Yen
Every One Wants Dollars (Again)
Submitted by Marc To Market on 11/22/2014 10:16 -0500Contrary to the death of the dollar chatter, the US currency continues to appreciate. Here's why there is still punch left in the bowl.
Have Central Banks Entered An Undeclared War?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2014 11:27 -0500The monetary tectonic plates are shifting, and predicting the next global financial earthquake is relatively easy.
In Addition To China, Here Is What Other Central-Banks Moved Overnight Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2014 07:05 -0500While the biggest news of the day will certainly be China's rate cut (and the Dutch secret gold repatriation but more on the shortly), here is a list of all the other central-banking/planning events which have moved markets overnight, because in the new normal it no longer is about any news or fundamentals, it is all about the destruction of the value of money and the matched increase in nominal asset values.
Stability vs Opportunity
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 11/20/2014 21:13 -0500Stability is a myth yet it’s what we humans strive for...
Yen Surges After Japan FinMin Says Speed Of Yen Collapse Has Been Too Fast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 20:54 -0500First the Japanese central bank proceeds to monetize all new debt issuance and is on route to holding 50% of all 10 Year bond equivalents within 2 years, sending the Yen year plummeting to 7 years lows daily, and then - just like Europe - Japan gets cold feet and realizes that the next steps are USDJPY 145+, meaning a complete collapse of the Japanese economy and a full on FX, if not shooting, war in Asia. So what does Japan's finance minister Aso do? Why he talks the Yen higher, in the process completely confounding the FX algos, and risking a full blown collapse in the Nikkei just 3 weeks ahead of the Japanese snap elections.
Hugh Hendry Live 2: "QE 'Worked' By Redistributing Wealth Not Creating It"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 18:54 -0500In the second of three interviews (part 1 here), Hugh Hendry tells MoneyWeek's Merryn Somerset Webb why central banks will go even further than anyone expects to keep the global economy afloat. Hendry notes, "there’s so much debt that if you reprice debt, the economy slows down. We saw that I think in 2012, after the taper tantrum and ten-year bond use went over 3%. What happened next? The economy slowed down. If anything I would be a buyer of U.S. Treasuries."
As The "Sanctions War" Heats Up, Will Putin Play His 'Gold Card'?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 17:07 -0500- Asset-Backed Securities
- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Brazil
- BRICs
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Corruption
- Creditors
- Czech
- default
- Exchange Stabilization Fund
- fixed
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- Market Share
- Money Supply
- National Debt
- Poland
- Portugal
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Slovakia
- Treasury Department
- Ukraine
- Unification
- Vladimir Putin
- Wall Street Journal
- World Bank
- Yen
- Yuan
The topic of ‘currency war’ has been bantered about in financial circles since at least the term was first used by Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega in September 2010. Recently, the currency war has escalated, and a ‘sanctions war’ against Russia has broken out. History suggests that financial assets are highly unlikely to preserve investors’ real purchasing power in this inhospitable international environment, due in part to the associated currency crises, which will catalyse at least a partial international remonetisation of gold. Vladimir Putin, under pressure from economic sanctions, may calculate that now is the time to play his ‘gold card’.
Global Slowdown Confirmed By PMIs Missing From Japan To China To Europe; USDJPY Nears 119 Then Slides
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2014 07:00 -0500- Across the Curve
- BOE
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Share
- Markit
- national security
- Nikkei
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Swiss National Bank
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Yen
The continuation of the two major themes witnessed over the past month continued overnight: i) the USDJPY rout accelerated, with the Yen running to within 2 pips of 119 against the dollar as Albert Edwards' revised USDJPY target of 145 now appears just a matter of weeks not months (even though subsequent newsflow halted today's currency decimation and the Yen has since risen 100 pips , and ii) the global economic slowdown was once again validated by global PMIs missing expectations from Japan to China (as noted earlier) and as of this morning, to Europe, where the Manufacturing, Services and Composite PMI all missed across the board, driven by a particular weakness in France (Mfg PMI down from 48.5 to 47.6, below the 48.8 expected), but mostly Germany, after Europe's growth dynamo, which disappointed everyone after yesterday's rebound in the Zew sentiment print, printed a PMI of only 50.0, down from 51.4 a month ago, down from 52.7 a year ago, and below the 51.5 expected. And just as bad, Europe's composite PMI just tumbled to 51.4, the lowest print in 16 months!
The Next QE? Switzerland Prepares A "Living Wage" Of $2,600 For Every Citizen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 21:10 -0500With Japan planning a few trillion Yen stimulus plan of airdropping "gift cards" directly to the poor to spur spending (and the virtuous awesomeness of economic utopia), it appears Switzerland is about to go one step further. As Motherboard reports, Switzerland could soon be the world’s first national case study in basic income. Instead of providing a traditional social net - unemployment payments, food stamps, or housing credits - the government would pay every citizen a fixed stipend. The proposed plan would guarantee a monthly income of CHF 2,500, or about $2,600 as of November 2014; meaning every Swiss family can expect an unconditional yearly income of $62,400 without having to work, with no strings attached. What could go wrong?
Is This The Chart That The World Should Be Watching Closest?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 19:56 -0500The consensus - perhaps until today, judging by the performance of Japanese stocks relative to the Yen - is that Abe calling a snap election is bullish, enabling him to re-confirm his mandate to push ahead with uber-dovish devastation of the Japanese economy. However, what few are willing to consider is... what happens if the world's greatest policy madman does not get elected? As the following chart shows, with only 4.4% of Japanese households believing they are better off in the past year, perhaps an unelected Abe is the black swan no one is considering currently...
Japanese Trade Deficit Streak Hits Record 44 Months, Yen & Stocks Decoupling
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 19:08 -0500While hopes of the J-Curve recovery in the deficit are long forgotten in the annals of Goldman Sachs history, silver-lining-seekers will proclaim the very modest beat in tonight's Japanese trade deficit a moral victory for a nation whose economic data has been nothing but abysmal for months. However, the near $1 trillion Yen deficit is the 44th month in a row as exports to US and Europe rose modestly in Yen terms but dropped to China and US in volume terms. USDJPY continues its march higher (now 118.25) but, unfoirtunately for Abe's approval ratings, Japanese stocks continue to languish an implied 1000 points behind - unable to break back above pre-GDP levels... as faith in Kuroda's omnipotence falters.
Why Japan Needs A 'Strong' Yen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 17:58 -0500Unfortunately, Natixis warns, the same error is being repeated by the Bank of Japan. The starting point of their analysis is the contrarian fact that Japan needs a strong yen. Japanese exports are hardly sensitive to their prices; Japan has a large proportion of "necessary" imports (commodities) whose price rises when the yen weakens. Unfortunately, Natixis warns, the Bank of Japan has just increased the size of its quantitative easing program, which will lead to a steeper depreciation of the yen. The only benefit will be a temporary rise in the Nikkei, an automatic result of the conversion of Japanese companies' results into yen. Nothing more...
Why Japan’s Money Printing Madness Matters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 17:03 -0500Keynesian fiscal policies and central banking regimes have buried the public sectors of most of the world’s major economies in unsustainable debt. Now they propose to double down on more of the same because an entire generation of politicians have been house-trained in permanent fiscal profligacy and endless kicking of the fiscal can down the road. To be sure, in perhaps putting off Japan’s day of fiscal reckoning once again, Prime Minister Abe is proving himself to be a certifiable madman. In short order, however, he will have plenty of company all around the planet.
Gold Rises After Unusual Russian Central Bank Gold Buying Announcement
Submitted by GoldCore on 11/19/2014 12:13 -0500Russia’s central bank bought about 150 metric tons of the metal this year, announced Governor Elvira Nabiullina yesterday. The pronouncement immediately created buying in the market, prompting gold to rise to a two week high at $1,200 an ounce.
All Eyes On The Freefalling Yen Which Just Plunged To Fresh 7 Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2014 06:55 -0500Once again all eyes are on the carry-trade driving Yen, whose avalance into oblivion is picking up speed, and where the formerly unimaginable USDJPY level of 120 as presented here in September, is now looking like this week's business, with the only question how long until Albert Edwards' next target of 145 is hit leading to nuclear currency warfare between Japan, Korea, China and ultimately, the US and Europe. Unfortunately, for Japan, at this point the terminal currency collapse will do nothing to incrementally boost exports or its economy, and the former Japan finmin was on the tape warning again that the Japanese recession will persist as USDJPY over 115 is now hurting Japan, something which should by now have been clear to most.





