Yesterday was the day of reckoning for the Japanese yen. We already wrote this week about the failure in the country's economy, but we perceived the lack of reaction of the foreign exchange market as the general inability of the yen to fall due to increased demand for safe-haven assets (see the dynamics of gold prices). As yesterday showed, we were wrong. The...
Back in early October I posted a commodities chart. On that chart I shared my thesis that Gold's 6-year breakout in May would retest and commodities would follow on the next leg up. I later posted that "unofficial QE would add fuel into inflationary forces". With Gold breaking out of its healthy correction, inflation hitting 9-year highs, the Fed saying they will...
Massive structure formed on the weekly chart. I am full of optimism for Bitcoin and the crypto marketplace in general. So I am quite bullish and expect the green arrows to win so to speak, which means we might see 100k per Bitcoin some time in the future given the debasement of the currencies that is going on all around the world, with the central banks pumping...
Traditionally, we start the review with news about the coronavirus epidemic. Once again, we note that the matter is even on its scale - thousands of times more people die from ordinary flu, and hundreds of thousands of times more get sick each year. The point is the problems that this epidemic has on the global economy. A number of key industrial centers in China...
The main event of the previous week was not a meeting of the Bank of England or even a decision of the Fed (both the Central Banks left monetary policy parameters unchanged). This is not data on US GDP (annual growth rates have been the weakest since 2016: 2.3% in 2019 compared to 2.9% in 2018), but the coronavirus epidemic in China. Yes, so far the epidemic has...
As we warned in our two previous reviews, investors relaxed clearly prematurely. Actually, the dynamics of underlying assets on Wednesday confirmed this. And the front pages of publications clearly indicate what investors should think and worry about now - the coronavirus epidemic. Yesterday we wrote that its scale has already exceeded SARS, and the epidemic is...
Despite the fact that the coronavirus epidemic is in full swing (the number of deaths has already exceeded one hundred, and the number of infected has approached 5000), investors sighed with relief. The Fear Index (VIX) crashed 15%, safe-haven assets were down, and stock markets and oil were up. Since we still do not see reasons for optimism, our recommendations...
Last week was marked by meetings of the Bank of Japan, Bank of Canada and the ECB. The first wave of decisions showed that the central banks are not yet ready for any changes in monetary policy. You can understand them: at the current rate of economic growth, raising the rate is impractical, and there is nowhere to lower it (at least in the case of the Bank of...
Yesterday, the ECB expectedly left the parameters of monetary policy in the Eurozone. This was predictable, so most were interested in the new strategy of the Central Bank. But Lagarde greatly disappointed the markets, saying that before November-December, one could not count on any clarity in this matter. Thus, the euro will not have to rely on support from the...
Monday turned out to be a fairly calm day for financial markets. The reason on the surface is a day off in the USA. So today it will almost certainly be more volatile and interesting. The Bank of Japan set the pace to the news background early in the morning. Monetary policy parameters were left unchanged. The press conference will be somewhat later than the...
The previous week was rich in important events, some of which can be formally classified as “game changers”, but judging by the dynamics of prices in the financial markets, the game did not undergo any special changes. Let's start with the most global. The United States and China signed documents on the first part of the trade deal. But there was no euphoria -...
All comments and likes are very appreciated. _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The price of gold could hit a record high of $2,000 an ounce within the next two years as US economic growth fades and the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, according to analysts at Citigroup. We can...
The Dow Jones Index is showing the longest period of growth in its history. Given that this growth is completely divorced from economic development, even the most avid bulls in the US stock market are beginning to doubt about prospects: the growth is clearly out of control. There is another fact: when the market grows very rapidly in a very short period, it...
The pound had dropped below 1.30 earlier in the week. AUDUSD gained a foothold above the resistance level of 0.6900. If this breakdown turns out to be stable, then a wide space opens up for the AUDUSD for further growth to at least 0.7020 or even 0.7200. Since AUDUSD is above 0.6900, its purchases seem to us profitable. But in any case, remember the Australian...
Despite the Christmas holidays and general calm in the forex market, the pound is dropping. Going below 1.30 is a very bad sign, but given the importance of the level zone 1.2950-1.3000, there is a serious risk of a full-fledged downward to 1.20. If the markets continue to believe in the impossibility of signing a trade agreement between the EU and the UK until...
Gold miners versus the price of gold itself is the cheapest it has ever been. The gold mining sector cannot go to zero and it is the closest to zero it has ever been. How often does one get the opportunity to enter a sector at generational Value investors should love this sector. - fundamentally undervalued. basing at all-time lows - Gold achieved 6-year highs...
A lot of macroeconomic statistics was published yesterday, however, it did not lead to significant movements. GDP was revised upwards 2.1% instead of preliminary 1.9%, and durable goods orders exceeded the most optimistic expectations (+ 0.6% m / m instead of -0.9% m / m). Well, the number of people receiving unemployment benefits in the United States so generally...
The US and China have traditionally been optimistic about the progress in the negotiations, but apparently, the markets no longer respond to this. If you yell “wolf”, in the end, people will no longer come. Something similar we can see in the negotiation process between China and the United States. They have been optimistic for more than a month, but there is no...