Archive for Investing – Page 2

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

Trading Investing Newsletter – 27th October 2008

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

So when and where did it all go wrong? If you are a fan of Henning Mankell’s eponymous hero, Inspector Kurt Wallender, as I am, it was the day we all stopped learning how to darn our socks!! Dysfunctional and irrational markets continue and I have already said will continue until the end of this month as the need to raise cash and prop up various institutions intensifies. Valuable assets will continue to be dumped as the financial chaos extends into unimagined and surprising parts of the global market. The past week saw every major index make new multi year lows apart from the Swiss SMI and the Dow Jones. However, it is not the fact that we are hitting new lows it is the extent of the decline which shows absolutely no immediate sign of ending. This is hardly surprising given the extent of the bull run from which markets are now retreating. There were also stunning declines across the board: silver falling to $865 on Friday, a loss of nearly 60% in value from the 2115 level posted in March. Gold dropped to $681, down $367 from its all time high of March 18 and crude oil falling to $62.65, totally ignoring the OPEC threat of a cut in production. Numbers this week will simply reinforce the view that the global economy continues to head south. Forget a recession – the key word is depression and a new era has arrived.
The debate as to how and why we arrived at this state has started and will, no doubt, continue for many years to come. Since last year the blame for the current mess has been levied at the door of the poor sub primers, the bankers who lent them the money in the first place, regulators too stupid to understand what was going on, hedge funds profiting from the fiasco, outright speculation and just about everyone else for being just plain “greedy” – so there. Whilst there is an element of truth in all of these and sub prime mortgages may have been the trigger the seeds of destruction for this disaster of epic proportions were sown by the policy makers and their economic advisers some years ago.
You may also have read that Bill Clinton is the latest culprit to be named when back in 1994 he implemented the “The National Homeownership Strategy: Partners in the American Dream”  Clinton’s repeal of the Glass Steagall Act has also been indicted as a possible cause. Also add in Alan Greenspan’s recent confession that he “may” have got things slightly wrong when interest rates were kept too low for too long!
However, the best explanation I have found so far and one I would like to share with you is the wholesale adoption of an economic theory known as New Keynesianism. At its heart stands the so called dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model which nowadays is the main analytical tool of central banks around the world. In this model, money, credit or a financial market play no direct role. The model’s technical features ensure that in the long run financial markets have no economic consequences. Central banks are told to ignore headline inflation and focus on core inflation excluding volatile items such as food and oil. The model also ignores asset prices and only deals with the consequences of an asset price bust. An economic model in denial of financial markets seems to me, not only totally bizarre, but is only going to continue to perpetuate the cycles of boom and bust which have brought us to this state in the first place. It also ignores the global nature of the financial market and seems hardly fit for the 21st century.
If our current troubles are to be laid at the door of New Keynesian thinking then surely repeating those steps which got us into this mess in the first place: negative interest rates, a rapid expansion of money, bailing out banks and an ever increasing national debt will simply ensure that we will be doomed to repeat this cycle ad infinitum. I will be dealing with market cycles in future newsletters and in particular, how to profit from them.
Trading Tip. The Baltic Dry Index and why we should understand its significance? This is the key barometer of global freight activity and therefore world trade. The index fell 11% in just one day last week. The reason, aside from a drop in demand, has been the total breakdown of trust between banks which is essentially what we mean by the credit crunch. The shipping market has crashed because it is built on trust and credit which has completely dried up. Many ship owners cannot get banks to issue letters of credit (trade finance) particularly on cargoes on price volatile commodities as they no longer look like adequate collateral. Even those who can get letters of credit are finding that their counterparties may no longer trust the credit rating of anything other than large, well established banks, many of which are now charging huge premiums. Letters of credit now cost three times the going rate of a year ago. This is leading to grain cargoes piling up in ports in the Americas and has even led Brazil to use its foreign exchange reserves to increase credit lines for exporters in a bid to keep to keep trade moving.

Good luck and good trading.
Anna

Trading Investing Weekly Update

Monday, November 17th, 2008

World stock markets took another tumble last week with the major US indices penetrating the October lows intraday. The FTSE finished the week down around 4%, but it was UK plc that took a battering. The Pound fell to record lows against the European single currency, even breaking through the synthetic Euro/ Deutsche Mark lows from 1996.The weeks action was all the more damning considering the Eurozones admission that it too is in a recession. The Euro managed to end the slightly down against the dollar, but the pound plunged through the 1.5000 level for the first time since 2002. However there is still some way to go before the low of 1.3685 from 2001 is breached.

Financials were amongst the worst performing companies as Libor broke its 23 day decline. 3 month Libor increased to 2.15% and overnight Libor also pushed higher. The main catalyst was Paulson’s announcements of changes to the Troubled Asset Relief Program. As this originally was seen as getting to the heart of the matter in terms of offloading toxic assets, investors are confused as to what this means for future prospects for financial firms in the US. In the US, the insurance giant AIG had its earnings estimates cut, as did Wells Fargo. Much worse are the rumours that Fannie May may have to tap into US government cash to avoid liquidation. Previously unaffected stocks such as HSBC were also down hard after poor results, and there was speculation that it too may need to follow Santander’s lead in raising money through a rights issue. Until very recently HSBC and Santander were seen as being at arms length to the current crisis due to their relatively low exposure to the US housing market. However, with news of the UK property crash worsening and Asian markets faltering, HSBC is coming under increasing pressure.

More than anything market participants hate confusion or indecision, with the common reaction being “if in doubt, get out”. This is reflected in the performance of financial shares across the globe. Even when the wider market attempted a rally, financials were weighing on sentiment, like a ship trying to sail with its anchor still deployed.

Although last weeks UK unemployment data and sales projections from various companies fell below consensus, European markets didnt revisit the October lows and US markets managed to rally from beneath them . Despite the economic outlook arguably looking bleaker than it did just two weeks ago, markets havent capitulated. The optimistic interpretation of this scenario is that the bad news is starting to be priced in by the stock market. As markets are forward looking by at least 6 months, they could be discounting the slowdown that virtually everyone is predicting, and are looking for what happens after that.

The pessimistic interpretation of the current scenario is that markets are as over optimistic now as they were a couple of months ago. The default reaction to any impending disaster is in most cases denial then panic. The pessimist would argue that investors are still too optimistic about companys future growth prospects, and so further falls are likely. The reality is that markets are flipping from optimism to pessimism almost by the hour and remain entrenched in a choppy mess. After repeated failed rallies over the last few weeks, the bulls would be forgiven for giving up the ghost.

The coming week kicks off with some middle tier US industrial production figures and Treasury secretary speaking late on Monday evening. On Tuesday there is a raft of UK and US inflation numbers followed by Fed chairman Bernanke testifying as US markets open. Wednesday sees the release of the last MPC meeting minutes and with Gordon Brown calling for further rate cuts, these minutes will be poured over closely for hints of future decisions. Later that evening the FOMC release the minutes from their last meeting and although many argue they are done for now, Wall Street is still calling for more cuts.

There have been many comparisons between current market action and the great depression of the 1930s, and in many ways these comparisons are valid. The last time markets were as choppy as they are today was indeed the 1930s. The world is a very different place to how it was 70-80 years ago, but the current extremes were seeing point back to this period as being a strong likeness. According to Rob Hannah of Quantifiable Edges, the stock market only recovered from this decade long malaise, once it switched from chop mode to trending mode. If a long period of chop is the worst we experience over the next few months, even years, although frustrating, there may be worse things that could happen. Ironically, a smooth decline which bottoms out to form a smooth rally may be the real harbinger of a recovery. This may be a moot point as we are still far from seeing smooth rallies or smooth declines.

Trading Investing News

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Last week the Bank of England hit the headlines with an unexpected 1.5% rate cut. The move was largely pre meditated as a shock tactic to boost the ailing UK economy ahead of the all important Christmas period. Spreading the cut over a number of months would have had much less of an impact as it can take many months for the benefits of such a cut to filter down to consumers. This is especially the case now with banks being slow to pass on any benefits to customers. The MPC have sent out a message that they are prepared to treat the threat posed by the global slowdown very seriously. Unfortunately this message is a double edged sword, the euphoria that immediately met the rate cut was short lived and the FTSE soon rolled over and headed back towards the lows of the day.

There is also the possibility that last weeks announcement might make it less likely that the MPC will cut again in the near future. Experts had been calling for cuts of this magnitude over a number of months, but the MPC may have bundled all their planned rate cuts in one dramatic roll of the dice. It may be some time before they cut again, preferring to let the dust settle on the biggest single cut in a generation.

Friday’s US payroll figures were ugly by any measure, with the reported loss of 240,000 jobs slightly worse than expected. The worse data point to come out was actually the downwards revision to Septembers payroll figures, which pushed September payrolls down from -159,000 to -284,000. This means that so far in 2008, over 1 million jobs have been lost, most of these have been in the financial sector but the slump is prevalent in virtually every US sector.

On the face of it, it was perhaps surprising to see equity markets rebound so strongly on Friday, especially in the face of accelerating unemployment in the world’s biggest economy. However, the reality is that financial markets are forward looking, which means that most of the time the bad news is already taken into account when it comes. Fridays payroll figures could have been even worse than they were and judging by the rebound we’re seeing, a significant part of the falls on Wednesday and Thursday may have been traders rushing in to sell ahead of Fridays numbers. The net result is that the preceding two day sell off appears to have overshot slightly.

On the credit markets, libor and credit default swaps continue to improve for the worlds largest financial firms. The cost of insuring against companies defaulting on their debt is still very high by historical standards, but they have still come down a long way in the last few weeks. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs still remain a concern while the UK’s HSBC currently has the lowest CDS of the remaining major independent banks and brokers. In short, things have most certainly improved since the dark days of October, but there is a long way to go before we can say safely say that this credit crisis is over.

Comments (0)
Categories : Investing

My Trading Newsletter – 20th October 2008

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Newsletter for w/c 20th October. 2008.

If you didn’t think it could get any worse then I am sorry to be bearer of bad news but Tuesday 21 could be make or break day for the markets when $360bn worth of defaulted CDS contracts are due for settlement - this article not only describes this in more detail but also explains why the coordinated bank bail outs have, so far, failed to restore a modicum of calm to the markets. My own view is that the wild whipsawing we have been seeing will continue until the end of this month at which point we will also have to consider the effect of the US Presidential Election.

As a very general rule when the market is going down into an election it favours victory for the party not in office. If it is going up into the election, it favours the party in office. The US Presidential Election can also have an effect on the US Dollar – again in general a democratic win has tended to be positive for the dollar whilst a republican win has nearly always led to dollar weakness. A good indicator for the dollar is the dollar index which is used extensively in the currency market as a sentiment indicator. The ticker code is USDX and being a futures index is quoted on the NYBOT (New York Board of Trade). The index represents the relationship between the US dollar and six major currencies: the Euro, Japanese Yen, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona and Swiss Franc. As you can see from the chart it has been in decline pretty much since 2000 – the start of the Bush term and has only latterly started to regain some ground.

There are various reasons for this recovery including the dramatic fall in the price of oil – some 50% since its high in July. Earlier this year I wrote extensively on the oil price in my blog: http://www.making-bread.co.uk/myblog as an example of how an asset bubble can just gather so much momentum that traders and investors lose all sight of logic and reason. How far the price will now fall will depend in part on OPEC and whether there is a coordinated move to cut supplies. The Axis of Diesel” article from Saturday’s Times newspaper  summarizes the current geo political and economic position very neatly.

You might wonder why I am focusing on issues which could be considered too global and perhaps irrelevant to traders outside of the US or the forex market. However, the old adage that when America sneezes we all catch a cold (or in this case pneumonia) still holds and with the global banking and financial systems resembling a cat’s cradle global has suddenly become very local. My own view is that regardless of your country, market or trading style a basic understanding of the economic fundamentals as well as the geo political dynamics can only help you make better trading and investing decisions.

Trading Tip: The financial world is awash with indicators, news and opinion both fundamental and technical which can overwhelm even the most seasoned of traders and investors. All indicators are either lagging or leading and while they may work some of the time they won’t work all of the time. One of the best reference books I have come across on fundamental economic indicators and how they impact the various markets is by Bernard Baumohl: The Secret of Economic Indicators. The book covers both the US as well as the most important world economic numbers. Enjoy!

Good luck and good trading.

Anna

My Weekly Trading Newsletter

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Newsletter for w/c 13th October 2008: “Derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction” is a famous Buffett aphorism and one with which many are familiar. What may not be so familiar is that he first coined the phrase back in 2003 in his annual letter to shareholders. He went on to argue that these highly complex financial instruments were time bombs which could harm not only their buyers and sellers, but the whole economic system. Having experienced the most frightening and hectic week since the second world war we can say that these bombs have now well and truly exploded. Exchanges as far apart as Brazil and Russia simply closed down, as governments attempted to stem the panic and fear. Interest rate cuts, bank bailout plans, the rush to safe haven assets all continued while the markets raged. As mentioned before economic data is irrelevant as the markets will continue their hysteria until at least the end of this month as governments and regulators try to prevent a complete meltdown of the global economy.

Despite the financial firestorm it is important to understand that derivatives such as futures, options and credit default swaps were originally developed to hedge risks in financial markets – that is – to buy insurance against market movements. Most traders and investors are familiar with futures and options but maybe less familiar with credit default swaps or CDSs. These were pioneered by J P Morgan back in the mid 1990s as insurance on debt, guaranteeing the holder his money in the event of a company going under. Typically they are bought to protect default on bonds, corporate debt and mortgage securities. The cost is priced as a percentage of the debt, and is measured in basis points (one-hundredth of a percentage point). Just like any other insurance product the riskier the debt the more expensive to insure that debt. By the middle of 2007 the market had grown to$45 trillion.

Crucially CDSs can also be used to measure the financial health of a bank or company. For example the price of a 5 year CDS in HBOS shot up when rumours began circulating that the bank was in trouble, the price only falling once it was announced that the Bank was to be taken over by Lloyds TSB. Until their recent collapse the three riskiest banks in Europe were the Icelandic trio of Landsbanki, Glitnir and Kaupthing. CDSs in Landsbanki were being priced at 3,000 basis points – the market view was that in order to insure £10m of debt investors would have to pay an additional £3m! It is hardly surprising these banks had to be nationalized by the Icelandic government.

Unfortunately, the problem does not end here because the entire CDS industry may be on the point of collapse. The reasons? First, unlike the banking sector, options and futures, this industry is unregulated and what started as a quick way to make stupendous amounts of money when economies and markets were booming, has now become a financial liability which will change forever the financial and political landscapes. As contracts were traded no one was making sure that the original holder actually had the assets to pay up in the event of a default and the fear now is that the insurers themselves may not have enough money to payout anyway. AIG’s recent write down of $11 billion was the biggest loss in the company’s history.

The impact of this problem will be felt by all of us because if this insurance disappears or becomes too expensive any kind of lending will become even more difficult to obtain for individuals and companies alike. The banking crisis is therefore far from over. It explains the frantic attempts of governments to shore up their national banks and the banking system with taxpayer funds. The restoration of confidence and, more importantly, the banks’ coffers has superseded any criticism of this plan of action. There is no Plan B. As individuals our priority must be to protect and preserve – shame this advice was not heeded by the banks, regulators and ultimately the politicians.

Trading Tip: In the current volatile markets all traders should consider using fixed odds trading to speculate on the markets. For those of you unfamiliar with this technique details can be found at my fixed odds trading site.

Finance Market News – Weekly Update

Monday, October 13th, 2008

It could be argued that even with the wild gyrations of the past few months, many were still in denial about the state of the financial markets. Last week, fear was rife as traders, investors, and the man on the street could no longer deny the magnitude of the global sell off. Some commentators are referring to it as the great crash of 2008. Certainly, there have been bigger one day falls in percentage terms, but the scale and unyielding nature of the October’s sell off of is unique. You only had to take your eyes off a market like the Dow Jones for a second, and it will have moved 100 points in either direction. This level of volatility is almost unheard of. For days markets have continued to show signs of complete surrender, days that may have become capitulation low points in the past, yet the sell off still continued. People looking for the bounce that often follows such waterfall sell offs, have so far unfortunately been too early and quite wrong.

The VIX options volatility index, often referred to as the ‘fear gauge’, has spiked to levels even higher than those registered during the height of the dotcom bubble collapse. This is a broad decline with no one sector out on its own in leading declines. Financials are down of course, but so too is the energy sector, as oil prices continue to fall. Last year around the quiet period and intermediate high of August, the FTSE had a daily range of around 60 points. Last week it was moving that much every 15 minutes. These are extraordinary times and many technical indicators are flashing at levels never seen before. At best, central governments are hoping that the coordinated rate bomb and localized interventions have stopped Armageddon, there is now no hope of the UK, US, Irish and Spanish economies avoiding recession.

This week’s planned economic announcements will continue to play second fiddle to the shocks and surprises that await us all. US financials will be grateful for Monday’s Columbus Day bank holiday, though the stock market is still open. Aside from this, there are important announcements from the UK to start the week with PPI input on Monday and CPI on Tuesday. Wednesday brings a raft of US data with US PPI and retail sales. Bernanke is also due to speak in the late afternoon.

Although the sub prime mess originated in the US, this has always been a global credit crunch. European banks were some of the biggest buyers of sub prime securities, so when the crisis developed, any one of the world’s major banks could have been holding toxic assets. This in turn led us to the historical coordinated action by the world’s central banks today. Each government has attempted to deal with the crisis with specific interventions in their area but all eyes are on this weekend’s G7 conference for further coordinated international activity.

It could be argued that Britain and the US have been able to take more significant moves because they have their own central bank and perhaps crucially a central treasury, something the Eurozone lacks. With problems in Ireland, Spain, Greece and Italy increasing, the pace of a recession across the Eurozone could run at different speeds, as did the preceding period of growth. The differing needs of each individual state could put further pressure on the Euro against the Dollar. The Dollar has recovered 16% from the lows back in March and looks set for further weakness.

My Weekly Newsletter – A Sideways Look At The Markets

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Good Evening

October 2008: “These capitalists generally act harmoniously, and in concert, to fleece the people, and now that they have got into a quarrel with themselves, we are called upon to appropriate the people’s money to settle the quarrel.” Abraham Lincoln – 11th January 1837 eloquently sums up the passing of the Paulson plan last week to bail out the banking system. Similar action is now taking place in Europe as more banks continue to fail or threaten to fail.

Last week all equity markets fell to multi year lows. Some made these on Tuesday, others on Friday. In Europe, the Netherlands AEX, London FTSE and Swiss SMI indices all fell to their lowest levels in over three years on Tuesday while the German DAX fell to its lowest level in over 2 years on Friday October 3rd.

In the Pacific Rim Australia All Ordinaries made a double bottom – level not seen since December 2005. Hong Kong lowest since July 2006 and the Nikkei fell below 11,000 for the first time since 2004. Nifty of India too fell on 30 September to 3715, its lowest price since April 2007. The US markets fared even worse – the Dow has actually fallen 4000 points since last year.

These falls were also mirrored across markets including commodities (lack of demand now coming through).Silver, oil, palladium (used in the car industry) were badly hit. It seems that traders and investors are cashing in everything and pouring money into safe havens such as Treasuries.This would also partly explain the recent surge of the dollar. However, this current financial turmoil has still some considerable way to go and will probably gather pace and whip up even more fear as it goes along leading to,not a recession but, a full blown depression.

Difficult as it may seem it is vital to try and remain detached from the fear and hysteria and try to understand, not only how the financial world arrived at this point, but also the likely outcome of this meltdown. Sadly the omens for a speedy resolution to the crisis are not particularly good as we are already one year into this downturn. However, two interesting indicators to use to gauge emotion and sentiment of a market are the VIX and Coppock.

The VIX – the fear indicator reached unprecedented levels last week although it began to send out warning signals as far back as May/June 2007 -http://www.making-bread.co.uk/trading-article5.htm and an important part of the trading toolkit. Meanwhile the Coppock indicator is useful as means of establishing when it is safe to re-enter the fray – http://www.making-bread.co.uk/trading-article1.htm.

This week’s economic data will simply continue to confirm that recession is not merely a threat but a reality.The BOE and Bank of Japan have to decide on interest rates. BOJ is expected to keep rates at 0.5% while the BOE is coming under increasing pressure to cut sooner rather than later. Under normal circumstances interest rates would influence the currency market. With an interest rate differential of almost 5% one would think traders would be buying the British Pound against the Japanese Yen. In fact the exact opposite has happened with the charts indicating possible further falls for the Pound.As this pair correlates strongly with the Euro Yen, both have similar chart patterns.Both pairs can also be highly volatile but very profitable if traded correctly.

Finally, one of the most interesting aspects of last week was the price of gold which, given its status as the ultimate safe haven, did not rise as expected.Indeed the gold chart shows that the price may even fall in the short term.Interestingly the CBOE recently launched the Gold Vix to measure market expectation of the volatility of gold prices http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7afb1bfe-5ff9-11dd-805e-000077b07658.htmlTrading Concept:
Volatility is not to be feared but understood and, where possible harnessed. Good luck and good trading.
Anna

Trading News Weekly Update

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

This is my newsletter from the 29th September which I hope you find enjoyable and interesting. If you would like a copy direct to your inbox, please just sign up on the making bread site via the link at the top of the page.

As markets around the world lurch from crisis to drama and back again we are still waiting the outcome (if any) of the Paulson plan to save the US banking system and economy thereby avoiding a 1929 style crash and depression. However, while grown men weep in Washington, banks continued to fail – Washington Mutual in the US and Bradford and Bingley in the UK, it is safe to say that this maelstrom is unlikely to end any time soon as the nightmare on Wall Street moves decisively onto Main Street.
Last week’s massive swings in the markets may have provided plenty of copy but in reality many are missing the point: it is the chronic lack of trust between banks which is the cause of this mayhem, resulting in a mass flight to quality. Interbank rates are dysfunctional – when a bank would rather earn less than 4% from a central bank than 6%+ from the market then there is something seriously awry.

A recap on last week’s banking woes started with Denmark’s Central Bank rescuing that country’s 6th largest bank, EBH, its second rescue in 10 weeks after two others agreed to be bought out last week.By Wednesday Gulf Arab States’ Central Banks said they were ready to provide more liquidity, if needed in the parched interbank market. Kazakhstan established a $5b rescue fund for p class=”MsoNormal”>

The solution to this unfolding catastrophe is to throw money at the problem much like the Japanese banking crisis of late 1980s – explained in detail at www.yen-to-dollar.com.Then, as now, this is only likely to prolong the agony as well as killing off enterprises and companies which are basically sound but whose credit dries up.

Once again this week’s economic data is almost irrelevant even though important Q3 numbers are expected:Japan’s Tankan Survey, UK PMI, ECB interest rate decision and US Non Farm Payroll on Friday. Each of these would normally be expected to move both equity and forex markets. However, given the fear and paralysis together with a number of holidays worldwide, market conditions will be both thin and highly volatile. At the centre of this storm is the fate of the US dollar with its implications to all markets and countries. Setting aside the long held desire of the like of Venezuela, Iran and Russia whose dearest wish is to see an end to the dollar, the fate of the US dollar is inextricably linked to all other markets. An agreement in Washington this weekend may see a dollar bounce and equity markets respond in kind, however, this may prove only a temporary reprieve.Ambrose Evans-Pritchard who is always an interesting read explains in his latest blog post how there is now a very serious risk of a run on the dollar.

In the forex market the dollar bell weather pair is the dollar yen.At the moment it is the Japanese banking system which is perceived as being insulated from the general crisis and the yen has strengthened accordingly.For forex traders 104 is now pivotal.For those of us who can remember the days when risk was seen as good it was the relentless selling of the Japanese yen in the carry trade pairs which led to many a profitable trade – oh happy days!
The public’s faith in the great and the good to get us out of this mess is both touching and probably misplaced and just remember that in the end it’s always the taxpayer who picks up the bill.

Trading Concept:

As traders and investors it is vital we understand correlation and how different markets and instruments relate and move in respect of one another.Two examples:In forex the euro dollar and dollar swiss are almost 100% negatively correlated – going long on both euro dollar and dollar swiss would make no sense at all (or even short on both) as they would cancel each other out.Currently the correlation between oil and the dollar is inverted – a weak dollar has led to a massive increase in the oil price – however this relationship is more fluid and may change in the future – my latest blog http://www.prices-oil.org gives a daily update and comment on the oil price. It’s also available in a Chinese version. Good luck and good trading – kind regards Anna.