Price Action
You Must be 48" To Ride This Ride
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2012 13:07 -0500
The crowds are slowly starting to fill up Times Square, and despite the imminent countdown to New Year’s, Washington still has not conjured up a resolution to avoid the fiscal cliff. Over the prior two months we have leveraged game theory, Venn diagrams, option “greeks,” and basic investor psychology as tools to decipher the ultimate path of the crisis and subsequent market reaction. Alas, regardless of all the analysis we and countless others have supplied; the short, intermediate, and long term prospects for stocks rest exclusively on headlines. More poignantly, the fate of the U.S. economy, global equities, and net incomes for hundreds of millions now depend upon the decision making of a group so small, its numbers can be counted with one hand.
Big Picture Thinkers And Silver
Submitted by lemetropole on 12/30/2012 15:06 -0500You truly have to be mentally challenged if you follow the gold/silver market action and cannot appreciate something is very amiss, as per the confused Mitsui gold people, as brought to your attention the other day.
Currency Positioning and Technical Outlook: Weak Signals, Lots of Noise
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/29/2012 11:09 -0500
The holiday week saw the dollar consolidate against most of the major currencies. The yen was the main exception as its losses were extended under the aggressive signals coming from the new Japanese government.
At the end of the week, the other key consideration, the US fiscal cliff made its presence felt. The recent pattern remained intact. News that gives the participants a sense that the cliff may be averted encourages risk taking, which means in the foreign exchange market, the sale of dollars and yen.
News that makes participants more fearful that the political dysfunction failed to avert the cliff and send the world's largest economy into recession, generally see the dollar and yen recover. This is what happened in very thin markets just ahead of the weekend as Obama's ling last ditch negotiating stance seemed to reflect a retreat from his earlier compromises.
Same Cliff Different Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/28/2012 07:08 -0500We could say that news is actually relevant or matters in this "market" but we would be lying, just as we would be lying if we said that this market has not become so utterly predictable, with yesterday's late day market surge - on yet another ridiculous catalyst - visible from so far away, it was almost painful to watch it take place in real time. Sure enough, futures are now sliding back, and giving back much of yesterday's gains - but don't worry, in a day full of even more meetings and flashing red headlines, at least some combination of carefully phrased MSM words will set off today's algo-driven buying frenzy, guaranteeing yet another "retail investor" decides they have had it with this farcical "free market" casino for ever.
Equity Futures At Friday's Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/23/2012 19:59 -0500
It seems a few humans have read a little this weekend and sold into the algo-induced euphoria from Friday's close. S&P 500 futures are down around 9 points - at the lows from Friday's day-session. EUR is bleeding modestly and JPY is weakening as equities appear to be recoupling with FX as a risk-driver (following EUR's dislocation two weeks ago). Cash Treasuries are yet to open but futures infer 2-3bps compression in yields. Much was made of VIX's 'strength' on Friday as some kind of tell; unfortunately misunderstanding is rife and it is evident that hedges were in fact rolled out into January (rather than lifted in any bullish manner). So far stocks are pushing back down to recouple with VIX's view of the world. Silver is flat at $30, Gold and Oil down a little. 6 more hours til Europe opens.
Currency Positioning and Technical Outlook Holiday Mode
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/22/2012 07:28 -0500
The US dollar rebounded smartly at the end of last week as the realization that it was increasingly likely the US would go over the fiscal cliff. This has been our base case, but many seemed to expect it to be averted and were looking past it.
Treasury Selloff Exhaustion Has Reversed - Next Stop Month / Year End
Submitted by govttrader on 12/21/2012 09:57 -05002 days ago US Treasury 10yr yields were 10bps cheap vs stocks. Well, not anymore. US Treasuries now have both technical and cyclical forces on their side for the next 1-2 weeks. Let us explain how...
Market Discovers Fiscal Cliff, Sends Dollar Higher
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/21/2012 07:10 -0500
It had seemed that many participants were looking past the US fiscal cliff and were to be content taking on more risk. However, yesterday's late developments have provided a cold slap of reality. Our base scenario, under which the US does in fact go over the cliff appears more likely now that Speak Boehner's "Plan B" failed to draw sufficient Republican support to allow a vote. Indeed, there is some speculation that the failure of Boehner's gambit may see a leadership challenge right after the New Year.
The lack of a coherent Republican strategy has prompted a large unwind of risk-on and thin holiday market conditions may be exacerbating the price action. In the risk-off mode, the US dollar and yen have performed best. The dollar-bloc, which has generally lagged in recent days, remains under pressure.
Yen Rebounds, Dollar Softens
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/20/2012 07:03 -0500
The US dollar is sporting a softer profile today. It had initially extended its gains after recovering in North America yesterday. In Japanese candlestick terms the euro and sterling had recorded "shooting stars", in essence opening on their highs and finishing on their lows. Additional profit-taking was seen in Asia, earlier today. The euro was pushed below its 20-day moving average for the first time since Dec 11. Sterling fared better but still extended yesterday's losses. However, in the European morning, both currencies have recovered to move back into yesterday's ranges.
The price action can be attributed to thinning market conditions and the recovery of the yen. Indeed, "sell the rumor buy the fact" gains in the yen, may have pressured the other currencies as cross positions were also unwound. The dollar has stabilized after slipping through the JPY84.20 area to trade below the previous day's low for the first time since Dec 10.
The Treasury Market Appears To Have Exhausted The Selloff - Time To Reverse??
Submitted by govttrader on 12/19/2012 14:59 -0500Treasuries have sold off aggressively over the past 2 weeks. Is it time for that trade to reverse to New Years??
Sentiment: Deja Cliff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/19/2012 07:05 -0500Blah blah Fiscal Cliff blah. Blah blah blahdy blah Cliff. Cliff blah blah republicans blah democrats blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah, blah blah, blah blah blah blah blah, blah blah, Cliff. Blah blah blah blah, blah blahdy blah.... Blah.
Initial Thoughts on Japan's Election
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/16/2012 12:56 -0500
The outcome of Japan's elections seems to be largely in line with market expectations. The Liberal Democrat Party won handily. It appears to have secured a majority of lower chamber of the Diet.
There had been some reports suggesting that it might be able to achieve a super-majority of 2/3, but this does not look to materialized. However, with its traditional party, the Komeito, together it may.
In any event, this is a strong mandate for the LDP's agenda. It is a combination of nationalism and what passes for socialism in the neo-liberal age, namely increased government support for the economy via a) massive public spending and 2) unlimited monetary easing.
The Trend Wants to be Your Friend Again
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/15/2012 07:53 -0500
The US dollar moved lower over the past week against the major currencies, with the notable exception of the Japanese yen. The greenback's technical tone has deteriorated. The euro and sterling appear to have convincingly broken above significant down trend lines. With the holiday season upon us, there seems to be no compelling technical reason not to look for a continuation of dollar weakness into the end of the year. Few are incentivized to fight the trend.
The extent of the Fed's easing, and the implication of its guidance, suggests an even more dovish posture than the expansion of QE3+ (remember it was purposely open-ended, unlike QE1 and QE2). While the euro zone economy appears to be contracting this quarter at a slightly faster pace than in Q3, the slowdown in the US is more dramatic. Growth may be more than cut in half from the 2.7% annual pace seen in Q3. The fiscal cliff is the main cause of consternation at the moment. Although there is private negotiations taking place, the public posturing is what investors have to guide them, and it is not particularly flattering.
Guest Post: The Investment Everybody Loves to Hate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 15:49 -0500
Imagine a stock - best for the hypothetical exercise is probably a tech stock - rising for 12 years without interruption. A net gain every year, sometimes a small one, sometimes a bigger one, but nicely compounding at an annual yield of more than 17.13% (that's a devilish 666.67% in 12 years). What would people say about this stock? Would there be a steady stream of negative press trying to dissuade people from buying it? We somehow doubt it, although almost every investment that has seen a great deal of appreciation has its detractors (and sometimes they are right). When it comes to gold, one could certainly debate the merits of buying it at what appears at least on the surface as a high price. Gold bulls can only profit from examining bearish arguments, in order to see if they have merit.
Four Drivers, Little Movement
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/14/2012 06:40 -0500With few exceptions, the global capital markets which began the week with a bang, are finishing with a whimper. The US dollar is little changed against the major and emerging market currencies. Asia stocks were by and large flat, with the notable exception of Chinese stocks, where the major indices jumped a little more than 4%.
European bourses are mixed, with gains and losses mostly less than 0.25% near midday in London. Spanish and Italian bond yields are slightly lower, but activity is quiet.
Despite the subdued tone there are four developments to note




