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U.S Inflation Data Ready to Rattle Markets and Traders

U.S Inflation Data Ready to Rattle Markets and Traders

Another Day to Prove some of us are Fools

The U.S will publish its PPI data in a few hours time. The outlooks from many experts regarding the Federal Reserve have been rather suspicious when contemplating the U.S central bank. However, the results of the Non-Farm Employment Change numbers on the 3rd of February, and this Tuesday’s rather stubborn Consumer Price Index reports have created doubt among the ‘experts’.

  • Forex and equities and their related indices will react to the publication of the Producer Price Index statistics today and create price velocity that day traders may find dangerous.

  • On the surface it appears many Forex pairs have begun to search for a calm middle ground leading up to the release of the PPI report. Perhaps positions are on hold until the release of the inflation data.

  • Traders should not be tempted and get stuck in tranquil waters that could turn into seas that drown their victims later.

Day traders who choose to wager before the reports are published today are essentially gambling with their money unless they have direct knowledge regarding today’s outcome. The rather comfortable mid-term bearish trend in the USD against most major currencies has been stopped cold since the 3rd of February.

GBP/USD Five Day Chart

Outlook regarding the U.S Federal Reserve has gone from scorn and mockery and become a rather more sedated acknowledgement that inflation is rather robust. Today’s PPI numbers will provide evidence and clarity. If the number via the Producer Price Index is stronger than anticipated it will certainly create a foundation for the ‘promised’ 0.25% rate hike in March, but also set the road for more hikes to potentially come.

Questions remain loud. The better than expected jobs numbers a couple of weeks ago was a cumbersome development for financial houses paying attention to recent layoffs from top companies and betting on weaker data. When hiring proved to be stronger than anticipated it could be pointed out that the employment numbers were looking backwards and not forward. Yet, the strong Retail Sales numbers and the improving Empire State Manufacturing reading yesterday are signs the U.S economy remains in a better place than forecasted. Recession may not be around corner.

Day traders need to be cautious and the ‘experts’ may want to look for their safe places today.

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Escalation of Rhetoric doesn’t create Calm Investors

Escalation of Rhetoric doesn't create Calm Investors

Putin and U.S Federal Reserve will Stir U.S Markets Today

An escalation of rhetoric via Russian President Vladimir Putin regarding his nation’s war with Ukraine took place this morning via a televised address to the Russian people. Putin has said Russia will call upon those with previous military training, and use a ‘limited’ call up of potential new troops. A claim of nearly 300,000 additional soldiers to be readied has been made by senior Russian officials shortly after Putin’s speech.

Making matters more intense, Putin said all military options are possible while Russia protects its sovereign territory. The land he was speaking about however, is not recognized Russian territory, it is Ukrainian soil. Putin’s ‘talk’ to Russia has firmly put him in a position which shows that results from the Ukrainian war have not had favorable results and that he is showing signs of frustration. An anxious Vladimir Putin is not about to calm down what are already nervous global markets.

China Urges a De-escalation in Ukraine while not naming Russia

China has already reacted to Putin’s speech by urging all sides active in the Ukrainian conflict to de-escalate the situation. China has its own economic worries presently and certainly doesn’t need another bad ingredient thrown into its midst as it deals with weaker demand for export products and a shaky real estate market as the global economy reacts to inflation and recessionary concerns.

International traders will hardly hear what China had to say today, not because it isn’t important, but because their attention will be on Putin and the U.S Federal Reserve. However, it is important to point out China did not condemn Russia, instead it asked that all sides involved in the Ukrainian sphere to lessen the dangers. China and its relationship with Russia remains an important aspect of global politics.

The U.S Federal Reserve will raise Interest Rates Today

The U.S Fed will raise its interest rate by 0.75% today according to most financial houses which have already acted accordingly within Forex per interpreted price action. The USD has made new long term highs within the USD/ZAR and the USD/CAD. The EUR is below par as of this writing against the USD, and the JPY and GBP also continue to struggle near long term lows versus the USD.

USD/CAD One Month Chart

U.S equity indices which have been struggling are not showing a massive promise of a reversal upwards which will alleviate losses seen this year. Investors need to remain patient if they are invested in indices such as the S&P 500. Day traders looking to profit from the volatility ripping through the markets will continue to be challenged by choppy conditions, difficult perceptions of short term technical charts and a lack of positive behavioral sentiment among the larger players in the marketplace who actually drive the markets most of the time.

  • USD remains stronger against many major and emerging market currencies, day traders need to be very careful if they pursue Forex positions in the short term.

  • U.S equity indices traded lower yesterday, and if the Federal Reserve falters and doesn’t offer solid clarity regarding interest rates today, this could create more nervousness.

Optimism is not being heard far and wide. While it is always interesting to be a contrarian and sometimes the correct avenue to engage thinking, the notion that upwards trajectories will suddenly occur may be wishful thinking in the near and mid term. Many asset classes are under stress.

Today’s upcoming pronouncements from the Fed will be important for institutional investors as they try to gauge the U.S central bank’s outlook until early 2023. If the Fed gives clues they will remain hawkish into the winter and a Funds rate around 4.50 to 5.00%is a possibility, this could shake investors and cause more capitulation – meaning a stronger selloff via equity indices could ensue. Short term traders will need to be prepared for violent conditions if they are day traders of stocks or CFDs. The inverted U.S bond yields remains a sign investors are seeking short and mid-term safety via interest rates to preserve money.

The fact that most traders are typically buyers first, not sellers first makes trading in bear markets difficult. Psychologically humans want to be optimistic. Today’s speech by Vladimir Putin while it doesn’t change the conditions on the ground in the Ukraine immediately, will shake the confidence of some financial houses which may have become accustomed to a ‘polite war’ they could ‘forget’ about and make believe would not get loud again. Nervous behavior is likely to be seen later today as early risers in the States awake to the news of Putin’s speech and react.

In short global markets will be dynamic today and tomorrow, as financial houses position their portfolios according to their foresight regarding developments the next few months. Day traders are urged to be cautious, and the prospect of sitting on the sidelines and watching ‘the show’ may prove to be a solid choice.

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Words Matter in the Financial World and Noise is Dangerous

Words Matter in the Financial World and Noise is Dangerous

As the financial markets trade in a nervous fashion the amount of ‘noise’ that traders must deal with has increased.

Markets Remain Jittery and Day Traders Pay the Price

The financial markets remain in a nervous state, and this is seen every day via the results from the major equity indices which continue to traverse within the framework of a threatening and potential bear market. Many new traders have not dealt with serious downturns in the financial markets before. Because human instinct is almost always positive, many speculators who participate in the markets tend to be buyers.

However in the past handful of months, many day traders who have been buyers have certainly found a difficult trading environment. Whether they are trying to pursue long positions in equity indices or cryptocurrencies, the speculative landscape has likely cost day traders money and produced trading accounts are negative, or worse simply have been closed.

U.S Federal Reserve Not Making Things Easy

The broad financial markets are likely to remain nervous in the coming months. The U.S Federal Reserve has a major interest rate announcement which will be delivered in the middle of June, and another rate hike of 0.50% is expected. What has the financial world nervous is not the anticipated interest rate hike which has already been digested into the marketplace, but what the Fed will say regarding their outlook regarding additional rate hikes in the summer. The reason why this is unclear is because the economic landscape remains cloudy and hotly debated.

The Federal Reserve has not helped investors because they have largely misread the economic landscape and caused problems because of past statements. Last year the Fed insisted inflation was transitory, meaning that it would soon diminish, this obviously did not happen. Now the best the Fed can do is to hope that inflation becomes less strong and that disinflation occurs. Meaning the U.S central bank is simply hoping it can decrease the rate of inflation.

Words matter in this trading landscape for investors because the Federal Reserve’s policy has not exactly been met with popular fanfare. Many market participants feel that the Fed has pursued bad economic policy and that they have reacted slowly to data which was abundantly clear regarding supply problems, and the rising cost of production due to climbs in energy prices.

The Biden Administration and Energy Costs

While some in the Biden administration try to point the finger at the Ukrainian war with Russia as the culprit. Most people are not that naïve. Energy prices were on the rise before the war and it can be seen that the bullish trend in the price of crude oil has existed since the Biden administration took power.

President Biden during his recent trip to Japan spoke about inflation caused by rising energy prices that were in ‘transition’. He made it clear that rising energy prices in the U.S are happening because the U.S is following a green environment policy and that the shift in regulatory mandates is driving the costs of energy higher. This combined with the Federal Reserve’s frequent talk about inflation and its desire to raise interest rates has made for a dangerous combination.

Noise will remain at a High Volume

Inflation may come down in the coming months. Demand for certain commodities may erode to some extent. However the cost of energy is probably going to remain high throughout the summer. The additional shadow of mid-term elections in the U.S and the potential for a shift in power in the U.S Congress are going to affect nervous sentiment among financial institutions in the coming months leading right up to November.

Traders need to prepare for noise which will come from pundits as they express their opinions. Speculators who are day traders also have to take into consideration that their short term goals are in direct opposition to that of long term financial institutions. The difference in trading outlooks and monetary capabilities make this a difficult environment for day traders in the current market conditions.

Following short term trends for day traders based on behavioral sentiment is viable. Technical charts can be used to gather short term evidence, but this will not stop the constant threat of reversals and spikes in price velocity from suddenly gathering power and creating momentary bedlam.

Eliminating the noise generating from pundits who can walk away from their statements without any consequences is a must. Unfortunately the comments coming from the Federal Reserve and White House are often hard to ignore and cause reactions in the marketplace; because their words matter even if they sometimes seem to forget what they have said in the past.