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Category: Stock Market

This is bull’s chance to maintain the uptrend

In the past days the S&P 500 and DJIA bounced off the daily 200 EMA. Bulls emerged to rescue our uptrend before violating the November 2009 lows. Due to this rise, the big picture uptrend is still very well intact. We can therefore regard it as an important juncture if bulls really mean it seriously.

The conclusion is that we can expect a bounce here. The first challenge is awaiting us at the upper range of the downtrend channel from which we sold off yesterday afternoon. Breaking this can be an attempt to break the intermediary 1,100 resistance. Dropping below the 200 EMA, however, can result in some serious outcry.

In Search for a Catalyst

Despite the recent recovery in markets, anxiety is still felt. What happened the past days was a gap fill from November 9 (marked red) and a bounce from this level. We are currently in a state of indecision, waiting for a new catalyst to give us direction. Accordingly, the SPY could not accomplish more than an inside Doji today.

By looking at the intraday activity, we can observe a cautious uptrend toward resistance areas. These are especially the 20 and 50 EMA in the daily chart (also visible in the Dow Jones). If bears are able to defend the resistance areas and break the small uptrend in that process, we should get more defensive.

Closing above the moving averages, however, can be an attempt to reach for January’s highs.

Stock Market Resumes Its Downtrend

Clients are short positioned since January 21, when our trading system signaled an entry opportunity to exploit the coming downside in the markets. We are still holding this position completely untouched ever since. If you want to learn more about Dynamic System (which has returned 61% in 2009), visit our homepage.

As trend followers, we try to hold onto this trade for as long as possible. I would like to give a short update on what is currently being observed: A very visible uptrend channel in the SPY, which took shape since mid-August, has been violated today. Another reason for concern is the break of the multi-month support level at around 109.00. Both of these breaks signal more intermediate weakness ahead and do not happen for no reason.

Yesterday’s announcement by the Federal Reserve to leave the interest rates unchanged was celebrated with cautious enthusiasm initially. It dissipated entirely today and we are resuming our downtrend.

Nikkei 225 Showing Sudden Strength

The Nikkei 225 index looks very bullish with a 10% rise this past week. It found a double bottom at the 9150 support and weekly 50 SMA area. If you have been looking at the Japanese market and want to gain some exposure in it, I suggest this is the right time and price to do so.

The easiest way for the individual investor, is probably to buy the EWJ (U.S. Dollar denominated ETF which represents the Japanese market). I have done this manually by buying the NIKKO ETIF 225 directly at the Tokyo Stock Exchange and financing this with a Yen carry trade. Next visible target area is 12,000, another 20% upside potential from yesterday’s close.

NIKKEI225

Morgan Stanley gives greenlight to start borrowing Yen

We have been yen bulls for an extended period. Now that we have reached our long-standing target of ¥85, we think that the risk-reward for holding long JPY positions is less interesting. Indeed, there are a number of factors which suggest that it’s a good time to book some profit in USD shorts and begin to use the JPY as the funding currency.

The roadmap for the 2009 FX market can easily be captured by the “punish the printer” theme. The most aggressive printers, namely the US and UK, have seen their currencies underperform, particularly against those currencies where the risk of printing was always close tozero — namely Australia, New Zealand and most EM countries such as Brazil. This theme has pushedv aluations to an extreme in most cases.

While the UK and US still have issues with respect to successfully reversing their balance-sheet expansion, and for that reason we still think the dollar and sterling will struggle to fully reverse this year’s losses until it is clear they can successfully exit their QE programs, the level of the yen on a relative basis suggests to us that it is a good time to substitute some dollar shorts for yen shorts. Playing a reversal of the “punish the printer” theme is perhaps one of the biggest currency
opportunities available in 2010, and we will continue to monitor it accordingly.

As can be seen in Exhibit 1, a basket of long USD and GBP against EUR and JPY is at fairly interesting levels for those inclined to fade the heavily populated “punish the printer” theme amongst the world’s four most liquid currencies. If we are right about USD/JPY, then this could start to turn now, especially as the EUR is around 30% expensive against both sterling and the dollar.

Why do we think USD/JPY is close to a bottom?

We think that Japanese authorities will want to resist yen strength around the ¥85 area, given that a break of this level sets up a test of all-time lows in USD/JPY around ¥80. Japan has not intervened in the currency market since 16 March 2004, not resisting the recent bout of dollar weakness. And despite risks to the domestic economy from the strong currency, they have kept to the spirit of the G20’s desire to deal with global imbalances. This has also been at a time when China’s renminbi has
been linked to a very weak dollar. Japan has been a good global citizen, but after this week’s surprise announcement of further liquidity measures by the Bank of Japan, it is perhaps an early indication that they are getting increasingly concerned about their economic prospects at a time when other central banks are thinking more about their exit strategies.

This might also imply that if the yen were to strengthen further the probability of intervention would rise quite sharply.  Coordinated intervention cannot be ruled out either, given that Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke has recently talked about a strong dollar being a source of global stability and that the Fed is attentive to the implications of changes in the value of the dollar and will formulate policy to guard against risks to their dual mandate. The recent Fed minutes also referred to the link between the dollar and inflation. There are many countries which are currently unhappy with dollar weakness (strength in their own currencies) or the low level of the federal funds rate such as the Eurozone, Canada, New Zealand, Switzerland, Brazil, Hong Kong, China and other Asian countries. A general stabilization of the dollar would suit everyone’s needs and help to contain any inflationary pressure in the US.

Source: Morgan Stanley: FX Impulse: Time to fund in Yen instead of Dollars?