Sterling falls

Sterling retracement respected resistance at $1.58  and the pound is now headed for a test of primary support at $1.53*. Reversal of 63-day Twiggs Momentum below -5% would warn of a downward breakout, offering a target of $1.43.
Pound Sterling/USD

* Target calculation: 1.58 – ( 1.63 – 1.58 ) = 1.53

The fall against the euro is even more dramatic. The brief rally to $1.18 was snuffed out and short-term support at €1.15 is not secure. Expect a test of the 2011 low at €1.10.
Pound Sterling/USD

Aussie Dollar tests trendline

The Aussie Dollar retreated above its former support level at $1.03 on the daily chart. Breakout above $1.04 — and the declining trendline — would indicate a bear trap, while reversal below $1.03 would test primary support at $1.015. Retreat of 63-day Twiggs Momentum below zero would favor a down-swing.

Aussie Dollar/USD

* Target calculation: 1.03 – ( 1.06 – 1.03 ) = 1.00

Euro tests support

The Euro retreated below its new support level at $1.35 on the weekly chart. Expect a test of $1.32 and the rising trendline. Respect would indicate a primary advance with a target of $1.42*. Rising 63-day Twiggs Momentum (above zero) suggests continuation of the primary up-trend. Failure of support at $1.32, however, would indicate a bull trap — with a target of $1.27.

Euro/USD

* Target calculation: 1.37 + ( 1.37 – 1.32 ) = 1.42

Cause of the 2007/8 crash and threatened double-dip in 2010

Here is the smoking gun. Note the sharp contraction in the US monetary base before the last two recessions and again in 2010. Monetary base (M0) is plotted net of excess bank reserves on deposit with the Fed, which are not in circulation. The Fed responded after the contraction had taken place, instead of anticipating it.

Monetary Base minus Excess Reserves

The long-term problem is that the monetary base should not be expanding at 10 percent a year. More like 3% to 5% — in line with real GDP growth.

Time for U.S. to Disengage from North Korea Crisis | Cato Institute

Doug Bandow suggests:

Washington should begin contemplating, within earshot of Beijing, getting out of the way of its allies if the North continues to develop nuclear weapons. The message to China should be: if your client state continues its present course, you may face a nuclear-armed Japan. If that happens, blame your buddies in Pyongyang.

Read more at Time for U.S. to Disengage from North Korea Crisis | Doug Bandow | Cato Institute.

ASX 200 passes first test

The ASX 200 passed its first test after breaking long-term resistance at 5000. The index retraced to test the new support level [test #1] in the first hour of trading today but rallied strongly thereafter. Respect of support strengthens the breakout signal but expect further tests in the weeks ahead. Respect in the Daily and Weekly time frames would confirm the primary advance, with a long-term target of 6000*.

ASX 200 Index

* Target calculation: 5000 + ( 5000 – 4000 ) = 6000

Fed's 2007 Transcripts Show Shift to Alarm | WSJ.com

2007 Fed transcripts show that tremors in the US financial system were initially treated with complacency before shifting to alarm. Janet Yellen, then president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, was one of the few who showed an understanding of the magnitude of the growing crisis. JON HILSENRATH and KRISTINA PETERSON at WSJ report:

“I still feel the presence of a 600-pound gorilla in the room, and that is the housing sector,” [Ms. Yellen] said in June 2007. “The risk for further significant deterioration in the housing market, with house prices falling and mortgage delinquencies rising further, causes me appreciable angst.”

By December, she was pushing the Fed to respond aggressively. She noted that the financial system’s problems were happening in the “shadow banking system”—that is, not in traditional banks but rather in bond markets and derivatives markets where hedge funds, investment banks and others traded mortgages and other financial instruments. “This sector is all but shut for new business,” she warned.

Read more at Fed's 2007 Transcripts Show Shift to Alarm – WSJ.com.

A credit vigilante arrives at the Fed | Gavyn Davies

Gavyn Davies at FT writes:

[Fed Governor, Professor Jeremy Stein] argues that the credit markets have recently been “reaching for yield”, much as they did prior to the financial crash. Although not yet as dangerous as in the period from 2004-2007, this behaviour is shown by the rapid expansion of the junk bond market, flows into high-yield mutual funds and real estate investment trusts and the duration of bond portfolios held by banks……. he indicates that the right weapon to deal with this might well be to raise interest rates, rather than relying solely on regulatory and other prudential policy to control the process. This would obviously come as a big surprise to the markets, which have tended to view the Fed’s stated concerns about the “costs of QE” as so much hot air……

Read more at A credit vigilante arrives at the Fed | Gavyn Davies.

OECD Leading Indicators Point to Divergence | WSJ.com

PAUL HANNON at WSJ writes:

The world’s largest economies are set to diverge in coming months with few signs that a broad-based recovery in growth is imminent, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s composite leading indicators.

The leading indicators for December, released Monday, point to a pickup in growth in the U.S., Japan, the U.K. and Brazil, but suggest growth will remain weak by historic standards in many other big nations [including China and India]……

Read more at OECD Leading Indicators Point to Divergence – WSJ.com.

Revolving door may have hurt SEC money fund reforms | Reuters

Sarah N. Lynch at Reuters reports:

Former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission staffers who now work in the private sector may have helped derail last year’s effort to reform the $2.6 trillion money market fund industry, a report [by the Project on Government Oversight] said.

Read more at Revolving door may have hurt SEC money fund reforms: report | Reuters.