Categotry Archives: News Flash – Market Movements

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Keeping a foot in both camps: how to make money from Russian bonds without violating the Western anti-Russian

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Categories: Investment Recommendations

Western banks want to make money from Russian bonds, but without violating the Western anti-Russian sanctions regime, Russian media reported.

Western banks have asked the Russian government for guarantees that Eurobonds money will not go to company under sanctions, a banking source close to the matter told RBK.According to the source, currently the potential deal involves several major Russian banks as well as foreign banks, including Swiss and Chinese.

The information was later confirmed to RBK by a Russian banking source and sources in European banks.

“US banks has especially insisted on these terms because they are very interested in buying Russian bonds,” one of the sources said.

Another source said that the terms were proposed to bypass restrictions imposed by the US Treasury Department. It warned banks off buying Russian bonds.

Washington explained that buying Russian debt would breach the policy of sanctions against Moscow, according to The Wall Street Journal.

“Banks and the Russian Finance Ministry discussed the guarantees. Officials were ready to include them in the deal,” the Russian banking source said.

The terms of the negotiations and the issue date have been kept confidential. It was reported that in February the Russian government sent offers to 25 foreign and three Russian banks. On February 24, the ministry closed the application window.

Deputy Finance Minister Sergei Storchak said that many American and European banks did not answer to the proposal. However he underscored that there were many other possible partners for Russia.

For example, a representative of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China said the bank had submitted an application and would participate in the bond issue.While American banks have already decided to stay away from Russian bonds there is still a chance that European banks will join the deal.

“The Finance Ministry may try issuing Euro-denominated bonds,” one of the sources assumed.

In March, Financial Times reported citing a source that Brussels warned European banks off buying Russian debt. Bloomberg also reported that Russia could delay bond issue until it finds the operators.

Read more:

How to make money from Russian bonds

US dollars and rubles inside a currency exchange office of a Sberbank

 

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Crash Warning – near sight!

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Categories: News Flash - Market Movements, News Flash World Economy, Tags: , , ,

I feel it’s time to give you an advance warning of a market crash on the near horizon.

Bonds:

Long-term bonds first began plunging this year in Japan. Then, the crash spread to the U.S. and abroad.

And just this past week or so, it began to accelerate in a big way. In fact, the price of U.S. Treasuries have sunk so rapidly that 5-year notes suffered their worst one-day percentage drop in recorded history, as their yields surged.

Meanwhile, bonds of emerging market countries have plunged across the board. And even the bond market of cash-rich China saw chaos this week.

And today, bonds of every shape and color — including municipal bonds, mortgage bonds, corporate bonds and U.S. government agency bonds — are taking still another beating.

In a long time I have been telling this, that what we’ve seen so far could be just the opening act in a global drama of historic dimensions.

Reason: Central banks may be forced to wind down what has been the most reckless money-printing-bond-buying scheme of all time.

Moreover, even if central banks continue printing money like crazy, the law of diminishing returns has already begun to strike, says Mike: The more bonds that central banks buy up, the less they get for their money in terms of lowering bond yields.

Commodities:

Gold has just plunged by the most in two years. Silver, palladium, platinum and most commodities have also been smacked down. We’re now very close to a major bottom in gold, probably in the $1,100-$1,200 per-ounce area, setting the stage for the next phase in gold’s bull market to $5,000 and beyond.

Stocks:

The sequence of events we’re witnessing today is uncannily similar to that of 1987: Japanese bonds crashed in April of that year. Then the crash spread to U.S. mortgage bonds, and next to U.S. Treasuries and bonds globally.

Five months later, U.S. bank stocks fell off a cliff. And in the following month, the Dow suffered its worst one-day crash in history.

Will this pattern repeat itself in 2013-2014? If so, how long will the time lag be this time? Will the stock market decline be just a sharp correction followed by a new upswing as in 1987? Or will it mark the beginning of a new long-term bear market?

I think in a very short term we will see what is the scenario to count on. Stay tuned and be careful out there.

 

Have a safe trading

Erik

 

 

 

 

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Frontier Currencies Irresistible as Naira Yields More

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Categories: Forex Capital Today, News Flash - Market Movements, Tags: , , ,

Hello Investors,readers,

Interesting article I read the other day about interest rates and how the money flows towards alternative markets to achieve higher yield on the investment capital.

Foreign-exchange traders, faced with lower volatility and record-low interest rates in the U.S., Europe, the U.K. and Japan, are searching for returns as far afield as Kazakhstan and Nigeria.

Investec Asset Management Ltd., which trades currencies of nations from Colombia to Uganda, said demand for assets in so- called frontier markets increased in the past six months. The Cambridge Strategy (Asset Management) Ltd. invested in the Nigerian naira from December to February. Money manager Adrian Lee & Partners will add positions in six currencies, including Kazakhstan’s tenge and the Kenyan shilling by the end of the second quarter.

Investors are pouring cash into countries rich in commodities or with high growth rates after Europe’s debt crisis prompted them to seek the safety of the dollar and the yen in 2011. Kenya’s shilling is up 29 percent since October from a record low and Chile’s peso has advanced 6.2 percent against the dollar this year. Now, traders risk central-bank action to counter currency appreciation as nations become overwhelmed by a market that dwarfs their economies.

“We have seen an increase in demand and interest in frontier currencies and emerging market currencies versus the majors,” Thanos Papasavvas, head of currency management in London at Investec, which oversees about $88 billion, said in a March 21 phone interview. “It’s not just a search for yield that has led to the increase in demand for these currencies, it’s also about stronger and improving fundamentals and better valuations.”
Colombian Rally

Investec trades the currencies of Chile, Colombia, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Uganda, Ukraine, Vietnam and Zambia, Papasavvas said.

Colombia, where mining helped the economy expand 5.9 percent last year and the benchmark interest rate is 5.25 percent, saw its peso strengthen more than 10 percent this year, tied with Poland’s zloty for the most among more than 170 currencies tracked by Bloomberg.

Its government said last month it will keep at least $1 billion of dividends from state-run oil producer Ecopetrol SA abroad to avoid adding to gains in the peso. It doesn’t rule out further steps to curb currency strength, Finance Minister Juan Carlos Echeverry told reporters in Bogota March 20.
‘Destabilizing’ Flows

Countries from Brazil to Switzerland have already taken steps to weaken exchange rates to protect exports and domestic industry. Brazil, Latin America’s largest economy, has sold dollars and broadened taxes on foreign loans and bonds issued outside the nation as part of measures to shield the real from foreign inflows. The Swiss National Bank introduced a cap of 1.20 francs per euro in September to limit its strength.

“Short-term capital flows can be destabilizing and I wouldn’t be surprised to see more countries fight that,” Dale Thomas, head of currency management in London at Insight Investment Management Ltd., which oversees about $267 billion in assets, said in a telephone interview on March 19. “You can get an asset bubble when money flows in and when money flows out it collapses.”

Investment is being channeled into alternative markets as profits from the largest currencies prove harder to come by. Deutsche Bank AG’s gauge of foreign-exchange returns, which includes the most-actively traded currencies, slipped 0.3 percent this year after a 3.8 percent drop in 2011, the worst performance in two decades. The currency-returns index had climbed 47 percent over seven years ended Dec. 30, 2005.
Falling Volatility

The JPMorgan G7 Volatility Index (JPMVXYG7) has tumbled to 10.14 percent from 15.46 percent in September, reducing money managers’ ability to exploit price moves. The 3.5-cent difference between the euro’s high this month of $1.3357 and its low at $1.3004 is the narrowest trading band since July 2007. The shared currency traded at $1.3228 at 11:59 a.m. in New York today.

Optimism that Europe’s debt crisis is stabilizing after the European Central Bank boosted bank liquidity with about 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of three-year loans and private investors forgave more than 100 billion euros of Greek debt has boosted demand for higher-yielding assets such as stocks. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) has climbed 8.6 percent this year.

Low rates, austerity and stimulus measures in the U.S., the U.K., Europe and Japan — known as the G-4 — have strategists forecasting little change.

The euro will fall to $1.30 by year-end, the median estimate of more than 50 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg shows. The yen will trade at 83 per dollar by year-end from 82.65 today and Britain’s pound will be at $1.57, from $1.5869, separate surveys show.
Emerging-Market Volumes

Futures-trading data from CME Group Inc., the world’s largest futures exchange, shows that volumes in emerging-market currencies jumped 42 percent in 2011 from the prior year, while those in the yen, euro and Swiss franc stagnated.

“There clearly has been more activity in the emerging markets — there are greater opportunities for investors,” said Ed Baker, executive chairman of London-based The Cambridge Strategy, which specializes in emerging-market currencies and equities and has $850 million under management. “No doubt it has been harder with the G-4 to make money,” he said in a March 20 telephone interview.

Baker said his company has profited in Nigeria’s naira and the United Arab Emirates dirham, while Serbia’s dinar was the best-performing currency in 2011 in its $65 million Apollo strategy fund, which had gross returns of 15.9 percent on an annualized basis since it was set up in May 2009.

Trade safe

Erik

Source: Bloomberg – Emma Charlton and Paul Dobson on March 26, 2012

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Gold ATM machine activated in China, 2,000 more to be installed

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Categories: News Flash - Market Movements

Beijing – China is one of the world’s largest producers and purchasers of precious metals, especially gold and silver. Beijing has now unveiled its first gold ATM machine in a shopping district. More than 2,000 will be installed in the next two years.
Since the beginning of the global economic meltdown, China has been purchasing and producing commodities at a rapid pace. Digital Journal has reported in the past that its central bank has bought gold bullion and state-television outlets have even urged citizens to acquire silver bullion. Digital Journal has also reported of gold ATM machines being installed in Germany and the United States. Now, China has unveiled its first gold ATM machine in Beijing’s shopping district of Wangfujing Street. Although it was opened for business on Sunday, it was shut down a few hours later because it was not producing receipts for customers. Operations manager of Gongmei Gold Trading said the technical issues were being repaired, but did not note when the machine will be up and running again. The machine, built by Germany’s Ex Oriente Lux AG, allows customers to purchase one million yuan ($157,000) worth of gold bars and coins in various sizes at regular up-to-date market prices. Gold can be purchased by cash or credit card. “The people in Asia have a unique taste for gold, especially in China and India, and the channels of investment in China are way too narrow right now,” said Zheng Ruixiang, Gongmei president, in an interview with China Daily. “To puts residents’ cash deposits into gold deposits can reduce cash flow and reduce pressure on commodity prices.” Chinese officials are planning to install more than 2,000 more machines over the course of the next two years. They will be placed in secure locations, such as private clubs, financial institutions and gold stores. Since 2000, gold has risen astronomically from $250 per ounce to as high as $1,900. A report from the World Gold Council suggested that China acquired more gold than India.

 

Good trading

Erik

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Will there come a new bank crash in the US. If so who is likely next to crumble?

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Categories: News Flash - Market Movements

One of America’s giant financial institutions, which I’ll name in a moment, could be a candidate for bankruptcy in a double-dip recession scenario.

It controls nearly $2.3 trillion in assets and has 57 million customers.

It does big business with virtually every other major financial institution in the country.

It is THE largest financial institution in America.

It’s so large, in fact, that, if it cannot avoid failure … it will cause so many other dominoes to fall and so many millions of Americans to lose money … the entire U.S. economy will be threatened.

And even if it can avoid failure, investors holding its shares will be decimated.

This forecast is not based on conjecture, rumor or hyperbole. It’s grounded in solid analysis and hard data.

Nor is it without direct precedent. In fact, this mammoth financial institution already came within a hair of bankruptcy less than three years ago!

The only reason it’s still a big player today is because it was one of the main beneficiaries of the largest federal bailout of all time.

But despite the bailout, its business has continued to deteriorate, and its prospects for survival have continued to darken.

Its name: Bank of America Corp., the largest banking conglomerate in the United States and 3.6 times larger than Lehman Brothers was when it failed in the fall of 2008.

Will BofA go the way of Lehman? Probably not. The authorities would likely break it up into pieces they feel must be saved and pieces that can be more easily shut down.

Is a future failure written in stone? No.

If the U.S. economy can somehow sidestep a double-dip recession, BofA can continue limping along.

Or if its lobbyists in Washington can somehow overcome the stiff resistance of Republicans in Congress to pass another giant TARP bailout bill, it may escape doomsday.

But the realities of our time are already reducing the chances of those escape routes:

  The U.S. economy is already slipping into a double dip with no force on the horizon strong enough to change its course.

  The U.S. Congress is already far stingier than at any time in modern history.

  And, considering his noncommittal speech at Jackson Hole last week, even Fed Chairman Bernanke seems far more reluctant to promise action than he was just one year ago.

Why Bank of America Is in Danger

Right now, BofA is caught in a vicious cycle of its own making.

The main reason: Back in January of 2008, it made the horrendous blunder of buying the nation’s largest mortgage company, Countrywide Financial, just before the mortgage market’s worst collapse in history.

Result: Bank of America’s main banking unit is saddled with $3.9 billion in repossessed real estate. (Back in March 2009, even when its stock was in the gutter and it was getting an emergency capital transfusion from Washington, it had less than half that much in repossessed properties — only $1.7 billion.)

And the homes BofA has foreclosed on so far are just the tip of the iceberg. The bank also has a whopping $20 billion in home mortgages that are in the process of foreclosure, up a shocking 224 percent from March ’09.

Yes, for a few months last year, there was some hope of a housing market recovery. But now those hopes have been dashed by the reality of sinking home prices — down another 5.9 percent in the second quarter, their biggest drop since 2009.

The main drivers: 3.7 million foreclosed homes in America, making it virtually impossible to sell properties without deep discounting; 6.5 million homes delinquent or in foreclosure; plus millions more on the way as the economy sinks.

See how vicious this cycle is? Prices are being driven lower by massive unsold inventories of foreclosed homes … while, at the same time, millions of Americans are walking away from their homes and foreclosing precisely because prices are falling!

And see how Bank of America is caught smack in the middle of this storm? It has a total of $421.7 billion tied up in mortgages — more than any other bank on the planet!

More Troubles

But that’s not all …

  Bank of America has just been sued by AIG to recover more than $10 billion in losses on $28 billion of investments, claiming that the bank misrepresented the quality of the mortgages. It’s the biggest suit of its kind in history, but not the only one. A horde of investors is suing the bank for similar reasons.

  Bank of America continues to hold $52.5 trillion in notional value derivatives. That figure is more than 36 times larger than its total assets and nearly 341 times bigger than its risk-based capital!

  Perhaps most frightening of all, the bank’s exposure to the credit risks of derivatives — the possibility that some of its trading partners might default — is 182 percent of its capital, according to the Comptroller of the Currency.

These are frightening numbers. And I am NOT alone in forecasting big trouble for the bank …

Chart1

1. Former Merrill Lynch analyst Henry Blodget estimates BofA may need to write off between $100 billion and $200 billion in additional losses.

If Blodget is right and the bank can’t raise the funds, that would be enough to wipe out the main banking unit’s $154 billion in capital.

What about Warren Buffett’s $5 billion loan to Bank of America announced last week? It’s a drop in the bucket compared to the bank’s potential capital needs.

2. Stock investors, recognizing the severity of the crisis, have driven the bank’s shares to within striking distance of its March 2009 lows. And …

Chart1

3. The market for credit default swaps — insurance contracts to protect against a BofA default — is now saying that the crisis is actually WORSE than it was at height of the debt crisis in 2009.

The proof:

In March of 2009, when the fear of Bank of America’s possible demise was sending shock waves of panic through the global financial markets, the cost of insuring $10,000,000 in BofA debt was $343,375 per year (with a ten-year contract).

Now, just this week, the same coverage has cost as much as $378,235, or nearly $35,000 more. (See chart above.)

Conclusion: No matter what you or I may think about the bank’s future, the collective wisdom of investors, as reflected in the current premium cost for default insurance, is saying the probability that Bank of America could go bankrupt is now greater than it was at any time during the great debt crisis of 2008-2009!

What to Do ( If you live in the U.S. )

BofA is not going to keel over tomorrow. It still has capital. And the double-dip recession which we feel could be a key cause of its demise is just beginning.

But it’s not too soon for you to take preparatory steps …

Step 1. Make sure your savings are safe.

  Go to www.weisswatchdog.com

  Sign up (it’s free). Or sign in if you’re already a member.

  Search for your bank (using the first word of the name)

  Add it to your Watchlist, and

  Check the rating. If it’s rated D+ or lower, it’s weak and should be avoided for most of your funds. If it’s rated B+ or better, it’s strong and likely to have the wherewithal to survive some of the toughest of times.

Step 2. Hedge against a worsening banking crisis with gold. The most convenient vehicle: The largest ETF that invests in gold bullion, symbol GLD.

Good luck and Have a Save Trading!
Erik

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The Great Treasure of the Bismarck Sea??

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Categories: News Flash - Market Movements

Many wished to have invested in Gold, some years ago while it was as low as 600 USD/ounce or even less. Listen here, here is an other chance for you to jump in for a fair price, with even more potential gain:

http://clicks.investmentu.com//t/AQ/AAbFIQ/AAbShw/AASZOA/AQ/AbCSNw/0H0Z

The company is:    Nautilus Minerals

Look it up and do your own due diligent homework.

Good trading

Erik

Ps. It is FREE and I do not even get anything back,well except maybe some recognition down the line in time…

 

 

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Reflection Thoughts of Recent Market Movements – August 2011

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Categories: News Flash - Market Movements

Hello Investors,

Since the S&P rating came out, the Stock market is just
fluctuating like a yo-yo. Most of the days though it is
going down as traders are in state of panic.

See, I remember few years ago, the US economy was in
state of recession (it still is to a certain extent..).
A lot of big chains closed down during that time and some
lost huge businesses..

But there were some that stood the storm and survived.

Why?

What is so different about the companies that survived
and the ones that saw drastic reduction in their businesses?

The difference is “Strong business fundamentals”

1. All the companies that did well had good understanding of
what is happening in the market and what can happen going forward.

Its like they knew storm is coming and they need to prepare
for that.

2. They had good discipline..like how much of each inventory to
keep, not putting all eggs in one basket etc.

The same concept applies to traders also..

..for all kind of traders – forex, stocks, commodities etc..

A successful trader is the one who has strong fundamentals and
good trading discipline and of course a good system to trust and follow.

like knowing when to trade, when not to trade, following
money management principles, not over trading etc.

So, it is essential to follow good trading fundamentals to
have regular profitable trades in all kind of market conditions.

Good trading,

Erik