Macro Extremes (week ending April 5, 2024)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities.

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean.

Extremes “above” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations

U.S. 10 year yield minus German 10 year yield

U.S. 10 year yield 

Aluminium

Bloomberg Commodity Index

WTI Crude Oil

Copper

S&P GSCI 

Brent Crude Oil

Silver in USD

AUD/JPY

AUD/THB

USD/IDR

USD/SEK

USD/PHP

USD/BRL

MXN/USD

COP/USD

And Britain’s FTSE 100 Index

Overbought (RSI > 70)

Russian 10 year bond yield 

Cocoa

Coffee (Robusta)

AEX

KBW Bank Index

Budapest

DAX

Pakistan’s KSE

Italy’s MIB

Nifty 50

TAIEX

Toronto’s TSX

BIST 100

And the S&P 500 Index

The Overbought Quinella – Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean)

Coffee (Arabica)

Biodiesel

CRB Index

Silver in AUD

Gold in AUD, CAD, CHF, EUR, GBP, USD and ZAR

Extremes “below” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations)

Australia 10 year yield minus U.S. 10 year yield

North European Hot Rolled Coil Steel (HRC)

Lumber 

Oats

Rice

CHF/AUD

Oversold (RSI < 30)

Chinese 10 year government bond yields

Lithium Hydroxide

Iron Ore

Shanghai Rebar

The Oversold Quinella – Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean)

Australian Coking Coal

Chinese Coking Coal 

Notes & Ideas:

For the week, government bond yields rose.

While Chinese and Russian 10 year yields appearing either end of their pendulums, many yields are showing signs of breaking north of their recent sideways pattern.

The Japanese 2’s are amongst the nearest other bond yield to approach an extreme.

And we see some yield spreads appear in this week’s list.

Equities mainly fell for the week, across the world.

Regular readers wouldn’t be surprised about this weeks declines, considering the implied probability that rises when we saw the the long list of overbought equity indices appearing over the past few weeks editions.

The following equity indices dropped out of overbought territory;

KBW Bank Index, CAC 30, IBEX, Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq Composite, S&P MidCap 400, Vietnam,  Nasdaq Transports & the Philadelphia SOX and the Nikkei 225.

The latter fell 3.4% of the week.

Oslo is in a 6 week winning streak, while Mexico’s main index has put together 4 weeks of consecutive higher prices. 

Toronto’s TSX extends its winning streak to 8 weeks.

The DAX broke 8 week winning streak and Italy’s MIB broke its 9 week rising run. Both these indices joined the Nasdaq 100, SMI, ASX 200 and SOX in performing an bearish outside reversal week. 

Commodities were generally higher and it is where most of the week’s action was.

The major commodity indices have returned to overbought status, mainly driven by the energy and the industrial and precious metals.

Gold prices across various currencies remains overbought, with their weekly performances listed below.

Renewed media noise about the rise in oil and copper prices coincides with them trading at overbought extremes.

Coffee prices were there largest gainers for the week. Arabica played catch up to Robusta Coffee, the latter having risen 22% over the past 6 weeks.

Prices related to steel production such as coking coal, iron ore, rebar, are all in oversold territory.

The “coking coals” have fallen for 7 straight weeks, with Australian Coking Coal prices falling 32% over that time.

The Baltic Dry Index has slumped 35% over the past 3 weeks.

While U.S. Midwest Hot Rolled Coil Steel is approaching oversold territory, the North European price did so, this past week.

Crude Oil, Copper, Tin and Silver moved out of overbought territory.

Rice has fallen for 6 consecutive weeks and its price has declined 15% over that time.

Oats are oversold and have produced a 35% decline from their overbought extreme seen in August 2023.

Cocoa has been overbought for 24 weeks.

Aluminium has risen for 6 straight weeks.

And Lithium Hydroxide has now spent 39 consecutive weeks in weekly oversold territory.

Currencies saw a bit more activity this week, with a few more currencies return to the ‘extremes’ list.

The AUD rose.

The CAD was weaker as was the Yen. 

The Euro was mainly firmer, reversing last week’s weakness.

The British Pound was mixed for the week.

The USD was also mixed as we see it exhibit ‘extreme’ strength versus the  Indian Rupee, Swedish Krona, Philippine Peso and Brazilian Real yet it is trading at ‘extreme’ weakness against the Colombian and Mexican Peso’s.

In fact, the USD has risen for 5 straight weeks against the BRL.

And the Kiwi has declined for 6 consecutive weeks versus the Aussie.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of;

Aluminium 4.9%, Bloomberg Commodity Index 3.4%, WTI Crude 4.5%, Lean Hogs 3.1%, Copper 5.7%, Heating Oil 5.7%, Coffee 12.5%, Nickel 6.4%, Platinum 2.1%, Gasoline 2.5%, Biodiesel 5%, Robusta Coffee 8.3%, Raw Sugar 2.2%, S&P GSCI 3.3%, CRB Index 2.5%, Brent Crude Oil 4.5%, Gasoil 6.5%, Silver in AUD 9.1%, Silver in USD 10.1%, Gold in AUD 3.3%, Gold in CAD 4.7%, Gold in CHF 4.4%, Gold in EUR 3.9%, Gold in GBP 4.2%, Gold in USD 4.3%, Budapest 1.8%, Egypt 3.4%, MOEX 1.9%, Oslo 1.8% and Turkiye’s BIST 100 climbed 5.2%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included;

Australian Coking Coal (7.7%), Baltic Dry Index (10.6%), Cocoa in London (3.4%), China Coking Coal (3.6%), Cotton (5.6%), North Europe HRC (3.7%), Lumber (2.4%), Cattle (3.7%), JKM LNG in Yen (2%), Lithium (9%), Newcastle Coal (2.1%), Palladium (1.4%), Sugar (2.3%), Dutch TTF Gas (2.7%), Urea U.S. Gulf (2%), Corn (1.8%), Oats (7.2%), All World Developed ex-USA (1.3%), KBW Banking Index (2.8%), CAC (1.8%), DAX (1.7%), DJ Industrials (2.2%), DJ Transports (1.8%), MIB (2.1%), IBEX (1.4%), Indonesia (2.6%), S&P SmallCap 600 (2.6%), Russell 2000 (2.8%), KRE Banking Index (4.1%), S&P MidCap 400 (1.9%), Nasdaq Biotech (3.5%), Nasdaq 100 (0.8%), Nikkei 225 (3.4%), Phillipines PSE (2.3%), SMI (2%), SOX (1.8%), Chile (2%), S&P 500 (1%), Nasdaq Transports (1.6%), Vietnam (2.3%), ASX Small Caps (1.7%) and the ASX 200 fell 1.6%.

April 7, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

The U.K.’s FTSE 100 is…..

The #FTSE 100 is trading at what I’d call one of my ‘overbought extremes’.

Despite not being ‘stretched’ across all my measures, the lack of strength in its current upward trend suggests that its overbought state arrives with more significance.

The FTSE 250 is a different story.

April 7, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

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Do forced buyers find bargains?

Private Equity is about to become a forced buyer.

Private Equity Buyout Funds need to use its cash hoard (26% of the $1.2 trillion held is considered aged) or perhaps lose it.

You don’t earn any fees if you hand money back to investors.

But seldom do forced buyers find bargains.

And then let’s add some leverage (interest rates are 4 times higher than 2 years ago)……..then achieving an adequate return from ‘Private Equity’ may be stressed and ambitious, at the very least.

April 3, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

Karri Asset Advisors

rob@karriasset.com.au

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Tesla’s entry point

How about buying #Tesla stock at $114.50 or $82?

That would be nice.

I’ll wait and watch but that might be a stretch.

Perhaps $146.60 is the interim entry point?

#TSLA is currently $166.63

April 3, 2024

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Reducing weighting to Spanish equities

We are starting to reduce allocation to Spanish equities.

Our various measures tell us that #Spain‘s #IBEX index at 11,075 points is “full” and approaching the latter part of its advance and so probability suggests that the ‘fat part of the trade’ has been seen.

Hemos visto la parte suficiente del comercio.

April 2, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

Karri Asset Advisors

rob@karriasset.com.au

#Espana

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Macro Extremes (week ending March 29, 2024)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities.

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean.

Extremes “above” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations

CRB Index

AUD/THB

MXN/USD

Overbought (RSI > 70)

Biodiesel

Robusta Coffee 

AEX

KBW Bank Index

Budapest

CAC 30

DAX

Dow Jones Industrial Average

Italy’s MIB

Nasdaq Composite

S&P MidCap 400

Nikkei 225

Philadelphia SOX

TAIEX

Nasdaq Transports

Toronto’s TSX

FTSE 100

Vietnam

And the S&P 500 Index

The Overbought Quinella – Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean)

Russian 10 year bond yield 

Gold in USD, AUD, CAD, EUR, GBP & CHF

Cocoa

IBEX

Extremes “below” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations)

CHF/AUD

Oversold (RSI < 30)

Chinese 10 year government bond yields

Lithium Hydroxide

Rice

The Oversold Quinella – Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean)

Australian Coking Coal

Chinese Coking Coal 

Iron Ore

Shanghai Rebar

Notes & Ideas:

For the week, government bond yields were mixed with a light bias towards weakness.

The Japanese 2’s and 5’s yield took a break from rising with the latter ending its 7 week winning streak.

Over the past several weeks, yields remain mostly in sideways travel.

Russian 10 year yields broke their 8 consecutive weeks of increases.

And there may be a change in trend for the U.S. 3 month bills.

Equities were higher, again.

Other than movers listed below, many indices remained subdued for the week.

The KBW Banking Index makes a return to overbought territory (having risen in 5 of the last 6 weeks) as does the S&P MidCap 400 and the FTSE 100.

While Stockholm eases out of that category.

Oslo is in a 5 week winning streak.

Toronto’s TSK extends its winning streak to 7 weeks.

The DAX is in 8 week winning streak.

Italy’s MIB advance extends to 9 consecutive weeks, has spent 7 weeks in overbought territory and is trading at its highest price since April 2008.

Egypt 30 index has tanked 12.4% over the past fortnight.

The Nasdaq 100 is 33% above its 2090 week moving average while the S&P 500 is 27% above the same measure.

Spain’s IBEX has registered an overbought quinella as it trades at its highest point since May 2017.

The FTSE 100 returns to the overbought territory.

And the CAC and DAX are still making new all-time highs.

Commodities were generally higher.

Gold prices across various currencies remains overbought.

Prices related to steel production such as coking coal, iron ore, rebar, are all in oversold territory.

The ‘coking coals’ have fallen for 5 straight weeks.

Furthermore, U.S. Midwest Hot Rolled Coil Steel is approaching oversold land too.

Crude Oil, Copper, Tin and Silver moved out of overbought territory.

Rice has fallen for 5 consecutive weeks and its price has declined 14% over that time.

Cocoa has been overbought for 23 weeks.

Aluminium has risen for 5 straight weeks.

And Lithium Hydroxide has now spent 38 consecutive weeks in weekly oversold territory.

Currencies were tempered for the week. 

The AUD was mixed, while the CAD and GBP were stronger. 

The Euro wea weaker.

The Yen eked out some small gains,

And the Kiwi has declined for 5 consecutive weeks versus the Aussie.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of;

Roterdam Coal 5.7%, Cocoa 9.3%, WTI Crude Oil 2.8%, Lean Hogs 2.5%, Arabica Coffee 2.2%, LNH in Yen 1.9%, Newcastle Coal 5.7%, Palladium 2.3%, Robusta Coffee 3.8%, Sugar 3.1%, S&P GSCI 1.4%, Brent Crude Oil 1.6%, Gold in AUD 3.1%, Gold in CAD 2.8%, Gold in USD 3.2%, Gold in CHF 3.6%, Gold in EUR 3.3%, Gold in GBP 2.9%, KBW Bank Index 3.1%, DAX 1.6%, S&P Small Cap 600 2.6%, Russell 2000 2.6%, KRE Regional Banks 3.7%, Karachi 2.8%, S&P Midcap 400 2%, South Africa 2%, Chile 1.9%, ASX 200 1.6% and the ASX Materials, Industrials and Small Caps all rose 2% for the week.

The group of largest decliners from the week included;

Australian Coking Coal (10.5%), Baltic Dry Index (17.1%), China Coking Coal (10.5%), HRC Steel (3.2%), Iron Ore (9.3%), Lumber (3.9%), Natural Gas (3.8%), Nickel (2.8%), Nickel on MCX (4.2%), Shanghai Rebar (2.8%), Dutch TTF Gas (1.5%), Egypt 30 (5.2%) and the Nasdaq 100 fell 0.5%.

March 31, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

The discrimination of the internal combustion engine

What if I don’t want to own and drive an electric vehicle?

I think the internal combustion engine is being discriminated against.

What if specialty fuels solve the lower emissions equation?

Why have #ethanol and #biofuels seemingly been removed from the vernacular?

And what if #hydrogen becomes a ‘thing’?

In amongst the hypocrisy of the #carbon ‘intensity’ that an #electricvehicle requires (or attracts), the internal #combustion #engine is not the ogre for those concerned….it is the #fuel or #energy required to fill up (or recharge) the vehicle.

What if my examples provide cleaner sources of propulsion than the mystical trickle of #electricity into an #EV?

then those fuels still require ‘combustion’…….

#ICE

#energy

Vamos, IBEX

Spain’s IBEX is at its most overbought and stretched since April 2015…..but still NOT making an all-time high.

March 29, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

Karri Asset Advisors

rob@karriasset.com.au

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Mean reversion beckons for NVDA and Cocoa

The two most notable parabolic price moves in recent times is being seen in the price of Cocoa and NVIDIA shares.

Both prices are trading at stratospheric percentages above their 200 week moving averages.

Cocoa is trading 3.5 standard deviations above its rolling monthly mean and even more astonishing, at US$9,950 per ton, it is more expensive than Copper which is trading at US$8,870 per ton.

Mean reversion or mean convergence?

Gravity is real.

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Macro Extremes (week ending March 22, 2024)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities.

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean.

Extremes “above” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations

US10 year minus Australian 10 year yield spread

US10 year divided by Australian 10 year yield spread

WTI Crude Oil

Copper

Tin

S&P GSCI

Brent Crude Oil

Silver in AUD, USD & EUR

Gold in USD

AUD/JPY

AUD/THB

FTSE 100

Overbought (RSI > 70)

Biodiesel

Robusta Coffee 

AEX

Budapest

CAC 30

DAX

Dow Jones Industrial Average

Italy’s MIB

Nasdaq Composite

Nikkei 225

Stockholm

Philadelphia SOX

TAIEX

Nasdaq Transports

Toronto’s TSX

Vietnam

And the S&P 500 Index

The Overbought Quinella – Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean)

Russian 10 year bond yield 

Gold in AUD, CAD, EUR, GBP & CHF

Cocoa

IBEX

Extremes “below” the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations)

AU10Y – US10Y yield

Australian Coking Coal

CHF/AUD

Chinese RMB

INR/USD

Oversold (RSI < 30)

Chinese 10 year government bond yields

Lithium Hydroxide

The Oversold Quinella – Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean)

None

Notes & Ideas:

Government bond yields mostly fell except for the Japanese 2’s and 5’s.

The Japanese 5’s winning streak extends to 7 weeks.

Russian 10 year yields have risen for 8 consecutive weeks.

The Chinese 10’s are the notable oversold extreme in this week’s list.

Equities were higher.

Shanghai is in a 6 week winning streak while the CSI 300 broke its 5 week advance.

Toronto’s has sneakily put together 6 straight rising weeks. 

The DAX is in a 7 week winning streak, the MIB advance extends to 8 consecutive weeks.

The Nasdaq is 34% above its 2090 week moving average while the S&P 500 is 27% above the same measure.

Egypt’s 30 Index isn’t overbought anymore.

Spain’s IBEX has registered an overbought quinella as it trades at its highest point since June 2017.

The FTSE 100 returns to the overbought territory.

The CAC and DAX are still making new all-time highs.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average re-enters overbought territory.

And Italy’s MIB has traded to its highest point since May 2008.

Commodities were generally higher.

While Rotterdam Coal is in a 5 week winning streak, Most coal prices had a terrible week.

Crude Oil makes a return to overbought land, while Copper and Tin extend their stay there.

Rubber isn’t overbought this week.

Gold prices across various currencies remains overbought.

Cocoa has now spent 22 weeks in overbought land.

Nickel broke its 5 weeks winning streak.

Uranium and the Baltic Dry Index broke their 6 week losing streaks.

And Lithium Hydroxide has now spent 37 consecutive weeks in weekly oversold territory.

Currencies saw a firmer CAD again as was the USD.

The AUD was firmer against all except versus the Yen.

The Euro was mixed.

The Yen as did the Kiwi.

The latter is in a 4 week losing streak again the AUD.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of;

Aluminium 2.8%, Cocoa 11.5%, LNG JKM in Yen 4%, Dutch TTF Gas 2.8%, Uranium 4%, Gold in CHF 2%, Wheat 5%, All World Developed ex USA 1.2%, AEX 2.9%, Austria 2.6%, KBW Bank 3.7%, DAX 1.5%, DJ Industrials 2%, DJ Transports 3.3%, IBEX 3.3%, Nasdaq Composite 2.9%, KOSPI 3.3%, S&P MidCap 400 2.2%, Nasdaq 100 3%, Nikkei 225 5.6%, Russell 2000 1.5%, SOX 3.2%, S&P 400 2.3%, TAIEX 2.8%, Nasdaq Transports 2.9%, FTSE 100 2.6%, ASX 200 1.3%, BIST 3.2% and the ASX Materials rose 2.4%

The group of largest decliners from the week included;

Australian Coking Coal (2.8%), China Coking Coal (2.8%), Rotterdam Coal (2%), Baltic Dry Index (5.5%), Cotton (2.6%), Lean Hogs (2.6%), Copper (3%), Heating Oil (2.4%), Tin (2.3%), Newcastle Coal (4.3%), Nickel (2%), Palladium (8.4%), Platinum (4.8%), Gasoil (1.8%), Silver (2%), Oats (2.1%), Rice (2.7%) and Egypt’s 30 equity index tanked 7.2%.

March 24, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au