Over the past
few years, the financial markets have become very speculative and highly
leveraged. Today, we have seen the
consequences of that aggressive risk appetite. On an intraday basis, the Dow hit a low
of 12,086 which represents a drop of over 500 pips, and is the largest move that
we have seen in at least 3 years.
Risk appetite is plunging as
investors bail out of nearly all assets.
Even gold has not escaped the liquidation. Prices have fallen over $20 since
yesterday’s close. The moves have been
substantial and February 27, 2007 will either go down as a major historical
turning point for the financial markets or an unparalleled buying opportunity.
The foreign
exchange market has provided a great clue into what is behind this move. The Japanese Yen, which has long been
the primary funding currency for a lot of these speculative investments has
skyrocketed. The Yen is now trading
at a 12 month high against the US dollar and is closing in on its year to date
highs against many of the other major currencies. The 9 percent drop in the Chinese stock
market is being quoted as the initial trigger for the drop, but the broadness of
the liquidation suggests that we have just seen a major shift in investor risk
appetite.
The first chart
below shows the close correlation between the Dow (Red line) and USD/JPY (black
line) over the past few months. For
the most part, USD/JPY has even been a leading indicator for the moves in the
Dow. The second chart is a
more granular look at the price action.
USD/JPY began drop to at 1am EST last night with virtually no
retracement. The Dow gapped at the
open, but for those watching USD/JPY, the continual drop in the currency pair
foreshadowed the continual drop in the Dow.


Don’t Blame It on Just
Although
Instead, the
moves today represent concerns about
After having
already made great profits being long the Dow and the short the Japanese Yen,
leveraged traders may not be as easily willing to get back into the market at
this point, especially given the risks that the
Major players
are getting stopped out of their long trades and we expect more to come. The Dow dropped 200 points intraday in a
matter of minutes while USD/JPY dropped 100 pips in a blink of an eye. The quick and sharp reversal in the Dow
and the far milder reversal in the dollar is clear indication that some big
money was being stopped out.
More to Come?
An unwinding of
this sort of degree is usually not just a one day affair. We could see further gains in the
Japanese Yen against the high yielders such as the Australian dollar,