Devisen-Trading nach fundamentalen Kriterien
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by Ronald Solberg November 03, 2008
US dollar Appreciation
The US dollar as measured against six major world currencies has appreciated approximately 19% during the last three months through end-October. In particular, the US Dollar index stands at 85, up from a recent low of 71.3. This trend reversal takes the US dollar’s valuation back to levels not seen since October, 2006 and represents nearly a 38.2% retracement from its index peak of 120 in January, 2002; by any measure a significant move and one largely unexpected by the financial markets both in terms of its timing, speed and magnitude.
What has caused this abrupt appreciation of the US dollar during the past quarter and what can we expect over the next 12-24 months? There are both fundamental and technical reasons that have been US dollar supportive in the past several months.
http://prudentbear.com/index.php/commentary/...ommentary?art_id=10148
thematisiert das us-defizit. und hält die us$ für kurzfristig
navigatorc
Im Juli stand AUD/JPY noch bei 103, aktuell bei 56. Das ist fast eine Halbierung - die man bei Währungspaaren "zivilisierter Länder" (also nicht Simbabwe o. ä.) sonst eher selten sieht. Der Short-Tipp kam allein auf Grund widriger Fundamentalfaktoren zustande (siehe Eingangsposting). Der Chart lieferte nach dem Doppeltop in 2007 und einem deutlichen Absacker im Frühjahr 2008, gefolgt von einer technischen Erholung, allerdings auch ein (nicht ganz so überzeugendes) Short-Signal.
Ich schätze, dass AUD/JPY noch weiter fallen wird. In Euro hab ich folgende Kursziele "im Hinterkopf":
EUR/JPY = 100
AUD/EUR = 2,15
Würden diese beiden Werte gleichzeitig erreicht, fiele AUD/JPY nach Adam Riese auf 47. Pessimisten rechnen sogar mit einem Absturz bis 40. Für einen Neueinstieg in Shorts ist jetzt mMn das CRV zu schlecht - außer für Leute mit schnellem Mausfinger.
Wie im Eingangsposting vermutet und begründet, musste Australien die Zinsen drastisch senken. Im Juli 2008 lagen sie noch bei über 7 %, jetzt bei 3,25 %.
Dies hat - in Kombination mit stark gestiegener Risiko-Aversion und forcierter YCT-Rückabwicklung, die den Yen nach oben trieb - zu dem starken Kursverfall in AUD/JPY geführt.
Australien mit Zinssenkung, Angst vor Rezession, Arbeitslosenquote steigt
Sydney 03.03.09 (www.emfis.com) Die australische Zentralbank senkte heute den Benchmark – Zinssatz auf 3,25 Prozent, der tiefste Stand seit 45 Jahren. Es war die fünfte Zins-Senkung innerhalb von 6 Monaten. Verschiedene Ökonomen gehen davon aus, dass der Zins bis Jahresmitte auf ein Rekordtief von 2 Prozent fallen könnte.
Die Westpac Banking Corp hat als eine der ersten Banken auf die Zinssenkung reagiert und ihren Zinssatz für die Standard-Hypotheken um 100 Basispunkte auf 5,91 Prozent gesenkt. Die Regierung kündigte an, weitere 42 Mrd. AUD zur Abwehr einer Rezession bereit zustellen. Die letzte Rezession erlebte Australien vor 18 Jahren und die Sorge um ein Abtauchen in dieser, geht schon seit dem vergangenen Jahr um. Mit Hilfe des staatlichen Konjunkturpaketes soll ein schrumpfen der Wirtschaft verhindert werden. Man rechnet mit einem kleinen Wachstum in diesem und kommenden Jahr zwischen 0,75 und 1 Prozent. Der IWF hatte in seiner letzten Prognose ein Schrumpfen von 0,2 Prozent vorausgesagt.
JPMorgan senkte seine Vorhersage. Ging man von einem BIP-Rückgang von 0,2 Prozent aus, so erwartet man jetzt ein Minus von 0,5 Prozent. Die Arbeitslosenquote stieg im Dezember auf ein Zwei-Jahres-Hoch von 4,5 Prozent. Die Unternehmen hatten nach Statistikangaben 43.900 Vollzeit-Arbeitsplätze gekündigt.
http://www.emfis.de/funktionen-features/drucken/...p;cHash=4af3c6d195
Dass "der Markt" (bzw. Hedgefonds) sich aus Renditegeilheit (3,5 % Zinsen) massiv in eine solch marktenge Währung gestürzt hat, ist gefährlich, zumal auch australische Haushalte horrend überschuldet sind (wie überall in Angel-Sachsien).
Hier ein US-Autor, der diese These teilt:
Dec. 15, 2011, 12:01 a.m. EST
Dead yen walking
By Eric St-Cyr
You may have seen the series on television about a post apocalypse world where zombies roam the earth and what is left of humanity is on the run. The story is centered on Rick Grimes, a small-town sheriff who is wounded in the line of duty and wakes up from a coma facing a new reality; zombies now rule the earth in search of fresh flesh; adapt and survive is the order of the day.
These days I feel like Rick. It seems that I have just woken from a long coma and I am now facing a new reality; a reality where brainless zombies drive the stock market, hunting in packs at any sign of noise, having forgotten any common sense and being only driven by the smell of blood. In a world where fundamentals don't matter anymore, where technical witchery dictates market direction, where rumors replace the truth, how can an investor adapt and survive?
There is definitively a lot of nonsense happening today and the best survival tool remains your logic. Take the time to analyze the world we live in and use this brain of yours before it become somebody else's lunch. The recipe is to be patient and invest in long-term themes facing unavoidable realities. For the coming years there is no more obvious trade than the collapse of the Yen.
From July 2008 to today, the Japanese Yen has gained gain over 30% vis-à-vis the green back i.e. the USDJPY has lost 30% of its value. If, like Rick, you have just woken up from a long coma, a rapid glance at your Bloomberg terminal would convince you that the Japanese economy is much stronger today then it was in 2008. That the Japanese fiscal situation is improving and that capital investment is flowing into the country. You might also focus your attention on the USA and conclude that the local economy has run into big troubles (true...), troubles even worse then the one faced by Japan over the last thirty years. Who knows, during your 3 year coma, maybe the US experienced a major earthquake, a tsunami, or even worse, a nuclear meltdown?
Of course, nothing can be further from the truth. The situation in Japan is catastrophic. If Europe is on the edge of the precipice then Japan has already fallen off the cliff. We all know that the Japanese debt to GDP now exceeds 200%. However zombie-traders continue to pump the Yen higher, as they have been conditioned to do for 30 years, believing that Japan is a safe haven, an investment of choice when volatility increases. Why?
Because contrarily to other countries, the Japanese debt is mainly owned by the Japanese population. The debt is financed through an important trade surplus, which translates into increased local savings, which in return are used to buy local debts. As the country experienced a deflation of 1 to 2% for the last 10+ years, and 10 years bonds provide yield in excess of 1%, the real rate of return has remained appealing for Japanese investors with a real return (after inflation) of approximately 2.5%. Therefore, for as long as the locals are buying, the debt can increase infinitively... The overall investor's belief is that a near-term disruption in the government bond market remains unlikely as the market sees stable domestic savings rates and healthy current account surplus remaining for years to come. They are wrong.
First the pool of assets directed to savings is shrinking rapidly. Japan has the second oldest population in the world, after Monaco, and savings are gradually morphing into healthcare expenses. Japan also presents one of the lowest birth rates in the world at 1.2%, the highest life expectancy, and a zero net migration rate for more then 10 years. Japan is a demographic basket case. According to the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Japanese household savings will cross into negative territory in 2015 - the downward trend is irreversible without a significant change in demographic profile.
Therefore in the next few years, the indigenous buyer of Japanese debts will shrink as the debt increases. The question will then become: As the population ages, reducing it's savings and depleting the pension fund assets, who will be buying Japanese bonds?The Bank of Japan will have to turn toward foreigners to continue financing their debt. If Europe is a proxy for the international investors appetite for risky fixed income asset, expect much higher rates on Japanese bonds going forward.
According to Societe General, the Japanese Debt Service as % of Tax Revenues already exceeded 57% in 2010 and the interest expense was over 27%. Therefore a rate increase of 2 or 3% would simply send the country into "virtual" bankruptcy. (Let's not even considered the 7% experienced in Europe recently) We all know that default is not an option for a government when the majority of the debts is owned by the local population; Japan will only have one solution, to print more and more Yen... Therefore, when our mob of zombie-traders starts smelling the blood in Tokyo's street, expect the worst.
www.marketwatch.com/story/dead-yen-walking-2011-12-15