Friday, July 11, 2014

The Polar Vortex Is Back In The Middle Of July.

While every single economist and "straight to CNBC" pundit was quick to blast the atrocious economic performance in Q1 as solely due to the "harsh weather", what has emerged in various retail earnings reports so far in Q2 is that, drumroll, they lied. In fact, as one after another "stunned" retailer admits, the depressed spending observed during Q1 continued, if not deteriorated even further, in the second quarter. Which means only one thing, the same thing we said back in January: as a result of Obamacare, the declining credit impulse resulting from the Fed's tapering, and a ongoing contraction in global trade as the world slides back into recession, the US economy is on the verge of stalling and may well enter into a tailspin if one or more exogenous events take place in a centrally-planned world that is priced to perfection.
To be sure, one of the potential scapegoats we highlighted previously was the replacement of the polar vortex with what we dubbed the "solar vortex", ala El Nino, which as we further reported, has already been blamed in advance by the Bank of Japan for a spending collapse set to take place in the second half of 2014, the year when the Japanese economy now almost certainly re-enters recession.
But just to make sure that the abysmal Q1 GDP which has now spilled over into Q2 and will likely see the US economy growing in the mid-2% range, has a sufficiently broad "excuse" in the third quarter of the year, here comes - in the middle of July - the polar vortex 2.0.  As WaPo reports, "However you choose to refer to the looming weather pattern, unseasonably chilly air is headed for parts of the northern and northeastern U.S at the height of summer early next week."
(WeatherBell.com, adapted by CWG)
Bearing a haunting resemblance to January’s brutally cold weather pattern, a deep pool of cool air from the Gulf of Alaska will plunge into the Great Lakes early next week and then ooze towards the East Coast.
6-10 day outlook from National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center
The atmospheric impact will not be nearly as dramatic, but still temperatures are forecast to be roughly 10 to as much as 30 degrees below average.
Temperature anomalies (or difference from normal) Tuesday midday from European model (WeatherBell.com)
This means that in parts of the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest getting dealt the chilliest air, highs in this region could well get stuck in the 50s and 60s – especially where there is considerable cloud cover.
GFS model forecast highs Tuesday (WeatherBell.com)

And focusing on next week specifically, "Wednesday morning’s lows may drop into the  40s over a large part of the central U.S."
 GFS model forecast lows Wednesday morning (WeatherBell.com)

Highs may struggle to reach 80 in D.C. next Tuesday and Wednesday with widespread lows in the 50s (even 40s in the mountains).
GFS model 7-day forecast (WeatherBell.com)
More from WaPo:
What’s behind this unusual winter weather pattern primed for the dog days of summer?  A lot of it is simply chance (randomness), but Weather Underground’s meteorologist Jeff Masters says Japan’s typhoon Neoguri is playing a role in the pattern’s evolving configuration:
….the large and powerful nature of this storm has set in motion a chain-reaction set of events that will dramatically alter the path of the jet stream and affect weather patterns across the entire Northern Hemisphere next week. Neoguri will cause an acceleration of the North Pacific jet stream, causing a large amount of warm, moist tropical air to push over the North Pacific. This will amplify a trough low pressure over Alaska, causing a ripple effect in the jet stream over western North America, where a strong ridge of high pressure will develop, and over the Midwestern U.S., where a strong trough of low pressure will form.
What amazes me most about the pattern is not so much the forecast temperatures, but the uncanny similarities in the weather patterns over North America seen in both the heart of winter and heart of summer. All of the same features (refer to the map at the top of this post)  apparent in January are on the map in mid-July: low pressure over the Aleutians (blue shading), a large hot ridge (yellow and red shading) over the western U.S., the huge cold low or vortex over the Great Lakes (blue and green shading), and then the ridge over northeast Canada (yellow and red shading).

It’s not at all clear what this means or what, if anything, it portends.  Weather patterns cycling through a certain circulation regime can repeat (and we’ve seen this pattern multiple times since November-December), but with El Nino forecast to develop, the global configuration of weather systems is likely to change.
So the question is: just how profound of an adverse impact on Q3 GDP (because remember: weather anomalies are never additive to GDP; only wars can do that in a Keynesian world) will the second, summertime coming of polar vortex have on the US economy? Judging by the laughable farce that the economic profession has devolved to, desperately seeking to "explain away" any deviation from a priced to perfection growth rate, if only that of the Fed's balance sheet, not to mention why its forecasts are always wrong we are likely to find out very soon.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Gold Spikes, Bonds & Stocks Surge Despite Fed Warning Over Complacency

As usual the initial knee-jerk reaction (in this case lower in stock prices and higher in bond yields) has been faded rapidly and despite Fed warnings over investor complacency (and real economic uncertainty not being priced in), investors are buying bonds and stocks with both hands and feet (for now)... Gold is spiking higher as the USD drops.
Gold is spiking
Gold Spikes, Bonds & Stocks Surge Despite Fed Warning Over Complacency

As Bonds, stocks, and the USD revert
Gold Spikes, Bonds & Stocks Surge Despite Fed Warning Over Complacency

How long can this last?
Gold Spikes, Bonds & Stocks Surge Despite Fed Warning Over Complacency

Charts: Bloomberg

Dubai Gold Exchange to relist Indian Rupee options contract on July 18

Dubai Gold Exchange to relist Indian Rupee options contract on July 18
Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) has announced the re-listing of its Indian Rupee Options contract. The contract, which was temporarily suspended in 2013 to facilitate migration to a new trading infrastructure, will restart trading on July 18.

DGCX's new advanced trading infrastructure, built in partnership with leading global financial technology provider Cinnober, will support trading in the options contract. The new EOS platform provides the Exchange the ability to support high volumes in innovative products such as Indian Rupee options.

Gary Anderson, CEO of Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange said: "The re-listing of the Indian Rupee options contract further widens opportunities to trade Emerging Market contracts on the Exchange. The contract will build on the success of DGCX's Indian product offering, which has seen significant growth in trading over the past year. This year, the DGCX Indian Rupee futures contract increased its share of the total value of Indian Rupee futures traded globally to 40%.

The EOS platform, will support the introduction of a range of innovative contracts including the upcoming spot gold contract, as well as new emerging market, equity and agricultural products.

DGCX is the only exchange outside India to offer trading in both futures and options in the Indian Rupee. Rupee options contracts launched by Indian exchanges have proven to be highly successful, which augurs well for the success of the DGCX Rupee options contract.

Each DGCX Indian Rupee Options contract represents one Indian Rupee Futures contract of 2 million Rupees. Prices are quoted in US Cents per 100 Indian Rupees, with a minimum premium fluctuation of 0.000001 US Dollars per Rupee ($2 per contract). The Indian Rupee Options contract can be traded Monday through Friday from 7.00 AM to 11.30 PM UAE time.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Rakesh Jhunjhunwala buys 2% stake in MCX; FTIL cuts stake to 24%

Billionaire investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala has bought a 1.96% stake in India's largest and only listed commodity bourse Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) from its promoter Financial Technologies(FTIL) in a block deal for Rs 66 crore.


The deal values the exchange at around Rs 3,370 crore. After Tuesday's transaction on the NSE - involving 10 lakh shares having been transferred to Jhunjhunwala at Rs 664 apiece - FTIL's stake in the bourse has declined to 24%.


Jhunjhunwala, said market analysts, made a good buy by having added a company that was the leader in the commodity futures market comprising five national level and 15 regional bourses. The 'Big Bull's' purchase energised the MCX share, which rose 4.2% to hit a year's closing high of Rs 679.7 on Tuesday.


Rakesh Jhunjhunwala buys 2% stake in MCX; FTIL cuts stake to 24%Some 13.03 lakh shares changed hands against the 2-week average of 4.06 lakh shares. MCX enjoys over 80% market share among commodity futures exchanges, which posted a combined turnover of Rs 101.4 lakh crore in FY14. Jhunjhunwala owns stakes in over 40 listed companies such as Crisil, Lupin, Titan Industries, Escorts, DB Realty, VIP Industries, Rallis Indiaand Viceroy Hotels.



The total market value of his portfolio was around Rs 6,700 crore on Tuesday, ETIG database shows. His purchase of a stake in MCX comes at a time when its founder and promoter FTIL has been declared unfit to hold shares in the bourse because of its alleged role in a Rs 5,600-crore scam at its subsidiary National Spot Exchange Ltd (NSEL). FTIL has challenged the regulatory order having declared it not fit and proper in the Bombay High Court.

Months ago, it began a divestment process of 24% of 26% of its stake in MCX without prejudice to its legal rights. The Kotak Group, Reliance Capital and BSE, among others, put in non-binding bids for buying FTIL's stake, but no final offer was reportedly made.

Amid myriad changes post the scam last July, MCX received shareholder approval to amend its articles of association that give it the power to transfer an unfit shareholder's stake into an escrow account and sell the same on its behalf if such a stakeholder fails to reduce its equity. 

Alcoa sees bigger aluminum deficit on China cutbacks

Alcoa sees bigger aluminum deficit on China cutbacks
Alcoa Inc has increased its estimate for the global aluminum market deficit this year due to capacity cuts in China, the world's No. 1 producer, a senior executive said on Tuesday in a conference call to discuss second-quarter earnings.
The U.S. aluminum producer expects demand to outpace supply by 930,000 tonnes this year, up from its previous estimate of 730,000 tonnes, William Oplinger, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, said.
The forecast would not include the more than 5 million tonnes stored in London Metal Exchange-registered warehouses and a similar tonnage of off-market inventory estimated to be held outside of the LME network.
Those stockpiles have cast a long shadow over the global primary aluminum market, pressuring exchange prices to levels close to or below breakeven for many big smelters in recent years.
Oversupply in alumina, a key raw material for making aluminum, will fall to an estimated 800,000 tonnes from 2.2 million tonnes expected previously due to lower output from India and higher imports from China, he said.

Indonesia and Freeport sign a MoU over copper exports

Indonesia and Freeport sign a MoU over copper exports
Talks to resolve the mineral export tax disputes ended in a MoU between Indonesia and US miner Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold.
As soon as, the shares in the company increased to a new 52-week high and during Monday the share was trading at US$38.74 in New York. The agreement is taken as the major step in the Arizona based firm quest for restarting the copper exports from the country. Relating the exports, Indonesia has imposed new regulations on Jan 12 and introduced a progressive tax on concentrates.
Chairul Tanjung, Indonesia’s chief economic minister told that they were happy and expected that it would be finalized with a MoU. The draft MoU steel requires the approval of both the cabinet and outgoing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Not only Freeport, but its fellow miner Newmont Mining was also battled against the new export rules.
Last week, Newmont’s Indonesian unit filed for international arbitration as it failed to resolve the disputes. Due to the disputes, the company already declared force majeure last month at its Batu Hijau copper mine
Both Newmont and Freeport have previously disputed they should be excluded from the tax, which starts at 25% and will increase to 60% in the second half of 2016. Freeport and Newmont contributes 97 pct of Indonesia’s copper output 

Zinc Prices Rises to 35-Month High as Inventories Shrink.

Zinc Prices Rises to 35-Month High as Inventories Shrink.
Zinc prices rose to a 35-month high as inventories dwindled amid speculation that increasing auto sales in China and the U.S. will boost metal use.
Zinc stockpiles monitored by the London Metal Exchange have dropped 29 percent this year to the lowest since December 2010. Auto sales in China climbed 14 percent in June, an industry group said yesterday. In the U.S., new-vehicle demand surged in May and June, Bloomberg Industries said.
“Demand, particularly in the U.S., probably picked up,” Patricia Mohr, a commodity market specialist at Scotiabank Group in Toronto, said in a telephone interview. “We’re seeing a bit of a recovery in industrial production in the U.S., largely linked to strong auto production. It’s probably reasonably good in China as well.”
Zinc for delivery in three months gained 0.8 percent to settle at $2,282 a metric ton at 5:50 p.m. on the LME. Earlier, the price reached $2,318.50, the highest since Aug. 5, 2011.
The International Zinc Association says the metal is used to coat medium-gauge steel sheet used in auto-body panels. The price has gained 21 percent in the past 12 months.
Zinc, copper and lead markets already face supply deficits while nickel and aluminum are heading for shortfalls, Morgan Stanley said in a report dated today. Zinc is poised for “continued outperformance as the deficit intensifies and global auto sector strength drives demand,” the bank said.
Copper rose 0.1 percent to $7,130 a metric ton ($3.23 a pound) in London. Earlier, the price reached $7,212, the highest since Feb. 19.
The discount for a grade of scrap containing 99 percent of copper narrowed to as low as 4 cents a pound, the smallest in two years, from 8 cents in April as demand increased, Bryan Rosenstrauch, the president of Comm Trade USA Inc., a brokerage in Houston, said yesterday.
On the Comex in New York, copper futures for September delivery fell 0.1 percent to $3.257 a pound. The price climbed 5.1 percent in the past 12 months.
Nickel, lead and aluminum gained in London. Tin dropped.