Charts on CDS spreads: Germany and China widen to 3 Y highs

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Charts should be self explanatory.

The CDS markets did not care much for the German vote as the CDS spreads widened again continuing to break out on the 3 Year range to 106/07 levels. While bunds have been rising, we are not particularly impressed whether investors are now confident of Germany ability to save the euro anymore.

We will be pasting updates on this.

The Chinese on the other hands continues to mystify as the CDS spreads have without a reason jumped out by over 15% in the last 3 days. The spreads have hit 2009 levels at 170/80 bps

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29 Sept Premium Trades: Trade status updates

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Category : Think Tank

[Update 1 9:17 AM: New trades posted]
[Update 2 3:52 PM: Targets Updated]
[Update 3 6:29 PM: New Trades issued, AUD/USD and USD/CAD after previous hit targets]
[Update 4 7:25 PM: Trade updates and new AUD/USD trade and Emini Trade]
[Update 5: We close today with a great trading day with over 450 pips in profit. This was the best day trading day after FOMC on Sept 21/22 when we recorded over 500 pips profit purely basis the yield curve which was predicting Bernanke plan.]

Stops and Targets may be moved during the day.

Charts and Analysis to be posted later. Macro commentary at the bottom of the trade sheet.

29 September 2011 New Trades are posted:

Important data released:

  • German unemployment has reached a 20 year low with rate at 6.9% and unemployed falling by 29K against expectation of 8k. Those expecting a euro rate cut by ECB will be disappointed if this data is anything to go by.
  • A crucial event risk for the day is German parliament vote on EFSF expansion. The fins have ratified it and Germans are expected to do so as well. But key to note will be the number of dissenters.
  • Worrying as it may be, German and French CDS has been climbing to over 18 month high. When yields and CDS rise together, it is generally considered to be the first sign of forex weakness in the respective pairs
  • Chinese CDS as chart posted here, indicate that China may be heading for hard landing. Saturday is the D Day for one of the most important data which may drive the markets in the first week of October, is the China PMI data

Key PMI charts from EURO zone reflect slowdown and then even a contraction.

 

 
Key updates from German vote:

  • German politicians have voted to approve the expansion of the powers of the eurozone’s bailout fund, the EFSF, with chancellor Angela Merkel winning 315 votes for the proposal but more importantly she lost 15 of her party members
  • Troika is back in Greece to vet the austerity measures undertaken in Athens. They were not welcomed though as ministerial workers shut doors on them but later were welcomed by other members
  • Greek public sector workers have of government buildings, in protest at the government’s harsh austerity measures
  • Business and consumer sentiment in the eurozone fell to 95 from a revised 98.4 in August, the European Commission in Brussels said today. That’s the lowest since December 2009 and below 96 projected by economists, according to Bloomberg.

EURO looks weak showing signs of rally but simply does not have speed, strength on RSI slope to negotiate break of 1.37 for a few hours. If EUR can sustain a break, then we have a serious upside correction for a few weeks. I suspect this could be after ECB rate decision but have no basis for this speculation. Right now, eur looks weak.

The Aussie is looking ready to begin its descent into the bottomless pit. We expected to reach at least 1.0000 but break below 0.9845 is not a good sign. Given PMI weakness around the world we suspect the Aussie is back into its downward trend and therefore almost surely finishing of S&P dream rally to 1200.


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AUD/USD charts added now:

 

USD/CAD charts added:

EURUSD Charts added

 

BofA on China hard landing and CDS spreads at 52 week high

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Category : Think Tank

Not a good sign for those who believe China will rally the world economy. The rising CDS was enough to trip S&P yesterday below 1155.

Full BofA report on China fall from grace:
China the Systematic Risks 11090934[1]

Yield curve makes a run: Charts and analysis

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Charts should be self explanatory as the 5Y yield makes a strong run for 10 dma, a level which while has been violated but has never been broken on a sustained basis. This time though we expect the break albeit after a pause here allowing Oscillators to break into positive and vortex (not shown here) to gather gaps. This pause will give dollar a chance to test its breakout and allow EURO that upside correction expected.

5Y Treasury Yield strengthens to 0.98% up from .94% on 27 September. Rising yield on short term treasury support the dollar.

The 2Y yield to Gold speaks volumes of the carnage in Gold. Something we predicted even before the FOMC given the strength in the yield curve. Rest of what happened is history.

Gold continues to fall with respect to 2 year yield curve as it strengthens. Bernanke has clearly broken the spine here as he flattens the curve.

The oscillators on Gold was blown sky high, never happened in the last 18 months in Gold rally. The correction was expected to be sharp. We believe there is more to come once dollar pauses tests it uptrend

CDS widening

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Category : Think Tank

Italy CDS +12 bps to 460
Spain CDS + 8 bps to 375
Portugal CDS + 10 bps to 1,110
Ireland CDS + 18 bps to 736
Greece CDS: Many points upfront but running joke

An absolute must listen: An unknown trader tells we are setting up………

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Remember we said this 20 days back, 20 days back and last week. We continue to say this. The stock markets are an absolute toast. We will say that again. “The stock markets are a toast and be prepared”. That man should belong at C3X.

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One chart stands out preaching bullishness…

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While am personally not a great believer that there is a recovery in US or EU, but for the first time in 18 months, we have the BDI price action suggesting strong trade volumes and shipping rates which can happen during two scenarios:
1. Trade is doing well
2. Shipping rates going up due to supply constraints in the shipping industry.

Given the correlations in the other parts of Intermarket analysis, we do believe it could well be the severe constraints being observed in the shipping industry with new volumes being delayed due to funding constraints.

Nonetheless the chart is bullish

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The contagion has spread: Charts and analysis

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A chart is worth a thousand words and therefore we focus on charts and analysis.

So with a few introductory words, we will present the charts.

The problem for the policy makers is that risk is being repriced faster than they counteract.The EU banking system is under-strain because they are being denied funding and also deposits are moving elsewhere. The speed of the adjustment is difficult for the banks to maintain their solvency. The confidence virus is a self-reinforcing one that requires an entity to backstop it just as the Fed did it during 2008. The under-capitalised EU banks are being required to de-leverage faster than they can re-capitalise.

The increasing strains have pushed the EU banks to become more reliant on ECB funding
as a lender of last resort. While the draw-downs are modest at the moment, it hints that as the EU banks need to roll-over more debt, the funding gap will need to be provided by the ECB. Furthermore, other sources of funding may become untenable, particularly the repo
markets if further inter-bank strains became evident.

The rapid declines in Asian and emerging market currencies alongside a rallying dollar
point to capital flight. It appears that rather than just holding cash overseas, investors are preferring to deposit it in ‘safe havens’.

“Bad news drives out good news”, Spiro Agnew

“Severe financial crises rarely occur in isolation. Rather than being the trigger of recession, they are more often an amplification mechanism: a reversal of fortunes in output growth leads to a string of defaults on bank loans, forcing a pullback in other lending, which leads to further output falls and repayment loans, and so on”,

This time is different , Reinhart and Rogoff.

The events of the past two months are not without precedent. Investors who experienced
the 2008 US financial crisis will remember the headlines concerning ‘funding problems
for banks’ or ‘inter-bank liquidity strains’ and the rout in equity prices as investors sought cash at any price. Sovereign defaults and banking crises have been the staple of economic history since 1800. The adoption of fiat currency systems and the ability to develop a ‘fractional banking system’ empowered bankers to expand credit based on their
customers deposits. Thus dis-intermediation was born. Gresham’s law states that ‘bad money drives out good’. However an alternative law has been proposed by Peter Bernholz, called ‘Thiers’ Law”. He showed under some circumstances that good money drives out bad particularly whenever the bad money eventually becomes worthless. In essence if you gave a person the choice between two currencies to own, people will chose the money they consider to have the highest perceived value.

“With US$2.7 trillion in assets, US money market mutual funds (MMMF) are systemically important institutions. Any change in the MMMF willingness to hold European bank paper is likely to affect the cost and availability of dollar funding. Ample dollar funding had also helped to contain pressures in dollar funding markets despite intensifying sovereign risk. That is no longer the case: Offshore dollar denominated issuance by European banks and dollar denominated foreign issuance has begun to decline, as money funds are reluctant to increase exposure to European banks and pressures in dollar funding markets have risen. The cushion of reserves built up by US branches of European banks helps to buy time, but the cushion is at risk of being depleted if a pullback by the money funds is accompanied by a generalised rise in risk aversion among other lenders. This could lead to further pressures in bank funding markets”

IMF Stability report, September, 2011

The contagion has quite clearly spread and we are heading for a global fall across asset classes. Our technical analysis had already suggested the scenario on Sept 5 when we were laughed to scorn but obviously we are now been subscribed on a fast scale. We do believe we have not yet seen the end of the fall till the time that Bernanke launched QE3.

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G20 Communique: Progress made but….

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They seem to be working on a three pronged approach:

First, Europe’s banks would have to be recapitalised with many tens of billions of euros to reassure markets that a Greek or Portuguese default would not precipitate a systemic financial crisis. The recapitalisation plan would go much further than the €2.5bn (£2.2bn) required by regulators following the European bank stress tests in July and crucially would include the under-pressure French lenders.

This makes no sense. There is hardly any numbers and nor is an estimate of what is required. So the number could be 400 billion euros or 5 trillion euros (if derivative exposure is to be taken into account).

The second leg of the plan is to bolster the EFSF. Economists have estimated it would need about Eu2 trillion of firepower to meet Italy and Spain’s financing needs in the event that the two countries were shut out of the markets. Officials are working on a way to leverage the EFSF through the European Central Bank to reach the target.

Again devoid of details, the plan makes good reading for the ever jumpy forex crowd to jump on headlines and start the algos.

Now the papers tried to makes sense of the plan:

The complex deal would see the EFSF provide a loss-bearing “equity” tranche of any bail-out fund and the ECB the rest in protected “debt”. If the EFSF bore the first 20pc of any loss, the fund’s warchest would effectively be bolstered to Eu2 trillion. If the EFSF bore the first 40pc of any loss, the fund would be able to deploy Eu1 trillion

If the ECB debt is secured collaterized debt, then what exactly will be the collateral to ECB? What will be the yield on the ECB debt? What is duration of those debts? Quantification of the loss and at what point does the ECB debt gets impaired in the worst case.

The third part of the plan is to have a managed default for Greece.

The G20 communique has put on a deadline for 6 weeks to iron out details not to mention that we will waiting for the details of this one.

EUR/USD gaps down 85 pips: Chart

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Category : Think Tank

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