Archive for November 2008

Silver Prices Today – 28th November 2008

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Along with Gold, Silver has experienced a quiet couple of sessions due to the Thanksgiving break in the major U.S. markets. The charts are maintaining the same formation and I still maintain the technical target levels of a $1.80 move pointing to a test of the early October highs at close to $12.50. The 9 day moving average is converging with the 40 day and a crossing of these will give another bullish signal. However coming into the weekend there may be some profit taking and it needs to be noted that key support levels are $0.50 below current prices.The short term trend is up while the medium and long term trends are bearish. Have a great weekend and I will be back with more trading and investing updates next week on commodities, currency, gold and silver, and don’t forget my oil trading daily news blog for the oil traders amongst you which provides news and comment on daily oil prices – regards Anna

Support:    $10.150 (yesterdays low)                              Resistance: $10.797 (high of 6th November)

Support:    $10.048 (40 day moving average)                       Resistance: $10.680 (high of 24th November)

Support:    $9.728 (14 day moving average)                        Resistance: $10.472 (yesterday’s high)

Gold Prices & Commodities – 28th November 2008

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Little changed on the chart pattern as a result of yesterdays activity apart from the predicted cross of the 9 and 40 day moving average. This event backed up the bullish technical picture whilst keeping the pennant formation in tact. The technical upside target is still in the $900 region and profit taking ahead of the week would target eventual support below between $760 -$770. Overnight Asian markets have been quiet keeping the price in a very tight range. Fundamentally there was good news in the form of the world Gold council report reporting increased Q3 demand in China , India and the Middle East . Speculation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut their key lending rate from %1.00 to %0.75 in early December to bolster growth is also heavily weighing on traders minds. The inverse correlation between the Dow and the Dollar that has been experienced of late may not last forever in the wake of huge fiscal stimuli and falling interest rates. If the market falls out of love with the dollar I feel that the outlook for Gold, Silver and commodities is very positive due to real term value and the re-emergence of safe haven status.

The short term trend is bullish, medium term sideways and long term trend remains bearish.

Support:    $810.50 (yesterdays low)                        Resistance: $832.35 (high of 25th November)

Support:    $807.95 (low of 26th November)                   Resistance: $823.23 (high of 26th November)

Support:    $802.00 (low of 25th November)                   Resistance: $817.60 (yesterday’s high)

Silver prices today – November 27th 2008

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Along with gold, silver has been reacting to the rise in stock markets and the short term strength in the oil price. Similarly the silver chart is also forming into a “pennant” but unlike gold the 9 and 40 day moving averages have already crossed giving a bullish signal. With the same logic applied an upside breakout will technically point to a $1.80 move pointing to a test of the early October highs at close to $12.50. Markets are expected to be “thin” today due to the Thanksgiving holiday and profit taking ahead of the weekend could push Silver down toward the 9 and 14 day moving averages $0.50 below current levels.  The short term trend is up while the medium and long term trends are bearish.

Support:    $10.150 (yesterdays low)                              Resistance: $10.797 (high of 6th November)

Support:    $10.048 (40 day moving average)                       Resistance: $10.680 (high of 24th November)

Support:    $9.728 (14 day moving average)                        Resistance: $10.472 (yesterday’s high)

Gold Prices – November 27th 2008

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Gold prices found support overnight in the wake of the Chinese key one year lending rate cut announcement of 108 points. Technically the chart patterns are looking constructive with the emergence of a “pennant” formation over the past week. A breakout to the upside of this pattern theoretically points to a move equally matching the height of the “flagpole”, which in this case amounts to around $90 equating to a target price in the $900 region. With the 9 and 40 day moving averages converging another bullish signal could be given if these two indicators cross. Pennant formations are not always continuation patterns and a failure to break upwards would point to a test of last weeks levels around $750.

The short term trend is bullish, medium term sideways and long term trend remains bearish.

Support:    $807.95 (yesterdays low)                        Resistance: $848.50 (high of 16th October)

Support:    $802.00 (low of 25th November)                   Resistance: $832.35 (high of 25th November)

Support:    $780.35 (40 day moving average)                 Resistance: $823.23 (yesterday’s high

Silver Prices Daily

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Although Silver rallied along with Gold on Friday and Monday the 9 and 14 day moving averages may need to cross to continue this short term rally. The 40 day moving average just above $10 is expected to act as support and a break of this level should result in a test down at $9.90. Position squaring is expected to play a large part in direction today ahead of Thanksgiving and I feel there are plenty of short term longs potentially willing to take profit after the $1.80 3 day move. The short term trend is up while the medium and long term trends are bearish.

Support:    $10.062 (40 day moving average)   Resistance: $10.797 (high of 6th November)

Support:    $10.020 (yesterdays low)     Resistance: $10.680 (high of 24th November)

Support:    $9.708 (14 day moving average)  Resistance: $10.530 (yesterday’s high)

Daily Gold Prices

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Since breaking through the $777 level, buy and entry stops have pushed the price into a new range technically targeting $848.50 on the upside. The 40 day moving average and the previously mentioned $777 level should act as good support some $40 plus dollars below current levels. The huge $60 range on Friday corresponded with the short term recovery in world equity markets and any further strength in The Dow ahead of Thanksgiving could result in a test just short of $850. However any signs of profit taking could quickly see a move back down to the support close to $780.The short term trend is bullish, medium term sideways and long term trend remains bearish.

Support: $802.00 (yesterdays low) Resistance: $848.50 (high of 16th October)

Support: $800.00 (psychological level) Resistance: $844.15 (high of 28th August)

Support: $780.87 (40 day moving average) Resistance: $832.35 (yesterday’s high)

Market Sell Off Continues

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Last week US equities ended a volatile week with big rallies on Friday, but these only came after the benchmark S&P 500 index had plunged to levels not seen for over a decade on Thursday. Despite Friday’s 6%+ rallies on the Dow Jones and S&P 500, those markets still finished the week down 5.31% and 8.39% respectively. After months of bailouts, mini rallies, rate cuts, and false dawns, investors threw in the towel. On Thursday, there was a panicked flight to quality, as the yield on the shortest term US treasury bonds sank to near zero. Money is flooding to what is perceived to the safest haven in these troubled times. The panic pushed investors into bonds, breaking records for that market. The yield on four-week Treasury bills fell to 0.045 %, and the three-month bill was yielding just 0.03 %, as investors rushed for safety.

The cost of insuring against investment grade companies defaulting shot up to its highest level since the crisis began. Worse still, Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway fund has seen the cost of its credit default swaps shoot to 5 times the level they traded at in June. At current levels, the CDS prices are implying that Berkshire is more likely to go bust than Morgan Stanley. When the Dow was trading around 13,000, Buffet used derivates to effectively bet that the market would be higher than this level in 15 to 20 years time. While there is still considerable time for this bet to work out, Buffet has already marked down a $6.7 billion loss on that trade. When investment ‘Gods’ such as Buffet look ready to fall, it is hardly surprising that investors are running to safe havens.

Just two months ago, the US Federal Reserve was still concerned about the “upside risks to inflation”. With last week’s 1 % decline in US consumer prices and rapid declines in UK inflation figures, we’ve gone from fears over inflation and stagflation, all the way to deflation in the space of 90 days. As a sign of the times, oil prices hit a new milestone last week. Just four months after making record highs of $147 a barrel, oil touched a low of $48.25 on Friday, a remarkable drop of 67%. The rapid demise in crude prices is having a direct impact on the Russian economy and stock market. Since May the Russian stock market has been leading other so called BRIC nations lower, with a drop of around 70% since the May highs.

Financial shares led the selling. HSBC received a broker down grade on fears of the state of its tier 1 equity ratio. HSBC was formerly at arm’s length to the rest of the banking sector with its relatively low exposure to US subprime loans. However, the ‘world’s local bank’ is now feeling the pressure due to its exposure to emerging economies, especially the troubled BRIC economies. In the US Citigroup was hit hard, losing half its value in just three days. Once the biggest US bank by market value, there is speculation that bad loans and writedowns may add up to losses totalling $20 billion for the troubled Citigroup. Some commentators point to Treasury secretary Paulson’s change of tack with regard to long directly buying toxic assets under the TARP program for sparking much of last week’s sell off.

This week starts with the German Ifo business climate report which will analysed closely after recent announcements that many parts of the Eurozone are already in recession. US existing home sales are released at 13.00 on Monday and analysts are expecting further declines to 5.02 million from 5.18 million. Tuesday morning brings a raft of UK economic announcements with the MPC treasury committee hearing top of the list. Preliminary US GDP is announced around midday, with the revised UK figures out the next day. Thursday is an extremely busy day with a large number of US announcements. Core durable goods, unemployment claims and new home sales are the notable highlights. The rest of the trading week could be relatively quiet with many traders using Thursday Thanksgiving holiday to make a long weekend.

There is simply no telling what the market or economy might be like as we start 2009. A selloff of this speed hasn’t been seen since the 1930s, and although comparisons have often been made of late, it is worth noting that at the low points of this period, rallies, when they came were surprisingly aggressive. Barry Rithholtz last week noted that the AAII individual investor’s stock allocation was 15% below its 21 year historical average. Although not marking the exact bottom, readings of this nature were not a million miles from the lows of 1987, 1990 and 2002. With a hoard of cash waiting in the wings, there is always the possibility of this reading again marketing the bottom. However, this market has left many seasoned professionals scratching their heads as the selloff has been unlike anything seen for generations. In recent months, these markets have reached extremes of sentiment that in the past have market key turning points. The trouble is that of late, markets have continued to make new extremes way beyond previous inflection points.

Weekly Trading Calendar

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Monday November 24th:

GE – 09:00 – Ifo Business Climate.
EU – 09:00 – Current Account.
EU
– 10:00 – Industrial New Orders M/M.
US – 15:00 – Existing Home Sales.
UK
15:30 Annual Pre-Budget Report.

Tuesday November 25th:

GE – 07:00 – GFK Consumer Climate.
GE –
07:00 – Final GDP Q/Q.
UK –
09:30 – BBA Mortgage Approvals.
UK – 09:30 – Prelim Business Investment Q/Q.
UK –
09:45 – MPC Treasury Committee Hearings.
US –
13:30 – Prelim GDP Q/Q.
US – 13:30 – Prelim GDP Price Index Q/Q.
US –
14:00 – S&P/CS Composite-20 HPI Y/Y.
US –
15:00 – CB Consumer Confidence.
US – 15:00 – HPI M/M.
US –
15:00 – Richmond Manufacturing Index.

Wednesday November 26th:

GE – 07:00 – Prelim CPI M/M.
GE – 07:00 – Import Prices M/M.
UK – 09:30 – Revised GDP Q/Q.
UK –
09:30 – Index of Services Q/Q.
US –
13:30 – Core Durable Goods Orders M/M.
US –
13:30 – Durable Goods Orders M/M.
US –
13:30 – Core PCE Price Index M/M.
US – 13:30 – Personal Spending M/M.
US –
13:30 – Personal Income M/M.
US –
13:30 – Unemployment Claims.
US – 14:45 – Chicago PMI.
US –
14:55 – Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment.
US –
14:55 – Revised UoM Consumer Expectations.
US –
15:00 – New Home Sales.
US – 15:35 – Crude Oil Inventories.
US – 17:00 – Natural Gas Storage.

Thursday November 27th:

US – ALL - Thanks Giving Bank Holiday.
UK –
Tentative - Nationwide HPI M/M.
GE –
08:55 - Unemployment Change.
EU –
09:00 - M3 Money Supply Y/Y.
EU -
09:00 - Private Loans Y/Y.
EU
- 10:00 - Consumer Confidence.

Friday November 28th:

UK00:01- GfK Consumer Confidence.
EU –
10:00 - CPI Flash Estimate Y/Y.
EU –
10:00 - Unemployment rate.
UK –
11:00 - CBI Realised Sales.

Financial Newsletter – 10th November 2008

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

“Regardless of how you feel inside, always try to look like a winner.  Even if you are behind, a sustained look of control and confidence can give you a mental edge that results in a victory” Arthur Ashe: 1943-1993.
While the 2008 US Presidential Election campaign will be discussed and forensically analyzed for many years to come, there is no doubt that a powerful combination of youth, first time voters as well as a spectacular harnessing of the internet (in particular Web 2 tools) were ultimately responsible for Barak Obama’s win.
The Obama Presidency also heralds a seismic shift for traders and investors as the heady days of laissez faire free market capitalism comes to an end and a more regulated, less speculative landscape emerges.   Stock markets around the world were momentarily energized by this momentous victory.  In Europe most indices had risen substantially by the 4th November.  For example the Dutch AEX, having fallen to 231.50 on October 27th surged to 291.13, a reversal of over 25%.  The German Dax rallied from a low of 4014 on October 24th to a high of 5301 on November 4th, a gain of 32%.  The London FTSE too rallied from its low of 3665 on 27th October to a high of 4639, a gain of almost 27%.  However, by the end of the week all had fallen back by an average of 10%.  Optimism may have entered the markets but volatility was far from dead.
Market volatility was even more pronounced in Asia and the Pacific Rim.  The Hang Seng of Hong Kong posted a one week gain of 43.5% from its multi year low of 10,676 on October 27th to a high of 15,317 last week.  India’s Nifty too gained over 43% during this same period.  Japan’s Nikkei too gaining over 30% but like the European indices these too failed to consolidate these gains and fell back almost 15%.  The US markets too rallied but like all the others failed to capitalise on their gains.  Hardly surprising as the October US Non Farm Payroll numbers on Friday put the US job market squarely into recession.  The speed and magnitude of the decline in the lack of new jobs underlines both the severity of the September credit crisis and the magnitude of the task facing the new President.
Elsewhere market falls were also the result of dramatic interest rate cuts.  In the UK the Bank of England cut base rates by unprecedented 1.5% while the ECB restrained itself to a 0.5% as central bankers and governments all try to avert an economic meltdown and attempt to steady the financial ship.   Neither cut in interest rate did much for either the British Pound or Euro.  The carry trade continues to unwind and investors and traders bail out of anything which smacks of speculation, hence the continued falls in oil and other commodities.  As has been mentioned before the worst is far from over for either the UK or Europe, with Asia and the Pacific Rim now catching the tail of this worldwide financial hurricane.
An interesting take on the entire credit crisis has been suggested by Liam Halligan whereby he suggests simply locking away all top bank executives regardless of type and refusing to let them out until they fess up to each other, admit their mistakes and reveal what toxic investments they are actually holding.  An AA meeting for addicted bankers – ie bankers addicted to debt and risk using other people’s money.    We can but hope!
In the meantime what of the future and how to profit from the enormous changes which will result from this Presidency?   If, as expected, governments bring in more stringent regulations for markets and financial instruments in an effort to avoid future asset bubbles traders and investors may have no choice but to look at conservative asset classes such as bonds and simple deposit accounts.    Calm, orderly market conditions with no volatility can appear seductive but dangerous as traders and investors soon become frustrated with little or no return from their safe haven investments.  Ironically it is at this point that many turn to trading and investing in more volatile instruments in an attempt to achieve higher returns.
Trading Tip:   It is often tempting when shares prices are falling (or in this market plunging) to be tempted to rush in and buy because they look cheap.  Beware and do not be tempted to rush in too soon – even though the likes of Warren Buffett and Anthony Bolton are now saying that this could be the time to buy.  The likes of Warren Buffett have such deep pockets he can afford the market to take a further turn for the worse.  He also takes a very long view.  Shares are always cheap for a reason.  Panicky investors have pushed prices down to unprecedented levels – the CBOE VIX recently reaching 80 while others are just plain rubbish.
Two classic tests for a cheap stock are a low price/earnings ratio (P/E) and a high dividend yield.  Falling equity markets quickly throw up “buys” on both measures.   For example a share priced at 100p with a full year dividend of 5p per share and forecast earnings per share for the next year of 10p, then the share price is 10 times  forecast earnings, so the p/e ratio is 10 while the dividend yield – the annual dividend as a percentage of the share price is 5% (5p/100p x 100%).  However, if the share price suddenly collapses to 50p with earnings and dividends remaining unchanged, the P/E halves to 5, while the dividend yield doubles to 10% (5p/50p x 100%).  The stock now looks much cheaper in relation to forecast earnings – a low P/E – but also offers a higher income return, but is it a buy?.  Not necessarily, as investors in supposedly cheap, high yielding bank shares, have been finding out to their cost.
The moral of the above is that when markets are in such turmoil and upheaval even tried and tested indicators are suspect and cannot and should not be used in isolation.     Patience is the virtue as we wait for the dust to settle on the fallen.
Good luck and good trading.
Anna

Financial Markets Newsletter – 3rd November 2008:

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

“Revenge is often like biting a dog, because the dog bit you” Austin O’Malley
Last week’s markets were characterized by an element of exhaustion as de-leveraging eased, allowing many instruments to bounce from extremely oversold levels while keeping volatility high.  For example the German Dax bottomed Friday October 24th at 4014 yet by Friday 31st October was up to 5066, a rise of 26.5%.  In the Americas both Brazil Bovespa and Argentina’s Merval fell to 29,435 and 819.36, their lowest in 3 and 5 years respectively, yet by the end of the week they had rallied 20%.   By the end of the week, India’s Nifty was back to 2921 for a gain of nearly 30% within the same week.  Commodities continued to make new lows as oil completed a 60% decline since its $147 dollar high back in July.   Silver fell to 840 on the overnight market on October 28 yet 2 days later was back up as high as 1064, a 25% gain over 2 days.
It was against this background that the ambush (or short squeeze to give it its correct term) of hedge funds by Volkswagen, Porsche and probably the German government was an extraordinary  event.  Over 100 hedge funds collectively lost a staggering £24 (approx $40 billion dollars) on a doomed gamble that Volkswagen shares would continue to fall because of the global economic downturn.  It was the “safest play in town.  In fact Porsche had been secretly building up a 75% stake in VW via intermediaries which must have been particularly galling to the “hedgies” given Porsche’s iconic status as the car of choice for many in this industry.
Regardless of the legality of the move by VW and Porsche there was scant sympathy for the hedge fund industry who many have blamed for contributing to the current financial problems, not least in their aggressive shorting of financial shares.
However, whilst hedge funds can certainly be held to account for contributing to the current financial meltdown the reason it has all gone so horrible wrong is that most so called experts in this industry do not really understand risk and have been using (and still use) inappropriate mathematical tools and models to measure and manage risk.  These tools and models are all based on the statistical device of the bell curve where the focus is on the norm, and any major departure such as a 1000 point drop in an index is seen as a rare event and its effect therefore negligible.   Listening to an investment banker earlier this year explaining that the reason their housing price model failed was because it did not take into account housing prices ever falling, was sufficient evidence that this approach is now wholly inadequate.
For me one solution has come from the world of fractals and in particular the work of Benoit Mandelbrot and Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the latter being the author of “The Black Swan”  which many traders and investors may have already heard of.   Commonsense tells me that all markets are much more volatile than the experts would have us believe and that this past year has not been a “once a lifetime event” but something which can happen at any time.   We have to accept that conventional measures of risk are not only outdated and outmoded but severely underestimate potential losses.  For better or worse our risk exposure to huge losses is actually much bigger than we think it is.  One only has to look at the risks when trading on margin where losses can exceed initial deposits to see this in graphic detail.  Professional traders (or at least those who should know better) are often horrified at the leverage offered by most forex brokers.  The maximum for retail traders should be around 1 to 5 or a maximum of 1 to 10 and yet the average offered by most brokers is around 1 to 100, up to a suicidal 1 to 400.  If you are trading anywhere near these levels I would strongly suggest you stop and reconsider.
Trading Term:  De-Leveraging:  After a long period of loose lending by institutions who should have known better (some banks lending at 40 to 1 by using little understood financial instruments and fancy paperwork and then moving the details of their financial misbehaviour off their balance sheets where regulators could not see it) the reduction of this debt is now a number one priority and will be the cause  of continuing turbulence.    This has had a big impact on the currency market as many of the debts were incurred in dollars and yen.  It is estimated that US investors alone were holding $5 trillion of foreign equities which are now being repatriated.   It is this which has contributed to the recent surge of the dollar.
As more and more investors and traders enter the currency markets in an attempt to find better and faster returns it is important to understand that this market is going to be even more volatile and unpredictable.  Also as it is also largely unregulated it is vital that anyone thinking of participating truly appreciates the extent of the dangers and risks inherent within it.
Good luck and good trading.
Anna