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2016/08/26 Commentary: Fed-ticipation II

August 26, 2016 Rohr-Blog Leave a comment

2016/08/26 Commentary: Fed-ticipation II

© 2016 ROHR International, Inc. All International rights reserved.

Extended Trend Assessments reserved for Gold and Platinum Subscribers

COMMENTARY (Non-Video): Friday, August 26, 2016

Fed-ticipation II

FEDbldgDCturbCLOUDS-151028As explored in Wednesday’s original Fed-ticipation post,   the reason for many market participants frustration as well as the stagnant trend activity this week is Fed-ticipation. That’s the attempt to understand what the US Federal Reserve is likely to do next... and when. The term is a pun on the old Carly Simon song Anticipation. While the overall topic of the song is on a wholly different aspect of interpersonal relations, the refrain has a very interesting couple of lines that relate to the current frustration with a Fed whose minions seem to be on so many sides of the rate hike fence that they don’t know where the fence is anymore. For more on that see Wednesday’s post.

The Fed-ticipation refrain parody of Simon’s tune is only the substitution of the title word, as in Fed-ticipation, Fed-ticipation, “Is makin' me late, Is keepin' me waitin'.” Little doubt some who have worried about a Fed hike have been late to the bullish equities party, and that the Fed has kept us all waiting endlessly for much touted rate hikes. Keep in mind that at the time of the December rate hike there were supposed to be four of them this year.

And now all of that is supposed to be clarified this morning by the missives from Janet Yellen at this year’s annual KC Fed Jackson Hole Policy Symposium. At 10:00 EDT she will espouse on “The Federal Reserve’s Monetary Policy Toolkit.” And of course, that will not merely be an academic exercise. It will be heavily scrutinized for hints on whether the Fed will be raising rates in September or as a last ditch gesture in December. Yet whether she will remain more dovish than her hawkish Fed cohorts is more problematic than ever.

While some US economic data has strengthened markedly (Employment and latest Durable Goods Orders), just this morning we were reminded that US Q2 GDP weakened as expected to only 1.1%. And offshore data showed Japanese inflation numbers slipping again this morning after very weak Euro-zone Consumer Confidence and German IFO earlier this week. So we have some sympathy for Chair Yellen, as she pays more attention than her fellow Fed members to the real international drags on the US economy. And it is hard to be the only central bank tightening when all the rest are still easing. That especially applies to the potential US dollar impact.  

Our guess is that she will once again cite the US economy as a reason to lean toward raising rates, yet remain more circumspect than her peers based on the international influences. That will mostly eliminate the potential for a September rate hike, yet leave the potential for a December hike (just one of the four proposed last December.) The markets response will of course also be the most important aspect. Equities and govvies have both weakened in anticipation of a more hawkish sentiment. Yet the September S&P 500 future has held its 2,175-70 support (Tolerance 2,165.) US dollar has also strengthened a bit on that sentiment, especially against emerging currencies that fear a Fed Hike.

And that’s it. Short and sweet in front of Chair Yellen today, with all of the overall background and extended Market Observations (in the lower section for Gold and Platinum subscribers) still much the same as Wednesday’s original Fed-ticipation post. Please refer to that and/or Thursday morning’s brief update email for the background and especially the full Evolutionary Trend View explored in those Market Observations.

Thanks for your interest.

Rohr Market Research Tagged analysis, Asia, bias, BoE, BoJ, bond, Brexit, China, comments, currency, debt, dollar, dovish, Draghi, Durable Goods, ECB, economic, employment, equities, Fed, fixed income, FOMC, Foreign Exchange, GDP, Germany, Gilt, govvies, hawkish, Hole, Indicators, inflation, Inflation Report, interest, interest rate, Jackson, Jackson Hole, Japan, LEAVE, macro, macro-technical, MPC, normalcy, normalcy bias, normalize, PMI, Productivity, QE, Retail, Retail Sales, risk-off, risk-on, S&P 500, T-note, technical, TREND, UK, US dollar, Yellen, Yellen put, Yen

2016/08/24 Commentary: Fed-ticipation

August 24, 2016 Rohr-Blog Leave a comment

2016/08/24 Commentary: Fed-ticipation

© 2016 ROHR International, Inc. All International rights reserved.

Extended Trend Assessments reserved for Gold and Platinum Subscribers

COMMENTARY (Non-Video): Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Fed-ticipation

YELLENshrug-160209There is a radical thought here. Yet that will keep until we explore the reason for many market participants frustration: Fed-ticipation. That’s the attempt to understand what the US Federal Reserve is likely to do next... and when. The term is a pun on the old Carly Simon song Anticipation. While the overall topic of the song is on a wholly different aspect of interpersonal relations, the refrain has a very interesting couple of lines that relate to the current frustration with a Fed whose minions seem to be on so many sides of the rate hike fence that they don’t know where the fence is anymore.

That would certainly be true of both Messrs. Williams’ and Dudley’s hawkish comments right in front of what were significantly dovish FOMC meeting minutes last Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Dudley’s flip-flops have been particularly egregious for anyone looking for a consistent insight on Fed policy. And since the minutes release we have heard from Fed Vice Chairman Fischer that “We are close to our targets”, also implying a rate hike might be reasonable sooner than not.

All of the others’ comments might seem little more than folderol once the annual KC Fed Jackson Hole Policy Symposium begins in earnest on Friday. And who should one of the more prominent early speakers be? None other than Fed Chair Yellen. At 10:00 EDT she will espouse on “The Federal Reserve’s Monetary Policy Toolkit.” And of course, that will not merely be an academic exercise. It will be heavily scrutinized for hints on whether the Fed will be raising rates in September or as a last ditch gesture in December.  

Yet it is also a measure of just how much the portfolio management and investor classes are mesmerized by a Fed marginalized through its misguided ‘normalcy bias’. The Fed desperately wants everything to be back to ‘normal’ in spite of indications to the clear indications the economy is not really fully recovering under the current program.

So it’s back to Fed-ticipation, with the refrain parody only being the substitution of the title word: Fed-ticipation, Fed-ticipation, “Is makin' me late, Is keepin' me waitin'.” Little doubt some who have worried about a Fed hike have been late to the bullish equities party, and that the Fed has kept us all waiting endlessly for much touted rate hikes. Keep in mind that at the time of the December rate hike there were supposed to be four of them this year.

Authorized Silver and Sterling Subscribers click ‘Read more…’ (below) to access the balance of the opening discussion. Non-subscribers click the top menu Subscription Echelons & Fees tab to review your options. Authorized Gold and Platinum Subscribers click ‘Read more…’ (below) to also access the Extended Trend Assessment as well.

Read more...

Rohr Market Research Tagged 2007, 2007 redux, 2016, Abenomics, analysis, Asia, bias, BoE, BoJ, bond, Brexit, Bund, China, comments, confluence, crude, Crude Oil, currency, DAX, debt, Deflation, Disinflation, dollar, dovish, Draghi, Durable Goods, ECB, economic, employment, equities, Euro, Europe, exports, Fed, fixed income, FOMC, Foreign Exchange, FTSE, GDP, Germany, Gilt, govvies, hawkish, Hole, IMF, imports, Indicators, inflation, Inflation Report, instability, interest, interest rate, Jackson, Jackson Hole, Japan, LEAVE, macro, macro-technical, Manufacturing, MPC, NIKKEI, NIRP, normalcy, normalcy bias, normalize, OECD, oil, PMI, Pound, Productivity, QE, RBA, redux, Retail, Retail Sales, risk-off, risk-on, S&P 500, Sales, Services, T-note, technical, terror, Trade, TREND, UK, US dollar, Yellen, Yellen put, Yen

2016/08/17 Holiday Notice

August 17, 2016 Rohr-Blog Leave a comment

2016/08/17 Holiday Notice

© 2016 ROHR International, Inc. All International rights reserved.

Holiday Notice: Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Holiday Notice

SUNSETwater-160817We are off on summer holiday for the balance of this week into Monday. We feel that Tuesday’s Commentary: The Road to Nowhere amply summed up the background and potentials for the balance of this week. The economic data seems to support our premise on the markets remaining stable for the balance of the week. And we want to be fully engaged again next week, as ‘late summer’ beginning then is different now than in the ‘old days’. First of all, in the regular world out there, most US students are getting back to school where that used to be deferred until after the late summer bank holidays.

In the markets there are more critical influences next week than the remainder of this one. Tuesday brings global Advance PMI’s, with very important German, UK and US data as the week unfolds. There is also the annual Jackson Hole (Wyoming) annual Economic Policy Symposium from Thursday through Saturday of next week. In order to avoid any protest plans the Symposium has delayed the actual event program release until the first day of the meeting for the past couple of years. Yet we know that various Federal Reserve and other central bank speakers always manage to express their views.

As such, next week’s ‘late summer’ economic data and Jackson Hole Symposium now mark the return from summer holidays for the markets, even if a goodly number of participants do not return until after the late summer bank holidays. Along with the important data to be released next week it creates a compelling reason to take our holiday for the balance of this week into Monday of next week, when there is limited economic data of any importance released. We will however be providing the Weekly Report & Event Calendar at the beginning of next week.

As far as the markets are concerned, the US equities are reacting back down after the next minor new high. No surprise. Yet as noted in Tuesday’s Market Observations in the lower section of the post, the same September S&P 500 future support that held last week into the 2,170-65 area maintains this week. The govvies are under a bit more pressure, with the September T-note future sagging once again below the 132-00 area, and the upside leader September Gilt future below 162.00. Yet there is ample support at lower levels like 131-00 and especially 130-00 in the September T-note future.

And on the foreign exchange the US Dollar Index seems to have steadied itself, yet not before sagging back below its .9550-00 over-under to retest the post-Brexit .9460 UP Break (out of its overall 2016 down channel), which is the key support this side of the .9300-.9262 extended support. Speaking of Brexit, even the recently burdened British pound has seen GBP/USD recover to the key 1.3000 area in the wake of better than expected UK Employment numbers. That will remain critical for the balance of the week.

We wish you all a very good remainder of the week.

Rohr Market Research

2016/08/16 Commentary: The Road to Nowhere

August 16, 2016 Rohr-Blog Leave a comment

2016/08/16 Commentary: The Road to Nowhere

© 2016 ROHR International, Inc. All International rights reserved.

Extended Trend Assessments reserved for Gold and Platinum Subscribers

COMMENTARY (Non-Video): Tuesday, August 16, 2016

The Road to Nowhere

BoEpicFACADEwHORSE-160714There was quite a bit of economic data last week. And once again it was very mixed. While there were a few bright spots elsewhere, weak international trade numbers were reinforced by soft Chinese and US Retail Sales figures. Yet global equities markets did not seem to mind because a “bad news is good news” psychology means continued central bank accommodation. Along with occasional bright spots (like recent US Employment reports), this keeps equities trending higher in spite of some of the US and global headwinds. Yet the govvies also like the ‘bad’ news, and have held well on setbacks in spite of the elevated levels seen on their recent rallies (especially the Gilt.)

On the other hand, the seeming anomaly has been the US dollar that has weakened in spite of the recent equities strength. Normally the US equities leading the way higher would encourage strength in the greenback. Yet the serial weak US economic data outside the bright spots have intrinsically weakened the US dollar, with the additional influence of the waning prospect of any Fed rate hike in this environment. The latter has not only weakened the greenback against developed economy currencies, it has also fostered significant improvement of emerging currencies. That demonstrates the full scope of the US dollar weakness against everything other than the beleaguered British pound.   

The pound’s renewed weakness after its post-Brexit implosion rally is partially tied into the expectation that the Bank of England will need to engage in further significant steps beyond its initial return to QE last week. BoE Governor Carney has a long-established aversion to zero interest rate policy (the ZIRP already in place at so many other central banks.) Yet the seeming failure of the renewed asset purchase program just two days into the exercise due to long-dated Gilt holders’ unwillingness to sell represents a problem for pursing that avenue toward stimulating the UK economy.  

A very interesting Financial Times Weekend editorial on “The BoE ‘sledgehammer' hits limits in the gilts market” (our marked-up version) opens with the idea that all of the BoE’s post-Brexit efforts may not change behavior. And that is a reasonable assertion in the context of the limited success of other QE programs. As we have noted on many occasions, central bank QE alone will not restore robust growth.

Authorized Silver and Sterling Subscribers click ‘Read more…’ (below) to access the balance of the opening discussion. Non-subscribers click the top menu Subscription Echelons & Fees tab to review your options. Authorized Gold and Platinum Subscribers click ‘Read more…’ (below) to also access the Extended Trend Assessment as well.

Read more...

Rohr Market Research Tagged 2007, 2007 redux, 2016, Abenomics, analysis, Asia, bias, BoE, BoJ, bond, Brexit, Bund, China, comments, confluence, crude, Crude Oil, currency, DAX, debt, Deflation, Disinflation, dollar, dovish, Draghi, Durable Goods, ECB, economic, employment, equities, Euro, Europe, exports, Fed, fixed income, FOMC, Foreign Exchange, FTSE, GDP, Germany, Gilt, govvies, hawkish, IMF, imports, Indicators, inflation, Inflation Report, instability, interest, interest rate, Japan, LEAVE, macro, macro-technical, Manufacturing, MPC, NIKKEI, NIRP, normalcy, normalcy bias, normalize, OECD, oil, PMI, Pound, Productivity, QE, RBA, redux, Retail, Retail Sales, risk-off, risk-on, S&P 500, Sales, Services, T-note, technical, terror, Trade, TREND, UK, US dollar, Yellen, Yellen put, Yen

2016/08/12 Commentary: Data Dependent Or… ?

August 12, 2016 Rohr-Blog Leave a comment

2016/08/12 Commentary: Data Dependent Or… ?

© 2016 ROHR International, Inc. All International rights reserved.

Extended Trend Assessments reserved for Gold and Platinum Subscribers

COMMENTARY (Non-Video): Friday, August 12, 2016

Data Dependent Or… ?

QUESTIONmarkBIZman-140815Or does the ‘Goldilocks on steroids’ equities tendency noted earlier this week depend equally as much on pure psychology? The recent improvement in US economic data made it easy to imagine that was driving the US equities higher and weighing on the govvies and US Dollar Index. That US dollar weakness has also been evident for weeks now against emerging currencies as well, also based on the idea that the weakness in some US data will keep a Fed rate hike on hold while non-US conditions have improved to some degree. And this morning we purposely waited to see the next bout of important US economic data into the weekend, only to find it is quite weak on some important indications.

It would have been hard to imagine coming into today that the US Retail Sales which had been a strong area recently would be flat. The non-Autos number was actually a fairly shocking -0.30%. The same goes for US PPI that was well below expectations. This was after quite a bit weaker than expected Chinese data (Retail Sales, Industrial Production and financing numbers), yet with Europe a lot more buoyant (especially German GDP.)

So what does this all add up to? Equities hardly backing off at all from the highs of their recent rallies. That is especially important for the US equities that set minor new all-time highs on Thursday. Yet not surprisingly the govvies are up on the weakness outside of Europe, with weak sister September T-note future back up from its most recent serial test of 132-00. And the US Dollar Index is down into its .9550-00 support once again under that same influence. The weakness of the US data even has the burdened British pound back up from the GBP/USD churn into the 1.2950 Tolerance of the 1.3000 support to right back up around 1.3000. And the stronger sisters like euro and Australian dollar are maintaining their recent renewed bid.

All of that is to be expected from the influence of the overall economic data. What might seem more confounding is the resilience of the equities in the face of such weak US data. However, as explored at some length in our Wednesday morning Commentary: Welcome to ‘The Grind’, once this kind of equities market decides that the overall situation is constructive (aided and abetted by extensive central bank accommodation), it is very hard to get them to sustain any break. At this point the “good news is good news” psychology noted on Monday can work hand in glove with a seemingly contrary “bad news is good news” psychology that keeps the central banks friendly.

For anyone who has not already reviewed it, we suggest a read of Wednesday morning’s Commentary: Welcome to ‘The Grind’ for more on that. It includes the reasons why it was completely reasonable for the September S&P 500 future to dip to a temporary new low for the week on Wednesday only set a new high on Thursday. It also reinforces today’s selloff from the new high only being very modest in spite of the weakness of the US data.

And that is pretty much it, as all of the more extensive trend views are completely consistent with the Evolutionary Trend View updated Thursday morning in the lower section of Wednesday morning’s Commentary: Welcome to ‘The Grind’ post.  

Short and sweet today, as everything remains 'steady as she goes' on all of the trend dynamics and technical levels.

Thanks for your interest.

Rohr Market Research Tagged 2007, 2007 redux, 2016, Abenomics, analysis, Asia, bias, BoE, BoJ, bond, Brexit, Bund, China, comments, confluence, crude, Crude Oil, currency, DAX, debt, Deflation, Disinflation, dollar, dovish, Draghi, Durable Goods, ECB, economic, employment, equities, Euro, Europe, exports, Fed, fixed income, FOMC, Foreign Exchange, FTSE, GDP, Germany, Gilt, govvies, hawkish, IMF, imports, Indicators, inflation, Inflation Report, instability, interest, interest rate, Japan, LEAVE, macro, macro-technical, Manufacturing, MPC, NIKKEI, NIRP, normalcy, normalcy bias, normalize, OECD, oil, PMI, Pound, Productivity, QE, RBA, redux, Retail, Retail Sales, risk-off, risk-on, S&P 500, Sales, Services, T-note, technical, terror, Trade, TREND, UK, US dollar, Yellen, Yellen put, Yen
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