Market Direction: BULLISH alert
issued 11/10/2016
The dollar, bitcoin, or ethereum? You choose...
The
dollar languished at its lows for the year on Thursday as a drumbeat of hawkish
comments from major central banks signaled the era of easy money might be
coming to an end for more than just the United States.
Support
for the dollar eroded as investors realized the U.S. Federal Reserve might not
be the only game in town when it came to higher interest rates.
In
Britain, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney surprised many by conceding a
hike was likely to be needed as the economy came closer to running at full
capacity.
The
Bank of Canada went further, with two top policymakers suggesting they might
tighten as early as July.
That
followed comments earlier in the week from European Central Bank President
Mario Draghi that stimulus might need to be toned down so it does not become
more accommodative as the economy recovers.
ECB
sources tried to hose down the talk but could not stop the euro hitting a
one-year high against the U.S. dollar. Early Thursday, the single currency was
taking in the view at $1.1381 having climbed almost three percent in as many
sessions.
The
Canadian dollar scored its biggest gain in three months to reach C$1.3037 per
dollar, while sterling rebounded to $1.2941.
Against
a basket of major currencies, the dollar sank to its lowest since early
November at 96.005 as volatility returned with a vengeance.
"Central
banks will be very cautious in their approach," said Martin Whetton, a
senior rates strategist at ANZ.
"But
once they start tightening in concert, and their bloated balance sheets start
unwinding, it is fair to say that bonds, equities, house prices and other asset
markets will face stiffer headwinds than they have for a long time."
The
squall had already driven German short-term yields to their highest in a year,
while yields on U.S. 10-year Treasuries were up 10 basis points so far this
week at 2.22 percent.
Yet
the prospect of higher interest rates bolstered banking stocks and helped the
S&P 500 score its biggest one-day percentage gain in about two months on
Wednesday.
The
Dow rose 0.68 percent, while the S&P 500 gained 0.88 percent and the Nasdaq
1.43 percent.
Financials
gained further after hours as the Fed approved plans from the 34 largest U.S.
banks to use extra capital for stock buy backs and dividends.
Asia
followed on Thursday with Japan's Nikkei adding 0.5 percent and Australia 0.6
percent. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged ahead
by 0.4 percent.
The
weaker U.S. dollar helped nudge gold up to $1,249.20 an ounce.
Oil
recouped a little of its recent steep losses after a weekly decrease in U.S.
production offset a surprise build in crude inventories in the world's top oil
consumer.
On
Thursday, U.S. crude firmed 7 cents to $44.81 per barrel and Brent added 6
cents to $47.38.
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The all-time highs since our initial
recommendation to go LONG
this market. Here is how the markets have performed:
Stock Market
Direction Recommendation (11/10/2016)
|
||
Dow
|
up 2,717.15 points a 14.45% gain
|
6/20/17
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Nasdaq
|
up 1,132.90 points a 21.75% gain
|
6/9/17
|
S&P 500
|
up 286.34 points a 13.21% gain
|
6/19/17
|
Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/
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