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Betting on China Via Australia

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

There are plenty of investors that think betting on China is as close to a sure thing as there could possibly be. The only problem is that investing directly in China’s economic freight train is complicated, opaque, and sometimes impossible. The Chinese government maintains strict capital controls, prohibits foreigners from directly owning certain types of investment vehicles, and prevents the Chinese Yuan from appreciating too quickly, if at all. For those that want exposure to China without all of the attendant risks, there is a neat alternative: the Australian Dollar (AUD).

Those of you that regularly read my posts and/or follow the forex markets closely should be aware of the many correlations that exist between currencies and other financial markets, as well as between currencies. In this case, there would appear to be a strong correlation between Chinese economic growth and the Australian Dollar. If the Chinese Yuan were able to float freely, it might rise and fall in line with the AUD. Since the Yuan is fixed to the US Dollar, however, we must look for a more roundabout connection. HSBC research analysts used Chinese electricity consumption as a proxy for Chinese economic activity (why they didn’t just use GDP is still unclear to me), and discovered that it fluctuated in perfect accordance with the Australian Dollar.

Australian Dollar and Chinese electricity consumption 1990-2008
Before I get ahead of myself, I want to explain why one would even posit a connection between China and the Aussie in the first place. There are actually a few reasons. First, Australia is economically part of Asia: “Today, 43 per cent of Australia’s total merchandise trade is with north Asia. A further 15 per cent is with Southeast Asia.” Second, Australia’s economy is driven by the extraction and sale of natural resources, of which China is a major buyer and investor: “In 2008-9, China was the biggest investor in the key resource sector with $26.3bn involvements approved, 30 per cent of the total.” Third, Chinese demand has come to dictate the prices of many such resources, causing them to rise continuously. Thus, Australia’s natural resource exports to countries other than China still draw strength (via high commodity prices) from Chinese demand.

As one analyst summarized, “China is buying raw materials from Australia in leaps and bounds, and that’s what’s driving that currency’s growth.” Sounds like an Open and Shut case. In fact, this presumed correlation has become so entrenched that any indication that China is trying to cool its own economy almost always prompts a reaction in the Aussie. To be sure, warnings that China’s annual legislative conference (scheduled for October 17) would produce a consensus call for a tightening of economic policy have made some forecasters more conservative. Still, as long as the Chinese economy remains strong, the Australian Dollar should follow.

It’s worth pointing out that the correlation between the Aussie and the Chinese economy doesn’t exist in a vacuum. For example, the Australian Dollar has also closely mirrored the S&P 500 over the last decade, which suggests that global economic growth (and higher commodity prices) are as much of a factor in the Aussie’s appreciation as is Chinese economic activity. The Aussie is also vulnerable to a decline in risk appetite, like the kind that took place during the financial crisis and flared up again as a result of the EU Sovereign debt crisis. During such periods, Chinese demand for commodities becomes irrelevant.

AUD USD 2006-2010
On the other hand, part of the reason the Australian Dollar has surged 10% since September and 20% since June is because other countries’ Central Banks (such as China) have increased their interventions on behalf of their respective currencies. Australia is one of a handful of countries whose Central Bank not only hasn’t actively tried to depress its currency, but whose monetary policy (via interest rate hikes) actually invites further appreciation. As the Aussie closes in on parity and Australian exporters and tourism operators become more vocal about the impact on business, however, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) might be forced to act.

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Emerging Market “Wall of Money” Spurs Currency War

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

According to Goldman Sachs (which if nothing else, is good at characterizing financial trends. Remember “BRIC?”), there is a “Wall of Money” that is already flooding emerging markets and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

MSCI Emerging Markets Chart 2006 - 2010

“The Institute of International Finance projected 2010 capital flows of $825 billion, up from $581 billion in 2009 and from the $709 billion that the trade group for global financial-services firms had projected for 2010 in April.” In hindsight, the outflow of capital from emerging markets that took place during the financial crisis will probably look like a blip, as risk appetite has already recovered to pre-crisis levels, and then some!

“The move into emerging markets has been led by stock investors, who will pour an estimated $186 billion into these countries this year, — fully three times the annual average of $62 billion generated between 2005 and 2009.” Emerging Market Bond funds, meanwhile, now routinely receive more than $1 Billion per week. Sovereign wealth funds are also starting to shift some of their assets into emerging market assets/currencies as part of their respective diversification strategies. As you can see from the chart below (courtesy of The Economist), Asia is by far the largest recipient of investment, followed by Latin America.

Emerging Markets Net Capital Flows, Forex Reserves
The continued shift of capital from the industrialized world into emerging markets as being driven both by economic fundamentals and the desire to earn a greater return on investment. “The IMF forecast this month that developing nations will expand 6.4 percent next year, outstripping growth of 2.2 percent among advanced economies.” Meanwhile, the ratio of foreign debt to GDP among developing nations has been cut to 26 percent, compared to 41 percent in 1999. And yet, even as analysts predict that emerging markets will account for 85% of global growth going forward, “emerging markets account for $3 trillion, or only 15 percent of market capitalisation of the benchmark MSCI world index.”

While it’s understandable, then, that investors would want to rectify this imbalance as quickly as possible, they need to realize that developing countries’ capital markets simply aren’t deep enough to absorb all of the incoming capital. In other words, an limited pool of capital is chasing a limited stock of accessible investments, and the result is that asset prices and exchange rates are climbing inexorably higher.

Analysts argue, “Some appreciation is due: a rise against rich-world currencies is both a natural consequence of the faster growth of emerging economies and a way to correct global imbalances.” But a 50% rise over five years (notched by a handful of currencies) does not represent some appreciation, but rather an explosion. This is precisely the sentiment echoed by many of the emerging markets, themselves, which have taken to using guerilla tactics to hold down their currencies. Since the latest phase of the “currency war” was ignited by Japan in September, every week has led to increasingly far-flung countries – Peru, Chile, Czech Republic, Poland, South Africa – reputedly contemplating intervention.

According to an interesting economic analysis, which scaled intervention to the size of the given country’s monetary base, South Korea and Taiwan have been among the most active participants in forex markets, while Thailand and Malaysia have been among the most restrained. This is born out by the sizable appreciation of both the Thai Baht and Malaysian Ringit over the last few years. However, I wonder if some economists will take issue with their assessment that Brazil and China have been relatively modest interveners.

Of course, this doesn’t make it any easier to forecast, since how a country behaved in the past isn’t necessarily indicative of how it will behave in the future. For example, Thailand just announced that it will not intervene, but Brazil will double its forex tax from 2% to 4%. Case in Point!

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USDCAD NR4 explosion

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great example as we have a NR4 pattern, price is above the hourly moving average and the weekly trend is ultra strong.  Our new FX Trend Bias tool also showed this as likely to explode as breakout showed the highest strength all day.


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NR7 Inside Bar Drop

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great example of trading with the trend.  Both weekly and monthly trend super weak, price is under the hourly moving average and then we have a NR7 ID pattern.  You short upon low of range breakdown and price falls over 100 pips.


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NR Breakout + Counter Trend Sell

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great example of our NR breakout system finding a 50 pip up move and our bread and butter counter trend system selling the high once upwards momentum fails at 4am EST.  Price then continues down 110 pips.


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NR Breakout + Counter Trend Sell

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great example of our NR breakout system finding a 50 pip up move and our bread and butter counter trend system selling the high once upwards momentum fails at 4am EST.  Price then continues down 110 pips.


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NR Breakout + Counter Trend Sell

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great example of our NR breakout system finding a 50 pip up move and our bread and butter counter trend system selling the high once upwards momentum fails at 4am EST.  Price then continues down 110 pips.

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Counter Trend Drop Off

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is one of our bread and butter trades taught in our Forex classes and first post here on blog.  When longer term trend is down we sell at upper containment band and in this case our FX Trend Bias went down quickly and preceded the price drop.


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Quad Trend Down in GBPJPY

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

The GBPJPY’s weekly and monthly trend down and price is finding support at hourly moving average at 3:30am EST.  Once price breaks sell as FX Trend Bias is down before and this new tool is about 70%+ winning with this setup.  Price then falls 100+ pips and later more.


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Quad Trend + Trend Bias

November 6th, 2010 · Forex Books, Forex Brokers, Forex Indicators, Forex Robots, Forex Systems, Forex Training, Trading

This is a great sell at 4:30 when price breaks the hourly moving avg.  Weekly trend down, monthly trend down, 1 hour trend down and our new FX Trend Bias shows nice weakness.


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