Aussie
Indonesia Leads Sea Of Red Across AsiaPac Stocks (And US Treasuries) Following Dismal Data
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/18/2013 23:30 -0500
UPDATE: Everbright Securities (the Chinese fat-finger stock brokerage) just announced they SNAFU'd again - this time by 'mistakenly' selling 10Y government bonds at 4.2%
AsiaPac and EM markets are awash with red this evening. While Japanese stocks are very modestly higher on the bad-news-is-good-news that Abe's economy saw the third largest trade deficit on record (dramatically worse at over JPY1tn than expectations of JPY773), most of the rest of the overnight markets (including US Treasuries) are in the red. From plunging Aussie vehicle sales data (-3.5% from +4.0% in the prior month, to a -0.3% QoQ print for Thailand's GDP (confirming recession as opposed to expectations of a +0.2% gain); and from Indonesian current account deficit (and currency depreciation) concerns smashing stocks -4.0% (most since Oct 2011) to the ongoing collapse in India currency, bond, and now equity markets, all is not well ahead of the European open. Chinese stocks are also down for the fourth day in a row as Friday's fat-finger concerns drive brokers down hard and spike 7-day repo rates.
FX: Noise to Signal Ratio Increases
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/17/2013 07:15 -0500Anticipation of Fed tapering is being cited for both dollar gains and dollar losses. What gives?
Corrective Forces to Continue to Dominate in the FX Market
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/10/2013 06:05 -0500Short-term, dollar risks still appear on the downside, but this appears largely corrective in nature. Medium-term, a higher dollar still appears to be the most likely scenario.
- Marc To Market's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
An Udderly Ridiculous Media S#%t Storm
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 08/06/2013 15:39 -0500It seems I arrived in New Zealand just in time to see the country implode over a bit of botulism and bad PR. Good thing I haven't converted all my dollars into kiwis just yet!
Dollar Poised to Slip to Lower End of Ranges
Submitted by Marc To Market on 08/03/2013 07:29 -0500Discussion of recent and prospective price action in the foreign exchange market.
China Bucks AsiaPac Trend With 'Miraculous' Rise In Its PMI
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/31/2013 20:09 -0500
UPDATE: China HSBC PMI prints 47.7 - same as Flash - for worst 4-month decline in 3 years
Following Japan's disappointing PMI last night, and after some 'hope' in June, Aussie PMI collapsed from an almost 'recovering' 49.6 to 42.0 with only 1 in 12 industries expanding and production, employment, and new orders all falling further into contraction. Then came a formerly consistent bellwether of the global recovery (until of course it started to fall when it became irrelevant) - South Korea's PMI tumbled to 47.2 (from 49.4) - its lowest since Sept 2012 (and falling for the 3rd month in a row) and employment down the fastest in 17 months. Then after the early Flash HSBC PMI printed at 11-month lows (final HSBC PMI shortly) and firmly in contraction, China's official PMI just arrived at a perfectly 'reasonable' 50.3 (highest in 2 months) and well ahead of a contractionary 49.8 expectation. Remember this is the same data whose subsets were temporarily (and then permanently) removed last month. This is the widest disparity from HSBC's measure in 15 months.
FX Outlook: Dollar Softer amid Consolidation
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/20/2013 07:12 -0500Overview of currency market outlook.
Underlying Dollar Uptrend Intact, Consolidation Ahead
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/13/2013 06:45 -0500Bernanke's comments washed out some late dollar longs and they may be reluctant to re-establish ahead of the Chairman's testimony before Congress at the end of next week. The underlying bullish case for the dollar remains intact.
Why Bonds Are Set To Bounce Back
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 07/06/2013 11:15 -0500Increasing concerns over deflation will limit any QE tapering in the second-half and set the stage for bonds to outperform stocks once again.
Dollar Rides High
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/06/2013 06:48 -0500Brief discussion of the price action that is lifting the dollar at expense of nearly every other currency.
Frontrunning: July 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/02/2013 06:29 -0500- Anglo Irish
- Apple
- Aussie
- B+
- BAC
- Bad Bank
- Barclays
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Citigroup
- Conference Board
- Copper
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hong Kong
- ISI Group
- Japan
- Keefe
- Las Vegas
- Lazard
- Market Share
- national security
- News Corp
- Quiksilver
- ratings
- Raymond James
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Transocean
- Tribune
- Turkmenistan
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Egypt on the edge after Mursi rebuffs army ultimatum (Reuters)
- Inside China's Bank-Rate Missteps (WSJ)
- Obama Urges Morsi to Respond to Protesters' Concerns (WSJ)
- How Fed’s 7% Jobless Avoids Deterring Bondholders Is Mystery (BBG)
- Obama Joins With Political Foe Bush at End of Africa Trip (BBG)
- China may introduce deposit insurance by year-end (China Daily)
- China’s Slowdown Could Slam Hong Kong (BBG)
- Government 'to ask Rothschild to advise on RBS split' (Telegraph)
- Martin Feldstein: The Fed Should Start to 'Taper' Now (WSJ)
June's Winners And Losers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/01/2013 07:03 -0500Think gold and silver were the worst performing financial asset in June? Think again: that dubious distinction falls to the Bovespa, the Shanghai Composite and the Greek stock market index, all of which tumbled more than the precious metal complex did in the past month. Yet what an odd month for hard assets - on one hand WTI, Corn and Brent were the best performing assets, while gold, silver, copper and wheat tumbled.
Greenback Finishes Q2 on Firm Footing, What Next?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 06/29/2013 06:03 -0500Near-term outlook for the major currencies discussed and a brief analysis of the short-coming of fair-value "discounting" models in understanding recent price action.
Chinese Sovereign Risk Spikes Most Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/25/2013 12:16 -0500
With the nation's short-term funding markets in crisis mode - no matter how much they are jawboned about temporary seasonal factors - it seems yet another indicator of stress is flashing the red warning signal. China's sovereign CDS has spiked by the most since Lehman in the last 3 days - up 55% to 140bps. This is the highest spread (risk) in 18 months and looks eerily similar to the period around the US liquidity market freeze. Hedging individual Chinese bank counterparty risk is hard (given illiquidty) and so it would seem traders are proxying general risk of failure via the nation's sovereign risk (and stocks which also languish at post-Lehman lows). On a related note, Aussie banks have seen there credit risk rise 50% in the last month as they suffer domestically and from the China contagion.
Ten Developments to Note
Submitted by Marc To Market on 06/20/2013 05:25 -0500The global capital markets are seeing large moves in response not only to the Federal Reserve, though clearly that is a key impetus, but also to developments elsewhere. Here is a dispassionate review.






