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The US Dollar and the Japanese Yen are likely to decline in European trade as equity index futures track higher ahead of the opening bell, hinting that firm risk appetite will weigh on demand for safe-haven and low-yielding currencies.

Key Overnight Developments

o Japan’s Retail Sales Surge on Improving Employment Outlook
o Australian New Home Sales Drop on Borrowing Costs, Grants
o AUD, NZD Outperform as HK Stocks Rally on Earnings, Drought


Critical Levels

03302010 1

The Euro added as much as 0.9 percent in early trade on the lingering effects of Friday’s announcement of an IMF-assisted EU scheme to bail out Greece but the single currency pared gains to tick just 0.2 percent higher against the US Dollar ahead of the opening bell in Europe amid (justifiable) skepticism that the arrangement will prove effective and robust enough for larger problematic countries like Spain and potentially even Italy. The British Pound added 0.1 percent against the greenback, with price action following that of its Continental counterpart. We remain short EURUSD at 1.4881 and GBPUSD at 1.5765.

Asia Session Highlights

03302010 2

Japan’s Retail Trade figures surprised sharply to the upside, rising to the highest level in over four years with a seasonally adjusted monthly gain of 0.9 percent in February. Sales rose 4.2 percent from the previous year, marking the largest annualized increase in 13 years. Clothing sales led the metric higher with a monthly gain of 2.2 percent. Large retailers’ sales sank 4.0 percent, showing that bargain-hunting continues to divert consumers away from department stores. The outcome likely reflects the cautious improvement in employment seen in January’s labor-market figures, although it is important to note that the number of employed workers is still 1.5% lower than a year ago having recovered less than half of the drop from the peak in December 2007, hinting that any recovery that may be underway is young and fragile.

Australian New Home Sales dropped 5.2 percent in February, the most in four months, according to the Housing Industry Association. The outcome follows January’s 7.9 percent drop in home loans – the largest decline in nearly a decade – after the central bank raised interest rates while the government reduced cash handouts to first-time homebuyers.

The Australian and New Zealand Dollars outperformed on the session, adding 0.6 and 05 percent respectively against their US counterpart following a rally in Hong Kong equities after China Resources Land Ltd reported that’s its 2009 profits more than doubled to HK$4.41 billion, topping expectations calling for a HK$3.4 billion result. The Aussie got an added lift as severe droughts in southwest China boosting coal producers on expectations that demand will rise as burning the fossil fuel is used as an alternative for electricity generation to compensate for a 15 percent drop in output at hydropower pants.

Euro Session: What to Expect

03302010 3

The economic calendar is fairly light in European trade. UK Mortgage Approvals are set to print at 48,400 in February, a modest gain from the previous month, although a downside surprise is not out of the question after a Bank of England survey of the UK’s largest banks showed that new loans unexpectedly declined over the same period. UK Consumer Credit measures are expected to tick lower, an outcome consistent with data released by the British Bankers Association last week. The final revision of Euro Zone Consumer Confidence is expected to confirm a reading at -17.2 in March, the lowest since October of last year.

On balance, risk sentiment is likely to remain the dominant driving force behind price action. European equity index futures are trading firmly higher (about 0.5 percent on average) ahead of the opening bell, hinting at further losses for the safety-linked US Dollar and Japanese Yen after both currencies retreated against the spectrum of their major counterparts in Asian trade.

For real time news and analysis, please visit http://www.dailyfx.com/real_time_news

To receive future articles by email, please contact Ilya at ispivak@dailyfx.com

DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
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Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:05 GMT
by Trade The News Staff

TradeTheNews.com | View company’s profile



Monday, March 29, 2010

Economic
08:30 Feb Personal Income, Feb Personal Spending, Feb PCE Core
10:30 March Dallas Fed Manufacturing

Events
10:00 Treasury Sec Geithner speaks in Washington, DC.CEG Analyst Day. Ex-dividend: ARI $0.35, ITW $0.31, KRC $0.35, KFT$0.29, MOLX $0.153, GAS $0.465, NUE $0.36, PCG $0.455, DOW $0.15.

Earnings
Before the Open: APOL, NEOG. After the Close: OXM.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Economic
08:00 Chile Feb Unemployment, Industrial Production, Total Copper production
09:00 Feb S&P/CS Home Price Index, Feb S&P/CS Composite-20
10:00 March Consumer Confidence
16:30 API Crude Oil/Gasoline/Distillate Inventories

Events
02:45& 06:30 Fed’s Evans to speak in Hong Kong. 12:00 Former Fed ChairVolcker discusses financial reform. 20:15 Fed’s Fisher discusses theeconomic crisis. Brazil to disclose FY11 budget. 08:30 TobaccoProducts Scientific Advisory Committee. Ford Analyst Meeting. 07:45ICSC/UBSW Chain Store Sales. 08:55 Redbook Retail Sales. ABC ConsumerConfidence. Trades Ex-dividend: APD $0.49, AXP $0.18, BMY $0.32, RL$0.10, RSG $0.19, SYY $0.25.

Earnings
Before the Open: CHRS, CIE, LAYN, LDK. After the Close: EXFO, FUL, LNDC, SAI, ZZ, TISI.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Economic
08:15 March ADP Employment Change
08:30 Canada Jan GDP
09:30 Brazil Feb Net Debt to GDP, Budget Balance
09:45 March Chicago PMI
10:00 Feb Factory Orders, March NAPM Milwaukee
10:30 DoE Crude Oil/Gasoline/Distillate Inventories
12:00 Colombia Feb Unemployment

Events
12:30 Fed’s Lockhart to speak on employment. 12:30 Fed’s Duke to address bankers in Arizona. 07:00 MBA Mortgage Applications. Trades Ex-dividend: CPB $0.275, KIM $0.16, LTD $1.00.

Earnings
Before the Open: APWR, AYI, BPZ, DG, FTK, LNN, RAD, HEAT, UNF. After the Close: ANGO, DMAN, GPN, BLUD, MOS, OMER, RIMM, RECN, RINO, XRTX.

Thursday, April 01, 2010

Economic
07:30 March Challenger Job Cuts
08:00 Brazil Feb Industrial Production
08:30 Initial Jobless Claims, Continuing Claims
10:00 March ISM Manufacturing, March ISM Prices Paid, Feb Construction Spending, Brazil March Trade Balance
10:30 Natural Gas Inventories
11:00 Treasury’s 10-yr TIPS announcement, note announcement

Events
16:00 Fed’s Bullard speaks to reporters in St. Louis. 17:00 Fed’s Dudley speaks in Lexington, VA. Total vehicle sales.Canaccord Hepatitis C Conference. Soleil Utility and Energy Conference.XTEX Analyst Conference. Trades Ex-dividend: DGX $0.10, RTN $0.375.

Earnings
Before the Open: KMX, NGPC, SCHL, WOR.

Friday, April 02, 2010

Economic
08:30 March Unemployment Rate, March Nonfarm Payrolls, March Manufacturing Payrolls, March Average Hourly Earnings

Events
Recommended equity markets closed for the Good Friday Holiday. Recommended bond markets 12:00 close.

Earnings
None Seen

*Note all time are EST (GMT-5).


Archive

  • Americas Calendar: Week of March 29 – April 2, 2010
    Published On Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:05 GMT
  • Americas Calendar: Week of March 22 – 26, 2010
    Published On Mon, Mar 22 2010, 06:04 GMT
  • Americas Calendar: Week of March 15 – 19, 2010
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  • Americas Calendar: Week of March 8 – 12, 2010
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  • Americas Calendar: Week of March 1 – 5,2010
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Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:18 GMT
by Saxo Bank Strategy Team

Saxo Bank | View company’s profile


EUR squeezes shorts in early Asian trading; Greek bond issuance likely this week…

MAJOR HEADLINES – PREVIOUS SESSION

  • US Final Q4 GDP out at +5.6% q/q vs. +5.9% previously

  • US Mar. Final Michigan Confidence out at 73.6 vs. 73.0 expected and 72.5 prior

  • JP Feb. Retail Trade out at +4.2% y/y vs. +1.6% expected and revised +2.3% prior

  • JP Feb. Retail Trade out at +0.9% m/m S/A vs. -1.2% expected and revised +2.0% prior

  • AU Feb. HIA New Home Sales out at -5.2% m/m vs. 9.5% prior

THEMES TO WATCH – UPCOMING SESSION

(All times GMT)

  • EU German states report Mar CPI (various)

  • Sweden Retail Sales (0730)

  • UK Net Consumer Credit (0830)

  • UK Mortgage Approvals (0830)

  • UK M4 Money Supply (0830)

  • EU Business Climate Indicator (0900)

  • EU Euro-zone Confidence Indicators (0900)

  • US Personal Income/Spending (1230)

  • US Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity (1430)

  • CA BOC’s Jenkins to speak (1555)

Market Comments:

The USD was generally softer across the board in Friday’s session as the draft EU agreement on the Greek bailout, follow-up supportive comments from EU officials, S&P’s affirmation of Portugal’s debt rating (in contrast to Fitch’s downgrade) and a firmer US Michigan confidence reading all conspired to promote better risk appetite. US yields were also a tad softer from the mid-week spike amid weekend profit-taking and as a result EURUSD pushed higher to take out small stops above 1.34. In other data releases, US Q4 GDP was marked marginally lower at the revision (- 5.6% q/q vs. 5.9% previously) and this also cemented the dollar’s weakness.

The start of trading in this holiday-shortened week was extremely volatile, with EURUSD shooting 100 points higher from NY closing levels near 1.3415 in minutes and taking out stops above the 1.35 level. The search for reasons to fit the move has come up with a number of possibilities: The market was again overly positioned short EUR as latest data from the IMM showed EUR shorts had again reached record levels; The market was prompted into risk aversion mode after the Bank of Israel hiked rates by 25bp at the weekend (perhaps less credible as other “risk currencies” failed to follow – AUD notably stuck in a 30 point range); perceived corporate demand following weekend reports that China carmaker Geely had finalized a $1.8 bln bid for Volvo; and general better feeling about Greece as it is expected to come to the debt markets with the first bond issuance since the EU agreement last week. (Note the FT reports they are interested in borrowing about EUR5 bln before the end of the month). Whatever the reason, the move was fierce and, once the stops were taken out, we drifted back down to opening levels.

UK opinion polls continue to show neither major political party gaining a majority at the pending election (on this note, chatter is that an announcement is not likely before the Easter break with most pundits favouring early May), with each of the two polls released showing differing parties ahead. However, GBP held onto Friday’s gains and looks to be stabilizing around the 1.50 mark.

It is a relatively slow start to the week data-wise but things pick up as we head towards the turn of the month (and not forgetting the end of the Japanese financial year) For today, Europe sees German states release March CPI numbers along with Sweden’s retail sales. UK data focuses on lending data with consumer credit, mortgage approvals and money supply all slated while the EU also releases confidence indicators. US data is limited to personal income/spending and Dallas Fed manufacturing activity.

Looking ahead we have an interesting week as we switch over to April. For Japan, apart from financial year-end, we have the Tankan survey on Thursday. Risk bulls might take a close look at Australia’s retail sales on Wednesday with US consumer confidence an early risk factor tomorrow. Undoubtedly the highlight of the week will be the non-farm payroll and unemployment report on Friday which is also the Good Friday holiday for most centres.


Archive

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    Published On Thu, Mar 25 2010, 07:36 GMT
  • EUR breaks lower on talk IMF to be involved in Greece bailout
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Operate Forex

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Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:07 GMT
by Johnathan Assia

eToro | View company’s profile


Start Trading Forex with eToro!

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The slow grinding increase in the equity markets continued this week as did the strength of the US dollar. Over the past few weeks the strong correlation that seem to grip the currency and equity markets has now dissipated as the dollar has now become the currency of choice give the fiscal issues that have plagued the European Monetary Union. For the week, the S&P 500 Index closed up higher by 1% at 1166. For the past 4 weeks the Dow Jones Industrials, the S&P500 Index and the NASDAQ have all closed higher.

EU – The Bailout of Greece and Euro Weakness

The divergence of opinions with regards to Greece, has created strife in the marketplace as the ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet has made public comment as late as Thursday, that the IMF has no place in deciding how any European country should handle their fiscal issues. This news came right before the EU agreed to a plan that would set up a safety net for Greece. Trichet’s comments are directly opposite to the current opinion of Germany and France who have made the IMF involvement a condition of their participation in so called bailout of Greece. Trichet also flip flopped on the issue of collateral. The extension of the relaxed collateral rules is an important issue, even if lower quality paper gets a bigger haircut. The size of the haircuts will be the main market focus of the next ECB meeting on April 8th. These relaxed collateral rules, some argue, is tantamount to some easing of monetary policy. The uncertainty comes on the back of a downgrade by Fitch which lowered Portugal’s sovereign credit rating one notch to AA- and warned of further cuts unless the government changes its fiscal course. The cumulative effect on the currency has been dramatic. Volatility in the Euro market has been relatively high with multiple day ranges. During the course of the week, the Euro currency vs. the US dollar broke through support levels at 1.3400, and touched a low of 1.3267, before retracing some of the losses for the week (which opened near 1.36). After the news that the EU would create a backstop for Greece, the Euro began to rally. Technically, the breakthrough along with the uncertainty created by multiple debt issues within the EU has formed a resistance level for the Euro, which could lead to additional selling near 1.3450.

Graph

Deflation in Japan

Meanwhile, the deflationary grip on Japan continues. Headline CPI in February was 1.1% below year ago levels, the same pace as recorded in January. The Core CPI (ex food and energy) figure was slightly higher than expected but still negative for a year in a row. This follows Thursday’s report of a slightly larger than expected decline in corporate service prices. The corporate service price index fell 1.3% year over year in February and the January series was revised down to -1.2% from -1.0%. The Bank of Japan expects deflation to persist through the next fiscal year. Of the 525 items tracked by the CPI basket, 335 fell in February compared with January when prices for 342 items fell. The Japanese finance ministry has been persistent in pushing the BOJ to enhance its quantitative easing measures in an effort to stem further deflation. Eventually, this will spill over into growth and create further downward pressure on the Japanese economy.

UK – Inflation Easing

In the UK, inflation data is beginning to ease after a couple of months of upward pressure. The pace of inflation for February released this week was slightly lower than expected and BOE Governor King did not have to write an explanatory letter to the government as he was obliged to do in December and January. The headline CPI rose 0.4%, slightly less than the market expected. The year-over-year rate slipped for the first time since last September (3.0% vs. 3.5% in January). Core inflation, which in the UK excludes energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, slowed to 2.9% from 3.1%. Core measures of inflation have been generally tame in developed countries with the UK being the exception recently. The ease in inflation will only help the BOE and allow for further quantitative easing if the economy stumbles. Additionally, the easing of inflation expectations shifted bids pressure on the pound. Technically, the pound faces a moving average crossover which is relatively bearish for the currency.

Graph

US – Bernanke speech, Housing prices, GDP

In a speech at a House hearing, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke acknowledged that the Federal Reserve is closer to selling some of its $1.25 trillion portfolio of mortgage securities. Chairman Bernanke has resisted this idea in the past because millions of U.S. homeowners and many investors would be affected by Federal Reserve sales which would push down prices and increase Mortgage rates. This is Bernanke’s way of preparing the market for a normalization process. “I anticipate that at some point we will, in fact, have a gradual sales process,” Chairman Bernanke said at a House hearing. The Fed has been purchasing mortgage-backed securities in an effort to stimulate the housing market with lower mortgage rates

.
In US housing economic news, Sales of existing homes fell a third time in a row during February, but the decline was less than expected, spurring hope for a turnaround in the spring. Home re-sales tumbled by 0.6%, to a 5.02 million annual rate from an unadjusted 5.05 million in January, according to the National Association of Realtors. Economists surveyed expected sales last month to decrease 2.0%, to a rate of 4.95 million. The median price for an existing home was $165,100 in February, down 1.8% from February 2009. The housing market has continued to show conflicting signals but the majority of the economic news has shown a market that is slow to recover.

Growth in the U.S. economy at the end of 2009 was slightly less than earlier estimates, according to the Commerce Department, mainly due to downward revision to consumer and business spending. Gross domestic product rose at a 5.6% annual rate October through December, the Commerce Department reported Friday in its third GDP estimate for the final quarter of 2009. Corporate profits climbed 8.2% in the fourth quarter, lower than the 13.8% surge in the third quarter. Year-over-year, earnings were up 51.8%.

Next week that market will be focusing on a plethora of economic data. On Monday the EMU will release consumer confidence, expectations are for an index level of -17 compare to last month’s -17. Later on Monday the US will release Personal Income and Consumption. On Tuesday, market participants will focus on the UK GDP, US Consumer Confidence and Japanese PMI Manufacturing. On Wednesday, Australian Retail Sales and EMU Employment take the headlines, along with the ADP Employment number. Thursday is purchasing manager’s day, with the UK, EMU and US ISM all being released. The big number for the week is Friday’s US Employment number. Analysts expect a positive reading of 187 thousand jobs, which would be the first increase in more than a year.

This news item was republished from Forex News website


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Mon, Mar 29 2010, 06:15 GMT
by John Mauldin

Millennium Wave Investments | View company’s profile


In this issue:

What Does Greece Mean to Me, Dad?

Dear Kids,

Ubiquity, Complexity Theory, and Sandpiles

Fingers of Instability

“To trace something unknown back to something known is alleviating, soothing, gratifying and gives moreover a feeling of power. Danger, disquiet, anxiety attend the unknown – the first instinct is to eliminate these distressing states. First principle: any explanation is better than none… The cause-creating drive is thus conditioned and excited by the feeling of fear…” Friedrich Nietzsche

“Any explanation is better than none.” And the simpler, it seems in the investment game, the better.
“The markets went up because oil went down,” we are told, except when it went up there was another reason for the movement of the markets. We all intuitively know that things are far more complicated than that. But as Nietzsche noted, dealing with the unknown can be disturbing, so we look for the simple explanation.

“Ah,” we tell ourselves, “I know why that happened.” With an explanation firmly in hand, we now feel we know something. And the behavioral psychologists note that this state actually releases chemicals in our brains that make us feel good. We become literally addicted to the simple explanation. The fact that what we “know” (the explanation for the unknowable) is irrelevant or even wrong is not important to the chemical release. And thus we look for reasons.

How does an event like a problem in Greece (or elsewhere) affect you, gentle reader? And I mean, affect you down where the rubber hits your road. Not some formula or theory about the velocity of money or the effect of taxes on GDP. That is the question I was posed this week. “I want to understand why you think this is so important,” said a friend of Tiffani. So that is what I will attempt to answer in this week’s missive, as I write a letter to my kids trying to explain the nearly inexplicable.

But first, let me note to Conversations subscribers that we have posted a Conversation I recently did with Professors Ken Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart, authors of This Time It’s Different, which has my vote for most important book of the last few years.

Last week we also posted a Conversation with two noted hedge-fund managers, Kyle Bass of Hayman Advisors (and his staff) here in Dallas and Hugh Hendry of the Eclectica Fund in London. Our discussion centered on what we all think has the potential to be the next Greece, but on a far more serious level.

That got a lot of positive response. Herb wrote, “Wow. What a great discussion. What smart guests, how little BS. Congratulations. It’s the best of your Conversations that I’ve listened to.”

And ACK wrote: “Wow!! Just the most important discussion I have been treated to as an investor and fund manager this year or last. Your product is dreadfully underpriced, as it delivers more value and education than almost any other subscription that I have… Thanks so much… This particular conversation was just mind-blowing!”

Actually, we get that last comment almost every issue, as we somehow seem to connect the dots for different listeners. When we started, I promised to do 6-8 a year, and we have already posted 5 timely Conversations in the first 3 months of this year, including my special Biotech Series as well as the Geopolitical Series with George Friedman.

For new readers, Conversations with John Mauldin is my one subscription service. While this letter will always be free, we have created a way for you to “listen in” on my conversations (or read the transcripts) with some of my friends, many of whom you will recognize and some whom you will want to know after you hear our conversations. Basically, I call one or two friends each month and, just as we do at dinner or at meetings, we talk about the issues of the day, back and forth, with give and take and friendly debate. I think you will find it enlightening and thought-provoking and a real contribution to your education as an investor.

And we are starting a renewal cycle with the subscriptions and have found a small bug in the software we purchased to handle them. Renewals are therefore not instantaneous. It may take a day, and for that we apologize. We are fixing it.

Oh, and by the way, since the Conversation on Japan was so well-received, the next one will be on China. Two brilliant managers (maybe three) with VERY divergent views. I may just toss in a few grenade-type questions and stand back and watch the show. And now on to this week’s letter.

What Does Greece Mean to Me, Dad?

Tiffani had been talking with her friends. A lot of them read this letter, and they were asking, “Ok, I get that Greece is a problem. But what does that mean for me here?”

The same day, a friend told me about a conversation she had with her 17-year-old Cal Tech daughter and her daughter’s boyfriend, who is also headed to Cal Tech. These are really smart kids, and they were asking her about some of my recent letters. “We understand what’s he saying, but we just don’t see what it means.” (For what it’s worth, the boyfriend wants to grow up to be Mohammed El-Erian of PIMCO. Go figure; I just wanted to be Mickey Mantle.)

Twice in one day is a sign, I am sure, so I will try and see if I can explain. And since all my kids must be wondering the same thing, this is kind of letter from Dad to see if I can help them understand why things are not going as well as they would like.

(A little background. I have seven kids, five of whom are adopted. A fairly colorful family, so to speak.
Pictures at the end of the letter. Ages almost 16 through 33. Daughter Tiffani runs my business and, except for the youngest boy, they are all out on their own. Four are married or attached. It is not easy to watch them struggle to make ends meet, but Dad is proud. But listening to their stories, and the stories of their friends, help keep me in the real world.)

Dear Kids,

I know what a struggle it has been for most of you, and now three of you have a kid of your own.
Expensive little hobbies, aren’t they? I know that you read my letter (well, except for Trey) and wonder what it means to you trying to pay your bills. Let me see if I can make a connection from the world of economics to the world of paying your bills. Sadly, what I am going to say is not going to make you feel any better, but reality is what it is. We’ll get through it together.

While life looks pretty good for Dad now, when I graduated from seminary in December of 1974 unemployment was at 8%, on its way to 9% a few months later. We lived in a small mobile home, which seemed wonderful at the time. I was proud of it. We scrimped and got by. My first job was a dead end, so I left after a few months. I guess I was lucky that no one would hire me, because I had to figure out how to make it on my own. All I really knew was the printing business I had grown up in, so I started brokering printing. Pretty soon I was doing just direct mail, and then designing direct mail. But there was never enough money. We were still in that mobile home six years later.

And prices were going up like crazy. We had inflation. I remember going to a bank in the late ’70s and borrowing money for my business at 18%, so I could buy paper for a job I had sold. Forget about borrowing for a new home or car. All I knew was that I was struggling to make ends meet (with a new kid!). There were a lot of nights where I would wake up at two in the morning with panic attacks about whether I could make payroll or pay bills until someone paid me. I didn’t understand that what the Fed and the government were doing was causing high inflation and unemployment.

I had a bank line I used to buy paper with. One day the bank abruptly cancelled that line and demanded their money, which I didn’t have – all I had was a warehouse full of paper and a contract that said I had a year to pay for it. The bank didn’t care. I told them they would just have to wait. I swear, they actually called my mother and told her they would ruin me if she didn’t pay that $10,000 line. She was scared for me (after all, you had to be able to trust your banker) and paid it without asking me. Turned out the bank finally went bankrupt later in the year. They were just desperate and trying anything they could do to get money, so they wouldn’t lose everything. They did anyway.

In short, times were not all that good, but we got through it. And now, 35 years later, it seems like d?j? vu all over again. Every time we talk it seems like someone we know has lost a job.

And so how do the problems in a small country like Greece make a difference to you? There is a connection, but it’s different than the old “hip bone is connected to the thigh bone to the knee bone” thing. It is a lot more complicated. Let’s go back to a letter I wrote four years ago, talking about fingers of instability. One of the best analogies your Dad has ever written, according to many of his 1 million friends. So read with me a few pages, and then we’ll get back to Greece.

Ubiquity, Complexity Theory, and Sandpiles

We are going to start our explorations with excerpts from a very important book by Mark Buchanan called Ubiquity, Why Catastrophes Happen. I HIGHLY recommend it to those of you who, like me, are trying to understand the complexity of the markets. Not directly about investing, although he touches on it, it is about chaos theory, complexity theory, and critical states. It is written in a manner any layman can understand. There are no equations, just easy-to-grasp, well-written stories and analogies.

We all had the fun as kids of going to the beach and playing in the sand. Remember taking your plastic buckets and making sandpiles? Slowly pouring the sand into ever-bigger piles, until one side of the pile started an avalanche?

Imagine, Buchanan says, dropping just one grain of sand after another onto a table. A pile soon develops. Eventually, just one grain starts an avalanche. Most of the time it is a small one, but sometimes it gains momentum and it seems like one whole side of the pile slides down to the bottom.

Well, in 1987 three physicists, named Per Bak, Chao Tang, and Kurt Weisenfeld, began to play the sandpile game in their lab at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. Now, actually piling up one grain of sand at a time is a slow process, so they wrote a computer program to do it. Not as much fun, but a whole lot faster. Not that they really cared about sandpiles. They were more interested in what are called nonequilibrium systems.

They learned some interesting things. What is the typical size of an avalanche? After a huge number of tests with millions of grains of sand, they found out that there is no typical number. “Some involved a single grain; others, ten, a hundred or a thousand. Still others were pile-wide cataclysms involving millions that brought nearly the whole mountain down. At any time, literally anything, it seemed, might be just about to occur.”

It was indeed completely chaotic in its unpredictability. Now, let’s read these next paragraphs slowly. They are important, as they create a mental image that helps me understand the organization of the financial markets and the world economy.

“To find out why [such unpredictability] should show up in their sandpile game, Bak and colleagues next played a trick with their computer. Imagine peering down on the pile from above, and coloring it in according to its steepness. Where it is relatively flat and stable, color it green; where steep and, in avalanche terms, ‘ready to go,’ color it red.

“What do you see? They found that at the outset the pile looked mostly green, but that, as the pile grew, the green became infiltrated with ever more red. With more grains, the scattering of red danger spots grew until a dense skeleton of instability ran through the pile. Here then was a clue to its peculiar behavior: a grain falling on a red spot can, by domino-like action, cause sliding at other nearby red spots. If the red network was sparse, and all trouble spots were well isolated one from the other, then a single grain could have only limited repercussions.

“But when the red spots come to riddle the pile, the consequences of the next grain become fiendishly unpredictable. It might trigger only a few tumblings, or it might instead set off a cataclysmic chain reaction involving millions. The sandpile seemed to have configured itself into a hypersensitive and peculiarly unstable condition in which the next falling grain could trigger a response of any size whatsoever.”

Something only a math nerd could love? Scientists refer to this as a critical state. The term critical state can mean the point at which water would go to ice or steam, or the moment that critical mass induces a nuclear reaction, etc. It is the point at which something triggers a change in the basic nature or character of the object or group. Thus, (and very casually for all you physicists) we refer to something being in a critical state (or use the term critical mass) when there is the opportunity for significant change.

“But to physicists, [the critical state] has always been seen as a kind of theoretical freak and sideshow, a devilishly unstable and unusual condition that arises only under the most exceptional circumstances [in highly controlled experiments]… In the sandpile game, however, a critical state seemed to arise naturally through the mindless sprinkling of grains.”

Then they asked themselves, could this phenomenon show up elsewhere? In the earth’s crust, triggering earthquakes; in wholesale changes in an ecosystem or a stock market crash? “Could the special organization of the critical state explain why the world at large seems so susceptible to unpredictable upheavals?” Could it help us understand not just earthquakes, but why cartoons in a third-rate paper in Denmark could cause worldwide riots?

Buchanan concludes in his opening chapter, “There are many subtleties and twists in the story … but the basic message, roughly speaking, is simple: The peculiar and exceptionally unstable organization of the critical state does indeed seem to be ubiquitous in our world. Researchers in the past few years have found its mathematical fingerprints in the workings of all the upheavals I’ve mentioned so far [earthquakes, eco-disasters, market crashes], as well as in the spreading of epidemics, the flaring of traffic jams, the patterns by which instructions trickle down from managers to workers in the office, and in many other things.

“At the heart of our story, then, lies the discovery that networks of things of all kinds – atoms, molecules, species, people, and even ideas – have a marked tendency to organize themselves along similar lines. On the basis of this insight, scientists are finally beginning to fathom what lies behind tumultuous events of all sorts, and to see patterns at work where they have never seen them before.”

Now, let’s think about this for a moment. Going back to the sandpile game, you find that as you double the number of grains of sand involved in an avalanche, the likelihood of an avalanche is 2.14 times as unlikely. We find something similar in earthquakes. In terms of energy, the data indicate that earthquakes simply become four times less likely each time you double the energy they release.
Mathematicians refer to this as a “power law,” or a special mathematical pattern that stands out in contrast to the overall complexity of the earthquake process.

Fingers of Instability

So what happens in our game? “… after the pile evolves into a critical state, many grains rest just on the verge of tumbling, and these grains link up into ‘fingers of instability’ of all possible lengths. While many are short, others slice through the pile from one end to the other. So the chain reaction triggered by a single grain might lead to an avalanche of any size whatsoever, depending on whether that grain fell on a short, intermediate or long finger of instability.”

Now, we come to a critical point in our discussion of the critical state. Again, read this with the markets in mind:

“In this simplified setting of the sandpile, the power law also points to something else: the surprising conclusion that even the greatest of events have no special or exceptional causes. After all, every avalanche large or small starts out the same way, when a single grain falls and makes the pile just slightly too steep at one point. What makes one avalanche much larger than another has nothing to do with its original cause, and nothing to do with some special situation in the pile just before it starts. Rather, it has to do with the perpetually unstable organization of the critical state, which makes it always possible for the next grain to trigger an avalanche of any size.”

Now let’s couple this idea with a few other concepts. First, one of the world’s greatest economists (who sadly was never honored with a Nobel), Hyman Minsky, points out that stability leads to instability. The longer a given condition or trend persists (and the more comfortable we get with it), the more dramatic the correction will be when the trend fails. The problem with long-term macroeconomic stability is that it tends to produce highly unstable financial arrangements. If we believe that tomorrow and next year will be the same as last week and last year, we are more willing to add debt or postpone savings for current consumption. Thus, says Minsky, the longer the period of stability, the higher the potential risk for even greater instability when market participants must change their behavior.

Relating this to our sandpile, the longer that a critical state builds up in an economy or, in other words, the more fingers of instability that are allowed to develop connections to other fingers of instability, the greater the potential for a serious “avalanche.”

And that’s exactly what happened in the recent credit crisis. Consumers all through the world’s largest economies borrowed money for all sorts of things, because times were good. Home prices would always go up and the stock market was back to its old trick of making 15% a year. And borrowing money was relatively cheap. You could get 2% short-term loans on homes, which seemingly rose in value 15% a year, so why not buy now and sell a few years down the road?

Greed took over. Those risky loans were sold to investors by the tens and hundreds of billions all over the world. And as with all debt sandpiles, the fault lines started to show up. Maybe it was that one loan in Las Vegas that was the critical piece of sand; we don’t know, but the avalanche was triggered.

You probably don’t remember this, but Dad was writing about the problems with subprime debt way back in 2005 and 2006. But as the problem actually emerged, respected people like Ben Bernanke (the chairman of the Fed) said that the problem was not all that big, and that the fallout would be “contained.” (I bet he wishes he could have that statement back!)

But it wasn’t contained. It caused banks to realize that what they thought was AAA credit was actually a total loss. And as banks looked at what was on their books, they wondered about their fellow banks. How bad were they? Who knew? Since no one did, they stopped lending to each other. Credit simply froze. They stopped taking each other’s letters of credit, and that hurt world trade. Because banks were losing money, they stopped lending to smaller businesses. Commercial paper dried up. All those “safe” off-balance-sheet funds that banks created were now folding. Everyone sold what they could, not what they wanted to, to cover their debts. It was a true panic. Businesses started laying off people, who in turn stopped spending as much.

As you saw from my earlier story about my bank experience, banks may do what unreasonable things when they get into trouble. (Speaking of which, my smallish Texas bank, where I have been for almost 20 years, just cancelled my very modest, unused credit line last month, and told me that letters of credit will not be rewritten without 100% cash against them. Not to worry, Dad is actually in the best shape of his life, business-wise, knock on wood. I hadn’t talked personally to a banker in years. When I asked the young clerk on the phone, “What’s going on?” he said it was just an order from his director. I switched banks last week, as I can smell a bank in trouble. And I again have a credit line – which I hope not to use.)

But the fact is, we need banks. They are like the arteries in our bodies; they keep the blood (money) flowing. And when our arteries get hard, we can be in danger of heart attacks. And it’s going to get worse, as banks are going to lose more money on their commercial real estate loans. Commercial real estate is down some 40% around the country.

There are a lot of books that try to pinpoint the cause of our current crisis. And some make for fun reading, like a good mystery novel. You can blame it on the Fed or the bankers or hedge funds or the government or ratings agencies or any number of culprits.

Let me be a little controversial here. The blame game that is now going on is in many ways way too simplistic. The world system survived all sorts of crises over the recent decades and bounced back. Why is now so different?

Because we are coming to the end of a 60-year debt supercycle. We borrowed (and not just in the US) like there was no tomorrow. And because we were so convinced that all this debt was safe, we leveraged up, borrowing at first 3 and then 5 and then 10 and then as much as 30 times the actual money we had. And we convinced the regulators that it was a good thing. The longer things remained stable, the more convinced we became they would remain that way. The following chart shows how our sandpile ended up. It’s not pretty.

GDP

I know Dad always say it is never “different,” but in a sense this time is really different from all the other crises we have gone through since the Great Depression that your Less-Than-Sainted Granddad used to talk about. What the very important book by professors Reinhart and Rogoff shows is that every debt crisis always ends this way, with the debt having to be paid down or written off or defaulted upon. That part is never different. One way or another, we reduce the debt. And that is a painful process. It means that the economy grows much slower, if at all, during the process.

And while the government is trying to make up the difference for consumers who are trying to (or being forced to) reduce their debt, even governments have limits, as the Greeks are finding out.

If it were not for the fact that we are coming to the closing innings of the debt supercycle, we would already be in a robust recovery. But we are not. And sadly, we have a long way to go with this deleveraging process. It will take years.

You can’t borrow your way out of a debt crisis, whether you are a family or a nation. And as too many families are finding out today, if you lose your job you can lose your home. What were once very creditworthy people are now filing for bankruptcy and walking away from homes, as all those subprime loans going bad put homes back onto the market, which caused prices to fall, which caused an entire home-construction industry to collapse, which hurt all sorts of ancillary businesses, which caused more people to lose their jobs and give up their homes, and on and on.

It’s all connected. We built a very unstable sandpile and it came crashing down and now we have to dig out from the problem. And the problem was too much debt. It will take years, as banks write off home loans and commercial real estate and more, and we get down to a more reasonable level of debt as a country and as a world.

And here’s where I have to deliver the bad news. It seems we did not learn the lessons of this crisis very well. First, we have not fixed the problems that made the crisis so severe. We have not regulated credit default swaps, for instance. And European banks are still highly leveraged.

Why is Greece important? Because so much of their debt is on the books of European banks. Hundreds of billions of dollars worth. And just a few years ago this seemed like a good thing. The rating agencies made Greek debt AAA, and banks could use massive leverage (almost 40 times in some European banks) and buy these bonds and make good money in the process. (Don’t ask Dad why people still trust rating agencies. Some things just can’t be explained.)

Except, now that Greek debt is risky. Today, it appears there will be some kind of bailout for Greece. But that is just a band-aid on a very serious wound. The crisis will not go away. It will come back, unless the Greeks willingly go into their own Great Depression by slashing their spending and raising taxes to a level that no one in the US could even contemplate. What is being demanded of them is really bad for them, but they did it to themselves.

But those European banks? When that debt goes bad, and it will, they will react to each other just like they did in 2008. Trust will evaporate. Will taxpayers shoulder the burden? Maybe, maybe not. It will be a huge crisis. There are other countries in Europe, like Spain and Portugal, that are almost as bad as Greece. Great Britain is not too far behind.

The European economy is as large as that of the US. We feel it when they go into recessions, for many of our largest companies make a lot of money in Europe. A crisis will also make the euro go down, which reduces corporate profits and makes it harder for us to sell our products into Europe, not to mention compete with European companies for global trade. And that means we all buy less from China, which means they will buy less of our bonds, and on and on go the connections. And it will all make it much harder to start new companies, which are the source of real growth in jobs.

And then in January of 2011 we are going to have the largest tax increase in US history. The research shows that tax increases have a negative 3-times effect on GDP, or the growth of the economy. As I will show in a letter in a few weeks, I think it is likely that the level of tax increases, when combined with the increase in state and local taxes (or the reductions in spending), will be enough to throw us back into recession, even without problems coming from Europe. (And no, Melissa, that is not some Republican research conspiracy. The research was done by Christina Romer, who is Obama’s chairperson of the Joint Council of Economic Advisors.)

And sadly, that means even higher unemployment. It means sales at the bar where you work, Melissa, will fall farther as more of your friends lose jobs. And commissions at the electronics store where you work, Chad, will be even lower than the miserable level they’re at now. And Henry, it means the hours you work at UPS will be even more difficult to come by. You are smart to be looking for more part-time work. Abbi and Amanda? People may eat out a little less, and your fellow workers will all want more hours. And Trey? Greece has little to do with the fact that you do not do your homework on time.

And this next time, we won’t be able to fight the recession with even greater debt and lower interest rates, as we did this last time. Rates are as low as they can go, and this week the bond market is showing that it does not like the massive borrowing the US is engaged in. It is worried about the possibility of “Greece R Us.”

Bond markets require confidence above all else. If Greece defaults, then how far away is Spain or Japan? What makes the US so different, if we do not control our debt? As Reinhart and Rogoff show, when confidence goes, the end is very near. And it always comes faster than anyone expects.

The good news? We will get through this. We pulled through some rough times as a nation in the ’70s.
No one, in 2020, is going to want to go back to the good old days of 2010, as the amazing innovations in medicine and other technologies will have made life so much better. You guys are going to live a very long time (and I hope I get a few extra years to enjoy those grandkids as well!). In 1975 we did not know where the new jobs would come from. It was fairly bleak. But the jobs did come, as they will once again.

The even better news? You guys are young, still babies, really. Hell, I didn’t have a good year income-wise until I was in my mid-30s, and that was an accident (I literally won a cellular telephone lottery). And it has not always been smooth since then, as you know. But we get through bad stuff. That is what we do as a family and as the larger family of our nation and world.

So, what’s the final message? Do what you are doing. Work hard, save, watch your spending, and think about whether your job is the right one if we have another recession. Pay attention to how profitable the company you work for is, and make yourself their most important worker. And know that things will get better. The 2020s are going to be one very cool time, as we shrug off the ending of the debt supercycle and hit the reset button. And remember, Dad is proud of you and loves you very much.


Archive

  • What Does Greece Mean to You?
    Published On Mon, Mar 29 2010, 06:15 GMT
  • The Threat to Muddle Through
    Published On Mon, Mar 22 2010, 06:38 GMT
  • The Implications of Velocity
    Published On Mon, Mar 15 2010, 06:40 GMT
  • Welcome to the Future
    Published On Mon, Mar 8 2010, 07:41 GMT
  • The Multiplication of Money
    Published On Mon, Mar 1 2010, 06:38 GMT
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Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:32 GMT
by Raivis Zile

Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | View company’s profile



Previous session overview

The dollar rose against the yen in Asia Monday on speculation that Japanese institutional investors may buy a lot of dollar-denominated assets at the start of the new fiscal year Thursday due to strengthening U.S. interest rates.

The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasurys stood at 3.882% on Monday after rising close to the psychologically-key mark of 4.0% last week. The rising yields will likely prompt big Japanese investors, such as life insurance companies, to buy U.S. assets to gain better returns, said analysts.

Short-term Asian hedge funds bought the greenback on such speculation, and the U.S. dollar rose to JPY92.61 as of 0450 GMT from JPY92.50 in New York Friday as a result. The ICE Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a trade-weighted basket of currencies, fell to 81.547 as of 0450 GMT from 81.599.

The euro initially edged higher versus the greenback after buying interest right at Thursday’s New York low of USD1.3267 lifted price in Australia. Traders bought euro just before Asian opening on comments by ECB’s president Trichet at a late Thursday’s news conference in Europe, he denied criticizing the inclusion of IMF finance in any rescue package and said he was ‘extraordinarily happy that the governments of the euro area found out a workable solution.

The British pound also rose in tandem with euro and reached a high of USD1.4894 in Asian mid-day. Although renewed cross selling in sterling versus euro and Japanese yen caused price to slip back to USD1.4811 early in European morning, renewed buying interest emerged and cable rallied to USD1.4924 in NY morning.

The Australian dollar was weaker in Asia on Monday but supported from its lows after the central bank governor said in a television interview that policy will need to be tightened further.

Market expectation

Investors will be paying close attention to U.S. economic data this week, and if they come in better than market forecasts, the dollar may climb to a seven-month-high of JPY94.00 this week, said analysts.

The U.S. will release personal spending data for February at 1230 GMT. Any upside surprises could push the U.S. unit sharply higher because some investors betting that spending in February was actually weak due to unfavorable weather during the month, said analysts.

For EURUSD offers seen placed between USD1.3450/60, a break to open a move toward USD1.3480/85 ahead of USD1.3500 and the overnight high at USD1.3525. Support seen placed at USD1.3420/15, a break below USD1.3410 to open a deeper move toward USD1.3385/80 ahead of stronger interest between USD1.3350/40.

Looking ahead, the euro may remain choppy, some dealers said, because they are not sure whether future bond auctions by Greece will be able to find solid demand from investors.

U.S. non-farm payrolls Friday will also be watched, with the world’s largest economy expected to have added jobs in March, supporting the U.S. dollar in turn.

Most important events of the day

29-Mar Count. Event For Unit Imp. Act. Cons. Prev.
0:00 DE CPI (P) Mar % m/m High 0.3 0.4
0:00 DE CPI (P) Mar % y/y High 0.9 0.6
0:00 DE HICP (P) Mar % m/m High 0.2 0.4
0:00 DE HICP (P) Mar % y/y High 0.9 0.5
0:00 US Richmond Fed President Lacker gives speech before Global Interdependence Centre conference Low
6:00 GB Nationwide house prices (nsa) (29th-31st) Mar % y/y Low 9.2
6:00 GB Nationwide house prices (sa) (29th-31st) Mar % m/m Low -1
7:30 SE Retail sales (nsa) Feb %y/y Low 3.3
7:30 SE Retail sales (sa) Feb %m/m Low 0.3 0.8
8:30 GB BoE – Mortgage Approvals Feb k Low 48 48.2
8:30 GB BoE – Net Consumer Credit Feb GBP bn Low 0.4 0.5
8:30 GB BoE – Secured Lending Feb GBP bn Low 1.2 1.5
8:30 GB M4 Money Supply (F) Feb % m/m Low 0.2
8:30 GB M4 Money Supply (F) Feb % y/y Low 3.6
8:30 GB BSA Mortgage Approvals Mar K Low
9:00 EU Business Climate Mar index Low -0.85 -0.98
9:00 EU Consumer sentiment Mar index Low -17 -17
9:00 EU Economic sentiment Mar index Low 97 95.9
9:00 EU Industrial sentiment Mar index Low -11 -13
9:00 WLD IMF MD Strauss-Kahn gives speech on “After the Global Financial Crisis: the Road Ahead for Central and Eastern Europe” Low
11:15 EU ECB Governing Council member Nowotny and Czech National Bank Governor Tuma take part in panel at EUROPEUM Institute for European Policy conference Low
12:30 US Core PCE Price Index Feb % m/m Med 0.1
12:30 US Personal income Feb % m/m High 0.1 0.1
12:30 US Personal spending Feb % m/m Med 0.3 0.5
15:00 US Treasury Secretary Geithner participates in Women in Finance conference Low
16:55 CA BoC Senior Deputy Governor Jenkins gives speech before the Economic Club of Canada Low
21:45 NZ Building Consents Feb %m/m Low 2 -2.8
23:30 JP Real Household Spending Feb % y/y Med 1.5 1.7
23:30 JP Unemployment Feb % rate Low 4.9 4.9
23:50 JP Industrial Production (P) Feb % m/m Med -0.5 2.7
23:50 JP Industrial Production (P) Feb % y/y Med 31.7 18.5

*Note all time are GMT.


Archive

  • Daily Forex Overview
    Published On Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:32 GMT
  • Daily Forex Overview
    Published On Fri, Mar 26 2010, 08:11 GMT
  • Daily Forex Overview
    Published On Thu, Mar 25 2010, 08:25 GMT
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Operate Forex

in Articles

Mon, Mar 29 2010, 07:36 GMT
by Easy Forex Team

Easy Forex | View company’s profile



Last week’s currency trading review

The Dollar broke higher against all currencies last week as the as the Euro losses continued and USD/JPY broke out of a 2 week range to the topside. US stocks traded at year highs above 10900 on the Dow Jones before settling slightly lower on fresh Korean peninsula concerns surfacing Friday. January Core Durable Goods climbed 0.9% vs. 0.6% previously and weekly jobless claims dropped to 442k vs. 456k previously. The Euro traded at fresh 10 month lows below 1.3300 on Thursday as the market’s concern about Greece debt and the EU’s bailout plan were put to the test. The EU summit on Friday emerged with a EU/IMF compromise bailout strategy that let the Euro stage a solid relief rally into the weekend. March German IFO surprised at 98 vs. 95.8 forecast. The EUR/USD fell -0.92% closing at 1.3406, after opening the week at 1.3529.

The Japanese Yen was the weakest currency in the market last week as the USD/JPY broke to the topside surging over 2 Yen. The main catalyst for the move higher was the change in yields on US Bonds leading the market to replace the Dollar with the Yen as the cheapest funding currency. Also weighing on the Yen was the differing monetary policy outlooks with US set to pare back support for the bond market whilst Japan is considering expanding support. The USD/JPY gained +2.14% closing at 92.52, after opening at 90.54 previously. The GBP fell below the key 1.5000 level on USD strength and ongoing political concerns in the UK. February Retail Sales jumped 2.1% vs. 0.8% forecast but this was offset from a January revision to -3.00% vs. -1.8% initially. GBP/USD fell -0.77% closing at 1.4897 after opening at 1.5011. The AUD held ground well against USD strength until Friday when heavy unwinding of short EUR/AUD positions sent the AUD/USD towards 0.9000. AUD/JPY traded at month highs above Y84.50 before slipping on Friday. High Australian interest rates continue to support the Aussie on dips. The AUD/USD fell -1.26% closing at 0.9039 after opening at 0.9153.

The forex trading week preview

In the States; On Monday, February Core PCE is forecast at 1.3% vs. 1.4% y/y previously. Also released, February Personal Spending is forecast at 0.3% vs. 0.5% m/m. On Tuesday, March CB Consumer Confidence is forecast at 50 vs. 46 previously. On Wednesday, March Chicago PMI is forecast at 61 vs. 62.6 previously. Also released, February Factory Orders forecast at 0.5% vs. 1.7% previously. On Thursday, Weekly Jobless Claims are forecast at 440k vs. 442k previously. Also released, ISM March Manufacturing is forecast at 57 vs. 56.5 previously. On Friday, March Non Farm Payrolls are forecast at 190k vs. -36k previously. The March Unemployment Rate is forecast at 9.7% vs. 9.7% previously. We will provide our previews and reviews of these data releases in the daily summary.

In the Eurozone; On Monday, German CPI is forecast at 0.9% vs. 0.6% y/y. On Wednesday, March German Unemployment Rate is forecast at at 8.2% vs. 8.2% previously. February EU Unemployment rate is forecast at 10.0% vs. 9.9% previously. On Thursday, March PMI manufacturing final is forecast unchanged at 56.3. In the UK; On Monday, February Mortgage Approvals forecast at 48 vs. 48.2k previously. Also, BOE Dale speaks. On Tuesday, Q4 GDP Final is forecast unchanged at 0.3% Q/Q. On Thursday, March PMI Manufacturing forecast at 56.8 vs. 56.6 previously. We will provide our previews and reviews of these data releases in the daily summary.

In Japan; On Tuesday, February Industrial Production is forecast at 31.75 vs. 18.5% previously. On Thursday, Q1 Tankan is forecast at -14 vs. -24 previously. Q1 Tankan Capex is forecast at -0.4% vs. -13.8% previously. In Australia; On Wednesday, February Retail Sales are forecast at 0.35 vs. 1.2% previously. On Thursday, February Trade Balance is forecast at -1.37bn vs. -1.18bn previously. We will provide our previews and reviews of these data releases in the daily summary.

TECHNICAL COMMENTARY

  • Euro – 1.3435

    Initial support at 1.3270 (March 26 low) followed by 1.3247 (May 6 low). Initial resistance is now located at 1.3507 (Mar 24 high) followed by 1.3569 (Mar 23 high)

  • Yen – 92.40

    Initial support is located at 91.77 (Mar 25 low) followed by 91.09 (Mar 24 low). Initial resistance is now at 92.96 (Mar 25) followed by 93.77 (Jan 8 high).

  • Pound – 1.4910

    Initial support at 1.4784 (Mar 1 low) followed by 1.4704 (April 30 low). Initial resistance is now at 1.5049 (Mar 24 high) followed by 1.5113 (Mar 23 low).

  • Australian Dollar – 0.9050

    Initial support at 0.8978 (Mar 4 low) followed by the 0.8936 (Mar 1 low). Initial resistance is now at 0.9139 (Mar 25 high) followed by 0.9199 (March 23 high).

  • Gold – 1107

    Initial support at 1085 (Mar 24 low) followed by 1078 (Feb 12 low). Initial resistance is now at 1109 (Mar 22 high) followed by 1124 (0.618 of 1144.98-1092.47).

  • Oil – 80.00

    Initial support at 79.50 (Intraday Support) followed by 78.00 (Intraday Support). Initial resistance is now at 82.00 (Intraday Resistance) followed by 83.20 (March high).


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