Gold is rising despite a strong Dollar

Gold is strengthening despite falling oil prices and the rising Dollar.

The Dollar Index is advancing toward a long-term target of 100 after breaking resistance at 90 in December.
Dollar Index

* Target calculation: 90 + ( 90 – 80 ) = 100

Spot gold is testing resistance at $1300/ounce after breaking through $1250. Expect a rally to test resistance at $1400, but a change in the primary trend is unlikely. Reversal below $1200 would warn of a decline to $1000*.
Gold

* Target calculation: 1200 – ( 1400 – 1200 ) = 1000

The most likely explanation for gold strength is the prospect of significant quantitative easing by the European Central Bank. Mario Draghi has called on the ECB to purchase € 50 billion of securities per month until December 2016 according to Bloomberg. With Japan and China already following the path of monetary expansion, concerns over the potential for a “currency war” are growing.

Robert Wright: Progress is not a zero-sum game [video]

Thought-provoking presentation by Robert Wright, best-selling author of Nonzero, The Moral Animal and The Evolution of God. Progress is not a zero-sum game — the network of linked fortunes and cooperation that has guided our evolution to this point can help us save humanity today.

Some thoughts:

Terrorism is a negative-sum game. The perpetrators commit atrocities to protest their sub-human treatment. The atrocities convince by-standers that these people are sub-human and deserve to be treated as such.

Non-violent protest is a testament to the moral/intellectual leadership of Mohandas (Mahatma) Gandhi. Stoic acceptance of violence without retaliation convinces observers that the protestors are not sub-human and do not deserve such treatment.

Europe: Out of the ashes

Deutsche Post AG (y_DPW.DE) serves as a bellwether for European markets, with subsidiary DHL couriers occupying a similar position to that of Fedex in US markets. DPW is testing resistance at €28.00 after a strong correction. 13-Week Twiggs Momentum recovered above zero and breakout above €28.00 would indicate another primary advance — a bullish sign for economic activity in the Eurozone.

Deutsche Post AG

* Target calculation: 28 + ( 28 – 22 ) = 34

Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, the DAX broke through resistance at 10000, signaling a fresh primary advance. A trough above zero on 13-Week Twiggs Momentum indicates continuation of the up-trend. The market is taking a positive view of expected quantitative easing (QE) by the European Central Bank (ECB).

DAX

* Target calculation: 10000 + ( 10000 – 9000 ) = 11000

France’s CAC-40 shows early signs of recovery, having broken through its descending trendline of recent months. Rising 13-week Twiggs Momentum suggests resumption of the primary up-trend. Recovery above 4500 would strengthen the signal, while breakout above 4600 would confirm.

CAC-40

Italy’s MIB Index remains weak, with 13-week Twiggs Momentum oscillating below zero. Respect of resistance is more likely, but breakout above 20000 would suggest a recovery.

MIB Index

Spain’s Madrid General Index also remains in the Doldrums, with declining 13-week Twiggs Momentum below zero. Only recovery above 1100 would provide cause for optimism.

Madrid General Index

Decline of inflation below zero for the Eurozone has forced the hand of the ECB. Announcement of significant QE is imminent. Expansion of the money supply should help to indirectly support stock prices. Unfortunately the Swiss National Bank, which held vast reserves of Euros because of its informal peg at 1.20 EUR/CHF, faced a difficult choice. Either go “all-in” to support the peg, and place their entire credit standing in question, or cut their losses (rumored to be around $70 billion) and walk away with their reputation a little worse for wear, but intact. Faced with the choice they had, in my opinion they took the correct option.

EURCHF

On the other side of the Channel, the Footsie is testing resistance at 6650. Recovery above the descending trendline would suggest the down-trend is over, especially if accompanied by recovery of 13-week Twiggs Momentum above zero. Strong resistance at 6900/7000 remains a major obstacle to a further advance.

FTSE 100

One final paragraph of advice: do not burn yourselves out. Be as I am — a reluctant enthusiast… a part-time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. So get out there and hunt and fish and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breathe deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, the lovely, mysterious, and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those desk-bound men and women with their hearts in a safe deposit box, and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: You will outlive the bastards.

~ Edward Abbey

China: Will history repeat itself?

China’s Shanghai Composite retreated from resistance at 3400, but this is a long way from signaling a down-trend.
Shanghai Composite Index

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has shown much stronger gains over the last 3 years, but diverged in the second half of 2014, falling while the Shanghai Composite soared. Breach of support at 22500, and the rising trendline, would warn of a primary down-trend.
Hang Seng Index

This opinion by Andrew Sheng highlights some of the challenges facing the Middle Kingdom:

It is hard to find earlier examples of economies which experienced similar growth spurts to that enjoyed by China over the last decade. The closest are probably the US in the 1920s and Japan in the 1980s. Both of these should serve as a warning that times of rapid growth can generate vast imbalances within an economy that inevitably lead to periods of painful adjustment.

2015: How low can it go?

Financial markets have endured a fair degree of turbulence in the last 6 months and made a faltering start to the new calendar year. Is this a sign of an imminent collapse or will markets recover to post further gains in 2015? Key determinants will be falling oil prices and the impact of monetary policy in the big four economies: the US, EU, China and Japan.

Crude Oil

Crude oil is plunging towards its 2008 low of $30 per barrel. Supply is inelastic, with the Saudis refusing to play their normal role as swing producer and cut production to stabilize prices. Demand will take time to recover despite the massive stimulus effect of low oil prices to the global economy. If current supply levels continue, the 2008 bottom is under threat.

Nymex WTI Light Crude

More likely than a cut in demand, is a threat to supply, with political turmoil erupting in one or more of the countries reliant on oil revenue: Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria, Iraq, Libya and other vulnerable states. Political turmoil could be a reaction to food scarcity and rising prices, as Venezuelans are already experiencing, or it could be fomented by one/more vulnerable producers seeking to throttle supply and drive up prices. Apart from domestic instability, sovereign default by Russia, while still unlikely, could also unsettle financial markets.

How will falling oil prices affect the global economy?

Energy stocks are falling, increasing downward pressure on broad market indices.

DJUS Oil & Gas

Inflation expectations are falling, with the spread between 5-year Treasury yields and the equivalent inflation-adjusted TIPS well below the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target.

Inflation Breakeven

Will falling oil prices increase the risk of deflation, as suggested by some pundits? Highly unlikely. Falling prices may shift consumer spending patterns, with consumers spending the savings from lower energy prices on other discretionary items. But this is likely to boost confidence and encourage further spending, rather than cause a contraction of total spending.

Falling prices caused by a contraction in total spending, as in 2008/2009, are an entirely different matter. Consumers increased savings and repaid debt in response to rising uncertainty. Prices fell in response to the resulting contraction in spending. Shrinking aggregate demand impacted on incomes, causing further cuts in spending and a self-reinforcing, deflationary spiral which caused serious damage to the economy despite the Fed’s best efforts.

Current price falls are driven by increasing supply, while a deflationary spiral is caused by contracting aggregate demand. Lower oil prices will act as a huge stimulus for the global economy towards the second half of the year and are likely to lift growth rates.

US stocks

Low inflation is likely to ease pressure on the Fed to lift interest rates. The S&P 500 continues in a bull-trend, with 13-week Twiggs Money Flow trending above zero, indicating long-term buying pressure. Respect of support at 2000 would suggest another advance and breakout above 2100 would confirm.

S&P 500

* Target calculation: 2000 + ( 2000 – 1800 ) = 2200

Rising troughs on CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) indicate a shift from low to moderate risk, but there is no cause for concern unless we see activity ranging between 20 and 30.

S&P 500 VIX

Europe

The graph below compares the annual rate of change in total assets of the European Central Bank (ECB) to the Fed. Fed assets are stated net of excess reserve deposits which pay interest to depositing banks, something not offered by the ECB. Both the Fed and ECB rapidly expanded their balance sheets in 2008 in response to the global financial crisis, while the ECB had to repeat the process in 2011/2012 to address the PIIGS sovereign debt crisis. The ECB’s mistake was allowing their balance sheet to shrink in 2013, in response to pressure from some members (primarily Germany) to return to austerity. The Fed was far more wary of aftershocks and maintained an expansionary policy throughout this period. The US economy strengthened as a result, while the EU contracted and threatens a deflationary spiral if the ECB does not alter course.

ECB compared to Fed Total Assets ROC

Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 proved surprisingly resilient in the circumstances, breaking above 3000. Expect further consolidation between 3000 and 3300 until we get a clear direction from the ECB. Declining 13-Week Twiggs Momentum is typical of a long-term consolidation. But reversal below 3000 would warn of a contraction.

Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50

China

The PBOC is also adopting expansionary monetary policy in response to declining activity and a weakening Yen (which erodes China’s export advantage). The Shanghai Composite Index surged, with 13-week Twiggs Money Flow indicating strong buying pressure. Breakout above 3400/3500 would suggest another up-trend.

Shanghai Composite

Japan

We have a similar situation in Japan, with the BOJ expanding on a massive scale, driving stocks higher and the Yen lower. The Nikkei 225 found resistance at its 2007 high of 18000, but Twiggs Money Flow appears strong and the index is likely to respect support at 16000.

Nikkei 225 Index

Aggressive monetary policy adopted by the two central banks is high risk and could end in tears. Especially if the two start to compete in currency markets for an export advantage.

Australia

The RBA is far more conservative and likely to rely on falling commodity prices to weaken the Australian Dollar. Further interest rate cuts seem unlikely given the current scenario. The ASX 200 has not made any progress since July last year, but rising troughs on 13-week Twiggs Money Flow indicate healthy support at 5000. Breakout above 5500 is unlikely at present, but would suggest another advance.

ASX 200

Low iron ore, coal and LNG gas prices are likely to inhibit the Australian recovery. What is needed is a strong program of infrastructure investment to restore confidence. This seems to be slow in getting off the ground. What is important is investment in productive assets, that produce market related returns on investment, rather than social infrastructure. The acid test is whether the completed assets can be sold to recoup money invested, providing funding for further infrastructure assets or to repay debt.

The only value of stock forecasters is to make fortune-tellers look good.
~ Warren Buffett

Corporate profits and employee compensation

Employee compensation as a percentage of net value added by nonfinancial corporations has been falling since its Dotcom peak in 2000 and is now approaching lows last witnessed in the 1960s. Both rising productivity, through technological advances, and offshoring of blue-collar jobs have contributed to the fall.

Net Value Added: Employee Compensation & Corporate Profits

Corporate profits (as a percentage of net value added by nonfinancial corporations) have shown a corresponding rise for the same period, demonstrating an inverse relationship over the last half-century. Rises and falls in both employment costs and corporate profits (as a percentage of net value added) are most likely attributable to fluctuations in output per employee (productivity) rather than fluctuating wage rates.

The question is: are rises in corporate profits and corresponding falls in employee compensation, as a percentage of net value added, sustainable? Is this time different, or are we likely to witness a peak followed by a sharp fall as in the 1960s? Productivity improvements through offshoring jobs are likely to continue for as long as the Dollar remains strong relative to Asian exporters. In other words, a very long time. Technological advances such as automation may also reduce employment costs per unit of output. But there is no clear answer as to how far profit margins will be eroded by increased competition from Europe and Asia. All we can do is monitor the relationship between employee compensation and net value added for nonfinancial corporations for clues. So far, there is no indication that the decline is reversing.

Health Care (Australia)

A chart of Australia’s ASX 200 Health Care [XHJ], compared to Financials-x-Property [XXJ] and the overall index [XJO] over the last 15 years, shows that outperformance of the Health Care sector is not just a recent occurrence.

ASX 200 Health Care

The sector also proved resilient during the GFC.

Health Care

One of the top-performing sectors, both in the US and Australia, is Health Care.

DJUS Health Care

The strength of a momentum strategy is the ability to identify and concentrate investment in outperforming sectors like this. Our S&P 500 Momentum strategy is overweight (40%) in this sector, with investments in Pharmaceuticals, Health Care Supplies and Biotechnology stocks.

Gold finds support at $1200

Spot gold recovered above the former primary support level at $1200/ounce despite low inflation and the stronger Dollar. I would attribute demand to rising uncertainty in the global economy, with falling oil prices, political turmoil in the Middle East and Eastern Europe, and the potential for a currency war with competing currency debasement (QE) between Japan, China and the EU.

Spot Gold

Bullish divergence on 13-week Twiggs Momentum suggests a recovery. Breakout above $1250 would indicate a rally to $1400. But reversal below $1200 remains as likely and would warn of a decline to $1000. Respect of the TMO zero line (from below) would strengthen the bear signal.

Dollar rises as yields fall

Flight to safety is driving demand for the Dollar, with the Dollar Index breaking resistance at 90 to signal a long-term up-trend.

Dollar Index

Long-term Treasury yields are falling in response to a lower inflation outlook. But foreign Treasury purchases may also be a contributing factor, with China seeking to protect its advantage in export markets.

10-Year Treasury Yields

Expect strong support at 1.40 to 1.50 percent. Yields are unlikely to fall below that level unless there is a serious risk of deflation. Recovery above 3.0 percent appears some way off, but would warn that the 30-year secular bull market in bonds is coming to an end.