Posts Tagged ‘Australia’

Donald Coxe: Post US Election Analysis

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

Donald Coxe and his colleagues at BMO Harris provided their post-election views following the Obama victory:

Donald Coxe, Global Portfolio Strategist, BMO Financial Group

- Obama’s victory will lead to a “feel-good” attitude within America at a time when gloom and sourness have become excessive. That favours financial assets generally at a time that fall is moving into winter.

- Obama’s spending plans will be seen as economy-favourable with the nation in recession. Stocks should benefit near-term.

- Obama is fully committed to continuation of all the ethanol subsidies and tariffs that McCain opposed. That is good news for the reeling ethanol stocks that have been buffeted by falling oil prices and still-high corn prices.

- Obama has threatened to impose carbon taxes on coal-fired electrical generating plants.

- None of the candidates promised significant revisions to the extremely favourable royalty structure for mining on federally-owned properties, mostly in the West. That is important for Canadian gold miners operating in Nevada.

- He famously said that on his first day in the White House he would “call up the President of Canada to announce he was tearing up NAFTA.” We believe he won’t do that.

- Worldwide, the election of a new U.S. President with a change agenda  will be greeted favourably. This should facilitate America’s dealings with other nations on such hot topics as Russian expansionism and response to Iranian nuclear weapons development.

Andrew Busch, BMO Capital Markets, Global FX Market Strategist

- Expect a U.S. stimulus package of $150 billion to be enacted and checks out the door by March with an impact on consumer spending by late April and May.

- Expect very expensive bond deals issuance to be done over the next three months with those issuing likely to only be high quality to get done and with high spreads to Treasuries. This should mean they get snapped up.

- There is going to be massive government bond issuance in 2009 across the globe to pay for bailouts, stimulus packages, and social spending. This means we should see a further steepening of the yield curve in 2009, but it won’t necessarily point to a big economic recovery like it has in the past.

Jack Ablin, Chief Investment Officer, Harris Private Bank

- Both an Obama victory and a Democrat-controlled Congress are currently factored into markets.

- When looking at Europe vs. U.S. price-to-sales comparisons, one can see the U.S. is beginning to trade like a “nationalized” country.

- Tax rates are expected to increase which will give an edge to municipal bonds.

- A move towards socialized medicine appears to be already discounted. In examining the valuation of U.S. vs. European pharmaceutical stocks, the U.S. valuation already incorporates nationalized health care.

- Large cap is set to outperform as small cap moves back to normal valuation.

Paul Taylor, Chief Investment Officer, BMO Harris Private Banking

- We are a long way away from a sustainable equity market rally. A sustainable equity market rally will only occur when it is clear that the spectre of a protracted, significant U.S. economic recession is not in sight.

- Leading economic indicators signal a meaningful U.S. and global economic recession. This will cause policymakers in Washington to focus attention on the economy as the number one priority.

- Investors should have a defensive strategy, with an overweight in Consumer Staples, Telecom, Utilities and underweight in Energy, Materials and Technology. This will be more appropriate until the spectre of recession is past.

- With Fed Funds at 1.0%, monetary policy will be impotent moving forward.

- A global economic recession is bearish for commodity based currencies (Canadian and Australian dollars) and is bullish for other currencies. The current “crisis of confidence” is bullish for the U.S. dollar due to its position of reserve currency.


Source: PR Newswire



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Resurgent Yen a Global Destabilizer

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Once again, volatility favouring the Japanese Yen is having a pronounced effect on what happens in the stock market. There is a well documented history of the relationship that exists between global stock markets and the Yen. There appears to be a well-defined negative correlation between the yen and equity markets. When the yen surges, markets fall, and vice versa.

We have covered this topic on several occasions during this year:

From the Economic Times, The Group of Seven issued warnings on Monday the yen’s wild swings are threatening financial stability, fanning speculation central banks may intervene to halt a rally in the currency driven by a Japanese exodus from emerging markets.

The yen was the only currency mentioned in a brief G7 statement as it rallied to 13-year high against the dollar, not only threatening Japanese exports as the world’s second-largest economy tumbles toward recession amid the worst global financial crisis in 80 years, but leading to a destabilization of currency related transactions that need to be unwound.

As a matter of background building, we provide below a summary of milestones in the yen’s history:

1871 - The yen became Japan’s currency as part of the Meiji Restoration, which marked the start of Japan’s modernization and opening to the rest of the world. Japan adopted the gold standard.

1949 - After World War Two the dollar’s fixed rate is set at 360 yen via the Bretton Woods system, partly to help stabilize prices in the Japanese economy.

1959 - The dollar/yen exchange rate is liberalized and the margin of fluctuation is set at 0.5 percent on either side of its dollar parity.

1963 - The margin of fluctuation is widened to 0.75 percent. 1971 - United States abandons gold standard, bringing an end to the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates and forcing a realignment of world currencies.

December 1971 - Under the Smithsonian Agreement, the dollar/yen exchange rate is set at 308 yen and is allowed to fluctuate in a wider band between 301.07 yen and 314.93 yen.

1973 - Japanese monetary authorities decide to let the yen float freely against the dollar, and the yen appreciates as far as 263 to the dollar.

1978 - The yen pushes through 200 to the dollar for the first time, strengthening as far as 177.

1980 to 1985 - The yen’s appreciation halts and partially reverses despite Japan’s big trade surpluses. Higher interest rates in the United States prompt Japanese investors to put money in dollar assets.

1985 - The Group of Five industrial nations, the predecessor to the G7, sign the Plaza Accord in which they agree the dollar is overvalued and to weaken it. The yen climbs from its pre-accord level of around 240 to 211 in October and 200 in November, a 20 percent rise in just a few months.

1986 - The U.S. currency falls further to around 190 yen in January, 167 yen in April and 153 yen in August.

1987 - In February, six of the G7 nations sign the Louvre Accord, which aims to stabilize currencies and halt the dollar’s broad decline. The dollar still falls from near 153 to 137 in April and 120.80 by the end of the year.

1988 - On January 4, the dollar falls to a post-war low of 120.45 yen in Tokyo trade, a level that holds as the low for more than five years. The Bank of Japan intervenes to buy dollars and sell yen that day on behalf of the Ministry of Finance.

August 17, 1993 - The dollar declines to a new post-war low of 100.40 yen in Tokyo.

June 21, 1994 - The dollar falls through the key 100 yen level and touches a record postwar low of 99.85 yen in New York trade before finishing at 100.30 yen.

April 19, 1995 - The dollar hits a record post-war low at 79.75 yen after U.S.-Japanese trade frictions spark heavy selling. By the end of the year it is near 103.40.

June 17, 1998 - As the dollar shoots above 144 yen, U.S. authorities join the Bank of Japan to buy yen, spending $833 million. By August the dollar rises to near 148 yen, partly due to yen carry trades in which investors borrow yen funds at Japan’s near zero interest rates to buy higher-yielding currencies.

1998 - After the global financial market strains from the near collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, carry trades are unwound quickly. In one week alone in October, the dollar tumbles from near 136 yen to a low around 111.50 yen.

1999 - The yen strengthens further despite repeated intervention, reaching 102 in November.

2001 - Following the Sept 11 attacks, Bank of Japan intervenes to sell yen for dollars.

2003 - The MOF begins massive intervention to halt the yen’s rise against the dollar, partly to shield Japanese exporters as the economy remains stuck in its post-bubble slump and deflation. The MOF spends 20.4 trillion yen ($200 billion) over the year, nearly all of it to buy dollars and sell yen.

2004 - The MOF spends 14.8 trillion yen ($145 billion) intervening in the first quarter of the year, including 1.67 trillion yen buying dollars on January 9 alone. But the MOF ceases intervention in March and has never since resumed.

2005 - The yen reaches a high of 101.67 yen in January but then starts to fall, hitting 121.40 in December. Yen carry trades and Japanese investors shifting funds into foreign assets drive the slide.

June 2007 - The dollar hits a 4-1/2-year high of 124.14 yen. July 2007 - The yen’s broad depreciation takes it to a 22-year low on a real effective exchange rate basis. Since January 2005 the yen has lost 25 percent of its value on a REER basis.

August 2007 - Strains in financial markets from the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis spark an unwind of yen carry trades.

The dollar falls from near 120 yen to 111.60 yen. The high-yielding Australian and New Zealand dollars tumble nearly 10 percent.

March 13, 2008 - The yen hits an 12-year high of 99.77.

October 24, 2008 - Yen hits 13-year high of 90.87 versus the dollar, while setting an all-time high against the Australian dollar of 55.11, with the Aussie losing almost a third of its value in just a month on a massive unwind of carry trades.

October 27, 2008 - The yen’s surge to 13-year highs prompts the G7 to issue statement to single out the yen in warning on currency market volatility.

The yen has surged nearly 20 percent so far in October on a trade weighted basis, more than twice as big as any month going back to 1970, including the carry trade collapse in October 1998 and the Plaza Accord to weaken the dollar in 1985.

(Sources: Reuters, Bank of Japan, Bank of England)


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Global Long-Term Rates Signal Deflation

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Its pretty clear that the last thing on investors minds these days is inflation when the 10-year yields around the world are back at last year’s lows. Falling long rates are a fairly reliable signal of deflation, and given how commodities, both hard and soft, as well as housing prices in the G7, investors have been making the flight to safety for most of this year.

10-year government debt securities have been among the best performing investments anywhere in the developed world. 

Global Long Term Interest Rates

Australia and Japan Long term rates

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International Markets Snapshot

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

June 24, 2008 - Courtesy of Bespoke Investment Group - The recent selloff in equities has really spared no one.  As shown in our trading range charts below of 22 major country indices, the trend has been down across the board in recent weeks.  Even Brazil, Mexico and Russia, who had all held up relatively well this year, have sold off quite a bit. Currently, 19 of the 22 countries are trading in oversold territory (Canada, Japan and Russia are neutral).  European countries like France, Germany and Italy have really taken it on the chin, while China and India remain the biggest losers in 2008.  After forming short-term uptrends off of the March lows, global equity markets have now lost most of their gains and are looking to move back into downtrends.

Austbraz

Canachin

Honggerm

Franindi

Italjapa

Malaspx5

Mexiruss

Singsout

Swedspai

Soutswit

Taiwftse

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