investors re-focus on the USD negative implications - mainly cyclical ones - of the unfolding problems in the US housing market, leaving room for more declines in the USD index.

If the Fed was to highlight economic growth/financial market risks in its statement tomorrow, rate cut expectations would rise further - 80% probability for 25bp cut by Oct already priced in - and the USD index should hit new lows.

The sharp narrowing in the 2Y US-EU13 swap spread (37bp compared to 60bp two weeks ago) is reflecting the deteriorating US growth outlook and diverging monetary policy expectations between the US and the Eurozone. We see a good chance that EUR/USD will re-test the previous high of 1.3852 this week. The 20%decline in the EUR long position (IMM data from July 31 compared with the week earlier) supports this view.

Given the high level of risk aversion in global markets, funding currencies should remain under selling pressure. As a low risk carry trade we favour a long CHF/JPY position.

Barclays Capital - Global FX Strategy

Looking for only modest changes to the FOMC statement:

Credit concerns are likely to remain the key driver of FX markets this week. With problems in structured credit markets still unfolding, the ongoing uncertainty is unlikely to be resolved in the short term and we do not expect risky assets to reverse their losses any time soon. Against this backdrop, our preferred trades remain buying AUD/NZD, EUR/GBP and the Swiss franc, while we expect the US dollar to underperform most other currencies. This week, we will learn more about the thoughts of the Federal Reserve … on the effects of the credit turmoil. As is the way of central banks - the central banking community has been observing credit markets with concern for some time now. They may see recent events as a potential threat, but so far as a positive development - a reduction in over-pricing in an important market with limited contagion. As such, we look for only modest changes to the FOMC’s statement tomorrow, which we think will only allude to recent market volatility as a source of uncertainty, while still indicating that inflation remains a predominant policy concern.
 

Fleursdumal

फूल की बुराई
Bonjour a tout lesbondaroles

attendant le bernakk ! dovrebbe usare delle parole tranquillizzanti ma poi sopravvengono le statistiche di quick sull'effetto iettatorio :V
 

quicksilver

Forumer storico
Il "troppo pieno"

Sapete cos'è lo scarico di "troppo pieno" in un impianto di depurazione?

è piu o meno quello che è successo qui con la indisponibilità del fol :rolleyes:



:lol: :lol: :lol:
 

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
volatilità alle stelle e doppio minimo da confermare sui 1430
vedi cosa causa il blocco del fol :lol:
:up:
 

Fleursdumal

फूल की बुराई
gipa69 ha scritto:
non sembra che vogliano arrestarsi, al momento....

american mort..gage ha dichiarato bancarotta
1186412139benedizione.gif
 

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