Phisix: Back to our Bullish Stance! But Keeping Vigil on the US Dollar Index.
-US Markets: Presidential Cycle behind Recent Rally?
-BSP Reflates! Locals seen to Add Fuel to Fire
-US Dollar Index Sits At Multi-Year Lows, Risks of Disorderly Unwind Heightens
``Accept the premise that my method is no better than theirs, and yours no better than mine. It doesn’t matter anyway; methodology isn't the primary element of successful trading. The key to success lies in two simple words: money management. There will be losing trades with every methodology. The secret is to have smaller losses on the losing trades and larger relative wins on the winners. To put it another way, "trade picking" ability, while important, is secondary; money management is primary.”- George Kleinman, editor of Commodities Trends, How to Become a Successful Trader
In the past issues we have noted of our interim neutrality stance towards the Phisix stemmed from the ambiguity provided by the dithering
With the US market’s electrifying breakout from its key resistance levels, particularly Dow Jones Industrials (+2.17% week-on-week) and the S&P 500 (+1.48% w-o-w), our main tentativeness have been set aside, as we are LIKELY to see momentum flow tilted in favor of the bulls.
Figure 1: Stockcharts.com: USD-SPX-Phisix correlation
The upper window pane of the chart shows of the US S & P 500 bellwether which recently bolted convincingly out of its resistance level (blue arrow), while the Phisix at the lower panel appears to be levering up for a thrust over the 3,800 zone, although, the Philippine benchmark could back up first to gain enough pivot room for the all important test on the resistance level at 3,822.
US Markets: Presidential Cycle behind Recent Rally?
Amidst the variegated concerns of a deflating housing industry, an equivalent tension over the possibility of a contagion from the subprime mortgages anxieties, and the softening of the
The Presidential Stock Market Cycle according to Investopedia.com, ``A theory developed by Yale Hirsch that states that
Figure 2: Contraryinvestor.com: Script Right on Cue!
To quote contraryinvestor.com (highlight mine), ``What history suggests to us is pretty much crystal clear. In the last half century, there has only been one third year of the Presidential cycle period that has witnessed negative results for the S&P. The average third year cycle performance since 1955 is 18.4%. Again, in the wonderful world of make believe as per "what if this happened in 2007", an 18.4% increase for the S&P in 2007 would mean a target of 1,670. Again, we present all of this completely in the spirit of learning to accept and be at peace with whatever happens in the financial markets, and in the spirit of acknowledging the lessons of history, regardless of our personal outlook or beliefs.”
If we go by the data presented above, then 1,670 as a target for the S&P translates to another 7.5% gain from Friday’s close, considering that on a year-to-date basis the S&P is already about 9.5% higher.
Of course when we talk about statistical average, in simplest form it means that to arrive at an average number requires that about half of the time the S&P has performed above this average and vice-versa.
With the momentum today strongly favoring the bulls following the impressive breakout, our immediate guess is that the index could go higher perhaps until sometime mid-August before a major slowdown or a correction ensues.
Of course, to avoid being literal, no trend goes in a straight line: which also means despite the tendency of US markets to advance there could be one, two day or even a week’s correction interspersed during the coming month or so.
While we aren’t interested in exact figures, what interests us is how the
If any corrections especially going into the traditional or seasonal lean months of September-October will be benign or mild then the last quarter could probably see a sturdy bounce to reflect on the Presidential cycle’s usual performance.
If the global market’s correlation to the
Anyway all these are just plain conjectures. Statistical patterns or seasonalities are hardly enough reasons why one should be invested.
BSP Reflates! Locals seen to Add Fuel to Fire
In all of Asia, only
While the Phisix registered NET foreign buying, most of these emanated from the highly successful second round offering of the PNOC-Energy Development Corporation (+15.79%).
However, over the broadmarket, excluding special block sales, we observe that foreign money has been Net sellers based on nominal amount (Php 629.5 million), and on the number of issues traded (Net 34 companies encountered outflows this week).
We are unaware if the recent action taken by foreign investors has been related to the recent announcement by the Philippine Central Bank (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas or BSP) to recalibrate its monetary tools by suspending tiering system for bank placements and by lowering overnight interbank borrowing and lending (from 7.5 and 9.75% to 6 and 8%, respectively).
Figure 3: NSCB: Declining Philippine Inflation Rate
However, Morgan Stanley’s Stephen Jen calls this muted effect on the export sector by rising currency levels in Asia as the “Ballast Effect”, where essentially, currency values becomes subordinate relative to the snowballing regionalization trends in the global trading dynamics and a more sophisticated financial markets.
The last of the issue of concern is the US dollar.
Figure 4 : NYBOT: Components of the US Dollar Index
While a falling US dollar has so far benefited global equity markets, what brings us to worry is that at present the US dollar index closed at a multiyear low.
Because a currency pair is a zero sum game it explains that the plight of the US dollar equals to a record high in the Euro, a 26-high in British Pounds, a 30 year high in the Canadian dollar, 2 ½ year high in the Swedish Krona and interestingly, a indications of significant rallies from “carry trade funding currencies” of the Swiss Franc and the Japanese Yen. In short, the US dollar has weakened almost across the board.
With
1. Depeg or delink from the US dollar as a currency anchor as Kuwait, or
2. Establish or increase exposure to Sovereign Wealth Funds to augment returns by utilizing surplus or excess forex reserves to diversify into NON-US dollar assets or finally and most importantly,
3. Be required to be paid for export sales of products or services in non US dollar currency.
Effectively all these construe to a weakening demand for the world’s reserve exchange currency.
Foreign central banks portfolios account for about a quarter of the total
With the present decline in the US dollar index, these redound to enormous losses in the price value holdings of these institutions. And added losses could signify a litmus test on the loss taking appetite for these international institutional banks.
So far the US dollar’s decline has been orderly. And the benefits reaped from the global financial markets have been an offshoot to such gradual clip of decline.
However, if anyone from these institutions should undertake the initiative to sell on its holdings to cut losses or for some other reasons beyond our comprehension, such an action could risk a domino-effect panic selling binge that could trigger a US dollar crash, which could easily roil the financial markets and spoil our fun.
I think at such critical times it would be best for one to have sufficient exposures to precious metals in your portfolio, as insurance, especially if a US dollar panic turns into a gold/silver buying spree panic. Oh please if you are contemplating mines as a proxy to metals, only mind those with proven reserves.
Also best be reminded to keep those mental stops active.
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