Author Archives: C S Vijayalakshmi

About C S Vijayalakshmi

Vijayalakshmi has the rare ability to look at charts using both Classical charting as well as Elliot Waves, which she combines with excellent proficiency in Excel. A growing presence in the social media sphere, she is also an accomplished danseuse and choreographer.

Global GDP Growth Forecasts

Insight: Pessimistic GDP forecasts could be a bullish sign

05-August-16 Real World GDP 2015: 3.1% / Current Global GDP consensus: 3.04% (2016)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

It is to be reasonably expected that initial forecasts of global GDP forecasts may be off the mark by a relatively wide margin. However, contrary to what might also be reasonably expected, the forecasts do not tend to get much better with subsequent revisions. Still, tracking the changes in the forecasts over time might give us useful insights into global economic sentiments.

This surmise is based on our study of the changes in averages of global GDP forecasts by various agencies for 2015 and 2016 from January 2015 to July 2016.

Comparing 2015 Actual GDP with 2015 & 2016 Consensus Projections

The study below how the 2015 GDP consensus forecast turned from optimism to pessimism.

2015 GDP: Forecasts minus Actual

The chart beside tracks the difference between the forecasts for 2015 GDP since Jan-2015 and the actual 2015 GDP that later came out at 3.1%.

It shows that the initial forecasts were 0.29% higher than the subsequent actual. The difference kept reducing over time and actually went down to -0.25% by January 2016.

The positive difference over the period Jan-15 to Sep-15 is marked in the chart as “Optimistic Forecast” and the negative difference from Oct-15 to Mar-16 is marked as “Pessimistic Forecast”.

2016 minus 2015 Forecasts

This chart tracks the changes in the difference between GDP forecasts for 2016 and 2015 since Jan-2015.

Initial forecasts suggested that 2016 growth would exceed 2015 growth by 0.20%. This difference grew to 0.41% by Aug-2015. This period is marked as “Initial Optimism”.

Later, as the 2015 forecasts were revised downward, the 2016 forecasts were also revised downwards such that the 2016-2015 difference came down to 0.26% by Mar-2016. This second period is labeled as “Pessimism on later revisions”.

The fact that the “Forecasts minus Actual GDP” difference swung from a large positive to a large negative in the first chart (instead of stabilizing near zero) supports our surmise that initial forecasts did not improve with subsequent revisions. But, what explains the swing itself? Why did the nature of forecasts change from optimistic to pessimistic?

Presumably the sharp fall in commodity prices and in the Chinese stock market from April-May 2015 compelled a lot of forecasters to downgrade their projections for Chinese growth and to become gloomy about global growth prospects as well. Further, we see that this gloominess impacted not only the forecasts for 2015, but also the forecasts for 2016, as seen in the second chart. This leads to our second surmise that whether or not the GDP forecasts can be useful in estimating actual GDP, the changes in the GDP forecasts can be used as an indicator for getting a handle on  global economic sentiments.

In the next section we present the background of our study and look at the sentiment aspect a little deeper.

Initial forecasts had an optimistic bias earlier. Might be a little pessimistic now.

Global GDP Growth Forecasts

Here we track the consensus global growth forecasts for 2015 and 2016 from Jan-2015 to Jul-2016 and also the actual 2015 GDP published by IMF at 3.1% in April 2016.

Note that the forecasts for both years were revised lower over time. The period from Jan-2015 to Sep-2015 is marked as “2015 Optimism” as the 2015 GDP forecast in this period was higher than the actual. This later turned into pessimism by Jan-2016.

The higher projections for 2016 over 2015 till Sep-2015 are marked as “2016 by 2015 Optimism”. This too has turned into pessimism now as the 2016 forecast is now lower than the 2015 actual.

Brent & Shanghai with 2015 GDP Forecasts

Forecasts depend on market sentiments

Most of the cuts in the 2015 GDP forecasts were seen between July-December 2015, during which period Crude prices and the Chinese equity markets also saw sharp declines, as tracked in this chart.

This raises the suspicion that downward revisions in GDP forecasts were more a reflection of sentiments in the global commodity and equity markets, rather than estimates of real economic growth.

Going back up to the chart on the top of this page, we see that the 2016 consensus forecast (3.04%) has been cut further since mid-2016, and now stand lower than the 2015 actual of 3.10%. The post Brexit sentiment is reflected in the June revisions and possibly indicate bullish signal for 2016.

CONCLUSION

The markets seem to have priced in all negative news, including Brexit, and no positive news is visible currently. If some positive surprises kick in the latter half of 2016, the actual GDP figures could come out better than the forecasts, exactly as it happened in 2015.

Early indications of positive surprises are the better NFP (non-farm payroll) data in the USA for June and July and the increase in July PMI (purchasing managers’ index) figures worldwide. Is further growth improvement in the offing?

If we use the GDP forecasts less for their intended purpose of estimating GDP and more as indicators of global macroeconomic sentiment, we are inclined to take a contrarion stance and be more optimistic about economic growth than the consensus. This study bolsters our overall bullishness on global commodity and equity markets.

In conclusion, we give an overview of the data sources and the methodology of this study.

Data Sources:
The consensus forecast used in the above charts are the average of forecasts taken from 29 major institutions (including respective governments and central banks, IMF, OECD and World Bank)  that publish forecast reports at different time intervals during a year. Majority of the projections are seen in the months of April-July and Oct-Dec. Forecasts made earlier is kept constant until any revisions are made.

Methodology:
Projections by different institutions like IMF, World Bank, Central Banks, S&P, Goldman Sachs etc are tracked and revisions are updated every month for the current and the upcoming years. The average of forecasts made for a particular year in a particular month is tabulated as below. Note that the figures in the table are arbitrary examples taken to reflect the trend in the actual projections:

Global GDP projections sample table

Note:
In a bullish context, you might also want to read our April 2016 study, wherein we have forecasted a possible 9X increase in the US Dow Jones Index over the next 10-15 years.

Aussie Long term Forecast – Jul’17

AUDUSD 0.7602/ Copper 2.65 / CADUSD 0.7769

Recap:

In the Jun’17 report (AUDUSD was 0.7523) we had kept our bullish stance for Aussie intact while waiting for confirmation on a break above 0.7750-0.7850.

 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:

AUDUSD Monthly Candles

We remain bullish on Aussie but expect a dip in July, to be followed by resumption in the uptrend thereafter towards 0.80. A break above 0.7750-0.7850 has not materialized yet and remains an important level to be kept an eye on. An actual breakout may occur in August or September as mentioned in our June report also.

 

Aussie Monthly Chart

Aussie indeed rose in June in line with our expectations and has come up to test the near term resistance zone of 0.7750-0.7850. Clear contraction in price movement is visible from the chart above since Dec’15 and is probably nearing exhaustion within July or August. We expect a short-lived dip to 0.75 or slightly lower in July, to be followed by a sharp break above 0.78 over August and September, along the path shown by blue line on the chart above, heading towards 0.80.

Quarterly Projections

AUDUSD Quarterly Projections

CAD/USD

CADUSD Weekly Chart

CAD/USD strengthened in June (from 1.2947 to 1.3547), contrary to our expectation of a further fall and could continue to rise over July and August. In the chart above, we have broken up the fall from 1.029 in Sep’12 to 0.688 in Jan’16 into 5-waves (as per the Elliot wave principle), which is being followed by an “A-B-C” correction that may possibly end near 0.84. Wave “C” is assumed to be playing out currently which could extend to 0.84 on the upside over the next few weeks indicating bullishness for the near term. This could indicate strength in Aussie too towards 0.80.

Copper Monthly Candles ChartCOPPER: Bullish

We have been following Copper for the last few months and it has been beautifully holding above 2.5 since Dec’16. We may now expect a rise towards 2.80-3.00 in the coming months.

It has moved up well in June from 2.5155 to 2.71 in line with our expectation and could be headed towards 2.80-3.00 over July and August. This could also boost the rise in CAD and Aussie, both being commodity currencies.

Conclusion

Close directional correlation between CAD, Copper and Aussie, continues to exist. A rise in Copper and CAD is supportive of a possible rise in Aussie mentioned in the previous page. Mild correction to 0.75 in July followed by a rise in August towards 0.78 is the preferred path for Aussie.

Japanese Yen Long term Forecast – Jul’17

08-Jul-17
Yen 113.87/ Nikkei 19929/ Gold 1212/ US-Japan 10Yr yield spread 2.31%

Recap:

In our Jun’17 report, Dollar Yen was expected to remain range bound in the 108-115 zone and neither of the boundaries was expected to break over Jul-Aug’17.


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:

Dollar-Yen has risen in June from levels near 109.10 to test 113.70 on the upside within the 108-115 range. The pair could now move up towards 115-116 in July followed by a corrective dip towards 112-111.  A break above 115-116 later on is the preferred path thereafter.

Corelation between yen and gold Chart

Yen & Gold correlation is Bullish for USDJPY

We are bearish till $1200 on Gold over the coming months. Given the strong directional correlation between Gold and Yen, weakness in Gold can lead to weakness in Yen.  The chart alongside shows that both Gold (LHS) and Yen (inverted USDJPY on RHS) have faced rejection from trendline resistances in line with our expectation in our June report. While the Resistances continue to hold, we could see some more downside in Gold and Yen towards 1200 and 0.0088-0.0087 levels respectively. A fall in JPYUSD towards 0.0087 could mean a rise in Dollar-Yen towards 115 (+ 2.20% from current levels)

Nikkei is bullish for USDJPY

Nikkei and Yen Corelation ChartThe Nikkei is rising to towards 21000 in line with our June report, looking potentially bullish towards 21000-21500 which could be tested over July-August’17.

A rise in Nikkei could also pull up Dollar-Yen also towards 115 and higher in the longer term given the strong directional correlation between the two. Thereafter, we could enter into a corrective phase but for the next couple of months, the trend is up.

Both the charts above indicate a rise in Dollar-Yen over July and August towards 115-116 levels from where a fall back towards 110 is possible. Overall the trend is up just now with movement within 115-110 likely to continue in the next couple of months.

US-Japan 10Yr Yield Spread: Near term bullish, long term bearish for Dollar Yen

USDJPY vs 10tbond JGB diff medium term Jul17As expected, the US-Japan 10Yr Yield Spread (2.28%, LHS on chart alongside) has risen from support near 2.10% to current levels. The yield spread may continue to rally towards 2.33-2.35%% before coming off from there to test lower levels of 2%.

2% could be a significant level to keep an eye for the long term. A bounce back from 2% could still keep the upward momentum intact. The strong correlation between the yield spread and Dollar-Yen is likely to hold for the coming months too. 

Quarterly Projections

USDJPY Quarterly Projections Jul'17 ChartDollar-Yen rose sharply in the quarter ending Dec ’16 from support near 100. This was followed by a dip to 110.11 in the Mar ’17 quarter. Thereafter the market dipped to 108.13 in April and has been ranged in 108.13-114.37 since then.

The current quarter could see another sharp rise towards 115-116, from where a further rise towards 120 might be possible. This is our preferred path. But, we would have to change this view in case we see a sharp rejection from 115.

Quarterly Projections Table Jul17Considering the larger picture, we look for a rise towards 120 over the coming 1-2 quarters as projected alongside and marked in dotted box on the chart above. Note that there could be an interim resistance near 115-116. But, only if we were to see a sharp rejection from 115-116 would we review our current upward bias towards 120.

Conclusion

Dollar Yen is likely to remain ranged within 115-110 over July-August, testing 115 in July before falling off towards 110 levels. Preference is of a break above 115 for the next quarter keeping a target of 120 but we will have to wait for price confirmation by end Aug-Sep’17. Till then we keep our near term view of testing 115 before coming off to 110 intact.

Aussie Long term Forecast – Aug’17

AUDUSD 0.7928/ Copper 2.888 / CADUSD 0.7908/ AUDINR 50.467

Recap:

In the Jul’17 report when AUDUSD was 0.7602, we had expected a dip towards 0.75 in July followed by a sharp rise towards 0.78-0.80 in August. An actual break out above the major resistance of 0.78 was expected over August and September.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:

Aussie rose sharply in July itself testing the target of 0.80 much faster than expected, instead of dipping to 0.75 first. The break out on the upside has been triggered by an already rising CADUSD as seen in our July report. The initial rise in CAD in June has lead to a sharp rise in Aussie and Copper in July. We expect the rally to continue for the next few months.

AUDUSD Monthly Candles

Aussie Monthly Chart

Our Aug-Sep’17 target of 0.80 has been met in July itself and the price could now gather momentum over the next couple of months to move higher towards 0.83-0.85 levels. The rise above 0.78-0.80 seems to be a significant break out signaling a sharp upward rally for the medium term, with Support seen near 0.78-0.77 now.

Quarterly Projections

AUDUSD Quarterly Projections Aug17

CADUSD Weekly Chart

CAD/USD

The strength in the Canadian Dollar has played out well in July from levels near 0.7714. As mentioned in our July report, the price is trading in its last phase of the A-B-C corrective move of the entire fall from levels near 1.04 in Sep’12. We could possibly see a rejection from levels near 0.83 towards 0.77 which could be tested in August.

Note that 0.83 is a crucial resistance, last seen in May’15 and could act as a decent resistance in the coming months.

 

Copper & AUDUSD: Weekly

Copper and AUDUSD WeeklyCopper finally broke above the important interim resistance near 2.75 in July to head towards our initial target of 2.78. Now we could see the rally to continue towards crucial resistance zone of 3.00-3.25 from where a rejection seems more likely.

Aussie has been rising in line with the rise in Copper and the Canadian Dollar. While Copper continues its rise towards 3.25, Aussie could move up towards 0.83 before seeing a dip back towards 0.80.

AUD/INR-Weekly

AUDINR WeeklyAUD/INR (50.766) has an important resistance near 52 which is likely to hold for the medium term. The currency pair has been trading below 52 since 2015 and while that holds, we could possibly see a pull back towards 50.

Although the AUD/USD chart by itself looks strong just now, but unless AUD/INR breaks above 52, the Indian Rupee is likely to remain strong against the Aussie in the coming months. Only a break above 52 (on AUDINR), if seen would force us to revise our current view.

 

Conclusion

Aussie has opened up upside levels of 0.83 after breaking above important resistance near 0.78. There could be some initial rejection from levels near 0.83, possibly in August which could lead to a corrective dip towards 0.80-0.79 levels before actually moving up towards 0.85 in September.

Euro Long term Forecast – Aug’17

5-August-17 / Euro 1.1772

RECAP

In our July’17 report, our bias was stated as neutral as Euro was standing at an inflection point. The success or failure to rise above the major resistance of 1.1450-1.1500 was to determine the near to medium term path. 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The rising German-US yield spread brought back the possibility of a long term bullish reversal back on the table last month and now with a break above 1.1500, the first signal for that reversal has been established. Our latest studies indicate Euro may rise to 1.2050 this quarter and to 1.2250 in the following 6 months.

 

Euro fractal monthly candles Aug17

The chart above showing the amazing similarity in the price structure between the periods of 1985-2002 and 2002-2016 was discussed last month. With a break above the May’16 top of 1.1620, the similarity is sustained and confirms the initial signal for a fresh bull market. The current rise has established the first higher high. If the next correction ends at a higher low (say near 1.11 at most), compared to the 2017 low of 1.0339 and thereafter a fresh high is made, the bull market will be fully confirmed. At this point, the chances of a higher low near 1.1100 looks good.

 

EURO: POSSIBLE PATH

EURUSD Weekly Candles Aug17

The chart above shows the Elliott Wave labeling and the probable path for Euro in the coming 3-4 months. According to this path, we may see a minor pause for 3-4 weeks after a high near 1.1900 and thereafter a new high around 1.2050 is expected, which may be followed by a lengthy correction for a 2-3 months.

 

EURO vs 2Yr GERMAN BUND/T-BOND DIFF: DIVERGENCE

German Bund diff vs EURUSD

This chart shows the 2Yr German Bund/US T-Bond yield spread against Euro since 2000. While both of them move in sync most of the times, 2017 is seeing a divergence (which is not visible for 10Yr 2Yr German Bund/T-bond yield spread against Euro). While this divergence is not the usual case, a very similar divergence was seen in the period of 2002-05, as shown in the first circle on the chart. In 2002-2005, the 2Yr yields spread kept going down but that didn’t stop Euro rallying and making new highs. If the phenomenon is repeated now, Euro can keep rising despite the divergence.

 

QUARTERLY PROJECTIONS

Eurusd Quarterly Projections Aug17

The previous projection is revised upward with the much sooner than expected rally to 1.18 levels. The current rally may take Euro 1.2050 levels before a medium term correction/consolidation but the downside for the next two quarters is expected to be limited to 1.15. The correction may be followed by another surge and test the major resistance of 1.2250 which may hold.

 

EURO-RUPEE: UPSIDE LIMITED TO 78.00 FOR NOW

EURINR Longterm

With EURUSD rising strongly, EURINR (75.70) has not only made only a gain of almost 11% from the 2017 low of 68.24 but also has also broken above the long term downtrend line coming down from 92 in 2013. Yet, EURINR may not appreciate commensurately with EURUSD as Rupee remains strong.

 

Weakness in USDINR is our preferred view, which limits the Euro’s gains vis-a-vis Rupee. If EURUSD rallies to 1.2050 and USDINR trades at 63.50, then we may expect EURINR at 76.52, compared to the current level of 75.70. Even with EURUSD at 1.2250 and assuming Rupee at the same 63.50 levels, we get 77.79 for EURINR, which implies very low chances of EURINR rising above the resistance of 78.00 in the coming few months.

 

CONCLUSION

Euro has provided initial signal for a long term reversal, which has opened up targets of 1.20 as discussed in the previous report. The target of 1.2050 may be achieved in the current quarter itself and 1.2250 by the Mar’18 quarter with the downside limited to 1.1600 levels for 2017.