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Posted By Topic: Global economic reality may clash in 2017       - Views: 1328
ferari
16-Dec 2016 Friday 4:37 PM (2681 days ago)               #1
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Investors sound optimistic about a breakout for the world economy next year, but for all the talk of huge tax cuts from the incoming U.S. presidency of Donald Trump, the economic outlook looks similar to 2016: uneven and unspectacular.
Accelerating inflation and a soaring U.S. dollar as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates are also risks to the economic balance, magnified by that pending stimulus.
Much may hinge on financial markets, which for a brief period around the start of this year looked like their fretting over China might throw the global economy off track. There is plenty more uncertainty about trade with China now than then.
So, many of the several hundred professionals polled by Reuters worldwide say the global trade slowdown during the world economy's lukewarm recovery from financial crisis that started nearly a decade ago could worsen.
Emerging economies will remain vulnerable. Brazil's persistent, crippling recession is way out of line with its soaring stock market, and much of Asia will grow below potential, putting the latest global growth forecast for the year ahead at 3.2 percent, less optimistic than it was this time last year.
For the developed world, meanwhile, it has been productivity gains that have been lacking for so long and policymakers remain at a loss on the reasons why, and how to remedy the problem.
The U.S. jobless rate is already down to 4.6 percent and hiring slowing, so economists say improving growth in output per worker will be crucial for prosperity.
"Mr. Trump and his team have promised growth of 3.5 to 4 percent or more, which we see as 'magical thinking' unless accompanied by accelerated productivity growth," noted Michael Carey, U.S. economist at CA-CIB in New York.
(For interactive graphic economic outlook from Reuters polls, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2e7JFpt)
MARKETS OUT OF STEP
The most optimistic U.S. growth forecast for any point in 2017 in a Reuters poll taken a month after Trump's shock election victory was 3.8 percent, well short of the peak rate in a business cycle that is already mature by past standards.
The consensus, in line with the Fed's view, is a little above 2 percent. That is similar to a Reuters poll outlook for 2016 in a series of forecasts made a year ago on growth, rates, inflation and foreign exchange that were broadly accurate.
Such lukewarm growth does not compute with another set of wildly bullish stock market views, although it is clear many strategists who initially said Trump would be a threat to markets have abruptly changed their minds since the election.
Strategists foresee a rising U.S. dollar, already at a 14-year high, and U.S. Treasury yields edging up as the Fed follows through with more rate hikes next year. But Wall Street isn't convinced yet there will be three more.
A rising dollar may blunt future performance of U.S. companies, many dependent on international business for revenue. Many of their share prices trade near record highs, but propped up by buyback schemes and stimulus, not business investment.
Dollar strength, weakening other currencies, will also influence how emerging markets manage relatively higher inflation, as well as wilting business confidence.
But for all the talk of trade barriers, oil prices rising on supply cuts, and planned U.S. tax cuts and infrastructure spending, the global inflation outlook hasn't changed much, even if the Fed is sounding more worried about it.
The Fed's preferred inflation gauge is forecast to average 1.8 percent next year, in line with its own view. ]
POLITICAL RISK RISING
The world's second largest economy, China, has turned up slightly this year, but built on a government borrowing binge and a partly-managed weaker currency. Growth is forecast to slow, and tensions between Beijing and the incoming Trump administration are already flaring. ]
Even India's economy - the fastest-growing in the world this year - is bracing for a growth hit from a radical government move to replace huge swathes of its currency in circulation.
One bright spot is the recent acceleration in euro zone growth as the European Central Bank continues buying tens of billions of euros worth of bonds each month, keeping the euro under pressure and making exports relatively cheaper.
But elections in Germany, France and the Netherlands threaten to further challenge the status quo just as economic effects from expected formal divorce proceedings start to appear after Britain's shock vote in June to leave the European Union.
The potency of global monetary policy is fading too, and further out of synch with the Fed's tightening campaign. The ECB and other major central banks like the Reserve Bank of India and the Central Bank of Brazil, are expected to ease more.



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justin11sg
17-Dec 2016 Saturday 2:36 AM (2681 days ago)            #2
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Thanks. The bull is already 9 yrs old. Got to be careful now. 




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ferari
20-Dec 2016 Tuesday 10:52 AM (2678 days ago)            #3
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U.S. rate hike has caused ripples through global markets, as investors began to contemplate the impact of American monetary tightening and beefed-up fiscal spending under a President Donald Trump.

Turning point

Many traders at a stock brokerage here described comments by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen Wednesday as more hawkish than expected.

A 25-basis-point increase in the federal funds rate was announced at 2 p.m., following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. The first hike in a year, which lifted the benchmark rate to a range of 0.5% and 0.75%, was largely expected. But Yellen also revealed that the Fed was now looking at raising the rate three times in 2017, instead of the two hikes that had been indicated before.

Yellen also cautioned against guessing President-elect Donald Trump's intentions regarding fiscal spending. "We're operating under a cloud of uncertainty at the moment and we have time to wait and see what changes occur and factor those into our decision-making as we gain greater clarity."

Fed watchers took this as an indication that the pace of rate hikes could hasten to more than the three estimated for 2017 as Trump's policies are implemented.

What the markets saw as the Fed's hawkish statements triggered stock selling, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average sharply lower on Wednesday. But the "Trump rally" resumed the next day as optimism about the incoming president's economic policies won out over concerns.

Trump's election victory has raised the likelihood that the U.S. will see economic stimulus via fiscal spending and monetary policy normalization play out simultaneously. Financial markets have reacted to this enthusiastically, seeing domestic demand growth around the corner. Stocks, interest rates and the dollar have all gone higher side by side as a result.

Winners & losers

Dramatic shifts in monetary and fiscal policies in the country that issues the world's reserve currency will have a huge impact globally. Developed economies will likely benefit, but some emerging countries could face higher debt costs and fewer borrowing opportunities, said Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch Ratings.

Meanwhile, as the greenback continues to rise toward parity with the euro for the first time since 2002, the eurozone countries are also likely to benefit. This comes at an opportune time for the European Central Bank. The bank has just decided to scale down its quantitative easing program, having reached a point where it needs to start worrying about running out of assets to purchase.

By contrast, a stronger dollar and higher U.S. interest rates could spell trouble for emerging economies by spurring capital flight and driving up dollar-denominated liabilities.

In Mexico, Banco de Mexico raised rates by 50 basis points Thursday, a day after the U.S. increase. The central bank apparently made its fifth rate hike this year to prevent the peso from plunging against the dollar, as well as to hold down inflationary pressure. Trump's election win has made things tougher for Mexico's central bank. The incoming president's pledges during the campaign signal that the southern neighbor may have less to gain from the policies of the new administration.

Brace for turbulence

When the Fed raised rates a year ago for the first time in nine and a half years, a sharp correction in the Chinese stock market ensued. This sparked sharp sell-offs in stock markets around the world.

A similar turbulence could follow after the U.S. rate hike this time as well. Although economic conditions are improving, there is a need to remain vigilant about risks, Timothy Adams, former undersecretary of the U.S. Treasury, warned.

If U.S. domestic demand climbs, rises in trade can lead to growth. Yet Trump's protectionism threatens that scenario. While Trump euphoria sweeps through the market, risks continue to build up. The direction of the global economy and capital flowing through the markets remains uncertain.



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justin11sg
23-Dec 2016 Friday 1:37 AM (2675 days ago)            #4
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Dow approaching 20K. Very high wor.




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04-Jan 2017 Wednesday 9:51 AM (2663 days ago)            #5
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Tq for sharing




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ferari
08-Jan 2017 Sunday 9:52 PM (2658 days ago)            #6
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A few week’s ago I discussed the post-election surge in the market based on rather optimistic outlooks as opposed to the technical underpinnings that currently exists. As I specially stated in the weekend newsletter entitled “Dow 20,000” the market was beginning to take on an eerily similar feeling:
“If this market rally seems eerily familiar, it’s because it is. If fact, the backdrop of the rally reminds me much of what was happening in 1999.
1999
Fed was hiking rates as worries about inflationary pressures were present.
Economic growth was improving
Interest and inflation were rising
Earnings were rising through the use of “new metrics,” share buybacks and an M&A spree. (Who can forget the market greats of Enron, Worldcom and Global Crossing)
Stock market was beginning to go parabolic as exuberance exploded in a “can’t lose market.”
If you were around then, you will remember.”
With Janet Yellen and the Fed once again chasing an imaginary inflation “boogeyman” (inflation is currently lower than any pre-recessionary period since the 1970’s) the tightening of monetary policy, with already weak economic growth, may once again prove problematic.
Interest Rates Reflect Economic Growth & InflationInterest Rates Reflect Economic Growth & Inflation
“But Lance, this is the most hated bull market ever?”
If price acceleration in the market is a sign of investor optimism, then the chart recently published by MarketWatch should raise some alarm bells.
Important Dow MilestonesImportant Dow Milestones
The only other time in history where the Dow advanced 5000 points over a 24-month period was during the 1998-1999 period of “irrational exuberance” as the Fed was fighting the fears an inflationary advance, while valuations were rising and GDP growth rates were slowing.
Maybe it’s just coincidence.
Maybe “this time is different.”
Or it could just be the inevitable beginning of the ending of the current bull market cycle.

Beginning Of The End Of Current Bull Market Cycle?



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Toh7788
10-Jan 2017 Tuesday 1:03 PM (2656 days ago)            #7
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quote originally posted by ferari:

Investors sound optimistic about a breakout for the world economy next year, but for all the talk of huge tax cuts from the incoming U.S. presidency of Donald Trump, the economic outlook looks similar to 2016: uneven and unspectacular.
Accelerating inflation and a soaring U.S. dollar as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates are also risks to the economic balance, magnified by that pending stimulus.
Much may hinge on financial markets, which for a brief period around the start of this year looked like their fretting over China might throw the global economy off track. There is plenty more uncertainty about trade with China now than then.
So, many of the several hundred professionals polled by Reuters worldwide say the global trade slowdown during the world economy's lukewarm recovery from financial crisis that started nearly a decade ago could worsen.
Emerging economies will remain vulnerable. Brazil's persistent, crippling recession is way out of line with its soaring stock market, and much of Asia will grow below potential, putting the latest global growth forecast for the year ahead at 3.2 percent, less optimistic than it was this time last year.
For the developed world, meanwhile, it has been productivity gains that have been lacking for so long and policymakers remain at a loss on the reasons why, and how to remedy the problem.
The U.S. jobless rate is already down to 4.6 percent and hiring slowing, so economists say improving growth in output per worker will be crucial for prosperity.
"Mr. Trump and his team have promised growth of 3.5 to 4 percent or more, which we see as 'magical thinking' unless accompanied by accelerated productivity growth," noted Michael Carey, U.S. economist at CA-CIB in New York.
(For interactive graphic economic outlook from Reuters polls, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2e7JFpt)
MARKETS OUT OF STEP
The most optimistic U.S. growth forecast for any point in 2017 in a Reuters poll taken a month after Trump's shock election victory was 3.8 percent, well short of the peak rate in a business cycle that is already mature by past standards.
The consensus, in line with the Fed's view, is a little above 2 percent. That is similar to a Reuters poll outlook for 2016 in a series of forecasts made a year ago on growth, rates, inflation and foreign exchange that were broadly accurate.
Such lukewarm growth does not compute with another set of wildly bullish stock market views, although it is clear many strategists who initially said Trump would be a threat to markets have abruptly changed their minds since the election.
Strategists foresee a rising U.S. dollar, already at a 14-year high, and U.S. Treasury yields edging up as the Fed follows through with more rate hikes next year. But Wall Street isn't convinced yet there will be three more.
A rising dollar may blunt future performance of U.S. companies, many dependent on international business for revenue. Many of their share prices trade near record highs, but propped up by buyback schemes and stimulus, not business investment.
Dollar strength, weakening other currencies, will also influence how emerging markets manage relatively higher inflation, as well as wilting business confidence.
But for all the talk of trade barriers, oil prices rising on supply cuts, and planned U.S. tax cuts and infrastructure spending, the global inflation outlook hasn't changed much, even if the Fed is sounding more worried about it.
The Fed's preferred inflation gauge is forecast to average 1.8 percent next year, in line with its own view. ]
POLITICAL RISK RISING
The world's second largest economy, China, has turned up slightly this year, but built on a government borrowing binge and a partly-managed weaker currency. Growth is forecast to slow, and tensions between Beijing and the incoming Trump administration are already flaring. ]
Even India's economy - the fastest-growing in the world this year - is bracing for a growth hit from a radical government move to replace huge swathes of its currency in circulation.
One bright spot is the recent acceleration in euro zone growth as the European Central Bank continues buying tens of billions of euros worth of bonds each month, keeping the euro under pressure and making exports relatively cheaper.
But elections in Germany, France and the Netherlands threaten to further challenge the status quo just as economic effects from expected formal divorce proceedings start to appear after Britain's shock vote in June to leave the European Union.
The potency of global monetary policy is fading too, and further out of synch with the Fed's tightening campaign. The ECB and other major central banks like the Reserve Bank of India and the Central Bank of Brazil, are expected to ease more.





Every year also no good... next time singapore become indonesia



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ferari
13-Jan 2017 Friday 12:44 PM (2653 days ago)            #8
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Will stocks sell off after Trump takes the oath? Here’s what history shows
Stocks often strengthen immediately after inauguration, but 1-month returns negative
There’s a chorus calling for stocks to sell off on or around Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration on Jan. 20. What does history show?
Ryan Detrick, LPL Financial’s senior market strategist and historical number wrangler, found that there is a tendency for equities to weaken once the oath of office has been administered—but it’s often delayed a few weeks.
The logic behind the calls for stocks to weaken after the swearing-in ceremony centers on the old market adage: “buy the rumor, sell the news.” The argument is that the market rally that has followed Trump’s Nov. 8 election victory has factored in potential upside, leaving the market ripe for at least a near-term downturn once the new administration gets down to the actual work of governing.
Through Wednesday, the S&P 500 SPX, -0.21% was up around 6.3% since the votes were tallied, leaving it on track for the strongest election-to-inauguration run since Bill Clinton’s re-election in 1996 was followed by an 8.8% rise
See: Here's how the stock market performs from election day through inauguration day.
The notion of an inauguration-inspired market top, which MarketWatch has written about here and here, is so widespread that some market mavens see it as a contrarian indication that near-term weakness is less likely to materialize.

How stocks have performed between Election Day and inauguration since 1928

A look back to 1928 at how the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.21% has performed between Election Day and Inauguration Day finds that the all-time champion is none other than Republican Herbert Hoover, who was elected to his first and only term on Nov. 6, 1928. (Read here to see how stocks have performed on Election Day and the day after).


Between then and his swearing in on March 4, 1929 (inauguration was moved to Jan. 20 by the 20th amendment in 1933), the index jumped 13.3%, according to Dow Jones data. Disaster would come a little under eight months later with the Crash of 1929, which stands as a signpost for the start of the Great Depression.

The biggest Election Day-to-Inauguration Day slump followed Democrat Barack Obama’s election on Nov. 4, 2008. Between then and inauguration on Jan. 20, 2009, the index dropped nearly 20%.

Read: ‘Don’t buy the dip’ and other analyst takes on Trump’s election win

Both stats suggest performance has more to do with timing than faith in prospective policies. Hoover was elected as the Roaring ‘20s and its stock-market rally came to a catastrophic end. Obama was elected in the depths of the financial crisis.

Stocks bottomed in March, setting the stage for the current seven-year-plus bull market. The index is up around 265% since the start of Obama’s first term.

“The reality is if the economy is on firm footing and not in a recession (2008) or falling into a recession (2000), most the time the returns have been rather strong for the S&P 500,” wrote analysts at LPL Financial, in a Monday note. “Considering the economy currently is probably the best economy an incoming president has inherited since Clinton in 1992, this could be another plus for equities after this election.”


Out of the 22 presidential elections since the creation of the S&P 500, the index has risen 14 times, or 63.6%, the Dow Jones data shows. On average, the move has been positive but no great shakes, with stocks rising 0.17%. When a Republican is elected, the average change has been a gain of 2.24%, while the average move following the election of a Democrat is a 1.56% decline.

When the party in power changes, the average move has been a decline of 2.97%, while the market has scored an average gain of 2.34% in the period when the same party retains the White House.






This message was edited by ferari on 13-Jan-2017 @ 12:46 PM



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ferari
20-Jan 2017 Friday 7:55 PM (2646 days ago)            #9
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The S&P 500 did a lot of nothing, continuing 2017’s trend of doing absolutely nothing. We’ve been sandwiched between 2,260 support and 2,280 resistance since the year started because traders are stubbornly sticking to their positions. Price moves when people change their mind and right now bulls are staying bullish and bears are staying bearish. Headlines and economic data no longer matter when people stop trading them.
Trump will become the 45th president of the United States Friday. Love him or hate him, it will be nice to put all of this behind us next week. Clearly the Trump trade is struggling to find new buyers since we stopped rallying in early December. Maybe we are simply consolidating gains before the next leg higher, or maybe we exhausted the supply of new buyers. Given how sanguine the market feels, it is hard to claim there is a lot of upside left because everyone is too pessimistic. If anything, I’d say traders are too optimistic and that leaves us vulnerable to a reversal in sentiment.
Even though the market barely moved 1% since early December, you’d hardly know it given all the arguing going on in the Twitter and StockTwits streams. Flat stretches like this chew up opinionated, over-active traders who jump on every “breakout” and bailout of every “breakdown”. Buying high and selling low rarely works out, but traders who come to the market with a bias on their sleeve are helpless victims to the market’s countless head-fakes. Directional traders make a lot of money when the market is moving, but they get eaten alive during these flat stretches. Sometimes the best trade is to not trade. That simple piece of advice could have saved a lot of people a lot of money and heartache.
What is the market going to do next? I wish I knew the answer. But the great thing is we don’t need to know because the market is going to tell us. The longer we hang out near resistance, the more likely it is we will eventually poke our head above it. We’ve encountered numerous negative headlines and bearish price-action. If this market was fragile and vulnerable to breaking down, those would have been more than enough to kick off a wave of selling. Instead supply dries up and we rebound within hours. That bodes well for a continuation. But demand continues to be a real problem for this market, so any gains will be slow. At this point, a continuation is more likely than a correction.
That said, if something comes along and actually spooks this market, there is a lot of air underneath us. 2,200 support is an easy jump from here and it wouldn’t take much to break through that and test the 200dma. High probability of a small gain, or a smaller probability of a large loss. Which way you trade this depends on your risk appetite, but no matter what, be ready to jump out of the way if hints of fear start cropping up. A dip under 2,260 driven by a new and unexpected headline that doesn’t bounce within hours is our sign that the market is starting a pullback to support. Trade accordingly.



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justin11sg
21-Jan 2017 Saturday 3:21 AM (2646 days ago)            #10
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Go more to bonds. Rebalance your portfolio. Gold is not a good trade anymore. Short gold.

Fed will hike more to make SnP500 great again. 




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justin11sg
26-Jan 2017 Thursday 12:02 AM (2641 days ago)            #11
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Dow hit record high of 20k now. 




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29-Jan 2017 Sunday 6:21 AM (2638 days ago)            #12
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quote originally posted by justin11sg:
Go more to bonds. Rebalance your portfolio. Gold is not a good trade anymore. Short gold. Fed will hike more to make SnP500 great again. 





quote originally posted by justin11sg:

Dow hit record high of 20k now.



Got huat anot ? 
 




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justin11sg
30-Jan 2017 Monday 2:21 PM (2636 days ago)            #13
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quote originally posted by HomeWork:



Got huat anot ? 



+4.5k nia..
 




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HomeWork
30-Jan 2017 Monday 2:27 PM (2636 days ago)            #14
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quote originally posted by justin11sg:
+4.5k nia..




pls teach me senpai!




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justin11sg
30-Jan 2017 Monday 2:29 PM (2636 days ago)            #15
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quote originally posted by HomeWork:

pls teach me senpai!



u know last year oil price shorted to $28 .
I go in first state resources (UT) and kio
earn few k now although the sales price abit exp.




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justin11sg
30-Jan 2017 Monday 2:38 PM (2636 days ago)            #16
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quote originally posted by HomeWork:

pls teach me senpai!



whats your view on gold ? GDX climbing back.




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02-Feb 2017 Thursday 5:22 PM (2633 days ago)            #17
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Tq for sharing




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ferari
15-Feb 2017 Wednesday 10:26 PM (2620 days ago)            #18
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50 day moving average breadth: First up is a look at market breadth. The key observation I have on this one is that the market has broken out to new highs, yet we continue to see "bearish divergence" i.e. higher highs on price but lower highs on 50dma breadth. As noted previously, this type of divergence can resolve peacefully - if breadth moves higher to confirm the upward move, but until then it's still a reason to have some level of skepticism on the outlook.
Bottom line: 50dma breadth is still showing divergence and is yet to confirm the breakout in price.
The Fear and Greed Index: Next one shows the CNN Money Fear and Greed Index - which provides a composite view of market sentiment. The insight on this chart is that the indicator has turned up after finding a base at the lower end of the recent range. To me this is actually something that would be consistent or confirming of a move higher (in slight contrast to the previous chart and observations), perhaps a prelude or preview of a "blow-off-top".
Bottom line: Sentiment is rebounding off the lower end of the range as part of a potential blow-off-top..
Number of consecutive trading days without a 1% intraday move: This peculiar chart from Charlie Bilello shows what the title says - but the main point is that it shows an unusually high level of low volatility... think that through for a second, and then progress to the next chart.
Bottom line: There has been a spike in the number of consecutive trading days without a 1% intraday move.
An alternative view of volatility: This graph tracks the rolling 12 month sum of daily moves exceeding positive or negative x% (4 different brackets). It offers an alternative view of volatility and shows changes in volatility regimes across time. The dark blue line (moves exceeding 5% to the upside or downside) rises in only the most volatile of times e.g. 2008 and 1987. Whereas the rest of the lines move to a greater or lesser extent depending on the scale of volatility. The key takeaway from this chart is that after seeing a surge across all but the dark blue line in 2015/16, these measures of volatility have calmed right back down to previous lows - and an important observation is this: "low volatility is often a good predictor of future higher volatility".
Bottom line: Another alternative view of volatility shows a transition back to a low volatility regime

Realized correlation: Very much a related chart, and one that potentially argues for higher volatility, this chart by PIMCO shows rolling realized correlations for the top stocks of the S&P500. A markets rule of thumb is that in times of crises or when macro currents are ruling the state of play vs individual company and sector fundamentals, correlations go towards 1 (e.g. look back to 2008 where correlations converged big time). So it makes a degree of sense that low correlations go with low volatility and high correlations go with high volatility. Interestingly, from the very limited history in that chart it looks like periods of low correlations tend to precede rises in the VIX - something to keep in mind given the previous two charts, and the next graph!
Bottom line: Realized correlations have fallen for the top S&P500 stocks. Expectations vs reality for the VIX: This chart shows the equity sentiment poll from my Twitter account with the net-bulls spread inverted against the VIX. It appears to show that respondents implicitly expect a rise in the VIX, but so far this divergence has yet to close. I talked about this and a few proprietary models I run in more detail in the latest edition of the Weekly Macro Themes and the implications for the VIX outlook. In short, the chart is another clue, along with the previous two that we could be in for higher VIX readings ahead. But then again, it could be that the poll respondents are simply too bearish. Look out for this week's poll reading to see if we get some convergence from the top down with the red line.
Bottom line: The weekly equity sentiment poll shows investors implicitly expect a higher VIX.









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ferari
24-Feb 2017 Friday 2:32 AM (2612 days ago)            #19
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The French philosopher Voltaire once wrote, “Uncertainty is an uncomfortable position. But certainty is an absurd one.” We are one month into the Trump Presidency, and, if anything is certain, it is that a great deal of uncertainty persists.
Financial markets are in a quandary as to next steps, tense, if you will. Voltaire understood that you can never know everything about anything, but, if you remain vigilant and continue to ask questions, the level of discomfort gradually dissipates, and you accept the situation.
There are benefits to uncertainty. It does keep us on our toes. We may never be able to predict indisputable outcomes, but the process is one that leads to discovery. In that vein, analysts are busy at work, poring through history books and searching for any correlations that will, hopefully, lead to fame and fortune. From the host of articles on today’s uncertain times, one can quickly discern that equity markets are straining to go higher without concrete actions from the Trump administration. Inevitably, the course of the discussion heads negative. Are we at a top? Is a major drawdown a real possibility?
How likely are we to see a major sell off in the next twelve months? Stocks have been on the rise for the past two weeks after Trump met privately with leading CEOs in America. Their tone after hearing Trump’s comments was upbeat and positive about the possibility of tax cuts and the turning back of needless regulations.
The market has responded positively, as well, but now already stretched metrics have been forced to a higher level. Tax and regulatory reform will take time and money from Congress. Central banking policy has nowhere to go but to new austerity venues. Political tensions across the globe, primarily in Europe, are rising. Volatility remains low, but the second any of these dominoes falls, every automated trading robot on the planet will issue a Sell order.
No one is getting off the Trump Train just yet. There may always be a “Greater Fool” around the corner to take out your position, but major sell offs have a way of fooling everyone at the same moment in time. As the author of the above chart attests, “Large drawdowns are not tail events.” Once you review the data presented above and accept the average probability of 18% conveyed by the modeling, you must conclude that the occurrence of a major sell off does not necessarily require a “Black Swan” to appear. It is not a “Fat Tail Anomaly” that is two to three standard deviations outside the mean.
The two phrases cited in the previous paragraph were the excuses that most analysts put forward to describe the onset of the Great Recession. In their own words, it was impossible to forecast such rare events, although there were a few astute souls that shorted the market and made billions. Perhaps that last factoid is the reason why so many are so hard at work searching for this situation’s “Holy Grail” – the one chart that spells doom for this economy and a reliable timetable to leverage for gain and profit.
The modeled probabilities under Equities, Rates, and Commodities average out at 37%, a cause for alarm in most any analyst’s playbook. If you focus on a single index, like the S&P 500 for example, history may paint for you a more palatable set of statistics. The two lower charts in the diagram above display actual historical probability demographics for both declines and negative returns for selected twelve-month periods in the past. The probability of a 15% pullback, the definition of a major correction, is nearly one chance in five, or 18%. Negative returns beyond 20% appear to be in the “fat tail” territory.
When there is uncertainty, look for confirmation from other sources.
Assessing probabilities is one way to put protective boundaries around your predictions for the future, but no one can take various chance scenarios or Monte Carlo simulations to the bank. Checking in with various banking investment departments is another way to see a clearer road ahead, accepting that, even if bankers have an inside track, they rarely publish how they did in the past. Charts that depict never-before-seen correlations are also an alternative that seems to gain more favor among analysts far and wide.
What are banking gurus postulating these days? Believe it or not, one analyst was highly amused that both Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs) seemed to be ascribing to the “Greater Fool” theory. Per DB:
“Historical evidence teaches us that when the market gets overheated and shoots past its fair value spread on its way to cyclical tights.”
And Goldman chimed in:
“We are more cautious as we do not forecast large overall returns in equity from here, but continue to see equities as the best place to benefit from the strong growth backdrop.”
What was this pundit’s take on these words of wisdom from the “Big Guys”:
“What that says is basically that when the market overshoots, it tends to overshoot more, and therefore 'overheated' becomes a buy signal. When the market is stretched, it tends to get more stretched, so maybe you should get more long. That's the most backwards logic I have ever heard."
Just remember that bankers need to shift their portfolios around, as well, and the only way to do that is to convince others to buy their castoffs.
One interesting chart that came across my desk this week had to do with comparing the S&P 500 index to Average Hourly Earnings, way back from the sixties until present times. It was another twist on the logic that, as disposable income increases over time, then the need to invest in equities is a logical place to deposit extra funds. Instead of tracking these two data flows on opposing vertical axes, this analyst chose to divide the two items to form an index-like presentation. The expectation is that the index would bounce between well-defined boundaries, a sign that stock valuations are appropriate.
So much for expectations over the past two decades! What transpired after the nineties? For one thing, average wages went flat over the period, the result of decades of outsourcing/offshoring and technology that destroyed jobs faster than it created them. The peaks from the Internet Bubble and the Great Recession are apparent, but will a third time be the charm, as the chart predicts? If stocks are too expensive for American workers, does that mean that they are overvalued?
Are there logical explanations for the immediate divergence after the millennium crossover? Supporting arguments point to income inequality. Wealthy investors tend to buy more stocks than do the working man’s 401k account. Our near-zero interest rate environment has skewed valuations over the period, and high-valuation components of the S&P 500—primarily tech companies these days—are typically less labor intensive and have thrived more in our modern day digital economy. In any event, valuations are stretched, and this presentation is just one more warning sign of what may come.
What about corporate insiders? What have these S&P 500 leaders been doing with all that cheap money and extra cash? As we wrote in our previous piece, the target for excess liquidity in the corporate realm has not been economic risk taking, i.e., investing in “capital expenditures, a form of economic risk taking that creates jobs in the process.”
Unfortunately, excess funds found their home in stock buyback programs and domestic acquisitions. As history has shown, major corporations buy back their shares when they know they are undervalued, thereby producing higher returns for both themselves and their approving shareholders. Where are we on that slippery slope?
Oops! Another downtrend in the making, if the current rolling-4-quarter trend holds true to its leading indicator nature prior to the Great Recession. We may truly be in uncertain times, but is pumping more air into an already over-inflated balloon a wise thing to do at this juncture? Trump and his merry band of advisors seem determined to do just that.
A few words on decision making in times of uncertainty
If you are expecting the veil of uncertainty to dissipate anytime soon, then you might take this one opinion to heart:
“Trump is high volatility. Not only is Trump shockingly unpredictable, he’s apparently deliberately so; he says it’s part of his plan.”
If this is the foreseeable roadmap, then, perhaps, a few cogent words on how to make decisions during uncertain times are appropriate.
How does one make smarter choices amid constant political and economic uncertainty? The experts in this arena suggest that a process be followed in a step-wise manner:
Research beforehand: The idea here is not to be surprised by surprises;
Document your reasoning: Write your reasons down to prevent hindsight bias later on that could worsen a situation;
Remain humble: Mistakes will happen, and do not fight Mr. Market;
Avoid the blame game: No one gets it right all the time, but own your decisions, no excuses allowed;
Assess probabilities: Walk through your preferred scenario by assuming that basic assumptions vary widely. Simulations help you prepare for surprises;
Keep the faith: Believe in your process. It is easy to overlook ordinary things, but your process gives you helpful guideposts during stressful times.
The Press has focused on Trump as the major source of uncertainty on the political front, but Goldman Sachs) actually believes that the U.S. is trailing other markets in their modeling of political uncertainty:
China and Europe are higher on their scale of measures. Where might you go when the sell-off turns fast and furious? The chart on the right may seem counter-intuitive. During the run up, risk-off assets may do well, but afterwards, risk-on assets take over, once uncertainty declines. Do we live in different times? Be careful with that notion.
Concluding Remarks
Per one Internet source, “The ‘Greater Fool Theory’ is the theory that states it is possible to make money by buying securities, whether overvalued or not, and later selling them at a profit because there will always be someone (a bigger or greater fool) who is willing to pay the higher price.” The sad truth about human nature is that investors that laugh at this amusing theory about the “greater fool” typically deny that they are acting like one.
Are you in denial? Are you a Greater Fool? When the “Big Crunch” comes, there will be ample volatility and opportunity to profit wisely in the forex market. To be forewarned is to be forearmed!



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ferari
07-Mar 2017 Tuesday 10:53 AM (2601 days ago)            #20
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Long-awaited legislation to dismantle Obamacare was unwrapped on Monday by U.S. Republicans, who called for ending health insurance mandates and rolling back extra healthcare funding for the poor in a package that drew immediate fire from Democrats.
In a battle waged since the 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act, Democratic President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, Republicans including President Donald Trump have long vowed to repeal and replace the law. But they failed for years to coalesce around an alternative.
With a proposal now on the table, the fate of the plan is uncertain even with Republican majorities in both chambers. Also unclear is where Trump stands on many of the details.
"Today marks an important step toward restoring healthcare choices and affordability back to the American people," the White House said in a statement, adding Trump looked forward to working with Congress on replacing Obamacare.
Republicans condemn Obamacare as government overreach, and Trump has called it a "disaster."
Critics complained about the penalty the law charged those who refused to buy insurance. The Republican proposal would repeal that penalty immediately.
Congressional Democrats denounced the Republican plan, saying it would hurt Americans by requiring them to pay more for healthcare, to the benefit of insurers.
Obamacare is popular in many states, even some controlled by Republicans. It has brought health insurance coverage to about 20 million previously uninsured Americans, although premium increases have angered some.
About half those people gained coverage through an expansion of the Medicaid program for the poor. The Republican proposal would end the Medicaid expansion on Jan. 1, 2020, and cap Medicaid funding after that date.
Just before the plan was unveiled, four moderate Senate Republicans jointly expressed concern that an earlier draft would not adequately protect those who got coverage under Medicaid, raising doubts about the legislation's future in the Senate.
Several Senate and House conservatives have already expressed doubt about another aspect of the plan, the offering of tax credits for the purchase of health insurance. The proposal seeks to encourage people to buy insurance with the age-based credits, which would be capped at upper-income levels.
The legislation would abolish the current income-based subsidies for purchasing insurance under Obamacare.
The proposal would protect two of the most popular provisions of Obamacare. It would prohibit insurers from denying coverage or charging more to those with pre-existing conditions, and it would allow adults up to age 26 to remain on their parents' health plans. Trump has long supported by both ideas.
The measure would also provide states with $100 billion to create programs for patient populations, possibly including high-risk pools to provide insurance to the sickest patients.
'FRANKLY NOT ENOUGH'
The overall cost of the Republican plan, a key issue in a time of high federal deficits, was not yet known, Republican aides said. Two House committees will next review the plan.
Craig Garthwaite of Northwestern University said the proposed tax credits, which would range from $2,000 to $4,000, were "frankly not enough for a low-income person to afford insurance."
Republicans said the legislation would give Americans the flexibility to make their own healthcare choices, free of Obamacare's mandate that people buy health insurance and the law's taxes, including a surtax on investment income earned by upper-income Americans.
"Our legislation transfers power from Washington back to the American people," House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady said in a statement.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement, however, that "Trumpcare doesn’t replace the Affordable Care Act, it forces millions of Americans to pay more for less care."
"Paying for all this is going to be a big issue," said Joe Antos of the American Enterprise Institute think tank.
"It's possible that CBO (the Congressional Budget Office) is going to say the Medicaid reductions aren't enough to offset the revenue losses from repealing all the taxes."
A hospital group voiced disappointment that lawmakers were willing to consider the measure without knowing how much it cost or how it might affect healthcare coverage.
The proposal "could place a heavy burden on the safety net by reducing federal support for Medicaid expansion over time and imposing per-capita caps on the program," said America's Essential Hospitals, which represents hospitals that provide care to low-income and uninsured individuals.



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ferari
07-Mar 2017 Tuesday 8:41 PM (2600 days ago)            #21
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According to Investing.com's Fed Rate Monitor Tool, Fed fund futures are
currently pricing in an 86% chance of hike next week.
With the U.S. central bank now in its blackout period ahead of the two-day
monetary policy meeting beginning on March 14, most analysts suggested that
only a dismal jobs report this Friday might have the power to stay the Fed’s hand.



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justin11sg
08-Mar 2017 Wednesday 11:52 AM (2599 days ago)            #22
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Bro,
​SGX zhun new pattern soon ?




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justin11sg
08-Mar 2017 Wednesday 8:32 PM (2599 days ago)            #23
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quote originally posted by ferari:
According to Investing.com's Fed Rate Monitor Tool, Fed fund futures are
currently pricing in an 86% chance of hike next week.
With the U.S. central bank now in its blackout period ahead of the two-day
monetary policy meeting beginning on March 14, most analysts suggested that
only a dismal jobs report this Friday might have the power to stay the Fed’s hand.



Buy liao

JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.




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debby
11-Mar 2017 Saturday 5:52 PM (2596 days ago)            #24
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Worth to look out for. Although I only interested in USD price changes. Really tricky moment this.

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ferari
16-Mar 2017 Thursday 12:14 PM (2591 days ago)            #25
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The dollar nursed bitter losses in Asia on Thursday while sovereign bonds savored their biggest rally in nine months after the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates, as expected, but signaled no pick-up in the pace of tightening.
The euro got an added bonus when early returns showed the anti-EU party of Geert Wilders won fewer seats than expected in Dutch elections, soothing fears that public opinion was swinging inexorably toward a break-up of the union.
The sigh of relief was heard across Asia as investors had feared faster U.S. hikes and more political upheaval in Europe could spook funds out of emerging markets.
"The Fed makes the world safe for risk until June," said CitiFX strategist Steven Englander. "Buy emerging market FX, equities, commodities."
Somebody seemed to be listening as gold, copper and oil all rallied as the dollar dropped. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (MIAPJ0000PUS) rose 0.9 percent to its highest since mid-2015.
South Korea's market (KS11) climbed 1.0 percent but Japan's Nikkei (N225) went the other way, easing 0.4 percent, as a jump in the yen pressured exporters.
The Dow (DJI) had ended Wednesday with gains of 0.54 percent, while the S&P 500 (SPX) added 0.84 percent and the Nasdaq (IXIC) 0.74 percent.
The Fed lifted its funds rate by 25 basis points to a range of 0.75 percent to 1.00 percent, but said further increases would only be "gradual."
Crucially, officials stuck to their outlook for two more hikes this year and three more in 2018, when many had expected an accelerated spate of moves.
Rather, the Fed said its inflation target was "symmetric," indicating that after a decade of below-target inflation it could tolerate a quicker pace of price rises.
That was painful news for bond bears who had built up huge short positions in Treasuries in anticipation of a hawkish Fed.




What kind of President will Donald Trump be? Will he restore America to its former position of greatness, or end up being feckless like a long list of his predecessors? That is yet to be determined.
However, what is clear now is if Donald Trump wants to avoid starting his tenure with an economic crisis similar to that of Mr. Obama he will need to put a lid on long-term interest rates rather quickly. And in order to do that he will have to convince a supposedly politically-agnostic Fed Chair, Janet Yellen, to not only refrain from further interest-rate hikes but also to launch another round of long-term Treasury debt purchases known as Quantitative Easing (QE).
Rising Yields
The move higher in Treasury yields since the election of Trump has been nothing short of violent, but borrowing costs were already on the rise prior to November 8. The Ten-year Note yield began its ascent after it bottomed at 1.36% back in July. This is because central bankers arrived at a new conclusion: that a steepening yield curve would be best for the banking system and economic growth, rather than to just continually push long rates lower. The Ten-year yield climbed up to 1.83% on the day prior to the vote, then spiked to over 2.30% several days after America made its choice for president.
But why is the election of President Trump so bad for bond prices? The answer is twofold. First, Trump’s pro-growth policies of lower corporate and personal taxes, in addition to reduced regulations, are causing investors to sell fixed income products and to place funds in equities. Growth stocks simply offer the potential for better returns than the current historically-low yields found in bonds. Second, and most importantly, a Trump presidency is highly inflationary because his massive $1 trillion infrastructure refurbishment plan, along with his proposal to rebuild the military, will—at least in the short-term—significantly increase annual deficits. In fact, deficits are already soaring; the fiscal 2016 budget hole jumped to $587 billion, up from $438 in the prior year, for a huge 34% increase.
Enormously growing deficits, which will add to the intractable national debt, tends to force a central bank into an ultra-loose monetary policy. But it’s not just the $20 trillion public debt that will put pressure on the Fed to keep printing money. Total non-financial debt has soared from $33.1 trillion at the end of 2007, to a record $45.6 trillion in Q1 2016. That means debt as a percentage of GDP has climbed from where it was prior to the Great Recession (226%), all the way up to 250% of the economy.
A central bank that vastly increases the money supply, one that far transcends the legitimate pool of savings, is the tool used by governments to keep interest rates from skyrocketing. This has been the recipe for runaway inflation since the beginning of economics.
In addition to this, Trump’s protectionist trade policies would implement either a 35% tariff on certain imports or would require these goods to be produced inside the United States at much higher prices. For example, the increase in labor costs from goods made in China would be 190% when compared to the federally mandated minimum-wage earner in the United States. Hence, inflation is on the way.
The incredible nearly 50-basis point surge in the benchmark Treasury yield in the immediate wake of the election is proof of Trump’s fiscal profligacy and his inflationary impact on the nation.
Death Of Bond Bull Market
The end of the 35-year-old bond bull market is upon us. Trump’s trade policies, along with his avowed love of debt, is putting significant upward pressure on borrowing costs. The Donald will now try to convince Janet Yellen to reverse her incipient tightening policy and bring rates back to zero—and eventually even to launch QE IV.
If rates continue to rise it won't just be bond prices that will collapse. It will be every asset that has been priced off that so called "risk free rate of return" offered by sovereign debt. The painful lesson will then be learned that having a virtual zero interest rate policy for the past 90 months wasn't at all risk free. All of the asset prices negative interest rates have so massively distorted including; corporate debt, municipal bonds, REITs, CLOs, equities, commodities, luxury cars, art, all fixed income assets and their proxies, and everything in between, will fall concurrently along with the global economy.
For the record, a normalization of bond yields would be very healthy for the economy in the long-run, as it is necessary to reconcile the massive economic imbalances now in existence. However, President Trump will want no part of the depression that would run concomitantly with collapsing real estate, equity and bond prices.
But the problem is that he will be asking Ms. Yellen to do the exact thing he accused her of doing during the campaign. Namely, being a political puppet of the President. If the Fed is truly apolitical, she will politely refuse. Nevertheless, what Yellen and Trump don’t understand is that our nation is both debt-disabled and asset-bubble addicted, which requires interest rates to be near zero percent or the whole ersatz economy will implode. The devastating bond bubble’s collapse will bring Trump to that reality very soon. And if Ms. Yellen doesn’t agree to pick up the speed on the printing presses she may hear the words “Your Fired”, even before her tenure is up in February 2018.


This message was edited by ferari on 27-Apr-2017 @ 10:20 PM



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justin11sg
16-Mar 2017 Thursday 3:13 PM (2591 days ago)            #26
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quote originally posted by ferari:
The dollar nursed bitter losses in Asia on Thursday while sovereign bonds savored their biggest rally in nine months after the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates, as expected, but signaled no pick-up in the pace of tightening.
The euro got an added bonus when early returns showed the anti-EU party of Geert Wilders won fewer seats than expected in Dutch elections, soothing fears that public opinion was swinging inexorably toward a break-up of the union.
The sigh of relief was heard across Asia as investors had feared faster U.S. hikes and more political upheaval in Europe could spook funds out of emerging markets.
"The Fed makes the world safe for risk until June," said CitiFX strategist Steven Englander. "Buy emerging market FX, equities, commodities."
Somebody seemed to be listening as gold, copper and oil all rallied as the dollar dropped. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (MIAPJ0000PUS) rose 0.9 percent to its highest since mid-2015.
South Korea's market (KS11) climbed 1.0 percent but Japan's Nikkei (N225) went the other way, easing 0.4 percent, as a jump in the yen pressured exporters.
The Dow (DJI) had ended Wednesday with gains of 0.54 percent, while the S&P 500 (SPX) added 0.84 percent and the Nasdaq (IXIC) 0.74 percent.
The Fed lifted its funds rate by 25 basis points to a range of 0.75 percent to 1.00 percent, but said further increases would only be "gradual."
Crucially, officials stuck to their outlook for two more hikes this year and three more in 2018, when many had expected an accelerated spate of moves.
Rather, the Fed said its inflation target was "symmetric," indicating that after a decade of below-target inflation it could tolerate a quicker pace of price rises.
That was painful news for bond bears who had built up huge short positions in Treasuries in anticipation of a hawkish Fed.




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ferari
27-Apr 2017 Thursday 2:06 AM (2550 days ago)            #27
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U.S. President Donald Trump is proposing to slash the corporate income tax rate and offer multinational businesses a steep tax break on overseas profits brought into the United States, officials said late on Tuesday.
With financial markets eagerly anticipating a White House tax plan, Trump will also call for a sharp cut in the top rate on pass-through businesses, including many small business partnerships and sole proprietorships, to 15 percent from 39.6 percent, an administration official said.
He will propose cutting the income tax rate paid by public corporations to 15 percent from 35 percent, and allowing multinationals to bring in overseas profits at a tax rate of 10 percent versus 35 percent now, the official said.
Trump's proposal will not include a controversial "border-adjustment" tax on imports that was in earlier proposals floated by Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives as a way to offset revenue losses resulting from tax cuts.
Trump's tax blueprint will fall short of the kind of comprehensive tax reform that Republicans have long discussed, and serve chiefly as a guidepost for lawmakers in the House and Senate.
"We're driving this a little bit more," a senior White House official told a group of reporters late on Tuesday.
The plan is not expected by analysts to include any proposals for raising new revenue to offset that lost by the tax cuts, and so, if enacted, it would potentially add billions of dollars to the federal deficit.
Trump sent Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn to Capitol Hill on Tuesday to brief lawmakers on the plan to be unveiled on Wednesday afternoon, likely by Mnuchin.
Mnuchin has been leading the administration’s effort to craft a tax package that can win support in Congress, although the proposals would have a long way to go before becoming law, even with Republicans in control of both the House and Senate.
Mnuchin has said the cuts will pay for themselves by generating more economic growth but fiscal hawks, potentially some in Trump’s own Republican Party, along with Democrats, are certain to question these claims.
Trump also may cap the individual top tax rate at 33 percent, repeal the estate and alternative minimum taxes and cut taxes for the middle class, analysts said.
Whether Trump will include provisions that could attract Democratic votes, such as a proposal to fund infrastructure spending or a child-care tax credit as proposed by his daughter Ivanka, is still the subject of speculation.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the plan for "the biggest tax cut" in U.S. history due to be released later on Wednesday by the White House would cut the business tax rate to 15 percent, including for small businesses.
"This is going to be the biggest tax cut and the largest tax reform in the history of our country," Mnuchin said at a news forum in Washington. He said there was fundamental agreement between President Donald Trump's administration and the Congress on the goals of the tax reform, and the details would be worked out.
Separately, House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said he had seen a "sneak preview" of the plan. "We like it a lot, it puts us on the same page, we’re in agreement on 80 percent and on the 20 percent we’re in the same ballpark," Ryan said.
When oil futures dropped 5% last Thursday, analysts were quick to blame OPEC for production cuts that have, over the past four months, failed to resolve the oil glut. But the real culprits are as follows:
1. As a result of the OPEC and non-OPEC production cuts deal, financial institutions and hedge funds anticipated that global crude oil inventories would draw down more quickly than they have. When their predictions were wrong, they were disillusioned, leading to a drop in oil prices.
2. Shale oil production did not immediately rebound when the OPEC-non-OPEC production cuts began. However, over the past two months, more DUCs (drilled uncompleted wells) were quickly completed and put into production in the more profitable shale oil areas. This production jump is showing up now and putting downward pressure on the oil market. The shale oil industry currently has more potential to increase production than the conventional oil industry, but it will soon face the weight of increased service and production costs.
3. Gasoline demand in the U.S. has not risen as much as is usual for this time of year. According to the EIA, gasoline consumption is 250,000 bpd lower now than it was at this time last year. On the other hand, since oil prices fell last week, gasoline prices have since fallen. With the summer driving season approaching, U.S. drivers may soon start filling up. If they do not, it will continue to depress oil prices.
4. Speculator panic resulted in 520 million barrels of crude oil options traded on Thursday. This was the third most ever. Over 7,000 contracts a minute were traded during a time of day when usually only a few hundred change hands. The sudden volume of trade was amplified by speculators and helped exacerbate the sudden drop.
What now? All eyes are on OPEC and its non-OPEC producing friends to shore up prices with talk of extending the production cut agreement for the rest of the year. In fact, Saudi Arabia is leading the jawboning with calls for extending the agreement beyond 2017. Since last week’s sudden drop, oil prices have not rebounded. Instead, they have continued to bounce.
News at the end of April from the equity markets that the oil majors – including ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) – beat expected quarterly earnings was a false sign of success. Exxon recovered after writing down assets the previous quarter and Chevron has been helped by selling less productive assets. Much of the profit jumps came from cost cutting and unloading assets, which could hurt oil companies in years to come and do not signal, as was reported, a turn-around in the oil market.
Key factors to look at include summer gasoline demand in the U.S., summer electricity demand in the Persian Gulf, shale oil production costs, offshore production in the Gulf of Mexico and Brazilian pre-salt regions, and most significantly, Venezuelan political unrest. These factors, more so than this month’s OPEC meeting, could have the greatest impact on oil prices over the next six months.


U.S. stocks were sharply lower on Wednesday after reports of a leaked memo by former FBI chief James Comey caused alarm on Capitol Hill, raising questions about whether President Donald Trump tried to interfere with a federal investigation.
Trump asked Comey to end a probe into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn's ties with Russia, according to the reports.
The latest development could distract Trump from pursuing his proposed policies such as tax cuts and simpler bank regulations, which have underpinned a record-setting rally on Wall Street.
The news comes on the heels of a tumultuous week at the White House when Trump unexpectedly fired Comey and then disclosed classified information to Russia's foreign minister about a planned Islamic State operation.


This message was edited by ferari on 11-May-2017 @ 1:03 AM

This message was edited by ferari on 17-May-2017 @ 11:43 PM



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ferari
19-May 2017 Friday 1:11 AM (2528 days ago)            #28
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The media has President Trump in the corner, body blow after body blow. He’s getting beat up. We’d expect the rest of the year to be more of the same.
It could also get worse. Still, even with the uncertainty this could bring to the markets, investors have a chance to do well this year. We’ll explain.
Equity Markets During Clinton And Nixon
As soon as we hear impeachment, heads swivel to the Clinton and Nixon sagas.
Most of the news about President Bill Clinton’s scandals broke in 1998. It just so happens that 1998 also had one of the worst stock bear markets in our recent history. That crash however was blamed on both global markets, including Russia and South America, along with a slowing domestic economy.
During October 1973, President Richard Nixon carried out the famous “Saturday Night Massacre” when he fired a special prosecutor (sound familiar?) who was looking into the events surrounding a break-in at the Democratic National Committee's Watergate headquarters. President Nixon resigned from his position in August 1974. The Dow plunged from about 5000 to about 3000 during that time.
In the Nixon era too, most of the blame for the crash was directed at economics rather than politics. In that period Nixon ended the gold standard, gold’s convertibility to dollars, which hit the dollar. The oil crisis also spiked inflation during that time.
While both crashes—in 1974 and in 1998—weren’t blamed directly on impeachment procedures or politics, they did happen coincidentally.
Markets will probably associate political risk with downward momentum, which can cause volatility for us.
Is Trump Good For Markets Or Not?
Remember that ahead of the November elections analysts were expecting a market crash on a Trump win.
Yesterday, former CEO of GE, Jack Welch told CNBC that an impeachment proceeding would “blow the market away.”
So which is it? Is Trump good for markets or not?
Markets will certainly react to news. It was surprising the markets didn’t react until yesterday, since we've been hearing so much news about Russian connections for months now.
Investors likely aren’t panicking on the news but rather using the news as a mechanism for typical profit taking.
Unless we were to see economic statistics like GDP and jobs or earnings fall off a cliff, the market has strong underlying fundamentals.
Investors can use these not-so-panicky dips to build positions.
Underlying Market Fundamentals Solid
Factset reported that earnings were up 13.6% in Q1, the strongest in six years.
Jobs have been pushing the economy up and May jobless claims appear stronger than April's numbers.
For GDP, The Atlanta Fed, is expecting a pick-up from Q1’s .7% to 4.1% in Q2.
Again, if these core market fundamental indicators were shaky, we'd need to worry about pile-on risk from politics. Since they're not, we can use political scare-days as buying opportunities.
Dollar Risk
While markets may not be as tied to politics, the dollar can be. We do expect politics to have a greater impact on the dollar.
We drew a few lines on the dollar chart above. We think the dollar had a failure at 99 and has downside to about 92.5. If it holds below there it has downside to about 88.5 (the lower line).
Holding below that and it’s “look out.” Right now, all these lines are in play.
The dollar has been seen as a safe haven globally. As foreign markets see economic strength and opportunity, their outperformance so far this year could build with additional US political woes. That could cause further dollar weakness.
Major market indices, including the Dow, Russell 2000 and NASDAQ, all took a nice hit yesterday. How do you respond? There are two scenarios.
Nobody really knows what happens in the future and anything is always possible. But to plan strategically and have a game plan is what's key.
a. If you're fully invested and can't stand the pain of a day like yesterday then you're too big, too invested. It makes sense to gradually reduce to a comfortable level.
b. If you believe you're under-invested, days like yesterday are your portfolio building days.
In no case should anyone try to be a hero and build or cut in big swathes. Gradual adjustments make for cool heads and allow for incremental assessment of the building fundamental, technical and political dynamics. Preparing a game plan in advance of volatile times can help investors stay focused by subduing emotional volatility in rocky markets, avoid chop and stay profitable.
Conclusion
We are probably far from the end of political chaos this year. Yes, it can cause some volatility. As long as our three main fundamental indicators, earnings, jobs and GDP, are moving up, we’d use volatility as buying opportunities. The next terrible news we hear could also be the opportunity to catch this bull market.



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ferari
10-Jun 2017 Saturday 6:25 PM (2505 days ago)            #29
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Shortly after the opening bell, the Nasdaq touched a record high 6,341.
But things turned south as the clock struck noon.
First, Citron Research published a scathing white paper on graphics processing unit manufacturer Nvidia. The firm said Nvidia had become “a casino stock” after soaring more than 16% this week alone. Citron said shares would sink to $130 before hitting $180.
“While we are fans of NVDA emerging business in auto, gaming, and AI …have the prospects of these technologies doubled in value in 6 months or is this an example of analysts chasing stock price?” Citron’s white paper asked.
That sent Nvidia shares tumbling into negative territory after hitting a record high $168.50 earlier on Friday. Currently, they’re down 6.4% at $149.70.
And that’s not all. Shares of Apple find themselves under pressure after a report from Bloomberg suggested the iPhone 8 won’t be as fast as its rivals. That sent shares down about 4% off their near record high of $155.46 reached earlier on Friday. Apple now trades at $149.85.
Apple's shares dropped nearly five percent in midday trading Friday after Bloomberg News reported that the newest iPhone won't be able to match the network speeds of its competition.

The latest generation wireless network can reach speeds as high as 1-gigabit speeds, about 100x faster than current speeds. According to Bloomberg's Ian King, Scott Moritz and Mark Gurman, Apple has partnered with Intel for the wireless modems in its new phones, and the chip manufacturer doesn't have a modem that can communicate at the new wireless speeds.

Qualcomm, an Intel competitor, does have chips currently available that can operate at the higher speeds, but Apple and Qualcomm are currently wrapped up in a legal battle over what Apple thinks is an industry monopoly by Qualcomm.

Apple currently plans to use both Intel and Qualcomm modems in the newest iPhone in order to limit its reliance on a single manufacturer. In theory, this means some phones will be able to run at the fast network speeds, but Apple will disable that feature in the Qualcomm equipped phones to ensure fairness and uniformity across all its devices.

Samsung's Galaxy S8 is already equipped with the Qualcomm chip capable of utilizing the new network speeds, according to Bloomberg.



That one-two punch is weighing on the broader tech sector. Here’s a look at the performance of Goldman’s newly touted FAAMG stocks:
Facebook -2.9% at $150.24
Amazon -2.6% @ $924.38
Apple -3% @ $150.16
Microsoft -3.1% at $69.69
Alphabet (Google) -2.8% @ $976.00

This message was edited by ferari on 10-Jun-2017 @ 6:29 PM



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justin11sg
13-Jun 2017 Tuesday 12:53 AM (2503 days ago)            #30
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quote originally posted by ferari:
Shortly after the opening bell, the Nasdaq touched a record high 6,341.
But things turned south as the clock struck noon.
First, Citron Research published a scathing white paper on graphics processing unit manufacturer Nvidia. The firm said Nvidia had become “a casino stock” after soaring more than 16% this week alone. Citron said shares would sink to $130 before hitting $180.
“While we are fans of NVDA emerging business in auto, gaming, and AI …have the prospects of these technologies doubled in value in 6 months or is this an example of analysts chasing stock price?” Citron’s white paper asked.
That sent Nvidia shares tumbling into negative territory after hitting a record high $168.50 earlier on Friday. Currently, they’re down 6.4% at $149.70.
And that’s not all. Shares of Apple find themselves under pressure after a report from Bloomberg suggested the iPhone 8 won’t be as fast as its rivals. That sent shares down about 4% off their near record high of $155.46 reached earlier on Friday. Apple now trades at $149.85.
Apple's shares dropped nearly five percent in midday trading Friday after Bloomberg News reported that the newest iPhone won't be able to match the network speeds of its competition.

The latest generation wireless network can reach speeds as high as 1-gigabit speeds, about 100x faster than current speeds. According to Bloomberg's Ian King, Scott Moritz and Mark Gurman, Apple has partnered with Intel for the wireless modems in its new phones, and the chip manufacturer doesn't have a modem that can communicate at the new wireless speeds.

Qualcomm, an Intel competitor, does have chips currently available that can operate at the higher speeds, but Apple and Qualcomm are currently wrapped up in a legal battle over what Apple thinks is an industry monopoly by Qualcomm.

Apple currently plans to use both Intel and Qualcomm modems in the newest iPhone in order to limit its reliance on a single manufacturer. In theory, this means some phones will be able to run at the fast network speeds, but Apple will disable that feature in the Qualcomm equipped phones to ensure fairness and uniformity across all its devices.

Samsung's Galaxy S8 is already equipped with the Qualcomm chip capable of utilizing the new network speeds, according to Bloomberg.



That one-two punch is weighing on the broader tech sector. Here’s a look at the performance of Goldman’s newly touted FAAMG stocks:
Facebook -2.9% at $150.24
Amazon -2.6% @ $924.38
Apple -3% @ $150.16
Microsoft -3.1% at $69.69
Alphabet (Google) -2.8% @ $976.00

This message was edited by ferari on 10-Jun-2017 @ 6:29 PM



Nasdaq going south now. Due to etc..  is advisable to average cost.  

 




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15-Jun 2017 Thursday 4:03 PM (2500 days ago)            #31
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve raised interest rates on Wednesday for the second time in three months and said it would begin cutting its holdings of bonds and other securities this year, signaling its confidence in a growing U.S. economy and strengthening job market.
In lifting its benchmark lending rate by a quarter percentage point to a target range of 1.00 percent to 1.25 percent and forecasting one more hike this year, the Fed seemed to largely brush off a recent run of mixed economic data.
The U.S. central bank's rate-setting committee said the economy had continued to strengthen, job gains remained solid and indicated it viewed a recent softness in inflation as largely transitory.
The Fed also gave a first clear outline on its plan to reduce its $4.2 trillion portfolio of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities, most of which were purchased in the wake of the 2007-2009 financial crisis and recession.
It expects to begin the normalization of its balance sheet this year, gradually ramping up the pace. The plan, which would feature halting reinvestments of ever-larger amounts of maturing securities, did not specify the overall size of the reduction.
"What I can tell you is that we anticipate reducing reserve balances and our overall balance sheet to levels appreciably below those seen in recent years but larger than before the financial crisis," Fed Chair Janet Yellen said in a press conference following the release of the Fed's policy statement.
She added that the balance sheet normalization could be put into effect "relatively soon."
The initial cap for the reduction of the Fed's Treasuries holdings would be set at $6 billion per month, increasing by $6 billion increments every three months over a 12-month period until it reached $30 billion per month.
For agency debt and mortgage-backed securities, the cap will be $4 billion per month initially, rising by $4 billion at quarterly intervals over a year until it reached $20 billion per month.
U.S. stocks edged lower and prices of U.S. Treasuries pared gains after the Fed's policy statement. The dollar (DXY) was largely flat against a basket of currencies after reversing earlier losses, while the price of gold fell.
"The Fed announcing an update to their reinvestment principles leaves September open (for) the start of balance sheet runoff, and the fact that they haven't slowed their projected path of rate hikes suggest they can do both balance sheet and rate hikes at the same time," said Gennadiy Goldberg, interest rate strategist at TD Securities.
EYES ON INFLATION
The Fed has now raised rates four times as part of a normalization of monetary policy that began in December 2015. The central bank had pushed rates to near zero in response to the financial crisis.
Fed policymakers also released their latest set of quarterly economic forecasts, which showed only temporary concern about inflation and continued confidence about economic growth in the coming years.
They forecast U.S. economic growth of 2.2 percent in 2017, an increase from the previous projection in March. Inflation was expected to be at 1.7 percent by the end of this year, down from the 1.9 percent previously forecast.
A retreat in inflation over the past two months has caused jitters that the shortfall, if sustained, could alter the pace of future rate hikes. But the Fed maintained its forecast for three rate hikes next year.
The Fed's preferred measure of underlying inflation has retreated to 1.5 percent, from 1.8 percent earlier this year, and has run below the central bank's 2 percent target for more than five years.
Earlier on Wednesday, the Labor Department reported consumer prices unexpectedly fell in May, the second drop in three months.
Yellen indicated the Fed still remained confident inflation would rise to its target over the medium term, bolstered by what she described as a robust labor market that is continuing to strengthen.
The Fed's estimates for the unemployment rate by the end of this year moved down to 4.3 percent, the current level, and to 4.2 percent in 2018, indicating the Fed believes the labor market will continue to tighten.
The median estimate of the long-run neutral rate, which is seen as the level of monetary policy that neither boosts nor slows the economy, was unchanged at 3.0 percent.
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari dissented in Wednesday's decision.
OIL NEWS
When investing in U.S. energy equities, it's important to keep in mind that the Trump administration has a very different attitude toward energy production than the Obama administration. President Trump plans to speak about the U.S. energy industry on Thursday, and investors should listen.
In the United States, the executive branch, which is run by the President, has broad reach over energy regulations. The President also has the power to provide financial assistance to energy businesses through loan guarantees, grants, and direct government purchases. When the Executive Branch favors a certain energy business or industry, many consider that a sign of good investment. When he disfavors it, many consider it a negative sign.
Much of U.S. energy is produced on land owned by the federal government. Hydraulic fracturing, coal mining, offshore drilling, wind turbines, and solar panel farms are often found on government land and development cannot happen without government permits, giving the President great discretion over what is given the opportunity to succeed. Moreover, at least four major government agencies spend significant resources setting and enforcing policies directly related to energy production and use. All of these agencies are controlled by the President.
Under President Obama, the government set a priority to provide financial assistance for research, development, and growth in primarily new businesses offering clean and renewable energy. The Obama administration provided loan guarantees and grants to solar panel companies and electric car companies. The administration exempted wind power and solar power firms from laws and regulations that would have punished them severely for the death of thousands of migratory and endangered birds. And the previous administration hurt carbon energy producers—their competitors—when they delayed and denied permits for carbon energy firms. Coal power plants, for example were almost regulated entirely out of business. For investors in the U.S., green and renewable energy firms were appealing during the Obama administration.
President Trump, on the other hand, has spoken about promoting energy exports and increasing fossil fuel production in the U.S. He has promised to expedite the approval process for new oil and gas pipelines, and he set the stage for approval of the Keystone XL pipeline (NYSE:TRP) almost immediately upon entering office.
Here are some of the issues investors should look for when President Trump speaks about energy on Thursday:
Will he speak about increasing permits for oil exploration and drilling on federal lands? This is an important point, especially for mid-size and smaller shale producers.
Will he speak about expediting opportunities for offshore oil and gas drilling? Firms have been waiting to tap into this promising resource, especially off the coast of the Southeastern U.S.
Will he speak about relaxing regulations that were based on the Clean Power Plan? If he does, it would help the coal mining businesses and coal fired power plants compete in a market flooded by cheap natural gas. For the last several years, coal has been pushed out of the market by competition from natural gas and by government regulations.
What will he say about his goal for the U.S. to be a net energy exporter? He could provide a boost to the value of ports, shipping businesses, and natural gas liquefaction plants.


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This message was edited by ferari on 28-Jun-2017 @ 7:14 PM

This message was edited by ferari on 02-Jul-2017 @ 2:19 PM



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justin11sg
27-Jun 2017 Tuesday 4:18 AM (2489 days ago)            #32
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Fixed  income aka bonds and gdx remains hold portfolio. Concern abt buy high and sell higher. 
Seems not much value buy on eq.

But i see china incept to msci emerging mrkt seems good for long term investment.




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19-Sep 2017 Tuesday 5:39 PM (2404 days ago)            #33
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NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve is set on Wednesday to announce the start of a plan to trim its $4.5-trillion portfolio of assets, much of it amassed in response to the 2007-2009 financial collapse, marking another milestone in bringing to an end the crisis-era measures.
If Fed Chair Janet Yellen gets her way, financial markets that had swung wildly with past shifts to the policy will barely shrug when the asset reduction begins, probably in October.
The plan is for the Fed to stop buying bonds so gradually that it will take years for its holdings to shrink to $3 trillion, around where some policymakers and economists estimate it will settle.
The Fed's asset holdings stood at about $900 billion in mid-2008, before it began buying bonds to spur hiring and economic growth.
Years of planning and months of careful public messaging should make the asset-unwinding process about as riveting as "watching paint dry," according to Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker.
The U.S. central bank is expected to leave interest rates unchanged at its Sept. 19-20 policy meeting, according to a Reuters poll of nearly 100 economists, with markets pricing in a 52 percent chance of a rate hike coming at a December meeting.
The Fed will also release a fresh round of projections on Wednesday, laying out policymakers' own expectations for rate hikes ahead.
LEADING OTHER CENTRAL BANKS
With the U.S. economy growing fast enough to keep unemployment well below half its recession-era peak, the Fed is poised to be the first major central bank to begin pulling back from the final stage of emergency measures post-2008.
Under Yellen, the Fed has raised interest rates four times from near zero and stopped accumulating assets. The next stage is not to sell holdings but to halt the reinvestment of proceeds from maturing bonds.
Thanks to synchronized global growth and still-easy financial conditions, the Fed looks able to avoid past shocks, most notably the so-called "taper tantrum" in 2013 that rocked markets worldwide and spiked bond yields when then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested the purchases could soon be reduced, or tapered.
"The market is going to be very sensitive to what's going on here," Peter Hooper, a former Fed economist who is now chief economist at Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) Securities, said earlier this month.
"But we no longer need all this extraordinary monetary easing that we have seen since the crisis, so it's time to do so."
The Fed's counterparts in Frankfurt and Tokyo will be among those watching the process most closely, given the potential ripple effects on their markets and economies, and the lessons to be learned from the U.S. experiment.
Combined, the three central banks hold some $15 trillion in assets, purchases that were meant to encourage riskier investing but that critics say may be distorting financial conditions. (For a graphic of combined purchases by central banks, see: http://tmsnrt.rs/2inHILp)
TENTATIVE START
The Fed will start by trimming no more than $10 billion per month from its balance sheet, with that cap rising each quarter for a year, until it hits $50 billion per month.
That should shed nearly $300 billion in bonds over the first 12 months, and nearly $500 billion over the second, according to analysts' projections.
The main unanswered question is whether the central bank will spread its remaining monthly repurchases evenly across the spectrum of maturities, or whether it will focus on shorter-dated assets and accelerate the process.
That will affect how far long-term yields may rise as the Fed allows bonds to run off. Another wild card may be the pace at which the Fed's mortgage-bond holdings shrinks, which depends in part on homeowners' refinancing decisions.
Attempts elsewhere to exit asset-purchase programs, known as quantitative easing, have not met with success.
The Bank of Japan was the first major central bank to introduce such a program in 2001, and its end in 2006 was followed by an economic downturn.
The BOJ later had to restart quantitative easing and broaden it, and today is nowhere close to ending purchases.
The European Central Bank, for its part, undertook two rate hikes in 2011 that it subsequently reversed, then in 2015 started its own purchases.
(For a graphic on the legacy of quantitative easing, see: http://tmsnrt.rs/2jxgbbf)
But with financial conditions supportive, the Fed's runoff will remain on "autopilot" unless there are "large adverse developments" that force adjustments, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said this month.



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justin11sg
19-Sep 2017 Tuesday 10:58 PM (2404 days ago)            #34
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I received news to start to sell liao.  
I dun know how true but my f.advisor never bluff me b4. Collect 5k first. Shiok fake rally. 




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05-Oct 2017 Thursday 5:56 PM (2388 days ago)            #35
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average has steadily risen 23% since America and the world woke up to the reality of President Donald Trump. Many predicted market catastrophe and the beginning of the end for American economic power. However, it appears US markets have become an exception to the rule.
On May 17, The New York Times reported that fired FBI Director James Comey had written a memo documenting Trump’s alleged efforts to slow the Russia investigation. This time, markets plummeted, and observers began to ask whether investors were waking up to the risk posed by Trump.
One week later, the S&P 500 hit an all-time high.
On June 1st, global media clamored to comment about President Trump’s decision to exit the Paris Climate Accords, joining Nicaragua and Syria as the only nations not signed up. The press talked of American isolation and the inevitable economic decline that follow protectionism in an ever evolving global economy.
One day later, the Nasdaq at 5,881 hit an all-time high.
On September 6th, President Trump irked Senate and House Republicans by siding with Democrats to approve their proposed package for raising the debt ceiling in response to a need for urgent funds post hurricane Harvey that caused billions of dollars of damage in Southeast Texas.
Five days later, the Dow Jones was again at an all-time high.
So is this a Trump bull market?
Today President Trump likes to take credit for the market’s performance. However, that wasn’t always the case.
When Trump announced his candidacy for the presidency, the S&P 500 had risen by nearly 200 percent since 2009; the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up more than 170 percent. Though all this seems to be lost in Trump’s comments that day when his negative talk of the Obama lead bull market played second fiddle to his confrontational comments about Mexican immigrants.
“We have a stock market that, frankly, has been good to me, but I still hate to see what’s happening,” he said at the end of his speech. “We have a stock market that is so bloated. Be careful of a bubble because what you’ve seen in the past might be small potatoes compared to what happens. So be very, very careful.”
The market did dip a few weeks later, but then rose again. Early 2016 saw another fall and then another rise.
Trump framed that prior run as a bubble as a means of disparaging President Barack Obama. He frames the current run as a sign that the economy is responding well to his presidency. But if an increase of 15% or 19% over 400-plus days of market activity is a bubble, how are rises of 43 and 37 percent unquestionable signs of economic health?
Click here to trade the US bull market now
Where is this heading?
After eight months in power and an unprecedented amount of unrest in Washington for a president in his first year, Trump is well and truly taking credit for continued stock market gains. But for how long will this bull market hold?
Many analysts point to impending deadlock on Capitol Hill around healthcare and post hurricane Harvey and Irma spending as the turning point to ending the stock market surge. With the White House and Congress locking horns, business friendly policy will likely be pushed to the sidelines and no amount of Trump speeches and tweeting will fill the void for much needed taxation and regulatory policy. The markets are likely to react to the fact that their optimism was unfounded and we are likely to see a slide. Whether this slide will be gradual or an economic hurricane ready to burst the Trump bubble is yet to be seen, and as we have seen with all things Trump: impossible to predict.
However, there are those that previously celebrated policy forming deadlock between the executive and legislative branches of US government as a perfect breeding ground for market growth. It is easy to forget that before Election Day 2016, it was common to celebrate how much the stock market benefited from Washington gridlock and policy paralysis. A state of enforced gridlock followed the 2012 election, and plenty of observers credited this with at least part of the market's 30 percent gain in 2013.
Perhaps one of the biggest names in global investing, Warren Buffett has made it clear where he stands on the current status of the US markets. Buffett told CNBC recently that "we are not in bubble territory or anything of the sort," the billionaire told CNBC on Monday. Measured against interest rates, stocks are actually on the cheap side."
24 Option’s partner Alpesh Patel, an award winning analyst and author has a clear view: “As more investment banks from Goldman Sachs to BoA Merrill Lynch provide more and more evidence of an overheated equity market, we fully expect declines and are happy to be in a trading position to readily short – however, we do not think these big declines will come before the end of this year. So our day to day trading stance is cautiously bullish. This is a trader’s market, not an investor’s one. The market is not budged by any Trump issues, Congressional blockages, because it knows fundamentally the President is not the only story – US corporate earnings in a growing global economy are and he is a fiscal and monetary dove as a businessman more than happy to see deregulation we have not seen since Reagan. Trump has managed to get funding from Congress for massive spending for hurricane reconstruction – that is another economic boost to corporates. His tariff blocks – the UK most recently suffering seen as more likely to boost US corporates. His incentives for US companies to bring trillions back onshore – another boost. The market simply sees his economic aspects more important than political ramblings about flag saluting.”



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vintp
06-Oct 2017 Friday 4:05 PM (2387 days ago)            #36
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It's already happening to Singapore now. Wait and see 3-5 months to go before Lunar New Year




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Peak Of Perfection
19-Oct 2017 Thursday 2:15 PM (2374 days ago)            #37
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Small Bull coming liao....IF the Korean Peninsula is peaceful.



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ferari
19-Oct 2017 Thursday 4:14 PM (2374 days ago)            #38
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President Donald Trump's drive to overhaul the U.S. tax code headed for a pivotal moment on Thursday, with Senate Republicans poised to approve a budget measure that would help them pass tax legislation without Democratic support.
The Senate and the House of Representatives must agree on a fiscal year 2018 budget resolution for Republicans to meet their goal of enacting a tax bill and sending it to Trump for his signature by the end of this year.
The budget resolution contains a legislative tool called reconciliation, which would enable Republicans, who control the 100-seat Senate by a 52-48 margin, to move tax legislation through the Senate on a simple majority vote. Otherwise, tax reform would need 60 votes and would likely fail.
Although Republican Senator Rand Paul, a fiscal hawk, has threatened to oppose the budget resolution, Senate Republicans appeared to have enough support to approve it with at least 50 votes, along with a possible tie-breaking vote from Vice President Mike Pence.
"We feel good about where we are," Republican Senator John Thune, a member of the Senate leadership, said. "The level of resolve is pretty high."
After failing to approve Trump-backed legislation to overturn Obamacare, Senate Republicans are under intense pressure to succeed on tax reform, beginning with the budget measure, which would allow tax legislation to add up to $1.5 trillion to the federal deficit over the next decade to pay for tax cuts.
If the budget measure passes, it will have to be reconciled with a markedly different resolution from the House of Representatives, which calls for a revenue-neutral tax bill. House Republicans say negotiations on a unified measure could take up to two weeks, setting the stage for introduction of a House tax bill by early November.
Republican success on reconciliation would all but rule out broad Democratic support for the Trump tax plan, which promises to deliver up to $6 trillion in tax cuts to businesses and individuals.
Trump sought to sell six Senate Democrats on his plan at a Wednesday meeting with Senate Finance Committee members from both parties. Five of the six Democrats, whom the White House described as open to working with Trump on taxes, are up for reelection next year in states that Trump carried in the 2016 presidential election.
The White House contends that the Republicans' plan to slash the corporate income tax rate to 20 percent from 35 percent would lead to the creation of jobs and higher wages for blue-collar workers.
But Senator Ron Wyden, the top Senate Finance Democrat and who attended the White House meeting, said he made clear to Trump that Democrats believe his plan would benefit the wealthy, raise taxes on some middle-class Americans and increase the federal deficit.
"There is a Grand Canyon-sized gap between the rhetoric surrounding this plan and reality," Wyden told reporters.




This message was edited by ferari on 03-Dec-2017 @ 12:52 AM



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ferari
27-Oct 2017 Friday 12:34 PM (2366 days ago)            #39
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The dollar stood tall on Friday, on track for weekly gains, while the euro slumped to three-month lows after the European Central Bank extended its bond purchases and reduced the chances that it would hike interest rates in 2018.
The ECB prolonged its bond buying program by nine months to September 2018, and left the door open to keep buying after that. It said it would begin paring its monthly purchases by half to 30 billion euros ($34.90 billion) starting in January.
ECB chief Mario Draghi said "an ample degree of monetary stimulus remains necessary", as inflation has yet to show signs of a sustained upward trend.
The euro was down 0.15 percent at $1.1633 after touching $1.1624, its lowest level since July 26. It was down 1.3 percent for the week.
The common currency slumped against the greenback as the ECB's cautious approach highlighted the difference between the Federal Reserve, which is poised to raise rates in December as it continues to normalize monetary policy.
"The ECB's decision appears like a limited deal, in which it restricted itself to curbing the amount of its bond purchases," said Koji Fukaya, president at FPG Securities in Tokyo.
"This is in sharp contrast to the Fed, which is moving steadily as scheduled toward the normalization of policy. The euro looks headed for further losses under such conditions."
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, added 0.2 percent to 94.800 (DXY), trading at three-month highs and on track for a weekly gain of 1.1 percent.
"The concept of tapering would be removal of accommodation, so it wasn't exactly what the market was expecting - it was a dovish form of tapering, as there was both an extension and a reduction," said Bill Northey, chief investment officer at the private client group of U.S. Bank in Helena, Montana.
The ECB's extension pushes "any potential rate hike to 2019", he said.
Also underpinning the dollar, the U.S. House of Representatives voted on Thursday to clear a procedural path for a Republican tax bill.
"We did see some additional progress toward tax cuts," Northey said. "As we move into 2018, the likelihood that something will pass increases."
Investor attention remains on candidates to head the U.S. Federal Reserve when current chief Janet Yellen's term expires in February.
Trump's search for the next central bank chair has come down to Fed Governor Jerome Powell and Stanford University economist John Taylor, Politico on Thursday cited one source as saying, while another counseled caution. But a White House official told Reuters that no final decision has been made.
Trump is expected to announce his candidate before his upcoming trip to Asia in early November.
The dollar gained 0.15 percent to 114.155 yen , within sight of this week's three-month high of 114.245 touched on Wednesday. It was up 0.5 percent for the week.
Specifically, and beginning in January, the ECB will reduce monthly purchases from the current €60 billion ($70.6 billion) to €30 billion ($35.3 billion) and will extend those purchases to “the end of September 2018, or beyond, if necessary”.
Furthermore and as expected, the ECB left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at a record-low 0.0%.
The central bank also held its deposit facility rate steady at -0.4% and its marginal lending rate remained at 0.25% as expected.
“The Governing Council continues to expect the key ECB interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases,” the statement repeated.
The euro fell against the U.S. dollar on Thursday after the European Central Bank began weaning the euro zone off loose monetary policy, while U.S. Treasury yields rebounded when the U.S. House passed a budget plan that paves a path for tax cuts.
The dollar index (DXY) rose 0.97 percent, with the euro down 1.32 percent to $1.1656, after the ECB said it would cut its bond purchases in half to 30 billion euros a month from January. However, it hedged its bets by extending asset purchases by nine months given continuously low inflation.
"With Draghi's openness to QE, it's a victory for the doves," said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in New York.
Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury notes (US10YT=RR) last fell 3/32 in price to yield 2.4536 percent, from 2.444 percent late on Wednesday.
The 30-year bond (US30YT=RR) last fell 4/32 in price to yield 2.9608 percent, from 2.955 percent late on Wednesday.
The yields had slipped earlier in the day, in line with euro zone bonds, after the ECB's meeting. However, they recovered after the U.S. House passed a fiscal year 2018 budget, enabling tax legislation to win congressional approval without any Democratic votes.
The legislation is expected to be made public next week.
"If you do have something on the tax issue happen this year, that would be good for growth, it would be good for profits, it would be good for the equity side," said Sameer Samana, a global quantitative and technical strategist at Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) Investment Institute in St. Louis. "It would be one more reason to at least rethink fixed income holdings."
As for tax reform, the House is set to vote on its tax plan on Thursday, which is a formality at this stage as the market focuses on the Senate bill. The Senate is expected to finish marking up their bill this week but last minute changes have led to clashes between Republicans and Democrats over the repeal of the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate. The Senate is also looking to make the individual tax cuts temporary (good till only 2025) and the corporate tax cuts permanent. An initial vote on the Senate bill is expected on Friday followed by a full Senate vote after Thanksgiving. If the Senate vote ends up being pushed past Friday, the delay drive the dollar sharply lower whereas a passing of the House bill and a yes vote from the Senate Finance Committee (which is different from the full Senate) would trigger a strong end of week rally.

我悄悄矇上你的眼睛

"The retreat in U.S. shares coincides with profit taking by investors before they close their books for the year-end. A lot of such year-end window dressing already appears to have taken place in emerging market equities," said Kota Hirayama, senior emerging markets economist at SMBC Nikko Securities in Tokyo.




This message was edited by ferari on 06-Dec-2017 @ 11:01 AM



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gauridollar
22-Nov 2017 Wednesday 5:57 PM (2340 days ago)            #40
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Hello, I think global "gray rhino" risks of 2017, culled from the best ... “gray rhino” risks: the highly obvious, probable threats that may or may not be.
Thank you.

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