Wednesday, October 6, 2021

How to invest in SMRs – the future of green energy

Sheepwash is a tiny village in North Devon with a population of just 250 or so people.

The Sheepwash Chronicle is the local magazine for and about the residents. It’s not what you might call the mainstream media.

I have some close family down there, so I visit quite often. Last week I stumbled across an article in the Harvest 2021 edition. It might be the best article I’ve ever read about green energy and our future electricity needs.

I thought I’d discuss it today.

Nuclear energy is clean and safe – so why is it so hated?

It’s by Dr Philip Bratby of the Countryside Charity and it’s called: Small Modular Reactors - An Opinion Piece. The ultimate low-carbon renewables.

It’s worth declaring up front that Bratby is pro-nuclear. It often seems that the energy debate is no longer about what is the cleanest, most-efficient energy source; the debate has been politicised and corrupted, often by those with their snouts in the trough of government subsidy, so anyone who suggests that fossil fuels have done a lot for mankind or that nuclear power might not be all bad is immediately branded a heretic.

But Bratby’s views seem particularly pertinent at the moment because of the current energy crisis in which we find ourselves, spiking natural gas prices and the fact that only recently, with no wind, the government has had to switch coal-fired plants back on.

I googled Bratby, and there isn’t much online. He has a first class honours degree in physics from the Imperial College of Science and Technology (London University), a doctorate in physics from Sheffield University, he worked in the military and civil nuclear industry as a energy consultant, and is now semi-retired.

There are a couple of anti-nuclear websites that have a go at him, using straw man arguments, quoting out of context and so on, so I won’t stoop to mention them here. Let’s get to the article.

If the government has its way, says Bratby, we will need much more electricity for heating and for charging all those millions of electric vehicles. To meet these needs, the electricity supply will need to be both expanded and more reliable.

Commercial nuclear power stations have been operating for nearly 70 years. They have provided huge amounts of reliable and affordable “clean” and almost-infinitely-renewable electricity. Nuclear energy has the best safety record of any energy technology. All environmental concerns, such as waste disposal, have been solved.

So why hasn't nuclear power been widely accepted?

One reason is that over the course of many years environmental activists have persuaded much of the public, many politicians, and the media that nuclear energy is unsafe. However, some activists have recently changed their minds.

For example James Lovelock, who proposed the Gaia hypothesis, has said that “nuclear power is the only green solution”. Bryony (now Baroness) Worthington, a lead author of the Climate Change Act, who once said that she was “passionately opposed to nuclear power” has more recently said of nuclear power: “I urge you on moral, ethical, scientific and environmental grounds to rethink your opposition to it”.

One-time anti-nuclear campaigner, environmental activist and author Mark Lynas, who has said that he “grew up hating nuclear power” has now said that “continuing to oppose nuclear was a mistake… it’s extraordinarily safe… and we must learn to love nuclear power”.

So why do some environmental organisations still oppose it and prefer environmentally-destructive wind and solar farms coupled with batteries?

The reason, says Bratby, is not that it doesn't produce abundant low-carbon energy, but that it does, and that conflicts with their aim: to halt economic growth.

Now – and this is Dominic speaking – I think there’s a lot of truth to that last statement. I often feel that that’s the main agenda behind a lot (not all) of authoritarian activism. The agenda, as well as to impose their views on others and dictate how to behave, is to stop capitalism, progress and economic activity altogether. Hence the hashtag #endcapitalism which you find everywhere.

Anyway back to Bratby: thanks to anti-nuclear propaganda, regulators require multiple, excessive layers of safety in nuclear plant design that needlessly pushes up costs. The regulatory process is complex, slow and cumbersome, and so takes years to complete.

The long lead time between building and operation adds to expense. And so political uncertainty is one reason many recent proposals for nuclear power stations in the UK have been abandoned, leaving the twin power stations at Hinkley C in Somerset as the only ongoing project.

The future of nuclear power

To overcome some of these problems, the focus for future nuclear power stations has switched to SMRs – small modular reactors.

SMRs have been in operation for over 60 years in submarines, aircraft carriers and ice-breakers, but only in the last few years has serious attention been paid to developing land-based SMRs for commercial electricity generation.

The advantages of SMRs over current nuclear power stations are legion:

They use relatively simple, proven technology.

They can be manufactured in factories and built on site rapidly.

They are safer than current nuclear power stations.

They occupy very little land and have little impact on the landscape. Some can even be constructed underground – surely preferable to wind turbines and solar farms.

They provide generation that can be controlled to provide baseload and load-follow capability.

Their output is not weather-dependent.

They are synchronous and the large rotating generators provide inertia, which is a positive benefit to the reliability and stability of the grid.

They use very high energy density fuel and thus require a lot less land. A 440MW SMR would require about 25 acres of land and would produce about 3.5TWh of electricity per year (enough for about 1.2 million homes). A solar farm would require about 13,000 acres (20 square miles) for the same output; wind farms would need about 32,000 acres (50 square miles).

There are about half a million homes in Devon. So Devon's domestic electricity needs could easily be met by a single 440MW SMR occupying a small area of land. By contrast, a huge area of Devon's farmland would need to be covered in solar panels or wind turbines to provide the same amount of electricity. Even then, alternative sources would be needed for when the wind doesn't blow or the sun doesn't shine.

I read that the biggest solar farm in the country is planned for Holsworthy, about 15 miles up the road from Sheepwash: 76,000 panels over 165 acres. It won’t come close to meeting Devon’s electricity needs.

In the UK, it is envisaged that SMRs would be constructed on the redundant sites of closed nuclear and coal-fired power stations, ie, on brownfield land where grid connections are readily available.

If they really are such a silver bullet, SMRs are going to happen whether activists oppose them or not. A shortage of energy will demand it. You don’t have to watch videos of Extinction Rebellion blocking traffic on social media to know that the British public have lost patience.

How to invest in SMRs

Several competing designs are being developed around the world, ranging in size from tens of megawatts to 500MW and of many different design concepts. But at the moment none of the pure play SMR companies are publicly listed.

RollsRoyce (LSE: RR) has built seven generations of SMRs for use in nuclear submarines and, with its design for a 440MW SMR, it is a contender – so that is one option. It’s about to land a load of orders from Eastern Europe, I hear, but it is not exactly a pure SMR play.

Another contender is NuScale, an American company, which is unfortunately still private. There is a way to get exposure to NuScale, however. The majority shareholder is engineering company Fluor Corp (NYSE: FLR). It has been through the wars a bit, and its share price is low so it might represent an opportunity - though again it is not a pure play.

Daylight Robbery – How Tax Shaped The Past And Will Change The Future is now out in paperback at Amazon and all good bookstores with the audiobook, read by Dominic, on Audible and elsewhere.



from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/investments/commodities/energy/603949/invest-in-small-nuclear-reactors-renewable-energy
via IFTTT

NZD Falls Despite RBNZ Rate Hike

RBNZ Raises Rates It’s been a strange start for the New Zealand Dollar today. Despite the RBNZ announcing its first-rate hike in seven years overnight, the antipodean currency has come under heavy selling pressure across the board today. The rate hike, which had been expected at the August meeting but was delayed due to the impact of fresh lockdowns, sees rates in New Zealand back up to 0.50% from the prior, record lows of 0.25%. With the rate hike priced in for August and then delayed, the market reaction is likely a case of “buy the rumour, sell the news”.Further Tightening ComingLooking ahead, the bank signalled that further removal of monetary easing is likely. The meeting statement highlighted that “further removal of monetary policy stimulus is expected over time, with future moves contingent on the medium-term outlook for inflation and employment." In terms of the bank’s view on the global backdrop, the RBNZ noted that “The level of global economic activity has continued to recover, supported by accommodative monetary and fiscal settings, and rising vaccination rates enabling a relaxation of mobility restrictions.”Impact of Recent Lockdowns The bank noted the economy had been performing well heading into the most recent lockdowns and while activity will certainly have contracted over the most recent quarter, the RBNZ expects a strong bounce back. There were some words of caution, however. The RBNZ noted that: “the latest COVID-19 restrictions have badly affected some businesses in Auckland and a range of service industries more broadly. There will be longer-term implications for economic activity both domestically and internationally from the pandemic.”CPI OutlookRegarding inflation then, the RBNZ projects that: “Headline CPI inflation is expected to increase above 4 percent in the near term before returning towards the 2 percent midpoint over the medium term.” The bank explained that “The near-term rise in inflation is accentuated by higher oil prices, rising transport costs and the impact of supply shortfalls.”Technical ViewsNZDUSDThe sell off in NZDUSD today is seeing the market once again testing below the rising trend line from 2020 lows as the decline from .7171 deepens. With both MADC and RSI showing bearish signals here, there is room for the move to develop further with .6791 the next level to note. Beyond there the bear channel low and the .6512 level.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/nzd-falls-despite-rbnz-rate-hike"
via IFTTT

Investment Bank Outlook 06-10-2021

CitiEuropean OpenUSD continued to see a bid amidst rising yields in most tenors as well as a sell-off in equities during the Asian session. US treasuries saw yields continue to tick higher as well. However, RBNZ took the headlines today, with an expected 0.25% hike to 0.5% for NZD, although flow dynamics and a higher USD contributed to the Kiwi declining 0.55%, alongside AUD, which declined 0.47%. KRW remained weak, with the spot edging past 1190. Oil retained its strength during the Asian session.USD continued to see a bid against the rest of the G10 complex during the Asian session, following a similar NY session. US treasuries were offered across all tenors during Asian hours. Noticeably, equities saw declines during Asian hours following a pickup in growth stocks during NY hours. KOSPI, NKY, HSI and ESA were all in the red in the Asian morning.US September ISM Services comes in line with estimates at 61.9 (59.9 expected; 61.7 prior). Improvements are seen throughout the bulk of components. Note favorable readings in sub-prints such as business activity (62.3), new orders (63.5), and inventory sentiment (46.3). Meanwhile, prices paid continues to tick higher to 77.5 (75.4 prior) alongside a mild decrease in employment to 53.0 (53.7 prior).CIBCFX FlowsThe Reserve Bank of New Zealand did what most of us expected, raised official cash rate to 0.5%. RBNZ said current further removal of stimulus expected over time, future moves contingent on the medium-term outlook for inflation and employment. The central bank noted that current Covid-19 related restrictions have not materially changed mid-term outlook for CPI and employment. Price action was disappointing, spot NZDUSD jumped from 0.6957 to 0.6980. The pair erased gains and traded lower. Our trader Jon believes that weak New Zealand stock index could have reversed the NZD. Another reason is profit taking in NZDJPY.AUDNZD had a better price action, a very quick move to 1.0441 and then bounced back. Some said the disappointing move in yield spreads of AU-NZ bonds could have contributed to the FX, attracted profit taking. AUDUSD price action was muted, mostly led by cross play. Offers in AUDUSD mentioned above 0.7315, bids ahead of 0.7250, similar to yesterday.USDJPY was bought from the Tokyo open, no particular reason, we think it was driven by positive start in US equity futures, Nikkei Index and higher UST yield. Things started to change after RBNZ, Nikkei erased earlier gains and turned negative. USDJPY did move lower but minimal. Our trader Jon said the demand out of Japan has been strong despite the performance of equity index, thinks we head higher. Plenty of 111.00 option strikes due this week, large one on Friday with $2.25bn.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/investment-bank-outlook-06-10-2021"
via IFTTT

Inflation Threat Worries US Bonds

American markets closed with gains but, US equity futures todayare on a slippery slope, largely due to the pressure from rising Treasuryyields. The yield on 10-year securities broke through the local high of 1.55%,signaling the resumption of the rally after a brief respite: For a short period following the Fed September meeting, Treasuryyields have been rising thanks to the rise of real interest rate (as seen fromthe recovery of TIPS yield). The inflation premium apparently again has become themain component cause of the rally in yields. Yesterday, the 5-year averageexpected inflation premium jumped 6 bps, from 2.53 to 2.59%. Since the start of2021, intraday increments of the bonds’ inflation premium were stronger in only5% of cases:Inflation expectations keep rising in the wake of rising energyprices, which set the stage for higher costs for firms, which may eventually beforced to transfer this pressure onto consumers.After a short break, the dollar went on the offensive again. HigherUS rates stimulate the inflow of foreign investors into fixed incomeinstruments. Before the Fed meeting in November, in which the policymakers areexpected to clarify the prospects for tightening next year; the current policyof the Central Bank is likely to be slightly stimulating. So, this means that bondsin the US are depreciating, sometimes taking short pauses. Naturally, due tothe trend in bonds, there is a high risk that risk assets will experiencedifficulties with growth. As alternative investment instruments, they offer everhigher returns.Yesterday's data showed that the US economy is doing well, theservice sector PMI from ISM more than met expectations, showing an increasefrom 61.7 to 61.9 points (59.9 points forecast). Creation of new firms haveslowed down, labor costs have risen, and labor shortages persist. Costsremained generally elevated, indicating the risk of higher consumer prices inthe coming months, i.e. inflation. The corresponding sub-index rose from 75.4to 77.5 points and is at its highest since 2008.The biggest event of economic calendar today is ADP report whichis the first part of US labor data in the NFP week. A gain of 428K is expected,but the number could easily beat forecasts given positive preliminaryemployment data and retreat of Covid in the US in early September, which, asrecent history shows, creates the risk of underestimating the positive dynamicsof hiring. In case of positive news, the dollar index will likely be poised to targetresistance at the previous local high (level 94.50).

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/inflation-threat-worries-us-bonds"
via IFTTT

Dollar Rises Ahead of ADP Employment Release



from Forex News https://www.investing.com/news/forex-news/dollar-rises-ahead-of-adp-employment-release-2635863
via IFTTT

Daily Market Outlook, October 6th, 2021

Daily Market Outlook, October 6th, 2021 Overnight Headlines Democratic Lawmakers Insist They Won't Back Down On Debt Ceiling Biden Had Productive Discussion With Democrats On Spending Bills Biden And China's Xi Agree To Abide By The Taiwan Agreement US Suspends Authority To Ship Nuclear Materials To China's CGN German Political Parties Edge Toward Coalition Decision After Talks UK PM To Reveal ‘National Living Wage’ Rise In A Few Weeks UK Businesses Face ‘Historic’ Price Jumps Just As Growth Slows Kuroda: Japan's Labour Practices Keep Wage Pressures Under Control RBNZ Raises Rates To Tame Inflation And Signals More To Come Australia Banking Watchdog Tightens Home Loan Requirements US Dollar Firm Ahead Of Payrolls Report; Kiwi Shrugs Off Rate Hike US Oil Prices Rises To Highest Since 2014 Amid Global Energy Crunch Asian Equity Markets Slip As Inflation, Default Compound Virus WorriesThe Day Ahead At the party conference today, UK PM Johnson is expected to reject a return to high levels of immigration, and instead urge businesses to invest towards a “high-wage, high-skill, high-productivity economy”, according to reports. Data wise, the UK construction PMI and Eurozone retail sales are likely to attract only limited attention in the markets this morning. Official UK construction data point to falling output in four months to July, with supply constraints in materials and labour likely affecting the ability to meet demand. In contrast, the construction PMI survey has been rather more upbeat, rising to as high as 66.3 in June before dropping in the following two months. The index still stood at 55.2 in August, well into expansion territory (above 50). For today’s September print, look for a small rise to 55.5, although the market consensus forecast is for another decline to 54.0. In the Eurozone, expect the volume of retail sales in August to have increased by 0.8%m/m after the 2.3%m/m decline in July. That would leave it about 3.5% above its February 2020 (pre-pandemic) level. Eurozone consumer confidence also unexpectedly improved in September. Tomorrow morning’s German industrial production figures for August at 7am will also be watched. Eurozone GDP growth is expected to remain strong in Q3, with something similar to the 2.2%q/q rise in Q2 likely, despite supply bottlenecks and the ongoing pandemic. The main focus today is the US ADP employment data, which will be watched ahead of Friday’s official labour market report. The ADP estimate is not always a good predictor of the official figures, but is eyed nonetheless as a potential gauge of risks to Friday’s outcome. Look for a rise of 480k in today’s ADP private payrolls, a little above the consensus forecast for 430k. The broader picture is that Fed Chair Powell seems to have set the bar low for tapering to start this year, with a go-ahead likely even with moderate employment growth in September.G10 FX Options Expiries for 10AM New York Cut(Hedging effect can often draw spot toward strikes pre expiry if nearby) USDJPY - 109.80/110.00 716m. 109.50 2.10bn (1.51bn P). 108.20 910m. EURUSD - 1.1860/70 453m. 1.1720/30 671m. 1.1700 482m. 1.1600/20 1.00bn (649m C). GBPUSD - 1.3830/50 804m. AUDUSD - 0.7320/30 736m. 0.7300/10 1.00bn (C). 0.7200 549m. NZDUSD - 0.7000 2.21bn (1.76bn C). USDCAD - 1.2730/40 1.00bn (515m P). 1.2710/20 1.04bn (975m C). 1.2600 958m. 1.2550/60 2.09bn (1.23bn P). 1.2520/30 1.19bn (832m P). 1.2500/10 503m. 1.2430/50 978m. Technical & Trade ViewsEURUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.17 Bullish above Narrow range as sellers at 1.1600 cap for now EUR/USD opened 0.20% lower at 1.1597 and traded in a 1.1588/1.1600 range Heading into the afternoon it is trading around 1.1595 Asian equity markets fell despite the positive lead from Wall Street EUR/USD support is at a double-bottom formed at 1.1560/65 Resistance is at the 10-day MA at 1.1642 and break eases downward pressure EUR/USD trending lower with the 5, 10 and 21-day MAs in a bearish alignment Range trading likely ahead of US non-farm payrolls barring any surprisesGBPUSD Bias: Bearish below 1.36 Bullish above. Soft toward the base of a 1.3612-1.3630 range with only occasional interest CIPS/Markit PMI:Construction all activity - leads UK data - poll 54 Johnson to return to election agenda amid COVID-19/Brexit chaos Charts; momentum studies, 5, 10 & 21 daily moving averages conflict 21 day Bollinger bands slide - bias remains lower while 1.3681 21 DMA caps Sustained 1.3681 break would target a test of the falling 1.3921 upper Bolli Tuesday's 1.3599 NY low then 1.3586 Asian base are initial supportsUSDJPY Bias: Bullish above 109 Bearish below USD/JPY up a small leg, Asia 111.46-65 EBS, remains better bid Tokyo fix and Japanese investment demand still, especially on dips Offers eyed towards 112.00, above though - exporters, profit-takers Few large nearby option expiries today, tom 111.00-50 total $2 bln Higher US yields supportive, Treasury 10s up small leg too, @1.548% Nikkei off another 1% to @27,544, Kishida regime start not auspicious? Crosses steady, most buoyant, EUR/JPY 129.28-45, GBP/JPY 151.77-152.14AUDUSD Bias: Bearish below 0.75 Bullish above Dragged lower by slumping stocks and NZD weakness AUD/USD opened flat at 0.7290 as buoyant Wall Street offset higher US yields After trading at 0.7291 th AUD/USD started leaking lower Weak equities weighed, as E-minis eased 0.45% and AXJ index fell 0.65% NZD/USD fell despite a hawkish hike by the RBNZ and that too weighed on AUD AUD/USD fell to 0.7262 and is trading around 0.7265 into the afternoon Support is at a double-bottom at 0.7250 and break targets 0.7170 Resistance is at 0.7315/20 where the 55-day MA and daily tops converge AUD/USD will likely remain heavy while risk assets remain volatile

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/daily-market-outlook-october-6th-2021"
via IFTTT

Market Update – October 6 – Stocks Bounce led by tech, Yields and Oil hold at highs

  • USD (USDIndex 94.00) recovers key handle after 93.65 lows on Monday and 94.50 10-mth highs last week. Better than expected (61.1) ISM Services PMI data.
  • Yields moved higher (10yr closed 1.5290%) now at 1.569% in Asian trades – Yields very much “on notice” following RBNZ. (30-yr at 2.14%). China closed until tomorrow, no new Evergrande news, clock ticking.
  • Equities turnaround Tuesday, led by Tech (Nasdaq+1.25%; NFLX+5.21%) USA500 +45.0 (+1.05%) at 4345 (but remains weak) USA500.F lower 4311.  Asian equities mixed.  VIX closed at 21.45 – trades up 2% at 22.15 now.  
  • USOil holds record highs $78.95 amid supply bottlenecks and inventory drawdowns. EIA Weekly data later
  • Gold slips on higher yields down to $1752 from $1770 highs yesterday. 20-day MA $1765.   
  • FX markets USD bidEURUSD under 1.1600 significantly at 1.1580, Cable holds 1.3600, & USDJPY higher again at 111.75.

Overnight RBNZ increased intertest rates by 0.25% to 0.5%. NZD ticked higher but is now the weakest. German factory orders  -7.7% M/M (largest decline since April 2020); EST. -2.2%, last month +3.4%. Biden spoke with Xi to cool tensions over Taiwan, pushed additional $3.5tn infra budget on tour of mid-west and backed Powell as criticism grows.

European Open – The December 10-year Bund future is down 33 ticks, U.S. futures are also selling off and in cash markets the 10-year Treasury rate has lifted 4.4 bp to 1.569%, after the RBNZ’s rate hike cemented tapering fears ahead of key U.S. payroll numbers later in the week. Stock markets are concerned of stagflation scenarios and the risk that a reduction of monetary support will hit the global recovery and DAX and FTSE 100 futures are down -0.7%, with U.S. futures also in the red. In

Today – EZ Retail Sales, US ADP Employment Change, Oil Inventories,  Fed’s Bostic, US congress to vote on raising debt ceiling, UK PM Johnson speech.

Biggest FX Mover @ (06:30 GMT) NZDUSD (-0.53%) Initially reacted higher on interest rate rise, to 0.6980 zone only to reverse to 0.6920 now. Faster MAs aligned lower, MACD signal line & histogram trending lower and under 0 line, RSI 30.7 & testing OS zone. H1 ATR 0.0012, Daily ATR 0.0068.

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Stuart Cowell

Head Market Analyst

Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.



from HF Analysis /276332/
via IFTTT

Dollar Up, New Zealand Raises Interest Rates us



from Forex News https://www.investing.com/news/forex-news/dollar-up-new-zealand-raises-interest-rates-us-2635775
via IFTTT

Dollar firm ahead of payrolls; kiwi awaits RBNZ decision



from Forex News https://www.investing.com/news/economy/dollar-firm-ahead-of-payrolls-kiwi-awaits-rbnz-decision-2635721
via IFTTT

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Dollar Rally Faces 'Critical Resistance,' But Bulls Will Hold The Line



from Forex News https://www.investing.com/news/forex-news/dollar-rally-faces-critical-resistance-but-bulls-will-hold-the-line-2635541
via IFTTT

Oil market hold near 7-year high

The USOIL is trading just over the $78 per barrel, while UKOIL spiked to $82.70 both above the highs seen yesterday after OPEC and its allies confirmed that they will be sticking with previously agreed output increases, rather than extending production further in the light of global energy constraints. However that wasnt a suprise eventhough markets initially felt threatened by it! USOIL prices are at 7 year highs  while UKOIL at 3 year highs

Given the spike in natural gas prices ahead of the European winter, oil prices will likely also remain underpinned. In the meantime, China angst and stagflation concerns continue to linger, but there are fears that price jumps in wider energy markets will push up oil prices, while capping the recovery not just in the manufacturing sector. Central bank officials are doing their best to calm nerves, but investors remain jittery. OPEC+ will meet again on November 4 and some expect the allies to meet again beforehand to discuss demand.

Oil prices have already surged more than 50% this year, a rise that has added and could continue adding to inflationary pressures that oil-consuming nations such as the US and India are concerned will derail recovery from the pandemic.

USOIL’s recent bullish pressures have been exteded breaking the upper weekly Bollinger band 78.00 and upwards pressyre is keeping the outlook bullish.  The simple moving averages (SMAs) are extending northwards (20-, 50- and 200-day) endorsing medium term direction, with the overbought condition in the near term indicating a possible correction of the 2-month rally.

The daily MACD and RSI, are positively configured presenting the possible advent of further bulls, while the short term Stochastic is struggling to be sustaned into bullish territory, promoting a near term pullback. If upside defences keep sellers at bay, the price may pullback to test the previous resistance (converted into support band of 68.00-70.00).

Click here to access our Economic Calendar

Andria Pichidi 

Market Analyst

Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.



from HF Analysis /275978/
via IFTTT

ISM Data may Boost Chances for Hawkish NFP Outcome

FX price action on late Monday showed that investors still favour dollar despite recent gains, and the story of China defaults weighs on demand for risk. Among the G10 currencies, NZD has the largest growth potential due to anticipated RBNZ rate hike tomorrow and possible hint of another hike this year. Lagarde's comments are unlikely to move the EUR, and the British pound seems to have become less responsive to the risks related to the UK divorce from the EU.Yesterday, the US currency retreated on almost all fronts with the equities’ downside providing surprisingly little relief. The source of additional pressure on USD was OPEC+ decision to hike output by 400K b/d which was considered as a bullish outcome as recent energy shortages worldwide stirred market rumors of supply failing to catch up with demand growth. The rapid rise in oil prices was also perceived as a reflection of dwindling world reserves, to which OPEC+ could respond with a more aggressive increase in production and it might look perfectly reasonable move. The decision to modestly boost production pushed prices higher by more than 2% on Monday, limiting demand for risk assets somewhat amid heightened expectations that central banks will rush to tighten policy as commodity markets, especially energy, indicate more cost-push inflation is ahead.Demand for safe haven assets was also boosted by news that another Chinese developer, Fantasia, was unable to pay $205M on its bonds on Monday. The news was a warning that China's real estate problems could extend beyond Evergrande. China's high yield bond yields posted its biggest jump since 2013, indicating strong investor outflows. In general, the junk debt market in China has become, in a sense, a barometer of the situation associated with defaults, and now correlates with the demand for risk in foreign markets. This also implies that the risks of default by large companies in China is a highly supportive factor for the US currency. Monday USD decline proved to be short-lived with the index rebounding back to 94 handle on Tuesday with a short-term uptrend line staying largely intact:In terms of eco data, non-mfg. PMI from ISM could revive bullish USD momentum, as a positive reading will boost chances of a strong Payrolls report, which in turn will weigh on Fed confidence in its exit from stimulus programs. It is worth paying special attention to the hiring component of this index, since a large share of employment in the US works in the services sector, and dynamics of the sub-index may shed light on possible direction of surprise of the NFP report on Friday.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/ism-data-may-boost-chances-for-hawkish-nfp-outcome"
via IFTTT

The oil price is spiking higher – and there’s no reason to expect it to drop from here

Oil (as measured by WTI, the US benchmark) hit a seven-year high yesterday.

Brent crude oil (the European benchmark) meanwhile shot above $82 a barrel for the first time in three years. 

Why the surge? And what does it mean for investors?

Opec is too disciplined for the market’s liking...

Oil cartel Opec-plus (that is, the usual Opec lot plus Russia) had a big meeting yesterday. 

The oil price has been going up fairly strongly in the last year or so, but it’s been overshadowed somewhat by so many other commodities that it hasn’t really been drawing as much attention as it normally would. 

However, now that we’re knee-deep in an energy crisis, when winter in the northern hemisphere hasn’t even begun, people are starting to pay attention. 

Anyway, the oil cartel has been pretty disciplined in the post-Covid era. All the countries involved have been stung by collapsing oil prices and they’ve all been very wary of triggering another collapse. 

Yet with prices rising at a solid clip and most of these nations quite keen to make more money, analysts and markets generally had expected yesterday’s meeting to end with a plan to increase crude production more significantly than they had already proposed. 

But that’s not what we got. Instead, Opec said that it’ll stick to the current plan. That is, to only increase production by 400,000 barrels a day each month. That’s quite a gradual increase given that the global economy is opening back up again (in fits and starts). 

Opec’s timing is really quite clever as well. The UN climate change talks are in Glasgow next month. For the next couple of months, politicians in developed markets are going to be competing with each other on who can pump out the greenest rhetoric. That’s going to make it quite tricky to publicly chide Opec for being stingy with what is, after all, a horrible dirty fuel of the past that we should all be glad to see the back of. 

...and so are the US shale drillers

So what happens next? One assumption in the new era was that oil prices would be capped by US fracking. However, the problem there is that frackers have belatedly discovered price discipline. 

There are some who have political interests in painting this as a “Joe Biden” issue. I have no idea how true that is – it might well be – but having seen how poorly Americans understand Brexit, I’m not going to bet that my Brit-centric grasp of US politics is any better.

And it doesn’t matter anyway. Scott Sheffield of Pioneer Natural Resources (the biggest shale operator) argues that “everybody’s going to be disciplined, regardless of whether it’s $75 Brent, $80 Brent, or $100 Brent… I don’t think the world can rely much on US shale. It’s really under Opec control.” 

Shale companies are also having difficulty recruiting – particularly on the driver front (the shortage of truck drivers is global, despite what you may have read elsewhere). With operating costs rising they’re going to be even more wary about splashing the cash around. 

Of course, Sheffield has an interest in talking things up and, whatever he says, there’s an oil price at which that “discipline” would break. But I don’t think we’re there yet.  

So I can see oil prices continuing higher, particularly as the pressure increases on supplies of every other fossil fuel. 

We’ve been suggesting you own oil majors since around March last year, and I see no reason to change that view now. 

In the long run, are we going to move away from oil? Yes, of course. I hope so. If we don’t, it would suggest that humanity’s ability to innovate our way out of trouble really has reached some sort of peak.  

However, that’s not going to happen overnight and in the meantime, a combination of ESG-mania and an over-reaction to last year’s negative oil prices has left the sector looking relatively cheap. And there aren’t many things that look cheap these days (no, not even after a couple of down-days on the S&P 500).

We’ll be discussing the energy transition and the best way to play it at the MoneyWeek Wealth Summit on 25 November. That’s a conversation I’m really looking forward to, I must admit – I’m keen to hear what our panellists have to say about it all. Make sure you don’t miss it – get your tickets here.



from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://moneyweek.com/investments/share-prices/oil-price/603939/the-oil-price-is-spiking-higher
via IFTTT

Market Spotlight: EURAUD On Watch Here

EURAUD Threatens Downside BreakPrice action in EURAUD has piqued my interest here. The pair has essentially been grinding higher in a long, slow corrective channel over the year to date. However, the move has recently started to show signs of faltering following what looks to be false upside breakout. Price is now testing the channel low and big support at the 1.5876 level, a break of which will open the way for a test of the 1.55671 level initially. With the retail community holding a more than 70% long position, there is plenty of room for a downside move to gather pace, supported by bearish readings on both MACD and RSI.Key Data to WatchThe RBA meeting overnight saw the central bank staying on hold. However, with the bank basically looking to tighten as soon as the economy allows, there are upside risks for AUD on any strong Aussie data. Little in the way of key data for either economy this week so keep an eye on broader risk flows instead as well as any COVID updates.

from Tickmill Expert Blog - Forex Traders Blog https://www.tickmill.com/blog/market-spotlight-euraud-on-watch-here"
via IFTTT

Don’t count resources out

Commodities have performed poorly over the past year, but they tend to move in long and volatile cycles. from Moneyweek RSS Feed https://m...