Friday, 26 November 2010

The dogged Dax

The Dax has been outperforming the other Western markets in a striking way over the last few months. Its reaction to the recent wobble arising from Euroland and Korea further has underlined the differences still further...

The Technical Trader’s view:

WEEKLY CHART

The succession of Prior Highs under the market underpins the Germans in a way that no other major Western market can compare with.

Note too that the drive up through the Prior Highs coincides with the break of the 61.8% retracement of the whole bear move from the Highs of 2007 (8005) and the lows of 2009 (588.50).

Look closer.

DAILY CHART

Close inspection of the Dec contract reveals a continuation Triangle – which has completed and whose minimum move is up as far as 7150 or so.

The market has a good deal further to go before losing momentum.

DAILY CHART

The move up from the completion of the continuation Triangle is well structured – the Prior Highs of 6561.50 and 6684 are acting as good support.

High volume down-days have been matched by high volume up-days.

The market is well set

Mark Sturdy

John Lewis

Seven Days Ahead

For the complete and illustrated version of this and future Updates be sure to sign up at www.sevendaysahead.com

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Bear Wind in EUR/CHF Blows Weaker

The FX Specialist view - We last looked at EUR/CHF when bears seemed fully in control, but subsequent action has suggested that that tide is on the wane, with the first positive indication recently seen. The current pullback could prove temporary, with a fresh attempt on the upside to come.
  • WEEKLY CHART Recovery prompted by the long term bear channel base exceeded the 23.6% retracement (of the downmove from Dec-08 1.5881 high), but so far has shied away from higher 1.3955 38.2% level. The recent key reversal week marked the start of a period of correction, but this resumed temporary (see below).
  • DAILY CHART: The earlier breach of the bear channel top projection suggested that bears’ momentum had weakened, with the current correction phase viewed as temporary. We currently focus on the 1.3070/1.3015 area, early Jun low and 76.4% pullback, where support looks likely. However, a recovery through the 1.3834 01-Nov high is needed to give bulls further confidence. At this stage any speculative buyers near the 1.3070/15 support would need initial stops below the 1.2763 08-Sep low.

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Sugar Setback Finds Temporary Support

The Commodity Specialist view - This year’s recovery in Sugar has been dramatic, recently exceeding the early 2010 high. However, the ensuing sharp correction has sidelined bulls for now, with the risk of further weakness to come.
  • SUGAR – WEEKLY CONTINUATION CHART: The sharp sell-off a couple of weeks ago in fact produced a Key Reversal Week which, although large in magnitude (which can sometimes see bears expend much of their energy), increases the risk of further negative action. Note first support on this chart comes from the Sep-09 24.85 high.
  • SUGAR - DAILY CHART MAR-11: On the front month chart the market slipped back following test of our latest Fibo projection, the 2.618 swing off prior Jan/May downmove. The 38.2% pullback has provided near term support, aided by the 25.35 28-Sep high. More interesting support, though, is the lower 21.75/56 area, 61.8% and early Jan high. This latter should provide stronger support. Our current thinking is that s/term rallies should prove temporary at present.

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Friday, 19 November 2010

Bunds retracing: no reversal yet

In recent weeks, Ireland has again become the cause of concern as her Banks desperately need restructuring. Unfortunately, Ireland doesn't have the necessary resources to recapitalise her Banks. Fearing a collapse of the Irish Banking system, economy and ultimately sovereign default, the yields of Euro bonds issued by Ireland have soared to record highs. This has also affected Portugal and Greece with Spain also finding herself in the firing line. This time though, instead of the Bund futures contract rallying as they did during the Grrek crisis , they have sold off, why?

The Technical Trader’s view:

MONTHLY CHART

The market has pulled back from the band of Fibonacci resistance beginning at 132.

The first support from the parallel channel at 130 odd was breached –

but we have closed on the second (weaker) support the diagonal from the Prior Highs about 127.65.

Powerful support only kicks in at the Horizontal 126.53.

And even then it is the top of a band of support really – 124.60-126.53.

Look closer.

WEEKLY CHART

The pull-back from the Fib cluster is clear.

Note that there is no clear Top formation in place yet.

And note too, the near coincidence of the steep rising diagonal (from 2008) and the horizontal 128.53/2.

So far it is a pull-back not a convincing reversal.

But a pull-back that may go further. Again, look closer

DAILY CHART

The pull-back has smashed down through the support from 128.29 – and note well that that breakdown smashed the weak pivotal support from the two Prior Lows.

Expect that area 128.00-29 to be good resistance on any pull-back.

First medium-term support of consequence is 126.53.

There is no short-term support.

The Macro Trader’s view:

Is the Long Bull market in the Bund over?

Since June 2008 government bond markets have rallied driven by two major dynamics:

- The financial crisis which powerfully argued for lower bond yields as deflation and slump were feared,

- As a safe haven for traders seeking sanctuary from various scares which on numerous occasions have given rise to risk aversion, especially the Euro zone Sovereign debt crisis earlier this year.

The first time the Euro zone Sovereign debt crisis centred on Greece erupted Government Bond markets rallied hard including the Bund. Although the crisis was termed the Euro zone Sovereign debt crisis, it was really focused on several peripheral Euro zone members, which apart from Greece, included Ireland, Portugal, Spain and others.

Ireland acted quickly, initiating a severe austerity budget in the hope of convincing the markets the authorities were in control of the situation and could manage it themselves without recourse to external help, unlike Greece who needed an EU/IMF bailout.

During this period peripheral Euro zone bond yields soared, as traders bought Bunds as a hedge against the risk that the Euro zone could fragment, with the weak periphery forced to leave the Euro. The rationale was the core rump would be fiscally strong centred on the German economy that was starting to enjoy a strong recovery and this explains why the Bund rallied so hard during that period.

Several months on we know Greece was “rescued” and an emergency bailout fund was established in case any other Euro zone economy fell prey to similar difficulties. For a while the crisis seemed, if not actually resolved, at least under control.

However, while the German economy continued to enjoy strong growth, others in the Euro zone didn’t. In fact Greek GDP slowed, making the deficit reduction targets agreed earlier seem harder to achieve.

But in recent weeks, Ireland has again become the cause of concern as her Banks desperately need restructuring. Unfortunately Ireland doesn’t have the necessary resources to recapitalise her Banks. Fearing a collapse of the Irish Banking system, economy and ultimately Sovereign default, the yields of Euro bonds issued by Ireland have soared to record highs.

This has also affected Portugal and Greece with Spain also finding herself in the firing line.

This time though, instead of the Bund futures contract rallying, they have sold off, why?

When the crisis first hit earlier this year, there was a delay in providing the help Greece needed because Germany wanted tough conditions attached. The German Government needed to convince its public that the rescue was in German national interest, and to achieve this she needed to make any future rescue seem like a last resort that would entail penalties including the rescued Country loosing of a degree of fiscal and economic sovereignty.

These conditions were eventually dropped, but Germany has since been pressing for them to be formally adopted in a treaty change together with private Bond investors being obliged to contribute to any future sovereign rescue.

Clearly Bond investors are literally scared by the implications of being required to bailout an economy purely for investing in apparently safe government, low yielding Bonds, and have been liquidating positions as a result.

But there are other factors in play too: negativity towards the Fed’s QE2 policy and bearish sentiment in Japan towards JGBs. That is based on the Japanese Government seeming to have precluded its self from further unilateral currency intervention in the weeks leading up to the recent failed G20 meeting when Japan’s government criticised South Korea foe currency manipulation.

So can the Bund rally if the crisis is resolved?

That depends heavily on the terms of any deal agreed with Ireland and whether or not the other peripheral economies continue to remain under attack.

Mark Sturdy

John Lewis

Seven Days Ahead

For the complete and illustrated version of this and future Updates be sure to sign up at www.sevendaysahead.com

Thursday, 18 November 2010

Soybean Bulls Retreating After Surge

The Commodity Specialist view - This year’s recovery in Soybeans finally managed to exceed the 2009 high, but has found resistance from a Fibonacci level not much above. The chart is now in pullback mode, turning focus on likely supports.
  • SOYBEANS – WEEKLY CONTINUATION CHART: The 1291.25 Jun-09 high was eroded, but slightly higher 61.8% recovery level has proved to be an effective barrier so far, prompting a slip back. On the continuation chart note potential support offered by the 1078.50 Dec-09 high.
  • SOYBEANS - DAILY CHART JAN-11: The bull run finally came to a halt near the higher of our two Fibo projections at 1340, with 12-Nov producing a Key Reversal Day. This ties in with the 61.8% level on the Weekly chart and a pullback phase is not surprising now. The 38.2% pullback level at 1176 now offers first support, often an effective level s/term, with the 1153.25 27-Sep high support not far beneath. However, a potentially much stronger area lies at 1170/1160, 61.8% and the Dec-09 high (not much below the 1078.50 on the Weekly chart). We would look for a decent rebound around here, if tested.

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EUR/USD Bounce Closing in on Stronger Resistance

The FX Specialist view - The recovery in EUR/USD from the Jun low has, so far, been a 3-wave affair and recently found good resistance. There is now the risk that further weakness will mean curtains for the bulls as upward momentum seeps away.
  • WEEKLY CHART So far a 3-wave, corrective structure has developed from the Jun low: - it has failed just ahead of 76.4% resistance, raising questions as to whether the bull move has run its course (note how a former 76.4% level was effective in late 2009).
  • DAILY CHART: After the market failed ahead of the 76.4% retracement level (no requirement for this to be tested) the continued drop below the 20-Oct 1.3696 low has provided a modest sign of momentum loss. However, more important are the current bull channel base (now under pressure) and then the 1.3333 06-Aug high, just above which resides a 38.2% pullback level – violating these supports would have more certain bearish implications. Subsequent rally attempts should then prove temporary ahead of further bear activity.

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Friday, 12 November 2010

76.4% Support in GBP/JPY Still Turning Bears Away

The FX Specialist view - From a rally high in 2009 the GBP/JPY cross has continued to experience downward pressure through 2010. However, a 76.4% pullback level has, on three occasions now, been eroded but with bears then losing interest...
  • WEEKLY CHART See how the downmove in 2010 has continued to fail to hold below the 76.4% level when tested/eroded. We here show the 23.6% recovery level of the 2009/2010 decline, around 135.00. A break through this would provide the first bull sign. Now see Daily chart...
  • DAILY CHART: Recent weakness failed to hold below the prior 126.73 May low, with that long term 76.4% level also having a residual supporting influence. Focus has again turned on the bear channel tops near 133.00 currently, now tested. However, more key is the 135.00 area, where the 17-Sep high coincides with the 23.6% recovery level to provide dual resistance – a break above this would provide an initial bull signal here.

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Thursday, 11 November 2010

Natural Gas Finds Support, But What Recovery?

The Commodity Specialist view - This year there have been two legs in the downtrend in Natural Gas, and finally interesting dual support has been reached. This has prompted a s/term recovery, but further signals are required in order to inspire bulls.
  • NATURAL GAS – WEEKLY CONTINUATION CHART: A typical 3-wave downmove has been seen so far this year. Note how dual support has been tested (3.155 May-09 low and 76.4% pullback), perhaps not surprisingly triggering a rebound phase.
  • NATURAL GAS - DAILY CHART DEC-10: Recent support came, not surprisingly, from around the bear channel base, close to support from the Weekly chart. Initial resistance is from the Sep congestion below 4.500, which includes a 38.2% rebound level. However, more important is the (redrawn) bear channel top at 4.650 – a break through this would imply that overall downward momentum had slackened, with a better recovery underway, s/term dips notwithstanding.

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