Monday, March 2, 2015

NIFTY intrday bear flag patter formation


NIFTY is forming Bear Flag pattern Breakdown is at 8950 and sustain below 8950 will test 8865 lvl which is height of the pole. 
Second target is 161.8% of the pole which comes to 8815 lvl.

Sell Nifty @ 8980 stop @ 8930 target @ 8950 - 8865 - 8815

Thursday, February 26, 2015

What's Next For Oil And Gold: Thoughts From Eric Sprott, Rick Rule And Marc Faber

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2015 21:14 -0500

“ How can we have an economic recovery when there is barely any discretionary disposable income for 40% of the population? As we have shown above, those that have seen their incomes grow are not the ones most likely to spend, while the bottom 40% of households still rely heavily on government assistance, have had stagnant incomes and have been faced with increasing inflation for “non-discretionary” goods that constitute a very large share of their incomes. There is clearly no recovery…
   -  Eric Sprott, Chairman and Founder of Sprott Inc., July 2014

“ Most developed economies have consumed and borrowed at worrying levels. The US federal government has on-balance-sheet liabilities of over $16 trillion and off-balance-sheet liabilities estimated at about $70 trillion. These numbers do not include state and local government liabilities, or the likely liabilities from underfunded private pensions. Not to mention increased costs associated with more comprehensive health care and an aging population!”
   -  Rick Rule, Chairman of Sprott US Holdings Ltd., July 2014

“This is the second longest bull market in the last 100 years. I wouldn’t buy shares here. I’m not interested. Now can the market go up another 20 percent? I wasn’t interested to buy the NASDAQ in late 1999, but between January 2000 to March 2000, the NASDAQ went up another 30%. Afterwards people were crying when they realized their losses. The markets go up and down. I think that the upside potential now for the general stock market is very limited and there is considerable downside risk. Probably more downside risk than investors realize.”
   - Marc Faber, Board of Directors of Sprott Inc., February 2014

Below are some further perspective on what may be next for oil and gold from Eric Sprott, Rick Rule and Marc Faber.
* * *
Weakness Around the World
The oil price is driven by the same dynamic that underpins the case for most commodities, such as copper, uranium, or iron ore.
As people get richer, especially in emerging markets, they tend to consume more metals with which to build houses and cars, and more fuels to generate energy and power machines.
Yet commodities have been flat since the Great Recession ended, suggesting, once again, that economic growth is slowing down.
The price of copper is at a four-and-a-half-year low of $2.60 per pound. Uranium sells for $36 per pound today, down from around $65 in 2011. Iron ore for delivery in 2015 trades for below $60 per tonne on the futures market, down from over $180 per tonne in 2011.
The price of oil, meanwhile, had not declined substantially over the last three years. Perhaps its recent price collapse is not as sudden and inexplicable as many believe.
Indeed, a low oil price is consistent with the price action we’ve seen in other commodities. It also dovetails with economic data we’re seeing from around the world, which suggest that global growth rates are simply decreasing.
The Eurozone is trudging along more slowly than the US, according to statistics from the European Central Bank. In the third quarter of 2014, its GDP was nearly flat at 0.3% in growth. Inventories were being dis-hoarded, falling by around 15 billion euros over the last 6 months. This suggests that fewer goods are being produced and stockpiled – a response to weak demand. Employment grew by 0.2% over the quarter, meaning that unemployment levels are still high for the developed world, and industrial production increased by only 0.1%.
The situation is similar in Japan. Despite sustained ultra-low interest rates and activist policies meant to stoke growth, the country is mired in what isn’t far off from being a depression. Its GDP shrank 0.5% in the third quarter of 2014, right on the heels of a more than 1.5% contraction in the second quarter.
Developed-world economies are not the only ones that are experiencing weakness now.
China’s annual growth rate has slowed from around 10% in 2011 to around 7.5% as of the third quarter of 2014. 11 Its domestic consumer market appears subdued. In the third quarter of 2014, the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which measures the average change in the prices of consumer goods and services, was its lowest since February 2010. The real estate market has been weak and domestic investments in fixed assets – which includes new building projects – grew by only 16.1%. That number was above 21% in early 2013, and has been declining steadily ever since.
Weak economies around the world offer weak demand for commodities and for capital. The effect is to keep interest rates extremely low and to push commodity prices down.
The same logic applies to oil, which has long been priced with the expectation of ever-increasing demand and ever-declining supply. We can therefore view the oil price as a symptom of poor global economic growth, which is a long-term problem – and not just as a short-lived consequence of a slight oversupply of oil.
Falling oil prices are yet another sign that the world economy may be more fragile than before the Great Recession.
Why is this important? Well, many write off the oil price drop as merely the machinations of Saudi Arabia to throw a monkey wrench in the wheels of the US shale industry – or perhaps a market that’s over-reacting to a slight supply and demand imbalance. You would then naturally expect a quick recovery after the market worked through the problem of oversupply, or once OPEC and Saudi Arabia had adequately bludgeoned its rivals. On the other hand, if you attribute the oil price decline to a more significant underlying issue within the world economy, then the oil price drop starts to look like the harbinger of a more long-term trend.
* * *
Gold Mergers and Acquisitions May Increase in 2015
The gold mining sector is seeing adjustments to a gold price in the range of $1,100 to $1,300 per ounce, down from over $1,900 in 2011. These are healthy adaptations to a lower gold price.
When investors expected the price of a metal to rise, companies responded by acquiring mines, even if they did not stand to produce a profit right away. A rise in the price of the metal could render the mine profitable at a later date, while holding off until metals prices rose may have meant paying more for the acquisition.
This explains why mining companies as a whole went on a buying spree during the years leading up to 2011, when everyone expected gold to keep going up.
What has happened to those acquisitions in the meantime?
The mining industry saw massive amounts of write-offs from mergers and acquisitions from 2011 onwards. Well-known billion-dollar write offs include the Alaskan Pebble mine and the Fruta del Norte deposit in Ecuador.
We are now entering a new phase of mergers and acquisitions, since many of the worst and least efficient projects from the last cycle have been dumped.
In 2014, big miners mostly switched from shedding deposits to acquiring new ones. Big acquisitions include Osisko Mining for over $3 billion by Agnico Eagle and Yamana Gold. Another example, Cayden Resources, received a takeover offer from Agnico Eagle of around $205 million. Bloomberg reports that $11.2 billion in new mergers and acquisitions in the gold mining sector have been proposed or completed in 2014.
We expect more takeovers of companies with potential or producing mines to occur in the next 12 to 18 months.
Cash Is King
‘Juniors’ that are looking to bring an asset into production require capital for exploration drilling and acquiring the data that may make the project attractive for an acquirer.
Exploration companies make high-risk ventures for investors. They can quickly drop in price if their projects fail to stimulate interest. For geological reasons, most exploration projects are destined to end in failure. The good thing is that bad projects can go out of business fast because they usually have no source of income other than issuing new shares. This culls the herd for investors and eliminates wasteful uses of capital.
The chart below clearly shows that, as a whole, a culling is imminent for many juniors, unless they can raise more cash. Cash held by junior gold miners listed on the TSX Venture exchange, the main marketplace for US and Canadian exploration stocks, is less than a third of its level from early 2012. In just three years, cash on these companies’ balance sheets has dropped from C$3.5 billion to around C$1 billion.
This means that cash is king – and becomes more important the longer this trends keeps going.
Some of the large miners may benefit from this trend. Because they have stronger balance sheets, they can absorb projects cheaply – especially when those companies are out of cash and their managers are worrying about their salaries.
Royalty and streaming companies could also swoop in to benefit from this trend. These companies offer financing to big miners and to junior exploration companies in exchange for a share of future production or discovery potential. They typically pay for the royalty upfront, but can end up with a very long-lasting stream of cash flows, at no additional cost.
Franco Nevada, the leading royalty and streaming company in the mining space, recently raised $500 million, which it has re-deployed into streaming agreements with mines owned by the Lundin Group.
The share price action of the three largest royalty and streaming companies suggests that this business model is increasingly popular with investors. The three largest royalty and streaming companies, Franco Nevada, Silver Wheaton, and Royal Gold are up 68%, 19%, and 27% respectively over the five years ending December 31, 2014. The GDX, which tracks major mining stocks, is down 63% during that period. The GDXJ, which tracks the junior miners, is down 78%.
* * *
Outlook for 2015
‘Cash is king’ and that’s good for speculators involved in financing small exploration companies. It is also good for mining companies that want to acquire assets and for royalty and streaming companies that provide financing to the sector.
If you have the ability to analyze specific takeover targets for potential acquisitions, these opportunities may offer outsize returns over the coming year.
However, a more general approach requiring less technical expertise may be to accumulate a position in the miners and royalty and streaming companies that stand to make acquisitions at bear market prices. Whether you invest in exploration and development stocks, or in relatively low risk royalty companies, there are always risks to investing including possible loss of principal.
To many people, the oil price drop looks like a wrinkle on otherwise smooth water. Taking a closer look, though, we can see that it doesn’t come ‘out of nowhere.’ In fact, commodities as a whole have been weak for several years now. Low interest rates and stagnant household income numbers also suggest poor economic conditions, leaving us to explain how we could see an epic stock market rally at the same time.
The mining industry is consolidating, which is a natural and positive occurrence. They are also not part of the pack that has participated in the ongoing rally. That’s partially because their weak balance sheets didn’t allow them to issue new debt in large amounts.
There is reason to be positive for gold and silver mining stocks because of improvements that are intrinsic to the industry. Precious metals stocks have been unloved for the last three years and consequently are at long-term lows. In contrast, we believe that most US stocks are teetering near all-time highs, on the shaky premise of a broad recovery.

Much more in the full note below (link)

Monday, February 23, 2015

Diamond Pattern Formation NIFTY Breakdown @ 8840 tgt 8500 soon





INDIA 50 Sell below 8840 CMP 8860 Stop @ 8880 TGT 8700 – 8550 - 8500 may also test 8250 


Diamond top formation

A diamond top formation is a pattern in technical analysis that is used to identify a possible end to an uptrend. This pattern is identified by drawing a line from the peak price to an existing lower high and another line from the highest low price down to the lower low. It ultimately forms a descending channel, but the lines drawn from the last uptrend to the peak and the latest lower low to the lower high takes the shape of a diamond.

NIFTY is forming similar to the Diamond To formation where if sustain trading below 8840 will confirm the breakdown on closing basis and will enter in negative trend. Support trend line is the rising trend line at 8840 and once the level  is crossed next down side will be the previous bottom at 8700 and sustain below the same will bring to 8550 the rising trend line as our first target and if the same support is also broken then will test the next support level at 8500 and below 8250 can not be ruled out. 

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Geopolitical storm clouds loom

http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/geopolitical-storm-clouds-loom-1.1807275#.VL-IvNKUf6E

 Comment on this story
IOL bus jan21 Ukraine conflictReutersGeopolitical risk looms large thanks to conflict in Ukraine and the Islamic State insurgency in Iraq and Syria, among other factors. File photo: Valentyn Ogirenko.
Davos - Geopolitical risk is back with a bang due to conflict in Ukraine, the Islamic State insurgency in Iraq and Syria, the politics of anger in Europe and the collapse of oil prices, but partying financial markets have barely registered it, yet.
Before the annual talk-fest of business and political elites began on Wednesday in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, a World Economic Forum survey said the risk of international conflict had now overtaken concerns about the economy, disease or climate change as the biggest threat to business and countries.
Yet investors drunk on cheap central bank money have driven stock prices in the United States and parts of Europe to near record heights, apparently oblivious to dangers near and far.
ECONOMIC GLOOM
That euphoria will be tested this year, especially since the International Monetary Fund has just cut its global growth forecasts for 2015 and 2016, China's economy is slowing, Russia is in a tailspin, and much of Europe remains in the doldrums.
To be sure, the rouble has lost half its value against the dollar since last June due to Western sanctions over Ukraine and tumbling oil prices, while the Swiss franc has soared by more than 14 percent since the Swiss National Bank gave up costly efforts to defend an exchange rate cap against a weakening euro.
Volatility may be rising, but the markets have not yet priced in the scale of potential turmoil.
“Taken together, the regional disputes in the former Soviet Union and Middle East have raised the spectre of a return to conflict over borders and territory, a risk compounded by fears that collective defense agreements such as NATO ... no longer retain their relevance,” said Tina Fordham, chief global political analyst at Citi.
“From the grass roots to the geopolitical, the global system is under immense pressure. In some places, it is cracking.”
SUCCESSIONS, BORDERS IN DOUBT
In the Arab world, uncertainties range from a succession of ailing rulers in Saudi Arabia, Oman and Algeria, to the widening tremors caused by bloodshed in Iraq and Syria that has called Middle East borders into question, sucked in outside powers and fuelled acts of violence on Europe's streets.
Even a possible diplomatic breakthrough to curb Iran's nuclear programme could create as much tension as it defuses, by bringing Tehran out of economic and political isolation to the dismay of Sunni Muslim states across the Gulf.
US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will bring their intensive nuclear talks to Davos, where they will meet on the sidelines in a race to craft a deal before the US Congress can enact new sanctions that could derail the negotiations.
“The risk ... is that a deal with Iran comes too early because the Saudi leadership of the Gulf Cooperation Council, the main adversaries of Iran, hasn't done the necessary to reach out to Iran in the way the Gulf needs,” said Florence Eid, chief executive of Arabia Monitor, a London-based consultancy.
Gulf Arab oil producers can afford low oil prices for a while without having to cut sensitive public spending at home, but it may make them less willing to go on bankrolling Egypt's army-installed government on the current scale.
If oil revenue stays low for a prolonged period, spending cuts could lead to social unrest from Algeria to the Gulf.
LOSS OF CONTROL
Europe faces potential worsening instability on its eastern flank and political upheavals in its southern rim.
Despite engaging in intensive diplomacy, Russia shows no sign of ending its support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine after it seized and annexed Crimea last year, triggering escalating Western sanctions.
President Vladimir Putin and his top lieutenants are staying away from Davos this year, but Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko will use the forum to appeal for Western financial and political support for his country on the brink of meltdown.
Western officials say they have no way of knowing whether Putin intends to widen the conflict to other former Soviet areas, keep it on a slow-burner to destabilise Kiev or seek a face-saving way out. But they see little sign that the growing economic price of sanctions is softening his stance.
Although EU ministers agreed this week there were no grounds to ease sanctions, differences among European nations may widen as the deadline for renewing the measures approaches in July.
TOO MANY CRISES
Jean-Marie Guehenno, a former head of UN peacekeeping who now heads the International Crisis Group think-tank, said there were so many crises and so many powers involved that it was ever harder for world leaders to focus and engage.
“There is essentially a loss of control,” he told Reuters.
“The United States is no longer so eager to play the benevolent sheriff,” Guehenno said. “It will remain the overwhelmingly dominant military power, but at a time of growing doubt about what that power can deliver and whether there is the will to use it.”
He questioned whether Moscow was in full control of pro-Russian Ukrainian rebels fighting against Kiev and said instability from the conflict could spread into Russia itself.
On the brighter side, he said concerns about a potential clash between China and Japan, which flared at last year's Davos session when Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe drew a parallel with the eve of World War One, had eased. Both countries seemed determined to prevent incidents escalating out of control.
In the European Union, the rise of hard-left and far-right populist parties opposed to austerity and demanding debt write-downs threatens the mainstream policy consensus that has prevailed since the euro zone crisis began in 2010.
Greece's far-left Syriza party is poised to win a general election on Sunday and become the first such radical group to enter government in the 19-nation single currency area, although polls suggest it may need a moderate coalition partner to rule.
Citi's Fordham said despite sympathy for Syriza across the euro zone periphery, scarred by mass unemployment, pay and pension cuts, she did not expect far leftists to gain power anywhere else in Europe.
Reuters