Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid, Italy’s Bond Yield Reached 6.66% On Monday
I thought this Between The Lines blog entry would be a light hearted joke given ‘the Mark’ relates to money, you know the script; 666, Berlusconi (beast), Rome, “muhahahahaha” etc. Then the parallels got a bit scary once I engaged in a bit of fact finding research. The rise of a supranational currency in the name of counter terrorism and economic stability. The Mark as a requirement on an object such as a credit card for all commerce, or the Mark on the hand or forehead to enable transactions. The stamped image of Rome’s emperor where the end of days of the euro as a currency may be being played out right now..gulp…
Perhaps this is what we get for the Vatican sticking its oar into the discussion last month and suggesting a new world order with a single currency. Eat your heart out Dan Brown, we don’t need Tom Hanks to star in this real life drama, just pull up a chair and buy the popcorn, Rome is burning and Silvio isn’t playing second fiddle to Nero. Perhaps he has hired an empty tanker to set sail laden with the circa $130 billion of gold Italy has on its balance sheet, that gold might go a long way to adding some leverage to Italy’s debt laden pot.
A futurist view of the mark of the Beast is the rise of a supranational currency that could be a hallmark of the End Times and that the mark of the beast will be a sign on the forehead and/or upper side of the hand. According to the Futurist view, to overcome the difficulties the Antichrist will use forced religious syncretism (i.e. in the name of counter terrorism and world economic stability) to enable the creation of the supranational currency. Some interpret the mark as a requirement for all commerce to mean that the mark might actually be an object with the function of a credit card.
A preterist view of the Mark of the Beast is the stamped image of the emperor’s head on every coin of the Roman Empire: the stamp on the hand or in the mind of all, without which no one could buy or sell. New Testament scholar Craig C. Hill says;
“It is far more probable that the mark symbolises the all-embracing economic power of Rome, whose very coinage bore the emperor’s image and conveyed his claims to divinity (e.g., by including the sun’s rays in the ruler’s portrait). It had become increasingly difficult for Christians to function in a world in which public life, including the economic life of the trade guilds, required participation in idolatry.”
A similar view is offered by Craig R. Koester;
“As sales were made, people used coins that bore the images of Rome’s gods and emperors. Thus each transaction that used such coins was a reminder that people were advancing themselves economically by relying on political powers that did not recognise the true God.”
I think I’ll just stick to the joke and the irony, or is it coincidence? Whilst Italy’s borrowing costs didn’t quite reach the ‘inflection’ point of 7.0% it has flirted dangerously close on a number of occasions during Monday’s trading sessions. What should be concern is just how rapid the rise has been, from 6% to 6.5% and further in just over a week, 28/10/2011.
Italy has expanded less than the European average for more than a decade and created a debt that tops that of Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland combined. The country faces an average of almost 20 billion euros ($27.5 billion) of bond maturities a month next year at a time when it must pay 470 basis points more than Germany to borrow for 10 years. Berlusconi’s government in August approved 45.5 billion euros in austerity moves, its second deficit-cutting plan in a month, to secure European Central Bank purchases of Italian debt after yields surged above 6 percent. The central bank is free to stop the buying if Italy fails to pass its reforms, ECB Governing Council member Yves Mersch told la Stampa daily in an interview.
Italy, which is due to auction treasury bills this week, sells more than 200 billion euros of bonds a year. Its 1.9 trillion-euro debt amounts to 120 percent of gross domestic product, and is second in Europe to that of Greece with a 340 billion euro debt and a debt versus GDP of 142%.
Monday proved to be as eventful and unpredictable as the recent previous first day of the week sessions. Italian government bond yields rose to their highest since 1997 – approaching levels regarded as unsustainable – as political turmoil in Rome threatened to drag the euro zone’s third largest economy deeper into regional debt crisis. Greece’s outgoing Socialist prime minister and conservative opposition leader raced to put in place an interim national unity government for just long enough to save the country from imminent default by implementing a new bailout program. France announced a new wave of austerity measures designed to preserve its precarious AAA credit rating, without which the euro zone might no longer be able to bail out its weakest members.
Finance ministers of the 17-nation currency area met in Brussels to try to accelerate the building of a firewall to shield solvent but stressed economies in Spain and Italy from the fallout of a potential Greek default. One euro zone official said: “We exhausted our scope for concern with Greece. The main concern of the ministers now is Italy and the leveraging of the EFSF.”
Despite the Eurozone turmoil U.S. stocks rose in Monday’s afternoon session recovering from an early slump, the euro trimmed losses as the European Central Bank’s Juergen Stark predicted the region’s debt crisis will be controlled within two years. Treasuries pared gains.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed 0.6 percent to close at 1,261.12 at 4 p.m. New York time. The euro slipped 0.2 percent to $1.3765 after sinking 0.8 percent earlier. The Swiss franc slid on a report the central bank may weaken the currency. Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields lost less than two basis points to 2.02 percent after decreasing seven points earlier. Oil climbed to a three-month high, while gold surged to the highest price since September.
The euro pared a 1 percent loss versus the yen to less than 0.4 percent. Stark, a member of the ECB’s Executive Board, spoke at an event in Lucerne, Switzerland. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.6 percent after tumbling 1.8 percent earlier. European markets closed before Stark’s remarks. Insurance, industrial and real-estate companies led losses. Carrefour SA dropped 2.6 percent after Citigroup Inc. advised selling shares of the world’s second-biggest retailer. PostNL NV slid 7.4 percent as the biggest Dutch postal operator said profit decreased.
Italy’s 10-year bond yield trimmed gains after climbing as much as 31 basis points. The extra yield investors demand to hold Italian 10-year bonds instead of German bunds, the euro region’s benchmark government securities, widened to as much as 491 basis points, or 4.91 percentage points, the most since the introduction of the euro in 1999, before retreating from the day’s high to 488 basis points.
The Swiss franc fell against all 16 of its most-traded peers following a report that the nation’s central bank may move to weaken the currency. The franc slid 1.7 percent versus the 17-nation euro and lost 1.8 percent versus the dollar. Policy makers remain ready to act in case the franc’s strength increases the risk of deflation and threatens the country’s economy, Swiss National Bank President Philipp Hildebrand told NZZ am Sonntag newspaper in an interview conducted Nov. 2 and published yesterday.
Gold futures rose as much as 2.5 percent to $1,799.90 an ounce. The metal climbed 6.3 percent in October, rebounding from the bear market in the previous month that saw it drop more than 20 percent from the record $1,923.70 reached Sept. 6. In September, investors sold gold to cover losses during a rout in equity markets.
Bullion may rise to a record $1,950 by the end of the first quarter, according to the median estimate of eight of the 10 most accurate forecasters tracked by Bloomberg over the past two years. The metal has appreciated more than sixfold in its 11- year run of annual gains. Before today, gold climbed 24 percent this year.
Oil climbed to a three-month high in New York, rising 1.3 percent to settle at $95.52 a barrel. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index increased 0.2 percent, rebounding from an earlier 0.7 percent drop.
Economic calendar releases that may affect the morning session market sentiment
09:30 UK – Industrial Production September
09:30 UK – Manufacturing Production September
A Bloomberg survey gives a median forecast of a month-on-month figure of 0.1% for the UK’s industrial production, compared with the last figure of 0.2%. The year on year figure predicted was -0.8% from -1.0% previously. A Bloomberg survey gives a median forecast of a month on month figure of 0.1% from -0.3% previously for manufacturing. The year on year figure predicted was 1.9% as compared with the last figure of 1.5%.
Source: FX Central Clearing Ltd. (FXCC BLOG)
http://blog.fxcc.com/november-8-am/
Why Only Trading The Major FX Pairs And Commodity Price Pairs Makes Perfect Sense
So what are we ‘selling or buying’ in our forex markets? The answer is “nothing” our retail FX market is purely a speculative market. No physical exchange of currencies ever takes place. All trades exist simply as computer entries and are netted out depending on market price. The banks provide the liquidity we trade that liquidity through our ‘pure-play’ ECN broker.
In order to gain a complete understanding of what forex is, it’s useful to examine the reasons that have lead to its existence in the first place, a specific insight into the reasoning behind foreign exchange as a medium of exchange of goods and services.
Our ancestors conducted their trading of goods versus other goods using a system of bartering, this was incredibly inefficient and required lengthy negotiation. Eventually metals such as bronze, silver and gold came to be used in standardised sizes and later grades (purity) to facilitate that exchange of merchandise. The basis for these mediums of exchange was accepted by merchants and the general public, its practical variables and qualities, such as durability and storage, gained the metals popularity. Fast forward to the late middle ages and versions and varieties of paper IOUs began gaining popularity as an exchange medium backed by the metals.
The advantage of carrying around paper IOUs versus carrying bags of precious metal was slowly recognised through the ages. Eventually stable governments adopted paper currency and backed the value of the paper with their gold reserves. This came to be known as the gold standard. Taking a massive leap forward to modern times The Bretton Woods accord in July 1944 fixed the dollar to 35 USD per ounce and other currencies to the dollar. Then in 1971, president Nixon suspended the convertibility to gold and let the US dollar ‘float’ against other currencies. Since then the foreign exchange market has developed into the largest market in the world with a total daily turnover of about 3.2 trillion USD. Traditionally an institutional (inter-bank) market, the popularity of online currency trading offered to the private individual has democratised forex and widening the retail market.
The foreign exchange market is the most liquid financial market in the world. Traders include large banks, central banks, institutional investors, currency speculators, corporations, governments, other financial institutions, and retail investors. The average daily turnover in the global foreign exchange and related markets is continuously growing.
According to the 2010 Triennial Central Bank Survey, coordinated by the Bank for International Settlements, average daily turnover was US$3.98 trillion in April 2010 (vs $1.7 trillion in 1998). Of this $3.98 trillion, $1.5 trillion was spot transactions and $2.5 trillion was traded in outright forwards, swaps and other derivatives.
Trading in the United Kingdom accounted for 36.7% of the total, making it by far the most important center for foreign exchange trading. Trading in the United States accounted for 17.9%, and Japan accounted for 6.2%.
Turnover of exchange-traded foreign exchange futures and options have grown rapidly in recent years, reaching $166 billion in April 2010 (double the turnover recorded in April 2007). Exchange-traded currency derivatives represent 4% of OTC foreign exchange turnover. Foreign exchange futures contracts were introduced in 1972 at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and are actively traded relative to most other futures contracts.
The primary reason the FX market exists is to facilitate the exchange of one currency into another for multinational corporations that need to trade currencies continually (for example, for payroll, payment for costs of goods and services from foreign vendors, and merger and acquisition activity). However, these day-to-day corporate needs comprise only about 20% of the market volume. Fully 80% of trades in the currency market are speculative in nature, put on by large financial institutions, multibillion dollar hedge funds and even individuals who want to express their opinions on the economic and geopolitical events of the day.
Because currencies always trade in pairs, when a trader makes a trade he or she is always long one currency and short the other. For example, if a trader sells one standard lot (equivalent to 100,000 units) of EUR/USD, she would, in essence, have exchanged euros for dollars and would now be “short” euros and “long” dollars. To better understand this dynamic, let’s use a practical example. If you went into a major out of town retailer and bought a LCD 3D tv for €1,000 you would be exchanging your euros for a tv. You would basically be “short” €1,000 and “long” one tv. The store would be “long” €1,000 but now “short” one tv in its stock. This principle applies to the FX market, the key difference is that that no physical exchange takes place, all transactions are simply computer entries.
Despite the fact that a minority of retail traders trade exotic currencies such as the Thai baht, Polish zloty, the Swedish krona, or the Mexican peso the vast majority ( particularly in our retail community) trade the seven most liquid currency pairs in the world, which are the four “majors” and the three pairs recognised as the commodity pairs. In everyday foreign exchange market trading and news reporting, the currency pairs are often referred to by nicknames rather than their symbolic names. These are often reminiscent of national or geographic connotations. The GBP/USD pairing is known by traders as the cable, which has its origins from the time when a communications cable under the Atlantic Ocean synchronized the GBP/USD quote between the London and New York markets. The following nicknames are common: Fiber for EUR/USD, Chunnel for EUR/GBP, Loonie and The Funds for USD/CAD, Matie and Aussie for AUD/USD, Geppie for GBP/JPY, and Kiwi for the New Zealand Dollar NZD/USD pairing. Nicknames vary between the trading centers in New York, London, and Tokyo.
The currency pairs that do not involve the US dollar are called cross currency pairs, such as GBP/JPY. Pairs that involve the euro are often called euro crosses, such as EUR/GBP.
The Four Major Pairs
EUR/USD (Euro/Dollar)
USD/JPY (Dollar/Japanese Yen)
GBP/USD (British pound/Dollar)
USD/CHF (Dollar/Swiss franc)
The Three Commodity Pairs
AUD/USD (Australian dollar/dollar)
USD/CAD (dollar/Canadian dollar)
NZD/USD (New Zealand dollar/dollar)
These currency pairs, along with their various combinations (such as EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY and EUR/GBP), account for more than 95% of all speculative trading in FX. Given the small number of trading instruments – only 18 pairs and crosses are actively traded – the FX market is far more concentrated than the stock market.
There are many official currencies that are used all over the world, but there only a handful of currencies that are traded actively in the forex market. In currency trading, only the most economically/politically stable and liquid currencies are demanded in sufficient quantities. For example, due to the size and strength of the United States economy and the Eurozone the American dollar and the euro are the world’s most actively traded currencies. In general, the eight most traded currencies (in no specific order) are the U.S. dollar (USD), the Canadian dollar (CAD), the euro (EUR), the British pound (GBP), the Swiss franc (CHF), the New Zealand dollar (NZD), the Australian dollar (AUD) and the Japanese yen (JPY).
Currencies must be traded in pairs. Mathematically, there are twenty seven different currency pairs that can be derived from those eight currencies alone. However, there are about 18 currency pairs that are conventionally quoted by forex market makers as a result of their overall liquidity. These pairs are:
USD / CAD
EUR / USD
USD / CHF
GBP / USD
NZD / USD
AUD / USD
USD / JPY
EUR / CAD
EUR / AUD
EUR / JPY
EUR / CHF
EUR / GBP
AUD / CAD
GBP / CHF
GBP / JPY
CHF / JPY
AUD / JPY
AUD / NZD
Most experienced traders attest to the massive role probabilities play in terms of their trading success. The vast majority of these successful traders also testify to the fact that they only trade the majors and or the commodity based pairs. There are many reasons for this but here’s just three key reasons. Firstly the spreads are the lowest, secondly the deeper pools of liquidity ensure better fills during even the most volatile periods and thirdly due to the aforementioned factors price is (probably) more likely to behave in a predictable fashion. The major pairs are quite simply the most predictable. Technical analysis works very well with most forex pairs, but this is particularly true of the major pairs.
This is due to the fact that millions of traders, from all corners of the globe, are looking at the same price patterns and indicators and price behaviour. There are many theories that the anticipated price moves tend to become self-fulfilling. Traders tend to buy and sell the major pairs at certain points, whether it’s a major area of resistance or support, or whether it’s a major fibonacci level, or key levels such as the 200 ema/ma. Certainly this is where the big players hunt.
Ultimately it’s up to each individual trader’s discretion to decide which pairs they want to trade, however, concentrating on trading no more than four pairs is the right route forward for fledgling traders. This makes it far easier to monitor and adapt to learning the characteristics of each pair, traders can clearly see how they respond to various technical indicators, and you can determine which times of the day are the most profitable for each of these pairs. Traders can also monitor how each currency behaves to fundamental news announcements, for example, policy statements by the SNB Swiss National Bank can cause extremes of price behaviour, ‘spikes’.
Over recent weeks not only have FX traders had to cope with some of the most volatile conditions experienced since 2008-2009 they’ve been under their own self inflicted pressures. It’d be only ‘human’ to question your edge over the past few months. Whilst your MM and mind may have been robust and steadfast unless you experienced 2008-09 then the ‘behaviour’ of the FX markets recently will have been quite a shock. However, despite it all the feedback is that money has been made by FX traders. If we accept that the only twenty percent of retail traders are successfully drawing down an income from this business and that the vast majority only swing trade the trend on the major four pairs plus the three commodity pairs and that they’ve coped well during the recent maelstrom then we’re getting a huge indication as to what pairs to trade, (in any market conditions) and why.
Source: FX Central Clearing Ltd. (FXCC BLOG)
http://blog.fxcc.com/why-only-trading-the-major-fx-pairs-and-commodity-price-pairs-makes-perfect-sense/
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