Showing posts with label USD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USD. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Will Gold Win Out Against the US Dollar?

By Louis James

It is an essential impossibility to solve problems created by excess debt and artificial liquidity with more of the same. That’s our credo here at Casey Research, and the reason why we believe the gold price will turn around and not only go higher, but much, much higher.

While fellow investors around the world may not agree with gold loving contrarians like us, they are buyers: gold is up in euros and almost everything else, except the dollar.

The dollar’s rise has been strong and seems all but unstoppable. But look at it in big picture terms, as in the chart below, and ask yourself how sustainable the situation is.


I’m skeptical of reading too much into such charts. A peak like the one in the early 1980s would certainly take the USD much higher, and for several years to come. But still, this is an aberration. It’s not the new normal, but rather the new abnormal.

More to the point, gold hasn’t collapsed since the dollar began its latest surge last July. Just look at this one-year chart of gold vs. the US dollar. The dollar is up sharply (in EUR, as a proxy for everything-not-the-dollar and for comparability to the chart below), but gold is only moderately down.

Gold has been trading almost sideways over the last year.

That might seem like damnation by faint praise, but it’s critically important. With the USD skyrocketing and commodities plummeting, gold should be dropping like—well, like a gold balloon—if the critics are right and it has no practical value at all, except to dentists and fashion accessory designers.

But gold is money, the best store of wealth millennia of human experience have devised, and more and more people are recognizing this. Consider this chart of gold vs. the euro, which documents my contention that people outside the US do not see gold as a barbarous relic, but as an essential holding to safeguard their future.

Pretty much everywhere but in the US, gold is up, not down.

This chart supports my view that gold rebounded last November when it breached its 2013 low because international buyers saw that as an opportunity. The US has gone from primarily exporting inflation to exporting gold and inflation.

The fact that the dollar has risen faster than gold has dropped has important, positive effects on miners operating outside the US. If costs are paid in Canadian dollars, Mexican pesos, euros, or really hard-hit currencies like the Brazilian real, then those costs have just gone way down relative to the price of gold.

Of course, there’s a good chance that there’ll be more sell-offs before the gold bull resumes its charge… but they should be regarded as opportunities. Because once the gold market rises again, the best small-cap mining stocks have the potential to go vertical.

Watch eight industry experts discuss where we are in the gold cycle, and how to prepare your portfolio for gains of up to 500% or even 1,000%, in Casey’s recent online event, GOING VERTICAL. Click here for the video.


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Tuesday, July 29, 2014

We’re Ready to Profit in the Coming Correction....Are You?

By Laurynas Vegys, Research Analyst

Sometimes I see an important economic or geopolitical event in screaming headlines and think: “That’s bullish for gold.” Or: “That’s bad news for copper.” But then metals prices move in the opposite direction from the one I was expecting. Doug Casey always tells us not to worry about the short term fluctuations, but it’s still frustrating, and I find myself wondering why the price moved the way it did.


As investors we’re all affected by surges and sell offs in the investments that we own, so I want to understand. Take gold, for example. Oftentimes we find that it seems to tease us with a nice run up, only to give a big chunk of the gains back the next week. And so it goes, up and down…..

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The truth is, and it really is this simple, but so obvious that people forget, that there are always rallies and corrections. The timing is rarely predictable, but big market swings within the longer term megatrends we’re speculating on are normal in our sector.

Since 2001, the gold price had 20 surges of 12% or greater, including the one that kick-started 2014. Even with last year’s seemingly endless “devil’s decline,” we got one surge. If we were to lower the threshold to 8%, there’d be a dozen more and an average of three per year, including two this year.


Here at Casey Research, we actually look forward to corrections. Why? We know we’ll pay less for our purchases—they’re great for new subscribers who missed the ground floor opportunities years ago.

This confidence, of course, is the product of decades of cumulative experience and due diligence. We’re as certain as any investor can ever be that today’s data and the facts of history back our speculations on the likely outcomes of government actions, including the future direction of the gold price.

When you keep your eye firmly on the ball of the major trends that guide us, you can see rallies and corrections for what they are: roller-coaster rides that give us opportunities to buy and take profits. This volatility is the engine of “buy low, sell high.” Understanding this empowers the contrarian psychology necessary to buy when prices on valuable assets tank, and to sell when they soar.

There have been plenty of opportunities to buy during the corrections in the current secular gold bull market. The following chart shows every correction of 6% or more since 2001.


As you can see, there have been 28 such corrections over the past 13 years—two per year, on average. Note that the corrections only outnumber surges because we used a lower threshold (6%). At the 12% threshold we used for surges, there wouldn’t be enough to show the somewhat periodic pattern we can see above. It’s also worth noting that our recent corrections fall well short of the sharp sell off in the crash of 2008.

Of course, there are periods when the gold price is flat, but the point is that these kinds of surges and corrections are common.

Now the question becomes: what exactly drives these fluctuations (and the price of gold in general)?
In tackling this, we need to recognize the fact that not all “drivers” are created equal. Some transient events, such as military conflicts, political crises, quarterly GDP reports, etc., trigger short-lived upswings or downturns (like some of those illustrated in the charts above). Others relate to the underlying trends that determine the direction of prices long term. Hint: the latter are much more predictable and reliable. Major financial, economic, and political trends don’t occur in a vacuum, so when they seem to become apparent overnight, it’s the people watching the fundamentals who tend to be least surprised.

Here are some of the essential trends we are tracking…...

The Demise of the US Dollar

Gold is priced around the world in United States dollars, so a stronger US dollar tends to push gold lower and a weaker US dollar usually drives gold higher. With the Fed’s money-printing machine (“quantitative easing”) having been left on full throttle for years, a weaker dollar ahead is a virtual certainty.

At the same time, the U.S. dollar’s status as reserve currency of the world is being pushed ever closer to the brink by the likes of Russia and China. Both have been making moves that threaten to dethrone the already precarious USD. In fact, a yuan-ruble swap facility that excludes the greenback as well as a joint ratings agency have already been set up between China and Russia.

The end of the USD’s reign as reserve currency of the world won’t end overnight, but the process has been set in motion. Its days are all but numbered.

The consequences are not favorable for the US and those living there, but they can be mitigated, or even turned into opportunities to profit, for those who see what’s coming. Specifically, this big league trend is extremely bullish for real, tangible assets, especially gold.

Out-of-Control Government Debt and Deficits

Readers who’ve been with us for a while know that another major trend destined for some sort of cataclysmic endgame can be seen in government fiscal policy: profligate spending, debt crises, currency crises, and ultimately currency regime change. This covers more than the demise of the USD as reserve currency of the world (as mentioned above); it also covers a loss of viability of the euro, and hyperinflationary outcomes for smaller currencies around the world as well.

It’s worth noting that government debt was practically nonexistent, by modern standards, halfway through the 20th century. It has seen a dramatic increase with the expansion of government spending, worldwide. The U.S. government has never been as deep in debt as it is today, with the exception of the periods of World War II and its immediate aftermath, having recently surpassed a 100% debt to GDP ratio.

Such an unmanageable debt load has made deficits even worse. Interest payments on debt compound, so in time, interest rates will come to dominate government spending. Neither the dollar nor the economy can survive such a massive imbalance so something is bound to break long before the government gets to the point where interest gobbles up 80%+ of the budget.

Gold Flowing from West to East

The most powerful trend specifically in gold during the past few years has been the tidal shift in the flow of gold from West to East. China and India are the names of the game with the former having officially overtaken the latter as the world’s largest buyer of gold in 2013. Last year alone, China imported over 1,000 tonnes of gold through Hong Kong and mined some 430 tonnes more.

China hasn’t updated its government holdings of gold since it announced it had 1,054 tonnes in 2009, but it’s plain to see that by now there is far more gold than that, whether in central bank vaults or private hands. Just adding together the known sources, China should have over 4,000 tonnes of monetary gold, and that’s a very conservative estimate. That would put China in second place in the world rankings of official gold holdings, trailing only the United States. The Chinese government supports this accumulation of gold, so this can be seen as a step toward making the Chinese renminbi a world currency, which would have a lot more behind it than U.S. T-bills.

India presents just as strong a bullish case, if only slightly tainted with Indian government’s relentless crusade to rein in the country’s current account deficit by maintaining the outrageously high (i.e., 10%) import duty on gold and silver. Of course, this just means more gold smuggling, which casts official Indian stats into question, as more and more of the industry moves into the black and grey markets. World Gold Council research estimates that 75% of Indian households would either continue or increase their gold buying in 2014. Even without gold-friendly policies in place, this figure is extremely bullish for gold and in line with the big picture we’re betting on.

So What?

Nobody can predict when the next rally will occur nor the depth of the next sell-off. I can promise you this: as an investor you’ll be much happier about those surges if you stick to buying during the corrections. But it has to be for the right reasons, i.e., buying when prices drop below reasonable (if not objective) valuation, and selling when they rise above it. Focusing on the above fundamental trends and not worrying about short-term triggers can help.

Profiting from these trends is what we dedicate ourselves to here. Under current market conditions, that means speculating on the best mining stocks that offer leverage to the price of gold.

Here’s what I suggest: test drive the International Speculator for 3 months with a full money back guarantee, and if it’s not everything you expected, just cancel for a prompt, courteous refund of every penny you paid. Click Here to get Started Now.



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Saturday, July 14, 2012

The Next Major Move in Precious Metals Is Close

What the GLD ETF Chart tells us about GOLD

After making new highs about a year ago we have seen Silver and Gold consolidate for roughly the last twelve months. Technically, it would typically be a bullish scenario with gold from the stand point that the last 12 months’ price action was a sideways consolidation in a bullish pennant formation. However over the last year we have witnessed a series of lower highs and increasingly tested supports levels around $150 on GLD which raises caution.


With the fed pulling any extensions on further quantitative easing in the form of QE3 or other programs, the bullish case has lately been criticised. However I am still a firm believer that gold in most respects is a currency, and the only one that can maintain its value. There are very serious issues looming in Europe and across the world that are far from resolution. With few tools left in the toolbox to stimulate world economies, further easing can never be ruled out.

Silver, after breaking through strong resistance around $19- $20 in September 2011 went almost parabolic in spring 2011 prior to giving up most of its gains in the last year. There seems to be significant support around $26 on SLV, however this level has been tested quite frequently over recent months and this again raises caution. While silver owes some of its moves to its industrial application, the high correlation between the two metals is not to be ignored.


I think the long term trade will be long in both metals, but I’m waiting to see a significant breakout out of these consolidations on heavy volume to confirm a direction. I would like to see both precious metals break out of their respective consolidations and ultimately have further confirmation in the USD. Any major headlines over the next couple months involving Europe or quantitative easing may provide us with the trigger for the next big move.

Get My FREE gold cycles and trading analysis here at  The Gold & Oil Guy.com

Chris Vermeulen

Make sure to also read "Gold Cycles Will Soon Forecast Where Prices Are Headed"

Friday, March 23, 2012

The Federal Reserve, Gold, the S&P 500, & the Retail Mindset

The recent rally has been breathtaking, however the majority of investors have missed out on a large portion of these gains as significant levels of cash have been either moved to bond funds or taken out of equity markets consistently during this rally. Let’s face it, financial markets around the world are not what they once were.

U.S. equity markets in particular are manipulated by high frequency trading which is wreaking havoc in the marketplace in terms of potential short term volatility expansions and “flash crashes” that can be isolated to one underlying stock.
In addition to the high frequency trading robots, the Federal Reserve is equally involved in the direct manipulation of financial markets through record easing adjustments. The Federal Reserve has unleashed massive amounts of liquidity while keeping interest rates incredibly low which has produced an environment where the risk-on attitude permeates the landscape.
As a basic example of the failure of recent Federal Reserve policies and their impact generally on the valuation of various underlying assets, I submit for consideration to readers a 20 year price chart of the U.S. Dollar Index.

 20 Year U.S. Dollar Index Chart

It boggles the mind to consider that Chairman Bernanke routinely denies that the Federal Reserve has failed to maintainwhat he calls “price stability.” When looking at the chart of the valuation of the U.S. Dollar against a basket of foreign currencies, most 5th graders if given the context would proclaim that the Federal Reserve has failed in their objective to maintain price stability.
As time passes and the financial crisis moves further into the rear view mirror, average Americans have varied views about the economy, the stock market, and trust in their government. For most Americans, the stock market does not make sense because they view the stock market and the economy as the same thing. Sophisticated investors understand that stocks and the economy are two totally separate issues, particularly with the amount of manipulation that has been taken place since 2007.
This manipulation has not gone unnoticed by the average American. Now more than ever regular people are not only distrustful of domestic financial markets, but they do not trust Wall Street, and for good reason. In light of this, data compiled during the recent uptrend suggests that retail investors have been pulling money out of equities for weeks even though prices continue to move higher. The chart shown below courtesy of ZeroHedge.com illustrates the recent trend.

U.S. Domestic Mutual Fund Flows

The chart above shows the price of SPY represented as the black line and equity fund inflows/outflows as the red area. As can be seen above, retail investors have been pulling massive amounts of capital out of equity based mutual funds over the past few months as equity prices have rallied. The retail crowd, commonly referred to as sheep or courtesy of Goldman Sachs “muppets,” are selling into the rally.
So why is the retail crowd selling? They do not believe that this rally will last because the real world around them is arguing in the face of everything that this rally stands for. Gasoline prices are crippling the lower and middle classes further reducing their disposable income. Higher food and energy prices paired with job scarcity and serious concerns have begun to mount.
The average retail investor believes the game is rigged at this point and the everyday investor is only helping Wall Street bankers fund their lavish lifestyles. Ultimately, the retail crowd likelybelieves that the only way to win the game is to simply not play.
Will time prove the supposed sheep wrong? Statistically one would think so, but in this case the retail folks may just be right. Headwinds surround the global macroeconomic landscape. Europe is moving into a recession which is being exacerbated by austerity measures. Data came out yesterday (Thursday) that the PMI in several European countries and China contracted. Ireland missed growth targets and central banks around the world continue to print unprecedented levels of fiat currency as if printing money and creating more debt will solve a debt problem.
All of these issues are concerns, but ultimately price is the final arbiter in the world of flickering ticks. From these eyes there are two possible outcomes for the price action in the S&P 500. The first outcome which I believe is more likely is a test of the 2011 highs which results in a snap-back rally that takes us deeper into the 1,420 – 1,440 resistance zone. The chart below demonstrates the bullish potential outcome.

SPX Bullish Outcome

Price action at some point will backtest the 2011 highs and the reaction at that point will be critical. Generally speaking price action does not break a key support or resistance level on the first attempt. Usually the 2nd or 3rd attempt will result in a break of a key support / resistance level.
In this case, a test in coming days would likely result in a bounce and reversion to the previous trend. A possible, albeit unlikely outcome would be a break below the 2011 support zone which would then come close to triggering a trend change. The daily chart below demonstrates the bearish potential outcome.

SPX Bearish Outcome

I do firmly believe that the U.S. Dollar Index will hold clues about the future for the price action of equities. According to cycle analysis, the Dollar should come into is daily cycle low sometime in the next few weeks, if not sooner.
From that low, we should see another move higher for the Dollar Index which I anticipate will test the recent highs near 81. The daily chart of the U.S. Dollar Index futures is shown below.

U.S. Dollar Index Futures Daily Chart

If my expectations are somewhat accurate, the short term weakness in the Dollar will assist stocks and risk assets in a move above recent highs. In the case of the S&P 500, a move to key resistance at 1,420 – 1,450 could occur.
Readers should keep in mind that weakness could be disguised as just a consolidation near the 20 period moving average which has occurred in the past when analyzing the Dollar Index. However, I would not rule out one more leg lower before the Dollar finds a bottom.
Gold, silver, and the miners have been under selling pressure for some time and are likely due for a bounce to the upside. The weakness in the Dollar discussed above would allow precious metals and miners to work off some of the short term oversold conditions that we are seeing presently. The daily chart of gold futures is shown below.

Gold Futures Daily Chart

After a move higher into or around the $1,700 / ounce price level for gold, I believe that another leg lower will be quite likely.

Conclusion

Readers should be mindful that the 1st Quarter will end on March 30th for financial markets. Window dressing and portfolio painting are likely to occur next week. I would not be at all surprised to see the tape painted to the upside during the final week of March after this brief pullback that we witnessed on Thursday and Friday morning.
Money managers want to show off their returns while demonstrating ownership of key names that drove performance during the quarter such as AAPL. I expect the price action on Friday and the rest of next week to have relatively light volume and a bias to the upside.
Barring any major financial news or geopolitical event, I do not expect to see price action work below the 2011 highs in the near term. The possibility cannot be totally ruled out, but it would seemingly be a rare occurrence to see a major support level break down on the first back test attempt. We may see lower prices early next week, but if the 2011 highs hold the bulls remain in control in the short term.
The real question readers should ask themselves is if prices do extend higher and we reach my target resistance zone for the S&P 500, will the retail crowd jump in and push prices higher, or will the banks be trading with each other as a major top forms? In coming days and weeks we should find out once and for all just who the real muppets truly are.
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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Surviving and Thriving as the U.S. Dollar and Silver Reverse!

The first week of trading for 2011 has been interesting for traders as precious metals melt down on the new found strength in the U.S. Dollar. Equities on the other hand bucked the trend and moved higher as they get bought into earning season. Once the earnings start to be released we should see the market get sold on the good numbers and retail traders will buy into the good numbers as the smart money selling their shares while there is liquidity in the market.

Speaking of pullbacks, we have been talking about silver and gold forming a top. A couple months ago in November we saw the first warning sign of distribution selling in the precious metals sector. There was a large drop in price with heavy volume which is a warning sign that the BIG MONEY is starting to roll out of that crowded trade (precious metals). The thing with tops is that they take a long time to form and become very choppy.

Since the November highs both silver and gold have more or less traded sideways. They never really went much higher and that’s because the big money is distributing their shares to smaller investors slowly overtime (retail buyers/average Joe’s). They try not to scare investors off so they sell their positions in chunks. What most people do now is that these sellers want higher highs to forming because once a new high has been created everyone become bullish again buying more on the breakout. It’s these waves of bullishness that the big money sells into which is why you see heavy volume after a new high has been formed.

Let’s take a look at some charts….

Silver Daily Chart

The silver chart clearly shows the bull market (markup phase) and also the distribution phase taking place now..... If things go according to plan then choppy/lower prices should take place in the coming 1-4 months.


Gold Daily Chart

Gold is doing the same thing as silver and we don’t think the selling is over yet.


Dollar Daily Chart

The past 12 months it seems like everything has been a dollar based play. Meaning if you were to pull up a 1 minute chart of the dollar and a 1 minute chart of the SP500 or Gold, you would now that when the dollar moves up stocks and commodities go down and vise-versa. That being said the SP500 has started to move up with the dollar in the past month so there is a shift happening but it’s a slow change and is not much of a concern for gold right now.

If the dollar starts another leg higher it will make for good timing as market sentiment is at an extreme and earning season is here. That typically means lower prices in stocks and commodities.


Mid-Week Silver, Gold and Dollar Trading Conclusion:

In short, in the next 1-4 weeks we are bullish on the dollar, and bearish/neutral on stocks and commodities. The reason we are neutral is because we don’t like to short things in a bull market phase as they can keep going up much longer than we think at times. Rather hold our strong positions and wait for a correction to buy/add once we feel the selling momentum has stopped later this year.

We would not be surprised if we get a 4-10% drop in the next few weeks in both stocks and commodities, but until we see a clear roll in price we will not be looking for any trades to the down side. We are not in a rush to pick a top/short the market but if we get a setup we will take a small position to play a falling market.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Commodities Rally as RBA Unexpectedly Raises Rate

Crude oil rallied to a 2 week high yesterday as PMI in China, India and the UK and US all recorded strong gains in October. Moreover, comment from Saudi Arabia's oil minister that consumers are happy with oil between 70 and 90 drove price higher. The front month contract for WTI crude oil surged to as high as 83.86 before closing at 82.95, up +1.87%. Gold plummeted after rising to a 2 week high of 1366.4. Better than expected ISM boosted the dollar and sent gold lower to 1350.6 at close. The benchmark contract settled at -0.52%.

ISM Manufacturing Index surprisingly improved to 56.9 in October from 54.4 in the prior month. The market had expected a dip to 54. The growth was driven by 'new orders', 'employment' and 'production' indices but was partly offset by 'inventories' and 'supplier deliveries'. Meanwhile, personal income contracted -0.1% m/m in September after rising +0.4% in August. Personal spending grew +0.2% m/m, easing from +0.5% in August. Inflation remained subdued with the core PCE deflation staying flat from a month ago. Economic data were mixed but should not change the Fed's decision to implement additional easing measures in November.

At the Singapore Energy Summit, Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said oil prices are likely to stay in a 'very comfortable zone' for longer time then most people think'. Oil market is 'very well supplied. A little bit oversupplied but it doesn't seem to be depressing the price'. Moreover, Ali al-Naimi said that consuming countries are happy with prices between 70 and 90, a range wider than what he described (70-80/bbl) as 'ideal'.

Commodities strengthened in Asian session today as the RBA unexpectedly raised the cash rate to 4.75%. Oil rose to 83.45 and gold climbed to 1357.2 after the news. The first rate hike in 6 months was to combat inflation which may accelerate in the medium term. The decisions caught the market by surprise as the Australia's CPI was disappointing in 3Q10. The interest rate differential between AUD and USD widened, sending AUD closer to parity with USD.

The Fed will begin the 2 day FOMC meeting today. More and more economists forecast policymakers will announce to buy Treasury securities of 500B first. The Congressional election is another focus. Opinion polls show that Republicans may take over House bur Democrats will remain control in the Senate. As we discussed yesterday, the outcome should not affect gold's uptrend in the long term.

Courtesy of Oil N'Gold


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Monday, October 25, 2010

Renewed USD Selling Boosts Commodities

G20's pledge to avoid competitive devaluation failed to halt the slide in USD. Indeed, the market realized the agreement may only calm fears of currency tensions temporary while, in the long term, global economic imbalances persist. The focus has turned to the upcoming FOMC meeting which will be held on November 2-3. Announcement of some sort of easing measures has been priced in. The unknown is how aggressive the Fed will restart QE2. As the dollar weakens, commodities advance with gold rising to 1339 after plunging to as low as 1315.6 last Friday. Crude oil strengthened for a second day to 82.5 as strikes in France continue and tropical storm threatens.

There are few catalysts stopping the market from selling USD even after the G-20 meeting. While member countries agreed to 'refrain from competitive devaluation of currencies' and to move towards 'more market determined exchange rate systems that reflect underlying economic fundamentals', there's no proposal on how to reduce international trade imbalance between countries. It's only stated in the communiqué that 'persistently large imbalances, assessed against indicative guidelines to be agreed, would warrant an assessment of their nature and the root causes of impediments to adjustment as part of the Mutual Assessment Process'.

The US has also made no commitment to refrain from further quantitative easing in the fact of criticisms by other member countries. German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle said 'it's the wrong way to try to prevent or solve problems by adding more liquidity…Excessive, permanent money creation in my opinion is an indirect manipulation of an exchange rate'. Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty also agreed with the notion that 'aggressive quantitative easing in the US would create devaluation pressure on the U.S. currency'......Read the entire article.


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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Crude Surges amid Demand Upgrades, China Imports Reach Record High

Crude oil strengthened further in European session as both the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the OPEC raised their forecasts on global oil demand as global economic recovery provides support for oil consumption. Also supporting oil prices was China's trade data in September. Strong imports for crude oil indicate resilience in domestic demand. WTI crude oil price soared to 82.9, up from yesterday's close of 81.67. Gold crawled above 1360 in European session as renewed selling pressure in USD raised demand for safe haven. GFMS forecasts the metal to reach 1400 by the end of the, citing low interest rates, the European sovereign debt crisis and fears about an economic slowdown factors supporting prices.

The IEA raised its global oil demand outlook to 86.9M bpd in 2010 and 88.2M bpd in 2011. That's +0.3M bpd more than last month's forecast for both those years. According the agency, the upgrades were driven by signs that 'the underlying demand trend in the OECD is more resilient than previously thought'. On the supply side, non-OPEC supply will increase to 52.6M bpd in 2010 (unchanged from August's estimates) from 51.5M bpd in 2009, followed by a rise to 53.1M bpd in 2010 (August: 52.9M bpd). Call on OPEC will be around 28.3M bpd (August: 28.8M bpd) in 2010 and 29.3M in 2011 (August: 29.3M bpd).

At an OPEC report released yesterday, the cartel also raised its demand forecast for 2010 to 85.6M bpd (August: 85.5Mbpd) while keeping that for 2011 unchanged at 86.6M bps. The 'stronger-than-expected, stimulus-led economic growth in the first half of the year' was the key reason for the upgrade. Non-OPEC supplies are revised higher for both 2010 and 10 as driven by growth in Brazil, Canada, Azerbaijan, and Kazakhsta. In contrast with the IEA, the OPEC revised lower the demand for the cartel's production for 2011 to 28.8M bpd from 28.9. The cartel forecasts demand for its production would be around 28.6M bpd for 2010 and 28.8M bpd for 2011. The estimate for 2010 represents a mild drop from August's reading.

The China trade report showed that export growth slowed to +25.1% in September from +34.4% in August, import growth slowed to +24.1% from +35.2% while trade surplus narrowed to $16.9B from $20B. The market was not disappointed by the slowdown but viewed it as a result of strong base effect last year. Imports for crude oil surged to 23.29M metric tons (2.69M bpd), up +35.4% and +11.4% on annual and monthly basis respectively. The record-high imports for crude oil signals the country's robust demand for the commodity.

Base metals rallied despite decline in imports from China. Rather investors were thrilled by the prospect that the market will be 'tighter' next year. LME copper surged to a 27-month high while lead also rose to the highest level in 6 months. Chile's Codelco, the world's biggest copper producer, expects a 'tighter' market next year as 'China is continuing to have a strong demand and from the supply side we have only a couple of new projects coming on- stream'. In September, China imported 368410 tons of unwrought copper and copper products (-7.68% y/y and -2.93% m/m) and 65772 metric tons of unwrought aluminum and aluminum products (-66.42% y/y and -9.44% m/m).

Courtesy Oil N'Gold .Com



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Monday, September 27, 2010

Gold's Net Speculative Long Positions Dropped for the First Time in 7 Weeks

Crude oil price changed little in Asian session after Friday's rally but the near term outlook remained firm as the dollar weakened. Current trading at 76.6, the benchmark WTI contract stayed in the middle of the 70-80 trading range. The chance of going higher and lower is balanced for today but it's unlikely for a break out of the range. Gold price moves narrowly around 1300. While the macroeconomic backdrop is favorable for further gains, a pullback on profit taking cannot be ruled out as the metal has advanced for 7 out of the past 8 weeks.

Dollar's weakness is a main theme sending commodities higher in recent weeks. The USD Index plunged below 80 for the first time since March last week and has dropped -10% from June's peak. USD should continue to be pressured as long as speculations on Fed's additional QE measures remain intact. Today in Asia, EURUSD soared to as high as 1.3494 before retreating. Investors trimmed investments on the euro as Ireland will disclose the final expenses of bailing out Anglo Irish Bank Corp. later this week. In fact, the euro fell against 15 out of 16 currencies as concerns about banking crisis in the Eurozone resurfaced. The euro's weakness against dollar is only mild in comparison with others. USDJPY changed little at 84 although the government may implement a stimulus plan of up to 4.6 trillion yen to boost recovery. Meanwhile the BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said the central bank is 'ready to implement appropriate action in a timely manner if judged necessary'. A deflationary Japanese economy and the government's currency intervention and stimulus policy are theoretically negative for Japanese yen. Yet, strength in the currency indicates that the effects of a unilateral intervention are limited.

We have a light calendar today. Japan's corporate service price contracted -1.1% in August, slightly better than expectations of -1.2% and unchanged from July, while trade surplus stayed unchanged at +0.59 trillion yen in August from a month ago. The money supply (M3) in the Euro zone probably grew +0.3% y/y in August, following a +0.2% increase in July.
Commitments of Traders:

Speculators showed mixed expectations on the energy complex as they were more bullish on fuels than crude oil. Net length for crude oil declined -4 437 to 43 900 contracts as the Enbridge pipeline 6A resumed operations earlier than market expectations. Net lengths for heating oil and gasoline increased, by 7 083 and 4 367, to 17 891 and 35 232 respectively. Net short for natural gas rose for a 7th week even though price has fluctuated around the $4 level. Traders lacked incentives to trade the futures as we saw both long and short positions declined during the week but the drop in the former was 6 times higher. The fundamental outlook was largely unchanged with gas supply remaining sufficient and hurricanes failing to disrupt production activities.

Performance was also discordant in the precious metal complex. Net length for gold slipped for the first in 7 weeks although price has set new record highs. Some traders entered short positions as they viewed the rally overstressed. While some market participants began to worry about a gold price bubble, gold has only set a record in USD terms but remained below June's levels in terms of many other currencies. Moreover, it's far from the peak when calculated in real terms. We believe gold's long term uptrend remains intact if the low rate environment persists. Net lengths for silver and platinum increased further while that for palladium dropped in concert with price decline.

Let's go to the charts on Non-Commercial Net Positions


The "Super Cycle" in Gold and How It Will Affect Your Pocketbook in 2010

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

The Dollar & Gold – What’s Next?

From guest analyst Chris Vermeulen....

Last week was strong with stocks and commodities moving up sharply. As nice as it was to see a rally, I still have my doubts whether this move has legs behind it. As prices moved higher throughout the week we saw volume become thinner and thinner.

Basic technical analysis of the recent price action, when looking at the hourly charts is pointing to a sharp pullback. The indexes, gold and silver have both rallied (drifted) higher on declining volume as they near resistance.

Let’s take a quick look at the US Dollar and Gold Charts
The US Dollar has been in a strong rally since the last week of December. The once easy money trade (short the Dollar) has been over for a couple of months but it may be another good trade if gold is rejected here at the 50% retracement level.

The next month or so will be interesting to see whether the dollar will continue to rally or drop like a rock as traders sell Dollars for another easy short trade. There is not much we can do here other than wait for a setup on the daily and hourly charts to form.

US Dollar – Weekly Chart



GLD – Gold Daily Chart
Gold still looks very bullish. Actually, the more gold pulls back the more I like the chart. This daily chart shows a very nice bull flag. The price is currently testing the upper trend channel line and this is what makes me think we are going to see a pop in gold prices or a sharp drop.

I would like to see gold pullback one more time and make a new multi-week low before heading higher. We did see extreme fear in the market 2 weeks ago which is when we took some long positions, but the lighter volume rally is not giving me comfort in adding more positions at this time.



Weekend Trading Conclusion:
In short, we nailed the market bottom on February 5th taking some long positions in US and Canadian ETF’s. I tightened our protective stops for these positions a couple days later making sure to protect our hard earned money. The Canadian trades have performed extremely well for us.

Now we just wait for another low risk entry point which could happen this week depending on what the market does.



Just click here if you would like to receive Chris Vermeulen's free weekly newsletter.








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Sunday, September 20, 2009

Weekly Summary From Crude Oil Trading Small Spec.


From Guest analyst Rich Olney.....

Weekly Summary for Sunday 9/20/09
Nov Crude Oil finished the week up 4% or 2.77 points to close at 72.49. Nat Gas finished the week up 21.6% closing at 3.778. The SnP cash closed the week up 2.5% closing at 1068.30. The USD lingers around support at 76 closing the week at 76.67. Gold finished the week up 4 points or up 1/2% at 1009.40. This week we get the FED MTG on Wed.

The commercials increased their net short position on crude this last week. It increased from -133,519 to -143,033 which is the second highest net short position this year. The high is 145,499 this year so we are at a yearly extreme. The Nat Gas net long position is at 40,512 which is the highest it has been since the commercials went net long last May.

For inventories crude oil imports have been decreasing and inputs into refineries have been increasing which means lower crude oil inventories. However Gasoline and Heating oil inventories are increasing. For Nat Gas current inventories are at 3458 and there are about 7 -10 more injections left before nat gas winter demand ramps up. If Nat Gas injections were to match last year then that would mean an additional 524 bcf of injections. Here are the balance of last years injections:

9/18 +54 bcf
9/25 +82 bcf
10/2 +87 bcf
10/9 +81 bcf
10/16 +71 bcf
10/23 +49 bcf
10/30 +23 bcf
11/6 +54 bcf
11/13 +23 bcf
11/20 -55 bcf

For technicals on crude support lies at 68. There is resistance at 73 which has held back crude for two weeks. If crude closes above 73 then it can make a run at the highs at 75.89 where there is strong resistance. For Natty it needs to close above the down trend line and above the rally high at 3.90. If natty can close above 3.90 two session in a row then that should confirm higher prices are in the cards. However Natty to close above the trend line first.....Read the entire post with charts!

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Crude's Rally Derailed from Fundamentals Again


Strength in stock markets and decline in USD were the major reasons for the rises in commodities. In the US, Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed +2.2% to settle at 9820 while S&P 500 Index surged +2.6% to 1068.3 as driven by better-than-expected housing market (housing starts), employment situation (jobless claims) and improvements in manufacturing activities (Empire State and Philly Fed Index). The dollar weakened further with every rebound being treated an opportunity to sell as investors' risk appetite increases. In the coming week, the FOMC meeting will be market's focus. While the Fed will likely announce to keep its policy rate at 0-0.25% for an extended period of time, it may talk more about plans for exiting from the current stimulus policies.

Crude Oil
Crude oil price retreated to -0.6% to settle 72.04 Friday, the second consecutive day of fall as USD recovered after substantially weakened against major currencies in the past week. On weekly basis, the October contract reached 73.16 the highest and gained +4%. Recent rally in crude oil has been determined by movements in USD and stock markets, rather than fundamentals....Read the entire article

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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Oil Price Remains Firm As Strong Stock Market Offers Support


Strong trading momentum in crude oil persists and the benchmark contract rises further to 72.7 in European morning. Investors remain thrilled by the huge draw in crude inventory despite weak fuel demand. Advance in equity markets and weakness in USD also support prices. Stock markets in Europe open higher Thursday. UK's FTSE 100 Index climbs +1% tpo 5172 although the country's retail sales stayed flat in August from a month ago. The market had expected a +0.1% gain. On annual basis, the gauge rose +2.1% while July's sales were revised down to +2.9%. Both of DAX (Germany) and CAC 40 (France) gain +0.6% in morning session.

Stocks in Asia performed very well with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index rising +1.2%, In Japan, the Nikkei 225 Stock Average surged +1.7% to 10444 as the Bank of Japan upgraded its economic outlook on the nation. The BOJ stated that Japan' economy has shown 'signs of recovery', compared with the 'stopped worsening' comment made in the previous month. However, the central bank remained concerned about the downside risk to growth and hence maintained the policy rate at 0.1%.....Read the entire article with charts!

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

New Video: USD$ Dollar Index UPDATE


The last time we made a video of this index was a little over two months ago. In that video our Trade Triangle technology predicted that we would see further weakness in the Dollar Index.

Guess what? This market has weakened substantially since our last video on July 14. We also pointed this out in a blog post on September 3rd.

Our Trade Triangle technology has really been on top of this market and captured every major move since inception. MarketClub’s “Trade Triangles” remain steadfastly bearish and there appears to be no lasting turnaround in the Dollar Index as of this writing.

In this short video, we want to show you exactly how the Trade Triangles can benefit your own trading. The process is very simple, very direct, and yes, very profitable. Nothing is guaranteed in trading, but you will certainly put the odds in your corner using our Trade Triangle technology.

Just Click Here to watch the video!

There is no need to register for this video and of course you can watch it with our compliments. I highly recommend watching this video today otherwise you risk missing out on what could be the move of the year.

Please feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Consolidation in Crude Oil will Continue in Coming Months


Commodity prices rose modestly last week amid weakness in USD. Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index added +1.4% while USD Index plunged almost -2% to 76.6, the lowest close in a year. Commodities normally trade in opposite direction with the dollar. The generation low interest rate in the US (Fed funds rate: 0-0.25%) has caused massive selloff in USD. Against the euro, the greenback plunged for 4 out of 5 trading days and closed -1.9% lower at 1.457, the lowest level in 9 months, for the week. Against the pound, USD also slid -1.6% to 1.6655, a 1-month low, last week. There were 3 central bank meetings last week. All of the RBNZ, BOE and BOC left interest rates unchanged at 2.5%, 0.5% and 0.25% respectively during the meetings but policymakers indicated brighter economic outlooks for 2H09 and 2010. In the coming week, the BOJ and SNB will decide on rates. We believe both banks will leave policy rates unchanged at 0.1% and 0.25% respectively.
Crude Oil
After spiking to 72.9, crude oil tumbled to as low as 68.8. The October contract plunged -3.9% to settle at 69.12 Friday, leaving this week's gain to +1.2% only. The black gold's decline Friday was accompanied by the dollar's weakness and strong US economic data. These were in contrary to the usual inverse relationship between commodities and USD.....Read the entire article
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