Monday, 30 June 2014

Big change in GOLD commitments [CFTC COT of June 24th]

COT data of June 24th 2014 - Comex Gold

Total o/i  392388, spreads 24959 (6.4%).  Closing price June 24th 1318.25
 
Nett differences:  Commercials -131607 (from -78325)  Large Specs +120859 (from +78295)  Small Specs +10748 (from +30)   
 
Proportions:   
Commercials (56.8% of total o/i) -
38.9% of Longs (from 44.4%), 74.7% of Shorts (vs 66.5%), balance minus 35.8 (vs minus 22.1)
Large Specs 33.5% of total) -
49.9% of Longs (from 45.8%), 17.0% of Shorts (vs 23.7%), balance plus 32.9 (vs plus 22.1)
Small Specs (9.7% of total) -
11.2% of Longs (from 9.8%), 8.3% of Shorts (vs 9.8%), balance plus 2.9 (vs square) 

Commercials have massively reduced longs and added to shorts, while both Large and Small Specs have done the reverse. The Commercials generally win ....

Saturday, 1 March 2014

Latest CFTC/COT figures (of Feb 25th)

COT data of Feb 25th 2014

Note that Commercials have changed stance in Corn - gone nett short for the first time since early July last year. 

In Coffee, Commercials have been liquidating longs - now very much nett short. Same situation in Sugar, but here the Commercials have been adding to shorts (rather than liquidating longs). 

Commercials continue to be bearish in Gold (shortest on a nett basis since mid-April last year), and particularly in Silver (shortest for a year). 

Mini-S&P and Mini-Nasdaq both show negative attitudes.

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Renminbi moves up the league table ...


Reuters reports that, according to figures from SWIFT (the global transaction services organization), China's yuan overtook the Swiss franc to become the seventh most-used world payments currency in January.
With a market share of 1.39 percent, the yuan remained one of the top 10 most-used currencies for payments worldwide for the third consecutive month, after ranking eighth in December.
The yuan is now only ranked behind the U.S. dollar, euro, sterling, yen, Canadian dollar and Australian dollar, according to SWIFT.

Saturday, 22 February 2014

London FTSE market ...

Big disturbances to 'normal' supply/demand factors at present, as the cash and shares resulting from Vodafone's stake of its Verizon Wireless stake are assimilated. Also, there's a FTSE and MSCI rebalance on Monday ...

Saturday, 8 February 2014

Friday, 31 January 2014

Change in FX activity

It seems that traders should move their analysis efforts away from the USD and concentrate more on cross rates in future. Activity in the "minors" last year increased considerably, and apparently this is continuing in 2014.

Some background here:



BIS Triennial Central Bank Survey 


[The latest survey of turnover took place in April 2013]

Highlights of the 2013 survey

Trading in foreign exchange mark ets averaged $5.3 trillion per day in April 2013. This is up from $4.0 trillion in April 2010 and $3.3 trillion in April 2007. FX swaps were the most actively traded instruments in April 2013, at $2.2 trillion per day, followed by spot trading at $2.0 trillion.

The growth of foreign exchange trading was driven by financial institutions other than reporting dealers. The 2013 survey collected a finer sectoral breakdown of these other
institutions for the first time. Smaller banks (not participating in the survey as reporting dealers) accounted for 24% of turnover, institutional investors such as pension funds and insurance companies 11%, and hedge funds and proprietary trading firms another 11%. Trading with non-financial customers, mainly corporations, contracted between the 2010 and 2013 surveys, reducing their share of global turnover to only 9%.

The US dollar remained the dominant vehicle currency; it was on one side of 87% of all trades in April 2013. The euro was the second most traded currency, but its share fell to
33% in April 2013 from 39% in April 2010. The turnover of the Japanese yen increased significantly between the 2010 and 2013 surveys. So too did that of several emerging ma
rket currencies, and the Mexican peso and Chinese renminbi entered the list of the top 10 most traded currencies.

Turnover by currencies and currency pairs

The currency composition of global FX trading shifted notably between 2010 and 2013, not only among the world’s most actively traded currencies, but also among important emerging market currencies. The Japanese yen stood out as the major currency that saw the most substantial jump in trading activity, whereas the role of the euro as an international currency declined over the period. The Mexican peso and the Chinese renminbi saw the most significant rise in market share among major emerging market currencies.

The role of the US dollar as the world’s dominant vehicle currency remains unchallenged. FX
deals with the US dollar on one side of the transaction represented 87% of all deals initiated in April 2013, about 2 percentage points higher than three years ago.

Among the major currencies, trading in the Japanese yen jumped the most, rising by 63% since the 2010 survey. Turnover in the USD/JPY pair rose by about 70% in this period. As a result, the yen significantly expanded its share in global FX trading by 4 percentage points to 23% in 2013. Additional information from the semiannual surveys by regional FX committees suggests that most of the rise in yen trading occurred between October 2012 and April 2013, a period characterised by expectations of a regime shift in Japanese monetary policy, which then took place in April 2013.

The international role of the euro, by contrast, has shrunk since the beginning of the euro area
sovereign debt crisis in 2010. With an increase of just 15%, trading of the euro expanded by less than the overall market. The euro remains the second most important currency worldwide, but its global market share decreased by almost 6 percentage points to 33%, reaching the lowest value since the introduction of the common currency.

Trading in the most actively traded euro exchange rate crosses, such as EUR/JPY, EUR/GBP and EUR/CHF, expanded less than that in their USD counterparts. Among the most actively traded advanced economy currencies, the Australian and New Zealand dollars continued increasing their share in global FX trading. By contrast, sterling, the Canadian dollar, the Swedish krona and, most notably, the Swiss franc lost ground in global FX trading in relative terms.

The 2013 Triennial Survey further shows a significant rise in the global importance of several
major emerging market currencies.  Turnover in the Mexican peso reached $135 billion in 2013, raising the peso’s share in global FX trading to 2.5%. The Mexican peso has thus become part of the group of the world’s 10 most actively traded currencies, ahead of well established currencies such as NZD and SEK. The Russian rouble also saw a significant increase in market share, making it the 12th most actively traded currency worldwide.

The role of the renminbi in global FX trading surged, in line with increased efforts to
internationalise the Chinese currency. Renminbi turnover soared from $34 billion to $120 billion. The renminbi has thus become the ninth most actively traded currency in 2013, with a share of 2.2% in global FX volumes, mostly driven by a significant expansion of offshore renminbi trading.

Investment outflows



Reuters, citing data from Boston-based fund tracker EPFR Global, reports that investors withdrew up to $10 billion from emerging market stock and bond funds in the week to Jan 29th, with equities seeing their biggest outflow in 2-1/2 years,.
Figures showed emerging market equity funds were down $6.3 billion in the week, the biggest weekly outflow since August 2011. Debt funds shed $2.7 billion.
Year-to-date outflows from emerging market stocks already amount to $12.2 billion, close to the $15 billion that fled during the whole of 2013, the data showed. Index-tracking exchange traded funds (ETFs) accounted for two-thirds of the exodus.
Bond fund outflows so far in 2014 are $4.6 billion, compared with $14.3 billion for the whole of last year.
In developed markets equity funds shed almost $5 billion in the week to Thursday.

Thursday, 9 January 2014

Interesting Article on forbes.com

The Top Ten Brain Science And Psychology Studies Of 2013 

 http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2013/12/29/the-top-ten-brain-science-and-psychology-studies-of-2013/?goback=%2Egde_3863963_member_5826608707999408132#%21