A Broker's Eyes
Discussing the latest Macro news impacting the World's major Commodities & FX crosses. Enjoy the blog... Empower yourself with belief & remember it only takes ONE person to CHANGE your life! Enjoy & Comment; for any other feedback, please email me : anish.lal@atom8.com
Tuesday, 28 June 2016
I’ve cracked the #Brexit conundrum!
Dear Britain,
Please don't worry about your decision to leave the EU. I have a solution that should relieve both remainers and leavers equally. A moment comes, which comes but rarely, when we step from the old to the new….I’ve cracked the #Brexit conundrum!
Cameron needs to immediately apply for Britain to become a Union Territory of the Republic of India.
Whilst historically speaking it seems only right and proper to give India a chance to rule Britain for a few hundred years - it actually makes a lot of sense for the British too!
Worried about jobs? India’s economy is growing 4x faster than Europe’s and will overtake the entire EU’s sometime in the 2030s - becoming twice the size of the EU economy by 2050.
In economic terms alone every young Brit should wish to replace their garish red EU passport with a classy blue Indian one ASAP.
Worried about the future of the NHS? India already provides nearly as many Doctors to the NHS as the EU does - and that doesn’t even include those of Indian origin, born or educated, in Britain. 25,055 Indian v 30,082 EU.
Worried about diversity? With over 100 different languages spoken everyday and adherents of every religion - even Britain’s favourite materialist consumption - there truly is something for everyone here!
Worried about being understood? English is one of India's two official languages - which will be a huge relief for all those have struggled to communicate with their continental neighbours for all these years.
Worried about not being part of something bigger? India has more than twice the population of the EU. Half of which are under 35, so the bonus is no more worries about an ageing population!
Worried about where to go on holiday? The Himalayas are nearly three times the height of the Alps and thousands of miles longer - there are more sandy beaches along India’s coastline than all the Costas you can dream of - and India has tropical rainforests and even a desert too! Plenty of visa free inter-railing adventures as well on the world’s largest railway network.
Worried about not being ruled by an unlected bureaucracy in a far away land? We’ve got that covered as well! Nowhere on the planet has perfected the shuffling of paper and writing of rules better than New Delhi - what’s more India’s civil servants salaries are more than 10x lower than Brussels. Talk about getting more for less!
British MPs, the whole of Whitehall and even the Royal Family (subject to the return of the Kohinor) can all be pensioned off at the fast expanding and internationally renowned Best Exotic Marigold Hotel chain in Jaipur.
Which would free up the Houses of Parliament, Buckingham Palace and much of Central London to become a permanent Bollywood film set. With more viewers than Hollywood this is sure to help keep London’s tourist economy going - which within a decade or two will be mostly Indians in any case.
Embrace the 21st Century. Swap Brussels for Delhi. Say Goodbye to Little Europe and Namaste to Incredible India!
Yours in waiting,
A 3rd Generation Immigrant of British Origin,
New Delhi, India🙏
Friday, 24 June 2016
#Brexit - A Genuine Clusterfuck! What will happen?
137 billion pounds was wiped off the value of the UK
stockmarket in the first nine minutes of trading. That's the equivalent of nine
years EU membership fees.
The falling value of the pound will cause the cost of
imports to rise, making things more expensive on the high street.
The poorer parts of Britain have used the referendum as a
vote on globalisation: they've been shafted by continuous British governments
since 1979, governments who have off-shored their jobs, used immigration to
lower their wages and deregulated banks to provide cheap credit to fund their
consumption.
None of this will change outside of the EU.
The problem always was, is and will be that domestic UK
politicians do not represent the interests of the traditional working class,
they represent international finance. And under Johnson and Gove they still
will.
The UK is an international CAPITALIST economy, it needs
inward investment to pay for its current account deficit (debt), which is
massive. 50% of our inward investment came from the EU in 2015. Low wages - yes
even with George Osborne's supposed 'living wage' - help to attract this
investment. Immigration is a structural part of the UK economy and this is not
going to change any time soon. Even Farage said he would use migrants from the
Commonwealth (lol - that basically ended in 1956 @Suez), rather than the EU.
Immigration will not stop, but our economy will probably
take a huge battering:
The UK economy is 79% services, services are harder to
trade than manufactured goods because of the fact that people are integral to
services, you can't just ship them overseas like a bag of spanners. The UK had
a free 'passport' to trade services in the EU.
The City of London (services) generates 10% of the UK's
total GDP. Roughly a quarter of the UK’s financial sector business involves the
EU's Single Market, equivalent to 2 per cent of gross domestic product. And
balanced on top is a wider array of professional services. (Financial Times).
Plus: developed countries buy more services than
developing countries who are at a different stage in their economic
development. The EU is made up of some of the richest developed countries on
the planet. The entire structural configuration of our economy favours services
sold to developed countries and we just risked putting the kibosh on that.
Smart move.
There's more.
Free trade agreements take years to negotiate, and the UK
will be screaming out for FTAs to ensure trade based on best possible terms,
rather than the default WTO position - yes that's right, even on leaving the EU
there are other international organisations we have to conform to, we call this
the modern world - Under WTO there are 10% import tariffs on automotive
manufacturing, one of the last bastions of manufacturing in the UK. Without an
FTA all UK automotive exports will see a 10% tariff slapped on them. Let that sink
in for a moment. A UK crying out for FTAs will give negotiating partners
leverage, the UK does not have the upperhand here.
And as for an EU-UK FTA, the UK is 5% of global GDP
(2015), the EU 26%, who do you think will have the upperhand in those negotiations?
As for us importing more from the EU than we export, we need those goods, for
our standard of living and for our domestic supply chains. The fact that we
import so much is not automatically something that works in our favour! Trade
is not a zero sum game.
And when all these British citizens fund out that they've
been lied to over the next few years they're going to be absolutely furious.
And who do you think they will vote for then? Angry men with easy answers and
tiny little moustaches maybe? I'm pretty sure it won't be Corbyn with his
mystical magical 1970s timemachine.
This is a genuine clusterfuck. Cameron has risked the
union of the Kingdom - Northern Ireland voted remain 56%, Scotland 62% - and
the wider EU in trying to appease to racists, the angry and the ignorant. This
is not the behaviour of a statesman. It is the behaviour of an opportunist and
a coward. His name will go down in history as the man who accidentally broke up
Britain.
Tuesday, 31 May 2016
The day ahead 31 May 2016
Good morning,
Tokyo led Asian stocks higher on Monday, as the Nikkei heads
towards a close above 17,000 points for the first time in a month, after the
yen plummeted against the strengthening dollar. Data released earlier in the
session showed Japanese industrial output unexpectedly rose 0.3% in April,
suggesting production is holding up despite weak exports and the impact from a
series of earthquakes that struck southern Japan during that month. Shares in
Shanghai surged +2.43% , Hong Kong +1.25%, while the ASX slipped -0.19%.
Underpinning Asian sentiment, European shares hit one-month highs on Monday
amid otherwise light trade with markets in London and New York closed for
public holidays.
In FX space the Aussie gained against its peers as building
approvals data for April came in much better than expected (+3% against -3%
exp). The positive sentiment also saw the Kiwi rally, whilst sterling soared
above the 1.47 only to quickly retreat back towards the 1.4650 handle against
the US dollar. The Euro is also under pressure as we head towards the European
open.
Gold rose for the first time in 10 days -- breaking its
longest losing streak in more than a year and currently sitting at $1212.
Although strongly underpinned amid the extended broad based US Dollar
correction, it looks to build a recovery towards the 100 dma located around
$1217.50. Oil pushed back towards the psychologically key $50 a barrel mark as moves
were limited ahead of Thursday's meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries. WTI sits at %49.58 and Brent at $49.73.
So to the day ahead and it looks to be a busy day as we
enter the last sessions of the month. First up we have German Retail
sales (0700 BST) and Unemployment Report (0855 BST). Last week’s sentiment data
suggests that Germany’s moderate growth trend will roll on, based on survey
figures for consumers, the financial community and the business sector. There’s
still concern about the near-term outlook, according to business polling, but
overall, the mood points to more of the same: Economic expansion that’s less
than stellar but strong enough to support the Eurozone's modest recovery.
Forecasters are looking for a positive retail sales number of 1% whilst the
jobless rate is set to remain unchanged at a low 6.2%. Close attention will be
paid to the monthly update on changes in the number of newly unemployed workers
for deeper context about the labour market trend.
Canadian GDP (1330 BST) The economy declined 0.1% in March,
its first decline since November 2015 and the estimate for April is more of the
same. According to Bank of Montreal, first quarter GDP is expected to rise
nearly 3% annualized, thanks to solid growth at the turn of the year and a nice
boost from net exports. Unfortunately, it said, the economy lost momentum as
the quarter progressed, with March GDP expected to come in flat after a small
contraction in the prior month adding Canada is going to get some sizeable
volatility in the months ahead due to the Alberta wildfires and resulting drop
in oil production.
US Consumer Confidence Indicator (1500 BST) Last week’s
revised data for the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index for May
points to an improvement in the mood at the Q2 midpoint. The benchmark was
revised down a bit from the preliminary reading for this month, but the index
still posted a solid bounce higher against April – and relative to recent
history as well. The CSI’s strength bodes well for today’s release of the
Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Indicator (CCI), a competing measure.
The two indices track one another, although there can be substantial
differences in the short term. Economists think that today’s first look at the
May data for CCI will post a solid rise to 96.0 for May against 94.2 in the
previous month. A firmer reading for the Conference Board’s index isn’t
surprising in the wake of CSI’s latest jump. If the upbeat forecast holds, the
case will strengthen for arguing that consumer optimism is rising in the second
quarter.
Trade Smarter
Anish
Thursday, 26 May 2016
The day ahead 26 May 2016
Good morning,
Asia stocks were mixed on Thursday following a rally during
the previous session, but energy firms were mostly up after oil surged past $50
a barrel for the first time this year. Investors seemed to brush off another
strong lead from Wall Street and Europe, treading softly as the Group of Seven
leaders' summit kicked off in Japan, where the sputtering global economy is
likely to top the agenda. The Nikkei is up 0.5%, the ASX +0.3% with Shanghai
and the Hang Seng down 0.97% and 0.41% respectively.
The yen surged on Thursday, taking some of the wind out of
the sails of the recently buoyant dollar and prompting investors to cover
positions against a backdrop of potential event risks, including a speech by
Federal Reserve chief Janet Yellen. A sudden spike in the yen in relatively
illiquid conditions triggered stop-loss orders and brought the Japanese
currency as low as 109.42 against the US dollar from a session high of 110.235.
Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso said on Wednesday that he told his G7
counterparts at a finance leaders' meeting last week that Japan will raise the
tax as planned. But he did not say whether that meant Japan has officially
pledged to the international community that it will go ahead with the increase.
The Aussie dollar was also a mover overnight as Q1 capex came in well below expectations (-5.2% v -3.2% exp), the initial move lower on the headline (0.7162 vs US dollar) then saw the Aussie rally back through the 0.72 handle as the full details were digested. Elsewhere the US dollar has been on the back foot throughout the session as risk trades are again prominent.
The Aussie dollar was also a mover overnight as Q1 capex came in well below expectations (-5.2% v -3.2% exp), the initial move lower on the headline (0.7162 vs US dollar) then saw the Aussie rally back through the 0.72 handle as the full details were digested. Elsewhere the US dollar has been on the back foot throughout the session as risk trades are again prominent.
Having bottomed out near $1218 region during Wednesdays
trading, gold staged a solid comeback overnight on the back of profit-taking
after the recent weakness. The bullion finally brought an end to its six-day
losing streak rising to highs of $1234.35 before consolidating around the $1230
handle.
Brent crude passed $50 a barrel for the first time in 2016
on Thursday after data showed a fall in US crude inventories, adding to expectations
of a tightening global market. Markets are now eyeing a June 2 meeting of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna where it is hoped a
deal on reducing production can be reached. WTI currently sits at $49.88 and
Brent $50.10.
So to the day ahead and first up we have UK Second Estimate
GDP (0900 BST). The markets had their first look at GDP figures for Q1 with the
release of Preliminary GDP in April, which showed a gain of 0.3%. This was
short of the estimate of 0.5%. Little change is expected in the Second Estimate
GDP release, with a forecast of 0.4% which is in line with the macroeconomic
figures released lately.
US: Durable Goods Orders (1330 BST) Manufacturing appears to
be recovering from its recent recession, but the preliminary numbers for May
via survey data suggest otherwise. Markit’s purchasing managers’ index revealed
that output fell this month for the first time more than six years. The hard
data for April, however, is expected to deliver brighter news, albeit in terms
of a one-month lag relative to the latest PMI update with headline orders for
durable goods rising for a second month in a row, which hasn’t happened since
last summer.
US: Initial Jobless Claims (1330 BST) New filings for
unemployment benefits fell a hefty 16,000 to a seasonally adjusted 278,000 for
the second week of May. The decline is the first weekly slide since mid-April.
The question is whether the recent surge in claims will continue in today’s
release. Although last week’s report offered an encouraging change of pace,
it’s always risky to reason from one number with the volatile claims data. A
second weekly decline, however, will offer a more reassuring message. The crowd
will be looking at today’s claims data to help decide if the PMI warning is
noise or an early sign of trouble for the labour market.
Good luck
Anish S. Lal – VP Sales
FX & Precious Metals, Atom8
Financial Services LLP
2nd Floor, Centenary House, Palliser
Road, London W14 9EQ, UK
Risk Warning
Trading on margin (spread betting, CFDs and FX)
carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you.
Before deciding to trade your live account, you should carefully consider your
investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. You could
lose more than your initial investment and should not trade with funds you
cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated
with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial
advisor if you have any doubts.
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
The Day Ahead 25/05/2016
Good morning,
Asian shares fell to near 10-week lows on Tuesday as a
stubbornly strong yen dragged Tokyo into the red while falling oil prices
deflated energy shares. With few fresh catalysts to drive sentiment,
investors eye the start of Thursdays G7 summit in Japan with the sputtering
global economy a key topic on the agenda during the 2 day meeting, while
worries over a possible US interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve as early
as next month again took hold. Adding to the US central bank's hawkish
signals last week that a June US rate raise could be on the cards, a prominent
Fed board member weighed in with comments that suggested markets could be
behind the curve on the Fed's intentions. Since raising rates in December for
the first time in nine years, the US central bank in March forecast essentially
two rate rises for this year, but markets have had much lower expectations amid
a batch of lack lustre US economic data. However, James Bullard, president of
the St. Louis Fed and a voting member of the policy-setting Federal Open Market
Committee, said in a speech on Monday in Beijing that US labour market and
inflation data suggested the Fed's projection "may be more nearly
correct". The Nikkei trades down 0.73%, Shanghai -0.77%, Hang
Seng -0.55% and the ASX -0.1%.
In the FX space the Aussie dollar extended loses below the
0.7200 handle against the US dollar as RBA Governor Stevens reinforced his
pledge to combat lower inflation levels by deploying appropriate monetary
policy framework, and thereby justifying his May rate cut stance. The kiwi
dollar also fell overnight as the bears took control as a classic risk-off
sentiment gripped the markets with the US dollar paring some of its recent
loses and the yen holding onto gains.
Gold extends its losing streak into a fifth-day this Tuesday
as US dollar strength weighs on the yellow metal capping any effort to the
upside. Having posted session highs of $1252.35 it quickly fell to lows of
$1244 and has looked vulnerable since. Oil dipped for a second day as comments
from Iranian officials vowing to keep production up did little to dispel
worries about global oversupply. WTI and Brent trade $47.90 and $48.11
respectively.
So to the day ahead and this week’s first tier data release
is German ZEW Economic Sentiment Indicator (1000 BST). Economic activity
accelerated in Europe’s biggest economy in May, according to yesterday’s survey
data from Markit Economics. The firm’s composite purchasing managers’ index for
Germany ticked up to 54.7 in this month’s flash estimate – a five-month high
and the first improvement so for in 2016. Whilst the PMI data is encouraging a
closer look still leaves room for caution. Today’s update in Germany’s
financial sector will provide more context for assessing the May macro profile.
The last two reports reveal a modest rebound in expectations, but the firmer
outlook for the future was accompanied by an ongoing slide in the current
reading of economic conditions.
UK Inflation Report Hearing (1000 BST) With exactly
one month left to go before the UK holds a referendum that will decide whether
or not it stays in the European Union, the British pound has generally remained
resilient in the face of substantial downside risk to the currency that would
very likely result from a successful “Brexit” vote. Aside from the Brexit
issue, last week saw mixed data out of the UK, including a lower-than-expected
inflation reading in the form of the Consumer Price Index, and
better-than-expected numbers for average earnings, unemployment claims, and
retail sales. Expect plenty of trading opportunities from todays lengthy
hearing.
US New Home Sales (1500 BST) The combination of job growth
and low interest rates have dispensed a bullish edge for the housing market so
far this year. Some indicators have been choppy at times, but sentiment in the
home building industry remains upbeat. Last week’s numbers on existing home
sales look promising too. Transactions edged higher in April for the third
month in a row, sticking close to the highest level since the recession ended.
Today’s update on newly built houses is expected to bring good news as well as
the market looking for a gain that will push sales up to 523,000 for April
(seasonally adjusted annual rate).
Good luck
Anish S. Lal – VP Sales
FX & Precious Metals, Atom8
Financial Services LLP
2nd Floor, Centenary House, Palliser
Road, London W14 9EQ, UK
Risk Warning
Trading on margin (spread betting, CFDs and FX)
carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you.
Before deciding to trade your live account, you should carefully consider your
investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. You could
lose more than your initial investment and should not trade with funds you
cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated
with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial
advisor if you have any doubts.
Monday, 23 May 2016
The Day Ahead 23 May 2016
Good morning,
Asian shares rose on Monday following Friday’s solid session
on Wall Street, while the dollar moved away from recent highs though remained
supported as investors bet that the U.S. Federal Reserve was on track to raise
rates sooner rather than later. However, the Nikkei extended losses,
slipping 0.6% on worrying economic data and reports that Japan's sales tax
increase would proceed as planned. Data released before the open showed Japan's
exports tumbled 10.% in April from a year earlier, in line with expectations
but down for a seventh straight month, reflecting sluggish demand from China
and emerging markets. Imports also fell sharply, which in turn boosted the country's
trade surplus above expectations. On top of this Japan’s Flash
Manufacturing PMI showed activity contracted at the fastest pace in more than
three years in May as new orders slumped. China’s Shanghai is up
0.5%, The Hang Seng 0.66%, whilst the ASX trades 0.19% lower.
In FX Space the US dollar fell against the safe haven yen
after Tokyo's threat to intervene to tame its resurgent currency faced
criticism at the G7 ministers' meeting. Japan last intervened in currency
markets around November 2011, when it tried to stem the yen's rise against the
greenback to keep an economic recovery on track after the quake-tsunami
disaster earlier that year. In a statement which presented a clear rebuff to
Tokyo, the G7 group "underscored the importance of all countries
refraining from competitive devaluation". A stronger yen hurts Japanese
exporters, a key driver of the world's third largest economy, by making their
products relatively more expensive overseas. Elsewhere the start of the week
brought a session of consolidation for currencies with pairs trading within
tight ranges as the market awaits fresh inspiration.
Gold has halted a 3 day slide and trades higher at $1255
whilst Oil slipped on both sides of the Atlantic as investors locked in profits
after a second week of gains. WTI currently sits at $48.15 and Brent $48.53.
So to the day ahead and the week kicks off with a host of
PMI reading from the Eurozone. Manufacturing and Services PMIs (0900 BST)
Sentiment data for manufacturing has been firming in recent months while the
comparable numbers for services remains steady, albeit modestly below levels in
2015. Taken together, these results suggest that Europe will hold on to a
growth bias in the second quarter. The trend may tick lower relative to the first
quarter's relatively robust 0.5% rise in GDP (quarter over quarter rate). But
for the moment, the economic outlook for Europe in the second quarter remains
in the plus column. Yet there’s also hints that the trend is slowing so today’s
flash data on PMIs for May will provide fresh guidance on Europe’s macro trend
at the mid-point for the second quarter.
US Manufacturing PMI (1445 BST) Manufacturing activity in
the US expanded in April, but just barely, according to two national sentiment
benchmarks. In a rare case of unity, both the ISM Manufacturing Index and
Markit’s PMI settled at 50.8 in April — just above the neutral 50 mark that
separates growth from contraction. Two early clues for May, via last week’s
releases from regional Fed banks, point to weakness for this month. The New
York Fed’s Empire State index fell sharply for the May reading, sliding to
negative 9 — a dramatic reversal after April’s positive 9 value. The Philly
Fed’s regional benchmark for manufacturing in May was also in negative
territory. The market consensus calls for a rise in the Manufacturing PMI to
51.0 for May vs. 50.8 in the previous month. Better, but a reminder that the
manufacturing trend remains shaky at best.
Anish S. Lal – VP Sales
FX & Precious Metals, Atom8
Financial Services LLP
2nd Floor, Centenary House, Palliser
Road, London W14 9EQ, UK
Risk Warning
Trading on margin (spread betting, CFDs and FX)
carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you.
Before deciding to trade your live account, you should carefully consider your
investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. You could
lose more than your initial investment and should not trade with funds you
cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated
with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial
advisor if you have any doubts.
Friday, 13 May 2016
Overnight and The Day Ahead - Friday 13th May
Good Morning,
Yesterday was about the ‘Proud Pound’ Mark Carney, the Governor
of the Bank of England, was unambiguous about the EU referendum; ‘Brexit’ would
lead to a loss of jobs, a fall in the value of the pound and ultimately lead to
a ‘technical recession’ - 6 months of falling growth. Has he overstepped the
mark and become a political Governor, in his role he is supposed to be
politically impartial. He believes he has the right to speak frankly about the
economy and Brexit carries the risk of recession.
Stocks – The Nikkei is down 1%, nothing specific - the news
that Nissan and Mitsubishi reached agreement lead to a surge of 16% in the
Mitsubishi share price yesterday, today it is down 4%.
Oil is having a good week opening at 46.20, this is up 7%
from the Monday open, we get the Baker Hughes Oil rig count later today
Gold opens at 1272, the range this week has been 1257 -1281.
We had Retail Sales data out of New Zealand overnight,
coming in slightly weaker than expected at 0.8% QoQ and the currency dipped
below 0.6800, 0.6793 the low.
Today in the US we get Retail Sales, Producer prices, the
Michigan consumer sentiment and business inventories.
Why is Friday 13th considered unlucky? One theory
is that Thomas W Lawson’s popular novel ‘Friday, the Thirteenth’ published in
1907 contributed to disseminating the superstition.
In the novel, an unscrupulous broker takes advantage of the
superstition to create a Wall Street panic on a Friday the 13th.
Good Luck today and enjoy your week end.
Anish S. Lal – VP Sales
FX & Precious Metals, Atom8
Financial Services LLP
2nd Floor, Centenary House, Palliser
Road, London W14 9EQ, UK
Risk Warning
Trading on margin (spread betting, CFDs and FX)
carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you.
Before deciding to trade your live account, you should carefully consider your
investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. You could
lose more than your initial investment and should not trade with funds you
cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated
with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial
advisor if you have any doubts.
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