Aussie
Some Markets Are Turmoiling In Asia
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2015 22:49 -0500No catalyzing event - China CPI modestly hotter than expected and Aussie confidence weak - but FX markets are fast in the Asia session with USDJPY surging above 122.00 for the first time since July 2007 and EURUSD dropping below 1.08 as USD strength dominates (up 1.65% from payrolls). Japanese stocks have decoupled from USDJPY's rally and are down notably and despite the USD strength, WTI crude has jumped (perhaps on news of Iraqi forces taking back an oil field near Tikrit). Gold is falling as Offshore Renminbi weakens. All in all - markets are turmoiling for no good reason...
Where The Hedge Fund Herd Was Parked Last Week: The Most Long And Short Net Specs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/07/2015 11:01 -0500Hedge funds are still useful for one thing: observing where the fast money herd is parked, and doing precisely the opposite in advance of the herd dispersing. Because in a market as illiquid as this one, any and all fast, sudden moves by even the smallest group of traders results in dramatic price movement outliers.
Bullish Dollar Momentum Leaves Near-Term Technicals Stretched
Submitted by Marc To Market on 03/07/2015 10:20 -0500Dollar extends gains, defies doom and gloomers again.
Aussie Boom Towns Go Bust As Iron Ore Prices Crash To Record Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2015 21:50 -0500Dalian Iron Ore prices have been cut in half in the last year (which must mean over-supply and not under-demand, right?). Amid China's growth target cut, Iron Ore prices there have crashed to below $60 - a record low - and that is having dramatic impacts across many regions. As we recently noted, Aussie gold miners are producing desperately to generate cashflow, but despite the booming housing market in some areas, as Reuters reports, the drop in iron ore and coal prices (the nation's 2 biggest exports) have led former boom towns to bust as "reality comes into the marketplace."
Aussie Gold Production Surges To Its Highest Since 2003
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/03/2015 21:00 -0500Amid a booming housing market (home prices +14.4% YoY), and busting economy (PMI 44.2 from 55.1 2014 peak), Australia's Gold output in 2014 surged 4% to its highest since 2003. As Mining.com reports, the world's no.2 gold-producing nation (after China) has been forced to increase the grade of ore they were targeting and push their processing plants even harder, and mining consultants Surbiton Associates warns "it's not all good news."
The Market is Simply NOT Expecting This to Happen in China
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 03/03/2015 17:56 -0500Financial systems that seem robust are more often than not inherently fragile - China is no exception!
"What’s Going On" - Traders Stumped As HFTs Frontrun Last Night's Australia "Surprise" Rate Decision
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/03/2015 08:46 -0500Yesterday at 10:30pm eastern, or alternatively today at 2:30pm local time, Australia's central bank unexpectedly did not cut its key interest rate, keeping it at 2.25% even as the majority of economists had predicted a rate cut. However, not everyone was surprised. Just a minute before the official announcement at bottom of the hour sharp, the AUD surged by 0.6%, rising from 0.7774 to 0.7822, suggesting that at least one algo and likely more, had advance knowledge of the unchanged decision, as shown in the chart below.
Did the Dollar Get its Groove Back?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/28/2015 10:29 -0500The US dollar firmed at the end of last week. Does this mean the bull market has resumed after the consolidatig its gains in February?
Dollar Momentum Eases, Bulls Hesitate
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/14/2015 10:09 -0500Technical outlook in the week ahead for the dollar, 10-year yields, oil and S&P 500.
Dollar Bulls Retake the Whip Hand
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/07/2015 10:48 -0500Put on the a tin foil hat if you must, but US dollar's rally is resuming after short consolidation phase. I think the rally is only about 1/3 of where it is eventually going.
Commodity Currencies Are Soaring
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/03/2015 13:25 -0500As Crude's bounce gathers pace so the world's beaten-down commodity-currencies are exploding higher. Aussie Dollar has given back all its RBA rate curt losses, The Russian Ruble is soaring, and the Canadian Dollar isd back under 1.24 against the USDollar... The USD Index is now down 1.3% since Friday.
Asian Markets In Turmoil - Weak Japanese Bond Auction; Surprise Aussie Rate Cut; India Holds Rates, Cuts Reserve Ratio
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/03/2015 00:27 -0500UPDATE: *INDIA'S CENTRAL BANK KEEPS BENCHMARK POLICY RATE AT 7.75%, CUTS SLR TO 21.5% OF NDTL FROM 22%
UPDATE: Dow Futs -80 points, S&P Futs -9pts
Following the 15th surprise rate cut of 2015 (Singapore, Europe, Switzerland, Denmark, Canada, India, Turkey, Egypt, Romania, Peru, Albania, Uzbekistan and Pakistan, Russia and now Australia), the Aussie Dollar has cratered to its lowest since May 2009 against the US Dollar at 0.7650 (and bond yields crashed by the most since 1997 to record lows). Aussie stocks kneejerked higher (on an extremely dovish RBA statement) but are fading (as are Chinese stocks). Perhaps even more concerningly indicative of the central banks losing control, following this morning's weak Japanese auction (or more properly expressed - BoJ monetization farce), USDJPY (under 117), Japanese stocks (down 350 points from US session highs), and JGBs (yields up 6-8bps) are all being sold.
Is the Dollar's Momentum Easing? Is Deeper Pullback in the Stock Market Likely?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 01/31/2015 10:13 -0500Simple near-term outlook.
Near-Term FX Views and More
Submitted by Marc To Market on 01/24/2015 10:27 -0500I have told you the US dollar was going up for months. Some mocked me. Others insulted me. So what? I tell you the dollar's bull market remains intact.





