Macro Extremes (week ending April 19, 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. 5-7 year corporate bond yield 

Australian, Brazilian, Chilean, Japanese, South Korean and U.S. 10 year government bond yield 

Japanese 2 year government bond yields 

U.S. 7 year government bond yields 

U.S. 20 and 30 year government bond yields 

TBT

U.S. 5 year government bond yield minus U.S. 5 year inflation breakeven rate

U.S. 5 year government bond yield minus U.S. 3 month bill yield

U.S. 10 year government bond yield minus U.S. 10 year inflation breakeven rate

Gold Volatility Index

Cocoa

Nickel

Overbought (RSI > 70)

U.S. 10 year bond yield minus Australian 10 year bond yield 

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

U.S. 10 year bond yield divided by Australian 10 year bond yield 

Gold in CHF

CRB Index

Italy’s MIB

Russia’s MOEX 

And Pakistan’s KSE Index

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

Coffee (Arabica)

Coffee (Robusta)

Aluminium

Copper

Tin

Silver in AUD and USD

and Gold as priced in AUD, CAD, EUR, GBP, USD and ZAR

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

IEF

IEI 

SHY

TLT

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

Urea (U.S. Gulf)

CAD/USD

GBP/USD

PHP/USD

DKK/USD

INR/USD

KRW/USD

SEK/USD

Dow Jones Transports

And Thailand’s SET Index

Oversold (RSI < 30)

Chinese 10 year government bond yields

Australian Coking Coal

Lithium Hydroxide

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

Lumber

BRL/USD

IDR/USD

Notes & Ideas:

Government bond yields rose.

Chilean 10’s have risen for 6 consecutive weeks and have risen for 10 of the past 11.

Across the curve, British yields have climbed for 4 straight weeks as have South Korean and Japanese 10’s.

And Russian 10 year bond yields aren’t overbought anymore.

Equities broadly fell everywhere…..

with the exception of Chinese stocks and U.S. banks.

Impressively the Dow Jones Industrials were flat for the week.

The Russell 2000 has declined 2.8% for 3 consecutive weeks, enough to see it touch its 200 week moving average.

The DAX fallen for 3 straight weeks, while Copenhagen and Switzerland’s SMI have done so for 4 weeks.

Oslo broke its 7 week winning streak after last week’s posting of an outside bearish reversal.

And South Africa broke its 4 weeks winning streak.

Commodities were mixed.

We saw strength in base metals, softs and coals, again.

Weakness was seen in Oils, Lumber, Cotton, Soybeans, Sugar and the PGM’s.

Biodiesel and Brent Crude Oil isn’t overbought this week.

Gold, Aluminium, Copper, Coffee, Tin and Silver all appear in the overbought quinella column this week.

Gold’s weekly winning streak is at 5 while Silver has risen for 7 of the past 8 weeks.

Coffee prices were amongst the largest gainers for the week, again. Robusta Coffee has risen 31% over the past 8 weeks.

Cotton has fallen for 6 straight weeks, while Lumber’s declining streak is at 4 week.

Gasoline broke its 5 week winning streak.

The LNG JKM price (in Yen) has risen 20% over the past fortnight.

Cocoa has been overbought for 26 weeks, while putting together a recent 9 week winning streak.

Cocoa remains more expensive than Copper.

Aluminium has risen for 8 straight weeks, rising 24% over that time.

And Lithium Hydroxide has now spent 40 consecutive weeks in weekly oversold territory, however it rose 8%.

Currencies are seeing continued action.

U.S. strength is keeping many reciprocals in oversold territory.

The AUD and the Yen were weaker.

The CAD was firmer as was the Euro.

And the BRL has fallen for 7 straight weeks against the USD.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of;

Australian Coking Coal 5.7%, Aluminium 10%, Baltic Dry Index 11%, Cocoa 9.4%, China Coking Coal 4.2%, Lean Hogs 2.5%, Copper 5.6%, Coffee 5.2%, JKM LNG in Yen 7.5%, Tin 3.5%, Newcastle Coal 6%, Nickel 9.5%, Robusta Coffee 4.7%, Shanghai Iron Ore 2.1%, Silver in AUD 3.6%, Silver in USD 2.9%, Gold in AUD 2.8%, Gold in EUR 1.9%, Gold in GBP 2.7%, Gold in USD 2.1%, Oats 2%, Rice 7.5%, Shanghai Composite 1.5%, CSI 300 1.9%, KBW Bank Index 2%, Chian A50 3.4% and Pakistan’s KRE Index rose 1.7%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included;

WTI Crude Oil (3.4%), Cotton (4.5%), Heating Oil (5.4%), Lumber (5.9%), Lithium (3.4%), Orange Juice (3.2%), Palladium (3.1%), Platinum (5.8%), Gasoline (3.3%), Biodiesel (2%), Sugar (3.5%), S&P GSCI (1.4%), Brent Crude Oil (3.3%), Gasoil (7%), Soybeans (2%), All World Developed ex USA (2.3%), AEX (2.7%), Budapest (3.3%), DJ Transports (2.7%), HSCEI (2.3%), Hang Seng (3%), IDX (4.4%), S&P SmallCap 600 (1.2%), Russell 2000 (2.8%), Nasdaq Composite (5.5%), KOSPI (3.4%), FTSE 250 (1.7%), S&P MidCap 400 (2.2%), Nasdaq Biotech (3.1%), Nasdaq 100 (3.4%), Nikkei (6.2%), Nifty (1.7%), Oslo (2.5%), PSE (3.3%), J’burg 40 (2.7%), SET (4.6%), SOX (9.2%), Chile (2.9%), S&P 500 (3.1%), TAIEX (5.8%), FTSE 100 (1.3%), Vietnam (8%), ASX 200 (2.8%), ASX Materials (2.2%), ASX Industrials (2.9%) and the ASX Small Caps fell 3.9%

April 21, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au

Macro Extremes (week ending April 12, 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. 5-7 year corporate bond yield 

Brazilian 10 year government bond yield 

Japanese 2 and 10 year government bond yields 

TBX

U.S. 5 year government bond yield minus U.S. 5 year inflation breakeven rate

U.S. 5 year government bond yield minus U.S. 3 month bill yield

U.S. 2, 3, 5, 7, 10 and 20 year government bond yields 

U.S. 10 year government bond yield minus U.S. 10 year inflation breakeven rate

Bloomberg Commodity Index

U.S. Dollar Index

Gold Volatility Index

Copper

AUD/JPY

AUD/THB

COP/USD

Austria’s ATX

Russia’s MOEX

And India’s NIFTY 50

Overbought (RSI > 70)

Russian 10 year bond yield 

U.S. 10 year bond yield minus Australian 10 year bond yield 

U.S. 10 year bond yield divided by Australian 10 year bond yield 

Aluminium

Cocoa

Biodiesel 

CRB Index

Brent Crude Oil 

Coffee (Robusta)

AEX

Budapest

Italy’s MIB

TAIEX

And Turkiye’s BIST 100

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

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

Coffee (Arabica)

Tin

Silver in AUD and USD

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

Pakistan’s KSE equity index

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

IEF

IEI 

SHY

Lumber

Urea (U.S. Gulf)

Oats

EUR/USD

GBP/USD

JPY/AUD

DKK/USD

HKD/USD

KRW/USD

SEK/USD

Oversold (RSI < 30)

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

Chinese 10 year government bond yields

Australian Coking Coal

Chinese Coking Coal

Lithium Hydroxide

Shanghai Rebar

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

None 

Notes & Ideas:

My immediate suggestion is to compare last week’s edition to this one. Readers will note many changes.

It seemed as government bond yields rose, which is mostly true in Australia, USA, Great Britain, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand……

However, we also saw declining yields in Switzerland, Spain, Germany, France & China.

Last week, I wrote, “many yields are showing signs of breaking north of their recent sideways pattern”. This was certainly the case.

Bonds provided an equal amount of action this past week, with my spreads and bond ETF’s entering the list.

The big news in Equities was observing many indices leaving overbought territory as prices declined.

A few winner still managed to appear in this week’s list, albeit only several.

Oslo is in a 7 week winning streak, while Mexico’s main index broker its 4 week run of consecutive higher prices. The latter also posted an outside bearish reversal week.

Toronto’s TSX broke its 8 week winning streak and posted a bearish outside reversal week.

South Africa has risen for 4 weeks straight as has the TAIEX. The latter has climbed higher for 12 of the past 13 weeks.

And last week’s reference to those equity indices which posted bearish outside reversal week’s held true.

Commodities were mixed.

We saw strength in precious metals, base metals, softs and coals.

It is worthy to note that many commodities which appear in todays overbought section saw those extremes tickled earlier in the week, before easing off in the last couple days.

Iron Ore isn’t overbought.

Gold prices across various currencies remains overbought.

Interestingly, Platinum has risen 10% over the past 3 weeks while Gold’s advance (in USD) has been 8%.

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

Coffee prices were amongst the largest gainers for the week, again. Robusta Coffee has risen 26% over the past 7 weeks.

While it remains oversold, China Coking broke is 7 week losing streak.

Rice broke its 6 week losing streak with a 7% rise, nearly halving the 15% decline seen during that declining trend.

Oats mostly recovered last week’s 7% decline. 

Cotton has fallen for 5 straight weeks, inversely, Gasoline has risen for 5 consecutive weeks.

Cocoa has been overbought for 25 weeks, while putting together a recent 7 week winning streak.

Aluminium has risen for 7 straight weeks, rising 14% over that time.

And Lithium Hydroxide has now spent 40 consecutive weeks in weekly oversold territory, however it rose 8%.

Currencies extended last week’s activity with U.S. strength sending many reciprocals into oversold territory.

The effect of a rising USD, rendered weakest in the AUD and many others.

In its own right, the CAD was stronger.

The Yen was stronger against all, except the USD.

The Euro was weaker against everyone.

The British Pound was mixed for the week, again.

The BRL has fallen for 6 straight weeks against the USD.

And the Kiwi broke its 6 weeks of consecutive versus the Aussie.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of;

Aluminium 1.7%, Rotterdam Coal 2.9%, Baltic Dry Index 6.2%, Cocoa 6.9%, Coffee 3.7%, JKM LNG in Yen 12.9%, Lithium 8.2%, Tin 15%, Newcastle Coal 2.7%, Orange Juice 2.6%, Palladium 5.2%, Platinum 6.5%, Shanghai Iron Ore 6.1%, Dutch TTF Gas 15.5%, Silver in AUD 3.3%, Silver in USD 1.4%, Gold in AUD 2.4%, Gold in USD 0.6%, Oats 6.1%, Rice 6.6%, Robusta Coffee 4.2%, KSE 2.8%, Oslo 1.8%, SET 1.5%, TAIEX 2%, FTSE 100 1.1%, Vietnam 1.7%, ASX Materials 2.9%, BIST 2% and the ASX Industrials rose 1.2%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included;

WTI Crude Oil (1.4%), Cotton (4.2%), Heating Oil (3.2%), Lumber (5.6%), Biodiesel (2.1%), Sugar (7%), Raw Sugar (1.7%), Urea U.S. Gulf (5.6%), Gasoil (2.7%), Urea Middle East (2.8%), Wheat (2%), Shanghai (1.6%), CSI 300 (2.6%), All Developed World ex USA (1.3%), KBW Bank Index (3.7%), China A50 (3%), DJ Industrials (2.7%), IBEX (2.1%), Indonesia (2.6%), S&P SmallCap 600 (2.9%), Russell 2000 (2.8%), Nasdaq Composite (0.5%), KRE Regional Banks (3.5%), S&P 400 Midcaps (2.9%), Mexico (2.6%), Nasdaq Biotechs (1.9%), SOX (1.5%), S&P 500 (1.6%), Nasdaq Transports (3.1%) and Toronto’s TSX fell 1.6%.

April 14, 2024

by Rob Zdravevski

rob@karriasset.com.au