23 February 2009

Technical Analysis - February 23 2009

S&P500 (770, last week 827 or -6.9% w.o.w)
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This will be the second week of hefty losses. The Daily MACD and MACD Histogram had a negative crossover 5 sessions ago and has thus joined the Daily Parabolic SAR, Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) turning bearish. For the weekly readings, the MACD and MACD Histogram are still positive but the Parabolic SAR has just turned negative. The weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still weak. Support is around 700 and resistance at 820.
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KLSE CI (890, last week 910 or -2.2% w.ow)
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Despite the daily indicators MACD, Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) have all turned positive during last week, indicators such as MACD and DMI (+ve and –ve) are now slowly flashing negative although no crossover downwards yet.. The weekly charts MACD and Parabolic SAR continues to be positive but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still otherwise. The index is expected to trade between 860 and 910.
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HangSeng (12,699, last week 13,555 or -6.3% w.o.w )
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With a hugh drop during the week, the daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, MACD and MACD Histogram dips under water again. As of weeks ago, the DMI (+ve and -ve) and Guppy MMAs continue to be negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish . Support is seen at 12,000 and resistance at 13,200.
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Nikkei 225 (7,416, last week 7,779 or -4.7% w.ow)

All the daily indicators like the Parabolic SAR, MACD, MACD Histogram, Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are bearish now. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram. However, the Parabolic SAR, Guppy MMAs, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) are still weak. Support is seen at 7,000 and resistance at 8,000.

* Bloomberg: South Korea is prepared to support won, banks as market tumbles.

* Bloomberg: Asia agrees on USD120B pool of currency reserves as crisis worsens.

* BT: Macquarie:- Investors positive on Malaysia stocks. It picks Genting, AMMB, KNM, TMI and Tenaga.

* InvestorsBizDaily: Clinton urges China to keep buying US Treasurys.


22 February 2009

Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending February 20 2009

US markets Update and Outlook

Stocks at the mercy of nationalization debate

MarketWatch: U.S. stocks are likely to face choppy waters next week, as the debate about whether or not to nationalize banks intensifies along with growing investor demand to rid the financial system of its toxic assets.

"Financial markets appear to be fixated on 'toxic' assets, and until they are removed from bank balance sheets, pressure will remain on the sector," said Benjamin Reitzes, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets. It's a week full of home sales and real-estate data, and Ben Bernanke heads to Capitol Hill for two days of testimony. Home Depot, Dell and others report earnings, and Microsoft has annual strategy meeting. Such concerns have helped drive the Dow Jones Industrial Average to fresh six-year lows. For the week, the blue-chip average fell more than 6%, marking its worst week since October of last year. The broad S&P 500 index fell nearly 7% for the week, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 6%.

A big chunk of the pain came from the financial sector, where Bank of America sank to new lows and Citigroup fell to an 18-year low on Friday amid concern the government may take over the banks, wiping out their shareholders. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd on Friday said banks may have to be nationalized for a short time, according to Bloomberg News. But Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said the Obama administration supports a privately held banking system. While the comments seemed to help financial shares come off their lows Fridays, stocks on Wall Street have again taken a turn for the worse since last week after Treasury Secretary's Tim Geithner unveiled a plan to help ailing banks.

Many analysts complained that the plan was short on details, specifically, on how the government would deal with the toxic assets that have plagued banks' balance sheets and the financial system for more than a year and a half.


"Unless investors are somehow convinced the assets are worth more or banks are willing to sell for less, the only option might be broad nationalization," BMO's Reitzes said in a note. Yet, he added, it was that very "prospect that helped drive U.S. banking shares to their lowest level since the early 1990s this week."

Not all asset classes lost over the past week, as investors seeking a safe haven led gold to top $1,000 an ounce for the first time since March of 2008. Still, the lack of follow-through from gold mining stocks isn't sending much of a bullish signal, according to some analysts. As commodity prices have plunged over the past year, the materials sector, which includes the shares of mining and chemical firms, has seen its profits collapse. In the fourth quarter, profits in the sector are down 82% from the year-earlier period, making materials the second worst performing sector of the S&P 500, after financials.

Overall earnings are now expected to have fallen 42.1% for the fourth quarter, according to Thomson Financial. This would mark the worst earnings growth rate since Thomson began tracking earnings 10 years ago. "The weakness is now spread out across multiple sectors and it looks to continue at least through the third quarter," said John Butters, earnings analyst at Thomson.

The first quarter is looking increasingly grim, with the ratio of negative to positive company forecasts jumping to 5.9 to 1, compared with a usual ratio of 2 to 1 historically.

Whereas health care, consumer staples and the utilities sectors had still posted slight earnings growth in the fourth quarter, all 10 sectors of the S&P are now expected to see their earnings fall in the first quarter, according to Thomson.

Next week, another 51 S&P 500 companies will report results, including Dow component Home Depot another update on the housing market, with the December S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, followed by a survey of consumer confidence in February by the Conference Board. And Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will deliver his semiannual report on monetary policy and the state of the economy, at the Senate Banking Committee. Wednesday will bring existing home sales figures for January, followed by new home sales date on Thursday. Also on that day will be data on durable goods orders for January and weekly jobless claims. On Friday will be a February manufacturing survey from the Chicago region, followed by another February reading of consumer confidence, this time by the University of Michigan. Also on Friday, will be a second estimate of gross domestic production in the fourth quarter. "Weaker business inventory and trade data suggest the second estimate for the fourth quarter GDP [...] will show a meaningful downward revision to something around negative 5% from the initial estimate of negative 3.8%," said William Knapp, investment strategist at MainStay Investments.

Weekly KLSE Update and Outlook

StarBizWeek(MarketWatch): The local bourse could not make much progress despite breaking out of the 21-week simple moving average for the first time in 12 months a week earlier, as investors were not enthusiastic to take up new positions due to frail offshore leads. Instead, they opted to book profit.

Despite that, Bursa Malaysia was holding quite well given the trauma the US market had been through the past week.

According to the daily chart, the recent breakthrough in the CI appears a half-hearted move for now and going forward; Bursa may just be range-bound due to limited participation from investors amid a dearth of market-stimulating news.

In short, there is still no solid confirmation of the recent bullish reversal but we will continue to look out for that.

While the weekly MACD is firming, the daily MACD is at a risk of flashing a sell. Given the tricky technical reading, the key index may channel sideways pending a new lead to emerge. Support 886, 860-863 and 835. Resistance at 925, 936.63, 946-950, 963.


* MarketWatch: Russian boom ends as resource wealth vanishes

* Japan leaves interest rate at 0.1%.

19 February 2009

Gold and Dollar, Rising Together

"The rally in the US dollar and gold is telling the market that investors are worried about global economic stability outside of the US and therefore they are preparing for the worst".

Please continue to read here for Kathy Lien's interesting article on the concurrent rise in gold and USD and its implication.


* BT(Singapore): Beijing will increasingly use its USD2T in foreign exchange reserves to support domestic growth and to finance the overseas expansion of Chinese companies.

18 February 2009

Yen heading for a fall?

Japan has been attracting all kind of negative news lately. The "unbelievable" contraction in its economy which contracted at its quickest pace in 35 years , resignation of its Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa who was allegedly intoxicated during a G7 Press Conference in Rome, the recent big drop in the approval ratings of its PM Taro Aso's and Clinton's visit to Japan which include a courtesy call to Japan's opposition party leaders are some of the recent "lowlights" for the country. Also, in recent times, there have been calls for the Japanese government to intervene in the money market to slow down the Yen's appreciation. A strong Yen will eventually kills the Japanese economy(or has it not already) and have repercussion to world trade. Here are some of the current views from analysts on this subject:


SeekingAlpha.com: An excessively strong Yen goes against the interest of everybody except those who have longed Yen......

It is frustrating for me to observe Japanese officials trying to bolster the stock market but doing nothing to avert the senseless appreciation of the Yen. At such levels, almost every manufacturing concern in Japan would fail. Artificially supporting stock prices would not work! But the Bank of Japan can sell Yen; indeed it can sell as much Yen as the market wants. There is no worry this will create excess liquidity, because should the Yen depreciate excessively, and at any sign of inflation, the central bank can mop up the excess Yen just as easily as it had sold the Yen in the first place.
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The excessively strong Yen is not helping other countries to export to Japan at all, because when unemployment and bankruptcies are on the rise, Japan's imports can only go down. In part because Japan's share in world trade is shrinking fast, world trade is also shrinking fast, hurting everybody. Order needs to be restored to the foreign exchange market before the world's second largest economy can have any chance of recovering
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FT:Com: The yen is overvalued and its status as a “safe haven” currency is likely to come under scrutiny, says Michael Metcalfe, head of global macro strategy at State Street Global Markets.

He argues that analysts typically fall back on either current account positions or, better still, net foreign asset positions as a guide to which currencies should perform in times of heightened risk aversion. “The rationale is that investors respond to reduced risk appetite by cutting their exposure to international investments,” Mr Metcalfe says.

This theory appears to be supported by the fact that Japan has one of the largest surpluses on its net foreign asset position – and therefore the biggest potential for repatriation flows – and the yen has appreciated strongly.


SeekingAlpha.com: The two currencies causing problems for the world’s reflationary efforts just now are the yen and the dollar. Both are too strong. Equally, the yen and the dollar this decade have played key, global roles in the extension of credit via their structural weakness. While I’m not making a case for resurrection of conditions that got the world into its current mess, it’s certainly true that the global policy response is an attempt at stabilization. Getting the yen back towards its previous carry-levels would do a lot, right now, to ease pressures.

Here are two possibilities. One, the dollar is devalued against gold. Second, Japan essentially lends yen interest free to the IMF, which forms the backing of a large expansion of its balance sheet of SDRs. Those SDRs are then used to recapitalize banking systems from Austria, to Ireland. The result of these two actions is that the brunt of the dollar devaluation is borne in part by gold, to ease the race-to-the-bottom effect on other currencies. In the case of the yen, weakness does get restored against most foreign currencies, but, Europe is willing to pay that price as a recipient of IMF recapitalization.

These are of course elaborate and sophisticated methods to accomplish something simple: Money Printing. Global devaluation of paper currencies, reflation, and rescue of banking systems. Those are the goals. The world will be no richer for it.

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* Bloomberg: GM, Chrysler seeks up to USD21.1B in first aid, plan to cut 50,000 jobs.

* East Europe faces deep recession.

* FT.com: Gold went to a 7 month high of USD972.65 a troy ounce after Russia's central bank planned to increase gold holdings with its overall foreign exchange reserves.

17 February 2009

What's feeding the Chinese stock rally?

Many economists expect China's economy to recover early this year backed by the government's four-trillion-yuan stimulus plan. Many are also confident it would embrace on an early recovery before global economy picks up. As a result, there were a lot of buy calls for China stocks, example here. Due to these factors, the recent run up in China's stock markets may not be too shocking to many. (The above chart is the comparison between The Shanghai Stock Exchange CI -which gained almost 30% and S&P500 -which lost almost 10% over a period of 3 months)

However, I was shocked when I read the article below. China using stimulus money to prop up the share markets???...it will only create short term gain but long term pain. There is no real economic benefit to push up the share prices of the companies. Nevertheless, such strategy has been practiced by many countries for many years before China though.

NakedCapitalism: The China bulls have commented approvingly on the growth in loans in China, seeing it as a sign of pending recovery, along with an upswing in stock prices. We've pointed out that economist and China commentator Michael Pettis has heard quite a few reports that many of these loans were in fact sham transactions to meet government targets. And now it gets even better. One analyst estimates that more than 1/3 of the total "new" lending (assuming that the loans were truly extended) may have gone into the stock market.

From Bloomberg (hat tip reader Michael):

Chinese companies may be using record bank lending to invest in stocks, fueling a rally that’s made the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index the world’s best performer this year, according to Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co. As much as 660 billion yuan ($97 billion) may have been converted by companies into term deposits or used to buy equities, Li Huiyong, Shanghai-based analyst at Shenyin Wanguo, said in a phone interview today, citing money supply figures. China’s banks lent a record 1.62 trillion yuan in January as part of a government drive to stimulate the world’s third- largest economy, while M2, the broadest measure of money supply, climbed 18.8 percent from a year earlier. The Shanghai Composite has surged 29 percent since the start of 2009, compared with a 10 percent decline in the MSCI World Index.




* TheStandard: Japan's Finance Minister said he will resign, after denying being drunk at a G7 meeting in Rome recently where he appeared incoherent and slurred his speech.

16 February 2009

Technical Analysis - February 16 2009


S&P500 (827, last week 869 or -4.8% w.o.w)

Another volatile week. Although index was up strongly a week earlier, the following week was a "strong down". The Daily Parabolic SAR which was the first to turn bullish is now bearish for the last two trading sessions. The Daily MACD has hooked down but has not crossover negatively yet. The MACD Histogram is still holding on while Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are remains negative. For the weekly readings, the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR are still positive. The weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish. Support is around 820 and resistance at 900.

KLSE CI (910, last week 897 or +1.4% w.ow)

The daily indicators MACD, Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) have all turned positive during the week. The weekly charts MACD and Parabolic SAR continues to be positive but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish. The index is expected to trade between 860 and 931.

HangSeng (13,555, last week 13,655 or -0.7% w.o.w )

The daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, MACD and MACD Histogram continues to be positive. The DMI (+ve and -ve) and Guppy MMAs are still negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish . Support is seen at 13,000 and resistance at 15,000.

Nikkei 225 (7,779, last week 8,077 or -3.7% w.ow)
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Following S&P500, the Daily Parabolic SAR which was the first to turn bullish is now bearish for the last two trading sessions. The Daily MACD has hooked down but has not crossover negatively yet. The MACD Histogram is still holding while Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are remains negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram. However, the Parabolic SAR, Guppy MMAs and DMI (+ve and –ve) are still negative. Support is seen at 7,500 and resistance at 8,600.
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15 February 2009

Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending February 13 2009

Weekly US Markets Update and Outlook

Stocks to cut their apron strings with Washington


Wal-Mart, economic data to dominate; bad-bank plan could still make waves


MarketWatch: U.S. stocks, at the beck and call of Capitol Hill in the past month, get a chance to cut those ties in the week ahead, as Congress heads home and a smattering of corporate and economic releases take over the calendar.

During a holiday-shortened week, earnings from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Deere & Co. round out a quarterly reporting season notable for the gallons of spilled red ink.

Investors on watch for early signs of an economic turnaround also will wade through two economic surveys on how business and the housing market are faring this month, plus January's industrial activity and inflation.

"Everyone knows that the economy is weak, but the consensus is that the economy will bottom in the summer," said Alec Young, equity strategist for Standard & Poor's equity research unit. "If you see the numbers miss, it makes it harder for investors to believe things will get better."

News out of the Beltway could still wreak havoc across traders' screens when they return from the President's Day holiday weekend Tuesday. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner could fill in the details of his recently announced plan to partner with private investors to wipe the bad assets off banks' books. Stocks sold off sharply in the past week, after analysts said the plan fell short of the needed fix for the beleaguered banking system.

Geithner has yet to detail how much the government will pay to take bad loans and securities off the balance sheet of banks. Too low a price for these illiquid assets would likely cause some banks to take a fresh round of charges, further pushing off a recovery in the financial system. "There will be a lot of speculation as to whether Geithner comes out with the details," said Greg Valliere, senior political strategist at Stanford Financial Group in Washington, D.C.

The Treasury or the FDIC could reveal how it plans to value toxic mortgage-related assets by rescuing a struggling financial institution, according to analysts.

For weeks, mixed sentiment about the progress of a second economic-stimulus package and the Treasury's bank plan has teased the benchmark indexes.
Optimism over both underwrote a rally in stocks during the first week of February. But the S&P 500 Index and Dow Jones Industrial Average gave back most of those gains in the past week, making spectacular intraday dives on Tuesday and Thursday, on disappointments that both programs would fall short.

The S&P 500 and the Dow both lost about 5% for the week ended Feb. 13.
Stock investors shut the door on one source of that volatility Friday, when Congress prepared to push through a sprawling, $787 billion stimulus package backed by President Barack Obama. He is expected to sign the bill into law on Monday. "It's going to be a quiet week because Congress is out," Valliere added.
Legislators heading home for the President's Day holiday typically take the week off to spend time with voters and donors.

Future news about the stimulus will involve details of its implementation, such as how "shovel-ready" infrastructure projects are and when certain tax changes will go into effect, Valliere pointed out. But for now, distraction from that legislation is likely to give ground to reports from the economy and corporations.

Wal-Mart, inflation

The world's largest retailer is expected Tuesday to report a lower profit for its fiscal fourth-quarter, hurt by higher expenses and a stronger dollar. Analysts expect Wal-Mart will earn 98 cents a share, excluding a charge from class-action lawsuits. Reports from retailers J.C. Penney Co. and Lowe's Co. follow later in the week.

Companies are closing the books on an earnings season that has made records for its dismal performance.

Reported earnings, which include one-time gains and charges, in the S&P 500 have lost $10.44 a share in the fourth quarter -- the first time companies in the index have ever posted a collective loss. Operating earnings are on track for the six straight quarterly decline. Companies have been struggling to project future quarters as the economy founders.

On Tuesday, surveys from New York area manufacturers and the National Association of Home Builders give traders a taste of how factories and the real-estate sector have been faring this month.

On Wednesday, the January industrial output report is likely to show widespread declines in U.S. manufacturing, particularly pressured by lower auto production. Housing starts, also out Wednesday, likely slid to a new all-time low. Also Wednesday, the
Fed releases minutes from its last meeting and its economic projections.

The week ends with reports on January wholesale and consumer prices. Both indexes are expected to reflect slightly higher gasoline prices since December while continuing to underscore the risk of deflation. Most key economic data this week "will contribute further evidence to the decay in economic growth in this quarter," wrote Brian Fabbri, chief economist for North America at BNP Paribas, in emailed comments Friday.

Weekly KLCI Update and Outlook

StarBizWeek(MarketWatch): Despite overseas markets, especially the Dow experiencing great swing and volatility, trading on the local bourse was pretty stable, with the key index fluctuating sideways to marginally higher, catching many people by surprised.

According to the weekly chart, a positive development appears in the making. That is, the key index had penetrated the 21-week simple moving average for the first time in 12 months. Theoretically, the breakthrough would pave the way for more scaling but because the CI still is flirting around the breakout level, it is wise we seek further confirmation before everyone turns bullish again.

Technically, the uptick of the daily and weekly MACDs suggest Bursa Malaysia may firm gradually this week.

To the upside, the key index is expected to face resistance at 925 points, 936.63 points, 946-950 points, 963 points and the 970-973 point range.

Support is seen at 886-892 point range, followed by 860-863 points band and the next at 835 points.




* Xinhua: South Korea Exchange plans to sign an official agreement with the Cambodian government next week to launch the kingdom's proposed stock exchange market in December. More fresh blood to spill? .

12 February 2009

Time to sell gold?

According to the Editor of Investment U, this guy Louis Basenese (inset) has been dead on with his predictions. He called the U.S. dollar bottom versus the euro within 26 days… oil’s peak within 24 days… and the top in U.S. Treasuries within two days. So when he makes a big call like this, we listen. And while Lou thinks gold is going down, there’s another asset class he thinks is going straight up - small caps. To get access to his five best small-cap picks, go to The White Cap Report His other recent article includes Time to Invest in China stocks which was posted here before. Anyway, here are his reasons for being bearish with gold.

Shorting Gold: 12 Reasons Making The Case For This Contrarian Investment by Louis Basenese, Advisory Panelist Senior Analyst, The Oxford Club

If you’re a self-professed “Goldbug,” feel free to read no further. Or at least spare me your hate mail. Because no matter what I say today, I know you’ll cry foul… or something much more colorful.

But for those of you with an open mind - especially after my last three contrarian predictions proved dead accurate, read on.

Because it’s time to start shorting gold!

You won’t find many, if anyone else, making this case. But as the first reason of 12 below reveals, that’s precisely why you should give it more credence.

12 Reasons To Start Shorting Gold

1. It’s decidedly contrarian. If a contrarian investor is someone who deliberately decides to go against the prevailing wisdom of other investors, shorting gold certainly fits the bill. Right now, everyone else is buying gold, or at least recommending it. If you have any doubt we’ve reached such fever pitch levels, consider No. 2.

2. The infomercial factor. The best indicator of a turning point for any investment, in my experience, is infomercials. If an investment gets so popular it invades the pre-dawn hours with non-stop but-wait-there’s-more offers, it’s time to get out. And that’s exactly what’s happening now. So much so companies like Cash4Gold.com are invading primetime television. They even splurged for a Super Bowl ad spot. And they recruited washed-up celebrities Ed McMahon and M.C. Hammer to boot. In case you forgot, the Hammer filed bankruptcy in 1996. And Eddie boy almost lost his 7,000 square-foot, $6.5 million Beverly Hills pad to foreclosure. No offense, if you take investment cues from these two, you deserve to lose money.

3. There is always some truth in a rumor. Recent news reports suggested Germany, the world’s second-largest holder of gold, was selling some from its vaults to trim its deficit. It turned out to be a
rumor. But you gotta wonder if there’s some truth behind it. After all, high gold prices would be an easy way to raise cash. In other words, the scenario is completely plausible. And if Germany’s considering it, even remotely, so, too, are plenty of other deficit-ridden governments. It goes without saying that a government dumping supply on the market will send prices lower, quickly.

4. The gold-to-oil ratio is out of whack. Historically, an ounce of gold will buy you about 14 barrels of oil. But with oil around $40 per barrel, an ounce of gold gets you almost 23 barrels - a whopping 64% above the historical mean. If you believe in statistics, a reversion to the mean is imminent!

5. So is the gold-to-silver ratio. Historically, an ounce of gold will buy you 31 ounces of silver. But now the ratio stands at 73 - an unbelievable 134% above the historical mean. Here, too, a reversion to the mean is imminent. And I’d rather place my bets on a 57% decrease in the price of gold, than silver more than doubling to make it happen.

6. The HGNSI index is too high at 60.9%. For the past 25 years, Hulbert Financial Digest has tracked the average recommended gold market exposure among a subset of gold-timing newsletters. It usually fleshes out around 32.6%. But now it rests at 60.9%, a level it’s only exceeded 13% of the time. The key - Hulbert found an inverse correlation exists between his proprietary index and the short-term market direction of gold. In other words, if the index is high, like now, gold is headed lower.

7. Trinkets drive demand, not governments or speculators. Nearly 75% of gold demand comes from the jewelry market. And if Indian brides balk at buying above $750 per ounce as the Bombay Bullion Association reports - India’s gold imports cratered 81% in December - look out below. And don’t be fooled into thinking investors (governments or speculators) will pick up the slack. As HSBC reports, rising demand from investors, particularly from ETFs, only offset half of the 33% decline in jewelry market demand since 2001.

8. What makes now “different?” If the global economic crisis keeps getting worse, as goldbugs like to point out, why hasn’t gold tested last March’s high of $1,030.80 per ounce? Or blown right by it? After all, gold is supposed to increase in value as economic conditions worsen. But it hasn’t lived up to expectations, not one bit. And I don’t think it ever will. Ultimately, when you factor in the massive amounts of stimulus being injected into the markets, on a global level, we’re close to the worst of times… and the peak for gold.

9. Analysts love it. According to Bloomberg, 16 of 24 analysts surveyed by the London Bullion Market Association believe gold will reach a minimum of $1,032 per ounce this year. As we all know, analysts’ track records are deplorable. Instead of just ignoring them, why not bet against them? The odds are definitely in our favor.

10. Hedge fund buying dried up. Institutional speculators (hedge funds) played a large part in gold’s run-up. But 920 of them went Kaplooey last year, according to
Hedge Fund Research, Inc. Not to mention, hundreds of others hemorrhaged capital as investors demanded their money back, while those left standing ratcheted down borrowing to close to nothing, according to Rasini & C., a London-based investment adviser. In the end, gold prices will eventually reflect the absence of these former heavyweights.

11. Gold is schizophrenic and the wrong personality is in control. Multiple motivations exist to buy gold including the desire for a safe haven, currency, adornment, raw material, or inflation hedge. But much like Treasuries, the bulk of buyers come from the safe haven camp today. And once the economy shows any signs of perking up, we can expect these same investors to flee for more risky assets. And don’t be so quick to rule out a second half recovery…

12. The Fed, the President, history and the Baltic Dry Index concur - the economy’s on the mend. Despite dismal data, both the Fed and President Obama point to the current recession ending by the second half of 2009. Moreover, the average recession only lasts 14.4 months. So even if this one is longer than usual, we’re still near the tail end of it. A fact underscored by the recent 61.4% rally in the Baltic Dry Index from its early December low. As I wrote in November 2008, the index is the first pure indicator of an uptick in global activity. And once the economy gets back into gear, the Fed will act quickly to reign in the money supply and curb inflation.


Cleary the gold rush is on. But that’s all the more reason to move in the opposite direction, against the herd. I realize this might be the most unpopular recommendation right now, but that means it could also be the most profitable.

And before you brandish me a fool for recommending shorting Treasuries and gold in the span of two months, here’s the intersection. The driving force behind both assets in recent months has been safe haven buying. And it will remain the dominant variable in determining price in the months ahead. So when investors go back on the attack for more risky assets, prices for both assets will fall.

It’s already happening for Treasuries. And I’m convinced gold is next.

Good (and contrarian) investing,

* RGE Monitor: Chinese exports contracted by 17.5% y/y in January, the steepest in 13 years, and the third month of contraction. Imports contracted even more (43.1%, the worst since data begun being collected in 1995). The deep import contraction took China's trade surplus to the third highest of all time $39.11b (record $40.09b in November and $39.98b in December)

* China to stick with US bonds.

* Bloomberg: House, Senate agree on USD789B stimulus, setting stage for final vote.

* Bloomberg: South Korea cuts interest rate to record low 2% as economy nears recession.

11 February 2009

Those smart Japanese investors

SeekingAlpha.com: The tide is starting to change and I want to make sure my readers are aware. Last year, the yen literally beat the performance of 177 currencies. However, the rise has been so swift and severe, that it’s killing the country. No one in Japan seems to be happy with it. Their exporters are literally campaigning to the central bank to intervene in the currency. The central bank has been quoted as saying that they are not happy with the rise of the yen either.

So what is a Japanese investor to do with such a strong yen that may not be that strong for long.

Invest abroad.

Here’s where the money is flowing!

Do we have any clue as to where they are starting to place their money? Yes! According to the Ministry of Finance, there have been “net purchases” of international stocks and bonds for the past seven weeks in a row now.

So where’s the money going? It’s working its way into places like Brazil, Mexico, Turkey and South Africa.

Therefore, money is being exchanged for the currencies of these lands and is further going into their bonds and stocks.

The yen gained an average of 55% against the currencies of these countries last year and they know that these gains will not hold. Therefore, they’re going into beaten down currencies with beaten down stock and bond markets.

It’s really important to note what these Japanese investors are doing, because they are smart investors. They get it right much more than they get it wrong. They are experts on international markets, because their own currency usually yields one of the lowest rates in the world. Therefore, they like to get into an appreciating currency that also has an appreciating stock or bond market.

A year ago, money was fleeing these emerging markets. However, they’ve plummeted so much and the yen has gotten so strong, it makes them one of the first groups of investors to march back into these markets.

In addition, one thing that you will see happening more and more this year in Japan is international mergers and acquisitions. There’s no better time to be buying when your currency is extremely strong and the stocks of international companies are extremely cheap. It’s a win/win for them.

They have done many of them already. In fact, their merger and acquisition activity tripled last year to $76 billion from about $25 billion the previous year.

All of this is beginning to cause a “net selling” of yen, finally, as the Japanese and other investors around the world exchange their yen for emerging market currencies around the world.

For those who are holding Japanese Yen or intending to short the currency, continue reading here are some idea what/where those smart Japanese investors are investing now.


* Skepticism is brewing that the US government 's bank rescue will not work. The US Treasury Secretary Geither has pledged government financing for as much as USD2T of efforts to spur new lending and address bank's toxic assets.



10 February 2009

Technical Analysis - February 10 2009


S&P500 (869, last week 826 or +5.2% w.o.w)

What a turnaround! Now the Daily MACD and MACD Histogram have joined the Daily Parabolic SAR to become positive as well while Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are slightly negative. At this juncture, the indicators may continue to turn bullish if further bad news in the market are being discounted. For the weekly readings, the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR are still positive.The weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish. Support is around 820 and resistance at 900.

KLSE CI (897, last week 884 or +1.5% w.ow)

The daily indicators MACD, Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) although have turned negative recently is seen making a comeback. Unlike the S&P500, none of the indicators have register positive readings yet but will soon be if the markets are to move up discounting further bad news. The weekly charts MACD and Parabolic SAR are still positive but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish. The index is expected to trade between 860 and 915.

HangSeng (13,655, last week 13,278 or +2.8% w.o.w )

After gaining almost 8% in two weeks, the daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, MACD and MACD Histogram have turned positive again. The DMI (+ve and -ve)and Guppy MMAs are still negative but has improved. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but the weekly ADX trend, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still bearish . Support is seen at 13,000 and resistance at 15,000.

Nikkei 225 (8,077, last week 7,994 or +1.0% w.ow)

The daily indicators like MACD and MACD Histogram has joined the Daily Parabolic SAR to become positive during the week However, the DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram. However, the Parabolic SAR which turned negative are still as such but will turn bullish soon if the market continues to turn upward. Support is seen at 7,700 and resistance at 8,600.
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* Bloomberg: China's inflation slows to 1% in January 2009 from a year earlier, weakest pace in 2 years as economy cools. Many analysts are predicting deflation looming
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* BT(Singapore): Delhi expects growth to slow to 7.1%.
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* YahooFinance: Obama to Congress: Pass stimulus, don't play games.

08 February 2009

Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending Februeary 6 2009

Weekly US markets update and outlook

Stocks pin hopes on rescue plans


Market rallies past dismal jobs numbers, with sights set on possible recovery

MarketWatch: Investors are poised to start next week eager for plans from the government to boost the economy and rescue the financial system, which could help bulls cement a nascent February rally in stocks. Hopes that the market has already priced in much of a dismal outlook for the economy this year were also evident Friday, as stocks rallied past news that January saw the biggest loss of jobs since 1974.

"The market is possibly looking at what we see today and thinking that we can't get much worse than that," said Paul Nolte, director of investments at Hinsdale's Associates. "It's not yet expecting that things will get better, but at least not much worse." On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 217 points, or 2.7%, to end at 8,280. The S&P gained 22 points, or 2.7%, to 868, while the Nasdaq Composite rallied 45 points, or 2.9%, to 1,591. After posting their worst January performance on record, stocks entered the month of February on a positive note. For the week, the Dow rose 3.5%, the S&P gained 5.2%, and the Nasdaq jumped 7.8%.

Part of the rally was supported by hopes that the Obama administration's economic stimulus plan was close to being passed by Congress. Late Friday, senators reached a tentative deal on a $780 billion plan, clearing the way for a vote over the weekend.

And on Monday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is expected to unveil the
administration's plans to rescue ailing banks and hopefully tamp down the credit crisis that has crippled the financial system and the global economy the past year and a half.

While outlines of the plan remain sketchy, many holders of financial stocks fear that potential moves to nationalize banks could reduce their stake or wipe them out altogether. "There remains an outside chance the federal government could move to nationalize the banks or commit additional capital and thus require banks to halt interest payments on preferred shares or at the very least, dilute existing equity shareholders," said Robert Pavlik, market strategist at Oaktree Asset Management. Yet, absent of the exact details of the Treasury's prescription for change, financial shares still rallied over the past week on Wall Street, a bullish sign for the market, according to Pavlik. "The market's turnaround on a lack of concrete news is interesting," he said. "We believe it points to the hope that the Street has that investor optimism will once again return to the levels we saw back in November."

Depressed earnings

The market also seemed not overly concerned about weaker-than-expected earnings and even some drastically weaker outlooks from companies posting their quarterly results. With 309 companies from the S&P 500 having now reported, fourth-quarter earnings are expected to have slumped more than 40% from the year-ago period. This would mark the weakest growth rate since at least 1998, according to Thomson Financial, which began tracking the data that year. Just a week ago, earnings were expected to have fallen 35% in the quarter.

The outlook for the rest of the year has also weakened, with a drop of more than 28% now expected for the first quarter, a roughly 25% decline in the second quarter, followed by a drop of 10% in the third quarter. Most forecasters still expect modest growth for the fourth quarter. But that view currently seems in jeopardy, warns John Butters, earnings analyst at Thomson.


Next week, another 60 companies from the S&P 500 are expected to report, including one Dow component, Coca-Cola Co. on Thursday.

Economic blues

Next week will be light on economic reports, except on Thursday, when the government will report its January tally of retail sales. Dismal sales and outlook from U.S. retailers failed to prevent those stocks from rallying last week, as investors had already priced in very bad numbers. On Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is expected to testify on the central bank's lending programs to ailing financial institutions. That same day, wholesale inventories and sales data for December are due. On Wednesday, the
government will report trade data for December.

Weekly KLSE Update and Outlook

MarketWatch(TheStarBizWeek): Bursa Malaysia's principal index retraced from the recent high of 936.63 on January 7 to a low of 867.35 on January 23 in an apparent profit-taking activity before turning range-bound on consolidation.


According to the chart, the CI has been trapped within a moderate band. It will continue to trade in this way until a clear breakout or a breakdown is detected, with many investors adopting a cautious stance while volume stays low due to prevailing uncertainty.

Initial resistance is pegged at the 900-point mark, followed by the 100-day SMA of 914. A successful push above the recent peak of 936.63 will see the market experiencing greater volatility to the upside.

Important support is set at the 860-863 point band. If it is violated, the next lower floor of 835 points and the recent bottom of 801.27 will be become much weaker. Overall, the technical landscape is unclear but a slight improvement in the short term indicators suggest share may have a mild upward bias initially before pulling back later.


* It is steaming hot today isn't it? In Australia, the hot weather has caused the worst fire disaster in a quarter century and the death toll has now reached 84.

* Australia's latest GDP estimates: 2009 : 0.5%, 2010: 2.5%

* IMF: China has potential to maintain 8% growth this year.

* Bloomberg: Japan won't print new currency to help stimulate the economy.

* RTTNews: Japan's foreign exchange reserves for January is USD1.011T(Dec USD1.631T)


05 February 2009

Bite the bullet, fight another day?

Like many other Malaysians, I have been following the "katak jumping events" in Perak fervently over the online news portals, newspapers or any other piece of information that makes senses. I have lost count already how many times I have visited and refreshed those online sites eager to see how those events unfold and to get the final verdict from the Sultan. The public opinion polls are all calling for dissolution of state assembly.

While I was busy "googling", many random thoughts on katak jumping came into my mind. Amongst them include the feeling of being cheated, sad, anguish, anxiety, revengeful, corruption, power play, plots, disloyal, betrayal, treachery, inducements, lack of integrity and quality or moral standards, options and alternatives and the fast sinking economy.

Then at 300pm, the much awaited news were out. Sultan has asked Nizar to resign, BN set to form government. I have stopped "googling" for any more updates then but those thoughts mentioned above are still coming back and forth my mind as I write.

The winners will be rejoicing while the losers will be depressing. What can the losing Pakatan Rakyat, Perakians and rakyat do? Will they protest against it(can't help but relating it to Bangkok) or like Jeff Ooi says, Bite the bullet, fight another day?


* Fitch downgrades Russia's debt to BBB(2nd lowest investment grade). The ruble has fallen by 40% since July 2008 against the USD.

* Bloomberg: Sany Heavy, China's biggest supplier of concrete-making equipment, plans to cut its Chairman's annual salary to 15 cents from USD92,000 (in 2007) and cut pay of board members by 90% because of the financial crisis.

* Old folks don't just attend company's meetings for souvenirs and food. See here.


04 February 2009

Sharing by Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett: We begin this New Year with dampened enthusiasm and dented optimism.

Our happiness is diluted and our peace is threatened by the financial illness that has infected our families, organizations and nations. Everyone is desperate to find a remedy that will cure their financial illness and help them recover their financial health.

Every new year, I adopt a couple of old maxims as my beacons to guide my future. This self-prescribed therapy has ensured that with each passing year, I grow wiser and not older.

This year, I invite you to tap into the financial wisdom of our elders along with me, and become financially wiser.

Hard work : All hard work brings profit; but mere talk leads only to poverty.
Laziness : Sleeping lobster is carried away by the water current.
Earnings : Never depend on a single source of income.
Spending : If you buy things you don't need, you'll soon sell things you need.
Savings : Don't save what is left after spending; spend what is left after saving.
Accounting : It's no use carrying an umbrella, if your shoes are leaking.
Auditing : Beware of little expenses; a small leak can sink a large ship.
Risk-taking : Never test the depth of the river with both feet.
Investment : Don't put all your eggs in one basket.

Opportunities are never lost. The other fellow takes what you miss.

Truly words of wisdom, aren't they? The above article is sourced from an email received recently.

* Malaysian katak and politics. Frogs are great jumpers, hardy, exceptional ability to hide and camouflage, poisonous and at times noisy. According to Wikipedia, frogs feature prominently in folklore, fairy tales and popular culture. They tend to be portrayed as benign, ugly, clumsy, but with hidden talents.
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* Australia announces its 2nd "move earth and heaven" stimulus package worth up to 4% of GDP or AUD42b while cutting interest rate by100 basis point to 3.25%. The news pushed AUD up by 2% yesterday.

* Bloomberg: Isuzu, Japan's largest maker of light duty trucks may post its first annual loss in 6 years.


03 February 2009

Technical Analysis - January 30 2009


S&P500 (826, last week 832 or -0.72% w.o.w )

Except for the Daily Parabolic SAR which turned positive recently, all other indicators egs MACD, MACD Histogram, Guppy MMAs and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are negative. For the weekly readings, the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR are still positive but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. The weekly ADX trend and DMIs (+ve and –ve) are bearish while Guppy MMAs is weakening further. Expect index to be at best consolidating. Support is around 780 and resistance at 850.

KLSE CI (884, last week 873 or +1.3% w.ow)

The market still has a 1% gain for the year. The daily indicators MACD, Parabolic SAR, ADX trend and DMI (+ve and –ve) have turned bearish. The weekly charts MACD and Parabolic SAR are still positive but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. The index is expected to trade between 835 and 915.

HangSeng (13,278, last week 12,579 or +5.6% w.o.w )

Despite only traded for two days during the week, the index gained more than 5% . Despite this, all the daily indicators like Parabolic SAR, the daily MACD and MACD Histogram and Guppy MMAs are still negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram and Parabolic SAR but will eventually turned negative if the selling continues further. Support is seen at 12,600 and resistance at 15,000.

Nikkei 225 (7,994, last week 7,745 or +3.2% w.ow)

Similar with S&P500, except for the Daily Parabolic SAR, all the daily indicators like MACD and MACD Histogram, DMIs (+ve and –ve) and Guppy MMAs are still negative. The weekly charts are still positive, especially the MACD, MACD Histogram. However, the Parabolic SAR has just turned negative. Support is seen at 7,400 and resistance at 8,400.


* JapanTimes: Japan's longest boom in the post war era died in October 2007. The boom lasted 69 months.

* CNN: Heaviest snow in 18 months partially criples UK.

* Will Australia cuts its interest rate by 150 basis point today similar with its NZ counterpart? Together with a slowing down economy and a negative trade deficit in December, watch AUD goes down further.

* Fitch: Outlook for KL currency rating negative.



01 February 2009

Smart Investing/Trading for the week ending January 30 2009

Weekly US Market Update and Outlook

'Bad bank' is best hope for beaten stock market

MarketWatch: Progress creating a government structure to absorb banks' rotten assets could provide some relief next week for the stock market, which otherwise faces a tough lineup of woeful corporate outlooks, plunging auto sales and big job losses.

Investors are hoping for more clarity from Congress and the White House on establishing a good bank/bad bank institution that would buy up the delinquent loans and illiquid securities corroding banks' books.

Traders will also be cued to policymakers' decision on how to spend the second half of last fall's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

"The market fully understands that the two largest problems we're faced with are the solvency of the banking system and bringing about the end to the real estate crisis," said Robert Siewert, a portfolio manager at Philadelphia-based Glenmede Trust Co., which manages about $17 billion in assets. "It could start to rally on any sort of indication of putting the banking system on a better footing," he said.

The market could use the good news. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average have lost about 9% this year, adding to last year's double-digit losses.

Any spark of hope from Washington faces a squall of negative reports from corporations around the country. Some 193 S&P 500 companies, 40% of the entire index, have already reported fourth-quarter results. Another 102, including Dow Jones Industrial Average components Merck Co., Kraft Foods, Inc. and Walt Disney Co. , are slated to report next week.

So far, earnings look bad and forecasts look worse. S&P 500 companies are on track for a 35% earnings decline. Companies are missing earnings' expectations at a rate not seen since the fourth quarter of 1995. These added to a gloomy jobs picture that next Friday's jobs report will likely illustrate.

Economists are expecting the economy lost 400,000 to 600,000 jobs in January. As in past months, the Wednesday release of payroll processor ADP's job forecast, followed by Thursday's jobless claims figures, could roil traders ahead of the Friday Labor Dept. release. January sales figures from the auto industry and retailers could also tip indexes, even though the theme of plunging auto sales and stingy shoppers is a familiar one. GM sales fell about 40%, Chrysler sales dropped 50% and Toyota Motor Co. sales lost more than 30%.

Devil's in the bad-bank details

The possibility that policymakers would take a page from the 1980s savings and loan crisis by creating an agency to buy institutions' bad assets sparked a rally in bank shares last week. After some jaw-jumping intraday rises, the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund , which tracks the S&P 500 bank stocks, ended the week 2.8% higher vs. a 0.7% drop for the broader index. Many agree that the market won't rally until the financial system works through the toxic mortgage and related assets. These prompted the failures last year of Lehman Bros. and Washington Mutual, caused successive writedowns as big banks such as Bank of America Corp. and sent the industry running hat in hand to the U.S. government - repeatedly knocking down any chance of a stock market rally.

But even if policymakers pull together to form a new version of the 1980s' Resolution Trust Corp., investors say a sustained rally won't necessarily follow. A lot rides on the details of the structure. If a government "bad bank" buys up bank debts for a steep discount to par value, say at 23 cents on the dollar, those purchases could force struggling institutions to embark on another big round of writedowns and capital raisings. That process could send more down the path to bankruptcy. But if the government buys the assets at par value, in other words, for far more than they are worth now, the problem passes on to the government and ultimately, the taxpayer. "The idea that this will be such a sizeable pricetag to the taxpayer is certainly something investors are weary of," Siewert said.

And regardless of the details of a proposed bank fix, the market still faces a rocky road. Siewert said his firm continues to underweight equities in favor of more investments in bonds, such as high-yield and municipal securities.

Weekly KLSE Update and Outlook

Trading is seen to be supportive after the week-long holiday.

StarBizWeek/MarketWatch: OUTLOOK: With the return of market players after a week-long holiday season, trading on the Bursa this week is expected to be "supportive". Having said that, most dealers expect trading to be range bound throughout most of the week.

Maybank Investment Bank Bhd head of retail research and chief chartist Lee Cheng Hooi sees a strong support level of 867- 868 points for the KL Composite Index (KLCI) "which it is unlikely to violate" and resistance level of 887-900 points for the week ahead.

"I think this trading week is going to be okay and not as bleak as would be assumed based on overseas markets," he says, pointing out that the KLCI had managed to punch through into positive territory on Friday.

While the local bourse failed to sustain the window dressing activity that lent it a boost towards the end of the year, some say the Umno general assembly meeting in March may inject some vigour into the market, as historically the market sees support from local players in the run-up to the meeting. However, with February having two-shortened trading weeks, there may not be much time to structure a supportive equities market, he says.

Rotational play is already evident in the market with the run-up in water-utilities linked counters on Thursday and plantation counters on Friday.
Despite weakness in crude palm oil (CPO) futures that are trading at around RM1,760 per tonne, plantation stocks have drawn speculative interest and this may continue.

"It's not pretty because CPO futures have broken past the RM1,790 per tonne support level, but there is still a run-up in plantations counters which are index linked," he says.

Lee expects this week to be trapped between the support and resistance levels with trading opportunities in some speculative stocks, naming infrastructure firm MMC Corp Bhd.

* Wow!How time flies when you are having fun! Its the 7th day of the Chinese New Year already! Time to wish everyone a very Happy and Bullish Birthday and enjoy tossing“Yu Sang” (a special dish in Malaysia Chinese community).