Posts Tagged ‘OMX’

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

People who read this post also read these:

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Brazil, China, Emerging Markets, India, International Markets, Latin America, Markets, Russia, US Stocks | No Comments »


More Carry-Trade commentary

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Jan. 22, 2008 - Here are some more clippings about the ‘carry-trade’ at the heart of global market volatility:

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — The Australian and New Zealand dollars fell against the yen as concern over a slowing U.S. and global economy spurred a reduction in holdings of higher- yielding assets bought with funds from Japan.

The New Zealand currency traded near the lowest in almost two months versus the yen as a slump in Asian stocks deterred investors from so-called carry trades. Australia’s dollar also declined against the U.S. currency after a government report showed producer prices rose by less than economists estimated, prompting traders to pare bets the central bank will raise interest rates from an 11-year high next month.

 

Inserted from <http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=ah9E711dlJh4&refer=australia>

 

Australia’s 11-year high benchmark rate of 6.75 percent and New Zealand’s record 8.25 percent rate drew investors in the past as part of the carry trade strategy. Those rates compare to 0.5 percent in Japan. The risk in the carry trade is that swings in exchange rates erode profits from interest-rate differentials.

The carry trade strategy involves borrowing in countries where interest rates are low, and investing where returns are higher.

Commodities, which make up about 60 percent of Australian exports and 70 percent of New Zealand’s, tumbled since the beginning of last week. Falling global economic growth may reduce demand for commodities these countries export, such as metals.

 

Inserted from <http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=a3dRGK0srjXo&refer=australia>

 

Another nervous week as the ‘carry trade’ unwinds. Many equity indices and Yen crosses are poised at key support levels: ‘necklines’ of ‘head-and-shoulders’ patterns or the lower edge of the big trading band of the last year or so. Leading the pack South are GBP/JPY and Sweden’s OMX Index, closely followed by the Dow Jones Industrial Average and FTSE 100. These have already seen weekly closes below these key levels and should, one by one, topple all the other ones over too. An unseemly scramble is likely if not next week then in February; at-the-money implied volatility could soar.

 

Energy products and most metals eased, many thinking if not talking recession, and Baltic Dry and Capesize Freight Indices have halved since their peak at the end of last year. Even the more pessimistic are saying contraction will be shallow and short and that by Q3 2008 things will be mended and economic growth will pick up. We feel this is way too simplistic and that the unravelling of all the mess in the financial system will probably take the whole of this year (and then some more).

 

A ‘flight to quality’ has resulted in Treasury yields moving lower, US ones leading the way to multi-month lows with yield curve steepening seeing two-year TNotes at a mere 2.39% (lowest yield since September 2004). Credit spreads against junk bunds are at July’s record highs. The US dollar has been contained in relatively small ranges around last week’s levels although the Swiss franc did dip very briefly to a new record low (1.0838) as did the Czech koruna (17.318). Sterling has regained some of its composure, EUR/GBP down from a record £0.7614, and the Yen had the best all round performance, dipping to 105.92 to the greenback.

 

Stock indices are all lower, the New Zealand bourse for a staggering twelve consecutive days while Jakarta and Mumbai are down nearly 8% this week alone. US and European indices lost roughly 5%, many now lower than they were at any point in 2007.

 

Inserted from <http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/market-view/weekly-market-commentary/2008-01-21.html>

 

The Japanese currency climbed against higher yielding currencies as investors looked for safe havens amid the turbulence in equity markets. The yen carry trade, where the low-yielding currency is sold to purchase riskier, high-yielding assets, proved a popular investment strategy in the first half of 2007 as stable equity market conditions ensured a healthy appetite for risk.

But the deepening financial market gloom since August has seen carry trades scaled back since the beginning of this year.

The real test of carry trade activity is the relationship between the yen and the New Zealand dollar. The yen fell 15 per cent against the Kiwi between January and August last year as the latter’s interest rate hit 8.25 per cent against Japan’s 0.5 per cent. But the Kiwi has since lost nearly all these gains, and was down 4 per cent this week to Y82.05 as the yen continued its rally.

 

Inserted from <http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/0600819a-c634-11dc-8378-0000779fd2ac.html>  

People who read this post also read these:

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »