Friday, October 23, 2009

After making a new high since June last year at 1,270.44 points, the FBMKLCI pulled back to close at 1260.02 points on Thursday with a relatively lower volume. The benchmark index still managed to close positively from last week with a modest gain of 13.16 points or 1%. There were profit taking activities in the past two days but the pressure was not high to cause the market to decline substantially. The KLCI traded between 1,247.18 and 1270.44 points in the past five days. There were not much news or financial data released last week and all eyes and ears are focused towards the national budget on Friday.

The average daily trading volume was 1130 million shares but volume declined sharply in the past two days with a daily average of 887 million shares. Investors were staying out to wait and see the outcome of the national budget which is expected to be broad-based. Prices of commodities keep soaring as the US dollar plunges further. This worries investors because high commodities prices may dampen economic growth. Regional market performances are mixed and are starting to feel stronger resistance.

The US Dollar is still weakening against major currencies. The Euro dollar is now EUR$1.50 to a US dollar. It has increased 3.4% in less than a month. However, it has strengthened against the Malaysian Ringgit last week. The weak US dollar has pressured commodities prices to climb higher. Gold continues to stay at US$1,060 an ounce while crude oil has gone above US$80 a barrel. Prices of rubber futures in TOCOM and crude palm oil futures in Bursa Malaysia have also risen to JPY225.00 a kg and RM2,210 per metric ton respectively.

The market continues to stay in an uptrend. The FBMKLCI is still being supported strongly by the short and long term uptrend. The rally in October is stronger than the rally in August. The momentum indicators are showing stronger bullish momentum in this rally. The RSI and Momentum indicators pivot highs are higher than the previous pivot highs. The MACD indicator continues to stay above its moving average. There is still little room for the market to move higher because the resistance level is at the range between 1,280 and 1,300 points.

The market volatility remains the same as last week with the Average True Range (ATR) indicator indicating an 8.5 points daily range. The index is still hovering at the top band of the expanding Bollinger Bands which also measures volatility in the intermediate term. This also means that the distribution of price in the past one week is on the high side. This confirms the momentum indicators which indicated strong bullish strength.


Daily FBMKLCI chart as at 22 October 2009 using NextVIEW Advisor


The market has almost fully recovered from the 2008 bear trend and there is still no major correction since the rebound in March this year. It took nearly more than three years (2004 – 2007) for the FBMKLCI to climb from 800 points to 1,260 points and less than a year for it climb the same this year. We have been waiting for at least a major correction to happen but the market is just bulldozing through resistance levels. Analysts, fundamentalists and chartists alike, including yours truly have been revising the resistance levels higher a few times this year. Can the resistance be broken again this time?

Chances of the index testing this level are high but there is low chance that it will stay above it and rally further without a proper correction. The resistance level I talked about since last month is 1,280 to 1,300 points. The market is not expected to immediately turn bearish either, because the leading indicator, the Ichimoku Cloud is still widening and market is supported well. The market may struggle to move higher this week. The immediate support level is 1,220 and if this level is broken, then the market may move lower for correction with the next support level at 1,160 points.

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Article contributed by Private Trader, Market Expert, Trading Coach and Chief Market Strategist of Nextview, Mr. Benny Lee. For more articles and commentaries from Benny, click HERE.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Who follows and who leads in markets? The answer is surprisingly different to the answer most people assume is correct. Intermarket technical analysis is a useful strategy tool for asset allocation. It’s also a useful tool for working out what may happen in the future. It’s too easy to look at markets in isolation, or to use outdated assumptions about market relationships. This is lazy thinking and in a changing market environment it can cost a fortune.

We publish hundreds of charts each year in our financial newsletter publications and in columns for international and Chinese financial media. The chart below is the probably the single most important chart you will see in 2009. You will need to put aside lazy thinking and assumptions to fully understand it.

This is not a technical chart. It’s a combination of 3 indexes, each displayed as a single line. Unlike many comparative charts the indexes have not been rescaled to a single starting point so we can see relative performance in percentage terms. This is not significant.

The charts have been time adjusted so it is easier to compare the behavioural characteristics of the three markets. We use the Dow Index and the Australian ASX S&P 200 XJO index as representative of markets outside the US. The DOW and XJO charts have been time shifted to the left so the absolute market lows of March 2009, match the time of the absolute market low in the Shanghai Index in October 2008. This type of time shifted display clearly shows which market is a leader and which markets are followers.

This chart display confirms that 2009 has seen the most profound change in market dynamics in more than half a century. Put simply, China leads and the DOW follows.

The blue line shows the performance of the DOW index.
The black line shows the performance of the Australian ASX S&P 200 XJO index.
The red line show the performance of the Shanghai Index.

The DOW is now at 10,000 but how important is this in terms of global market behaviour? The DOW is following the behavioural leadership of the China market. The 10,000 equivalent for the Shanghai Index is 3,000. The Shanghai market reached this level and briefly powered above it before developing a trend correction. The Shanghai Index remains in trend correction mode and is using price and time corrections. The price trend correction is the sudden index fall of between 15% to 20% from 3480 to 2750. The time correction for the trend is the extended sideways movement over the past 10 weeks. The important relationship is not the comparative percentage returns, but the comparative behaviour.

We need to watch carefully because there is a high probability our markets and the US market will follow this China market leadership behaviour with a lag of several months. This suggests a trend price correction in the order of 10% to 15% followed by a period of sideways trading as the market applies a further trend correction using time.

Analysing and understanding China market behaviour is absolutely critical to any market strategy. China leads, the DOW follows the behaviour and other markets tag along further behind. Watching China gives investors a glimpse of the potential future. It is absolutely essential to developing any long term portfolio investment or planning.

To read more articles and commentaries from Daryl Guppy, click HERE

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Article contributed by Private Trader, Market Expert, Trading Coach and Best-Selling Author Mr. Daryl Guppy. For more articles and commentaries from Daryl Guppy, click HERE.

Monday, October 19, 2009

The Nikkei has two important features. They are best seen on the weekly chart. The first is the series of trading bands. These provide support and resistance levels. This pattern of behavior is similar to the patterns seen with many other regional indexes, but the Nikkei is less developed. The upper edge of the current trading band is near 10400. The market consolidated in this area and is now retreating from this resistance level. The lower edge of this trading band is near 9000 and this is the new downside target. Traders will look for support consolidation in this area.

The second feature is the uptrend line starting from the March low. The position of this line was confirmed when the market developed a successful breakout above the long term downtrend line. The drop below the new uptrend line is bearish. This uptrend line intersects the trading resistance band level. The failure of the market to push above this level and to remain above the uptrend support line sends a stronger bearish message. There is a low probability of a rally rebound developing prior to a retest of support near 9000. There is also a low probability the market will easily move above the resistance level near 10400.



The trading band extended from near 7500 to 9000. The trading band is used as a projection method and sets an upside target near 10400. This is a nominal target because it does not coincide with any previous support or resistance level. However it has proved to be a more significant resistance level than the historical 10,000 resistance level.

Regional markets have moved in double trade band projections. Using this method the next resistance level is near 11800. This is near to the strong historical support resistance level at 12,000. The rapid market fall from near 12,000 suggests there is little resistance to a rapid rise in the market. Once the market is above to move above 10400 here is a high probability the market will move quickly and smoothly to 11800 to 12000.

To read more articles and commentaries from Daryl Guppy, click HERE

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Article contributed by Private Trader, Market Expert, Trading Coach and Best-Selling Author Mr. Daryl Guppy. For more articles and commentaries from Daryl Guppy, click HERE.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

When I was studying in graduate school in the 1960s there was a big debate among economists: Which version of macroeconomics best described the world, Keynesian or Monetarist? The Keynesians claimed that fluctuations in aggregate demand determined output, monetary policy was not very important, and fiscal policy is what is needed to pull the economy out of a slump.

Monetarists, on the other hand, believed that erratic monetary policy was the most important source of fluctuations and that, by stabilizing the money supply, the central bank could limit the severity of recessions and prevent a depression such as the U.S. experienced in the 1930s.

Economists, unlike scientists, cannot run a series of controlled experiments to pick a winner. We had to wait 70 years for another financial panic of the magnitude that hit our economy in the 1930s to shed light on the question.



Keynesians Start Well

Keynesians assert that business cycles are caused by changes in aggregate spending behavior. When businesses and consumers are optimistic, they increase their spending and the economy flourishes. When they are pessimistic, spending falls and the economy slips into recession.

This latest crisis was indeed preceded by a period of optimism, particularly in the housing sector. When housing prices soared, many homeowners felt wealthier and increased their consumption. Some believed that they were destined to be able to use their houses like ATM machines, cashing out their home equity as real estate prices rose.

But when the increased supply of housing overwhelmed demand, the euphoria broke and home prices fell. This led to the largest decline in consumption since the end of the Second World War. The cause of the recession was quite Keynesian in nature.

Monetarists, on the other hand, came up short on the cause. The supply of money and credit continued to advance before the financial crisis. In fact, in the year leading up to the start of the recession in December 2007, the money supply increased at a faster pace than in either of the two preceding years. Although some claimed that the cause of the housing bubble was the Fed keeping interest rates too low too long, it is the money supply, not interest rates, that Monetarists watch.

Monetarism finishes Strong

But on the subject of the policies to get us out of the crisis, the Monetarists shine much brighter. Milton Friedman's monumental work, "A Monetary History of the United States", argued that whatever caused the Great Depression of the 1930s, the downturn was made much worse by the Fed's failure to aid the credit markets. In the early 1930s, as the economy worsened, millions of depositors tried to withdraw their funds from the banks (there was no deposit insurance at that time). Although Congress created the Federal Reserve so that it could provide emergency reserves, the Fed did nothing, and billions of dollars of deposits were lost. The money supply fell sharply, and virtually all financial activity ground to a halt.

The fall in the money supply instigated a huge deflation that hit not only in the stock market and real estate but also commodities. The consumer price index dropped 24 percent between December 1929 and December 1932. The collapse in the price level worsened the burden of debtors and added to the already sharply rising level of defaults. Friedman claimed that if the Fed had prevented the collapse of the banking system and stabilized the money supply, deflation would have been avoided and the Great Depression would never have happened.

But Keynesians objected. Keynes claimed that the forces of deflation would have overwhelmed the central bank, leaving it powerless. Once interest rates hit zero, monetary policy no longer could stimulate the economy since negative interest rates are impossible. Keynes called this situation "The Liquidity Trap" and claimed that, under these circumstances, only fiscal policy -- tax cuts and massive increases in government spending -- could prevent a recession.

A Test of the Theories

Although the Keynesians got it right on the cause of the crisis, it increasingly looks like Milton Friedman and the Monetarists got the solution right. Ben Bernanke, who studied Friedman's "Monetary History", made sure that the Federal Reserve did not repeat the fatal mistakes of the 1930s. He not only reaffirmed the Fed's support for bank deposits but expanded its coverage to money market mutual funds and all business accounts, no matter what the size. Virtually no depositor or money fund investor lost money in this crisis.

The Fed was indeed hampered by the Keynesian Liquidity Trap when the central bank set the Fed Funds near zero at the end of last year. But Bernanke initiated policies to mitigate this constraint. First the Fed lent banks far more reserves than they required, an action called Quantitative Easing. This assured the banks would have sufficient funds to meet any withdrawals. Secondly, the Fed established lending facilities to reduce the soaring interest rate on privately issued debt instruments.

During the Great Depression interest rates on private debt increased sharply because dramatically higher risk premiums were demanded by lenders. Indeed, last year, the libor rate, which is the rate at which banks lend to each other and upon which trillions of dollars of private loans are based, soared after the Lehman bankruptcy. But when then Fed sharply increased lending to security dealers, banks, and non-bank financial institutions, these premiums shrank dramatically.

When the public saw that their deposits and money funds secured, the panic eased, the stock market rose, and consumer confidence improved. The latest data indicate that it is almost certain that the recession ended sometime this summer.

It is true that the Keynesians will claim that the Obama fiscal package of tax cuts and spending is also responsible for the economic recovery. I will concede these policies did stimulate spending somewhat. The Obama package totaled $775 billion spread over two years, but the Fed has lent over $1 trillion in the first six months of the crisis, and stood ready to lend even more if necessary. Fortunately, the Fed is now scaling back its lending as many financial institutions are paying back their loans and reducing their excess reserves.

The Winner?

Both the Keynesians and the monetarists are right. The Keynesian emphasis on unexpected fluctuations in spending did the best at explaining how we got into the crisis. But the Monetarists' claim that preserving the banking system is critical to prevent a recession from becoming a depression is also right.

I am in no way absolving policymakers, particularly the Fed, who failed to see the crisis coming and protect the financial system. But we should be thankful that economic theory provided us a framework that prevented the last recession from turning into something much worse. The biggest winners are not the Keynesians nor the monetarists, but all of us counting on an economic recovery.

by Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D.


N.I.N.E finds this article interesting. The article is extracted from Yahoo! Finance.

Friday, October 16, 2009

The Malaysian equity market extended its rally last week with the benchmark FBMKLCI climbing 16.77 points or 1.36% from last week to settle at 1,246.86 points Thursday. The index has increased 3.26% in a month. The market found resistance on Thursday when the FBMKLCI fell 10 points from the intraday high of 1,256.59 to close at the current level. Market is supported well by FBMCKLI component stocks ahead of the tabling of the national budget end of this week, improving economic indicators and also strengthening of the Malaysian Ringgit.

Market participation has increased significantly last week especially in the last few days of the week. Average daily trading volume has increased 1,063 million shares from 750 million shares the previous week. The surge in market participation was due to positive economic reports and rise in regional markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has increased 2.8% in a week. Japan Nikkei 225 index and London’s FTSE increased 4.1% and 1.3% respectively.

Malaysia Institute of Economic Research (MIER) has upgraded forecast on Malaysia economic performance for this and next year following improving macroeconomic indicators, better consumer sentiment (CSI) and business confidence (BCI) indices as well as improving sectoral indices. Malaysia GDP (gross domestic product) for this year is revised to a contraction of 3.3% from a contraction of 4.2% earlier. While for 2010, Malaysia GDP is expected to grow by 3.7%, higher than the 2.8% forecast earlier. Furthermore, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) earlier this month anticipated the global economy to expand by 3.1% in 2010 from a 1.1% contraction in 2009

The US Dollar is still weakening against major currencies and caused US-dollar dominated commodities to continue to increase. Crude oil in the futures market has surged to US$78 a barrel from US$70 a week ago. Price of gold went as high as US$1,070 an ounce before settling at US$1,050. Japanese Yen-dominated rubber prices in TOCOM remained the same as the following week at JPY$215 a kg. Locally, the price of crude palm oil also increased from RM2,030 per metric ton to RM2,110 although the Malaysian ringgit is strengthening. This is because demand for palm oil in Europe, China and India remains strong. The price of this commodity went as high as RM2,196 last week.

The equity market continued to be supported even in the short term. The FBMKLCI continues to stay above the short to long term 30 to 90 day moving averages. The market was last supported by the short term 30-day moving average about a month ago. The uptrend is supported by a good bullish momentum. The RSI, Momentum and MACD indicators are still increasing since the rally a month ago. In the longer term, these indicators are also indicating a good bullish momentum as these indicators are making new pivot highs. Therefore, there is a high chance that this upward rally is going to continue.

Market volatility remained firm with the FBMKLI traded in an 8.4 points range on a daily basis, based on the Average True Range (ATR) indicator. The volatility was almost the same as the previous week’s daily average range. The distribution of price however is on the upside as FBMKLCI continues to stay at the top band of the expanding Bollinger Bands. This confirms the bullish momentum. The mid band of the Bollinger bands, acts as the average or equilibrium between the bulls and the bears is currently at 1,222 points.

The market made new highs as expected and the immediate support level is revised to 1,200 points when the 1,230 immediate resistance level is broken. The immediate resistance level is now at 1,260 points and a stronger resistance level is between 1,280 and 1,300 points. With the current momentum, there is a high chance FBMCKLI climbing to this stronger resistance range. However, if the market fails to make new highs and the FBMKLI falls below the 1,200 points support level, then the market may move further into correction to the next support level at 1,150 points.

The leading Ichimoku Cloud indicator started to expand a little bit after contracting for about two weeks. This shows that the market still has good support and can be supported well in the near future with the current momentum. Therefore, the equity market may continue to move upwards at least in the next one month or being maintained above the short term support level.


Daily FBMKLCI chart as at 15 October 2009 using NextVIEW Advisor

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Article contributed by Private Trader, Market Expert, Trading Coach and Chief Market Strategist of Nextview, Mr. Benny Lee. For more articles and commentaries from Benny, click HERE.