Category Archive: 4.) Marc to Market

Great Graphic: Canadian Dollar Resilience in Face of 7% Drop in Oil

This Great Graphic, composed on Bloomberg, shows two-time series.  The white line is the premium the US government pays to borrow over the Canadian government for two years.  The yellow line the US dollar against the Canadian dollar.   Even th...

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Is Atlas Shrugging in Davos?

The World Economic Forum is underway in Davos.  The global capital markets are off to one of their worst years ever,  the threat of terrorism hangs over us, like the Sword of Damocles, GDP growth, except in a few countries, is not keeping pace with population growth.   As  2500 rich, powerful, and famous (mostly) … Continue reading...

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Markets Resume New Year Slide

The market meltdown is extending into the third consecutive week.  Once again, the attempt to stabilize has failed, and bottom pickers have been punished. It is easy to line up poor news developments, including IMF cutting world growth on the same day that the IEA warns of an extended glut in the oil market, the … Continue reading »

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Tomorrow’s News Today

There are three important economic events tomorrow.    The UK will release its December employment report and November weekly earnings data.  The US reports December CPI.  The Bank of Canada meets, and is widely expected to be the first centra...

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Central Bank’s Dovish Tilt Will Weigh on Brazilian Assets

(from my colleague Dr. Win Thin) Brazilian central bank President Tombini said it will take into account the IMF’s revised forecasts for a deeper recession when it meets this week to decide on policy. Sorry, but we don’t buy it. No central bank should ever be affected by IMF forecasts. Yes, the IMF has great …

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AIIB Launched, but Threat to Dollar Exaggerated

The China-sponsored Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank was formally launched over the weekend.  Many observers have seen it as a rival to the World Bank.  Others saw in another vehicle that would be used to facilitate the internationalization of the Chinese yuan.  We have consistently argued that these ideas are a serious exaggeration. News that AIIB …

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Collective Sigh of Relief in Capital Markets or Turnaround Tuesday?

The relentless pounding that investors suffered in the first two weeks of the year has subsided.  It is too early to have much confidence that a turn is at hand.  By various measures, the sell-off had stretched the technical condition.     I...

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Emerging Markets: Week Ahead Preview

EM ended last week on a sour note. The most important factor for global risk appetite has become China, with the Fed tightening cycle now on the back burner.  Our base case remains that China muddles through, but policymakers there need to commu...

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Trying to Get One’s Bearings

The market is trying to get its bearings today. The large decline in the US equities before the weekend has had modest spillover effects elsewhere.  Equity markets, barring the Shanghai and Shenzhen Composites, are mostly modestly lower.  The M...

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Week Ahead: What Will It Take to Stabilize the Capital Markets?

Two weeks into the year and most investors are nursing sizable drawdowns.  The recovery in the US equities on January 14 looked like a potential turning point. However, the coattails proved non-existent, and the bull trap was sprung with new downside momentum established before the weekend. The obvious takeaway is that the current driver is not …

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Weekly Speculative Positions: Boosted Long Yen Positions, but Mostly Trimmed Exposures

Speculative activity in the CME currency futures picked up in the latest reporting period. There were six significant gross position adjustments, which in our work is more than 10k contracts.   The gross short speculative euro position was reduced by 17.9k contracts, leaving 209.6k. Since early December, 53k gross short euro contracts were covered.  During the same …

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Outlook for the Dollar: Dissecting the Bull

The US dollar remains strong against most currencies.  The exceptions are the Japanese yen, Swiss franc and euro though the franc and euro pulled back in the US afternoon before the weekend.  The greenback is still appreciating on a trade-weighted basis, which is the metric that counts in assessing its impact on the overall economy.   …

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Emerging Markets: What has Changed

1) The Hong Kong dollar posted its biggest two-day decline since 1992 2) Bank Indonesia restarted its easing cycle, cutting rates for the first time since February 2015 3) Poland’s current Monetary Policy Council (RPP) held its last policy meeti...

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When it Rains, It Pours

There are three developments today, which while not driving the market, are important for many investors.  The first are comments from German Finance Minister Schaeuble and EC President Juncker.  The second is an important development in Poland.   The third are growing problems in Greece. Schaeuble is formally acknowledging what investors have known for some time. The …

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A Bloody Friday

The recovery of US shares and oil yesterday provided short-lived.  Asian shares were dragged lower with the help of Chinese equities.  The 3.5% fall in the Shanghai Composite today brings the year-to-date decline to a little more than 18%. Taiw...

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Great Graphic: S&P and Oil–Conjoined Twins or Distant Cousins that Sometimes Look Alike?

The US stock market and the oil market appear joined at the hip. The Great Graphic here, created on Bloomberg, shows the correlation of the two markets.  It is near 0.77, which is the highest since September 2013.   The correlation was condu...

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When Loons Cry: Will the Bank of Canada Cut Rates Next Week?

Speculation is mounting that the Bank of Canada will be the first major central bank to cut rates this year.  It meets on January 20.  The combination of the drop in oil prices (40% since mid-October) and the erosion of the business outlook has boosted the risk of a cut next week.   The bitumen from … Continue reading »

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Market Turmoil Continues, Risk Shunned

Investors still have not found solid footing this year.  Equity markets have continued to sink, even though China's equities advanced.  Bond markets are mostly firmer, with the US 10-year yield seemingly being drawn back toward 2.0%.  Oil prices are little changed, after Brent slipped to marginal new lows.   There is much talk about the Iranian …

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Is Sterling almost Done Being Pounded?

Sterling fell 4.25% from the high on December 28 to yesterday.  It has been confined to yesterday's range today.   After finishing below the lower Bollinger Band yesterday, it has moved back into the band today.  The Bank of England meets tomo...

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Fishing for a Bottom to Dollar-Yen

While the euro often carves out a bottom, the dollar's lows against the yen are frequently characterized by spikes.  That was the case, for example in the middle of October and late-August and the low (~JPY115.60) in December 2014.  Such a spike may ...

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