Europe: DAX selling pressure continues

Germany’s DAX is consolidating between 7500 and 7900. Bearish divergence on 13-week Twiggs Money Flow still warns of selling pressure. Failure of 7500 would indicate a correction to test the rising trendline — around support at 7000.

DAX Index

* Target calculation: 7500 + ( 7500 – 7000 ) = 8000

The Italian MIB Index broke support at 16000. Following the earlier trendline break this warns of a primary reversal. Confirmation would come from breach of primary support at 15000. Reversal of 63-day Twiggs Momentum below zero would strengthen the signal. Respect of primary support would still not mean that trouble is over, as a lower peak followed by failure of primary support may follow.
FTSE MIB Index

The FTSE 100 displays a rising flag on its weekly chart, below resistance at 6400. Upward breakout would offer a target of 6800*. Downward breakout is unlikely but would signal a correction. Another 13-week Twiggs Momentum trough above zero would indicate strength in the primary up-trend.

FTSE 100 Index

* Target calculation: 6400 + ( 6400 – 6000 ) = 6800

An Italian voter speaks out on the real reasons Italians voted for Grillo | Credit Writedowns

An Italian reader of Credit Writedowns explains:

With this [Monte Paschi] scandal people started to realize that the right (Berlusconi’s party) and the Left (Bersani’s PD) are equally corrupt and are in politics to do favours for their friends…….People voted for Grillo because they are sending a message to Bersani and Berlusconi: “go home”. They have ruined the country in the last 20 years.

Read more of this entertaining insight into Italian politics An Italian voter speaks out on the real reasons Italians voted for Grillo | Credit Writedowns.

Forex: Euro and Sterling retreat while Aussie Dollar rebounds

The euro broke medium-term support at $1.32 and the rising trendline against the greenback. While this indicates trend weakness it does not necessarily mean reversal to a primary down-trend. Completion of a 63-day Twiggs Momentum trough above zero would suggest that the trend is intact — and an advance to $1.42* is on the cards.
Aussie Dollar/USD

* Target calculation: 1.36 + ( 1.36 – 1.30 ) = 1.42

Pound sterling broke long-term support at $1.53 against the greenback, offering a long-term target of $1.43*. Fall of 63-day Twiggs Momentum below -5% (its 2011 low) would strengthen the signal.
Aussie Dollar/USD

* Target calculation: 1.53 – ( 1.63 – 1.53 ) = 1.43

Against the euro, the pound is testing support at €1.15. 63-day Twiggs Momentum well below zero suggests a strong down-trend. Failure of support would offer a target of the 2011 low at €1.10.
Aussie Dollar/USD

The Aussie Dollar respected primary support at $1.015. Recovery above $1.03 and the declining trendline would suggest another rally to test $1.06. Reversal below $1.02 would warn that primary support is under threat.

Aussie Dollar/USD
Failure of primary support would offer a target of $0.96*. Oscillation of 63-day Twiggs Momentum close to zero, however, suggests a ranging market.
Aussie Dollar/USD

* Target calculation: 1.01 – ( 1.06 – 1.01 ) = 0.96

The Canadian Loonie by contrast is in a strong primary down-trend against the greenback, headed for a test of $0.96. Falling 63-day Twiggs Momentum suggests that medium-term support at $0.97/$0.98 is unlikely to hold.
Aussie Dollar/USD
The US dollar has broken its long-term declining trendline against the Japanese Yen, suggesting that the 30-year decline is over and the greenback likely to appreciate for the foreseeable future. Follow-through above ¥100 would confirm, offering a target of ¥120*.
Aussie Dollar/USD

* Target calculation: 100 – ( 100 – 80 ) = 120

Europe: Italian stalemate

Reuters reports that support for Mario Monti’s centrist coalition is fading.

Opinion polls give the centre-left coalition led by the veteran former industry minister Pier Luigi Bersani a narrow lead but the race has been thrown open by the prospect of a huge protest vote against austerity policies imposed by Monti and rage at a wave of corporate and political scandals.

Without a strong government, resolution of Italy’s current crisis is unlikely. The Italian MIB Index retreated below new support at 17000 and last week penetrated the rising trendline, warning of a primary reversal. Breach of support at 16000 would strengthen the signal — as would reversal of 63-day Twiggs Momentum below zero. Confirmation, however would only come from a lower peak followed by failure of primary support at 15000.
FTSE MIB Index

The FTSE 100 continues its advance toward long-term resistance at 6750. Failed down-swings within the recent reverse pennant (broadening wedge) suggest continuation of the advance. Upward breakout would offer a target of 6750, strengthened if 21-day Twiggs Money Flow recovers above 20% to form another trough above zero.

FTSE 100 Index

* Target calculation: 6000 + ( 6000 – 5250 ) = 6750

Germany’s DAX continues to test support at 7500. Bearish divergence on 13-week Twiggs Money Flow warns of selling pressure. Failure of 7500 would indicate a correction to test the rising trendline — and support at 7000.

DAX Index

* Target calculation: 7500 + ( 7500 – 7000 ) = 8000

Bernard Connolly: Why the Euro Crisis Isn't Over | WSJ.com

From Brian Carney’s weekend interview with Bernard Connolly:

…But even if the Greeks were undisciplined, he says, “both the sovereign-debt crisis and the banking crisis are symptoms, not causes. And the underlying problem has been that there was a massive bubble generated in the world as a whole by monetary policy—but particularly in the euro zone” by European Central Bank policy.

The bubble formed like this: When countries such as Ireland, Greece and Spain joined the euro, their interest rates immediately dropped to near-German levels, in some cases from double-digit territory. “The optimism created by these countries’ suddenly finding that they could have low interest rates without their currencies collapsing, which had been their previous experience, led people to think that there was a genuine rate-of-return revolution going on,” he says.

There had been an increase in the rates of return in Ireland “and to some extent in Spain” in the run-up to euro membership, thanks to structural reforms in those countries in the pre-euro period. But by the time the euro rolled around, money was flowing into these countries out of all proportion to the opportunities available…..

Read more at The Weekend Interview with Bernard Connolly: Why the Euro Crisis Isn't Over – WSJ.com.

The final verdict on George Osborne as Chancellor | Mainly Macro

Simon Wren-Lewis, economics professor at Oxford University, writes:

What George Osborne did with his austerity programme was the equivalent of putting a sick patient on a starvation diet accompanied by cold showers. The UK economy without accelerated austerity would still have been in poor shape, but under George Osborne it has been a disaster.

Read more at mainly macro: The final verdict on George Osborne as Chancellor.

Euro retraces

The Euro retraced to test support and the rising trendline at $1.32. Respect would indicate a primary advance with a target of $1.42*. 63-Day Twiggs Momentum well 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 $1.26.

Euro/USD

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

Europe: FTSE advances while DAX retreats

The FTSE 100 is advancing toward long-term resistance at 6750 on the monthly chart. Rising troughs on 13-week  Twiggs Money Flow indicate long-term buying pressure.

FTSE 100 Index

* Target calculation: 6000 + ( 6000 – 5250 ) = 6750

Germany’s DAX is testing support at 7500. Bearish divergence on 13-week Twiggs Money Flow warns of selling pressure. Failure of 7500 would indicate a correction to test the rising trendline — and support at 7000.

DAX Index

* Target calculation: 7500 + ( 7500 – 7000 ) = 8000