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Market Anarchy, The Day Atlas Crumbled
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Market Anarchy, The Day Atlas Crumbled

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In order to understand why Ayn Rand is dead wrong, you simply have to watch the opening sequence of “The Last Boyscout". Granted this particular piece of Bruce Willis's oeuvre isn't exactly Citizen Kane, but it does capture in stark terms the unfortunate consequences of playing a game without any referees. As the camera descends on rain splattered football field we see a grim, troubled fullback running down filed with the force of a locomotive. As he is approached by the opposing team he whips out a gun shoots his would be tacklers on the spot, opening the way to an unfettered path towards the end zone where he promptly sits on one knee, puts the gun to his head and blow his brains out.

Ridiculous as it is, this scene from the Last Boyscout has always stayed in my mind as an apt metaphor for the pitfalls of an unregulated market. Imagine if football or soccer had no referees. If just one player amongst many decided to use a gun to help him score a goal or a touchdown. Could this type of a game survive for more than a few seconds? Of course not. In order to be productive and effective, all social human activity must have rules. More importantly those rules must be enforced uniformly by a disinterested third party if the game is to stay honest and last. Otherwise all games will simply devolve into a variation of the Last Boyscout.

That's why I strongly disagree with the philosophy of Ayn Rand (Alan Greenspan's intellectual guide) while admiring her call for individual freedom. It only takes one thief amongst a group of a thousand honest men to destroy all the benefits of a free market system. Every economic transaction is in essence an exercise in trust. I pay you money and you perform a service. But performing a service has a cost. It requires, thought, labor, work. What if I just took your money and performed none of those tasks? Wouldn't my profit margins be much greater than my competitors? If I could get away with the scam long enough I could grab all the market share and dominate my sector. Sound crazy? Think AIG selling CDS insurance for $5 premium per $1000 face value with the money entrusted to them by annuity buyers. (Yes I know that is not EXACTLY what they did - that that was the EXACT effect of their actions) Now that some of those bonds are bankrupt they have to pay out $995 in claims which they do not have. Can one even make a moral argument as to why the management of that organization should not be sentenced to life in prison? After all we put away bank robbers for life for stealing as little as $10,000. The crimes of AIG were exponentially greater.

The point of this rant isn't really about my lust for vengeance. The crimes of Wall Street are already water under the bridge. Capital has been lost, lives have been ruined and now it just a matter or recognizing reality. I wrote two weeks that on Wall Street you either eat your losses or your your losses will eventually eat you. Hank Paulson, ever the Goldman Sachser that he is, refused to honor that rule and the end result is a complete and total stock market crash despite his best but misguided efforts to throw good money after bad with TARP.

So what should policy makers do now? Recognize the absolute and abject failure of unregulated free market and fix the real problem. Contrary to popular belief unregulated free markets are not always the most efficient solution. Countries that rely on private toll roads and the US healthcare system are just but two examples of utter and absolute failure of free market to deliver a quality product at a low cost to the greatest amount of people - a key measure, I would argue, of our progress as a society.

In finance this failure of the free unregulated markets has manifested itself in the vast shadowy over the counter derivatives market for MBS, CDO, CDS and a host of other alphabet soup products whose notional trade value now exceeds $550 Trillion - 10 times the Global GDP. In what now seems like a quaint memory but was in fact the foreshadow of things to come, the hedge fund LTCM nearly brought the financial world to ruin with its reckless trading in 1997. On the other hand in 2005 another hedge fund Amaranth Partners also blew up gloriously on bad energy trades, but its collapse scarcely caused a ripple. What was the difference? LTCM trades were all made over the counter without any supervision or transparency. Amaranth trades were all made on a regulated centralized exchange - the NYMEX - where a careful clearing enforcement system made sure that all the counterparties were paid their due.

On Friday, I wrote the following words,"Given these apocalyptic scenarios, consensus is building amongst the G-7 policymakers to centralize the two largest over the counter markets - LIBOR and CDS which have come to a grinding halt, as counterparties no longer trust each other and credit is cut off to a trickle. The centralization of clearing for these two key markets (much like equities on NYSE and NASDAQ and futures on CME) would go along way towards alleviating the fear that has paralyzed these two key markets. Centralized clearing would effectively guarantee counter party risk and provide much better price transparency perhaps enticing bargain hunters to make some bids. Global policymakers however must move fast, as investor confidence is being drained by the moment and markets are unlikely to stabilize and function well without some centralized structure. For FX, the bottom line is that risk on remains the dominant trading theme of the day and high yielders will continue to be pressured until some semblance of order returns."

Next week the markets may well bounce. Carry could rebound from it grossly oversold levels. Traders could breath a sign of relief. But none of these cosmetic events will fix the underlying problem of global finance - lack of transparency and security capital. Instead of burning yet more trillions of dollars of taxpayer money global policymakers should bring in over the counter market under an exchange regulated umbrella - a solution that would be far less expensive and far more efficient for us all.

Top 5 Stories in FX This Week

The Art of Managing Luck

So this was an interesting week in the FX market to say the least. As I write this Dylan Radigan is running a piece on CNBC entitled Violent Volatility Vortex as he points to the the fact that VIX has now hit 70 on an intra day basis while the DOW has plunged below 8000 for the first time since 2003.

For FX traders the equity market has been the only market that matters because the one and only driver of trade in currencies has been has been risk. On Thursday we had the Aussie rise 500 points as risk assumption returned temporarily and on Friday it plunged that much and more as risk aversion came back with a vengeance.

How does one trade in this kind of a market? Obviously very carefully. This week I reduced my size to half my usual amount and that decision probably saved me from more pain than anything else I could have done. When markets go wild you have only two choices - get smaller and survive or bet big and blow up.

But while getting small controlled my risk it did not bring me profit. I spent the first half of the week trading back and forth on my levels setup but my chart looked more like target practice poster from a gun range - riddled with as many losses as wins. The volatility was so vicious that I would often have a trade move well on its way to my profit target only to turn violently and stop me out for a loss. After getting smacked around by the market like that for about 10 times in a row, I stopped and looked for a better way. Ironically the key to success lay right in front of me.

Instead of trading single entry single exit, I adopted the BKT approach of trading 2 units one with a short profit target and one with the long one and lo and behold the level's setup became much more profitable. Once again I realized that in trading being partially right is much better then being absolutely wrong.

One of the biggest myths in trading is that if you just use a 2-to-1 reward to risk ratio you need only be correct 50% of the time to be wildly profitable. True in theory. In real life however if you trade with 2 to 1 r/r ratio you will likely be only correct 2 out of 10 times maybe even 1 out 10 times. Little wonder then why novice traders become bewildered when this hackneyed advice from trading books does not work. Markets never make it easy. They rarely go up in a straight line. They nearly always retrace and that's why as a trader you need to able to take what they can give rather demand you just due. The game of trading is really the art of managing luck and this week proved that point in spades.

Here is the video of this week's trades

Boris Schlossberg
BKTraderFX


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Dollar Strength Over Extended Shaky Safe Haven Status
Forex Weekly Reports

Forex Trading Weekly Forecast

Regardless of the market you are following (Forex, stocks, commodities) or the specific assets you trade (whether the safe haven US dollar, low-yielding Japanese yen, recession-prone crude), risk and panic are the common threads for activity. The world's economic super powers have already attempted to forcibly revive confidence in lending and investing; but to no avail. Now, with the G7 convening - and with the knowledge that only dramatic efforts may be able to stabalize the markets - investors the world over are waiting to see whether the broad market crash will continue next week or a bottom can be put in place.

  • Dollar Strength Over Extended Shaky Safe Haven Status
  • Euro Forecast Depends on EU Summit To Determine Joint Action
  • Japanese Yen Locked to Global Risk Sentiment as Markets Digest G7
  • British Pound Could Bounce, but Long-Term Forecast to the Downside
  • Swiss Franc Just As Linked To Risk Appetite As The Dollar And Yen
  • Canadian Dollar Could Gain On Technical Retracement
  • Australian Dollar May Sink Further As Commodity Sell Off Continues
  • New Zealand Dollar Outlook Bearish As The Flight to Safety Continues

Dollar Strength Over Extended Shaky Safe Haven Status

Fundamental Outlook for US Dollar: Bearish

  • Fed joins other global central banks in delivering a surprise 50bp rate cut
  • Credit crisis casts risk aversion shadow across all markets; and the dollar benefits, for now…
  • Traders left to tally the damage for the worst week for the markets since the Great Depression

Despite the approval of a massive $700 billion bailout plan and coordinated global rate cut, panic continues to dominate market sentiment. For the US dollar, the influence of this undesirable state will determine whether the currency can sustain its aggressive rally or a dramatic retracement brings it back to Earth. To understand where the greenback will go, we need to first understand how it has come to this point. How can a currency that represents a 1.50 percent benchmark lending rate, an oncoming recession and the epicenter for a financial crisis rally against nearly every one of its major counterparts? Security. While the dollar has few redeeming features fundamentally, the US is still the largest economy in the world with deeply liquid Treasuries that can be unequivocally deemed ‘risk-free' even as traditional asset classes suffer their worst declines in decades. This safe haven status has proven itself to be nearly as universal as the sell off in risky assets has been. However, the consistency can work both ways. Just as surely as the demand for liquidity has driven the dollar higher, a return in risk appetite or signal that the US market itself is no longer a refuge could quickly reverse the dollar's fortunes.

Monday happens to be a US banking holiday (Columbus Day); but few Forex traders will likely take the day off. Instead, they will be joining the world's masses in appraising the plans that come out of this weekend's G7 meeting. At the close of Friday's US session, the global economic authorities released a list of agreed upon “common guidelines” for addressing the ballooning crisis. The vague steps called for: taking ‘decisive action' to support systemically important financial institutions; unfreeze credit markets and secure liquidity and funding to banks; ensure the ability for firms to raise private and public funds to revive confidence; guarantee national deposit insurance; and restarting secondary markets for securitized assets (like mortgages). These are lofty goals and politics will be a high hurdle to make headway on any and all of them. However, details and action are what this skeptical market will need to revive confidence in lending and investment. More than likely, additional monetary easing (cutting benchmark and discount lending rates) and capital injections will be points that can be easily passed. What the market really needs though is all-encompassing guarantees on interbank lending and consumer bank deposits.

Months and years from now, recent record-breaking market declines will be considered panic or irrational exuberance. However, the longer this imbalance lasts, the greater the long-term impact will be on the financial markets and economic growth. Policy and regulation may hamper a return of speculative funds just as surely as lingering fears will. What's more, the pinch on lending that is being felt now is already guiding the US towards recession. Nevertheless, policy officials have few options other than taking extreme steps to put out the fire. – JK

Euro Forecast Depends on EU Summit To Determine Joint Action Plan

Fundamental Outlook for Euro: Bullish

  • The European Central Bank cut rates by 50bps to 3.75% as part of a coordinated move with other central banks
  • However, the ECB's statement and comments by the ECB's Nowotny suggests it was a one-and-done deal
  • The G7 statement revealed no formal plans, will the EU meeting on Sunday yield a solution?

The euro plummeted against the greenback to hit the lowest levels in over a year before finally hitting support at the 6/13/07 low of 1.3263. Indeed, fears of a financial market meltdown drove the US dollar higher across the majors as the G7 meeting in Washington failed to yield anything supportive of investor sentiment. In fact, the only news regarding the G7 meeting was generally negative, with Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti refusing to endorse a draft statement, saying that it was “too weak.” Meanwhile, comments by Italian President Silvio Berlusconi saying that they discussed “suspending the markets for the time it takes to rewrite the rules” sent stock markets diving lower. Mr. Berlusconi later rescinded his statement, saying he didn't mean it, but the reaction of the markets highlights how incredibly important it is for official to issue a strong statement or plan in the near-term.

As a result, the meeting of European Union members on Sunday will be key to where EUR/USD goes next. French President Nicolas Sarkozy's office said the meeting is meant to “to define a joint action plan” among EU members. It will be interesting to see if other countries become involved in this meeting, such as the UK, as UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling proposed during the G7 meeting that nations should guarantee lending between banks, either by turning central banks into clearing houses for the loans or having governments back them. The key gauge of this will be to see how the stock indexes react to any announcement, as indications that the financial markets are stabilizing could trigger a reversal in the moves we saw last week, working in favor of EUR/USD strength.

The other main factors to keep in mind will be the release of Euro-zone economic indicators, including the German ZEW survey and the Euro-zone Consumer Price Index. The ZEW survey is likely to reflect pessimistic sentiment amongst investors given the extent of the credit crisis, and this data could weigh on EUR/USD for at least a short-time. Meanwhile, the September reading of Euro-zone CPI is expected to slip to 3.6 percent from 3.8 percent, but if this actually holds steady or falls less than forecasts, the euro could gain. The odds may be in favor of a more euro-bearish result though, as CPI could actually slip a bit more than anticipated, which would support the case for additional rate cuts by the ECB going forward.

Japanese Yen Locked to Global Risk Sentiment as Markets Digest G7

Fundamental Outlook for Japanese Yen: Bullish

  • Meeting Minutes Reveal BOJ Uncertain About Japanese Economic Outlook
  • Merchant Sentiment Falls to Lowest in 7 Years in September
  • Bank of Japan Retains Rates at 0.50% Citing “Sluggish” Growth
  • Equipment Orders Plummet in August as On Shrinking Foreign Demand

Next week's economic calendar points in a familiar direction as the world's second largest economy grapples with full-blown recession. The Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index is expected to see wholesale inflation shrink -0.6% in September, bringing the annualized rate to 6.6%. This will see the pace of price growth down 9.6% since it topped out in July and began to slide along with the rapid depreciation in crude oil. The Current Account surplus is seen narrowing to 1198.3 billion yen in August as the trade side of the equation sinks into deficit. Augusts' Merchandise Trade Balance fell deeply into deficit courtesy of a sharp decline in exports to the US, with shipments down -21.8%. Overall exports grew just 0.3% versus 8.0% in the preceding month. The capital side is unlikely to be supportive: a 0.9% rise in the 10-year bond probably not enough to offer meaningful counterweight as Japanese stocks slid -1.5% while the Yen lost -1.6% in August. The service sector is set to shrink -0.8% through August, throwing the Tertiary Industry Index back into negative territory after a surprise bounce to 1.2% in July. The final revision of the Industrial Production reading is also due, with preliminary estimates pointing to a -6.9% contraction in the year to August, the worst result in nearly 5 years.

On balance, the fundamental outlook has long since faded from view as the Japanese Yen exchange rate has become a direct reflection of traders' risk sentiment amid the continuing global credit crisis. Wall Street issued a tumultuous session to end a week of historic losses with the Dow Jones benchmark index down 700 points at one time and up 300 points at another to close at an effective stalemate showing -1.5% in the red. The yen mirrored the stock market's volatility, with USDJPY trading as low as 97.89 to close the week at 100.23. Significant event risk lies ahead as next week's trading open will see forex markets price in the communiqué from Friday's G7 summit in Washington, DC. The markets may breathe a sigh of relief should the meeting produce a meaningful, coordinated response to the crisis, weighing on the yen as risk appetite mounts a comeback. Realistically, political differences make the chances of such an accord unlikely at best, so the Yen should continue to gain strength on risk aversion in the near term until the global nature of the crisis forces individual countries into pursing similar sets of policies to offer more liquidity, insure deposits, facilitate mergers and otherwise bolster the banking sector. - IS

British Pound Could Bounce, but Long-Term Forecast to the Downside

Fundamental Outlook for British Pound: Bearish

  • British Pound Tumbles as Bank of England Cuts Rates, UK announces bailout
  • Worst stock market crash in recent history sends the risk-sensitive GBP reeling
  • Interest rate and technical outlook point to further pound losses

The British Pound tumbled to end the week's trade, as the worst single-week stock market performance in recent history sent the risk-sensitive currency to fresh five-year lows. Panic across financial markets had a particularly pronounced effect on British Pound/US Dollar and British Pound/Japanese Yen currency pairs, as a flight to quality sent traders piling into the “safe-haven” US and Japanese currencies. Whether or not global financial markets may recover will likely be the primary driver of GBPUSD and GBPJPY volatility, and it will be important to watch how Asian financial markets react to a recent G7 statement addressing the ongoing financial crisis.

The Group of Seven (G7) announced that it would take “decisive action” in its attempts to support key financial institutions and “take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets”—ostensibly bullish remarks from the powerful group of world finance ministers. Yet the group's failure to back their rhetoric with concrete actions could potentially leave markets under pressure through Sunday night's Asian market open, and it will be very important to see how markets react to the news. As it stands, the British Pound continues to trade in a virtual free-fall against the Japanese Yen and similarly pronounced downtrend against the US Dollar. The Bank of England's recent rate cuts and UK government's announced bailout of major financial firms has done little to pacify British Pound markets, and one has to wonder whether any amount of government action—be it a unilateral UK attempt or G7 coordination—will be enough to satisfy panicked traders.

We can never rule out a short-term correction of British Pound weakness, but medium-term bearish momentum favors further losses in the GBPUSD and GBPJPY. A sustained GBPUSD break below the historically significant 1.7000 mark would open up a move towards key Fibonacci support at 1.6160—the 61.8 percent retracement of the British Pound's 7-year rally from 1.3700-2.1100. The 61.8 percent mark is typically considered the final major defense of a previous trend, and a move below 1.6160 would signal that the British Pound's 7-year uptrend against the US dollar is officially over. We will not get ahead of ourselves in predicting a decline below 1.6160. Yet it remains clear that fundamental and technical momentum remains to the downside for the recently-downtrodden UK currency, and our longer-term forecast remains to the downside for the British Pound/US Dollar exchange rate. – DR

Swiss Franc Just As Linked To Risk Appetite As The Dollar And Yen

Fundamental Outlook for Swiss Franc: Bullish

  • SNB joins the crowd and cuts its benchmark lending rate by 25 basis points to 2.50 percent.
  • Panic further engrains itself into the psyche of the markets and gives the Swissie additional fuel

Just like its Japanese and US counterparts, the Swiss franc is reaping the benefits of its safe haven status. Known as a perennial funding currency and a timeless harbor for capital, the currency will continue to benefit from flight to safety flows. However, with investors growing increasingly suspicious of the sanctity of any asset, the franc may come under greater pressure. Economically, Switzerland is inextricably linked to the health of the Euro Zone. In good times, this aggregate economy is seen as an ever-present trade partner; but in today's fear-riddled markets, the bureaucracy preventing the Union from enacting a sweeping bailout plan threatens to infect Switzerland just as surely as the US cold spread to Europe.

Another consideration is the fact that the franc is no longer an optimal funding currency. With an average 2.50 percent benchmark Swiss lending rate, the Japanese 0.50 percent and US 1.50 percent primary rates represent lower risk (hence the franc's drop against both of these counterparts). However, considering the massive unwinding that has already taken place, it is growing less and less likely that investors still have large amounts of capital still tied up in these very modest carry pairs (CHFJPY and USDCHF). Realistically, these specific moves are being driven by aggressive dollar and yen buying, and when these trends are curbed the Swissie will be able to rebound against the dollar (though the same conditions will likely see the currency dropping nearly everywhere else).

In the week ahead, beyond the blurry influence of risk appetite/aversion, the franc will track the efforts of the top global powers' policy decisions. This weekend's G7 meeting will be pivotal for confidence and in turn the franc. Pessimism is so deeply entrenched in the markets that it is difficult to say what actions could reestablish confidence in lending and investing; but the plan will need to address the frozen credit markets. The market is fully aware that there has been far too much leverage built up through credit through the years, and there will always be a high level of risk as long as there are multiples of derivative capital built up on a fixed amount of hard assets. A long-term solution will need to secure an orderly deleveraging while simultaneously insuring that investment is still strong in other areas. Sweeping efforts must be made on this account. So far, the UK and US plans to draw bad debt from their respective financial systems is a good step. Even better will be the New York Fed bringing its planned credit default swap clearing house to fruition and the global effort to secure all interbank lending and national bank deposits. - JK

Canadian Dollar Could Gain On Technical Retracement

Fundamental Outlook for Canadian Dollar: Bullish

  • The Canadian dollar plummeted almost 8% last week as commodity prices sold off
  • Ivey PMI was stronger than expected at 61.0, suggesting a pick up in business activity
  • The Bank of Canada cut rates by 50bps to 2.50 percent as part of a coordinated effort with other central banks

The Canadian dollar plummeted over the course of the last week as the combination of weak oil prices and a massive US dollar rally led USD/CAD to spike. Indeed, risk trends were clearly driving the market in that risk aversion led to commodities, stocks, and forex carry trades to drop while flight-to-safety led the greenback and Japanese yen higher. Given the Canadian dollar's correlation with oil, the currency faced significant bearish potential. Indeed, even surprisingly strong employment data couldn't save the Loonie, as the net employment change jumped 106.9K versus forecasts of a mild 10.0K rise. This was the best reading since record-keeping began in 1976, and suggests that Canadian domestic demand should remain robust through the end of the year.

Looking at the daily charts, the absolutely massive wick at the top of Friday's daily candle may suggest that the USD/CAD rally could run out of steam. This week, there is limited event risk out of Canada as only Manufacturing Shipments for the month of August will be released on Thursday, which would be in line with the August Ivey PMI result. Nevertheless, risk trends will likely be a better gauge of where USD/CAD goes next as a recovery in oil prices, along with dollar selling could easily allow the Canadian dollar to recoup some of its losses.

Australian Dollar May Sink Further As Commodity Sell Off Continues

Fundamental Outlook for Australian Dollar: Bearish

  • RBA Lowers Cash Target Rate by 100 bps, Surprising Markets
  • Westpac Consumer Confidence Plunged the Most in Two Years, falling 11% after a gain of 7.0%
  • Australian Employment Falls to 2,200 from 10,200 as Full Time Jobs Drop by 15,400
  • Consumer Inflation Expectations Remain at 4.4%, As Easing Oil Prices Lower Expectations

The Australian dollar continued its current downward trend as the RBA shocked markets with a 100bps cut, that would ignite a coordinated easing by several of the major central banks. The AUDUSD would drop below 0.6500 for the first time in five years before finding support. The Australian economy continues to deteriorate which led to a sharp fall in consumer confidence and the labor market. The commodity driven country has suffered as demand for raw materials has dwindled and one of the highest interest rates has curbed domestic growth. Indeed, the current dour outlook for the global economy has sunk commodity prices sending the CRB index to its lowest value in a year to 300.12, and oil below $80 per barrel.

The economic calendar will present some minor event risk given the broader economic concerns. NAB business confidence has remained at a seven year low the past two months and given the tightening of credit markets and bank failures we could see a precipitous fall in sentiment. Sinking confidence from business owners will continue to weigh on the labor market and domestic growth. The current downtrend in the economy may be spelled out tin the Westpac leading index which has slowed the past two months and as growth continues to slow it may signal that the country's 17 year economic expansion is coming to an end. The RBA's larger than expected rate cut signals that policy makers are anticipating the rate of growth to slow faster than was expected. Credit Suisse overnight index swaps are pricing in another 165 bps worth of cuts over the next twelve months and the majority of the easing may come in the next few months as market conditions worsen. Therefore, we could see continued weakness in the Australian Dollar. However, given the 2,50 point drop in this month alone, the possible future easing may be already priced in to the currency, and a resolution to the credit crisis may lead to a retracement. - JR

New Zealand Dollar Outlook Bearish As The Flight to Safety Continues

Fundamental Outlook For New Zealand Dollar: Bearish

  • Fading Demands for Carry Trades to Drag on the New Zealand dollar
  • Interest Rate Expectations Deteriorate Further, Fueling Bearish Sentiment for the Kiwi

The downturn in the global financial market paired with mounting growth concerns for the entire world has certainly taken a toll on the New Zealand dollar as investors limit their temperament for high-yielding assets. In fact, the kiwi has lost 600+ points against the U.S. dollar this week as the flight to safety continues amid falling commodity prices.

The New Zealand dollar has fallen drastically against the greenback and the Japanese yen as the financial crisis intensified despite the increased efforts by central banks all over the world. Heightened credit concerns paired with fading demands for carry-trades will continue to drag on the high-yielding currency as lenders continue to hoard cash. Indeed we saw stock market indices around the globe break below key support levels this week, and the markets may only get worse next week as credit conditions have yet to return to normal. Meanwhile, the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index showed that commodity prices have fallen 11.8% in September, which is the steepest monthly decline since record keeping began in 1956, signaling that lower prices will continue to limit the appeal of the New Zealand dollar. Furthermore, the remarkable slowdown in the global economy, as well as within the domestic economy, has certainly raised fears that economic activity will remain subdued well into the next year, with economists projecting the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to loosen its policy considerably in order to pull the nation out of its first recession since 1998.

The Credit Suisse overnight index swap for the RBNZ are showing that market participants are now anticipating the central bank to lower the benchmark interest rate by at least 200bp points over the next 12 months, which is significantly higher than last week's projection for 150bp worth of cuts. Interest rate expectations have clearly deteriorated over the past week, and will continue to press on the New Zealand dollar going forward.- DS

DailyFX

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US Dollar: Will We See A Reversal Early Next Week?
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

US Dollar: Will We See A Reversal Early Next Week?

  • US Dollar: Will We See A Reversal Next Week?
  • Euro Plummets On Fears G7 Will Not Find Solution
  • British Pound Consolidates Massive Losses - Recovery in Store?
  • Japanese Yen Trades Choppily As Financial Markets Remain Extremely Volatile

US Dollar: Will We See A Reversal Early Next Week?

Flight-to-safety triggered major gains for the US dollar on Friday, as volatility remained exceptionally high in the market. In fact, the CBOE's VIX Index surged to a record high as Moody's Investors Service said that they may cut their rating on Morgan Stanley, stoking already-high anxiety amongst traders about the health of financial and serving to create the perfect storm to spur selling in the equity markets. Indeed, S&P 500 experienced its worst week since 1933 and the DJIA had its worst week ever, and given these massive losses, the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market will reportedly try to impose a temporary ban on short sales for individual stocks that falls at least 20 percent for the following three days. As usual, these solutions are very short-sighted, and may not be beneficial in the long-term. The issue is trust between counterparties, and banks are simply hoarding cash because they don't know if the banks they'd normally lend to will be the next to fail. Trust needs to be restored before the markets can recover, and many will be looking toward the Group of Seven nations to help improve this.

Indeed, the G7 met today in Washington, but one official said that they were unlikely to adopt a commitment to guarantee loans between banks, like the UK has done. Meanwhile, there are concerns that any statement the G7 makes will not be sufficiently strong to restore confidence in the markets, as Italian Prime Minister Giulio Tremonti refused to endorse a draft, saying that it was “too weak.” As a result, these may leave Sunday's meeting of European Union leaders in Paris as a more important event. Since the start of September, Sunday has been one of the most important days in terms of financial market news. The announcements that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were being nationalized, that Merrill Lynch would be sold to Bank of America, and that Lehman was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy all fell on a Sunday. The pressure is on, but if the G7 or EU comes out with a statement that leads the credit and stock markets to stabilize a bit, the US dollar could see a sharp reversal lower.

Euro Plummets On Fears G7 Will Not Find Solution

The euro hit the lowest levels in over a year before finally hitting support at the 6/13/07 low of 1.3263. Indeed, fears of a financial market meltdown drove the US dollar higher across the majors as the G7 failing to announce significant commentary during the day. In fact, the only news regarding the G7 meeting was generally negative, with Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti refusing to endorse a draft statement, saying that it was “too weak.” Meanwhile, comments by Italian President Silvio Berlusconi saying that they discussed “suspending the markets for the time it takes to rewrite the rules” sent stock markets diving lower. Mr. Berlusconi later rescinded his statement, saying he didn't mean it, but the reaction of the markets highlights how incredibly important it is for official to issue a strong statement or plan in the near-term. As a result, a meeting of European Union members on Sunday will be key to where EUR/USD goes next. Given the sharp reversal in EUR/USD from 1.3260 on Friday, I think there's some bullish potential for the pair early next week, unless the G7 and European Union meetings fail to yield anything that boosts investor sentiment.

British Pound Consolidates Massive Losses - Recovery in Store?

The British pound held to a range of 1.6900 - 1.7150 on Friday, holding up fairly well versus the dollar compared to currencies like the euro, which plunged. For once, the UK is looking to be somewhat ahead of the curve as they have enacted aggressive policies meant to stabilize the markets. Though it did not prevent the FTSE 100 from falling, as the index closed down 8.85 percent, the UK government announced plans on Wednesday for a 50 billion pound strategy to partly nationalize at least eight British banks. Furthermore, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling proposed that nations should guarantee lending between banks, either by turning central banks into clearing houses for the loans or having governments back them. The suggestion has not been ruled out by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, which may signal that the plan could actually be enacted. Next week on October 14, the September reading of the UK Consumer Price Index is forecasted to accelerate to an annual rate of 5.0 percent from 4.7 percent, as is also anticipated by the Bank of England. While these expectations did not stop them from cutting rates on October 8 by 50bps to 4.50 percent in a coordinated effort with central banks like the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, and Bank of Canada, among others, stronger than expected CPI results could lead the British pound could rise. On the other hand, a weaker than forecasted result could weigh on the currency.

Japanese Yen Trades Choppily As Financial Markets Remain Extremely Volatile

The Japanese yen gained quite a bit during the Asian trading session, but simply consolidated for much of the European and US trading session, suggesting the currency may be a bit overbought. Indeed, volatility was extreme by every measure, as the VIX hit its highest level on record. The predominant issue in the markets right now is the severe lack of confidence in the markets, and that is why the billions of dollars in liquidity injections by the world's central banks haven't really made a dent in deteriorating credit conditions. It is clear that investors remain very jittery, leaving traders unlikely to pile back into carry trades like the Japanese yen crosses. My long-term bias for the Japanese yen: bullish. However, if we see some sort of announcement over the weekend saying that governments will guarantee bank lending, the Japanese yen could fall back.

DailyFX

Disclaimer

Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources.


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G7 Issues Joint Statement On Addressing Financial Crisis
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

G7 Issues Joint Statement On Addressing Financial Crisis

The Group of Seven (G7) issued a joint statement following its meeting in Washington DC addressing the ongoing financial crisis. The text is copied below.

"The G-7 agrees today that the current situation calls for urgent and exceptional action. We commit to continue working together to stabilize financial markets and restore the flow of credit, to support global economic growth. We agree to:

1. Take decisive action and use all available tools to support systemically important financial institutions and prevent their failure.

2. Take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets and ensure that banks and other financial institutions have broad access to liquidity and funding.

3. Ensure that our banks and other major financial intermediaries, as needed, can raise capital from public as well as private sources, in sufficient amounts to re-establish confidence and permit them to continue lending to households and businesses.

4. Ensure that our respective national deposit insurance and guarantee programs are robust and consistent so that our retail depositors will continue to have confidence in the safety of their deposits.

5. Take action, where appropriate, to restart the secondary markets for mortgages and other securitized assets. Accurate valuation and transparent disclosure of assets and consistent implementation of high quality accounting standards are necessary.

The actions should be taken in ways that protect taxpayers and avoid potentially damaging effects on other countries. We will use macroeconomic policy tools as necessary and appropriate. We strongly support the IMF’s critical role in assisting countries affected by this turmoil. We will accelerate full implementation of the Financial Stability Forum recommendations and we are committed to the pressing need for reform of the financial system. We will strengthen further our cooperation and work with others to accomplish this plan."

DailyFX

Disclaimer

Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources.


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What Triggered the Major Volatility in FX and Equities?
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

What Triggered the Major Volatility in FX and Equities?

TODAY'S BIGGEST PERCENTAGE MOVERS

  • AUD/USD (-444 pips or -6.46%)
  • AUD/JPY ( -390 pips or -5.70%)
  • EUR/AUD (+1065 pips or 5.46%)

THE STORIES IN THE CURRENCY MARKET

  • USD: WHAT TRIGGERED THE MAJOR VOLATILITY IN CARRY TRADES AND EQUITIES?
  • EUR: EURO HITS LOWEST LEVEL SINCE MARCH 2007
  • GBP: BRITISH POUND: BIG WEEK AHEAD
  • JPY: CARRY TRADES TUMBLE AS VIX HITS RECORD HIGHS
  • CAD: RECORD EMPLOYMENT GROWTH FAILS TO HELP CANADIAN DOLLAR
  • AUD: BREAKS 0.65
  • NZD: FALLS 9.6% THIS WEEK

EXPECTATIONS FOR UPCOMING FED MEETINGS

 GFT Forex

** PERCENTAGES MAY NOT ADD UP TO 100% BECAUSE OF THE PROBABILITY OF LARGER OR SMALLER MOVES BEYOND THOSE SHOWN ON THIS TABLE

WHAT TRIGGERED THE MAJOR VOLATILITY IN CARRY TRADES AND EQUITIES?

The price action in the equity markets today was nothing short of impressive. We literally had a W shaped trading day where stocks opened down 600 points, rallied back into positive territory, sold off again by another 600 points before recovering most of its losses by the end day. The volatility that we have seen in the currency market is only an extension of the movements in equities. On an intraday basis, the Dow saw a 1000 point swing, with stocks up as much as 300 points in the last hour of trading. Two very different factors drove the sharp reversal - no one wanted to be short carry trades going into the G7 meeting and the money from the Lehman credit default swaps are coming back into the markets.

The Case for a Bounce Next Week

Even though the economy could still be in for more trouble over the coming months, there is a case for a major bounce next week. Many people are arguing that this week's sell-off in stocks is tied to the need to raise cash to settle the Lehman Brothers' credit default swaps. For those who bought protection against a bankruptcy on Lehman brothers, they are set to get 91.375 cents on the dollar. The sellers of the protection will now have to make cash payments of more than $270 billion to the buyers. As the money changes hands, those who have bought protection could now put their payments to work in the equity markets which could pave the way for a serious bounce.

Will the G7 Come Up With a Grand Plan?

There is big hope for this weekend's G7 and G20 meetings. Unfortunately with expectations running very high, there is a chance that the G7 could disappoint. Unlike the weekend meetings in the US that led to the AIG bailout and the creation of the TARP program, the world's largest economies are getting together to come up with a plan that could stabilize the financial markets. This could be the most significant G7 meeting since the 1985 Plaza Accord. The crisis has now gone global and a global response is needed. Unfortunately, investors have become increasingly desensitized to the groundbreaking measures introduced domestically and internationally, so it could take a lot to convince banks to start lending to each other. Grand plans are hard to come by and the G7 may just insist on tailoring solutions to their own countries which could be a big disappointment to the equity and currency markets. Italy has already said that the G7 draft is weak and needs to strengthen which confirms the possibility there could be a disappointment. In that case, there could be weakness for equities, USD/JPY and other Japanese Yen crosses. The EUR/USD and GBP/USD could come under pressure if there is aggressive selling in EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY just as we have seen today. If the G7 manages to come up with a grand plan, there is case a for a major relief rally in USD/JPY and other carry trades. Some ideas being floated around include bank recapitalization, equity or FX intervention and unsecured lending by central banks. Ultimately, it will be up to the market to decide if enough is enough with the aggressive selling because the flush that we have seen in the past week is no longer driven by economic fundamentals.

A Look at P/E Ratios: Are Stocks Becoming Good Values?

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen more than 40 percent over the past year, leaving many investors wondering whether stocks have finally become cheap. Price to Earnings or P/E ratios has fallen to the lowest level in 23 years. With the S&P 500 trading at 860, the estimated P/E ratio according to the NY Times was just below 12. Over the past century, the average P/E ratio was approximately 15.5. According to a study by Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller, the P/E ratios in the UK and Germany have fallen to levels that have only been seen 4 or 5 times in 150 years. From that perspective, P/E levels have fallen significantly but it is important to remember that earnings are expected to decline and P/E ratios always fall below the average in recessions. If economic conditions are as bad as the stagflationary period of the 1970s, then P/E levels could still fall to single digits. USD/JPY is due for a bounce, but in the long run, the prospect of further rate cuts from the US should continue to drive the currency pair lower. In addition to the G7 meeting, we are expecting US producer prices, consumer prices, retail sales, manufacturing and housing market reports next week.

BRITISH POUND: BIG WEEK AHEAD

It has been a brutal week for the British pound. The currency pair came under another round of selling that it took it below 1.70 against the US dollar to hit a low of 1.6781. It has since rebounded, but the intraday volatility has been significant. The market continues to be disappointed by the UK's handling of the current economic crisis. After coordinated rate cuts by the UK, US, and Euro-zone, GBP/USD traders were still left with the idea that the British government has waited too long, and done too little, to prevent a disastrous recession. Even though this week's major development was the rate cut and the bailout plan, the UK also saw an expanding trade deficit. Next week's schedule is filled with many key economic reports, including the Employment Numbers, the Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index. These reports could give a further gauge into how radically the BoE will be able to pursue further monetary easing.

EURO HITS LOWEST LEVEL SINCE MARCH 2007

After range trading for most of the week, the EUR/USD fell to the lowest level since March 2007. The coordinated rate decision earlier this week has given traders little reason to favor one currency against the other but the initial sell-off in stocks triggered a massive demand for US dollars. Like the UK, Germany and France are both expecting inflation numbers next week. Germany's economic schedule also includes the ZEW Sentiment Survey, as well as further inflation barometers such as Producer Prices and Import Prices. The ECB has largely abandoned its inflation only viewpoint, adding growth concerns into its economic policy decision. Therefore the effect of rising inflation will be a limited concern due to the current market crisis. Monthly inflation expectations for both Germany and France are expected to be unchanged. It is likely that because of growth concerns and tame inflation we will see another rate cut within the next few months.

CARRY TRADES TUMBLE AS VIX HITS RECORD HIGHS

As the VIX reaches historical highs, there has been an extreme break-down of carry trades. Over the past 3months, the yen has had a 90% correlation with the volatility index and volatility is bad for carry trades. AUD/JPY has made itself the prime example of such a development, continuing this week's losses by falling 6.25% or 420 pips. After hitting a low of 98.00, trading in USD/JPY has rebounded significantly, apparently due to marginal gains in US indices and the technical aspect of being extremely oversold. The recent rebound in the Dow has lifted the pair over 100 points on the day. Nevertheless, the Japanese economy has become almost the safe haven of risk aversion as we have yet to see a significant impact from the global economic crisis. It is safe to say the BoJ has little reason to cut rates as they are already at low levels. In the midst of a market that values currencies based on which one cuts rates the least, the yen has made a stand as one of the strongest. The most important releases next week are the Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index and the Trade Balance. The outcome of the G7 meeting will also play a big role in the price action of the Japanese Yen.

RECORD EMPLOYMENT GROWTH FAILS TO HELP CANADIAN DOLLAR

Canadian employment numbers, released this morning blew away expectations. The market was looking for 10k new jobs but instead, the country reported a record 106.9k job growth. The weakness in the Canadian dollar continues to stem from fears that a Canadian bank will collapse. In accordance with current trends, USD/CAD is up more than 7.0% this week. The economic calendar for the coming week is light for all 3 commodity producing currencies. The Australian dollar was the worst performing major currency with a 16 percent decline this week. According to Purchase Power Parity, the AUD/USD is now undervalued. Even though the validity of these numbers is often questioned, it is an interesting way to see how trends have progressed because the currency was still considered overvalued last week. Next week's news releases do not hold any important new economic developments. Despite yesterday's unchanged trading, the Kiwi is once again losing ground against the dollar, shedding more than 9% this week. A lack of news announcements has seen the Kiwi fall due to the overwhelming flight from the commodity currencies. Sunday, we expect New Zealand Retail Sales which may give us a sense into whether these losses are warranted.

GBP/USD: Currency in Play On Monday

GBP/USD will be our currency in play on Monday. The UK is expecting Producer Price Index figures Monday at 4:30 am ET or 8:30 GMT. Heightening inflation expectations could spell new problems for the BoE.

The currency pair remains in the sell zone as determined by Bollinger Bands. Today's price action has been volatile in both directions, but has ended up near the day's open with a modest gain. To find potential support it takes weekly and monthly charts, as opposed to daily ones. We found support levels by drawing a Fibonacci retracement from the lows in early 2001 to the high in early 2007. Support will be the 61.8% retracement at 1.6539. We will use the same Fibonacci retracement to locate resistance at the 50.0% retracement or 1.7421. The level is met with the one-standard deviation Bollinger band, further cementing the strength of the level.

GFT Forex

Kathy Lien
http://www.gftforex.com

DISCLAIMER: GFT refers to Global Futures & Forex, Ltd. and all of its divisions, branches and subsidiaries, including Global Forex Trading and GFT Global Markets UK Limited. GFT Global Markets UK Limited is authorized and regulated by the United Kingdom Financial Services Authority. Each investment product is offered only to and from jurisdictions where solicitation and sale are lawful. Trading of foreign exchange contracts, contracts for differences, derivatives and other investment products which are leveraged, can carry a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. It is possible to lose more than the initial investment. In Australia, GFT means Global Futures & Forex, Ltd. ARBN 103 508 461, AFS Licence 226625. A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) is available at www.gft.com.au. You should read and consider the PDS before making any decision to deal in GFT products. © 2008 Global Futures & Forex, Ltd. All rights reserved.


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USD and JPY Gain on Worst Stock Rout since 1930s
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

USD and JPY Gain on Worst Stock Rout since 1930s

The dollar rose against most major currencies Friday. The yen fell modestly and other key currencies cut losses after US stocks partly recovered from steep losses on hopes that the G-7 will take coordinated steps this weekend to confront the global financial crisis. The Australian and Canadian dollars dropped as commodity prices plunged. Our long Australian dollar stopped out with a small loss, but our short Canadian dollar position gained as the loonie suffered one of the biggest weekly and daily declines ever. Sterling fell modestly but managed to stay above support at 1.70.

The EUR/USD fell for the week following the deepening global credit crunch and the worst US stock market route since 1930s. Investors are fleeing risky assets. The pair broke the 1.35 support today and fell to a multimonth low of 1.3258 before paring losses. The pair is in a strong downtrend. The asset implosion and deleveraging will likely continue to pressure the EUR/USD. There are supports in the 1.32 and 1.30 areas. Minor resistance is at 1.35 and significant resistance is at 1.39-1.40.

Financial and Economic News and Comments

US & Canada

The US trade deficit in goods and services fell 3.5% to $59.14 billion in August, following July's revised $61.31 billion deficit, the Commerce Department said. Exports declined 2.0%, the biggest decline in four years, to $164.7 billion. Imports fell 2.4% to $223.9 billion, mainly reflecting the decline in oil.

US import prices fell 3.0% m/m in September, the largest drop since April 2003, data from the Labor Department showed. Petroleum import prices tumbled 9.0% m/m; prices excluding petroleum declined 0.9% m/m. Export prices declined 1.0% m/m. Import and export prices rose 14.5% y/y and 6.8% y/y, respectively.

Canada's employment increased 106,900 in September, the biggest one-month employment gain in at least 30 years and more than 10 times as the expected, following August's 15,200 gain, data from Statistics Canada showed. The unemployment rate remained at 6.1%. Canada added 276,800 workers since September 2007, a 1.6% y/y increase. The employment gain will possibly help Conservative Party Prime Minister Stephen Harper for the October 14 election.

Canada's trade surplus rose to $5.8 billion in August from $4.2 billion in July, Statistics Canada said. Imports fell 5.8% to $37.3 billion in August, the first decline since March 2008 and the largest percentage drop since December 1991. Exports decreased 1.6% to $43.1 billion, the first drop since December 2007.

Canada's new housing prices were unchanged m/m in August, with the new housing price index remaining at 158.6, Statistics Canada reported. Housing prices rose 2.3% y/y in August compared with 2.7% y/y in July. Regionally, housing prices rose at the fastest pace in St. John's with a 23.7% y/y increase.

In a bid to ease higher borrowing costs that have crippled lending, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., a government-run agency, will buy as much as C$25 billion ($21.6 billion) in mortgages from the banks, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said.

Europe

Germany is working on a plan to recapitalize its major banks that could include taking government stakes and measures to guarantee banks' access to liquidity. No final decision had been taken yet, but Chancellor Angela Merkel's government could take a decision on the plan and announce it as early as this weekend.

European Central Bank council member Christian Noyer said the ECB's decision to offer banks unlimited cash in its money market operations may “dramatically” improve confidence in the European banking system. “I do hope that once it is fully understood and proven its effects, it will change dramatically and decisively the mood in the money market,” Noyer said on Bloomberg Television. “It's a very powerful decision that the ECB has taken.”

Asia-Pacific

Foreign direct investment in China rose 39.9% y/y in the first nine months of the year and spending by overseas companies climbed to $74.4 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said.

Yamato Life Insurance Co., a 98- year-old Japanese insurer, filed for bankruptcy in Japan's first bankruptcy in the industry in seven years, with debts exceeding assets by ¥11.5 billion ($116 million). Yamato's collapse is the eighth by a Japanese life insurer since World War II, and the fifth largest this year, according to Teikoku Databank Ltd.

FX Strategy Update

EUR/USD USD/JPY GBP/USD USD/CHF USD/CAD AUD/USD EUR/JPY
Primary Trend Negative Neutral Negative Neutral Negative Neutral Neutral
Secondary Trend Negative Negative Negative Positive Positive Negative Negative
Outlook Negative Negative Negative Positive Positive Negative Negative
Action Sell Sell None None Buy Stopped Out None
Current 1.3409 100.20 1.7042 1.1337 1.1803 0.6478 134.41
Start Position 1.3803 109.45 N/A N/A 1.1268 0.6628 N/A
Objective N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Stop 1.4120 106.75 N/A N/A N/A 0.6400 N/A
Support 1.3250 98.00 1.7000 1.1000 1.0800 0.6400 130.00
1.3000 96.00 1.6600 1.0600 1.0600 0.6300 125.00
Resistance 1.3500 103.00 1.8000 1.1500 1.2000 0.8000 145.00
1.4000 105.50 1.8500 1.1900 1.2500 0.8500 150.00

Hans Nilsson
Capital Market Services, L.L.C.
www.cmsfx.com

©C2004-2005 Globicus International, Inc. and Capital Market Services, L.L.C. Any information in this report is based on data obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but no representations or guarantees are made by Capital Market Services, L.L.C. with regard to the accuracy of the data. The opinions and estimates contained herein constitute our best judgment at this date and time, and are subject to change without notice. Capital Market Services, L.L.C. accepts no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any expense, loss or damages arising out of, or in any way connected with, the use of all or any part of this report. No part of this report may be reproduced or distributed in any manner without the permission of Capital Market Services, L.L.C.


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Global Stocks Plunge as Panic Grips World's Financial Markets
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

Global Stocks Plunge as Panic Grips World's Financial Markets

Global Stocks Plunge

Following the fall in US stocks yesterday, the Japanese Nikkei Index fell almost 10% in its first hour of trading. It closed the day down 9.6%. The sell-off flowed into the European markets as the key London index was down 8.8% and the DJ Stoxx 600 showed European stocks closing more than 7%.

GBP/JPY - Pound SLides 1000 Pips From Yesterday's High to Today's Low at 166

The Pound-Yen pair continued its decent. From yesterday's high near 176 the pair sank all the way to 166, a 1,000 pip move in less than 24 hours. It did find support there and recovered to 172 after the NY open only to have it act as resistance and push the pair back down.

EUR/CHF - Euro Slides vs Fran on Risk Aversion

The Euro-Swiss Franc pair slid 370 pips overnight, accelerating its fall that had been more tempered during the middle of the week. The pair, which is a favorite for carry trade in European circles slid to support near 1.5075 as stocks fell overnight.

USD/JPY - Dollar To Finish the Week Around 500 Pips Lower vs Yen

In the first minutes following the NY open, the Dow industrials plunged nearly 700 points to trade below the 8,000 mark for the first time since April 1, 2003, though stocks bounced back in the following hour. After that however, stocks resumed their downfall, with the Dow index down almost 400 points by 1 PM EST. The Dollar-Yen pair fell 300 pips from yesterday's peak overnight, but traded higher in the NY session. The pair opened the week at 105 and by noon EST was down 550 pips, so the selling momentum in this pair seems to have faded after the Asian session.

US Trade Deficit Narrows on Fall in Oil Imports

In fundamental news, the US trade deficit shrank in August as both exports and imports fell. Imports were down as oil prices decreased, and there was less crude oil purchased amid a weakening economy. The trade deficit amounted to $59.14 billion, a 3.5% decrease from July's revised figure. With the its major trading partners slowing, the US saw exports decline by 2%.

US Import Prices Decline by 3% in September

US import prices tumbled at their fastest pace in nearly 5 years in September. The 3% fall follows a downwardly revised 2.6% drop in August. Last month's decline was the largest since April 2003. The easing in import prices suggests that producer and consumer prices will also fall.

EUR/USD - Euro Falls Through Recent Line of Support

The Euro-Dollar pair broke its recent line of support in late trading yesterday and the Euro pared all of its gains from the last 3 sessions falling back below 1.35. With the financial turmoil continuing investors are looking to the safety of US treasuries.

CAN Employment Jumps on Part Time Work

In Canada, employment increased by 107K in September, though 97K of that was due to an increase in part-time work. The unemployment rate remained at 6.1% when forecasts had it edging up.

CAN Trade Surplus Expans as Fall in Imports Outpaces Fall in Exports

The Canadian trade surplus increased to C$5.8 billion in August, as imports declined 5.8% due to lower imports of energy and automotive products. Exports were down 1.6%, so the overall balance moved in Canada's favor.

CAN New House Prices Flat in August

In a third release, the new housing price index saw flat growth for the month of August, and increased 2.3% compared to a year ago. That continues a pace of decelerating price growth in the Canadian housing market.

USD/CAD - Loonie Continues its Freefall

Despite the better than expected jobs and trade news, the US Dollar-Canadian Dollar pair jumped almost 500 pips from its open to test the 1.20 level. In the last 3 days alone the pair has jumped 1000 pips as fears of a global recession pressured commodity prices which in turn have hurt commodity currencies such as the Loonie.

Next Week

Finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven nations began meeting today in Washington, and are expected to begin hammering out a round of coordinated, uniform measures to try and stem this crisis. On Monday, the US celebrates Columbus day and banks will be closed. Later in the week the US will release data on producer and consumer prices and retail sales.

Capital Market Services, L.L.C.
www.cmsfx.com

©C2004-2005 Globicus International, Inc. and Capital Market Services, L.L.C. Any information in this report is based on data obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but no representations or guarantees are made by Capital Market Services, L.L.C. with regard to the accuracy of the data. The opinions and estimates contained herein constitute our best judgment at this date and time, and are subject to change without notice. Capital Market Services, L.L.C. accepts no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any expense, loss or damages arising out of, or in any way connected with, the use of all or any part of this report. No part of this report may be reproduced or distributed in any manner without the permission of Capital Market Services, L.L.C.


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Dow Jones Loses for Eighth Consecutive Trading Day - Worst Streak Since September, 2001
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

Dow Jones Loses for Eighth Consecutive Trading Day - Worst Streak Since September, 2001

The US Dow Jones Industrials Average recovered from its earlier drop below the critical 8,000 mark, but the 1.49 percent daily decline was the eighth such loss in as many days - the Dow's worst streak since the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The stock index has not lost for nine consecutive trading days since February of 1978 - offering the theoretical possibility that it could see a bounce through Tuesday's market open. Yet the lack of concrete action in a statement from the G7 could mean that Asian markets open to sharp volatility through Sunday night, and it is less than clear if we may expect any sort of Dow Jones bounce through the near term.

DailyFX

Disclaimer

Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources.


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Why is the Canadian Dollar Weak?
Forex Fundamental Analysis Reports

Why is the Canadian Dollar Weak?

The Canadian Dollar plunged to its lowest levels in over three years, as an outright rout in crude oil prices and broader commodity markets led to a similarly dramatic rally in the US Dollar/Canadian dollar exchange rate. The Canadian currency likewise fell victim to broader US dollar strength, as the previously-downtrodden Greenback was the best performer among G10 currencies through the day's clear financial market duress. Indeed, US Dow Jones Industrials Average tumbles perhaps counter-intuitively further fueled the USD's ascent, and further dollar gains would bode poorly for the Canadian dollar's exchange rate against its US namesake.

The Canadian dollar has proven especially sensitive to movements in broader commodity markets, and indeed we see that the USDCAD's correlation with the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Commodity Index is near its strongest levels in at least 10 years.

Thus whether or not the Canadian dollar may recover from its recent tumbles may largely depend on whether commodities can bounce from recent lows. Even gold - typically seen as a safe-haven store of value - has fallen substantially on a clear de-leveraging across global financial asset classes.

DailyFX

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