WEC & Models
This year’s World Economic Conference will focus on the future and our model design so that you can understand and employ this for your level of investment/trading. We have sent out information on the background history of cycles, so we do not have to cover that in the WEC. This year will be more about what we face ahead since there is a lot to go over.
This year we will be using the Socrates Platform for many in-depth market analysis. The object is to show that personal opinion and what someone thinks is not really relevant when they are sitting there with just a myopic focused view of a few markets.
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Market Talk – November 4, 2015
Asia, and China in particular, put in a stellar performance today,
eventually closing up over 4%. Rumors pushing the market that the PBoC
is pursuing a tighter relationship between Shanghai and Hong Kong, and
also that President Xi Jinping said the country’s economic growth rate
will not be less than 6.5% in the next five years to 2020 with reasons
provided. Interesting price action in the Nikkei today, and yet again it
failed to hold the 19k level.
The European session opened following the positive sentiment but could not maintain the momentum. The DAX was the poor loser today, closing down 105 points (-1%). FTSE and CAC closed positive on the day, but a long way from the day’s highs. The ADP report released earlier in the day was marginally better than expected (+182k), but dealers await Friday’s non-farms number instead. All U.S. indices closed negative but off their intraday lows. Despite a wall of money sitting on the sidelines, dealers remain nervous after Janet Yellen’s comments this afternoon and the bond market’s reaction to it!
U.S. Treasuries traded heavy at the short-end today. Comments from Fed Chair Yellen that December could be the first hike in ages brought the front-end back to life. We saw 2s to 5s lose 5bp, whilst 10s remained unchanged, and 30s actually traded higher! The spread between TY/RX was active intraday, ranging from +164 to 159, and finally closing at +162BP.
Oil had a reasonably solid morning session but lost all of that and more in the afternoon trading as news of additional inventories hit the screens. Gold suffered yet another weak day closing at $1107 (-0.6%).
The U.S. dollar was the pride of the fleet today, making ground against both majors and emerging market pairs. The DXY closed up +0.8% at 98.01, which is obviously adding additional pressure to commodities and foreign issuers of U.S. debt.
Tomorrow should add more clarity to the global forecasts when we see retail sales from Europe, the UK Bank of England decision, and U.S. initial claims. All this leads up to Fridays Non-Farms fun and games.
The European session opened following the positive sentiment but could not maintain the momentum. The DAX was the poor loser today, closing down 105 points (-1%). FTSE and CAC closed positive on the day, but a long way from the day’s highs. The ADP report released earlier in the day was marginally better than expected (+182k), but dealers await Friday’s non-farms number instead. All U.S. indices closed negative but off their intraday lows. Despite a wall of money sitting on the sidelines, dealers remain nervous after Janet Yellen’s comments this afternoon and the bond market’s reaction to it!
U.S. Treasuries traded heavy at the short-end today. Comments from Fed Chair Yellen that December could be the first hike in ages brought the front-end back to life. We saw 2s to 5s lose 5bp, whilst 10s remained unchanged, and 30s actually traded higher! The spread between TY/RX was active intraday, ranging from +164 to 159, and finally closing at +162BP.
Oil had a reasonably solid morning session but lost all of that and more in the afternoon trading as news of additional inventories hit the screens. Gold suffered yet another weak day closing at $1107 (-0.6%).
The U.S. dollar was the pride of the fleet today, making ground against both majors and emerging market pairs. The DXY closed up +0.8% at 98.01, which is obviously adding additional pressure to commodities and foreign issuers of U.S. debt.
Tomorrow should add more clarity to the global forecasts when we see retail sales from Europe, the UK Bank of England decision, and U.S. initial claims. All this leads up to Fridays Non-Farms fun and games.
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