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Dollar: State of Play

The start of a new calendar year does not necessarily mean the rise of new market drivers.   In fact, the key issues investors face at the start of 2016 are the same that dominated Q4 2015.   These issues center around pace of Fed tightening, the outlook for the world's second largest economy and its markets, the impact from the drop in oil prices, and commodity prices more generally, Europe will deal with the centrifugal forces that threatening it, and whether Japanese economy can find...

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The Dollar’s Technical Tone at the Start of the New Year

The US dollar firmed against nearly all the major currencies in the last week of 2015.  The exceptions were the Antipodean currencies and the Japanese yen. The relatively high short-term yields offered Australia, and New Zealand may have attracted some hot flows looking park over the turn.  The yen's gains were all scored on New Year's Eve in thin turnover, as equity markets and US yields slipped lower. Since the ECB eased policy on December 2, the US Dollar Index has been mostly...

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Economic Forecasts: Swiss Banks were too Optimistic

Our analysis of the forecasts of economic data for 2015 shows that the Swiss banks were too optimistic for most data. US growth, the oil price, inflation and interest rates were far lower in 2015 than they expected. The forecast errors for stock indices and unemployment, however, were  smaller. In December 2014, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ) published the forecasts of the leading Swiss banks for the year 2015. UBS, Credit Suisse, Julius Bär, die ZKB, Raiffeisen, Pictet und J. Safra...

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Only high-Alpha Investing in 2016 will be profitable!

As you may have expected, last week the market moved more into wind-down mode as the week progressed and dosed to a near-sleep on Friday’s half-day with the S&P500’s volume down 53%. This is the usual script at this time of year, so that the market ignored the WTI crude oil price, which it had recently been closely correlated to, when it moved from last week’s close $34.73 per barrel to this week’s price of $38.10, an increase of 3.38%. The market still languishes in its ‘under...

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Switzerland to vote on ending fractional reserve banking

One year ago (and just two months before the shocking announcement the Swiss Franc’s peg to the Euro would end, dramatically revaluing the currency, and leading to massive FX losses around the globe and for the Swiss National Bank) the Swiss held a referendum whether to demand that their central bank should convert 20% of its reserves into gold, up from 7% currently. After the early polls showed the Yes vote taking a surprising lead, the Diebold machines kicked in and the result was a...

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2015 Draws to a Close

Many financial centers in Asia and Europe are on holiday today, and those that are open, are experiencing a minimum of activity.  Turnover may pick up briefly in the North American morning, but conditions will remain thin and only those who need to transact will.   The US reports weekly jobless claims and the Chicago PMI.   The holiday-shortened week may limit the changes in the weekly jobless claims though we note that the four-week moving average finished 2014 near 287k, and now it...

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Yen is Lower for Fourth Year, Euro for Second

The US dollar will finish 2015 higher against both the euro and yen.  Sometimes those of us who follow the economic and financial news closely can get caught up with the short-term fluctuations.  As traders that is what we do.  . Investors, however, can take a longer look at developments.   Taking a step back, we note that this is the fourth consecutive year that the yen has fallen against the dollar.  The greenback closed 2011 near JPY77.  It will likely finish this year near JPY120....

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Quiet but Choppy Markets as Activity Winds Down

The foreign exchange market is becalmed, leaving the US dollar narrowly mixed in uneventful and light turnover. The euro has been confined to less than a third of a cent range. Yesterday it briefly dipped below its 20-day moving average for the first time since the ECB met earlier this month. It remains in the upper half of the two-range ($1.08-$1.10) that has confined prices most of this month. There was only one close outside of this range (December 9) since that ECB meeting.   The...

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US-European Threat Perceptions Diverge

The trajectories of the monetary policy at the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank are diverging.  It is the keystone of our anticipation of further euro weakness in the year ahead.  In addition to this monetary divergence, there is a geopolitical divergence that will be of growing significance.  At the heart of the geopolitical divergence lies asymmetrical threat perceptions.  Simply, if crudely put, the US perceives a greater threat from Russia's actions than many in...

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