“The Most Important Chart For Investors” Flashback, And Why USDJPY 120 Is Now Coming Fast

Back in late September, we posted what Albert Edwards thought at the time was “The Most Important Chart For Investors” which was quite simply, a chart of the USDJPY. Here is the punchline of what he said:

We have long believed that investors ignore Japan at their peril. Time and time again, investors have missed major global market trends that have been catalysed by Japan. We have felt for some time that a fragile Chinese economy could be pushed over the edge by a further yen devaluation – in many ways a replay of the Asian crisis of 1997. And just as the Chinese real economy data has taken a turn for the worse in August, the yen has slipped below a key 15-year support level against the dollar. This is probably the most important chart investors should focus on. The next phase of global currency wars may have begun.

 

We have written previously that Japan?s QE and the associated yen weakness could trigger a re-run of the 1997 Asian crisis, only this time sucking in the Chinese renminbi. The yen has just broken below a key long-term support and after a brief technical pull-back, its decline is likely to accelerate. This will trigger a wave of profit-crushing deflation flowing from east to west. Andrew Lapthorne has just written a great note on Japanese equities. He says yen weakness, not corporate self-help, is the key to Nikkei outperformance, with Germany looking particularly vulnerable. It looks as if yen weakness is what we’ve now got!

 

Staring long and hard at the Yen/$ chart, I think that, in the current circumstances, the yen/$ will head to 120 pretty quickly – perhaps after a short reinvigorating retracement. And, if the dollar’s ascent is given extra impetus by the DXY also breaking out, a decline in the yen below Y120 will see an end to its 30-year uptrend – a trend that has relentlessly exported deflation from the west to Japan. Sound far-fetched? One of the few things I have learnt over 30 years in this industry is that when traders decide the yen/US$ starts to move it can jump by Y10 or Y20 very, very quickly indeed.

Considering the BOJ’s overnight move, he was absolutely correct.

So for all those who missed it, here it is again, because it explains not only where the Yen is headed next, but why, sadly, this could well be the end of Japan and the mirage of a recovery that has had everybody hypnotized for the past 6 years.

Albert Edwards Presents “The Most Important Chart For Investors”

Which incidentally has nothing to do with stocks or bonds, and everything to do with all-important FX (which just happens to drive all correlation and risk pairs around the globe thanks to the far greater embedded leverage in FX, and is why all “modern” traders focus almost entirely on the USDJPY and EURUSD).

Specifically, as SocGen’s Albert Edwards notes “we show on the front page chart what I believe to be the key chart investors should be focusing on at present. It shows the yen breaking down against the US dollar. This may be more than just a strong dollar story on the back of Fed tightening however, as it seems the yen has now also broken key support levels against the euro. This is a weak yen story. Though there are good fundamental explanations for recent dollar strength vis-à-vis both the yen and the euro, often commentators like to find a fundamental story to fit market events even when price movements have occurred without any clear fundamental explanation ? for we teenage scribblers (as ex-UK Chancellor Nigel Lawson dismissively called us) all have to fill those column inches of commentary.”

Wait, Albert is now a chartist? So it would appear, with a few large caveats:

Sometimes it is very clear to me that instead of fundamentals driving prices, it is the charts or technicals that are important. Hence I have long been an advocate of keeping one eye on the charts to see if a major support or resistance has been broken. The very fact that the markets contain so many followers of technical analysis means that the soothsaying of chartists can actually be self-fulfilling. Nowhere is this more true than in the world of foreign exchange (FX) trading where fundamentals often play a peripheral role, even in the medium term. And in a world where momentum investing has become more ?fashionable?, FX is the one area where a clear market trend is especially seized upon with relish.

We couldn’t agree more, since we ourselves enjoy point out, more often than not, when various algos activate momentum ignition strategies in the USDJPY to push the broader S&P 500 above (never below) key resistance levels. In fact, it was on Zero Hedge where we pointed out last night the extreme oversold level of the Yen. Edwards, however says to ignore this, and instead to focus on what may be historic weakness in the Yen, which in turn will clobber the global economy.

… if I am right and the yen runs sharply lower from here, then this will spell real trouble for the global economy. (Do not be fooled if there is now a pause in yen weakness or even a partial retracement from these levels, as the rapidity of recent moves means the yen is now extremely oversold against the dollar ? i.e. the daily RSI=88. This should be the pause that reinvigorates the new trend).

Why does a rapidly weakening yen spell trouble for the global economy?

First, because the Chinese economy will see a further rise in its already strong real exchange rate, especially if other Asian currencies are pulled down with the sliding yen. This will hurt the Chinese economy which, from August data, appears to be weakening again. The strengthening renminbi will also exacerbate deflationary pressures further.

 

Second, a weak yen spells trouble for the west as a wave of deflation washes in from the rapidly devaluing east. This reverses a decade long trend. I believe that profits growth is so anaemic in the west that this monetary tightening via strengthening exchange rates could in itself be sufficient to send US and European profits into outright decline and subsequently their economies into recession (via a contraction in the investment spending). That is why this FX technical break is so important

That’s what could happen. Here is why Edwards believes, it will happen.

We have long believed that investors ignore Japan at their peril. Time and time again, investors have missed major global market trends that have been catalysed by Japan. We have felt for some time that a fragile Chinese economy could be pushed over the edge by a further yen devaluation – in many ways a replay of the Asian crisis of 1997. And just as the Chinese real economy data has taken a turn for the worse in August, the yen has slipped below a key 15-year support level against the dollar. This is probably the most important chart investors should focus on. The next phase of global currency wars may have begun.

 

We have written previously that Japan?s QE and the associated yen weakness could trigger a re-run of the 1997 Asian crisis, only this time sucking in the Chinese renminbi. The yen has just broken below a key long-term support and after a brief technical pull-back, its decline is likely to accelerate. This will trigger a wave of profit-crushing deflation flowing from east to west. Andrew Lapthorne has just written a great note on Japanese equities. He says yen weakness, not corporate self-help, is the key to Nikkei outperformance, with Germany looking particularly vulnerable. It looks as if yen weakness is what we’ve now got!

 

Staring long and hard at the Yen/$ chart, I think that, in the current circumstances, the yen/$ will head to 120 pretty quickly ? perhaps after a short reinvigorating retracement. And, if the dollar’s ascent is given extra impetus by the DXY also breaking out, a decline in the yen below Y120 will see an end to its 30-year uptrend – a trend that has relentlessly exported deflation from the west to Japan. Sound far-fetched? One of the few things I have learnt over 30 years in this industry is that when traders decide the yen/US$ starts to move it can jump by Y10 or Y20 very, very quickly indeed.

Remember that “shocking” CPI print from last week? If the SocGen strategist is right, prepare for many more such “stunners” as Japan makes deflation-exporting its only business model, one which could well crush the economies of Europe, China, and the US… and Japan! Case in point: recall what just happened to Sony last week. But the all important offset, a rising global stock market, should make it all better at least until the entire economic base is so hollowed out, not even algos can dismisses the record divergence between stock market myth and economic reality.

Edwards’ bottom line: “If a clear break in the yen downwards against both the dollar and euro is occurring, not only will this spell trouble for the beleaguered Chinese economy and exacerbate deflation in the west, but it will also break the spell of German economic dominance.




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Nikkei Futures Halted Limit Up (+1100) As USDJPY Tops 112

Bwuahahahaha… Nikkei futures halted limit up – over 1100 points post-BoJ (+1400 post-FOMC) as USDJPY tops 112 (up 4 handles post-FOMC) to its highest since Jan 2008.

 

Chart: Bloomberg




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Earth to Teachers. Come in, Teachers. You Can’t Support Common Core But Oppose Testing.

BoyA
recent Gallup Poll
exposed the fact that many teachers have a
Jekyll and Hyde complex when it comes to Common Core: they like the
idea of uniform national standards but vigorously oppose
standardized tests.

According to the poll, 76 percent of teachers reacted positively
to the idea of having “one set of educational standards across the
country for reading, writing, and math.” Good news for Common Core
proponents, right? Unfortunately, the other half of Common Core is
rigorous testing, and 72 percent of teachers reacted negatively to
“standardized computer-based tests to measure all students’
performance and progress.” When the poll suggested “linking teacher
evaluations to their students’ Common Core test scores,” teachers
were horrified: 89 percent didn’t like that idea.

Common Core cannot be stripped of standardized testing and still
survive. Tests were not some incidental byproduct of the national
standards effort; they are an integral part of the package. There
will be no way to tell if the standards are working—or if schools
are implementing them correctly—if the tests are tossed out but the
standards maintained.

Certainly, some teachers merely oppose the tests because they
don’t want to be held responsible for their students’ progress at
all. That’s bad; teacher compensation and evaluation should be
based on something tangible, like student achievement, rather than
something automatic, like tenure or degree attainment.

But I can’t fault teachers who don’t want to be held responsible
for students’ negative test scores when the students
clearly don’t stand a chance
of passing. Haphazard
implementation of Common Core means that not all students are
absorbing Core-aligned material at the appropriate grades,
rendering
the tests ill-suited
to the task at hand. And how are
kindergartners at struggling, cash-strapped, inner-city schools
going to pass a computerized exam,
no matter how
dedicated their teachers are?

One of the main problems of public education is a lack of
accountability. There is no way to excise bad teachers from the
system, and good teachers have little incentive to stay. Better
testing is a perfectly valid solution to deal with that problem.
But this test—a test forced on the states by
large federal and corporate interests—is clearly creating more
problems than it solves.

Incidentally, Common Core tests
are so unpopular
that some former supporters of the effort have
been forced to change course in order to avoid alienting teachers.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is fighting to keep his
governorship, has significantly walked back his pro-Core stances.
His Republican opponent, Rob Astorino, is even more opposed to
Common Core, and will actually appear on the ballot as the nominee
of the “Stop Common Core” party.

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A.M. Links: ISIS Airstrikes Helping Assad, Not Hurting ISIS, President Obama in Maine, Israel Closes Temple Mount

  • Ebola costumeSecretary of Defense
    Chuck Hagel
    said that “of course” U.S. airstrikes against the
    Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) would benefit the Assad
    regime. About 1,000 foreign fighters are still entering
    Syria
    to fight with ISIS each month.
  • President Obama was in
    Maine
    to campaign but didn’t touch Ebola.
  • The odds of
    Republicans
    taking control of the Senate stand at 68
    percent.
  • Pennsylvania state police say they’ve caught alleged cop
    shooter
    Eric Frein
    after a nearly seven-week long manhunt. Prosecutors
    want to seek the death penalty.
  • Israel has closed the
    Temple Mount
    after a series of shootings at the site, which
    also includes the al-Aqsa mosque.
  • The military has taken over the government in
    Burkina Faso
    after protesters stormed and set fire to the
    parliament building.
  • Zambia’s newest head of state is the first white president in

    Africa
     since F.W. de Klerk.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up
here
.

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Kurt Loder Reviews Nightcrawler and Horns

Nightcrawler is a steely LA noir that
trains a searchlight on the TV news business, and flushes out some
of its creepiest denizens. Gyllenhaal gives an intense, gripping
performance. His Louis is an icy sociopath, living in solitary
contentment with a laptop and a big-screen TV (both stolen,
presumably), his only companion a sad potted plant. The actor says
he lost nearly 30 pounds for the role, and his cadaverous,
dead-eyed countenance is the movie’s most disturbing element.
Writer-director Dan Gilroy is already a well-regarded screenwriter
(he scripted The Bourne Legacy with his brother,
Tony Gilroy). Here, directing his first movie, he reveals a sleek,
fully formed style, greatly enhanced by meticulous editing (by his
other brother, John Gilroy) and by James Newton Howard’s subtly
ominous score, writes Kurt Loder. 

View this article.

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Ally Financial (Formerly GMAC) Admits DoJ Subpoenas On Mortgage-Related Activities

If yesterday’s Citi debacle was a buying opportunity (which it is according to the pre-market), then news that Ally Financial (formerly GMAC) is under regulatory and DoJ investigation must be great news:

  • *ALLY CITES REQUEST FROM SEC ON SUBPRIME AUTO FINANCE PROBE & MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES
  • *ALLY SAYS REQUESTS INCLUDE SUBPOENAS FROM DOJ

Of course, do not forget that GM itself recently admitted to the DoJ probing its subprime auto loan underwriting practices. But, but, but – isn’t this exactly what FHFA’s Mel Watt wants?

 

Via Ally’s 10-Q

Ally and its subsidiaries, including Ally Bank, are or may become involved from time to time in reviews, investigations, and proceedings (both formal and informal), and information-gathering requests, by government and self-regulatory agencies, including the FRB, FDIC, Utah Department of Financial Institutions (UDFI), Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), SEC, and the Federal Trade Commission regarding their respective operations.

 

Such requests currently include subpoenas from each of the SEC and the DOJ. The subpoenas and document requests from the SEC include information covering a wide range of mortgage-related matters, and the subpoenas received from the DOJ include a broad request for documentation and other information in connection with its investigations of potential fraud and other potential legal violations related to mortgage-backed securities, as well as the origination and/or underwriting of mortgage loans.

 

In addition, we recently received a document request from the SEC in connection with its investigation related to subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities.

 

Further, in December 2013, Ally Financial Inc. and Ally Bank entered into Consent Orders issued by the CFPB and the DOJ pertaining to the allegation of disparate impact in the automotive finance business, which resulted in a $98 million charge in the fourth quarter of 2013. The Consent Orders require Ally to create a compliance plan addressing, at a minimum, the communication of Ally’s expectations of Equal Credit Opportunity Act compliance to dealers, maintenance of Ally’s existing limits on dealer finance income for contracts acquired by Ally, and monitoring for potential discrimination both at the dealer level and within our portfolio of contracts acquired across all dealers. Ally formed a compliance committee consisting of certain Ally and Ally Bank directors to oversee Ally’s execution of the Consent Orders’ terms. Failure to achieve certain remediation targets could result in the payment of additional amounts in the future.

 

Investigations, proceedings, regulatory actions, or information-gathering requests that Ally is, or may become, involved in may result in material adverse consequences including without limitation, adverse judgments, settlements, fines, penalties, injunctions, or other actions.

*  *  *

And this comes on the heels of GM Financial’s admission of Subprime Auto Loan Probes (via Bloomberg)

Investigations of the subprime auto finance business are spreading as General Motors Co. (GM) said its lending arm received additional subpoenas seeking details of its underwriting practices.

 

GM Financial, which specializes in loans to people with spotty credit, said in a regulatory filing yesterday that attorneys general of states it didn’t identify and other government offices are demanding documents related to its business of making car loans and pooling them into bonds that are sold to investors. The Detroit-based lender, along with Santander Consumer USA Holdings Inc., disclosed a similar probe by the U.S. Department of Justice in August.

 

The scrutiny is intensifying at the same time more borrowers are falling behind on their payments and sales of securities backed by the loans increase. Auto-finance firms that lend to people with bad credit lowered their standards amid increased competition as new entrants flooded the business to capitalize on cheap funding, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

 

“Subpoenas travel in packs,” Erik Gordon, a professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, said by telephone. “There’s never one company in an industry subpoenaed because they’re mostly all doing the same thing.”

*  *  *

But, but, but – isn’t this exactly what FHFA’s Mel Watt wants?




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Charting Banzainomics: What The BOJ’s Shocking Announcement Really Means

Still confused what the BOJ’s shocking move was about, aside from pushing the US stock market to a new record high of course? This should explains it all: as the chart below show, as a result of the BOJ’s stated intention to buy 8 trillion to 12 trillion yen ($108 billion) of Japanese government bonds per month it means the BOJ will now soak up all of the 10 trillion yen in new bonds that the Ministry of Finance sells in the market each month.

In other words. The Bank of Japan’s expansion of record stimulus today may see it buy every new bond the government issues.

This is what full monetization looks like.

More from Bloomberg:

The central bank is already the largest single holder of Japan’s bonds, and the scale of its buying could fuel concerns it is underwriting deficits of a nation with the heaviest debt burden. The BOJ could end up owning half of the JGB market by as early as in 2018, according to Takuji Okubo, chief economist at Japan Macro Advisors in Tokyo.

 

“Kuroda knows when to go ALL in,” Okubo wrote in a note. “The BOJ is basically declaring that Japan will need to fix its long-term problems by 2018, or risk becoming a failed nation.

 

The unprecedented efforts to stoke inflation could scare bond investors, said Chotaro Morita, the chief rates strategist in Tokyo at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc.

 

Kuroda said earlier this month that while the BOJ holds only about 20 percent of Japan’s outstanding government bonds, the Bank of England holds approximately 40 percent of U.K. government debt.

We wish Japan the best of luck in avoiding becoming a “failed nation.”

Then again there is something to be said about a nation which is now desperately, and obviously to everyone, trying to unleash hyperinflation… and, for now at least, is failing.




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Despite Surprise Rate-Hike, Russian Ruble Crashes Most In 6 Years

Yesterday’s record-breaking surge in the Ruble appears, as we warned, to have been front-running today’s rate-hike announcement… and despite its surprise size, it is disappointing the market. The 5%-plus swing higher in the Ruble yesterday has been notably retraced as the Russian currency plunges (biggest drop in almost 6 years) after the central bank hiked rates 150bps (expectations were broadly of a 50bps hike) but it appears the ‘whisper’ number was a 200bps hike and a shift in FX policy to more active intervention. The inituial rip rally instantly faded and despite low liquidity due to Russian holidays, USDRUB is back over 43 – which would be a new record low close if it holds.

Russian Central Bank disappointed…

  • *RUSSIAN CENTRAL BANK RAISES KEY RATE TO 9.50% (up from 8%) 
  • *BANK OF RUSSIA DOESN’T ANNOUNCE CHANGES TO FX POLICY
  • *BANK OF RUSSIA SEES SIGNS FOR SLOWING INFLATION IN MID-TERM
  • *BANK OF RUSSIA READY TO EASE IF EXTERNAL CONDITIONS IMPROVE

22 of 31 economists in Bloomberg survey forecast 50bps increase; 2 predicted move to 9%; increases of 25bps and 75bps forecast by 1 each; 5 economists projected no change

The reaction:

  • *RUBLE EXTENDS DECLINES, WEAKENS 2.9% VS BASKET

 

Biggest plunge in almost 6 years

 

Analysts react:

  • *RUSSIAN RATE RISE WON’T `SIGNIFICANTLY’ SUPPORT RUBLE: NORDEA
  • *RUBLE WEAKNESS IS `BEYOND SPHERE OF MONETARY POLICY’: NORDEA
  • *RBS: RATE RISE WON’T ELIMINATE FX SHORTAGE BEHIND RUBLE DROP

The weakness has prompted furtherremarks from the central bank:

  • *BANK OF RUSSIA CONDUCTS INTERVENTIONS IN LINE WITH FX POLICY
  • *BANK OF RUSSIA INTERVENES ONLY AT EDGE OF RUB FLOATING CORRIDOR
  • *BANK OF RUSSIA: TIGHTENING HASN’T YET OFFSET IMPACT OF WEAK RUB




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Consumer Spending Tumbles At Fastest Rate Since October 2009

Goodbye GDP hopes… Consumer Spending tumbled 0.2% against expectations of growing 0.1%, dropping at the fastest pace since October 2009. This is the biggest miss since Jan 2014 – in the middle of the PolarVortex… did it snow in October?

 

 

Chart: Bloomberg




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Bank of Japan Reaction Context: Nikkei 225 Is Up 1000 Points In 7 Hours

You know the world’s financial markets have become farce when the broad Nikkei 225 stock market of Japan rises 1000 points in 7 hours… The meme that stock ‘markets’ move on fundamentals not central bank liquidity is officially dead. Let that sink in for a moment…

 

 

Chart: Bloomberg




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