Sunday, November 15, 2009

GLOBAL MARKETS OUTLOOK FULL VERSION 11/16-20: Ominous Double Tops on S&P 500, EUR/USD

Because global asset markets are so tightly integrated, a weekly preview of major forex pairs also demands a look at key international equity markets, which tend to set the overall bullish or bearish tone, as well as key commodities like oil and gold, which provide a means of evaluating currencies independent of currencies themselves.

GLOBAL STOCK MARKETS

As always, we begin our weekly preview of global markets with a look at the S&P 500 stock index. International forex and commodity markets tend to move according to stocks, and no single index provides a better single picture of overall market sentiment than the S&P 500. Just note how similar most other major international stock or commodity daily charts match that of the S&P 500.

The key points to note about the chart:

• The possible formation of a bearish double-top pattern forming around the 1100 level

• The relatively low volume on the rallies to this level compared to the much higher volume at the tops and on the pullbacks since the beginning of September until now. The red line on the volume histogram is a 10 day Simple Moving Average of Volume that clarifies how volume is relatively low on the rallies and higher on the pullbacks.





S&P 500 Daily Chart With Volume With 10 Day Moving Average for Volume

04 Nov 15



For perspective on the significance of the 1100 level, we zoom back to a weekly chart of the S&P 500 for the past 5 years. Note how this level has served as minor multi-week support resistance. Thus if the past is any guide, the rally will need to pass the 1100 within the next few weeks or risk losing credibility. If that happens, then risk assets are likely to either consolidate in a horizontal range or stage a long awaited normal pullback. Note that a drop of 100-300 points would be a perfectly normal retracement and markets would still be in a firm overall uptrend.





S&P 500 5 Year Weekly Chart with 10 Week Moving Average for Volume

06 Nov 15

Again, note the declining overall volume of the rally since April, suggesting a lack of believers in this rally. The bright side is that there may be a lot of cash still available to fuel further rally if the recovery becomes more convincing. The downside of this low volume rally is that it suggests they buyers were short term hot money that will be inclined to sell if the recovery falters. That in turn will depend on whether economies can begin to hold up without massive new stimulus, and if they can't, whether governments will be able to continue providing it, and for how much longer.

If one can answer those questions correctly, then they'll know whether to be long or short these markets and virtually every asset traded.





COMMODITIES: ENERGY AND PRECIOUS METALS



Crude Oil



Summary

Earlier in the week, WTI crude oil price did attempt to pierce the 80 resistance. However, both industry-specific fundamentals and macroeconomic data were not strong enough to sustain the breakout. Release of bearish US inventory data and reduced consumer sentiment triggered sharp selloff towards the end of the week.

Analysis

Decline in crude oil price accelerated after the US reported surprising drop in consumer confidence in November. Price plummeted to 75.57, the lowest in a month, before recovery. The benchmark contract closed at 76.35, down -0.8% and -1.4% on daily and weekly basis respectively.

Preliminary reading for the University of Michigan sentiment index fell to 66 in November from 70.6 in October. Although strong GDP growth (revised down to +3.1%) in 3Q09 was good news, the 26-year high unemployment rate continued to hurt consumer confidence. Consumers lacked job security and this diminished their desire to spend and to invest.

For energy-specific data, we received the weekly inventory report from the US Energy Department. Moreover, the 3 oil agencies also published their latest forecasts on global oil demands. In short, the data were still mixed, pointing to long-term recovery with short-term headwinds seemingly inevitable.

Crude inventory rose +1.76 mmb in the week ended November 6 with the Midwest leading the build. Oil inventory in that region surged +2.1 mmb of which 1.4 mmb was from Cushing, Oklahoma. Other regions also showed modest builds with decline only seen in the East Coast. Refinery runs dropped to 79.9%, the lowest in a year although many facilities have resumed operations after maintenance. This was probably driven by abundant fuel stocks.

After making a trough of around -$5 in August, the spread between WTI and Brent crude oil has turned positive again since September. However, WTI's premium to Brent has narrowed recently as driven by increasing stocks at Cushing, Oklahoma, the place where WTI oil is stored.

The biggest disappointed came from gasoline stockpiles which surged +2.56 mmb. Gasoline demand fell -1.9% from a week ago to 8.844M bpd. The reading was also -1.7% below the level a year ago. 4-week average at 8.917M bpd represented declines of -1.1% and -1.5% on weekly and annual basis respectively.

Distillate inventories climbed -0.35 mmb, the first increase in 5 weeks, as demand slipped. Weather in the Northeast was warmer-than-expected in November and this dampened demand for heating oil.

All of the US Energy Department, OPEC and the International Energy Agency revised upward their forecasts of global oil demand for 2009 and 2010. Although the sizes of upgrades were different among these agencies, the common factor was heavy reliance on demand growth from China.

Macroeconomic data in China were broadly encouraging. Expansions in industrial outputs, power generations and retail sales accelerated in October, fueling speculations that the nation's GDP growth can reach +10% the first in more than a year in 4Q09. Moreover, robust industrial activities and electricity usage signaled strong demands for energy and base metals. However, as Chinese Premier Wen Jiabo said, there are still uncertainties for the road to recovery.



Natural Gas



Summary

Gas price slumped to 4.287 as the Energy Department reported +25 bcf (consensus: +20 bcf) rise in gas storage to 3813 bcf in the week ended November 6. Although the level of increase tightened the year-over-year surplus and the surplus as compared to 5-year average, it sent the absolute gas storage to a fresh record high. The benchmark NYMEX contract climbed +0.5% from Thursday but recorded a weekly drop of -4.4%.

We remain bearish on natural gas price as demand is still bottoming while supply continues to stay at record level. Warm weather serves to worsen the already-weak fundamentals and this should result in delay in recovery.



Analysis

According to Baker Hughes, the number of gas rigs dropped 6 units in the week ended November 13. However, it did not help resolving the problem of oversupply. Since mid-July, the US gas rig count has gained +9.5%. Industry data showed that the economic threshold for US shale plays has been declining, suggesting greater production per rig per USD spent. Rising production efficiency has encouraged E&P companies to increase investment budgets. This exacerbates the demand/supply imbalance.









Gold



Summary

Gold continued its journey to uncharted region and reached a fresh high at 1123.4 Thursday before retreat. However, the strong rebound at NY session Friday signaled investment demand for the precious metal remained robust and we expect the long-term uptrend should resume after consolidation.

Analysis

Gold price rebounded strongly in NY session Friday amid renewed weakness in USD. The benchmark contract surged to as high as 1119.7, just a few dollars below the record high, before settling at 1116.7. The Commerce Department reported that the nominal trade balance in goods and services widened to -$36.5B (consensus: -$31.7B) in September from -$30.8B in the previous month. Although both imports and exports increased significantly, growth in imports (+5.8% mom) outpaced that that In exports (+2.9% mom). The wider-than-expected trade deficits weighed on the dollar.

Although RSI (currently at 73) suggests that valuation of gold has been stretched and pullbacks or corrections cannot be ruled out in the coming week, prevailing dollar weakness, low real interest rate environment and strong investment demand should continue to support gold's uptrend towards end 2009.

IMF's gold sales to the Reserve Bank of India still positively affected gold price. India's gold purchase signaled the ongoing shift of central banks and governments as net gold sellers to net gold buyers. Speculations for further central bank buying boosted investment demand.

Real interest rate in the US remains low and this environment is supportive for gold.

Silver

Summary

Comex silver slid to as low as 17.03 before strong rebound Friday. The benchmark contract ended the week flat. Gold-to-silver ratio declined to 60-ish from above 80 at the end of last year. Although current level represents modest increase from 58 in September, it's still above historical average and suggests silver is modestly overvalued. While recent rally in silver has been driven by upsurge in gold, its fundamentals remain weak.

Analysis

On the supply side, key miners reported that silver mine supply increased +7% yoy in 3Q09. On the demand side, China's silver imports fell -23% to 421 metric tons in September while its exports rose more than 4 times to 455 metric tons, suggesting the country has shifted from a net importer to a net exporter of silver. Although industrial activities are expected to improve as global economic recovers, ample silver supply remains the key concern.









FOREX



Overview

The economic calendar heats up with a tremendous amount of data from across the globe and speeches by Fed officials. The major currency pairs are ready for a breakout and there is certainly sufficient catalyst to trigger one. The only question is, will these event risks kill the rally or pave the way for more gains.

THE event to watch this week: does the S&P 500 and EUR/USD form bearish double tops at their respective resistance levels and begin a period of consolidation, normal 10%-20% pullback, or something more severe.

Other Events to Sustain or Kill the March Rally

The most important: the U.S. retail sales report and speech by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke on Monday.

If October retail sales are very weak or Bernanke talks up the dollar, the rally in equities and high yielding currencies could come to a screeching halt. However we believe that the chances of this happening are low.

--First, it's usually the Treasury Secretary and not the Federal Reserve Chairman that comments on the USD.

--Second, the Fed has been USD dovish.

If anything Bernanke favors a weaker dollar in this low inflation environment. The focus then turns to what he says about the economy and monetary policy. According to the last FOMC statement, there have been no meaningful improvements in the outlook for the U.S. economy since the previous meeting. Asset prices have moved higher but that does not always suggest a stronger outlook for U.S. companies. Recent comments from other Fed officials remain relatively downbeat as growing unemployment caps optimism.

Bernanke's likely tone will be continued caution, to remind us that the recovery is still vulnerable and therefore interest rates need to remain low for a very long and therefore implementing an exit strategy now is inappropriate. If Bernanke maintains this line, then the dollar will continue to be sold to fund carry trade.

--Retail sales may surprise despite the grim labor market

Despite a difficult labor market, both Redbook and the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) reported a sharp rise in retail sales last month while similar results were reported by individual retailers. Good spending numbers would suggest that the economy is moving in the right direction even though the labor market is weak.

Also due this week is inflation, housing and manufacturing sector reports along with the Treasury International Capital flow report. Eight Federal Reserve Presidents are scheduled to speak on a variety of topics while Treasury Secretary Either will be testifying to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday. Don’t forget that President Obama will be in Asia until next Thursday. Watch for any market moving comments, particularly during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC), but we don't expect any dramatic breakthroughs on currency.

USD

Possible S&P 500 Double Top Signaling the Risk Aversion Needed for US Dollar Rally?

Summary

US Dollar Outlook: Bullish if stocks drop, bearish if they don't

- Key Events: Monday-Core Retail Sales, Retail Sales, Tuesday- PPI m/m, TIC Long Term Purchases, Wednesday-Building Permits, Core CPI m/m

- S&P 500 possible double top around 1100 forming?

- IMF pegs the US dollar as the top funding currency for a yield hungry market

- Sharp rise in the trade deficit, drop in consumer confidence contradict the recovery story

- The US dollar to finally reverse course or once again collapse? COT reports reduction in USD shorts.



Analysis

This past week the dollar made its strongest rally in months against the euro, its prime counterpart, but the move faded. Lacking any reason to boost USD demand, the market kept the USD in its eight-month old bearish trend channel. To achieve a sustained reversal, the USD will need either:

• A sustained period of at least consolidation if not reversal in global stocks and other risk assets that drives up demand for safe haven currencies as carry trades unwind. The S&P 500 has twice backed off from the 1100 level. Failure to break through soon could lead to at least a consolidation period if not outright reversal.

• A fundamental improvement in the US economy that brings recovery in the critical jobs, banking, and housing areas, quite possibly in that order, that provides reason for markets to believe USD interest rates will rise sooner than currently expected and thus lift the dollar out of its current status as a prime funding currency for carry trades.

• A selloff in the EUR, because for every 3 Euros bought, a USD is sold, thus any selloff on one automatically helps the other. Since March, this relationship has been a key driver of the EUR's rally.



Events

For the coming week, the most pressing question for any trader is whether either of these drivers of dollar demand will step forward.

The above noted key USD events this week are unlikely to provide either of these reasons for a USD rally.

Therefore, the dollar's prospects for the coming week are likely to move with overall risk appetite through the global financial markets. Looking beyond US economic events, there seem to be few scheduled events or indicators from elsewhere that might alter the current level of fear or greed. In sum, another relatively quiet week of scheduled news releases.

That doesn't rule out the chance of a volatile trading week or trend shift.

When there is a major market-moving event due, the price action leading up to its release is often muted as traders do not want to increase risk. Moreover, if the news doesn’t fall far from forecasts or it otherwise doesn’t play into the larger market themes, then it fails to move markets. Actually, it is those light economic calendar weeks that we see sentiment build momentum and define new trends. The extended nature of the S&P's March rally and thus far firm resistance around 1100 may be all that is needed.

Retail sales will serve as a barometer for consumer spending (accounting for approximately three-quarters of GDP) and the October CPI numbers will reveal whether there is any merit to hawkish concerns through fears of looming inflation.

Given the continued hits to US jobs and wages, it is difficult to see how either will bring prospects for US rate increases and ensuing USD rally any closer.



EUR

Euro Remains Below 1.5050 - Is It a Double Top to Confirm that Forming on the S&P 500?

Summary

Euro Outlook: Neutral-Bullish if USD Continues Down, Bearish if Stocks Consolidate or Fall

- Key Events: Monday-CPI y/y, Thursday- Trichet speaks, Friday German PPI, Trichet speaks

- The German trade surplus expanded to 10.6B in September

- German GDP rose for a second straight quarter in Q3, but exports struggling under high EUR

- Euro-zone GDP figures worse than expected but better than Q2 and do show EZ growing again-Does ECB raise rates or leave them to help smaller nations still in recession?

- Did the EURUSD form a double top? The S&P 500 is forming one around 1100, and this pair strongly correlates to it. If it fully forms, this will be THE event for global markets in general, not just the EUR.

Analysis

The euro ended the past week slightly higher against the US dollar, but down significantly versus the commodity dollars as Credit Suisse Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rates shifted to price in fewer rate increases. Following the European Central Bank’s latest policy decisions, OIS rates eased back to pricing in 83.1 from 98.5 basis points worth of increases over the coming year. From a technical perspective, EURUSD remains in an uptrend, but 1.5050 is meaningful resistance and a failure to break above in the coming weeks may signal a double top for the pair.

Two offsetting events for the euro at the end of the week, as data showed that the Euro-zone’s third quarter recovery wasn’t quite as healthy as expected while there were some hawkish comments by an ECB official. Specifically:

• Euro-zone GDP rose by 0.4 percent from the second quarter, missing the 0.5 % expected increase. Since this was the advanced reading of the index, there was no breakdown available, but the increase was probably from a slight recovery in export demand. However, consumption may have remained weak, because services PMI for the euro-zone did not rise above 50 – signaling an expansion in business activity – until September.

• ECB Executive Board member Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo said that he couldn’t rule out raising rates while some Euro-zone countries are still in recession, and while such a move would be “less fitting” for those countries, the national governments “will have to understand that.”

Events

In the coming week, only one indicator shows major market-moving potential: Euro-zone CPI. The annual rate of inflation growth is projected to rise to -0.1 percent from -0.3 percent. If the data shows that the euro’s appreciation has actually driven down import costs and price pressures more than expected; the currency could pull back because this could further undermine current market expectations for ECB rate increases.



JPY

Yen Likely to Range Trade vs. the US Dollar Given Lack of Market Moving News

Summary

Yen Outlook: Bearish/Neutral

- Key Events: Monday-BoJ Gov. Speaks, Tuesday-Tertiary Industrial Activity, Friday-BoJ Press Conference

- Yen looks increasingly vulnerable with growing risk appetite

- Yen outperforms against British Pound despite its lower yield

- Forex crowds pointed to potential for USDJPY losses

Analysis

Continued S&P 500 rallies made the safe-haven JPY the second-worst performing G10 currency to finish the week’s trade, beating out only the similarly-battered US Dollar. All major world equity indices finished anywhere from 2-3 percent above their weekly open except for the Japanese Nikkei 225—raising serious doubts on investor demand for Japanese financial asset classes, which reflected poorly on the domestic currency. Indeed, the fundamental arguments for Japanese Yen strengths are becoming increasingly scarce—especially through times of healthy financial market risk appetite.

We have long held that financial market risk sentiment and the trajectory of the S&P 500 would be the major determinant of USDJPY price action. Yet the US Dollar has now become the top funding currency for carry trades as it now carries the lowest overnight yield of any major world currency. This significant shift in interest rates has meant that the USDJPY’s correlation to risky assets has fallen considerably from its heights, and it is admittedly unclear whether the USDJPY would decline on S&P 500 tumbles. In fact, the rolling correlation between the US Dollar Index and S&P is very near record-highs—emphasizing the Dollar’s sensitivity to risk sentiment.

The Japanese Yen may struggle to find a bid against the US Dollar as it trades near substantive highs. This unclear US Dollar/Japanese Yen link to risk sentiment may explain low volatility expectations for the currency pair, and it seems traders are pricing in range trading for the often fast-moving USDJPY. This contrasts with the volatility expectations for other major currencies, and theoretically provides a safe haven for range traders and scalpers for the coming week.



GBP

Bullish Pound Forecast Versus Euro Subject to BoE Surprises?

Summary

Pound Outlook: Neutral

- Key Events: Mon.-Rightmove HPI m/m, Tue.- CPI y/y, BoE Inflation Letter, Wed.-MPC Meeting Minutes, Thur.-Retail Sales m/m

- GBP rally stops on Fitch concern on UK sovereign debt rating

- Similar caution from the Bank of England also hurts Pound, more could come from news this week

- Technical support still there for the GBP



Analysis

The British Pound survived a week of unimpressive news to trade a bit higher against the US Dollar, but a busy coming week of economic event risk may pose further challenges for the UK currency in the week ahead. Early prior-week news that Fitch Ratings took a “cautious” view on its outlook for the UK Government Bond’s AAA sovereign rating shook markets and sent the Sterling plunging about 200 bps. The following Bank of England Quarterly Inflation report expressed a similarly cautious outlook for economic growth, and it seemed like the GBP was headed for a break of key support against the US dollar. Yet the GBPUSD held key technical levels through the week’s close. Whether or not the pair can sustain its level will likely depend on events in the days ahead, setting the stage for another eventful week of British Pound price action.

Events

Consumer Price Index figures and mid-week Bank of England monetary policy minutes will be the major highlights in the week ahead, but traders should watch for UK Retail Sales results too.. Inflation and BoE outcomes are likely to cause volatility in UK interest rate expectations and thus the Pound. The currency rallied sharply through the Bank of England’s most recent interest rate announcement as officials boosted Quantitative Easing measures by only half of the expected £ 50 billion.. Traders will want to see the voting for that decision and general commentary on the future of monetary policy, while the previous day’s CPI data will likewise play a large part in determining monetary policy forecasts. Forecasts call for a modest rise in year-over-year inflation rates, and it is admittedly difficult to predict likely reactions to the event. Lofty expectations for later-week Retail Sales numbers, on the other hand, leave room for disappointment.

The Pound has been able to hold major technical and psychological support versus the Euro and US Dollar, but that will likely be tested in the week ahead. According to US CFTC Commitment of Traders data, Non-Commercial traders are still heavily long the EUR/USD and short the GBP/USD—giving us a fairly bearish EUR/GBP bias. Yet positioning has thus far eased considerably from previous extremes, and the British Pound is at clear risk for losses on continued disappointments in domestic fundamental developments. All else remaining equal, we expect the British Pound to break the psychologically significant 0.8900 mark against the Euro, but our forecasts will likely be put to the test in the week ahead.



CHF

SNB Pledge to Maintain Policy Suggests Range Trading Ahead, But Sudden Risk Aversion Might Overwhelm SNB Efforts to Keep the CHF Low

Summary

Swiss Franc Outlook: Neutral

- Key Events: Tuesday-Retail Sales y/y, Thursday-Trade Balance, SNB Chairman Roth Speaks

- Swiss Investor Confidence Weakens in November

- Producer & Import Prices Unexpectedly Contract in October

- Continued Dovish Policy May Leave the CHF Range Bound Barring any Positive Surprises From The Above Events

Analysis

The Swiss Franc ended the week higher against the U.S. Dollar and the Euro, with the USD/CHF continuing to push toward parity as the pair slipped to a low of 1.0034, just 2pips shy of the yearly low at 1.0032. The CHF appears likely to remain range-bound over the following week as investors weigh the outlook for future policy. SNB member Thomas Jordan made the following points:

• Reaffirmed the central bank’s policy stance during a speech earlier this week and said that the board has reached its goals and does not see any reason to shift policy.

• Continued to voice his concern about the marked appreciation in the Swiss franc, stating that “the exchange rate has quite an important impact” on the economy, and went onto say that the central bank’s efforts to stem the rise against the euro were successful.

• That the SNB will look to normalize policy over the medium-term as conditions improve, but noted that the outlook for the global economy remains highly uncertain and pledged to support the economic recovery in the short run.

Similarly dovish, SNB Governor Jean-Pierre Roth expects to see weaker growth following the crisis, and said that the slump in employment remains a concern as growth prospects remain subdued. As policy makers maintain a cautious outlook for the region and vow to prevent a further appreciation in the exchange rate, the franc seems likely to continue to range trading as markets consider the chance of another SNB intervention. Still, the economic calendar for the following week could spark volatility in the Swiss franc cross rates as the Swiss National Bank holds an improved outlook for growth and forecasts GDP to expand at an annual rate of 0.4% in 2010 amid an initial forecast for a 0.4% contraction.



CAD

Canadian Dollar Continues To Move With Oil, Then Stocks, Then Events

Summary

Canadian Dollar Outlook: Bullish Barring Stock Pullback

- Key Events: Monday-Manufacturing Sales m/m, Wed.- Core CPI m/m, Thurs. Leading Indexes m/m

- Is USDCAD bound to strengthen? Much depends on S&P 500, which drives oil

Analysis

The Canadian dollar was one of the strongest major currencies over the past week, but this was mostly the result of broad US dollar weakness rather than commodity prices, as oil continued to consolidate between $77/bbl and $80/bbl. Furthermore, there was no major economic data on hand. However, one significant indicator was released on Friday, when data showed that Canada’s trade deficit narrowed to a three month low in September. The deficit eased to C$927 million from C$1.99 billion in August due to a 3.5 % increase in exports, suggesting that foreign demand may ease some of the nation’s economic woes. As usual, a break in either direction for oil is likely to translate into a similar move for the Canadian dollar versus the US dollar, but the trend remains in favor of CAD strength and/or USD weakness, barring a significant stock pullback.

Events

Overall, upcoming economic reports out of Canada are anticipated to reflect improving conditions.

• Monday, manufacturing sales for the month of September are projected to rise by 1.7 percent following a drop of 2.1 percent in August, but the actual results could prove to be even better given the jump in exports during the same period.

• On Wednesday, the annual rate of Canadian headline CPI growth for October is projected to bounce back up to 0.1 percent from -0.9 percent, while the Bank of Canada’s core measure is projected to rise to 1.7 percent from 1.5 percent. Such results would suggest that higher commodity costs are providing some support for the headline CPI measures, while improving domestic demand has lifted broader prices. The Bank of Canada sees that “overall risks to its inflation projection are tilted slightly to the downside,” but if CPI climbs higher than expected, the Canadian dollar could rally on improved expectations for interest rate increases.

• Finally, on Thursday, international securities transaction may show that foreign demand for Canadian assets waned in September to C$3.0 billion from C$5.082 billion. On the other hand, wholesale sales are estimated to rise 1.0 percent for September, which would bode well for the November 23 release of retail sales as a gauge of domestic demand.



AUD

Australian Dollar Continuing Higher Barring New Risk Aversion



Summary

Australian Dollar Outlook: Bullish

- Key Events: Tues.-Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes, Wed.- Wage Price Index q/q (expected increase may fuel further rate increase expectations, AUD strength)

- Growing Interest Rate Advantage Feeding AUD Carry Trade Demand, AUD to rise with stocks

- Australian economy unexpectedly added 24,500 jobs in October, equaling a six year high, renews rate hike expectations, and AUD rally

- Westpac Consumer Confidence Fell for the first time in six months by 2.5%

- Consumer inflation expectations fall to 3.2% from 3.5% in October

Analysis

The Australian dollar hit another annual high of 0.9368 against the USD as continued risk appetite and unexpected job creation in October fed bullish sentiment. Equity markets continued push higher with the Dow setting a fresh yearly high as traders took comfort in the G-20’s pledge to maintain low interest rates and stimulus programs. However, the RBA isn’t expected to follow the pack as they have already raise rates at their last two policy meetings and markets are currently pricing in an 83% chance that they will continue to tighten at their December meeting. The prospect of higher borrowing costs led to 2.5% drop in consumer confidence, the first in six months. Confidence remains relatively high, but declining optimism could negatively impact domestic consumption which unexpectedly fell 0.2% in September.

The weak demand had raised the prospect that the RBA would take a break from their tightening policy at their December meeting as there are concerns that premature rate hikes could derail the recovery. Additionally, Governor Stevens last week signaled to markets that the strength of the Australian dollar would limit upside inflation risks and give him the scope to slow the pace of future rate increase. But the surprising job growth renewed expectations for an additional 25 bps hike as it confirmed Governor Stevens' statements following November’s meeting that “there have been some early signs of an improvement in labor market conditions. The rate of unemployment is now likely to peak at a considerably lower level than earlier expected.”

Events

The upcoming economic calendar may only add to the likelihood of a rate increase as the wage cost index is forecasted to show a 0.7% rise in the third quarter, adding to inflation concerns. Westpac’s leading index which tracks eight gauges of activity, such as company profits and productivity, to give an indication of how the economy will perform over the next three to nine months is also due for release. If it continues its current trend of improvement then the brighter outlook for growth will add to the case for future tightening. Rising interest rate expectations will continue to be a supporting factor for the Australian dollar which could see the com-dollar eventually look to test its all-time high. However, the RBA will release their minutes from their November meeting which could hint at the prospect of keeping rate steady at their next meeting which could weigh on the Aussie.

Additionally, the AUD could drop fast if risk appetite wanes which could be the case this week with equity markets up against technical resistance levels.



NZD

New Zealand Dollar Fundamentals To Overwhelm Risk Appetite?



Summary

New Zealand Dollar Outlook: Bearish

-Disappointing retail and manufacturing indicators bear out RBNZ Governor Bollards economic concerns

-Is NZDUSD setting up a bearish reversal of its eight month bull run? Watch to see if the S&P 500 rolls over at the forming bearish double top around 1100

Analysis

Even more than other high yield currencies, the NZD may be living on borrowed time, given the S&P's forming bearish double top. If 1100 indeed proves to be the end of the rally, the NZD would likely suffer more than most other currencies. Risk appetite alone lifted this currency from a six-year low, and it is only a matter of time before the aggressive rally collapses under its own weight.

The NZD's high yield and its mere presence among the list of most liquid currencies have made it a place to park idle cash. In fact, under most scenarios (even a revival in the demand for yield); the NZD may actually lead the over-due correction.

While it is possible that the New Zealand dollar could struggle or tumble even if sentiment is steady or rising; it is best to first cover the most direct fundamental scenario: a plunge in risk appetite. Though the S&P 500 and Gold closed their respective weeks at or near new highs for the year; there is growing skepticism among the trading ranks that the drive can hold up for much longer. As we noted in the above section on global stocks indexes, volume for the S&P 500 (and gold too) hit new monthly lows. From a more historical perspective, we haven’t seen a rally from equities of this magnitude in recent history.

We have argued for many months that from technical and fundamental perspective, values have run ahead of the economics that support them. The return of idled investor funds from the harbor of safe haven assets back into the speculative arena has filled in for the lack of reasonable yield income with the thrill of capital gains. However, eventually a balance will be struck where the speculators will be tapped and what remains to be invested will belong to those managers that are cautiously awaiting the return of dividends, yields and other stable rates of return. When the tides turn, the collapse from profit taking will likely be more severe (though perhaps not as deep) as the initial rally.



When carry trades begin to be unwound in masse, those securities with a weak fundamental foundation will see bleed capital the fastest. Therefore, a currency like the Australian dollar may see a retracement but it could well be relatively mild thanks to its ability to avoid recession and the promise of a hawkish rate regime. However, as we've noted repeatedly, the NZD lacks the fundamental strength of the AUD, even though it has risen in tandem with the AUD.

• The NZ economy is still struggling to recover.

• The central bank has vowed to hold its benchmark lending rate at its record low 2.50 percent until late 2010.

Thus any real retreat in risk appetite makes the overbought NZD a clear favorite for shorting, especially against the oversold USD. Meanwhile, we will keep tabs on the economy’s and central bank’s pace. Event risk over the coming week is relatively light but upstream inflation numbers and credit card spending figures will offer a look at two key concerns for the policy authority.



CONCLUSIONS

Watch the S&P 500 carefully to see if a sustained retreat or range trading stage below the bearish double top beginning to form around 1100 causes this to turn into a truly bearish formation. As noted above

The low volume nature of the March rally suggests there is plenty of short term money that is ready to take profits. If that movement develops, we suggest readers do the same and /or go long safety currencies.

If news events surprise to the upside, risk assets could once again hold on and move forward. Betting against the resilience of the market has been an expensive mistake overall since March. That's why we wait for various forms of confirmation of trend shifts before trading them.



RECOMMENDATIONS

Long risk assets when they hit support levels but be ready to close positions and go short if the double top in the S&P 500, EUR/USD, and other charts holds firm and develops into a pullback.

DISCLOSURE: AUTHOR HAS NO POSITIONS IN THE ABOVE INSTRUMENTS

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