Gold & Precious Metals
“Interest rates are not going to significantly rise in the near term to any meaningful degree. In fact, it is very likely that interest rates on Government issued Treasuries will remain range bound between 1% and 4% for the next 20 years.”
Now, you can go back to what you were doing, OR you can read my reasoning as to why I believe this to be the case in the paragraphs below.
…..click HERE or the image to continue reading
The Shanghai Composite falls almost 20% from its recent peak.
“This is probably not a dip to buy,” wrote analysts at Morgan Stanley. The bank lowered its price target for the Shanghai benchmark in a report Thursday, citing concerns like lofty valuations and high margin debt relative to China’s free float market capitalization. Margin debt, or the use of borrowed cash from brokerages, has reached 8.5% of the value of China’s tradable shares. That’s well above the 4.6% level Taiwan reached at the height of its market bubble.
…read more HERE
1. Your Big Picture Market Road Map …
by Larry Edelson
“Nearly every single market on the board is now setting up for a series of major tipping points….”
…..in this article Edelson gives you “a road map to help you see for yourself where the fireworks are likely to begin in each of the major markets”
2. Richard Russell – Big Money Now Panicking As Legendary Economist John Williams Issues A Dire Warning
“Of everything I read there is one item that bothers me, it’s the newsletter by John Williams titled Shadow Government Statistics. But strangely, I never see him quoted.
“the US dollar faces a massive decline, with implications for a meaningful upturn in inflation evolving into a great hyperinflationary crisis.
3. When Bonds Go Kaboom!
Its been 33 years when this bond market made its last turn with the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond at a high of almost 15% in 1982.
Yields have been trending downward ever since.
An investment in Walmart in 1982 roughly equals a return of $20,000 for every $100 invested.
USDCAD Overnight Range 1.2327-1.2395
FX volumes are down across the board in Europe as the weekend looms and another EU/Greece meeting is on the agenda. The US dollar has had a pretty good week. As of 7:00 am it has gained against the entire G-10 spectrum. The RBNZ contributed to the US dollar’s rise, claiming that NZD is at “unjustifiable and unsustainable levels”, which some interpret as “Bank-speak” for “FX intervention ahead”.
USDCAD started the day in New York with a modestly bid tone and managed to grind all the way to 1.2395 from 1.2355 before reversing and drifting back to its opening levels. Friday’s movement is merely a reflection of a “quote and cover” market rather than one with any direction.
It will be an eventful and volatile week coming up, with the bulk of the USDCAD action occurring on Tuesday. That is the day that Greece needs to pay the IMF. It is also the day Canadian GDP gets released and it is month end, quarter end and half-year end for portfolio managers.
USDCAD technical outlook
The intraday USDCAD technicals are bullish and in a modest uptrend channel since June 18. The bottom of the channel is currently 1.2325 and the top is at 1.2450. However there is “multi-top “resistance at 1.2390-00 which has capped short term rallies. A break above this resistance will extend gains to 1.2420 and then 1.2450. A break below 1.2325 may lead to a test of 1.2260. Meanwhile the 2 week range of 1.2155-1.2420 remains intact. For today, USD support is at 1.2325, 1.2305 and 1.2280. Resistance is at 1.2395 and 1.2420.
Today’s Range 1.2325-1.2395
Chart: USDCAD hourly with uptrend channel








