Showing posts with label investors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investors. Show all posts

Thursday, October 16, 2014

How Can There Not Be a Currency Crisis?

By Casey Research

The Fed claims that signs of economic stress are very low, but savvy investors feel otherwise. With geopolitical unrest expanding and central banks doing the opposite of the right things, is a currency crisis barreling toward us? See what Mish Shedlock had to say about the state of world finance at the 2014 Casey Research Summit:


Even though the Summit is long over, you can still benefit from every presenter… every panel discussion… every investment recommendation. Order the 2014 Summit Audio Collection and you’ll receive all of that, plus all slides used in the presentations and a bonus highlight reel. Choose between instantly available MP3 files or CDs… or get both for maximum convenience.

Order now so that you’re well positioned to thrive in the coming crisis economy.

The article How Can There Not Be a Currency Crisis? was originally published at casey research


Get out latest FREE eBooK "Understanding Options"....Just Click Here

Thursday, April 24, 2014

The Rise of the Trading Machines…. HFT vs. Me, You and John Carter

Today our trading partner John Carter of Simpler Trading poses this important question to us. Do we have the tools to trade in the face of high frequency trading and the “Rise of the High Frequency Trading Machines”.

It’s no secret that all us [that’s me, you and John] are at a huge disadvantage 100% of the time compared to the high frequency traders, the HFT. So what do we do to trade against the HFT, where do we start?

We start right here by checking out John’s great new free video that gives us some of the best examples we have seen yet on how they, the HFT, do this do us. And thanks to John you and I are not in this alone.

        Just Click Here to Watch John’s New Video

        Here’s a sample of what John has learned……

            •   How to protect himself against high frequency traders

            •   How to take advantage of what high frequency traders are doing

            •   How to “get in front of” the high frequency traders

Watch the video today then prepare yourself to jump into the nuances of trading against the “Rise of the High Frequency Trading Machines” with John next Tuesday and two free webinars.

        Here is what we’ll cover on Tuesday……

            •   How HFT firms are causing you to lose money trading

            •   How they front run your orders to catch a move without you

            •   Why individual investors are at a disadvantage

            •   How HFT sees what’s happening in the market before you do

            •   Why HFT firms have a competitive advantage

            •   How HFT firms are making billions by pickpocketing you

        Just pick which webinar and time works best for you…..Register Now!

                Tuesday April 29th - 1 p.m. eastern time

                Tuesday April 29th - 8 p.m. eastern time

Get your seat now, because as you probably already know, all of John’s free webinars fill up well before the day of the presentation. Sign up today then make sure to log on 10-15 minutes early on Tuesday to guarantee you keep your seat.

    Until then we’ll see you in the market!

    The Forex Market Club

Just click here to check out John’s wildly popular book “Mastering the Trade” on Amazon.com



Saturday, April 19, 2014

Every Central Bank for Itself

By John Mauldin



“Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face.”
– Mike Tyson

For the last 25 days I’ve been traveling in Argentina and South Africa, two countries whose economies can only be described as fragile, though for very different reasons. Emerging market countries face a significantly different set of challenges than the developed world does. These challenges are compounded by the rather indifferent policies of developed world central banks, which are (even if somewhat understandably) entirely self centered. Argentina has brought its problems upon itself, but South Africa can somewhat justifiably express frustration at the developed world, which, as one emerging market central bank leader suggests, is engaged in a covert currency war, one where the casualties are the result of unintended consequences. But the effects are nonetheless real if you’re an emerging market country.

While I will write a little more about my experience in South Africa at the end of this letter, first I want to cover the entire emerging market landscape to give us some context. Full and fair disclosure requires that I give a great deal of credit to my rather brilliant young associate, Worth Wray, who’s helped me pull together a great deal of this letter while I am on the road in a very busy speaking tour here in South Africa for Glacier, a local platform intermediary. They have afforded me the opportunity to meet with a significant number of financial industry participants and local businessman, at all levels of society. It has been a very serious learning experience for me. But more on that later; let’s think now about the problems facing emerging markets in general.

Every Central Bank for Itself

Every general has a plan before going into battle, which immediately begins to change upon contact with the enemy. Everyone has a plan until they get hit… and emerging markets have already taken a couple of punches since May 2013, when Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke first signaled his intent to “taper” his quantitative easing program and thereby incrementally wean the markets off of their steady drip of easy money. It was not too long after that Ben also suggested that he was not responsible for the problems of emerging-market central banks – or any other central bank, for that matter.

As my friend Ben Hunt wrote back in late January, Chairman Bernanke turned a single data point into a line during his last months in office, when he decided to taper by exactly $10 billion per month. He established the trend, and now the markets are reacting as if the Fed's exit strategy has officially begun.

Whether the FOMC can actually turn the taper into a true exit strategy ultimately depends on how much longer households and businesses must deleverage and how sharply our old age dependency ratio rises, but markets seem to believe this is the beginning of the end. For now, that’s what matters most.

Under Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s leadership, the Fed continues to send a clear message to the rest of the world: Now it really is every central bank for itself. 

The QE-Induced Bubble Boom in Emerging Markets

By trying to shore up their rich-world economies with unconventional policies such as ultra low rate targets, outright balance sheet expansion, and aggressive forward guidance, major central banks have distorted international real interest rate differentials and forced savers to seek out higher (and far riskier) returns for more than five years.

This initiative has fueled enormous overinvestment and capital misallocation – and not just in advanced economies like the United States.

As it turns out, the biggest QE-induced imbalances may be in emerging markets, where, even in the face of deteriorating fundamentals, accumulated capital inflows (excluding China) have nearly DOUBLED, from roughly $5 trillion in 2009 to nearly $10 trillion today. After such a dramatic rise in developed world portfolio allocations and direct lending to emerging markets, developed world investors now hold roughly one third of all emerging market stocks by market capitalization and also about one third of all outstanding emerging market bonds.

The Fed might as well have aimed its big bazooka right at the emerging world. That’s where a lot of the easy money ran blindly in search of more attractive real interest rates, bolstered by a broadly accepted growth story.

The conventional wisdom – a particularly powerful narrative that became commonplace in the media – suggested that emerging markets were, for the first time in a long time, less risky than developed markets, despite their having displayed much higher volatility throughout the past several decades.

As a general rule, people believed emerging markets had much lower levels of government debt, much stronger prospects for consumption led growth, and far more favorable demographics. (They overlooked the fact that crises in the 1980s and 1990s still limited EM borrowing limits until 2009 and ignored the fact that EM consumption is a derivative of demand and investment from the developed world.)

Instead of holding traditional safe haven bonds like US treasuries or German bunds, some strategists (who shall not be named) even suggested that emerging market government bonds could be the new safe haven in the event of major sovereign debt crises in the developed world. And better yet, it was suggested that denominating these investments in local currencies would provide extra returns over time as EM currencies appreciated against their developed market peers.

Sadly, the conventional wisdom about emerging markets and their currencies was dead wrong. Herd money (typically momentum based, yield chasing investors) usually chases growth that has already happened and almost always overstays its welcome. This is the same disappointing boom/bust dynamic that happened in Latin America in the early 1980s and Southeast Asia in the mid 1990s. And this time, it seems the spillover from extreme monetary accommodation in advanced countries has allowed public and private borrowers to leverage well past their natural carrying capacity.

Anatomy of a “Balance of Payments” Crisis

The lesson is always the same, and it is hard to avoid. Economic miracles are almost always too good to be true. Whether we’re talking about the Italian miracle of the ’50s, the Latin American miracle of the ’80s, the Asian Tiger miracles of the ’90s, or the housing boom in the developed world (the US, Ireland, Spain, et al.) in the ’00s, they all have two things in common: construction (building booms, etc.) and excessive leverage. As a quick aside, does that remind you of anything happening in China these days?

Just saying…...Broad based, debt fueled overinvestment may appear to kick economic growth into overdrive for a while; but eventually disappointing returns and consequent selling lead to investment losses, defaults, and banking panics. And in cases where foreign capital seeking strong growth in already highly valued assets drives the investment boom, the miracle often ends with capital flight and currency collapse.

Economists call that dynamic of inflow induced booms followed by outflow induced currency crises a “balance of payments cycle,” and it tends to occur in three distinct phases.

In the first phase, an economic boom attracts foreign capital, which generally flows toward productive uses and reaps attractive returns from an appreciating currency and rising asset prices. In turn, those profits fuel a self-reinforcing cycle of foreign capital inflows, rising asset prices, and a strengthening currency.

In the second phase, the allure of promising recent returns morphs into a growth story and attracts ever stronger capital inflows – even as the boom begins to fade and the strong currency starts to drag on competitiveness. Capital piles into unproductive uses and fuels overinvestment, overconsumption, or both; so that ever more inefficient economic growth increasingly depends on foreign capital inflows. Eventually, the system becomes so unstable that anything from signs of weak earnings growth to an unanticipated rate hike somewhere else in the world can trigger a shift in sentiment and precipitous capital flight.

To continue reading this article from Thoughts from the Frontline – a free weekly publication by John Mauldin, renowned financial expert, best-selling author, and Chairman of Mauldin Economics – Please Click Here.

The article Thoughts from the Frontline: "Every Central Bank for Itself" was originally published at Mauldin Economics


Sign up for one of our Free Trading Webinars....Just Click Here!


Thursday, March 28, 2013

Here is a Solid Plan to Hedge Your Investments


My friend and Forex expert Cecil Robles is a guy who knows his stuff. He's been a successful trader for nearly 10 years and has built a 7-figure business as both a trader and a Forex trainer.

Cecil is someone I trust... and now he's got a way for you to rake in big gains... regardless of the economic storms on the horizon.

Here's why this email is important...

According to a number of leading economic analysts, a serious crisis is just around the corner. The reality is that most people will be blindsided by it... but you don't have to be.

You see, now that the Federal Reserve has unleashed another round of Quantitative Easing, the dollar will continue to weaken.

Already the US dollar has lost nearly 3% versus other major
currencies including the euro, British pound, Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar, Swiss franc, Canadian dollar and others.

Stocks have rallied a bit, but that won't likely continue. And at the same time the purchasing power of your money is shrinking.

It's debatable whether this will jump-start the economy.
At some point, the U.S. dollar may very well collapse under a
mountain of unsustainable debt. After that, all bets are off...
because the markets could nosedive overnight.

Therein lies your opportunity... and it's the reason I'm sending you this email.

You need a solid plan to hedge your investments and
protect your wealth in the months and years ahead.

That's why Cecil created the Currency Investor's Club.

You'll be able to copy his winning trades... and get access to his exclusive Forex training.

In fact, you'll have the opportunity to place the exact same trades he's placing... and you could soon be profiting just like Rich A --

"The short call you made on the British Pound was
absolutely phenomenal. I picked up a 25% return
on my total account value of $23,000 and
a ROI of 625%. I risked $920 and I netted $5,750!"

Plus... members get Cecil's exclusive strategies for investing in commodities, precious metals and ETFs... along with keys to protecting your assets short and long term.

No matter what happens to the U.S. dollar, or the U.S. economy, you don't have to be caught unprepared . Cecil has a solution that can make all the difference in your finances and in your life.

Use the link below to get the full story...

Sincerely,
Ray C. Parrish
The Forex Market Club 

P.S. Imagine seeing gains up to 84% of the time... and how much more secure you'll feel about your financial picture.


Monday, September 21, 2009

Currency Traders Rising As Dollar Falls

Betsy Waters, global director at dbFX, Deutsche Bank's online forex division, says currencies should be an important part of an investors portfolio. Plus, she discusses the weak dollar and names the most popular forex pair trades.