How to Use The ADX Indicator

The ADX indicator analyzes the strengths of the trend; the MACD/OsMA analyzes how likely the trend is. ADX means the Average Directional Index and was developed in 1978 as an indicator of trend strength in a series of a financial instrument.

How to Use ADX Indicator

The ADX indicator is used to quantify the strength of a trend. It calculates using a moving average of price range expansion over a certain period of time. By default an ADX indocator is set at 14 bars, but that can usually be adjusted in the trading platform of choice. The ADX indicator can be used with any type of trades: stocks, shares, funds, indices, forex, commodities, etc.

In the figure below you can see a screenshot of my free demo account with Plus500. In the lowest chart you can see three lines: a green, blue and red one. The dark blue line is the ADX indicator line.

adx indicator, adx/dmi

 

Interpreting the ADX works as follows. A rising ADX means that the market’s  trend will rise and you can do best by apply a trend following system. A downward trend indicates a flat ADX.

An increase of the ADX through the 20 boundary, indicates that there is a new trend is going to take place. Above 20 or 25 is often confirmed by the trend. Wanner, the ADX above 40 opens and then goes down here again, this means that the trend is weakening and a fall can take place again.

NOTE: the ADX indicator going up does not mean the rate is rising, it meas that the rate shows a trend!! 

The ADX indicator is is derived from the DMI indicator, Directional Movement Indicator, which is also developed by the same person responsible for the ADX indicator. The DMI, with help from for example ADX, tells whether the instrument is trending or not.

In the screenshot you can see two DMI lines. The green line is the +DMI and the red is the -DMI. When the -DMI is above the +DMI, prices are moving down and when the +DMI is on top of the -DMI the uptrend has shown.

Technical Indicator ADX

The ADX indicator has certain a value in the range of a minimum of zero to a maximum of 100, indicating ist weakness or strength. This is an overview of the ADX values and trend strength:

adx indicator

In summary: when the ADX value is between 0 and 25 there is no trend at all. When the range is below 25 for at least 30 bars the price enters a range conditions and price patters which are often easier to identify. From low ADX indicator conditions, the price will eventually break out into a trend.

NOTE: a falling ADX trend line means that the trend is strenght is weakening.

How to Trade the ADX indicator: Conclusion

The most important signal on a chart is the price. First you should read the price, second the ADX indicator to determine what the price is doing. Using an indicator like ADX is only handy when it adds something that the price itself doesn;t tell us. The best trend rise out of periods of price range consolidation. A disagreement between the buyers and sellers price are the reason for a breakout. Price momentum differences are created whether there is more supply than demand or more demand than supply.

About the author:

Jan de Wit is your forex and binary options blogger, bringing the best free tips, tools, ebook and more to his subscribers at his site.

 

 

Jordan cuts rate 25 bps to stimulate growth

By CentralBankNews.info
    Jordan’s central bank cut its benchmark rediscount rate by 25 basis points to 4.25 percent as “a catalyst to further economic growth stimulation through promoting private sector expansion.”
    The Central Bank of Jordan (CBJ), which cut rates by 50 basis points in 2013 after raising them by the same amount in 2012, also said the cut took place amid a continuous improvement in the country’s fundamental economic indicators, such as subdued inflationary pressures, higher appetite for dinar denominated assets, increase investment inflows and the resulting positive impact on foreign reserves.
    The CBJ announced the rate cut on Sunday with the new rates effective from today. The CBJ’s overnight repurchase agreement rate will be 4.0 percent, the weekly repurchase agreement rate 3.50 percent and the overnight deposit window facility at 3.25 percent.
   Jordan’s inflation rate fell to 3.4 percent in November from 5.8 percent the previous month while Jordan’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by an annual 2.80 percent in the third quarter.
   Jordan’s economy is under pressure from the cost of accommodating hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees and in October the central bank said the drain on resources and higher state spending from the presence of over 600,000 refugees was cutting growth by at least 2 percentage points.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

OIL Elliott Wave Analysis: Downtrend Could Resume

OIL 4h

Crude oil has turned slightly to the upside in the past week as expected after a completed five wave fall at 91.00 area. We have been looking for a three wave retracement back to former wave iv) placed at 94.26 which is already the case so we need to be aware of a new bearish reversal in the next few trading days. However, there is room for rally to 96.20 area, but sooner or later we think that downtrend will resume. We will keep an eye on 91.44 level; a decline towards this zone will confirm a completed rally and new leg down.

OIL 4h Elliott Wave Analysis

OIL 1h

Crude oil reached our projected zone around 95.00 area that we highlighted at the end of the past week. We have now five waves up from 91.43 that can be considered as wave c) of a contratrend structure. However, a decline from top must be impulsive and strong to call end of a rally. Would love to see move back to 92.40 that will then open door for new low.

OIL 1h Elliott Wave Analysis

Written by www.ew-forecast.com

14 days trial just for €1 >> register now

 

 

 

Having No Exposure to Energy Risk is Risky

By Dennis Miller – Having No Exposure to Energy Risk is Risky

Because Marin Katusa is the foremost expert on all things energy, I’ve been eager to pick his brain for our subscribers. Marin, an accomplished investment analyst, is the senior editor of Casey Energy DividendsCasey Energy Confidential, and the Casey Energy Report. He is also a regular commentator on BNN and other major media outlets.

Dennis Miller: Marin, welcome. Thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge with our subscribers.

Marin Katusa: Thanks for having me. It’s my pleasure.

Dennis: I know you are aware that our subscribers are mostly baby boomers and investors on either side of the cusp of retirement. We focus a lot on diversifying among sectors and minimizing risk within each sector. Can you explain where energy opportunities should fit in to our subscribers’ portfolios, including both low- and higher-risk investments?

Marin: It’s a Catch-22 for the mature investor today. Everyone is chasing yield, thereby propping up the prices of yield plays. Dominant companies in the energy sector pay a good dividend and have appreciated very nicely.

Now, I can’t emphasize enough how important it is to lock in gains by putting in Casey profit stops. 25-40% gains on big energy companies are equivalent to double and triple gains in the junior market. Don’t be scared to sell.

For your subscribers, only invest in juniors – which are high-risk investments – with money you can afford to lose. That means no more than 10% of your portfolio. Now personally, I don’t follow that advice, but I’m nowhere near the age of your audience. The younger you are, the more time you have to build your non-risk portfolio. While the juniors can make you tremendous wealth, they are also the riskiest investments in the world.

Every investor should also think about the percentage of his portfolio exposed to the energy sector. It’s mind-blowing to me that investors in your age bracket often have 10% of their portfolio in gold stocks, but very little to none in the energy sector. Globally, the energy sector dwarfs the gold sector, and I believe 10% of everyone’s portfolio – including your readers’ – should have exposure to energy investments. For your audience, 90% of that 10% should be invested in less risky energy companies, and 10% should be in riskier junior energy stocks. Nothing is more pleasing to a portfolio than investing in a company at under US $0.25, and having the stock run to over US $7 (an over 2,500% gain).

Dennis: When I talk about speculative picks, I like to use an analogy. When it comes to pharmaceutical stocks, they usually have a lot of intellectual capital. When their research moves along the FDA approval process, a larger company will often buy them out and bring their product to market. In effect, speculative companies are like a research and development arm for the industry. The same is true in junior mining. Once they discover and have provable reserves, a larger company generally buys them out and mines those reserves.

I know big oil companies do most of their own exploration, but a uranium company might not have the ability or capital to build a mine. Can you explain the nuances of the energy sector in this regard and the investment implications for us?

Marin: Let’s start with oil.  My publication was the first to publish on the potential of the East African Rift and Africa Oil (V.AOI). It was on no one’s radar, and no majors were in the area at the time we first started writing and recommending stocks in the area. Essentially, the oil and gas play for juniors is to get in early and prove up a new concept, locking up a PSC and getting the license to actually do some exploration work. Africa Oil is a perfect example of that, and AOI was able to attract a much bigger company to fund the risk. That stock had over a 1,000% gain.

There’s a similar game plan with shale gas: get in early, and stake up large blocks of land based on a geological concept that the majors are not looking at. Cuadrilla is a perfect case study in that game plan. It staked up some land for very little, proved a concept, and delivered exceptional returns for its shareholders.

In the energy sector, majors are attracted to juniors that have large sections of land with large, previously unrealized potential. The early days of the Eagle Ford oil shales are a good example of this. Smart companies were buying up land for $100 per acre, and in a few years the same land was going for $25,000 per acre.

Profiting from Energy Now

Dennis: I know you have had some phenomenal success in smaller energy picks in the past. At the Casey conferences, many subscribers have told me you made them a lot of money. Do you see any good opportunities on the horizon? If an investor wanted to take advantage of these opportunities, are they better off with an individual company or with an ETF or mutual fund in that sector?

Marin: I’ve never been a fan of ETFs. Also, I don’t like public mutual funds because few ever beat the indices, and investors pay ridiculous fees.

I think there are some excellent energy investments to be made today. But first, a potential investor has to ask himself: “What is my risk tolerance, and what is my time frame?” Africa Oil, Cuadrilla, and Uranium Energy Corp. were all major successes, but they were all very high risk, and it took over 18 months for each success to be realized.

If you do your homework, investing in an individual company will deliver superior gains than an ETF or mutual fund.

Dennis: I know you spend a tremendous amount of time in the field evaluating opportunities. Do you use a process for evaluation similar to Doug Casey’s Eight Ps?

Marin: The most important P to me is “People.” Actually, average people will screw up the best company, and if you invest in the right people, they can turn around the worst company.

The Projects and Politics are also on the top of my list. All the 8Ps are important, but those are the top three in my book.

American Nuclear Power Dependence

Dennis: I recently watched a webinar you did with some real experts on nuclear power and uranium. You cited some surprising statistics I had never heard before, about the number of homes in the US that rely on nuclear power and the number that rely on uranium from Russia. Can you share some of that information for our readers, as well as the investment and security implications?

Marin: Here is another startling fact that, if you are an American, I’m sure you will have a major issue with. In 2012, more uranium was produced by a Russian company on American soil than by all American producers combined on American soil. I’m sure Russians like that fact, but not so much Americans.

Also, the US imports over 90% of the uranium it consumes annually. It is by far the most contrarian investment in energy today globally.

The only solution for the security issues is to pay a higher price for uranium… or 20% of the homes in the US could go without electricity. Talk about creating a chaotic event. The sector and commodity are cheap, and producers cannot make money at current prices.

Dennis: Once a utility has gone through the long, expensive process of building a uranium facility, it is pretty much committed to that one type of fuel. It doesn’t seem to have the latitude to convert, like a lot of utilities did from coal-fired plants to gas. Is that correct?

Marin: There is a misconception that thorium can be substituted for uranium in the reactors. Nothing can substitute for uranium in the existing reactors. In fact, even if the price of uranium doubled or tripled, the increased costs to creating nuclear electricity would be negligible. Once the plant is built, the big costs are paid for.

I think your real concern is this. If the price of uranium rises – as I believe it will – the US utilities will pay whatever it takes to buy their fuel, and that cost will be passed on to the American consumer. There is no realistic Plan B.

Dennis: Is uranium where you see the next best opportunity for huge investment gains? And if so, what caution would you offer to those subscribers who may be close to retirement and do not have the benefit of a do-over with their investment dollars?

Marin: Every investor needs to know his time frame for investing. If an investor is looking to earn yield from uranium, then he should invest in the larger producers. The way to invest in uranium with the lowest risk is to actually buy uranium. There’s no political, production, exploration, or management risk involved. However, you can’t exactly buy uranium and store it beside your gold and silver coins.

We recently put together a special report in which we discuss exactly how investors can get exposure to the lowest-risk uranium investment in the world, which actually owns uranium (U3O8) and also uranium hexafluoride (UF6).

If you’re looking for higher-risk exposure, we’ve had some great success with Fission, which we recently sold for over 100% gains, but it doesn’t pay out a dividend, and produces no uranium. The company explores for uranium.

The Future of Oil

Dennis: We see the price of oil fluctuate regularly. In the long run, how much effect does that really have on the price of energy? You make a great case for uranium; since demand is going to far outpace supply, prices should rapidly escalate.

Marin: The reality is, most oil reserves are in countries that are not friendly to the US, and that oil is produced and managed by national oil companies.

Take Venezuela for example, which has some amazing oil deposits. The US imports almost as much oil from Venezuela as it does from the Canadian oil sands, and yet it pays almost twice as much for Venezuela’s oil as it does Canada’s oil.

Now, is Venezuela reinvesting the profits back into exploration and replacing produced oil? No. Venezuela is actually decreasing oil production, and yet domestic demand is increasing. This is what we call “the big pinch.” Thus, the only solution for Venezuela is to sell less oil, but for a much higher price.

Venezuela is not alone in this problem. Most of OPEC has this problem. Oil will go higher in the years to come. Porter Stansberry bet me 100 ounces of silver on my oil price prediction, and he lost. I offered him double or nothing, and he refused. And it’s not just oil; all energy fuels are going higher.

Dennis: One final question. Energy stocks have been somewhat out of favor over the last few years. What do you anticipate for the next couple of years?

Marin: That is a good thing. You buy when things are unpopular and sell when they become popular again.

The world will need more oil, uranium, and natural gas to keep the global economy going. Higher prices for uranium will result in increased attention by the hedge funds chasing gains. And because the sector is so small, those who are positioned early will make incredible gains only if they sell when it becomes popular – which we will definitely do when it’s time.

Companies bringing North American technologies to old, proven, producing deposits to enhance production will also see considerable gains. For example, there are areas of Europe that produced oil before the first oil well was ever drilled in Texas. Those areas have never seen modern, North American technology, and the projects are de-risked because we already know the oil is there. These areas have produced in the past, and the infrastructure is in place, which means lower costs for implementing enhanced oil recoveries.

Not to mention, Europe depends on Russia for so much of its energy needs, and it pays a premium for that dependence. I think in the coming years, the European energy renaissance will be an area from which to profit.

Dennis: Marin, it looks like we are on the verge of some major changes here in the US. Not only will nuclear energy prices climb, but our electricity bills will also. I really appreciate you taking the time to teach our subscribers about the energy sector. If we have to pay higher electric bills, we need to profit too. Thanks for taking the time to help us.

Marin: My pleasure, Dennis; thanks for having me.

As the editor of Miller’s Money Forever, I often have the pleasure of interviewing my colleagues on a variety of topics to give our subscribers even greater exposure to different investing sectors. Recent interviews include:

  • Maximizing Your IRA with Terry Coxon, senior economist and editor at Casey Research;
  • The Ultimate Layer of Financial Protection with Nick Giambruno, editor of International Man;
  • Juniors for Seniors with Louis James, globe-trotting senior editor of Casey Research’s metals and mining publications; and
  • Other esteemed colleagues.

Gain access to everything our portfolio has to offer, as well as access to these top minds through occasional interviews and input, with your risk-free 90-day trial subscription to Miller’s Money Forever.

 

 

 

Thoughts from the Frontline: Forecast 2014: “Mark Twain!”

By John Mauldin

 

Piloting on the Mississippi River was not work to me; it was play — delightful play, vigorous play, adventurous play – and I loved it…

– Mark Twain

In the 1850s, flat-bottom paddlewheel steamboats coursed up and down the mighty Mississippi, opening up the Midwest to trade and travel. But it was treacherous travel. The current was constantly shifting the sandbars underneath the placid, smoothly rolling surface of the river. What was sufficient depth one week on a stretch of the river might become a treacherous sandbar the next, upon which a steamboat could run aground, perhaps even breaching the hull and sinking the ship. To prevent such a catastrophe, a crewman would throw a long rope with a lead weight at the end as far in front of the boat as possible (and thus the crewman was called the leadman). The rope was usually twenty-five fathoms long and was marked at increments of two, three, five, seven, ten, fifteen, seventeen and twenty fathoms. A fathom was originally the distance between a man’s outstretched hands, but since this could be quite imprecise, it evolved to be six feet.

The leadsman would usually stand on a platform, called “the chains,” which projected from the ship over the water, and “sound” from there. A typical sound would be expressed as “By the mark 7,” or whatever the depth was. In modern English language, it is interesting to note that the expression “deep six,” refers to this old method of measuring water. On the Mississippi River in the 1850s, the leadsmen also used old-fashioned words for some of the numbers; for example instead of “two” they would say “twain”. Thus when the depth was two fathoms, they would call “by the mark twain!” (bymarktwain.com)

And thus a young Samuel Clemens, apprentice Mississippi riverboat pilot, would take the “soundings” and from time to time would sing out the depth of two fathoms as “By the mark twain!” We think that is how he found his pen name. In Life on the Mississippi, Mark Twain describes sounding: “Often there is a deal of fun and excitement about sounding, especially if it is a glorious summer day, or a blustering night. But in winter the cold and the peril take most of the fun out of it.”

The pilot would much prefer to hear the sweet sing-song call of “no bottom,” as that meant there was no danger of running aground. “Mark twain,” or 12 feet, was getting rather shallow for some of the larger vessels and so sounded a note of caution.

On their surface today the markets seem as smooth and flowing as Old Man River, but are there sandbars lurking in the depths? Will the journey this year be as fast and easy as in the last five? Can we plunge on into the night, relishing the call of “No bottom” that we are hearing from the bulls? Or is that a cry of “Mark twain!” telling us to be cautious?

Perhaps we should take our own soundings from the data to see what might lie up ahead. This week, in the third part of my 2014 forecast, we’ll look in particular at the US markets as a proxy for markets in general. (This letter will print a little longer as there are lots of charts.)

But first, I am pleased to announce that my friend former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will be at my conference this May 13-16 in San Diego, joining (so far) Niall Ferguson, Kyle Bass, Ian Bremmer, David Rosenberg, Dr. Lacy Hunt, Dylan Grice, David Rosenberg, David Zervos, Rich Yamarone, Code Red coauthor Jonathan Tepper, Jeff Gundlach, Paul McCulley, and a few more surprises waiting to confirm. Nothing but headliners, one after the other.

When I first broached the idea of our conference with Jon Sundt, the founder of cosponsor Altegris, the one rule I had was that I wanted the conference to be one I would want to attend. The usual conference boasts a few headliners, and then the sponsors fill out the lineup. I wanted to do a conference where no speaker could buy his way onto the platform. That means we often lose money on the conference (hard as that may be to imagine, at the price, I acknowledge); however, the purpose is not to make money but to learn with – and maybe have some fun with – great people. We do put on a great show, and my partners make sure it is run well. But the best part will be your fellow attendees. A lot of long-term friendships are forged at this conference. You can learn more and sign up at http://www.altegris.com/sic.

It’s All About the Earnings

For over a dozen years I have regularly compared notes on S&P 500 earnings with my friend Ed Easterling. For Ed, the subject borders on an obsession. I am, of course, far more reserved in my enthusiasm. We have co-authored numerous articles, and Ed never fails to call to my attention anything unusual that happens on the earnings front. He is the ultimate data wonk, and I say that in an affectionate way. Ed has what I think is one of the best data research sites anywhere at www.crestmontresearch.com. So this week I read his latest email, about the uptick in the forecast earnings of the S&P 500, with considerable interest.

As they do at this time of year, S&P posted an update to their 2014 EPS (earnings per share) forecast. For newbies, “as-reported” earnings are earnings as reported to the tax authorities, and we can more or less think of them as real earnings. “Operating earnings,” on the other hand, are what companies like you to pay attention to. They exclude one-time charges and other things that companies find inconvenient. I call operating earnings “EBIH earnings” – earnings before interest and hype.

S&P conveniently gathers forecasted earnings data from numerous analysts and amalgamates it in one big spreadsheet along with the history of actual earnings. You can access their spreadsheet here. The data we will be looking at will come from the first tab, but there is also a lot of data commentary from Howard Silverblatt, the longtime curator and maven of all things earnings.

The forecast for 2014 as-reported earnings was $106 in late December. Now it’s $119.70 – up 13% from the previous forecast just two weeks ago and up 20% versus the 2013 estimate of $99.42. Since 2013 has concluded, that number will be revised only slightly. Silverblatt says the revised figure is based upon an improved outlook rather than something technical like an accounting change.

The table below is a screenshot from the Excel spreadsheet. Note that, depending on which set of earnings you want to use (and Ed and I prefer to use as-reported as opposed to operating earnings), if the forecasters are right, then the P/E ratio at the end of 2014 will be in the neighborhood of 15, less than the long-term average and down considerably from today’s. This can only be described as a bullish number.

Ed notes in a quick email, which spurred a long telephone conversation, that “The 2015 forecast is still a month or so away – yet just imagine the bull stampede if it comes in +15%. That’ll would take the figure to $138 and a forward “next year” P/E of only 13 when the trailing 20-year Shiller P/E10 is 25.4.”

I would have ended that sentence with an exclamation point (!), but Ed is more even-tempered in his writing. Still, a price-to-earnings ratio of 13, published on the official S&P website for all the world to see, would have the bulls salivating. It would even have me close to “pounding-the-table-bullish,” as a true P/E of 13 is quite favorable for the long term (say, ten years). So should we take the forward-looking view? If that P/E ratio of 13 based on today’s price of the S&P 500 turns out to be the reality, another 30% year is well within the scope of possibilities and might likely be considered the most probable outcome.

And the markets seem to think that will be the case. Lately, it seems every week (and sometimes every day) brings a new all-time high. For fans of Mad magazine, it’s an Alfred E. Newman world: “What? Me worry?” Volatility is back at pre-crisis lows, as the chart below illustrates.

This kind of news would normally point to prosperity across the real economy and call for a celebration – but take heed: prices do not always reflect reality, and analysts’ expectations consistently tend to overstate actual earnings, as you can see in the following graph from a 2010 McKinsey on Finance Study, Equity analysts: Still too bullish. When that graph gets updated next year, we will see that nothing has changed.

For the record, I was citing similar research back in 2003 in my book Bull’s Eye Investing. In fact, there was a whole chapter on the topic of analysts’ estimates. They also tend to be too bearish at market bottoms. Basically, analysts tend to forecast for the near future more of what has happened in the recent past. At turning points they really miss the boat.

If we look at recent years in light of long-term valuations and market behavior, we see that the combination of high and rising valuations, low and suppressed volatility, and a relatively weak trend in real earnings growth is a proven recipe for poor long-term returns and market instability.

The S&P 500 Index returned 32% excluding dividends from January 1, 2012, through January 17, 2014. Over that time frame, real earnings grew by less than 8%…

… while the trailing 12-month price-to-earnings multiple has expanded by nearly 30%, from 12.8x to 17.3x.

That means most of the recent gains in US equity markets have been driven by multiple expansion, in spite of sluggish real earnings growth. Despite an improvement in the real earnings trend since I dug into US stock market valuations, multiple expansion, and earnings last August, the disproportionate amount of gains attributable to multiple expansion versus gains attributable to earnings is a clear sign that sentiment, rather than fundamentals, may be the dominant force driving the markets higher.

Of course, the simple trailing 12-month price-to-earnings ratio can be misleading at critical turning points if you are trying to handicap the potential for long-term returns. For example, the collapse in real earnings during the global financial crisis sent the S&P 500’s trailing P/E multiple through the roof by March 2009. So, while trailing P/E is a useful tool for understanding what has already happened in the market, Dr. Robert Shiller’s “cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio” (commonly known as the “Shiller P/E” or “CAPE”) is far more useful for calculating a reasonable range of expected returns going forward.

As I wrote back in August 2013 when the prevailing Shiller P/E sat near 24, this approach won’t help you much with short-term market timing; but current valuations have historically proven extremely useful in forecasting long-term returns. In his book Irrational Exuberance (2005), Dr. Shiller shows how this approach “confirms that long-term investors – investors who commit their money to an investment for ten full years – did do well when prices were low relative to earnings at the beginning of the ten years. Long-term investors would be well-advised, individually, to lower their exposure to the stock market when it is high … and to get into the market when it is low.”

As you can see in in the graph above, compared to the more common trailing 12-month P/E ratio, the Shiller P/E metric essentially smooths out the series and helps us avoid false signals by dividing the market’s current price by the average inflation-adjusted earnings of the past ten years. Historically, this ratio has peaked and given way to major market declines at around 29x on average (or 26x excluding the dot-com bubble), and it has bottomed in the mid-single digits.

Not only does today’s Shiller P/E of 25.4x suggest a seriously overvalued market, but the rapid multiple expansion of the last few years, coupled with sluggish earnings growth, suggests that this market is also seriously overbought. Today’s markets are just slightly less expensive than the 27x level seen at the October 2007 market peak and are only modestly below the levels seen before the stock market crash in 1929. Although we are nowhere near the all-time “stupid” peak of 43x reached in March 2000, a powerful narrative drove the markets to clearly unsustainable levels then, and a powerful narrative is driving markets today. In many ways, faith in the Federal Reserve today is roughly equivalent to faith in the words dot com in 1999.

While it may be impossible to accurately predict when this policy-driven market will break, history suggests it would be very reasonable for the secular bear to eventually bottom at a P/E multiple between 5x and 10x, opening up one of the rare wealth-creation opportunities to deploy capital at truly cheap prices.

Sometimes we have to wade through what may seem like deceptively dry technical details to sort out compelling conclusions, but I hope you’ll focus on the main idea: We are not talking about the potential for a modest 20% to 30% drawdown in the US stock market. If the historical relationship between Shiller’s P/E and consequent returns is any indication, we are talking about the potential for a 50%+ peak-to-trough drawdown and ten-year average annual returns as bad as -6.1%, according to the chart below from Cliff Asness at AQR. Such a result would fall in line with somewhat similar deleveraging periods such as the United States experienced in the 1930s and Japan has experienced since 1989. There is no way to sugarcoat it: too much equity risk can be unproductive and even destructive in this kind of economic environment.

But where there is danger there is also opportunity. I believe this is a terrific time to take some profits and diversify away from the growth-oriented risk factors that dominate most investors’ portfolios.

On that front, keep a lookout for a special report that we will release in the next week to share five critical steps you can take to defend your portfolio from economic disasters, bankrupt governments (or governments that are testing their borrowing limits), and increasingly desperate governments. It will be a free report for all Thoughts from the Frontline readers, and we hope you will share it with everyone you know.

To continue reading this article from Thoughts from the Frontline – a free weekly publication by John Mauldin, renowned financial expert, best-selling author, and Chairman of Mauldin Economics – please click here.

© 2013 Mauldin Economics. All Rights Reserved.
Thoughts from the Frontline is a free weekly economic e-letter by best-selling author and renowned financial expert, John Mauldin. You can learn more and get your free subscription by visiting www.MauldinEconomics.com.

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Monetary Policy Week in Review – Jan 13-17, 2014: Brazil raises rate as IMF warns of deflation amid buoyant mood

By CentralBankNews.info
    Last week Brazil captured the honor of being the first central bank to raise interest rates in 2014 while Tajikistan cut its rate and six other central banks maintained their policy rates as higher global growth forecasts and a sense of optimism in the euro zone was dented by the head of the IMF who warned against the risk of deflation.
    The mood in global financial markets was upbeat, supported by the World Bank raising its 2014 growth forecast and reports the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will follow suit along with European Central Bank (ECB) board member Benoit Coeure’s confidence in the economic recovery that he said there might not be a need for another round of long-term refinancing operations (LTROs).
    More importantly, the positive tone in global financial markets is allowing the Federal Reserve’s reduction in asset purchases to proceed smoothly, though central banks worldwide remain on tenterhooks, aware that the gradual unwinding of years of extraordinary accommodative policy has the potential to disrupt capital flows and crush financial markets and currencies.
   The Bank of Mozambique, one of the six central banks that held rates steady last week, clearly expressed this sense of cautious relief over how financial markets so far are taking the Fed’s tapering of quantitative easing, saying its own policy decision was taken in “a scenario that requires caution and prudence.”
    IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde injected a dose of harsh reality into the general upbeat mood, acknowledging that the deep-freeze in the global economy is over but world growth remains “too low, too fragile and too uneven” with some 200 million people in need of employment.
    “With inflation running below many central banks’ targets, we see rising risks of deflation, which could prove disastrous for the recovery,” she told the National Press Club in Washington D.C., adding:
    “If inflation is the genie, then deflation is the ogre that must be fought decisively.”

   Through the first three weeks of the year, 3 central banks have cut rates, or 17 percent of this year’s 18 policy decisions taken by the 90 central banks followed by Central Bank News. This is slightly down from 20 percent the previous week as Brazil last week became the first central bank to raise its rates this year, continuing last year’s tightening cycle.

LIST OF LAST WEEK’S (WEEK 3) DECISIONS:

TABLE WITH LAST WEEK’S MONETARY POLICY DECISIONS:

COUNTRYMSCI     NEW RATE           OLD RATE        1 YEAR AGO
KENYAFM8.50%8.50%9.50%
TAJIKISTAN4.80%5.50%6.50%
BRAZILEM10.50%10.00%7.25%
SERBIAFM9.50%9.50%11.50%
MOZAMBIQUE8.25%8.25%9.59%
CHILEEM4.50%4.50%5.00%
EGYPTEM8.25%8.25%9.25%
PAKISTANFM10.00%10.00%9.50%

This week
(Week 4) five central banks will be deciding on monetary policy, including Turkey, Hungary, Japan, Canada and Thailand.

COUNTRYMSCI             DATE CURRENT  RATE        1 YEAR AGO
TURKEYEM21-Jan4.50%5.50%
HUNGARYEM21-Jan3.00%5.50%
JAPANDM22-Jan              N/A0.10%
CANADADM22-Jan1.00%1.00%
THAILANDEM 22-Jan2.25%2.75%

An Analysis of The Turkish Lira

By Alex Eliades

FX traders everywhere have seen the Turkish Lira plummet to record lows versus the US Dollar since the government scandal in which several ministers and hundreds of Government officials were arrested on charges of corruption. The result has been a massive impact on international confidence in the Turkey’s government and has severely affected an already dwindling currency.

The Turkish Lira had seen massive drops in the past 25 years before recent events. Bloomberg started tracking the USD/TRY currency pair back in 1981 and since then it has never been as low as it is these past days. On my MT4 chart which goes back to 1999 I can see you got change from 1 Lira when you purchased 2 dollars. In contrast today you will need nearly 5 Lira to purchase 1 dollar.

Increases in consumption taxes have been announced, which reduced the likelihood increasing the interest rate devaluing the currency further. The consumption tax hike could add to inflation this year making the Lira a bad currency to hold on to. Turkey also has a very large current-account deficit which contributes to the vulnerability of the Lira.

In order to stabilise the currency the Turkish central bank sold off some of their dollar reserves and other foreign currencies and had spent about $15 billion doing so. This provided some stability and has slowed the currency devaluation but it has not halted it completely and volatility continues. It is projected that the central bank will spend another $6 billion before the end of the month. Turkey has less than $40 billion in foreign exchange reserves so the central bank cannot safely spend much more in order to preserve the Lira.

The US Federal Reserve’s move to cut their monetary stimulus has affected some of the leading emerging economies, which has mounted more pressure on the Lira. In 2013, the Turkish Lira fell against the dollar by 17% and this trend appears to be continuing into 2014.

Foreign investors were not so long ago heavily investing in Turkey and other emerging economies during the boom and while developed economies were flat. However, as the developed economies start recovering and show signs of higher yields investors are pulling back from emerging markets like Turkey.

Economically speaking, on top of everything else the political scandal could not come at a worse time for the Turkish Lira. With local elections due in March this is a critical time for the leading AK political party. The central bank is independent of the Government but the political part still has strong influence over the organisation. It is very likely that any stiff policies that are due to come out of the central bank due to the crisis will be delayed to after the elections in March.

Interestingly Turkish Energy Undersecretary Metin Kilci made a public statement announcing that natural gas prices would not be raised this year. This is a very bold statement given the fact that Turkey has to import all of its natural gas and as the Turkish Lira devalues the local price of the gas increases accordingly, irrespective of global price rises. Analysts believe that it is likely that an increase in gas prices of at least 15% are due as prices have been keep constant since October 2012 and in that time the cost of gas to the Turkish has increased significantly.

Foreign currency traders are looking at the USD/TRY price plummet with great caution as it’s very difficult to predict stability or where the devaluation will end. However, if traders can gauge it right there is the potential to make a lot of money.

About the Author:

Alex works for XGLOBAL Markets, which is a brokerage firm specializing in Forex, CFDs and Metals trading. He is a columnist for a popular financial newspaper, blogs on topics that include financial markets, growth hacking and has written a list of academic papers.

 

 

WTI Futures Falls From Two-Week High on China Data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Futures for the West Texas Intermediate  (WTI) dropped from its highest price in two weeks, following the government data which revealed the China’s industrial output slowed last month. China is the second largest oil consumer in the world after the US. Futures dropped as much as 0.8%, while factory production advanced 9.7% higher, according to reports from China’s National Bureau of Statistics. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for February delivery dropped 0.75% lower at $93.61 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after adding 41 cents to $94.37 on Jan 17, the first weekly increase in three weeks. Brent for March settlement declined 0.2% to $106.22 a barrel on the ICE futures Europe exchange. The European benchmark crude stood at a $12.64 premium to WTI for the same month.

WTI – China

According to a data released by the National Bureau of Statistics, China’s GDP expanded by 7.7% in the December quarter. Coming in higher than the 7.6% increase analysts forecasted, but slower than the 7.8% seen in the previous quarter. China’s Industrial production increased by 9.7% year-on-year in December, down from the 10% rise seen in the previous month. While Retail sales in December rose 13.6% higher year-on-year, compared to 13.7% recorded in November. Bullish bets on WTI were reduced by 17,455 options and futures to 229,722 in the week ended January 14, according to data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

WTI – Iran Deal

Last weekend, western powers including the US, China, Russia, France, Germany and the UK finalized a six-month deal with Iran, over the country’s nuclear program; which will be implemented from Monday. As part of the deal, the Persian nation will scale back its nuclear developments, while the US will ease economic sanctions.   Visit www.hymarkets.com   to find out more about our products and start trading today with only $50 using the latest trading technology today.

The post WTI Futures Falls From Two-Week High on China Data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Asian Stocks Starts Week in Red on China GDP Report

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Stocks in the Asian region  started-off the week lower following the release of China’s GDP data, which revealed that China’s economy was growing at a slow pace in the fourth quarter. Shares in Japan were shaken by the nation’s weak consumer data and strong yen. Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng declined 0.47% lower at 23,025 points at the time of writing, while the China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite edged 0.18% lower to 2,001.35 points at the same time. South Korea’s Kospi index edged 0.5% higher. In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei index lost 0.74% to 15,618.23 points at the time of writing, at the same time Tokyo’s Topix index dropped 0.43% at 1,291.83 points. Industrial & Commercial Bank of China lost 1.4% in Hong Kong, while shares in the world’s largest gaming giants, Nintendo Co. declined 6.2% in Tokyo, marking the second-biggest drop on the regional benchmark index. Car-makers Mitsubishi Motors lost 2%, while Sharp Corp declined 1% lower.

Stocks – China GDP Data

According to reports from the National Bureau of Statistics, the second-largest economy expanded by 7.7% in the fourth quarter from the previous year. Dropping from 7.8% growth seen in the previous three months. China’s Industrial production increased by 9.7% in December, down from the 10% rise seen in the previous month. While Retail sales in December rose 13.6% higher year-on-year, compared to 13.7% recorded in November. China’s fixed-asset investment; excluding rural households, came in 19.6% higher between January to December from the previous year, expanding by 20.6%. The tight credit conditions could reduce the nation’s economy growth even further, with policymaker’s adamant on scaling-back the nation’s banking activities.   Win a luxurious trip to the Maldives & up to $30,000 cash for trading with us! Visit for details http://ift.tt/L42Q3q

The post Asian Stocks Starts Week in Red on China GDP Report appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

The Senior Strategist: China slowing down

China’s economic growth slowed in the fourth quarter. Gross domestic product rose 7.7 percent in the October-December period from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

“Chinese growth momentum is weaking,” said Jyske Banks Senior Strategist, Ib Fredslund Madsen.

This week companys earnings and World Economic Forum in Davos will attract attention.

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