Archive for the ‘Currencies’ Category

What will 2012 bring?

Friday, January 13th, 2012

2011 was a year where not much happened all round – the NZ stockmarket (main index), housing market, and currency were virtually flat year-on-year. We have entered the age of deleveraging and also a huge population bulge will be retiring which will start to have a drag on house prices and perhaps even stocks in the coming years. There are huge opposing forces and uncertainties in the global enivornment, especially surrouding the Euro area. With the developed nations mired in debt, it is going to be years before things return to the ‘good old days’ of ever rising asset prices.

OK, so the new year is a time where everyone loves to make predictions about the coming year, if anything it’s fun to look back on a year later. This is my assessment of the most likely outcomes in 2012.

The New Zealand dollar

The US economy is making a comeback so the NZD/USD should remain relatively unchanged for 2012, or at least within the normal range of volatility. I expect a trading range of 75c to 85c. Against the Euro the Kiwi dollar should do very well this year, provided that there is not some catastrophic event which causes a flight to risk (and therefore risk assets such as the Kiwi dollar to be sold off). As I write this the NZD/EUR has hit a new high of over 62c. I expect a trading range of 58c – 70c for the NZD/EUR with the bias to the upside. For the NZD/GBP I can see the Kiwi outperforming, but not as much as against the Euro, I can see a trading range of 49p to 55p for the NZD/GBP.

New Zealand House Prices

I expect there to be a continuation of the slow growth of house prices in Auckland, in the order of 3 or 4% in popular suburbs (in line with the general inflation level). For the rest of New Zealand I can see there being more modest growth, and even falls in some coastal or rural towns. The housing market is underpinned by very low interest rates, and relatively easy credit conditions, combined with low unemployment levels meaning fewer forced sales. What is stopping the market from running away is low or negative net migration, and a shift in consumer behaviour towards deleveraging. Also – the baby boomer’s are reaching retirement age so we are going to start seeing demographic headwinds turn against the NZ housing market over the next 10-20 years.

A huge swathe of the population will be retiring and that will mean people will downsize, or sell holiday houses as they elect to use the cash tied up in their houses for world travel or to help pay for medical expenses during their retirement. This will mean continued downwards pressure on the housing market for years to come. Overall there are opposing forces at work – i.e. easy credit vs demographic headwinds. It takes a number of factors to come together to produce a property price boom and I do not see any of these factors coninciding for many years to come. The property ‘gravy train’ is over for the forseeable future at least.

The stockmarket

Again I believe we are in a tradtional pattern of trading, which means buy in fall (Northern Hemisphere fall that is) and “go away in May”. So I would say the stockmarket will have a modest uptrend until about April or May, and then a correction for June, July August, with a rally from September or October onwards. I would be very surprised if the stockmarket ends the year significantly up or down on where it started. After last year’s modest year-on-year decline, I am predicting this year will see the stockmarket gain about 3% from where it began on the 1st January. There are simply too many global headwinds in terms of high debt levels in the developed world to allow any sort of major recovery to get underway.

Strategies

The safest strategy in this enviornment is to pay down debt and find ways to save money, by reducing expenditure on unneccessary items. I have a few stocks with good dividends, but I would be a very cautious buyer of stocks, only have a handful and nothing you cannot afford to lose!

2011 – The year in review.

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Looking back a year on it’s interesting to see how my predictions actually went. Unfortunately I have not had much time for this blog in the last year due to extreme busyness at work and in my personal life too. Here’s a wrap-up of how my predictions actually went.

The NZD (New Zealand Dollar)

The NZD/USD had a volatile year, and went much higher than I predicted, but ended up in the range that I thought the currency would trade in over the year. At the peak the NZD/USD hit 87c, which had every newspaper clamouring that the Kiwi (NZD) was headed towards parity with the US dollar. This would have been the time to sell NZD, in hindsight. The NZD/USD fiinished up the year at about 77c which is in the range I thought the currency would trade in.

The Stockmarket (S&P500 and NZX50)

I was almost bang on with my predictions about the stockmarket. We had a rally from the beginning of 2011 until April 29th where the market peaked. The market then struggled to regain form, suffering a large and sharp summer correction. The market bottomed on October 03 (the beginning of fall) and rallied somewhat until the year end but did not reoup it’s losses since the peak in April.

It was a very lacklustre year for the stockmarket and anyone on the long side would have really struggled. I know New Zealand investors that got completely hammered trading NZ stocks (the NZ market generally tracks the S&P500) – with some stocks down 60% or more. I was lucky enough to sell my holdings mid-Feburary, which was mainly for personal reasons rather than having a crystal ball (I was planning a wedding and needed the cash!). I am glad in hindsight that I did.

 I dipped my toes back into the market in about August but none of those stocks have done that well, being down about 15% each. In hindsight  would rather have stayed out of the market altogether, although I did expect the end of year rally to be much more pronounced than it actually was.

The NZ housing market

OK, I was almost on the money here, but still slightly too pessmimistic. I predicted there would be a very slight dip in prices (in the order of 1-2%) but instead prices were stable and even slightly up in Auckland (depending on the suburb). As for the rest of NZ, it still looks in pretty dire shape, prices may still be falling in coastal areas and small towns, although this has little impact on National statistics due to the low volumes and low values in the smaller cities. The housing market in Auckland has been very resilient, most likely due to the influx of people from earthquake-damaged Christchurch.

Conclusions

2011 was a very difficult year for anyone trading or investing, with no really easy wins. There are huge global forces pushing the markets around, such as the European debt crisis. The Western world is mired in debt and doing its best to recover, but it seems to be a long and tough battle. Until the European debt situation is resolved I can’t see huge growth coming from anywhere anytime soon.

 I think we are in a similar time to the Great Depression from 1929-1948 where we have had so many years of debt building up that it needs to be washed out of the system, and that is going to take a very long time and will mean slow growth for 2012 and the forseeable future.

What will 2011 bring?

Monday, January 10th, 2011

A quick recap of 2010


My predictions for 2010 were pretty much on the mark. The NZ dollar traded mostly in a range between 70-75c to the USD, with the odd foray higher and lower, for short periods of time. The equity markets rallied early in the year then entered a sizeable correction during the Northern Hemisphere’s summer. The housing market was flat to slighty down. Overall it was a lacklustre year with no real gains being made or losses either for that matter. Without the US government’s QEII program we would be looking in much worse shape.

Where to in 2011?

In 2011 I can see:

1) An early rally in the stockmarket until late March or April, then a summer correction, then possibly another rally late in the year. I believe we are back to the traditional patterns of trading (buy in the Fall, go away in May).

2) The NZ dollar will gain strength against the greenback, but will still struggle to march past the 80c mark. NZ is teetering on the brink of a double-dip recession and this is going to keep the currency necessarily depressed for some time. But the US economy is struggling too, so relative to each other, they will stay about the same.

3) The NZ housing market will show further weakness until later in the year. The low sales volumes we have been experiencing are a sign of further falls in prices to come. The correction in prices will not be massive however, we are talking only a few percentage points if that. This is due to the sales volumes of higher-end properties dragging the median prices up.

4) The Rugby World Cup will fuel some optimism in the local equity markets (in stocks like THL and NZO). This optimism will fade once the fans leave and winter truly quicks in.

Conclusions:

I am staying long equities but will review this sometime in late March and early April. With property investing, now is the time to put in some cheeky low offers, if you have the required deposits that the banks are asking for. The greatest irony is that the best time to buy is always when people have the least cash and finance is the hardest to get. So therefore it lost on most people as most people cannot get finance to snap up the bargains as they come along. I don’t predict any massive rally, but I can’t see any major correction either, bar some unforseen event (such as a war breaking out). If the US government implements QEIII, we will see a further rally in the equity and commodity markets.

Happy investing!

NZ dollar still locked in a downtrend

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

The S&P500 has been rallying the past 2 days and yet despite the rate rise from the central bank the NZD has been unable to rally past the 70c mark and hold its ground. As I wrote in my previous articles, the NZD broke its correlation with the US stock market last October (2009) and then since then has been stuck in a volatile downwards sloping channel.

The NZ dollar is still stuck in its downwards trending channel with the upper channel line presently at around 71c to the USD. The NZ dollar would have to break above 71c and hold there to break this pattern. While NZ has always had higher interest rates than the USA, the NZD is not as strongly correlated to the relative interest rate differential between the US and NZ as most people believe. What is more important is the relative economic performance between these two countries.

Right now the US economy is rebounding strongly, however the NZ economy is showing mixed signals. Wheras on the one hand commodity prices are high, on the other, the housing market is falling and the consumer is deleveraging which is dragging on the NZ economy.

NZD Stuck in a Downtrend

NZD Stuck in a Downtrend

Bear market blues? Rob Pretcher’s Latest…

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Please click on the below video to watch the latest update from Robert Pretcher….

Robert Pretcher from Elliot Wave International is known for his outspoken calls on the market. He’s been pretty bearish for the past couple of years, and called the top of the market in 2007. Last March 2009 he told people to “cover their shorts” which was a timely call as the market rallied from that point a 60% rally that lasted until last week when the Greek sovereign debt crisis hit. He was early in calling the top – last August – but what he has to say here is pretty interesting. If he’s right – then it’s a very bad time to be in stocks.

Have a look at his last call on the Market August 2009 which is very interesting to look back on in hindsight.

Is Pretcher correct? Is this the resumption of a bear market?
If you look back in hindsight – Pretcher’s call last August may have seemed very premature at the time – but the S&P500 as of today (31st May 2010)  is only up 5% from August 17th 2009 (when that video was published) and the NZ stockmarkt (NZ50) is actually 2.5% below where it was on August 17th 2009 and is at 9 month lows. So therefore in hindsight – anyone that had followed Pretcher’s advice and sold stocks then would not have missed out on much of a gain. The market since August 2009 has really struggled to make any significant headway.

But that does not necessarily mean that we are going into another bear market. The overall trend is still up but it is very choppy trading. As I said in my previous post – this is a trader’s market, not a buy-and-hold (or buy-and-hope) market.


What remains to be seen is whether the stockmarket can bounce back from the recent problems with Greece and the PIIGS economies in Europe. In my opinion the emerging markets such as China, India and Brazil, are much more important to a global recovery than Europe. If there was a significant slowdown in these emerging markets, then we would be in danger of another vicious bear market. In the meantime – I am cautiously optimistic, that this is a correction in the uptrend and not the resumption of the bear market.

NZD breaks a key resistance point, back in downtrend

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

After challenging the upper channel line of the downtrend the NZD/USD has been stuck in since last October, the NZD/USD has now broken down and crashed through a key resistance level at 6809 (68.09 cents to the US dollar). The NZD/USD is now firmly back inside its downwards trending channel and heading towards the lower channel line which currently stands at around 65c.

The Kiwi dollar is looking very oversold at present with the RSI below 30. The NZD hit a low of 66.59c yesterday in the currency markets, and is continuing to be hurt by the increased negative sentiment and high volatility surrounding the Greek bailout and the German ban on  naked short selling.

The NZ Dollar Back inside its downwards trending channel

The NZ Dollar Back inside its downwards trending channel

In my other post here I discussed the channel setup and some of the fundamentals surrounding the NZD. While the NZ economy seems to be recovering strongly the NZD has always been vunerable to quick sell-offs due to the tendency of investors and traders to rush to the perceived ‘safety’ of the USD when there are signs of trouble or doubts about the economy.

NZ dollar hits upper channel line .. will it push through?

Friday, April 30th, 2010

The New Zealand dollar has today hit up against the upper edge of the downwards trending channel that it has been stuck in since October 2009. With NZ commodity prices at an all time high and the Australian economy in full swing one would have to argue that the case for a strong NZ dollar is a good one. If the NZ dollar can push through the upper channel line then it will rise to challenge the 75c mark which is the high from October 2009. There is a more in-depth article here by Roger Kerr on the prospects for the NZ dollar which also discusses what could happen if rates rise in the USA.

New Zealand Dollar downwards trending channel vs USD

New Zealand Dollar downwards trending channel vs USD

NZ dollar breaks correlation with US stocks , heading lower

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Is the Kiwi dollar’s dream run over?

Since the global financial crisis took hold in late 2007 or early 2008 – the Kiwi dollar has been very highly correlated with the US dollar – basically as the Kiwi dollar can also be viewed as a measure of risk sentiment. As panic took over during the collapse of Lehman Brothers and other investment banks, the NZ dollar fell down to a low of about 48c, closely tracking the collapse of the sharemarket. But since the low in March 2009 the Kiwi dollar steadily climbed to hit a peak at around 76c to the USD in October the same year.

The below chart shows the NZD/USD plotted against the S&P500 sharemarket value since 2007 until today. The green lines show the periods where the NZD has broken it’s correlation with the USD and trended in a different direction. There was one such period from mid 2007 to early 2008 where the NZD appreciated and the Stockmarket was falling, and also from October 2009 until today where the Kiwi dollar has been falling against the USD while the stockmarket has continued its rally.

So why is the NZD in a downtrend?

The answer to this is not exactly simple as there are many factors that are drive the NZD/USD rate. There is an excellent analysis of what drives the NZD on Rodney Dickens’ website which can be accessed here . Prices for New Zealand’s export commodities look to be on a steady uptrend so this cannot be attributed to any NZD/USD weakness. At present it looks like the NZD is stuck in the middle of its downwards trending channel and could break out either way.

My view is that the market currently sees that the recovery in the US will be stronger or faster than in New Zealand and since the NZD/USD tracks the relative performance of the two economies fairly well (as Dickens has shown) then this works in favour of bets for the USD.


Kiwi dollar must fall to save the NZ economy

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Has the US dollar fallen from grace?

In the past week there has been a lot of media interest in the New Zealand dollar as it staged a massive upside reversal against the US dollar. After hitting a low of around 52c to the US dollar earlier this month the Kiwi dollar climbed all the way to 60c to the US dollar before falling back from it’s highs. The Kiwi has been trending downwards against the US dollar all year, and this has not been the first time that it has made a very sharp reversal. The question being asked by many people is – has the US dollar’s golden run finished?

What is driving the Kiwi dollar?

There are several fundamental reasons why the Kiwi dollar has fallen so far to date, and needs to fall further. NZ makes it bread and butter from it’s exports, which are mainly commodities such as lamb, wool, dairy products and Aluminium. There are other sources of export revenue too but these are the big players. Since the global downturn began, commodity prices worldwide have taken a sharp tumble and are down 21% from their peak in July 2008. When commodity prices fall, currency traders expect NZ’s GDP to fall too so they are more inclined to sell the Kiwi dollar on the expectations that the Reserve Bank will be forced to cut interest rates to boost the economy. This creates a self-fufilling prophecy where a falling exchange rate forces traders using the carry trade to unwind speculative long positions, which in turn drives the Kiwi dollar even further down.

The reason behind the Kiwi’s recent climb

The recent climb in the Kiwi dollar is really a story of US dollar weakness more than the Kiwi’s strength. The US dollar has lost value against all currency pairs in the past week. This was a result of the Federal Reserve cutting the Fed funds rate to 0-0.25%, lowering yields on the US Treasury notes and causing a sell-off of the US currency. There are some pundits in the investment community saying that this could be the end of the recent strength in the US dollar, and a break of the trend. However, technically speaking the US dollars upwards trend against other currencies (except the Japanese Yen) is still intact. In the long run if the Fed uses the printing presses excessively this will hurt the US dollar but in the short to medium term, the US dollar will continue to be strong.

What to expect  next?

Expect the recent strength in the Kiwi to only be short-lived. The US dollar has been very strong this year but from time to time a strenghening currency will have what is known as a “pullback”. Nothing can go up in a straight line, its always a rocky road because of the huge forces affecting the currency markets on a day to day basis. This recent pullback in the US dollar is the sole reason behind the Kiwi’s strength. Nothing fundamental has changed in the NZ economy.

Until commodity prices firm the only way for the NZ economy to recover is through a weaker Kiwi dollar which will mean more money for our exports. A weaker NZ dollar can be achieved through the Reserve Bank lowering interest rates. Dr Bollard knows this and for this reason he will be keen to cut rates further in 2009 to stimulate the economy. The only variable in this is inflation, if inflation gets out of hand Bollard may find himself in a tricky situation! Let’s see what happens.

Where is the bull market now…?

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

Where is the bull hiding?

Stocks are in a bear market, commodities are falling like a stone, interest rates on bank deposits are down, bond prices are dropping, and house prices are down. It does not seem like a pretty picture, yet I am reminded of the old adage “there is always a bull market somewhere“. Somewhere, but where? Surely not every single asset class can be in a bear market at the same time? I pondered over this last weekend and then it came to me – and the answer was so obvious that I simply could not believe I had not seen it earlier.

“C” is for……?


Currencies! Yes… you may have noticed there was an asset class that was obviously missing from the list above. Currency trading is the single largest market in the world, with over 3 trillion dollars changing hands on a daily basis. Since mid-2008, there has been a huge bull market underway in both the Japanese Yen, and the US dollar. The strongest of these pairs has been the Japanese Yen, followed by the US dollar and then the Swiss Franc. These currencies have been in a firm uptrend since June which has yet to show any signs of abating. This has been a sharp trend reversal because up until this year, the high-yielding currencies such as the New Zealand Dollar (NZD), Brazilian Real (BRL), Australian Dollar (AUS) and British Pound (GBP) had been in favor. The market seems to now be favoring the lower-yielding “safer” currencies.

Comparing apples with apples.

Gold has long been used as a store of value over the centuries and provides us with a suitable means by which to compare currencies, against a common benchmark. In order to smooth out any noise from daily fluctuations, I have used the monthly averages. Let’s take a look at what the results show:


Since Jan ’08            Since Jun ’08
USD 7.54%                        19.42%
JPY
31.09%                      35.03%
NZD
-26.68%                    -19.3%

When plotted on a chart the results show even more dramatically that the USD staged a sharp reversal from it’s downwards trend in June this year, and has been gaining strength ever since. The New Zealand dollar, measured in Gold ounces, has been sliding since the start of the year. The Japanese Yen has been the strongest performer, and has been showing considerable strength throughout all of 2008. The results show that a simple trend-following trade since June this year on the JPY and USD would have done very nicely, although of course there is plenty of ‘hindsight bias’ in this statement!

So where to from here?

In Richard Farleigh’s book “Taming the Lion” there were two very important observations that he made about the markets, based on a lifetime of his experience:

1) A trend, once in motion, tends to stay in motion
2) Markets tend to under-react in the short term, but then they always go further than expected

It is my belief that the current trends we are seeing in the stronger JPY and USD are going to continue for some time, for several technical, and fundamental reasons. Of course nothing in the world of investing is ever certain, but these are my beliefs! In my next blog, I’ll be talking about some of the fundamentals underpinning the USD and the JPY, and the reason behind NZD weakness. Until then, happy trading!