Friday, March 1, 2013

Gold Price Climbs, Miners Follow

Gold Price Climbs, Miners Follow

http://www.goldalert.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/300x105_gold_bars_54681artw.jpg

GOLD PRICE NEWS – The gold price climbed $6.50 to $1,587 per ounce Monday morning, advancing on the back of a flurry of supportive macro-economic news.  Stifel Nicholas highlighted “headlines that Russian and Kazakhstan gold purchases are up, UK debt has been downgraded, Japan goes ahead with “easing” nominee” and “the US Adjusted Monetary base is up…again.”  Silver followed the price of gold higher, rising roughly 1% to $28.95 per ounce.  The U.S. dollar traded weaker against the euro, reversing some of the strong gains witnessed in 2013.

Gold mining stocks rebounded Monday after another steep drop last week, which saw the gold stocks sink 4.9%, as measured by the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) and 5.8%, as measured by the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ).  Weakness in the gold price, combined with disappointing operating performance by the gold producers, has weighed heavily on the sector’s stock prices in recent months.  The GDX and GDXJ rose 1.7% and 2.4%, respectively, in early trading Monday morning.

Hecla Mining (HL), an industry stalwart, released their fourth quarter earnings this morning.  JP Morgan noted, “Hecla delivered in-line Q4 earnings with higher-than-expected production, albeit at lower realized silver price and higher cash costs due to lower byproduct credits. It announced the reopening of its Lucky Friday mine last week, and this is expected to deliver over 2moz of silver in 2013, although costs are expected to be high as it ramps up. Its 2013 production outlook is in line with our expectations, and the company is expecting to spend 28% more towards capex in 2013. The company also reported a modest 2% increase in its proven and probable reserves and a 33% increase in its mineralized and inferred gold resources.”

Argonaut Gold (AR) announced 2013 guidance this morning of 120,000 – 140,000 ounces at cash costs of between $630 and $660 per ounce.  Scotia noted these numbers were close its analyst’s expectations of “132.3 koz at $613/oz.”  Scotia’s metals and mining team also commentated that “the company now guides to 2013 capex of $57M-$75M vs. expectations of $49M.”

The Global Precious Metals at TD Securities highlighted the surge in short positions on gold, which was revealed in the CFTC’s Commitment of Traders report. TD noted, “Gold (Futures and Options) speculative shorts jumped by 34% while silver shorts more than doubled to add 74% to the speculative position.  The gold net speculative long (futures) position is now at its lowest level since before the Global Financial crisis – June 2007 while speculative shorts (futures and options) are at their highest since April 1999 when the gold price was just $286.00 / Ounce!”

Martin Murenbeeld, Chief Economist at DundeeWealth Economics, noted that gold’s 50-day moving average broke down through its 200-day moving average – the so-called “death cross” – for the sixth time since June 2001.  Murenbeeld urged his clients to focus on Fed Chairman Bernanke’s Humphrey Hawkins Testimony (February 26-27) for clues as to the futures direction of monetary policy. Dundee’s chief economist expects Bernanke to “confirm that QE4 will not be altered much before yearend, and while he is unlikely to say why exactly it will almost certainly be because he fears that US economic data (now that the payroll taxes have been hiked and there is sequestering on March 1) will not be very positive for the first half of 2013.”

Friday, February 15, 2013

Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed – NFPs Tomorrow

Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed – NFPs Tomorrow

The majors have consolidated overnight as global investors continue to weigh three very significant US-driven event risks between yesterday and tomorrow: the 4Q’12 GDP reading; the FOMC’s cryptic policy statement; and the January Nonfarm Payrolls release. Accordingly, with equity markets in Europe sliding and US futures pointing lower, the Japanese Yen and the US Dollar have emerged as two top performers.
The GDP figure yesterday was not nearly as bad as the headline of -0.1% (annualized) appeared. Defense spending, the most bloated government subsidized industry in the US, dropped by -22% in the 4Q’12, while the aggregate combination of the trade deficit and weak inventory figures (as a result of Hurricane Sandy) weighed on the headline figure by -2.7%. In other words, consumption and investments – together accounting for approximately 80% of the headline figure, were significantly stronger at +2.6%. The underlying components were promising as well: incomes have risen as inflation has remained tame (thus implying increased purchasing power for US consumers); and the savings rate increased to +4.7% from +3.6%. With the payroll tax hike at the start of the year, consumption figures could be weaker – but the economy is indeed picking back up.
With respect to the Fed and NFPs, they’re nearly one in the same – after all, the Fed has said it will stimulate the economy until the Unemployment Rate falls to 6.5%, on a sustainable basis (accompanied by increased participation rates). But with the labor market improving – the six month average of jobs gain is +159.67K, the highest rate since May, at +175.83K – and the US consumer strengthening, there has been little reason for the Fed to alter its path. In fact, it deemed the slowdown in growth the past few months as “transitory” – they too are anticipating a stronger economy. A strong NFP figure tomorrow could stoke further gains in the US Dollar as Treasury yields rise; a weak figure at this point isn’t priced it.
Taking a look at European credit, peripheral yields have increased slightly, perhaps hurting the Euro today. The Italian 2-year note yield has decreased to 1.627% (-2.0-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has increased to 2.565% (+5.8-bps). Similarly, the Italian 10-year note yield has increased to 4.324% (+1.7-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has increased to 5.227% (+3.3-bps); higher yields imply yields prices.
RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 11:50 GMT
NZD: +0.17%
JPY: +0.05%
AUD: -0.02%
CHF:-0.09%
GBP:-0.11%
CAD:-0.12%
EUR:-0.14%
Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): +0.06% (-0.09% past 5-days)
ECONOMIC CALENDAR
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_Picture_1.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow

See the DailyFX Economic Calendar for a full list, timetable, and consensus forecasts for upcoming economic indicators.
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS OUTLOOK
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1028.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
EURUSD: No change: “The Bull Flag breakout has begun after cracking 1.3485, “with a final measured move pointing towards 1.3635.” Support comes in at 1.3470/3500, 1.3380/85 (mid-March swing high, Bull Flag resistance), and 1.3280/3310. Resistance is 1.3545/50 (price is here now), and 1.3635.”
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1029.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
USDJPY: No change: “The USDJPY rally is back on the up and up, with price breaking above 91.00 (perhaps a Bull Flag on the hourly chart had developed, hindsight being 20/20). I maintain: “The focus remains on buying dips, and generally speaking, selling Yen strength (EURJPY, USDJPY preferred for gains; CADJPY, GBPJPY preferred for loses).” Resistance comes in at 92.00/05 (weekly R1), 93.15/20 (weekly R2), and 93.45/50 (monthly R3). Support comes in at 91.00 and 90.00/10 (weekly pivot, monthly R2).”
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1030.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
GBPUSD: No change: “The pair has rallied off of the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement from the June low to January high, but I maintain: as long as the daily RSI downtrend holds, it is possible for a move lower.” This may break today, signaling an end to the bearish bias for the near-term, and wouldn’t rule out a rally back towards the 50-EMA and significant psychological resistance at 1.5990/6000. Support is 1.5700 and 1.5675/80.”
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1031.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
AUDUSD:No change: “The pair continues to range although it has showed signs of cracking, with both the ascending trendline off of the June low and the October low having been breached, as well as the ascending TL off of the June low and the December low. Accordingly, a weekly close below 1.0460 could signal a deeper retracement towards 1.0350/400, before a greater breakdown towards parity. Support comes in at 1.03800/400 (weekly low), 1.0340/50 (December low), and 1.0140/50 (October low). Resistance is 1.0460/70 (ascending TL off of the June and December lows, 50-EMA) and 1.0500/15.” Note: the Morning Star candlestick cluster isn’t seeing any follow through today, as the daily RSI downtrend has persisted.
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1032.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
S&P 500: Tuesday I said: “as indicated on the charts the past weeks, noting “nearing the top 1505/1512” – the top was 1504.6. If this breaks, 1520 is in sight.” Indeed, the irrational exuberance has continued, bringing topline Bearish Rising Wedge resistance in focus at 1512/15; the December 2007 highs of 1520/24 could be reached on an overshoot. Bottom line: I’m expecting a crash in the S&P 500 unless volumes accelerate rapidly, given the disconnect from reality.
Forex_US_Dollar_Consolidates_After_GDP_Fed_NFPs_Tomorrow_body_x0000_i1033.png, Forex: US Dollar Consolidates After GDP, Fed - NFPs Tomorrow
GOLD: The past few weeks I’ve maintained: “When considering the move off of the September highs, a measured A-B=C-D (as expressed on the Daily) suggests that a bottom could be in place at [1630/40].” The rebound has ensued, with the alternative safe haven rallying up to 1690 today. A daily close above 1700 points towards 1722/25 and 1755. Support is 1663 (200-EMA) and 1640/45.
— Written by Christopher Vecchio, Currency Analyst
To contact Christopher Vecchio, e-mail cvecchio@dailyfx.com
Follow him on Twitter at @CVecchioFX
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DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets. Learn forex trading with a free practice account and trading charts from FXCM.

Trading Currencies Against the Crowd – Real Forex Strategies

Trading Currencies Against the Crowd – Real Forex Strategies

Our proprietary forex sentiment and positioning data shows that the majority of traders often buy and sell at all of the wrong times. Here are some trading strategies we use to trade against the forex trading crowd. 
In our Traits of Successful Traders series, we studied the results of 12 million real forex trades placed by FXCM clients and the findings were significant. Our data showed that retail traders were profitable on 59 percent of all EURUSD trades placed, but further analysis showed an important statistic—most ultimately lost money trading the Euro/US Dollar.
Profitable Trades by Currency Pair
forex_trading_strategy_against_the_trading_crowd_body_Picture_5.png, Trading Currencies Against the Crowd - Real Forex Strategies
Source: The data is derived from Forex Capital Markets LLC accounts–excluding managed and Eligible Contract Participant accounts–from 10/01/2009 to 9/30/2010. All data is rounded to the nearest whole number.
The winning percentage only tells part of the story. Traders lost money trading the Euro/US Dollar because their losses were nearly twice as large as their winners.
Average Trader Profit or Loss in Pips
forex_trading_strategy_against_the_trading_crowd_body_Picture_6.png, Trading Currencies Against the Crowd - Real Forex Strategies
Source: Ibid
We dedicated a Forex Education piece to why many traders lose money, and the takeaways are important. Just as significant, we want to know how we can use this information to our advantage in real trading. This is the major motivation behind our use of the FXCM Speculative Sentiment Index (SSI): our measure of retail trader FX positioning.
The SSI is simple: we look at how many traders hold open long positions versus those short and is expressed in a ratio. If the ratio is positive, it shows how many open orders are long for each one short. If it is negative, it shows the number of orders short for every one that is long.
For example: A EURUSD SSI ratio of 3.0 tells us that there are 3.0 open orders long for every 1 that is short. An AUDUSD SSI ratio of -2.0 tells us that there are 2.0 open orders short for every 1 long.
How Can We Trade Using Retail Forex Sentiment Data?
In order to understand our SSI-based trading strategies, it is important to recognize a key characteristic of crowd behavior: most will buy when a currency is falling and sell when it is rallying. As our data on real trade information suggests, the crowd is more often profitable as most trades are closed out at a gain. Yet when these trades don’t work, most traders expose themselves to outsized losses.
What does this mean? We most often go against what most traders are doing. If everyone is buying, we like to sell. If most are going short, we like to buy.
Forex Trading Crowds Buy Weakness, Sell Strength
forex_trading_strategy_against_the_trading_crowd_body_Picture_7.png, Trading Currencies Against the Crowd - Real Forex Strategies
Our knowledge of crowd behavior and trade results underlines that this is a low-probability strategy: we will probably be wrong more often than right. But appropriate reward to risk on trades likewise suggests we may ultimately be successful.
There are many different ways to do that, and the below strategies use the Speculative Sentiment Index as the ‘heart’ of their trading logic.
Sentiment-Based Forex Trading Strategies Available on Tradestation Desktop:
forex_trading_strategy_against_the_trading_crowd_body_1a.png, Trading Currencies Against the Crowd - Real Forex Strategies
Automate the Breakout2 trading system via the FXCM Apps store
Automate the Momentum2 trading system via the FXCM Apps Store
Automate the Momentum1 trading system via the FXCM Apps Store
Automate the Range2 trading system via the FXCM Apps Store
— Written by David Rodriguez, Quantitative Strategist for DailyFX.com
To receive the Speculative Sentiment Index and other reports from this author via e-mail, sign up to David’s e-mail distribution list via this link.
Contact David via
New to forex? Sign up for our DailyFX Forex Education Series
DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets. Learn forex trading with a free practice account and trading charts from FXCM.

Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen

Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen

With the Euro pulling back significantly yesterday, and the commodity currencies in general signaling broader risk-aversion for the past few weeks, a bit of interesting commentary from a key Japanese official has provoked a sharp pullback in the Yen-crosses (AUDJPY, EURJPY, USDJPY, etc. lower). Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso said in parliament today that “the yen’s sudden move from ¥78 or ¥79 to ¥90 [versus the US Dollar) was not something we anticipated.”
As Senior Technical Strategist Jamie Saettele made note of in the DailyFX Real Time News feed this morning, a number of ‘bells’ are going off suggesting that we may have arrived at a turning point in the Yen-crosses. Specifically, our attention is on EURJPY; earlier this week, taking a fundamental perspective, I suggested that the Euro may have topped. If the technical conditions are in place to see the Yen bottom and the Euro top, the fundamentals are certainly there as well. According to the CFTC’s COT report, net non-commercial futures positioning remains near its shortest level in the Yen since July 2007. Meanwhile, Euro long positioning has surged. In Japan, Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa announced that he would step down on March 19 earlier this week, but this does not present a material change to the view that further dovish policies will be in place until the new BoJ Governor takes the reins.
Europe is a trickier situation, but one that is starting to look rather fragile. Political concerns in both Italy and Spain are heating up, with the former on the verge of tight elections, while the latter is seeing corruption charges and general disintegrating sentiment towards the government build. On the monetary front, with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi emphatically underscoring the softening inflation and growth outlooks, rate expectations have turned south, sending the EURJPY has towards ¥123.50.
Taking a look at European credit, peripheral yields have eased, but the hangover of the ECB press conference yesterday has held back the Euro from rallying. The Italian 2-year note yield has decreased to 1.594% (-6.5-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has decreased to 2.671% (-8.1-bps). Similarly, the Italian 10-year note yield has decreased to 4.519% (-5.6-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has decreased to 5.294% (-9.4-bps); lower yields imply higher prices.
RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 11:30 GMT
JPY: +1.15%
AUD: +0.53%
NZD: +0.50%
GBP:+0.20%
CHF:+0.15%
EUR:+0.06%
CAD:+0.02%
Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): -0.48% (+0.53 % past 5-days)
ECONOMIC CALENDAR

Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_7.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
See the DailyFX Economic Calendar for a full list, timetable, and consensus forecasts for upcoming economic indicators.
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS OUTLOOK
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_6.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
EURUSD: No change: “Consolidation occurring after overshoot towards 1.3700; with the daily RSI uptrend breaking, a pullback towards 1.3500 should not be ruled out. I maintain: with the daily RSI well into overbought territory, a pullback would be deemed healthy. Dips into 1.3500 are deemed constructive. Support is 1.3615/20 (weekly R2), 1.3540 (weekly R1), and 1.3500. Resistance is 1.3635/60 and 1.3755/85 (weekly R3, monthly R1).”
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_5.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
USDJPY: No change: “Further bullish price action as US Treasury yields strengthen and speculation over BoJ policy arises again. Resistance comes in at 92.00/05 (breaking now) (weekly R1), 93.15/20 (weekly R2), and 93.45/50 (monthly R3). Support comes in at 91.00 and 90.00/10 (weekly pivot, monthly R2).”
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_4.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
GBPUSD: The pair is holding below the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement from the June low to January high, vindicating the “cover on dips, sell rallies” perspective. I continue to look to sell rallies in the pair as significant RSI divergence exists. A hold below 1.5675 eyes a move towards 1.5500, and ultimately, 1.5265/70, the June low. Resistance comes in at 1.5825 and 1.5885/90. Support is 1.5675 and 1.5580 (monthly S1).
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_3.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
AUDUSD:A break below 1.0360 has given way to a move into the November swing low and 200-DMA at 1.0285/310, which could prove to be an area to look for a bounce. However, the daily RSI support dating back to June 2012 is breaking, suggesting that further downside should be sought. Resistance comes in at 1.0360 and 1.0425. Support is 1.0290 and 1.0150.
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_2.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
S&P 500: Tuesday I said: “as indicated on the charts the past weeks, noting “nearing the top 1505/1512” – the top was 1504.6. If this breaks, 1520 is in sight.” Indeed, the irrational exuberance has continued, bringing topline Bearish Rising Wedge resistance in focus at 1512/15; the December 2007 highs of 1520/24 could be reached on an overshoot. Bottom line: I’m expecting a crash in the S&P 500 unless volumes accelerate rapidly, given the disconnect from reality.
Commentary_from_Japanese_Officials_Adds_Fuel_to_Technical_Turn_in_Yen_body_Picture_1.png, Forex: Commentary from Japanese Officials Adds Fuel to Technical Turn in Yen
GOLD: The past few weeks I’ve maintained: "When considering the move off of the September highs, a measured A-B=C-D (as expressed on the Daily) suggests that a bottom could be in place at [1630/40].” The rebound has ensued, with the alternative safe haven rallying up to 1690 today. A daily close above 1700 points towards 1722/25 and 1755. Support is 1663 (200-EMA) and 1640/45.
— Written by Christopher Vecchio, Currency Analyst
To contact Christopher Vecchio, e-mail cvecchio@dailyfx.com
Follow him on Twitter at @CVecchioFX
To be added to Christopher’s e-mail distribution list, please fill out this form
DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets. Learn forex trading with a free practice account and trading charts from FXCM