Market Sentiment
Weekly Sentiment Report: Is There Another Rabbit in the Hat?
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 03/10/2014 12:01 -0500The "smart money" indicator is at its most extreme degree of selling since November, 2010.
Weekly Sentiment Report: Headwinds
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 03/03/2014 10:41 -0500The technicals break with the news!
Studying Gold and Silver’s Past Gives Us a Glimpse of Where We’re Heading in the Future
Submitted by smartknowledgeu on 03/03/2014 06:18 -0500A look back in time helps one spot the banker propaganda about gold and silver so prevalent today.
Weekly Sentiment Report: The Smart Money is Bearish
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 02/24/2014 12:33 -0500This is a headwind we shouldn't ignore.
The Chinese Dominoes Are About To Fall: Complete List Of Upcoming Trust Defaults
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/19/2014 23:53 -0500... We know how "difficult" it was for China to do the wrong thing when it bailed out two insolvent shadow bank Trusts and encourage moral hazard, despite repeated assurances by one after another PBOC director that this time the central bank means business, we have good news: these two narrowly averted Trust defaults are just the beginning - it is all downhill from here.
For Your Radar Screen: Next Week's Features
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/16/2014 14:36 -0500- Australian Dollar
- BOE
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- CPI
- CRB
- CRB Index
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- France
- Housing Market
- Hungary
- Institutional Investors
- Italy
- Japan
- Market Sentiment
- Markit
- Philly Fed
- Portugal
- recovery
- Short Interest
- Technical Indicators
- Testimony
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Verizon
- Yen
- Yuan
Overview of the events and data that will be of interest to investors.
On The Lessons 'Economists' Fail To Learn
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2014 10:48 -0500
How quickly emerging markets’ fortunes have turned. Not long ago, they were touted as the salvation of the world economy – the dynamic engines of growth that would take over as the economies of the United States and Europe sputtered. Economists at Citigroup, McKinsey, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and elsewhere were predicting an era of broad and sustained growth from Asia to Africa. But now the emerging-market blues are back. This is not the first time that developing countries have been hit hard by abrupt mood swings in global financial markets. The surprise is that we are surprised. Economists, in particular, should have learned a few fundamental lessons long ago...
Weekly Sentiment Report: Crisis Averted?
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 02/10/2014 10:02 -0500Crisis was averted. Or was it just put off for another day?
New Phase in FX has Begun
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/08/2014 09:54 -0500A technical look at the currencies. The phase that has characterized the first few weeks of the year has ended and a new one has begun.
Argentine Banking System Archives Destroyed By Deadly Fire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/05/2014 23:57 -0500
While we are sure it is a very sad coincidence, on the day when Argentina decrees limits on the FX positions banks can hold and the Argentine Central Bank's reserves accounting is questioned publically, a massive fire - killing 9 people - has destroyed a warehouse archiving banking system documents. As The Washington Post reports, the fire at the Iron Mountain warehouse (which purportedly had multiple protections against fire, including advanced systems that can detect and quench flames without damaging important documents) took hours to control and the sprawling building appeared to be ruined. The cause of the fire wasn’t immediately clear - though we suggest smelling Fernandez' hands...
JPMorgan Takes Offense At Argentina's Fabricated Reserves Data
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/04/2014 14:06 -0500
As we noted previously there is a race to the bottom between the Argentine currency and its central bank's reserve balance as day by day both slide seemingly unceasingly. However, as JPMorgan notes in a rather aggressive note, a local press article sheds doubts over Argentina's 'honest' reporting of international reserves. Though long used to the lies about inflation (that ended up with the economy minster being fired and it being deemed 'illegal' to tell the truth), JPMorgan blasts that during a balance of payments crisis - as Argentina is undergoing - such manipulation of official statistics (and one so critical for market sentiment) is detrimental to the needed confidence building around the transition in the FX regime and is "a very very bad idea". Simply put, Argentina is over-stating its reserves... considerably.
Bank Of America Warns: "Too Few Bears Out There", "Investors Not Prepared" For Selloff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/04/2014 08:24 -0500
There is one main reason why complacency is bad: selloffs. Because as Bank of America explains, in an environment in which there are "too few bears", and where investors are "not prepared for a downside correction", when you do finally get a sell off for whatever reason, with nobody hedged and otherwise prepared for such an outcome, the only logical continuation is piling on until one gets selling exhaustion. And in a world in which hedge fund leverage is about 500%, by the time exhaustion comes, there will be very few left standing.
Weekly Sentiment Report: The Price Cycle
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 02/03/2014 12:30 -0500In essence, you need to be selling strength.
- thetechnicaltake's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
Alarms Going Off As 102 Dollar-Yen Support Breached
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/03/2014 07:14 -0500- Australia
- Auto Sales
- BOE
- Central Banks
- China
- Chrysler
- Congressional Budget Office
- Copper
- Crude
- Debt Ceiling
- default
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Ford
- General Motors
- Germany
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- LIBOR
- Lloyds
- Market Sentiment
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- POMO
- POMO
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- recovery
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Benefits
- Yen
Alarms are going off in assorted plunge protecting offices, now that the USDJPY has breached the 102.000 "fundamental" support level, below which the Yen can comfortably soar to sub 100.000 in perfectly even 100 pip increments. The first trading day of February has brought another weaker session across Asia though some equity indices such as the KOSPI (-1.1%) are in catch-up mode given they were shut towards the back-end of last week. Over the weekend, the Chinese government published its latest official manufacturing PMI which showed a 0.5pt drop to 50.5, a six-month low, and consistent with consensus estimates. DB’s Jun Ma believes there was some element of seasonality affecting this month’s result including the fact that Chinese New Year started at the end of January (vs February last year), anti-pollution measures in the lead up to CNY and efforts to control government consumption around the holiday period. The official service PMI was released overnight (53.4) which printed at the lowest level since at least 2011. The uninspiring Chinese data has not helped market sentiment this morning, with the Nikkei plunging -2% and ASX200 once again under pressure. S&P500 futures have fluctuated around the unchanged line this morning although if support below the USDJPY fail solidly, then watch out below. Markets in Mainland China and Hong Kong remain closed for Lunar New Year.
Two Months After We Said It Would, Goldman Cuts Its GDP Forecast (With Much More To Come)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 15:17 -0500Back in December 2013, as we do after every periodic bout of irrational exuberance by Goldman's chief economist Jan Hatzius et al (who can forget our post from December 2010 "Goldman Jumps Shark, Goes Bullish, Hikes Outlook" in which Hatzius hiked his 2011 GDP forecast from 1.9% to 2.7% only to end the year at 1.8%, and we won't even comment on the longer-term forecasts) designed merely to provide a context for Goldman's equity flow and prop-trading axes, we said it was only a matter of time before Goldman (and the rest of the Goldman-following sellside econo-penguins) is forced to once again trim its economic forecasts. Overnight, two months after our prediction, the FDIC-backed hedge fund did just that, after Goldman's Hatzius announced that "we have taken down our GDP estimates to 2½% in Q1 and 3% in Q2, from 2.7% [ZH: actually 3.0% as of Thursday] and 3½% previously."







