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domenica 29 maggio 2011

Dr. Matteo Olivieri premiato per il suo nuovo saggio " Capitalismo e teoria liberale classica: una prospettiva cattolica".


Cosenza (Italy), 29 Maggio 2011

Venerdi 27 Maggio ho ricevuto il premio UGF Banca della Scuola di Liberalismo 2011 "Ludwig Von Mises" di Catanzaro per il mio ultimo saggio "Capitalismo e Teoria Liberale Classica: una prospettiva cattolica". Il mio scritto si è classificato al terzo posto.

Nel ricevere il premio, ho avuto la possibilità di rimarcare l'originalità del mio lavoro, che si va ad inserire nell'annosa questione se esiste una compatibilità di fondo tra pensiero cattolico e quello liberale classico. In particolare, col mio saggio individuo nella corretta comprensione del rapporto tra nominalismo e realismo il modo per risolvere la controversia tra le due scuole di pensiero, e propongo un nuovo approccio d'analisi, che si differenzia sia dalla tesi misesiana di assoluta incompatibilità dovuta al tentativo cattolico di imporre una determinata visione del mondo, sia dalla più recente tesi cattolica di compatibilità basata sulle teorie esposte dalla Scuola di Salamanca.

La mia principale conclusione è che - pur utilizzando lo stesso vocabolario - liberalismo classico e cattolicesimo sono incompatibili dal punto di vista teorico, ma il primo assume dei profili di irrazionalità  - non presenti nel secondo -  che contraddicono le sue stesse premesse iniziali.   

Di seguito alcuni scatti  del momento della premiazione.




Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

Previsioni settimana valutaria 29 Maggio - 3 Giugno 2011

Cosenza (Italy), 29 Maggio 2011
 
A mercati fermi, ecco le mie previsioni per la nuova settimana valutaria:
  1. Apprezzamento del Dollaro USA su Euro;
  2. Apprezzamento del Dollaro USA su Yen giapponese;
  3. Apprezzamento dell'Euro su Yen giapponese;
  4. Apprezzamento dell'Euro su Franco svizzero;
  5. Apprezzamento dell'Euro su Sterlina inglese;
  6. Apprezzamento del Franco svizzero su Dollaro USA;
  7. Apprezzamento della Sterlina inglese su Dollaro USA;
AGGIORNAMENTI
Lunedi 30 Maggio 2011: Ad oggi sono 5 le previsioni esatte su 7, sia su base quotidiana che settimanale (di seguito il grafico del tasso di cambio Euro/Dollaro USA in tempo reale).
  1. OK – OK
  2. OK – OK
  3. OK – OK
  4. OK – OK
  5. OK – OK
  6. NO – NO
  7. NO – NO
Martedi 31 Maggio 2011: Ad oggi sono 5 le previsioni esatte su 7 su base quotidiana, e 6 su 7 su base settimanale (di seguito il grafico del tasso di cambio Euro/Dollaro USA in tempo reale).
  1. NO – NO
  2. OK – OK
  3. OK – OK
  4. OK – OK
  5. OK – OK
  6. NO – OK
  7. OK – OK
Giovedi 2 Giugno 2011: Ad oggi sono 6  le previsioni esatte su 7 su base quotidiana, e 5 su 7 su base settimanale (di seguito il grafico del tasso di cambio Euro/Dollaro USA in tempo reale).
  1. NO – NO
  2. OK – OK
  3. OK – OK
  4. OK – OK
  5. OK – OK
  6. OK – OK
  7. OK – NO
Sabato 4 Giugno 2011: A conclusione di settimana sono 5  le previsioni esatte su 7 su base quotidiana, e 4 su 7 su base settimanale (di seguito il grafico del tasso di cambio Euro/Dollaro USA in tempo reale).
  1. NO – NO
  2. NO – NO
  3. OK – OK
  4. OK – OK
  5. OK – OK
  6. OK – OK
  7. OK – NO*
Chart

 
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

martedì 24 maggio 2011

Fine del QE: le prime conferme


Cosenza (Italy), 24 Maggio 2011
Dopo i numerosi articoli da me dedicati all'argomento "fine del QE", e le opinioni ancora molto discordanti sull'argomento, penso che ora stiano emergendo alcuni indizi concreti che rafforzano le affermazioni da me fatte. In particolare:
Betrachtet man die Finanzmärkte, so zeigt sich, dass seit Jahresbeginn die Break-even-Inflationsraten (BII), die die Renditedifferenz zwischen Nominalanleihe und inflationsgeschützten Anleihen (Linker) messen und daher die Inflationsraten indizieren, die die Märkte erwarten, deutlich gestiegen sind.
Allerdings hat sich der Tenor seit Anfang April deutlich gewandelt. Besonders für kurzlaufende Anleihen sind die BII deutlich gefallen, für die im September 2012 fällige italienische Staatsanleihe sogar um fast einen Prozentpunkt.
Die deutsche Inflationsfurcht zeigt sich allerdings auch hier: Tendenziell sind die BIIs für deutsche Linker seit Jahresanfang am stärksten gestiegen und seit Anfang April am wenigsten gefallen. Das lässt sich nur teilweise damit erklären, dass die für Deutschland prognostizierten Inflationsraten für 2011 und 2012 ein wenig höher liegen als für Italien und Frankreich.
“The market was pricing in a global growth story up until February, then it shifted into a supply-shock story and then within the last week or two it shifted back into a demand driven story,” Jeffrey Currie, head of commodity research at Goldman Sachs in London, said in an interview today. “This shift back to a demand-driven market, albeit weaker demand, is very significant. We are substantially more confident when the market is focused on demand growth.” [...] Two-year Treasury notes gained after the U.S. sold $35 billion of the securities. The two-year note yield slipped two basis points to 0.51 percent following the first of three Treasury auctions this week totaling $99 billion.
The securities drew a yield of 0.560 percent, compared with the average forecast of 0.562 percent in a Bloomberg News survey of nine of the 20 primary dealers obliged to participate in U.S. debt offerings. The bid-to-cover ratio, which gauges demand by comparing total bids with amount of securities offered, was 3.46, compared with 3.06 last month and an average of 3.38 at the past 10 sales.
  • Reuters 24/5 "Rally in oil drives up stocks; euro rebounds": nell'articolo si sostiene che il mercato è entrato in una fase di correzione che durerà per tutta l'estate. Si segnala inoltre che Goldman Sachs ha rivisto al rialzo per il 2012 il prezzo del petrolio brent a 140 Dollari al barile, adducendo come motivo una minore produzione di greggio da parte dell'OPEC.
Goldman Sachs, one of the most influential institutions in the global oil spot market, raised its 12-month price forecast for Brent crude to $130 a barrel from $107 and increased its end-2012 forecast to $140 a barrel from $120, citing global economic growth and tight OPEC spare capacity. U.S. crude and Brent futures jumped more than 2 percent on the news before paring gains on profit taking. U.S. crude oil was up 0.76 percent at $98.42 a barrel in afternoon trade, while Brent was 1.4 percent higher at $111.50. [...] "Markets are in consolidation mode. They're getting through negative concerns," said Karen Olney, head of thematic strategy at UBS. "You've got the end of QE2, China tightening and a lack of earnings news. Today is a bounce back from yesterday." Energy shares rose on Wall Street, but key stock indexes dipped on losses in technology and industrial shares. Concerns about the U.S. economic recovery were also haunting investors. "There isn't much for the market to get excited (about) at this point, especially going into summer months and the QE coming to an end soon," said Randy Frederick, director of trading and derivatives at the Schwab Center for Financial Research in Texas, Austin. The Federal Reserve's second round of quantitative easing, or QE2, which is set to end next month, has been credited with pumping vast amounts of liquidity into markets.
AGGIORNAMENTI

Mercoledi 25 Maggio 2011:
Un articolo che rappresenta un'eccezione a quanto normalmente si legge finora: il mercato azionario potrebbe avere in estate un rapido rialzo. L'articolo sembra sposare appieno le mie tesi: CNBC 24/5 "Stocks Likely to Face a Bumpy Ride Into Summer".
Stocks could have a rough ride into summer, as the Fed steps back from its quantitative easing program and the economy stumbles through a soft patch. Stocks Tuesday were barely changed after a volatile sell off Monday on concerns about Europe's sovereign debt crisis, a lingering worry that periodically rattles the markets. The S&P 500 [.SPX 1316.28 --- UNCH (0) ] is now down 3.5 percent for the month of May, and analysts expect the market to continue trading in a choppy fashion. They say stocks could move lower before heading much higher, but this is not the start of a steep correction.   "I think this is just going to be a very sloppy investing season, and one where you're not going to be rewarded for being early," said Jack Ablin, CIO of Harris Private Bank. Stocks and other risk assets have been locked in a trade where they move in tandem with the euro. [EUR=X 1.4037 -0.0063 (-0.45%) ] Risk assets benefited from the launch of the Fed's quantitative easing program, but have sold off in the last several weeks, ahead of the completion of the program at the end of June. "I do think we're in a cyclically sideways market which means you really do have to play this risk on, risk off trade," Ablin said. Brian Rauscher, chief portfolio strategist at Dahlman Rose and Co, said he expects a major correction at some point but does not believe this is the start of it. [...] Rauscher said if the market does sell off sharply, the chances of the Fed pursuing another quantitative easing program would rise dramatically. The Fed, in its latest program, is purchasing $600 billion in Treasury securities. "If the market can stay above 1300, the probability of QE3 is 10 percent," he said.
Giovedi 26 Maggio 2011: Ecco un altro articolo estremamente interessante, in cui si dice che il mercato azionario "ribassista" (bull market) può essere a breve al termine. Vedi The Street 25/5 "Bull Market in Stocks Is Ending: Strategists":
The bull market in stocks, which began two years and two months ago on the tail end of the deepest recession since the Great Depression, has handed investors gains of 80 percent. But, according to fund managers and analysts including Standard & Poor's Chief Technical Strategist Mark Arbeter and Capital Advisors Chief Executive Officer Keith Goddard, the end is nigh. Europe's tumultuous debt woes, Japan's recession, the end of the U.S. Federal Reserve's massive bond-buying program and peak profits among American companies signal a slowdown in the pace of equity gains that may, in a worst-case scenario, result in a decline of as much as 20%. Calling stock-market tops and bottoms is more art than science, though in a research note last week, S&P's Arbeter said stocks will fall 15% to 20%, perhaps more, with a slide extending into next year. His evidence: A breakdown in commodities, a potential intermediate- to longer-term bottom in the U.S. Dollar Index, lagging emerging markets and a rise in Treasury yields. All of which raise costs for U.S. businesses, crimping profits. "In our opinion, this reflects concerns about the economy, and many times, is a bearish omen for the overall stock market," Arbeter writes, noting recent outperformance in sectors like consumer staples, health care, telecom and utilities. Although Arbeter made his call through the prism of market technicals, other stock-market watchers agree with his bearish assessment. Nouriel Roubini, the economist who rang the warning bell ahead of the global financial crisis in 2008, recently said unemployment will continue to rise in the U.S. over the next year. Roubini has frequently warned of global economic woes, and he continues to see problems in Europe as a threat to a global recovery. The threats to the future of the bull market read like a laundry list of events set to occur at the end of days. Inflation from rising commodity, agriculture and materials costs is a major concern, as is the end of the Federal Reserve's purchase of $600 billion in U.S. Treasurys, known as QE2, which provided a massive boost of liquidity that helped to increase asset prices. There are several other concerns that aren't mentioned nearly as much as inflation and the end of the second round of quantitative easing. Fitch Ratings cut Greece's credit rating on Friday due to the risk of a sovereign default. Last year, the European Union and International Monetary Fund bailed out Greece, but even that rescue may not be enough to help the country manage its debt and deficit. Worry continues to mount over a potential debt restructuring.
Segnalo inoltre l'articolo Comdirect 25/5 "Devisen: Euro bewegt sich in Spanne Analysten erwarten Rückgang". in cui economisti dell'OECD ritengono imminente un deprezzamento dell'Euro nei confronti del Dollaro USA fino ad un livello di 1,35 (contro l'1,41 circa di questi giorni).
NEW YORK (dpa-AFX) - Der Euro hat sich am Mittwoch meist in einer Spanne zwischen 1,40 und 1,41 US-Dollar bewegt. Die anhaltende Schuldenkrise und die positive Wachstumsprognose der OECD haben von zwei Seiten auf die Gemeinschaftswährung eingewirkt.

Analysten zeigten sich derweil überzeugt, dass der Euro bereits in den kommenden Tagen unter seine wichtige Unterstützung bei etwa 1,40 Dollar fallen dürfte. Das ebne den Weg für Anschlussverkäufe, die die Währung bis auf 1,35 Dollar nach unten fallen lassen könnten. Verhindert werden könnte ein solches Szenario nur, so die Experten, wenn es den Politikern gelinge, mit glaubwürdigen Lösungen die Sorgen der Anleger vor einer möglichen Restrukturierung der griechischen Schulden zu lindern.
Im New Yorker Handel kostete die Gemeinschaftswährung zuletzt 1,4074 Dollar. Den Referenzkurs hatte die Europäische Zentralbank (EZB) zuvor auf 1,4069 (Dienstag: 1,4089) Dollar festgesetzt. Der Dollar kostete damit 0,7108 (0,7098) Euro. Zum Schweizer Franken wertete der Euro am Mittwoch weiter ab und fiel bei 1,2290 auf ein Rekordtief./rum/he
Venerdi 27 Maggio 2011: Un altro articolo in cui si sostiene che la pressione al deprezzamento del Dollaro USA potrebbe essere al termine: CNBC 26/5 "Why the Dollar's Blue Period May Be Ending"
A lot of downward pressure on the dollar is easing off. Here's why — and what you should do. Yes, today's GDP number was disappointing, and yes, so were the jobless claims. But increasingly, signs point to the end of dollar doldrums [.DXY 75.26 -0.28 (-0.38%) ] . First up, of course, is the end of QE2, which is finally within sight. All those low interest rates have been good for stocks, but they have been bruising the dollar, partly by boosting investors' appetite for riskier, and higher-yielding, currencies. "If this market perceives the end of QE2 as a risk-off event, that would probably have more of an effect than interest rates on the direction of the dollar going forward," says Alan Ruskin, global head of G10 FX strategy at Deutsche Bank. "The end of QE2 would be less of a headwind than the end of a tailwind for global risk appetite," and it would "demarcate a choppier risk and less USD negative environment." Big investors are also displaying less bearishness on the dollar. Data from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for the week ending May 17 shows a big drop in dollar short positions among hedge funds — down $8 billion to $25.5 billion. That pretty much has to help the currency. But wait — there is more. The effective federal funds rate, which determines the rate at which banks will lend to each other overnight, has been falling. There are various technical reasons behind the drop, but the result has been excess reserves at the Fed, which according to analysts at Barclays Capital, has put downward pressure on short-term interest rates — with predictable results for the dollar. "We think that the sharp fall in US short-term rates along with the FOMC's stubbornly dovish stance was behind the USD weakness in April," they wrote in a research note. Earlier this week, however, the Fed announced that it would allow government-supported entities like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to borrow Treasurys from the Fed when the time comes to withdraw cash from the financial system. Details are still being worked out, but the analysts at Barclays believe this could lead to higher fed funds rates — and thus less downward pressure on interest rates and the dollar. "Decreases in excess reserves at the Fed have tended to be associated with USD appreciation since late 2008," though somewhat less so in the past year, the Barclays analysts wrote. "The move in effective fed funds rate tends to lead the move in 3M US LIBOR, one of the key drivers of USD, according to our analysis." OK, Fed policy can be hard to follow. But the bottom line is simple: between QE2, hedge fund sentiment, and some technical changes in Fed policy, the downward pressure on the dollar is decidedly easing.
Mercoledi 1 Giugno 2011:
Interessante articolo CNBC 31/5 "Roubini Strategist: Positioning Yourself for a Possible Correction", in cui si parla di possibile correzione degli indici azionari. In particolare:
The stock market is at a "tipping point" of a correction as economic growth begins to slow, renown economist Nouriel Roubini recently told Bloomberg. A celebrated bear, Roubini is best known for predicting the financial crisis. Gina Sanchez, director of asset allocation at Roubini Economics, told CNBC on Tuesday that the markets had got excited about high profit margins because workers were getting laid off. It seems as though the layoffs are now coming to an end, though, so she's seeing the profit margins get squeezed. Her fair value on the S&P 500 is the 1,350 level while most strategist are looking for 1,400 to 1,450. Being as the market is trading off of macroeconomic news, she thinks expectations are going to have to be adjusted and the market could slide to the 1,300 level.
 Segnalo inoltre l'articolo CNBC 1/6 "Stock Headwinds Should Keep Investors on Defensive", in cui la fine del QE2 non (!) viene associata ad un impatto significativo sul corso dei titoli azionari. In particolare, le prospettive di crescita sarebbero un motivo più forte della enorme liquidità ancora in giro sui mercati.
The end of QE2 has been seen as many as the key catalyst for re-evaluating investment strategy over the coming months, but Secker believes lower growth will be the more important event. “The end of QE2 – we are firm believers that the economic growth outlook is a more significant determinant of equity direction than liquidity factors, but given current macro uncertainties we believe investors will be averse to re-risking ahead of the end of June when QE2 is due to expire” “If economic news flow has stabilized by then, we’d expect the ending of the QE2 program to have a minimal impact on stocks; however, if the growth outlook is continuing to weaken at that time equities could see a more significant drop,” said Secker.  
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

lunedì 23 maggio 2011

Borsa e Dollaro USA accumunati dalla stessa sorte?


Cosenza (Italy), 23 Maggio 2011

Il recente articolo CNBC 23/5 "Why Strong Dollar Hurts Stocks, and What You Can Do" segnala che la tendenza degli ultimi tempi sui mercati è caratterizzata da una correlazione inversa tra Dollaro USA e mercati azionari (leggi Dow Jones), e questa tendenza è destinata a rafforzarsi al completamento del programma di quantitative easing. Per questo motivo - continua l'articolo - le maggiori banche e gli altri intermediari finanziari starebbero consigliando ai propri clienti di riposizionare i propri portafogli verso una maggiore assunzione di richio. Di seguito, riporto un breve stralcio dell'articolo.
The dollar and stock market used to be close comrades, rising and falling together on the strength of the US economy. But those days are over. In their place has come an inverse relationship in which the greenback's weakness sends investors into risk assets like stocks, based largely on the notion that an export driven economy is the best we can hope for. With the subsequent grand scale monetary intervention from the Federal Reserve following the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009 still ruling the day, strong-dollar/weak stocks remains the trade of the day today and the dominant force in the market so far this month.
A ben guardare, mentre fino a pochi mesi fa il Dow Jones e il Dollaro USA sembravano positivamente correlati (cioè all'aumentare del Dollaro aumentava l'indice Dow Jones) da circa un mese a questa parte sembrano muoversi in maniera molto più simile anche se in maniera negativamente correlata, vale a dire che all'aumentare del primo diminuisce il secondo e viceversa (vedi grafico in basso: in azzurro il Dow Jones; in nero il tasso di cambio Euro/Dollaro).


A mio avviso, tuttavia, le conclusioni dell'articolo segnalato non sono condivisibili: infatti, non basta guardare solamente al fatto che esista correlazione negativa tra Dow Jones e Dollaro USA, ma occorre anche osservare che negli ultimi tempi i due si muovono in maniera praticamente simmetrica (mentre ciò non avveniva in passato). Questo può voler dire, a mio avviso, che la percentuale di contratti derivati scambiati sui mercati è aumentata considerevolmente. In questo caso, la diminuzione del Dow Jones non è motivabile col rafforzamento del Dollaro, ma piuttosto con la diminuzione del prezzo future di molte materie prime. Quest'ultimo aspetto, poi, è motivabile col fatto che molti investitori attendono una diminuzione futura del prezzo delle materie prime e quindi vendono a termine contratti future.
Da parte mia ho già segnalato nei miei post precedenti tale situazione, che nelle ultime settimane ha assunto una dimensione non più trascurabile. La mia conclusione pertanto è differente da quella proposta nell'articolo: a mio avviso, al termine del QE osserveremo sia un apprezzamento del Dollaro USA sia un aumento dell'indice Dow Jones.

AGGIORNAMENTI

Martedi 24 Maggio 2011: Ecco due articoli in cui si esprimono dei pareri molto diferenti dai miei: i mercati azionari subiranno una correzione nei prossimi mesi.
  • CNBC 23/5 "Stocks Choppy for Now, But Steep Correction Unlikely": "The latest wave of market turbulence could sweep stocks lower into the summer, but it's not likely to be the start of a deep correction, analysts say. [...] "I think this is just going to be a very sloppy investing season, and one where your not going to be rewarded for being early," said Jack Ablin, CIO of Harris Private Bank. "I do think we're in a cyclically sideways market which means you really do have to play this risk on, risk off trade," he said. Brian Rauscher, chief portfolio strategist at Dahlman Rose and Co, said he expects a major correction at some point but does not believe this is it. "Today there's some sellers and there's no buyers. The buyers right now have no reason to step up and be aggressively purchasing here. We're out of the earnings season and there is no catalyst. This market has been very resilient at these technical levels," he said. Andrew Burkly, director of equity research at Brown Brothers Harriman, expects the market to stay in its choppy, lower trend until July or August. "We're bracing ourselves for something we think is a typical 'sell in May' and go away. That's what we think we're in and we don't think it's over. It's not a bull-market-ending bear market," he said. Burkly said he made some portfolio changes and moved more heavily into defensive stocks, like heath care and consumer staples, while staying away from higher beta sectors. "Our overall thesis for the year has always been that the economic growth expectations got too far ahead of themselves," he said. Burkly said U.S. data has also been a big factor in the market's choppiness, and the 2011 GDP forecasts of economists have now slipped to a consensus 2.7 percent from 3.3 percent. "We think that's the trigger. All these growth forecasts are being pared back," he said. Burkly said he is watching the 1295 level on the S&P as the next big support area, and that the S&P could fall to his low forecast for the year of 1230 before rebounding".
  • CNBC 23/5 "Halftime: New Dynamic Gripping Market, Strangling Bulls?": "The Dow [.DJIA 12381.26 -130.78 (-1.05%) ] and S&P [.SPX 1317.37 --- UNCH (0) ] traded sharply lower on Monday with jitters about a summer swoon rippling across Wall Street. Unlike other market sell-offs, pro investors are starting to worry that this time stocks are not going to bounce off technical levels of support. "There are some signs that suggest the market is oversold in the near term (and could bounce), but I see a significance built into this decline. I wouldn't be surprised to see S&P down to 1,300, 1,280 levels," says James Dailey, portfolio manager at TEAM Asset Strategy Fund in a Reuters interview. CNBC’s Fast Money traders are equally concerned. Looking at fundamentals, Europe’s fiscal woes appear to be getting worse and there are more signs of weakness in BRIC nations. For example, new data released over the weekend showed China’s PMI hit a 10-month low. [...] “What’s exciting about the next couple months?” asks trader Steve Grasso. Ontop of Europe and China, he reminds we’ve got the end of QE2, the Japan quake aftermath and a volcano eruption that threatens to disrupt flights. ”What do investors have to get excited about?” he says. All told we’re looking at “a different dynamic in the market.” “Is not down as much the new up,” asks host Melissa Lee with a smile. Little did she know – the Fast traders are very worried that it is. [...] Trader Steve Cortes is equally bearish. He’s not only concerned by weakness in China but all the BRIC nations. “India [IFN 28.69 -0.50 (-1.71%) ] is down on the year and so is Brazil [EWZ 70.94 -0.99 (-1.38%) ] .” Cortes largely thinks the world is over-invested in emerging markets and under-invested in the US – due to the Fed’s QE2 program which triggered a significant decline in the dollar. Cortes thinks as QE2 draws to and end “the dollar [.DXY 75.98 -0.12 (-0.16%) ] gets off its back.” Although that should create a rotation out of emerging markets and into the US it won’t be enough of a catalyst to prevent the S&P from selling off. “We’ll simply go down slower than the rest of the world,” he says. And because of a stronger dollar Cortes is bearish oil as well as most commodities. “They're suspect here,” he says. And as far as Cortes is concerned so are commodity related stock such as Caterpillar [CAT 101.89 -2.44 (-2.34%) ] . Trader Steve Grasso seems to agree. He doesn't like the technical action. "We've seen stocks pop recently (off levels of support) but that's not happening on Monday," he says. "We're struggling at 1317, which was the intra-day low from May 17th." In other words former levels of support are not holding, typically a bearish sign. "(Again), there's a different dynamic in the market." Looking at single stock stores, the traders are watching Goldman Sachs [GS 135.84 0.85 (+0.63%) ] , which managed to dodge the broader sell off on Monday. What should you make of it? Trader Steve Cortes reveals that he's long. "Volatility in the market should be good news for Goldman. And currently it's under-owned," he says. Pete Najarian is watching unusual options action in Morgan Stanley [MS 23.69 -0.14 (-0.59%) ] . An increased volume in the June 26 / July 26 call spread suggest to Najarian, "going out to July (some investors think) financials could participate to the upside". 
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

domenica 22 maggio 2011

Previsioni settimana valutaria 22 - 27 Maggio 2011


Cosenza (Italy), 22 Maggio 2011

A mercati chiusi, ecco le mie previsioni per la settimana entrante.
  1. Apprezzamento dell'Euro su Dollaro USA (NB);
  2. Apprezzamento del Dollaro USA su Yen giapponese (NB);
  3. Apprezzamento del Dollaro USA su Franco svizzero;
  4. Apprezzamento del Dollaro USA su Sterlina inglese;
  5. Apprezzamento dello Yen giapponese su Euro (NB);
  6. Apprezzamento dell'Euro su Franco svizzero;
  7. Apprezzamento della Sterlina inglese su Euro.
PS: La notazione "NB" (nota bene) indica le maggiori possibilità di arbitraggi.

AGGIORNAMENTI

Lunedi 23 Maggio 2011: Inizio di settimana molto nervosa, ma positiva per le mie previsioni (5 su 7 su base sia quotidiana che settimanale). La Sterlina si apprezza nei confronti dell'Euro nella prima partedella giornata,per poi perdere le posizioni guadagnate a fine giornata.Male il cambio Euro/Dollaro, che risente di numerose notizie negative, tra cui la rinnovata crisi dell'Area Euro e la riduzione dellla prospettiva sul rating del debito pubblico italiano da parte dell'agenziaStandard&Poor's , WSJ 23/5 "Italy Shocked, Shocked by S&P Move": "Judging from the reaction from local media and financial executives, Standard & Poor’s decision late on Friday to revise Italy’s sovereign debt outlook from “stable” to “negative” went down like a plate of overcooked pasta. Never mind that S&P left the actual rating unchanged at A+. On Saturday morning, many Italian newspapers and websites were screaming about “Il Caso Italia”, the “Italian Case” — not, sadly, a sequel to the “Italian Job” but their shorthand for the concern and outrage at the credit rating agency’s decision to question the country’s fiscal and political stability (imagine that…).."
  1. NO - NO
  2. OK - OK
  3. OK - OK
  4. OK - OK
  5. OK - OK
  6. OK - OK
  7. NO* - NO*
Martedi 24 Maggio 2011: Dopo la giornata turbolenta di ieri, imercati sembrano tendere verso un riequilibrio. Ad oggi sono 4 le previsioni esatte su 7 subase quotidiana e 5 su 7 subase settimanale. L'Euro ha quasi recuperato tutte le perdite di ieri (vedi grafico)
  1. OK - NO
  2. OK - OK
  3. NO - OK
  4. NO - OK
  5. NO - OK
  6. OK - NO
  7. OK - OK
Chart
Giovedi 26 Maggio 2011: Giornata nervosa sui mercati valutari: molte delle posizioni finora guadagnate sono state nuovamente perdute. Eccellente la ripresa dell'Euro sul Dollaro USA, che in parte ritorna sopra i livelli di inizi settimana, ma poi chiude appena al di sotto. Nel complesso, sono 3 su 7 le previsioni avverate su base quotidiana, e 2 su 7 su base settimanale.
  1. OK - NO*
  2. NO* - NO*
  3. NO - NO
  4. NO - NO
  5. OK - OK
  6. NO - NO
  7. OK - OK
Sabato 28 Maggio 2011: Alla fine l'apprezzamento dell'Euro sul Dollaro c'è stato!!! Solo pochi giorni fa sembrava una sfida impossibile...ma, ancora una volta, LEAF lo aveva preannunciato! Peccato, invece, per le altre previsioni che non risultano avverate (ma la cosa deve far riflettere)...

Chart
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

giovedì 19 maggio 2011

Il Dollaro USA dopo il QE: apprezzamento o deprezzamento in vista?


Cosenza (Italy), 19 Maggio 2011

Nel bell'articolo del quotidiano tedesco FAZ 19/5 "Schwaches Wirtschaftswachstum - schwacher Dollar?", ci si chiede che la debole crescita economica significhi anche un Dollaro debole. La domanda, che potrebbe sembrare ovvia,  invece non lo è affatto, e molti economisti sono divisi sulla sorte del Dollaro USA da qui a qualche mese.

I grafici che vengono mostrati indicano una situazione molto complessa: da un lato, l'Euro che è chiaramente sopravvalutato rispetto al Dollaro in termini di Parità del Potere d'Acquisto (grafico 1), e i profitti aziendali che sono in crescita e seguono molto bene l'andamento degli indici azionari; dall'altro lato, la produzione industriale che è stagnante ai livelli del 2000 (grafico 3), e l'elevata disoccupazione anche rispetto ai valori del 2010.
(Fonte FAZ):
Vereinigte Staaten: Schwaches Wirtschaftswachstum - schwacher Dollar?

Vereinigte Staaten: Schwaches Wirtschaftswachstum - schwacher Dollar?

Vereinigte Staaten: Schwaches Wirtschaftswachstum - schwacher Dollar?

Vereinigte Staaten: Schwaches Wirtschaftswachstum - schwacher Dollar?

Insomma, quale sorte attende il Dollaro USA nei prossimi mesi? Il quotidiano tedesco propende - come me - per un apprezzamento. Il motivo è chiaro: le politiche monetarie e fiscali restrittive nei paesi emergenti, stanno già inducendo molti investitori statunitensi a rimpatriare i Dollari investiti all'estero, e ciò avrà un effetto al rafforzamento della valuta statunitense.
Denn ein schwaches amerikanisches Wachstum, die bremsende Wirkung der Sparmaßnahmen in vielen europäischen Staaten und nicht zuletzt auch die restriktiveren geld- und fiskalpolitischen Strategien in den Schwellenländern können Anleger zu Gewinnmitnahmen und zur Repatriierung ihrer Mittel führen. Da amerikanische Anleger riesige Beträge im Ausland und in den Rohstoffmärkten investiert haben, würden entsprechende Bestandsanpassungen den Dollar zumindest zyklisch eher auf- als abwerten lassen.
Interessante notare che questa posizione è esattamente contraria a quella sostenuta dalla banca d'investimento Goldman Sachs, la quale scommette su un deprezzamento del Dollaro.
Während professionelle Anleger in den vergangenen Wochen angesichts der andauernden Diskussionen über die Staatsschuldenkrise in Europa euroskeptisch wurden, geht die Investmentbank Goldman Sachs von einer deutlichen Abwertung des amerikanischen Dollars gegen den Euro aus.
A mio avviso, diventerà fondamentale a questo punto capire se la fine del QE coinciderà con un aumento immediato o differito dei tassi di interesse USA da parte della FED. Nei miei post dei mesi scorsi, citavo un intervallo di sei mesi nella curva dei rendimenti USA (c.d. "pianerottolo"), da Giugno 2011 a Gennaio 2012, in cui i tassi di interesse sarebbero stati fermi ma la quantità di moneta in circolazione sarebbe diminuita. All'epoca non capivo come tale processo potesse tuttavia prendere forma. Ora tutto m è molto più chiaro e, alla luce dei miei ultimi post, ritengo che quanto scrivevo allora ha ancora una sua validità.

Segnalo inoltre l'articolo CNBC 19/5 "US Economy Showing More Signs of Sluggish Growth", in cui la descrizione dello stato attuale dell'economia USA è - in verità - alquanto preoccupante.
Several key economic reports released Thursday showed more weakness in US growth, disappointing investors and cutting into stock gains. Factory activity in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region grew much more slowly than expected in May, a survey by the Philadephia Fed showed Thursday. Meanwhile, a gauge of future U.S. economic activity dropped for the first time in nearly a year in April, the Conference Board said. Other reports showed an unexpected decline in existing home sales for April, while jobless claims fell but showed the trend in employment remains weak. [...] The economy has been growing moderately and delivering some new jobs," said Conference Board Economist Ken Goldstein in a statement. "Economic growth will likely continue through the summer and fall, but the pace of economic activity may be choppy." Meanwhile, the index's March increase was revised up — to 0.7 percent from the previously reported 0.4 percent. The Conference Board's Coincident Economic Index rose 0.1 percent in April, following a 0.2 percent increase in March. Its Lagging Economic Index also rose in April, 0.5 percent, after increasing 0.3 percent in March.
AGGIORNAMENTI

Giovedi 19 Maggio 2011: Nell'articolo CNBC 19/5 "Fed's Fisher Says US Economy Has Too Much Liquidity", Richard Fisher, Presidente della Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, collega la recente diminuzione dei prezzi delle materie prime all'enormequantità di denaro disponibile sul mercato. 
The U.S. economy has moved from having too little liquidity to having more than enough, a top Federal Reserve policymaker said on Thursday. "We've gone from too little liquidity to too much," said Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. A steep retreat in oil prices suggests this liquidity and the speculative activity it generates — not just strong demand from emerging markets — are driving the market, Fisher said. "What the correction indicates to me is that there's a lot of liquidity out there," Fisher told reporters after a speech. That puts him at odds with other top Fed officials, who have argued that the Fed's ultra-loose monetary policy cannot be blamed for driving up commodity costs. Asked about the Fed's exit strategy, Fisher said investors should not prejudge the outcome based on minutes from the central bank's April meeting that hinted that many officials favor interest rate hikes rather than asset sales.
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

Dow Jones e fine del QE: "Eppur si muove!"


Cosenza (Italy), 19 Maggio 2011

Sono sempre più convinto che la fine del programma di Quantitative Easing della Federal Reserve coinciderà con un periodo di ripresa del mercato borsistico statunitense, e i miei ultimi post sono stati tutti incentrati a spiegare perchè ciò dovrebbe avvenire.
Ho anche mostrato come la crescita del Dow Jones possa essere collegato ad un aumento del Dollaro USA, probabile segnale che l'economia statunitense si stia davvero rafforzando e il denaro rientri in Borsa.

Nonostante lo scetticismo generale, mi pare che ora i primi articoli di stampa comincino ad emergere, a conferma delle mie idee. Eccoli elencati:
  • The New York Times 18/5 "Some See Rise Ahead for Dollar": nell'articolo si dice che scommettere contro il Dollaro USA potrebbe non essere più una scelta conveniente nei prossimi mesi.
[...] But betting against the dollar may no longer be such a safe play — not necessarily because of any sudden macroeconomic shifts but because of a sense that the long dollar sell-off may have finally gone too far. Since May 4, the dollar is up 4 percent against the euro and 2 percent against the pound, while rallying against the Romanian and Latvian currencies as well. The dollar’s bounce, though too brief to be called a trend, has not been driven by any noticeable improvement in America’s economic fundamentals. Indeed, the faint but real risk that Congress will fail to reach agreement on raising the legal ceiling on government borrowing only underscores the still parlous state of the American economy. At the same time, unemployment in the United States remains stubbornly high, at 9 percent. And there is a strong belief among big money investors that the Obama administration as well as the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, tacitly welcome a cheaper dollar to spur exports and encourage American manufacturers to hire more aggressively. “The U.S. economy is still facing headwinds — from weak housing to reductions in government spending,” said Ray Attrill, a currency strategist for BNP Paribas in New York. “For those reasons, we think the export sector is where policy makers are looking for growth.” But analysts also see another, more technical reason behind the dollar’s long decline — one that may well be ending. Ever since the global financial crisis began to ease in 2009, the appeal of investing in higher-yielding currencies and commodities all over the world has created what, in trader parlance, is called a risk-on, risk-off dynamic. Investors tend to sell their safer holdings, like United States Treasury bonds, when they feel more bullish. Because 90 percent of the world’s hedge funds are dollar-based, those changes in sentiment can have a depressing effect on the American currency. Reserve-rich central banks in emerging markets have also been selling dollars and buying euros to rebalance their reserve portfolios, said Mr. Attrill, citing recent data from the International Monetary Fund.
  • CNBC 13/5 "Market History Says Commodities Boom Ending Soon: Strategist": nell'articolo si cita il parere investitori specializzati che si dicono convinti che il prezzo delle materie prime sia destinato a diminuire durevolmente. Sempre nell'articolo si legge che il nuovo recente aumento del coefficiente di riserva bancario deciso dalle autorità Cinesi dovrebbe accelerare questo ribasso dei prezzi, essendo minore la moneta in circolazione.
While the dollar and oil may be trading in tandem Friday, a falling dollar did not play a big role in the commodity price boom these past 115 months, Darda said, pointing out that the dollar fell only 40 percent from its peak in 2001, while commodities soared 240 percent. Instead, the dominant force in commodity prices has been China, he said. In a Thursday research note, Darda said commodity prices are sliding because of a hike in reserve requirements for Chinese banks, which has slowed money growth and increased risk spreads in China. Another factor? A contracting balance sheet for the European Central Bank, he says. “Most observers think ‘it’s different this time’ for commodity prices,” Darda said. And while it may be, he cautions that, in the past, “’it’s different this time’ has proven to be a costly mantra.” This past week, the boom appeared to have stalled, as commodity prices plunged on fears of a slowing global economy and falling demand for gasoline, in turn triggered by hard-to-swallow prices at the gas pump. On Wednesday, U.S. light crude sank 5.5 percent, while silver futures tanked 7.7 percent. [...] While the dollar and oil may be trading in tandem Friday, a falling dollar did not play a big role in the commodity price boom these past 115 months, Darda said, pointing out that the dollar fell only 40 percent from its peak in 2001, while commodities soared 240 percent. Instead, the dominant force in commodity prices has been China, he said. In a Thursday research note, Darda said commodity prices are sliding because of a hike in reserve requirements for Chinese banks, which has slowed money growth and increased risk spreads in China. Another factor? A contracting balance sheet for the European Central Bank, he says.
  • CNBC 18/5 "Stocks AND Commodities Cheap Now?": nell'articolo, il giornalista si dice sorpreso di sentire dire da investitori, per la prima volta da settimane, che azioni e materie prime sono diventati un business attraente.
For the first time in two weeks, I'm hearing traders talk about stocks — and commodities — looking attractive. And why not? The S&P 500 is down almost 3 percent from the multiyear high it hit at the end of April. The CRB Index is down almost 10 percent this month. Other than cash, there are not many places to put money. Bond prices keep rising. People are buying 10-year Treasurys at 3.11 percent. You're kidding, right? While some are clearly anticipating that the sluggish economy will bring the markets down much further, others are not so sure. "Looks to me like some people are betting on QE3," one trader said to me this morning. "There is no chance they are going to allow a double dip."
Qui di seguito, il grafico del Dow Jones costantemente aggiornato, a 10 giorni e a 3 mesi.

Chart

Chart
AGGIORNAMENTI

Venerdi 20 Maggio 2011: Interessantissimo articolo Reuters 19/5 "End of QE2 to hurt stocks, bonds: Reuters poll", che la dice tutta sull'atmosfera di incertezza che regna intorno al tema "Fine del QE". Da un sondaggio condotto dalla Reuters, risulta che 40 su 64 investitori intervistati la pensano (quasi su tutto) come da me espresso nel mio articolo: prezzo dei bond governativi, euro e materie prime diminuiranno alla conclusione del programma di QE, mentre aumenteranno Dollaro e rendimento sui titoli obbligazionari. Gli intervistati si dicono convinti anche di una diminuzione dei mercati azionari, ma su questo punto le mie opinioni divergono.
Investors betting on a rise in stocks, bonds and commodities should prepare for a loud sucking sound in their portfolios next month when the Federal Reserve pulls the plug on its $600 billion stimulus program. Stocks, bonds, gold and the euro are expected to fall in the three months after the end of the Fed's second massive bond buying operation, also known as quantitative easing, or QE2, a Reuters poll of 64 analysts and fund managers found on Thursday. Investors and traders approach the end of QE2 with a sense of trepidation, worried that with the Fed no longer supporting the market, investments that have been profitable for the last nine months will plummet and rattle confidence in the shaky economic recovery. The survey showed investors overwhelmingly thought government bonds would suffer from the Fed's exit, with 40 of 64 respondents saying the end of quantitative easing would drive up yields on U.S. 10-year Treasury bonds. Although equities and commodities prices have already been declining in anticipation, the end of QE2 will likely leave markets more vulnerable to issues that investors overlooked as long as the Fed was printing money at a record pace. Concerns about the European debt crisis, the Chinese economic slowdown and the struggling U.S. jobs market, already gnawing away at investor confidence, may now take a big bite out of sentiment across a range of markets. "The psychological impact of QE2 is more important than the action itself," said Jason Pride, director of investment strategy at Glenmede in Philadelphia, with $19.8 billion under management. "QE2 is a statement that the Fed will act as a backstop," he added. Volatility is also poised to grow as declining global liquidity makes investors less willing to take on risk at any price. Out of 63 respondents, 36 said markets will become more volatile when QE2 ends. The dollar, on the other hand, should gain as the Fed stops lowering its value by printing money. Out of the 64 participants, 38 expect the greenback to strengthen versus the euro, while 14 see no impact. Still, the exchange rate between the two currencies will mostly depend on broader developments in the euro zone and the United States, both struggling to manage mountains of debt after the global financial crisis. 
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.

martedì 17 maggio 2011

Nuove considerazioni sulla fine del QE.

Cosenza (Italy), 17 Maggio 2011
Gli scenari che si prospettano da qui ad un mese, quando terminerà il programma di quantitative easing, non sono affatto chiari e, proprio in queste settimane, si ascoltano molte voci quasi sempre in disaccordo su ciò che ci attende.
Ieri, per esempio, è stato pubblicato il "NABE Outlook May 2011" (National Association of Business Economics), che prospetta un aumento dell'inflazione e del prezzo delle materie prime.
Summary: “NABE panelists revised their projections for economic growth in 2011 downward compared with their February projections,” said Richard Wobbekind, NABE president and associate dean, Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado. “Real GDP is expected to grow at a moderate pace of roughly 3 percent in the current year and only slightly faster in 2012. Factors supporting growth going forward include pent-up business and consumer demand, accommodative monetary policy, and growth in the rest of the world, especially Asia. The main factors restraining growth include high and rising commodity prices, uncertainty about future federal government economic policies, a tepid housing market, and financial headwinds. Panelists remain highly concerned about federal deficits and debt, and are increasingly concerned about rising commodity prices and inflation.”
Da parte mia ho già espresso un'opinione contraria: il prezzo delle materie prime è - a mio avviso - destinato a diminuire nel tempo in maniera durevole. La motivazione di ciò risiede nella proporzione tra prezzo dei futures e delle options attualmente scambiate sui mercati. Questo argomento, che solo una settimana fa sembrava un'idea bizzarra, sta rivelandosi ogni giorno pù vero e supportato da autorevoli commenti. Ecco quelli di giornata:
  • CNBC 16/5 "Dennis Gartman: 'Smartest People' Getting Out of Commodities": "He's first points to plans by Glencore, the world’s largest commodity house, to raise as much as $11 billion in an IPO scheduled to price this week. In case you're not familiar with Glenncore, headquartered in Switzerland, the firm produces, sources, processes, refines, transports, stores, and finances commodities all around the world, according to its website. “Glencore could have gone public almost anytime and it has chosen to go public right now,” says Gartman. “I think one has to be very careful being bullish of commodities when Glencore is cashing out. These are among the smartest people in the world.” "If Glencore is getting out, one should be somewhat suspect," Gartman adds".
  • CNBC 17/5 "Financial Repression Coming to America: El-Erian": "The co-CEO of the world’s largest bond fund has warned America that it faces a combination of higher inflation, austerity and financial repression over the coming years as policy makers grapple with the impact of the financial crisis and the subsequent policy response. [...] “Secular baseline portfolio positioning should minimize exposure to the negative impact of financial repression, hedge against higher inflation and currency depreciation and exploit the heightened differentiation in balance sheets and growth potentials,” El-Erian added".
  • Reuters 17/5 "Euro off 7-week low but still seen wobbly": "In addition, a trader for a Japanese brokerage house cited talk of yen-selling by Japanese investment trusts. The Australian dollar dipped after the minutes of the Reserve Bank of Australia's May policy meeting offered few fresh clues on exactly when the central bank may next raise interest rates. A senior trader for a Japanese trust bank said global macro hedge funds were detected unloading long positions in the Australian dollar after the minutes were released, but added that the market impact was limited as the minutes were largely in line with expectations. [...] Based on regression analysis of the euro/dollar and IMM currency speculators' long positions in the currency pair since September, the euro could fall to $1.33 if all speculator long positions are unwound, said Makoto Noji, senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities. [...] Positioning data published by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission shows that currency speculators trimmed their net long position in the euro in the week to May 10 but still held relatively large bets on the euro. Their net long position in the euro stood at 61,447 contracts. While that was down from a four-year high of 99,516 hit the week before, it is still among the largest net long positions seen since late 2007".
Lo scenario che si delinea da questi articoli è  - a mio avviso - chiaro (e conferma la direzione da me indicata): gli investitori stanno vendendo le loro vecchie posizioni (old business), e stanno acquistando a termine le nuove posizioni (new business).
Se questa ipotesi è vera, si potrebbe assistere ad un innalzamento della curva dei rendimenti sulle brevi scadenze (shift), ma non necessariamente portare a maggiore inflazione!
AGGIORNAMENTI
Martedi 17 Maggio 2011: Ecco che cosa (probabilmente) vuol dire un innalzamento della curva dei rendimenti sulle brevi scadenze...un articolo assai illuminante del Prof. Gregory Mankiw (Harvard) apparso oggi sul suo blog "Google Plays the Yield Curve": Google ha emesso un bond del valore di 3 miliardi di Dollari, anche se ha liquidità disponibile per 37 miliardi di Dollari.
La notizia, apparentemente paradossale, ha una spiegazione economica assai razionale: considerate le circostanze, è assai conveniente indebitarsi a lunga scadenza.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Google Plays the Yield Curve 

Click on graphic to enlarge.
I was fascinated a story in today's Wall Street Journal. Apparently, Google is sitting on $37 billion in cash, but nonetheless decided to sell $3 billion worth of bonds. Why? To take advantage of low interest rates.

It is like reverse maturity transformation. The banking system borrows short and lends long. Google is borrowing long and lending short. (Or maybe I should call it reverse quantitative easing, as Google is also doing exactly the opposite of what the Fed has been doing.)

Does this make sense for Google? I have no idea, and I am ready to concede that those guys are a lot smarter (and financially successful) than I am. But there is reason to be skeptical.

The chart above shows the spread between the ten-year Treasury bond and the three-month Treasury bill. The yield spread is now high by historical standards. The
empirical literature on the expectations theory of the term structure (in which I have sometimes played) suggests that this is a good time to borrow short and lend long--the opposite of what Google is doing.

Maybe this time is different, and past empirical regularities will not hold going forward. But ponder this question: If you had a friend with a paid-up house, would you suggest that he now take out a long-term mortgage in order to deposit the proceeds in a money-market fund? If not, does it make sense for Google to be doing much the same thing?
Al seguente link, invece, l'articolo del WSJ 17/5 "Cash-Rich Google Sells First Bonds", in cui si dice anche che molte altre aziende hanno già preso la stessa decisione di Google.
[...] Margie Patel, a senior portfolio manager at Wells Capital Management, said large technology companies are using debt offerings to "buy a very cheap, long-term insurance policy that gives them flexibility for whatever the economy throws at them, in case of acquisition opportunities, or if their cash flow changes down the road."
Until the Google deal, nearly $17 billion in debt had been issued in 17 deals in the tech sector so far this year, according to Thomson Reuters.
Cisco Systems Inc., Dell Inc., and International Business Machines Corp. were among other debt issuers this year in deals ranging from $1 billion to $4 billion.

Martedi 17 Maggio 2011: Un'altra voce fuori dal coro; la segnalo a conferma delle mie tesi. CNBC 17/5 "Stocks Will Move Higher After Correction: Stock Pickers":
Despite the correction, markets still look good, according to father-son duo Harry Clark, founder, president and CEO of Clark Capital Management, and Sean Clark, CIO of Clark Capital Management.  “There’s nothing wrong here and [stocks] look very good in our opinion,” Harry Clark told CNBC.  However, Harry Clark said the correction has been keeping investors from jumping into the markets, with only 35 percent of the public invested, compared to the typical 55 percent.  In the meantime, Sean Clark said the market is currently in a “rotational correction”. “We’ve seen volume on down days be heavier than volume on up days,” he noted, “and that’s a concern. That means we have more correction to the downside left until the market establishes its base and, I think, the market eventually moves higher.” 
Segnalo ancora l'articolo CNBC "Stocks Hit 1-Month Low, Oil Off on Recovery Fears", in cui si parla di "riassestamento" dei fondamentali economici. E' la prima volta che leggo un giudizio di tale rilevanza!
"World stocks as measured by MSCI were down 0.6 percent, with the index earlier hitting its lowest level since mid-April. [...] There's a reassessment of the fundamentals, and there's a perception that the current price is too high," said Christophe Barret, oil analyst at Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank. "With demand being affected by the high oil prices ... they have to correct."
Giovedi 19 Maggio 2011: Ecco altri tre emittenti famosi di obbligazioni negli ultimi 10 giorni, con alcune interessanti sorprese riguardanti il rapporto rischio/rendimento (vedi FAZ 19/5 "Große Anleihen für kleines Geld"):
Waren in jüngster Zeit Anleihemissionen größerer und etablierterer Emittenten durch hohe Mindestanlagesummen und Stückelungen zumeist institutionellen Investoren vorbehalten, so ändert sich das Bild zumindest in den vergangenen zehn Tagen. Gleich drei Emittenten bringen neue Anleihen in privatanlegerfreundlicher Stückelung von 1000 Euro auf den Markt. Legt man indes die Laufzeit als Zielgruppenkriterium zugrunde, so bleibt das Bild das gleiche: „Retail kauft nicht bei Laufzeiten über fünf Jahre“, heißt es im Banker-Deutsch, was so viel bedeutet, dass Privatanleger Anleihen mit Laufzeiten von mehr als 5 Jahren nicht gern ins Depot nehmen. Das Kriterium der fünfjährigen Laufzeit erfüllt mit Renault einmal mehr nur ein Autobauer. Dessen Anleihe im Volumen von 175 Millionen Euro ist mit einem Kupon von 4,75 Prozent ausgestattet. Ob das viel oder wenig ist, ist Ansichtssache. Denn Renault ist ein Grenzgänger. Während die Rating-Agentur Standard & Poor's (S&P) das Unternehmen mit „BBB-“ noch im Investment-Grad-Bereich einstuft, bestätigte der Wettbewerber Moody's erst im Februar abermals die Bonitätsnote von „Ba1“, mithin die beste im Bereich spekulativer Emissionen. [...] In einem ähnlichen Rating-Bereich bewegt sich der österreichische Baukonzern Strabag, der nur von S&P bewertet wird. Die Agentur stuft das Unternehmen ebenso wie Renault mit „BBB-“ noch als investmentwürdig ein. Strabag nutzt laut dem Vorstandsvorsitzenden Hans-Peter Haselsteiner das freundliche Umfeld für eine Emission im Volumen von 200 Millionen Euro. Schließlich wisse niemand, wann Griechenland zahlungsunfähig werde. Dabei hat der Strabag-Chef weniger das eigene Geschäft als den Kapitalmarkt im Auge. [...] Strabags neue siebenjährige Anleihe mit einem Kupon von 4,75 Prozent rentiert derzeit mit 4,845 Prozent, was knapp oberhalb dessen liegt, was andere Industrie-Anleihen in diesem Rating-Bereich derzeit bieten. Renault übertrifft das Marktmittel mit einer Rendite von 4,77 Prozent immerhin um etwa 50 Basispunkte - wenn man nicht auf Unternehmen aus Südeuropa setzt. Eine Anleihe der Hellas Telekom (OTE) bringt derzeit 8,35 Prozent, Fiat 5,98 Prozent. Beide Anleihen aber haben hohe Mindestanlagesummen. [...] Vom Rating her betrachtet deutlich solider ist ist die neueste Anleihe des Spezialisten für Befestigungstechnik wie Schrauben oder Dübel, der Adolf Würth GmbH & Co. KG. Die Emission im Volumen von 500 Millionen Euro mit einem Kupon von 3,75 Prozent und einer siebenjährigen Laufzeit wird von S&P mit der Note“A“, von Fitch mit „A-“ bewertet.
Matteo Olivieri
>> Le informazioni qui contenute non (!) costituiscono sollecitazioni ad investire.