Archiv für den Monat: Mai 2022
EUR/USD Price Forecast: Euro Hit by Gas Disruptions, Parity Break at Risk
Gold Fundamental Forecast: US Dollar Weighs on Gold. Will US Retail Sales Alter Course?
Iran says it can double its exports of oil
Co.. he spoke with reporters Saturday in Tehran.
Iran has capacity to double oil exports if there’s sufficient demand
Iran will “exert maximum effort to recoup its crude oil market
share and revive its customers,”
Iranian crude exports have plunged ever since previous US President Trump dumped the Iran nuclear deal in 2018. Talks between the European Union and Iran on attempts to revive the deal are ongoing. I’ve been updating on the negotiations for months and months but they are persistently stalemated. We get positive and negative indications on the talks on a seemingly never-ending cycle. Resuscitation of the deal, if it comes, will eventually bring more Iranian oil to market, over time.
Oil price update – trading resumes Monday morning Asia time/Sunday evening US time:
ICYMI – Barclays warn of EUR/USD dropping under parity if Russia shuts off gas to Europe
„If Russia closes its gas taps (to Europe), we expect EURUSD to fall below parity,“
„Our economists estimate that a total loss of Russian supplies, combined with rationing of the remainder, could dent euro area GDP by more than 5 percentage points over one year“.
The heightened concern over supply of Russian gas into Europe has been ongoing for weeks/months since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine. As for euro, its been heavy all year with monetary policy divergence between a tightening Federal Reserve and a much more hesitant European Central Bank also a factor.
EUR/USD:
Unconfirmed reports that Kurdish forces have taken control of some oil wells in Iraq
Reuters follow up with
the Kurdish government denied „all allegations and rumours which claim that the regional government had occupied and took over oilfields in Bai Hassan … with the support of an armed force“.
Something to keep an eye on come oil trade reopening on Monday morning (Asia time, Sunday evening US time)
MUFG trade of the week: AUD/JPY to keep on falling
In AUD/JPY, they recommend selling at spot at 89.50 with a target of 84.50 and a stop at 92.50.
„We are recommending a new short AUD/JPY trade idea to reflect our view that the curret period of risk aversion is likely to extend further in the near-term,“ MUFG notes.
„We believe there is room for the JPY to continue to rebound in light of short positioning and stretched valuations. The AUD alongside other commodity currencies are coming under more selling pressure as global growth fears intensify,“ they wrote.
They also maintain a long EUR/GBP trade with a target at 0.8800 and a stop at 0.8440. Spot is at 0.8500.For bank trade ideas, check out eFX Plus. For a limited time, get a 7 day free trial, basic for $79 per month and premium at $109 per month. Get it here.
This kind of thinking is a recipe for disaster
Yet the amount of people I’m seeing say some variation of this is sky high, both online and in my real life.
This isn’t to say that it can’t go for 1-cent to 10-cents. Money can be made in any kind of market.
The bigger lesson is that trying to catch a falling knife is a terrible habit.
It’s a psychological flaw in nearly all new traders. As humans, we benchmark things. We have a sense of what gasoline should cost, what an apple should cost and hundreds of other things. When things ‚go on sale‘ we tend to want to buy them because humans have a deeply ingrained fear of scarcity.
Who among us didn’t think of ways to stockpile gasoline at the depths of 2020?
I real life these are generally good instincts and habits.
The problem is that we then transpose this to financial assets, especially ones without intrinsic value.
Currencies are one of the most-powerful examples of this. For a generation, traders relied on cable gravitating to 1.60. When it go too high, it was time to sell, when it got too low it was time to buy. If you went offside you could hunker down and wait it out.
It worked from the mid-1980s to the mid-2010s… a 30-year stretch.
In the currency market, there is some basis for that kind of thinking. The relationships between strong, developed economies rarely shift dramatically over a few years. There’s some mean reversion built in. But the combination of Brexit, the economic malaise in continental Europe and US dominance in technology appears to have broken the regime.
In assets without intrinsic value, or a strong floor, betting on mean reversion is diasterous. Just because something has fallen doesn’t mean it will bounce back. It’s like the periods of bizarre buying we’ve seen in bankrupt companies.
In a stock, you can find a level of price-to-earnings (hopefully forward earnings), where there’s a floor. Cash flows are cash flows and that’s intrinsic value.
But far, far too often traders think that because something has fallen from 200 to 100 that it will bounce back, even if the economic situation has changed.
Trading is often about habits and the better habit is to sell things that are falling and to buy things that are rising. If something is at an all-time high or an all-time low, it’s there for a reason.
This seems to be a lesson the new traders need to learn over and over. The trend is your friend. Resist whatever urge you have to buy things that are ‚cheap‘ unless you have a strong and reasonable basis of value or a reason for a turn. Even then, what’s the rush? Let it level out first. Let the other guy have the first leg of gains.
It’s an emotional market right now. Don’t get caught in this classic trap.