Sector ETF Technical Analysis – September 17

ETF_DAYETF_QETF_YTD(click here if charts are not observable)

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The 2013 Global Interest Rate Spike

Nice chart illustrating the year-to-date increase in global interest rates (10-year local currency government bond yields) .  Not surprising the emerging markets lead the global rate spike.  Also note, Italy, Spain and Greece are more credit instruments rather than sovereign bonds in the truest sense (sovereign real rate + expected inflation).

The move in rates, combined with the shrinking U.S. current account deficit, could be why gold is so volatile and trading so poorly.

Sep16_Global Rates

(click here if chart is not observable)

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Sector ETF Technical Analysis – September 16

ETF_DAYETF_QETF_YTD(click here if charts are not observable)

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Merkel’s Bavarian boost ahead of German election

(click here if video is not observable)

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Daily Risk Monitor – September 16

Click on table to enlarge and for better resolution

RiskMON_1RiskMON_2RiskMON_3(click here if table is not observable)

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Sector ETF Technical Analysis – September 13

ETF_20 dayETF_50 dayETF_200 day(click here if charts are not observable)

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Weekend Lecture: Third World lessons for First World growth

Thirty years ago, China seemed hopelessly mired in poverty, Mexico triggered the Third World Debt Crisis, and Brazil suffered under hyperinflation. Since then, these and other developing countries have turned themselves around, while First World nations, battered by crises, depend more than ever on sustained growth in emerging markets.

In Turnaround, economist Peter Blair Henry argues that the secret to emerging countries’ success (and ours) is discipline—sustained commitment to a pragmatic growth strategy. With the global economy teetering on the brink, the stakes are higher than ever. And because stakes are so high for all nations, we need less polarization and more focus on facts to answer the fundamental question: which policy reforms, implemented under what circumstances, actually increase economic efficiency?

Pushing past the tired debates, Henry shows that the stock market’s forecasts of policy impact provide an important complement to traditional measures.

Through examples ranging from the drastic income disparity between Barbados and his native Jamaica to the “catch up” economics of China and the taming of inflation in Latin America, Henry shows that in much of the emerging world the policy pendulum now swings toward prudence and self-­-control. With similar discipline and a dash of humility, he concludes, the First World may yet recover and create long-­-term prosperity for all its citizens.

Peter Blair Henry is the dean of New York University’s Stern School of Business and former professor of International Economics at Stanford University. In 2008, he led Barack Obama’s Presidential Transition Team in its review of international lending agencies such as the IMF and World Bank. A member of the board of the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Kraft Foods Group, Peter received his PhD in economics from MIT and Bachelor’s degrees from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar, and the University of North Carolina, where he was a Morehead Scholar and a finalist in the 1991 campus-­-wide slam dunk competition. Born in Jamaica, Peter became a US citizen in 1986. – LSE

(click here if video is not observable)

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U.S. Sector ETF Performance – September 13

ETF_DAY

ETF_QETF_YTD

(click here if charts are not observable)

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Daily Risk Monitor – September 13

RiskMON_1RiskMON_2RiskMON_3(click here if table is not observable)

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Angela Merkel: The mother and the monster – Economist

Demonised across Europe for her determined enforcement of austerity, Germany’s chancellor remains overwhelmingly popular at home and looks likely to win the upcoming election.
Economist

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