The Coming Week’s Top Market Movers, Lessons: The Only Thing Driving Global Markets

How bullish and bearish forces align for stock indexes, forex and other global markets, both technical and fundamental outlooks, likely top market movers. Despite all the headlines, neither economic data nor the Russian invasion of Ukraine moved markets. Here’s what did.

Summary

–Technical Outlook: European stocks rise, close gap with US, Asia, despite miserable data, Russian invasion of Ukraine. Guess Why?

–Fundamental Outlook: The only market driver that really matters, how long the bull market can last, why, and what to monitor.

–The Key Questions: What to ask for the coming week and beyond.

The following is a partial summary of the conclusions from the fxempire.com weekly analysts’ meeting in which we cover outlooks for the major pairs for the coming week and beyond.

Technical Picture

We look at the technical picture first for a number of reasons, including:

Chart Don’t Lie: Dramatic headlines and dominant news themes don’t necessarily move markets. Price action is critical for understanding what events and developments are  and are not actually driving markets. There’s nothing like flat or trendless price action to tell you to discount seemingly dramatic headlines – or to get you thinking about why a given risk is not being priced in

Charts Also Move Markets: Support, resistance, and momentum indicators also move markets, especially in the absence of surprises from top tier news and economic reports. For example, the stronger a given support or resistance level, the more likely a trend is to pause at that point. Similarly, a confirmed break above key resistance makes traders much more receptive to positive news that provides an excuse to trade in that direction.

 

Overall Risk Appetite Medium Term Per Weekly Charts Of Leading Global Stock Indexes

ScreenHunter_02 Aug. 31 11.06

Weekly Charts Of Large Cap Global Indexes May 12 2013 To August 29 2014:  With 10 Week/200 Day EMA In Red: LEFT COLUMN TOP TO BOTTOM: S&P 500, DJ 30, FTSE 100, MIDDLE: CAC 40, DJ EUR 50, DAX 30, RIGHT: HANG SENG, MSCI TAIWAN, NIKKEI 225

Key For S&P 500, DJ EUR 50, Nikkei 225 Weekly Chart: 10 Week EMA Dark Blue, 20 WEEK EMA Yellow, 50 WEEK EMA Red, 100 WEEK EMA Light Blue, 200 WEEK EMA Violet, DOUBLE BOLLINGER BANDS: Normal 2 Standard Deviations Green, 1 Standard Deviation Orange.

Source: MetaQuotes Software Corp, www.fxempire.com, www.thesensibleguidetoforex.com

02 Aug. 31 11.06

Key Points & Lessons

European Indexes Closing Performance Gap On Rising Stimulus Hopes

For Europe, the week brought more evidence of deterioration in both economic data and the Ukraine crisis. Nonetheless, European stocks made their third straight weekly advance. As a result they

  • Broke or are close to breaking their 2 month old downtrend lines.
  • Moved firmly into their double Bollinger® band neutral zones, signaling a bottoming is in as momentum is now firmly neutral rather than negative.
  • Closed the performance gap with Asia and the US

So if everything is getting worse why did European stocks rise? For the same reason they’ve advanced in other regions in the face of sustained periods of bad fundamentals. It’s another week of the “bad news equals good news trade.” For those somehow still unfamiliar with this phenomenon, it means that because bad news implies more central bank stimulus is coming, stocks rise because that new cash injection into markets is expected to prop up stock prices.

The bad news equals good news trade needs to things to work:

  • Consistently bad economic data showing stagnant or declining growth. Check.
  • Investors interpret central bank comments to mean that they will add new stimulus programs if things don’t turn around soon, or that such programs are already in the pipeline and that it’s just a matter of weeks before they’re announced. Check, ever since Draghi’s impromptu Jackson Hole comments in which he admitted that deflation was not merely temporary but rather a longer term problem.

Daily Charts / Short Term Coming Weeks

ScreenHunter_03 Aug. 31 12.22

Key For S&P 500, DJ EUR 50, Nikkei 225 Daily Chart June 9 2014 to August 29 2014: 10 Week EMA Dark Blue, 20 WEEK EMA Yellow, 50 WEEK EMA Red, 100 WEEK EMA Light Blue, 200 WEEK EMA Violet, DOUBLE BOLLINGER BANDS: Normal 2 Standard Deviations Green, 1 Standard Deviation Orange.

Source: MetaQuotes Software Corp, www.fxempire.com, www.thesensibleguidetoforex.com

03 Aug. 31 12.22

Key Points & Lessons The Daily Charts

For the US and Europe, the big gains came early in the week on rising hopes for new ECB stimulus, fueled by ECB President Draghi’s remarks that deflationary forces were proving more persistent than previously thought.

For the rest of the week, global stocks stayed in flat, tight trading ranges.

The big lesson here is that speculation on ECB easing was the big market mover, overriding data as well as news of Russia’s increasingly overt invasion of Ukraine.

This is a key lesson because:

On Saturday Reuters reported that ECB Executive Board member Benoit Coeure had reinforced new ECB easing expectations, saying the bank was prepared to further boost funding to banks in order to encourage lending.

This alone could give global indexes, particularly European ones, a boost early in the week.

It also puts added focus on Thursday’s ECB meeting and press conference. Although most analysts don’t expect the ECB to announce new measures yet, this event would still be the likely venue for the ECB to feed or dampen stimulus speculation.

Germany has usually been the chief opponent of new stimulus, but a string of bad German data last week has raised suspicions that German leaders will become more receptive to it as their own economy shows signs of weakening. In particular, we saw

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