Gold Beat Stocks Except During the Tech Bubble

Warren Buffett once noted, Gold doesn’t do anything “but look at you.” It doesn’t pay a dividend or produce cash flow.

 

However, the fact of the matter is that Gold has dramatically outperformed the stock market for the better part of 40 years.

 

I say 40 years because there is no point comparing Gold to stocks during periods in which Gold was pegged to world currencies. Most of the analysis I see comparing the benefits of owning Gold to stocks goes back to the early 20th century.

 

However Gold was pegged to global currencies up until 1967. Stocks weren’t. Comparing the two during this time period is just bad analysis.

 

However, once the Gold peg officially ended with France dropping it in 1967, the precious metal has outperformed both the Dow and the S&P 500 by a massive margin.

 

See for yourself… the above chart is in normalized terms courtesy of Bill King’s The King Report.

According to King, Gold has risen 37.43 fold since 1967. That is more than twice the performance of the Dow over the same time period (18.45 fold). So much for the claim that stocks are a better investment than Gold long-term.

 

Indeed, once Gold was no longer pegged to world currencies there was only a single period in which stocks outperformed the precious metal. That period was from 1997-2000 during the height of the Tech Bubble (the single biggest stock market bubble in over 100 years).

 

In simple terms, as a long-term investment, Gold has arguably been the single best passive investment of the last 40+ years.

 

Moreover, I think there is considerable value in Gold today as an investment. Indeed, I can make the arguments that Gold is both cheap as a cigar butt and as a moat.

 

If we look at Gold as a cigar butt (trading at a discount to its intrinsic value), we must first consider Gold’s intrinsic value.

 

Many investors argue that Gold has no intrinsic value. I disagree with this assessment as it does not consider the nature of the financial system.

 

Let’s compare Gold to the US Dollar.

 

Every asset in the financial system trades based on relative value. Ultimately, this value is denominated in US Dollars because the Dollar is the reserve currency of the world.

 

However, even the US Dollar itself trades based on relative value. Remember the Dollar is merely a sheet of linen and cotton that is printed by the Fed and is backed by the full faith and credit of the Unites States.

In this sense, the Dollar’s value is derived from the confidence investors that the US will honor its debts.

 

A second item to consider is the fact that the Dollar’s value today also derived from the Fed’s money printing. Indeed, a Dollar today, is worth only 5% of a Dollar’s value from the early 20th century because the Fed has debased the currency.

 

As a result of this the world has adjusted to this change in relative “value” resulting in a Dollar buying less today than it did 100 years ago.

 

In this sense, Gold’s value is derived from investors’ faith in the Financial System (ultimately backstopped by the Dollar) and the Fed’s actions.

 

Gold also moves based on investors’ confidence in the system. If investors’ are afraid that the system is under duress (meaning that they have little confidence in the Dollar-based financial system) then they perceive Gold has having a higher value.

 

Similarly, if the Fed prints Dollars by the billions, Gold is perceived as having a higher value relative to the Dollar.

 

Thus, Gold does not have any less intrinsic value than the US Dollar does. In that regard we can price it relative to the Fed’s actions and to the fear of systemic risk to get an assessment of its true value.

 

With that in mind, today Gold is clearly undervalued relative the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet (see Figure 3 on the next page).

 

Since the Crash hit in 2008, the price of Gold has been very closely correlated to the Fed’s balance sheet expansion. Put another way, the more money the Fed printed, the higher the price of Gold went.

 

Gold did become overextended relative to the Fed’s balance sheet in 2011 when it entered a bubble with Silver.  However, with the Fed now printing some $85 billion per month, the precious metal is now significantly undervalued relative to the Fed’s balance sheet.

 

Indeed, for Gold to even realign based on the Fed’s actions, it would need to be north of $1,800. That’s a full 30% higher than where it trades today. Eventually this relationship will normalize. Gold is clearly being manipulated lower.

For a FREE Special Report on how to beat the market both during bull market and bear market runs, visit us at:

 

http://phoenixcapitalmarketing.com/special-reports.html

 

Best Regards

 

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

 

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/NOJ-7GJ4eJQ/story01.htm Phoenix Capital Research

With 1 Week Left Until November 30 Obama Scrambles To Boost Obamacare Enrollment; Propaganda Enters Overdrive Mode

With just a week to go until the Obama-promised “all clear” healthcare.gov date of November 30, the president is scrambling to boost enrollment in the 11th hour. As reported by Reuters, the administration announced a flurry of fixes to its troubled HealthCare.gov website on Friday that officials said would soon double its current capacity, a crucial step toward getting the system working by a November 30 deadline. It also pushed back a deadline for people to enroll in insurance plans for 2014 under President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act in a nod to millions of applicants who have been unable to sign up because of technical glitches for nearly two months. The reason for the push is that consumers need to make decisions on healthcare plans in December if they want insurance in place by January.

The problem as discussed ad nauseam is that with its 500 million lines of code, its accessibility problems and its security concerns,  healthcare.gov is simply not a viable option in the long or short-run. And yet Obama keeps insisting on band aid fixes only now the president has decided to boost direct enrollment as a workaround would the latest attempt to fix the site crash and burn again.

Jeffrey Zients, the troubleshooter named by Obama to oversee fixes to HealthCare.gov told reporters on Friday that the website will soon be able to handle 50,000 simultaneous users – twice its current capacity, and up from fewer than 1,000 in the days after its botched launch on Oct 1.

 

Some of the technical fixes will allow insurance companies to more easily directly enroll consumers in health plans, a senior administration official said.

 

The administration will run a pilot program for direct enrollment in three states with large numbers of uninsured people – Texas, Florida and Ohio – and use the results to expand the availability of the “direct enrollment” option.

 

“We do believe that it’s substantial. We’re looking at hundreds of thousands of people who we believe may well opt to do this,” the official told Reuters.

In the meanwhile the first delay to the rollout was announced: it will, however, hardly have a meaningful impact:

People needing health insurance by January 1, 2014 will have eight extra days to sign up, officials said. The original deadline for year-end coverage was December 15, but now will be moved to December 23.

More importantly, the administration has also decided to push back the deadline for the second yearof enrollment, which just happens to fall at a critical time – just after the midterm elections which also means Americans will not know how high premiums surge as a result of Obamacare until after the election.

With the first enrollment period barely off the ground, the Obama administration also has decided to delay enrollment for the second year of the program to give insurance companies more time to calculate rates, White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters.

 

The delay will mean consumers will start shopping for insurance for Year Two of Obamacare on November 15, 2014 – more than a week after voters go to the polls for midterm elections, when congressional Democrats are expected to face tough questions about the policy they supported.

 

“That means that if premiums go through the roof in the first year of Obamacare, no one will know about it until after the election,” said Republican Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa. But Carney rejected any assertion that politics was behind the extension.

“The fact is, we’re doing it because it make sense for insurers to have as clear a sense of the pool of consumers they gain in the market this year, before setting rates for next year,” Carney said.

And as usual, the White House is convinced it can just lie and just keep getting away with it thanks to a press that is infatuated with a president who until recently could, in the eyes of the “independent” media, walk on water but no more.

Elsewhere, in an attempt to artificially boost excitement in a program that has gone from Obama’s crowning achievement to his most abysmal failure, the WaPo reports that there has been a surge in enrollment after the abysmal results from the first enrollment month:

After anemic enrollment in the federal health insurance marketplace, several states running their own online exchanges are reporting a rapid increase in the number of people signing up for coverage, a trend officials say is encouraging for President Obama’s health-care law.

 

By mid-November, the 14 state-based marketplaces reported data showing enrollment has nearly doubled from last month, jumping to about 150,000 from 79,000, according to state and federal statistics. The nonprofit Commonwealth Fund, which has been tracking the data, called the most recent numbers “a November enrollment surge.

 

The latest figures from the state-run exchanges, combined with totals on the federal exchange, bring the national number to at least 176,000.

One wonders how much of the “surge” is due to the change in crtieria to just needing to have Obamacare in one’s checkout cart. Either way, even if one believes the propaganda, and it is unclear why anyone would after the endless barrage of lies in the past 5 years, “while the pace of enrollments increased this month, sign-ups are still well below early projections.”

A far bigger problem beyond simple propaganda is that once again just like with jobs, it is a quality not quantity issue something which central-planning regimes everywhere are unable to grasp – as reported before, if only older, treatment “troubled” individuals sign up and younger Americans skip the healthcare experiment, the outcome would be even worse than if Obamacare had not been unleashed as the Ponzi Scheme (by definition) is critically reliant on younger payors who don’t extract more from the system than they put in, at least not early on. Then again, what is central-planning without propaganda:

Some of the state exchanges are seeing the pace of enrollment pick up daily. California has been out in front; the state’s enrollments have grown steadily in November and now account for nearly half of all health law sign-ups. The state has had its strongest two weeks of enrollment this month.

 

“We’re seeing much larger numbers than we expected,” Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee told reporters this week.

Sure you are. Because since actions still speak louder than propaganda, we can only assume that the resignation of the official charged with launching Hawaii’s troubled ObamaCare insurance exchange will resign next month, according to multiple reports. From The Hill:

Coral Andrews, the executive directo
r of Hawaii Health Connector, is the first marketplace director to leave her post since Oct. 1, when the exchanges launched.  The Hawaii Health Connector went live on Oct. 15 due to software problems and had only enrolled 257 people in its first month of operation, according to the Honolulu Star Advertiser.

 

Andrews will reportedly depart on Dec. 6 and be replaced on an interim basis by Tom Matsuda, who headed up ObamaCare’s implementation in the state. “I am honored to have been a part of implementing part of the Affordable Care Act for the people of Hawaii,” Andrews said in a statement.

Expect increasingly more resignations as the Obamacare “surge” continues.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/mJ9XdCjMUws/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Push Back Against Border Checkpoints Located 100s of Miles from Borders!

 

Let us now praise Terry Bressi of the University of Arizona, who
is publicizing the existence of in-country border checkpoints that
are hundreds of miles from the nation’s edges. Bressi films his
encounters – more than 300! – and posts the vids at his YouTube
channel.

Watch the vid above but expect to get pissed at the enormous
waste of time, resources, and American idealism. Did any of our
parents or grandparents or great-grandparents or whoever really
come to the United States for this?

This video, by Tracy Oppenheimer, originally went live on
November 18. Here’s the original writeup:

“This is not increasing our security, in fact, it’s making us
less secure. It’s just feeding an empire building, it’s feeding
agency budgets, and job security for various law enforcement
agencies,” says the University of Arizona’s Terry Bressi of
in-country immigration checkpoints.

Bressi sat down with ReasonTV’s Tracy Oppenheimer to discuss
these checkpoints and their implications for civil liberties.
Bressi estimates that he has been stopped by border patrol between
300-350 times. After his first encounter, he started carrying
cameras and audio recording equipment, and has since been
videotaping his checkpoint interactions. He says this holds
officers accountable for their actions, and he hopes that by
posting these videos online, citizens will become more aware of
their rights.

“A federal agent who is standing in the middle of a public
highway, wearing a public uniform, collecting a public paycheck
while seizing the public absent reasonable suspicion has no
expectation of privacy,” says Bressi in regards to filming border
patrol agents. “This is something that I like to remind folks of,
that the government thinks that we don’t have any right to privacy
whatsoever, but that’s a double-edged sword.”

For more of Bressi’s checkpoint videos, visit his
YouTube channel.

About 7 minutes.

Produced by Tracy Oppenheimer, shot by Zach Weissmueller.

For more info, links, and downloadable versions,
go here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/23/push-back-against-border-checkpoints-loc
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The FDA Wants to Ban Berger Cookies, the World’s Most Delicious Dessert

The FDA may soon kill off the world’s most delicious
dessert—Baltimore’s own Berger Cookies. Please believe I make this
claim as one who is not otherwise overly enamored of sweets.

For those who haven’t had the pleasure, we’re talking fudge
slathered over a shortbread cookie to rapturous effect.

If you are one who feels another dessert has a better claim to
distinction, know that it doesn’t matter. Whatever you’re into will
be banned too if it contains artificial trans fats, which the FDA
may decide to outlaw as soon as January.

Berger Cookies, whose recipe has been only slightly modified
since the 1830s, are obviously not healthy. But they are one of
life’s little pleasures, and the law that criminalizes them is an
ass. A tremendous, giant donkey and/or posterior. Of evil.

Via
Capital News Service
:

In the past two weeks, the Berger Cookie bakery has made two
attempts to produce the cookies without trans fat, said owner and
president Charles DeBaufre, Jr. The result was discouraging, he
said.

“We’ve tried it and trust me, it is nasty. It doesn’t taste
right,” DeBaufre said. “The texture’s not there. It’s an entirely
different product.”

Trans fats are essential to the taste and flavor of the cookie,
DeBaufre said. If the ban goes into effect, he said he would apply
for an exception. If the bakery is denied an exception, he said he
would continue to test out new recipes or “go out of business, one
of the two.”

As Baylen Linneken
noted earlier
this month, the FDA claims a ban may prevent
between 3,000 and 7,000 deaths from heart disease each year. But
evidence for this proposition is equivocal at best. New York City
banned trans fats in 2006, and the heart disease mortality rate
fell. But, says Linneken, it fell faster in the rest of the
country—where trans fats are still freely available—over the same
period.

The FDA further claims the benefits of prohibiting trans fats
would dwarf the costs. But there is no way they could know that. As
they acknowledge (PDF),
their estimates do not include losses to consumers who find
themselves unable to obtain foods they once enjoyed.

This loss will be particularly acute for those who live near or
hail from Baltimore, where Berger Cookies are a revered commodity.
But the ban will also affect frozen pizzas, microwave popcorn,
donuts, and no doubt other local amuse-bouches. 
   

The nation already has an ample supply of actual, terrifying
public health crises like antibiotic-resistant
bacteria
and critical
drug shortages
. It would be nice if the agency that professes
to protect us from such perils would leave. The cookies. Alone.
People can decide what to eat for themselves.

The FDA is accepting
public comments
through January 7th.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/23/the-fda-wants-to-ban-berger-cookies-the
via IFTTT

The FDA Wants to Ban Berger Cookies, the World's Most Delicious Dessert

The FDA may soon kill off the world’s most delicious
dessert—Baltimore’s own Berger Cookies. Please believe I make this
claim as one who is not otherwise overly enamored of sweets.

For those who haven’t had the pleasure, we’re talking fudge
slathered over a shortbread cookie to rapturous effect.

If you are one who feels another dessert has a better claim to
distinction, know that it doesn’t matter. Whatever you’re into will
be banned too if it contains artificial trans fats, which the FDA
may decide to outlaw as soon as January.

Berger Cookies, whose recipe has been only slightly modified
since the 1830s, are obviously not healthy. But they are one of
life’s little pleasures, and the law that criminalizes them is an
ass. A tremendous, giant donkey and/or posterior. Of evil.

Via
Capital News Service
:

In the past two weeks, the Berger Cookie bakery has made two
attempts to produce the cookies without trans fat, said owner and
president Charles DeBaufre, Jr. The result was discouraging, he
said.

“We’ve tried it and trust me, it is nasty. It doesn’t taste
right,” DeBaufre said. “The texture’s not there. It’s an entirely
different product.”

Trans fats are essential to the taste and flavor of the cookie,
DeBaufre said. If the ban goes into effect, he said he would apply
for an exception. If the bakery is denied an exception, he said he
would continue to test out new recipes or “go out of business, one
of the two.”

As Baylen Linneken
noted earlier
this month, the FDA claims a ban may prevent
between 3,000 and 7,000 deaths from heart disease each year. But
evidence for this proposition is equivocal at best. New York City
banned trans fats in 2006, and the heart disease mortality rate
fell. But, says Linneken, it fell faster in the rest of the
country—where trans fats are still freely available—over the same
period.

The FDA further claims the benefits of prohibiting trans fats
would dwarf the costs. But there is no way they could know that. As
they acknowledge (PDF),
their estimates do not include losses to consumers who find
themselves unable to obtain foods they once enjoyed.

This loss will be particularly acute for those who live near or
hail from Baltimore, where Berger Cookies are a revered commodity.
But the ban will also affect frozen pizzas, microwave popcorn,
donuts, and no doubt other local amuse-bouches. 
   

The nation already has an ample supply of actual, terrifying
public health crises like antibiotic-resistant
bacteria
and critical
drug shortages
. It would be nice if the agency that professes
to protect us from such perils would leave. The cookies. Alone.
People can decide what to eat for themselves.

The FDA is accepting
public comments
through January 7th.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/23/the-fda-wants-to-ban-berger-cookies-the
via IFTTT

Daisy Ad 2013: Nuclear Option Senate Remix

Click above for a 50-second trip down Memory Lane with
Sens. Reid, Clinton, and Obama talking about the “nuclear option”
back in 2005. A good time for all is guaranteed!

Back in 2005, the Republican majority in the Senate was
threatening to do away with procedural filibusters when it came to
judicial nominees and other appointments. The move would allow the
World’s Greatest Deliberative Body to proceed to up or down votes
on presidential picks in those categories with just 51 votes rather
than a two-thirds majority. Majority Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) and
future Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) pooh-poohed that
this was any sort of big breach of tradition.

At the same time, folks such as Sens. Harry Reid (D-Nev.),
Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), and Barack Obama (D-Ill.) announced the
very end of constitutional rule if the “nuclear option” were indeed
triggered. The whole point of the rule, they said, was to protect
the right of the legislative minority to gum up the works in the
Senate. Simple majority votes to end debate before votes? That was
for the ruffians in the House. The Founding Fathers, in their
infinite wisdom, had made it so. Indeed,
as late as 2008
, Harry Reid was still saying the nuclear option
was an abomination and swearing he would never use such a dastardly
tactic.

This week, of course, the
Senate Dems went ahead and pulled the switch on
the nuclear option
, citing Republican obstructionism as the
reason that they had to go ahead and embrace exactly what they
denounced just a few years ago. The immediate case deals with the
important D.C. Circuit of Appeals, where Obama’s picks would change
the balance of the panel for years to come and have been twisting
in the wind as a result.  


They had to do it
, don’t you see, say liberals, because the
Republican crackpots – Wacko Birds and Angry Birds alike! – just
wouldn’t allow “cloture” (the end of debate, needed before a proper
vote on a nominee) to happen. Conservatives respond that the only
reason the GOP was busting the president’s chops on nominees is
because
his choices were so radical
. Now that the filibuster on
appointees is gone, they worry, Obama will fill the nation’s courts
and bureaucracies with bomb-throwers. The upside, say cons, is that
this means 2014 and 2016 will be all about Obama’s radicalism.

What do you think, Reason readers? Is Republican obstructionism
the problem here (The
Weekly Standard
notes that 71 percent of Obama’s Circuit Court
nominees were confirmed in his first term, versus 67 percent of
George W. Bush’s in his first term). Or is it Obama’s radicalism
(the Wall Street Journal writes that of recent presidents, Obama is
the only one “whose average and median waiting time for circuit and
district court nominees from confirmation to nomination was more
than six months”)?

This seems like as good a time as any to remind you all of the

long-term trend to voters identifying as
“independents”
 and that display such as this are surely
one of the reasons why people are looking for a real alternative to
the played-out politics of Team Red and Team Blue.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/23/daisy-ad-2013-nuclear-option-senate-remi
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Baylen Linnekin on Proposed New FDA Food Rules

FDAEarlier
this week Keep Food Legal, the nonprofit Baylen Linnekin leads,
submitted formal comments to the FDA in opposition to two proposed
food safety rules the agency is currently considering. The comment
period closed yesterday. The proposed rules, mandated thanks to
passage of the Food Safety Modernization Act in 2011, would
increase the regulatory burden faced by fruit and vegetable farmers
and other food handlers, packers, and sellers and require many to
adopt procedural standards the FDA claims would prevent a small
percentage of foodborne illness. Linnekin rounds up some of the
negative reactions left by others who will be affected by the new
rules.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/23/baylen-linnekin-on-proposed-new-fda-food
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Diverging Dollar Performance Set to Continue

The market seemed to get confused last week between the noise and the signal and this confusion gave the dollar a bit of a reprieve.  However, by the end of the week, the market seemed to be back on message.  

 

Specifically, market sentiment swung from what was perceived as dovish comments at Yellen’s confirmation hearing to Fed can taper in December after reading the FOMC minutes.  Similarly, speculation of a negative deposit rate in Europe triggered a quick decline in the euro.   Surveys suggest that the perceived odds of Fed tapering this year are still low and Draghi and other ECB officials played down the likelihood of a negative deposit rate (though did not take it off the table entirely). 

 

The divergent performance of the US dollar makes it difficult to talk about in general.  The Dollar Index itself is really mostly Europe, which accounts for almost 80% of its basket.  Against the European currencies, the US dollar looks heavy.   The Dollar Index can work lower.  

 

Since the ECB’s rate cut on Nov 7 and the stronger than expected US employment , the Dollar Index has been flirting with the 100-day moving average.  After repeated attempts in vain to close above it, the Dollar Index may have to work lower first.   A break of the 80.40 area could signal a move toward 79.50 before better support is found.  

 

On the other hand, the US dollar’s outlook against the yen, Canadian dollar and Antipodean currencies appears more constructive.   These were the worst performing major currencies over the past week, with the former two losing about 1% and the latter two losing about 2.2%.  

 

From a technical perspective, this divergence is set to continue.  The euro-yen and sterling yen crosses capture the theme.  Both are trading at multi-year highs, even though the dollar remains a few percentage points below the high it set against the yen in May. 

 

The euro traded down to almost the support near GBP0.8300, but sterling is at 3-year highs against the Australian dollar, while the euro is well below the peak it made in late Aug, just above AUD1.50  Sterling poked through CAD1.71 for the first time since early 2010, and although it pulled back, may not be done.   

 

Technically, the euro and sterling have scope for additional near-term gains without encountering strong resistance.  For the euro the $1.3600-50 area stands in the way of the 2-year high set last month near $1.3830.  Sterling faces the double top set in early- and late-October near $1.6260.  A convincing break could spur a move to $1.6400.   For the euro, a break of $1.3400 would call this constructive view into question.  A similar level for sterling is near $1.6050.  

 

The US dollar finished the week above JPY100 for four consecutive sessions.  In the last two sessions it closed above JPY101.  It is at the highest level since July.  Although we are sympathetic to the divergence of monetary policy trajectories, we not that the US 10-year premium over Japan has not risen above the Sept high near 222 bp.    Moreover, the euro gains against the yen may also not have been driven by interest rates.  Over the past month, for example, the German premium on 2-year as well as 10-year money actually eased compared to Japan. 

 

The immediate target for the dollar is near JPY101.60 and then the May high set at almost JPY103.75.  We remain attentive to 1) the inverse relationship between the yen and Nikkei and 2) the risk that Japanese investors take profits on equities ahead of the doubling of the capital gains tax (to 20% on Jan 1).  The Nikkei made new six-month highs at the end of last week, but had a weak close before the weekend.   While technical indicators are constructive, a wave of profit-taking could buoy the yen.   

 

The US dollar is near the upper end of its five-month range against the Canadian dollar.  The Bank of Canada has moved away from the forward guidance that suggested it would need to remove some liquidity (i.e. raise rates) next year and the soft inflation figures (headline CPI was 0.7% in October) may keep it on the defensive.  The year’s high set in early July just above CAD1.06 is the next immediate target for the greenback, though it probably requires a break of the Q4 2011 high near CAD1.0660 to signal a break out.  

 

The Australian and New Zealand dollars appear to have carved out a topping pattern that looks like a complicated head and shoulders pattern.  The objective of the Australian dollar’s head and shoulders pattern is around $0.8800, which is just below the August low of $0.8850.  Resistance is seen near $0.9280.  The New Zealand dollar closed well below the $0.8200 neckline on a weekly basis.  The measuring objective is around $0.7950.  On a break of $0.8130, the next target is about $0.8030. 

 

The US dollar peaked against the Mexican peso on Thursday near MXN13.15.  It settled on Friday on the session lows near MXN12.97.  The bottom of the recent range is a little more than another percentage point lower at MXN12.80.  Real sector data has softened, but the bullish case for the peso is 1) anticipation of structural reforms and especially the measure to open up the oil and telecom sectors and 2) the clearing of the previous overhang of positions.  

 

Observations from the speculative positioning in the CME currency futures:  

 

1.  The latest CFTC reporting period, for the week ending Nov 19, position adjustment by speculators in the currency futures were generally minor.  The main exception is the rise in the gross short yen position by almost 16k contracts.  This market segment was anticipating the break out that took place two sessions after the reporting period ended.  At 131k contracts, the gross short yen position was the largest since late March.  It has risen from 80k contracts in late October.

 

2.  The second largest position adjustment was in the rise in the gross long sterling contracts.  Here too the speculators were rewarded.  Sterling finished the week above $1.6200, the best level in a month.  The gross short sterling positions remain substantial and the net position is still slightly short.  It probably swung to the long side during the current period.

 

3.  The speculative market appeared to get wrong-footed with the euro.  They have been dramatically cutting back on gross long euro position.  Since late October, the gross long position has been slashed by around 55k contracts, driving the net position below 9k contracts from 72k.   The euro finished last week with its highest close of the month (thus far).  The gross long euro position remains considerable larger than in any other currency futures, with sterling’s nearly 54k contracts a distant second.

 

4.  There has been a bit of a tug-of-war in the peso.  The gross short position has doubled since mid-October to 31k, the highest in two months.   The gross long peso position has nearly doubled to almost 41k contracts.  The bulls may have been happy as the dollar slipped to new 3-week lows at the start of the week nearing MXN12.85.  Two days after the reporting period ended, the dollar has rallied back to MXN13.15. The dollar reversed lower on Thursday (Nov 21) and there was good follow through on Friday, where the greenback settled on its lows just below MXN12.97.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/o6e4DE5G0i8/story01.htm Marc To Market

Diverging Dollar Performance Set to Continue

The market seemed to get confused last week between the noise and the signal and this confusion gave the dollar a bit of a reprieve.  However, by the end of the week, the market seemed to be back on message.  

 

Specifically, market sentiment swung from what was perceived as dovish comments at Yellen’s confirmation hearing to Fed can taper in December after reading the FOMC minutes.  Similarly, speculation of a negative deposit rate in Europe triggered a quick decline in the euro.   Surveys suggest that the perceived odds of Fed tapering this year are still low and Draghi and other ECB officials played down the likelihood of a negative deposit rate (though did not take it off the table entirely). 

 

The divergent performance of the US dollar makes it difficult to talk about in general.  The Dollar Index itself is really mostly Europe, which accounts for almost 80% of its basket.  Against the European currencies, the US dollar looks heavy.   The Dollar Index can work lower.  

 

Since the ECB’s rate cut on Nov 7 and the stronger than expected US employment , the Dollar Index has been flirting with the 100-day moving average.  After repeated attempts in vain to close above it, the Dollar Index may have to work lower first.   A break of the 80.40 area could signal a move toward 79.50 before better support is found.  

 

On the other hand, the US dollar’s outlook against the yen, Canadian dollar and Antipodean currencies appears more constructive.   These were the worst performing major currencies over the past week, with the former two losing about 1% and the latter two losing about 2.2%.  

 

From a technical perspective, this divergence is set to continue.  The euro-yen and sterling yen crosses capture the theme.  Both are trading at multi-year highs, even though the dollar remains a few percentage points below the high it set against the yen in May. 

 

The euro traded down to almost the support near GBP0.8300, but sterling is at 3-year highs against the Australian dollar, while the euro is well below the peak it made in late Aug, just above AUD1.50  Sterling poked through CAD1.71 for the first time since early 2010, and although it pulled back, may not be done.   

 

Technically, the euro and sterling have scope for additional near-term gains without encountering strong resistance.  For the euro the $1.3600-50 area stands in the way of the 2-year high set last month near $1.3830.  Sterling faces the double top set in early- and late-October near $1.6260.  A convincing break could spur a move to $1.6400.   For the euro, a break of $1.3400 would call this constructive view into question.  A similar level for sterling is near $1.6050.  

 

The US dollar finished the week above JPY100 for four consecutive sessions.  In the last two sessions it closed above JPY101.  It is at the highest level since July.  Although we are sympathetic to the divergence of monetary policy trajectories, we not that the US 10-year premium over Japan has not risen above the Sept high near 222 bp.    Moreover, the euro gains against the yen may also not have been driven by interest rates.  Over the past month, for example, the German premium on 2-year as well as 10-year money actually eased compared to Japan. 

 

The immediate target for the dollar is near JPY101.60 and then the May high set at almost JPY103.75.  We remain attentive to 1) the inverse relationship between the yen and Nikkei and 2) the risk that Japanese investors take profits on equities ahead of the doubling of the capital gains tax (to 20% on Jan 1).  The Nikkei made new six-month highs at the end of last week, but had a weak close before the weekend.   While technical indicators are constructive, a wave of profit-taking could buoy the yen.   

 

The US dollar is near the upper end of its five-month range against the Canadian dollar.  The Bank of Canada has moved away from the forward guidance that suggested it would need to remove some liquidity (i.e. raise rates) next year and the soft inflation figures (headline CPI was 0.7% in October) may keep it on the defensive.  The year’s high set in early July just above CAD1.06 is the next immediate target for the greenback, though it probably requires a break of the Q4 2011 high near CAD1.0660 to signal a break out.  

 

The Australian and New Zealand dollars appear to have carved out a topping pattern that looks like a complicated head and shoulders pattern.  The objective of the Australian dollar’s head and shoulders pattern is around $0.8800, which is just below the August low of $0.8850.  Resistance is seen near $0.9280.  The New Zealand dollar closed well below the $0.8200 neckline on a weekly basis.  The measuring objective is around $0.7950.  On a break of $0.8130, the next target is about $0.8030. 

 

The US dollar peaked against the Mexican peso on Thursday near MXN13.15.  It settled on Friday on the session lows near MXN12.97.  The bottom of the recent range is a little more than another percentage point lower at MXN12.80.  Real sector data has softened, but the bullish case for the peso is 1) anticipation of structural reforms and especially the measure to open up the oil and telecom sectors and 2) the clearing of the previous overhang of positions.  

 

Observations from the speculative positioning in the CME currency futures:  

 

1.  The latest CFTC reporting period, for the week ending Nov 19, position adjustment by speculators in the currency futures were generally minor.  The main exception is the rise in the gross short yen position by almost 16k contracts.  This market segment was anticipating the break out that took place two sessions after the reporting period ended.  At 131k contracts, the gross short yen position was the largest since late March.  It has risen from 80k contracts in late October.

 

2.  The second largest position adjustment was in the rise in the gross long sterling contracts.  Here too the speculators were rewarded.  Sterling finished the week above $1.6200, the best level in a month.  The gross short sterling positions remain substantial and the net position is still slightly short.  It probably swung to the long side during the current period.

 

3.  The speculative market appeared to get wrong-footed with the euro.  They have been dramatically cutting back on gross long euro position.  Since late October, the gross long position has been slashed by around 55k contracts, driving the net position below 9k contracts from 72k.   The euro finished last week with its highest close of the month (thus far).  The gross long euro position remains considerable larger than in any other currency futures, with sterling’s nearly 54k contracts a distant second.

 

4.  There has been a bit of a tug-of-war in the peso.  The gross short position has doubled since mid-October to 31k, the highest in two months.   The gross long peso position has nearly doubled to almost 41k contracts.  The bulls may have been happy as the dollar slipped to new 3-week lows at the start of the week nearing MXN12.85.  Two days after the reporting period ended, the dollar has rallied back to MXN13.15. The dollar reversed lower on Thursday (Nov 21) and there was good follow through on Friday, where the greenback settled on its lows just below MXN12.97.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/mOw-Pllz53U/story01.htm Marc To Market

Sandy Creek moves on; Landmark, OLM elminated

Three local teams competed Friday night in the GHSA state football playoffs, but only one will live to fight another day this season.

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Sandy Creek 55, Chestatee 7: The Patriots steamrolled into the AAAA state quarterfinals with another offensive explosion, this time against the War Eagles from Hall County.

It was the seventh time in 12 games this season Sandy Creek has scored 54 or more points in a game, and the sixth time the team has allowed seven points or fewer.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-22-2013/sandy-creek-moves-landmark-olm-elminated