Currency

The Japanese-China Parallel is Eerie and Scary Combined

Screen Shot 2013-07-30 at 7.25.51 AMQuotable:
 

If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are heading.

                                               Lao Tzu

We’re ahead of the curve again:

The Japanese-China Parallel is Eerie and Scary Combined

Greetings!
John Ross (aka JR) sent me a piece of research this morning from Trading China, titled, “China risks following Japan into economic coma.”  The first paragraph of the piece read:

After decades of emulating Japan’s export-driven economic miracle, China appears in danger of following it into the same kind of economic coma that Japan is trying to wake up from 20 years later. 

Well, I couldn’t agree more.  And in fact I would like to share with you more detail on the possibility China follows down the path of Japan by re-printing an article I wrote three years ago, titled, “The Japanese-China Parallel: Eerie and Scary Combined.”  This piece was published in the Forex Journal in the August 2010 edition.  

……..read on HERE @ Currency Currents 30 July 2013

Jim Rogers: Be Prepared & Prosper

images

Move to the Farm Belt and become a Lamborghini dealer

If you don’t want to become a farmer, move to the Farm Belt and become a Lamborghini dealer.

A global shortage of farmers could become a serious problem. Most farmers in the U.S., Japan and elsewhere are in their sixties or older and young people aren’t entering the business. More Americans are graduating with degrees in public relations than in agriculture, a field that generated fewer than 10,000 college graduates last year. — in FA MAG

 

You can play this game for a while……….but eventually the currency collapses cause the markets have more money than the central banks do.

– Jim Rogers answering the question “how much of the sovereign debt can the ECB own, if others don’t want to buy it ?”

 

U.S. Stocks: The Bull Market Is Getting Close To The End

 

Jim Rogers : “I’ve never seen a bull market in any asset class that goes on forever. There may be one, but I’ve never heard of it. Enjoy it, but be prepared. I do know it will end, but not when. We’re getting close to the end. The day that happens won’t be a pretty one. When it ends it will be a big mess. he continued. This will be worse than 2001 and 2008-2009.” — in Financial Advisor Magazine

  

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Jim Rogers started trading the stock market with $600 in 1968.In 1973 he formed the Quantum Fund with the legendary investor George Soros before retiring, a multi millionaire at the age of 37. Rogers and Soros helped steer the fund to a miraculous 4,200% return over the 10 year span of the fund while the S&P 500 returned just 47%. 

Fundamental considerations are likely to dominate technical factors in the week ahead. The Federal Reserve, Bank of England and the European Central Bank meet….

CLICK HERE to read the complete article…

Yield Differential Still Seems in Charge of Euro versus US dollar

Quotable: 

“All sentiment is right; because sentiment has a reference to nothing beyond itself, and is always real, wherever a man is conscious of it. But all determinations of the understanding are not right; because they have a reference to something beyond themselves, to wit, real matter of fact; and are not always conformable to that standard.” 

                                                                                                                        David Hume

 

Commentary & Analysis

Yield Differential Still Seems in Charge of Euro versus US dollar

To show a market correlation is to show a market correlation. That is about it. The reason I say that is because we can never really be sure which of the pieces of price data in the correlation is leading and which is following. And to go further, even if we did know which was leading we then run into the problem of then “forecasting” where the lead piece of price data is going in order to help “forecast” where the follower is going. Thus, I think correlation analysis is useful, but it must be handled with caution.

In that vein, you have probably heard plenty of people trying to forecast currency prices using a forecast of interest rates. I have been guilty of implying the same in my missives. But in reality, it’s a mug’s game to predict currency action by trying to forecast interest rates. Because as John Percival, of Currency Bulletin said many years ago, and I am paraphrasing: If we can forecast interest rates then why bother with currencies; just buy a seat on the Chicago Board of Trade and retire very wealthy. Wise advice as always from Mr. Percival…

Mr. Percival did go on to say that there is meat when it comes to interest rates, and it flows from the yield and inflation differentials. He said these differentials “seem to be the basic fundamentals of currency analysis.” Change is what moves prices, and “in currencies, changes in real yield differentials are a basic value benchmark.”

So, in that vein, below is a chart of the US versus Eurozone 2-year Benchmark Yield Differential. As you can see, the US dollar index has been tracking closely on the yield differential i.e. as the spread moves higher in favor of the US, the dollar index rises, and vice versa. 

Screen Shot 2013-07-25 at 10.04.10 AM

This differential analysis could become increasingly important now that we finally seem to have exited the pure and mind-numbing “risk on” and “risk off” world of investing.

So, I think it is fair to expect (guess) that US economic growth is most likely to be faster than Eurozone growth in the months ahead. If that proves true, then it’s likely the 2-year yield differential will continue to grow in favor of the US dollar. And it’s a key rationale for why I expect the move higher in EUR/USD over the last 10 trading days is “corrective” in nature and the longer term downtrend will reassert itself soon.

But, surprise is what moves people to move prices. And just because careful consideration goes into a guess about the future, doesn’t make it so. Spain reported today the country’s unemployment level fell for the first time in two years. So, we can never say “never,” and that’s why we trade using stops (mental or otherwise).

If you wish to learn more about our forex service, please click here.
[Correction: In yesterday’s Currency Currents I said I expected bond prices to “go lower” in the months

ahead. I meant to say bond prices to “go higher.” Sorry for the error.] Thank you.

Jack Crooks
Black Swan Capital

www.blackswantrading.com

info@blackswantrading.com

 

 

Black Swan Capital’s Currency Currents is strictly an informational publication and does not provide personalized or individualized investment or trading advice. Commodity futures and forex trading involves substantial risk of loss and may not be suitable for you. The money you allocate to futures or forex trading should be money that you can afford to lose. Please carefully read Black Swan’s full disclaimer, which is available at http://www.blackswantrading.com/disclaimer 

 

Has the Chinese Economy Hit the Great Wall?

Screen Shot 2013-07-25 at 8.24.24 AMThe lazy days of summer trading continue. The Dow barely moved yesterday. Gold fell $15 an ounce – to be expected after the recent big move up.

We left Vancouver, where we were giving a speech at the Agora Financial Investment Symposium, only a few hours after getting there. On the airplane to Beijing we puzzled about time and place – trying to work out the movements of the Earth, the sun and the airplane.

The flight took 10 hours. From our fuzzy memory of the globe, China should be almost on the exact opposite side of the world from the US. So you would head north from Canada to go to China.

But the plane didn’t seem to be going north. It was going west… or northwest. Looking out the starboard window after midnight, we saw the warm glow of the sun over the Arctic.

At least, that’s what we thought we were looking at. But then the light failed. We must have been going away from the east… so we must have been going west.

But why?

You don’t mind if we take a moment work out these important celestial movements, do you, dear reader?

If you fly from one point to another you have to take into account that the place to which you are going does not stay put while you are going there.

There are 24 time zones on the Earth. A 10-hour flight gives the planet time to complete about 40% of a revolution. This means, obviously, your target airport must rotate through 10 time zones… or about 10,000 miles if it is on the equator… toward the east while you are in the air.

The airplane must, therefore, aim not for the place you are going but for the place it will be when you get there, a place far to the east of where it was when you left.

We’re not sure this has any importance to anyone other than pilots, but we found it interesting. And the same phenomenon happens in football and quarterbacking. You aim in front of your moving target.

Big Trouble in China

There is a parallel phenomenon in investing. You don’t really care what the price of gold is today; it’s what the price will be in six months… or six years… that matters.

Revolution is a fact of life. The planet revolves. The markets revolve round and round too.

So do economies…

We’re in China today. Want to know what is going on China? We don’t know but a lot of people think they do. Here’s Paul Krugman in the New York Times:

The signs are now unmistakable: China is in big trouble. We’re not talking about some minor setback along the way, but something more fundamental. The country’s whole way of doing business, the economic system that has driven three decades of incredible growth, has reached its limits. You could say that the Chinese model is about to hit its Great Wall, and the only question now is just how bad the crash will be.

And here’s Ben Levisohn in Barron’s:

Unlike three months ago, when investors were placing big bets that China’s policymakers would pump cash into the economy to spur growth, the markets seem to have accepted the fact that sluggish growth for the world’s second largest economy is its new normal.

Where will China be in six months… or six years?

It is impossible to know. Goldman Sachs slashed its estimates for China’s growth. But it has no better idea than Paul Krugman or anyone else. The Chinese could surprise us in either direction. The economy could fare worse than expected… or better.

But one thing does appear to be happening. After 20 years of spectacular growth, China is looking for a new way forward.

“It’s not enough just to open a factory in Shenzhen and make things for export,” explained a Chinese colleague. “The days of the entrepreneur who grew up under communism and then went on to become a billionaire are over.

“That was the first stage of China’s development. It was the entrepreneurs’ phase. And it happened right after Deng Xiaoping opened the economy up. Entrepreneurs took advantage of the opportunity, using low wages to make things for the developed countries.

“China’s wages are still low compared with the US or Europe. But they’re not low enough. And the developed countries are no longer looking to outsource their manufacturing to China anyway.

“The next phase will be different. No one knows what it will be. But it will be different. And yes there could be a revolution in China… but I doubt it. People are pretty happy with the last 20 years. They expect the next 20 will be good too.”

Regards,

Bill Bonner

Bill