Market News

Stalemate

Posted by on Nov 4, 2013 in Commentary, Featured, Market News

Stalemate

We reach yet another stalemate as the dominance of the central banks in the currency markets continues after the latest FOMC meeting. The continued manipulation of interest rates through quantitative easing continues. A growing economy being primed by $85bn of money every month, or $1 trillion annually. The FED has on numerous occasions hinted at tapering, but keeps shying away from taking the plunge. It could signal a readiness to reduce the stimulus and avoid the continual back tracking by reducing the stimulus to $80bn a month. In the overall scheme of things, I hardly think a $5bn...

Read More

Happy Landings as quantitative easing slows

Posted by on Jul 4, 2013 in Commentary, Featured, Market News

Happy Landings as quantitative easing slows

A couple of weeks ago, helicopter Ben (a.k.a. Ben Bernanke) announced the Federal Reserve was going to slow down the rate at which it was printing money. The printing presses, known as quantitative easing were always going to stop at some point. The fact that so much notice was given shouldn’t have come as a surprise. But it jolted the market. In my view, we should look at the background to the announcement, which is a return to economic growth and a fall in unemployment. Over the past few months, the stimulus of billions of dollars being printed aligned with low interest rates has...

Read More

Currency Wars

Posted by on Jan 27, 2013 in Commentary, Featured, Market News

Currency Wars

One of the trading themes for 2013 is likely to be the continuation of currency wars. Real or perceived, currency wars have existed for as long as I can remember. Whether a devaluation of an existing currency, or revaluation, currency wars cause seismic movements in exchange rates. The latest country to join the currency wars game is Japan, with the Japanese Yen losing value against all major currencies since elections a couple of months ago. The Bank of Japan, under political direction from the incoming government has agreed to raise it’s inflation target and adopt quantitative...

Read More

Two weeks into January

Posted by on Jan 17, 2013 in Commentary, Market News, News

Two weeks into January

It’s pretty snowy and frosty in my part of the world. That said, we are two weeks into January and there have been some exceptionally profitable trading days so far this year, January 2nd being the first of them. It was almost so predictable, the USA did not fall off the fiscal cliff. No real surprise at all. The element of surprise was contained to the extent that the US politicians have been taking careful note, maybe even having private coaching from their European counterparts. Collectively, the US politicians managed to kick the can down the road. It worked in Europe in 2012, so...

Read More

Happy New Year

Posted by on Dec 31, 2012 in Commentary, Featured, Market News

Happy New Year

As a trader taking a backwards look at 2012, I can only conclude that it has been a strange kind of year. In the UK, the stock market is already closed for 2012. Anyone who has read some of my previous posts will guess how I am going to summarise 2012 though. A year when much changed and little was achieved. After three years of crisis, Greece and the problems of the Euro are firmly on the back burner as the world watches the USA head ever closer to the so called fiscal cliff. Does that mean the problems of the Eurozone are over? Have they been miraculously fixed? The only judgement call I...

Read More

Kicking the can

Posted by on Nov 29, 2012 in Commentary, Featured, Market News, News

Kicking the can

When it comes to kicking the can down the road, European ministers have shown the world their expertise. Aligned with their ability to fudge issues, it gives markets and commentators plenty of material to write about. This weeks further instalment of the Greek bailout is a case in point. After months of negotiation and discussion, including an open spat with the IMF, European institutions handed over several billion more Euros to Greece as part of their international bailout. IMF participation at this time was deferred. Greece now has the liquidity to meet it’s immediate financial...

Read More