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Crude Oil Boosted on OPEC Jawboning, NZD Soars Ahead of RBNZ – US Market Open

Crude Oil Boosted on OPEC Jawboning, NZD Soars Ahead of RBNZ – US Market Open

MARKET DEVELOPMENT – USD DROPS ON DIVDED CONGRESS, NZD SOARS AHEAD OF RBNZ, OPEC JAWBONING BOOSTS OIL

USD: The US Dollar fell in the wake of the Midterm election outcome, which produced a divided congress with the Republicans retaining the Senate and the Democrats winning the House of Representatives. Ultimately, this has been taken as a Dollar negative given that the Trump administration may face increased hurdles in regard to domestic agenda’s, most notably, further tax cuts and fiscal stimulus. USD index hovers around intra-day lows as markets digest with the basket back below the 96.00 handle.

EUR: The Euro has continued to track higher this morning, taking out the 50% Fibonacci Retracement at 1.1447 (rise from 1.0340-1.2555). Much of the upside in the Euro had been exacerbated by a bout of short covering with bearish bets at $4bln in the run up to the election.The upside in the Euro against the greenback had ran into notable resistance at the 1.15 handle with a huge 6.3bln vanilla option, which is set to expire on Friday.

GBP: Modest gains for the Pound which had climbed above the 1.31 handle amid the weakness in the US Dollar. Although, much of the attention for GBP remains on Brexit, which has taken some of the shine from the Pound, dipping back towards 1.3140 from highs of 1.3174. As it stands, UK cabinet is set to have a second meeting on Friday/Saturday with time running out for November summit to be announced. However, option markets suggest positive news may be on the way with 1-month risk reversals continuing to show a reduction in premium for GBP puts.

NZD: The Kiwi is flying high today after yesterday’s stellar jobs report, in which the jobless rate dropped to the lowest level in a decade, falling to 3.9% beating expectations of 4.5%. Alongside this, the jobs growth more than doubled to 1.1% from 0.5%. This in turn has reduced bets of further easing by the RBNZ, who are to announce their latest monetary policy decision at 2000GMT.

Crude Oil: OPEC jawboning has taken Brent crude prices back above $73/bbl with reports suggesting that Russia and Saudi Arabia could be looking at reducing oil production in 2019. This had shortly been followed by reports that OPEC+ were also considering production cuts next year, which in turn has underpinned prices this morning. Much of this talk has been on the premise that Iranian sanctions may not be as bad as initially feared given the recent announcement by the US to provide oil waivers, consequently reducing the impact of sanctions.

Crude oil boosted on opec jawboning, nzd soars ahead of rbnz - us market open

DailyFX Economic Calendar: Wednesday, November 7, 2018 – North American Releases

Crude oil boosted on opec jawboning, nzd soars ahead of rbnz - us market open

DailyFX Webinar Calendar: Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Crude oil boosted on opec jawboning, nzd soars ahead of rbnz - us market open

IG Client Positioning NZDUSD Chart of the Day

Crude oil boosted on opec jawboning, nzd soars ahead of rbnz - us market open

NZDUSD: Data shows 60.4% of traders are net-long with the ratio of traders long to short at 1.53 to 1. In fact, traders have remained net-long since Sep 20 when NZDUSD traded near 0.65776; price has moved 1.4% higher since then. The number of traders net-long is 12.6% higher than yesterday and 8.4% lower from last week, while the number of traders net-short is 9.9% higher than yesterday and 5.7% higher from last week.

We typically take a contrarian view to crowd sentiment, and the fact traders are net-long suggests NZDUSD prices may continue to fall. Positioning is more net-long than yesterday but less net-long from last week. The combination of current sentiment and recent changes gives us a further mixed NZDUSD trading bias.

Five Things Traders are Reading

  1. Gold & Silver Price Analysis – Resistance May Not Keep Them Down for Long” by Paul Robinson, Market Analyst
  2. bitcoin Cash and Ripple: Boosting Market Sentiment | Webinarby Nick Cawley, Market Analyst
  3. Trading Forecast for Crude Oil, Gold Price, S&P 500, DAX 30 & Moreby Paul Robinson, Market Analyst
  4. EURUSD Analysis: Resistance Curbs Further Upside, Eyes on FOMC” by Justin McQueen, Market Analyst
  5. GBPUSD Price: Important Bullish Price Zone Nears” by Nick Cawley, Market Analyst

— Written by Justin McQueen, Market Analyst

To contact Justin, email him at Justin.mcqueen@ig.com

Follow Justin on Twitter @JMcQueenFX

Published at Wed, 07 Nov 2018 14:20:00 +0000

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Morgan Stanley Analyst: True Price of Bitcoin Could Be Zero

In a recent report sent out to clients, Morgan Stanley analyst James Faucette cautioned that the “true” value of bitcoin might actually be zero.


Zero. Zip. Nada.

The report, titled bitcoin Decrypted, discussed the difficulty in ascribing value to the digital currency, noting that it behaves like neither a currency nor a store-of-value commodity like gold, silver, etc… Examining several key factors, Faucette points out:

  • bitcoin can’t be valued as a currency because it has no associated interest rate;
  • It may be likened to digital gold but, unlike gold itself, which is used in electronics, jewelry, etc.., bitcoin has no inherent use*;
  • While it is technically a payment network, bitcoin is difficult to scale and charges no transaction fee*;
  • bitcoin’s average daily trade volume over the last 30 days is only $3 billion* compared to $5.4 trillion in the FX market;
  • The estimated daily purchase volume for bitcoin is less than $300 million compared to Visa’s $17 billion

Bitcoin acceptance among Top 500 eCommerce Retailers

All of these facts, according to Faucette, underscore the fact that the digital currency has “virtually no acceptance, and shrinking.” In fact, he provides a handy chart (above) to illustrate his statement. Because of this, he maintains that “If nobody accepts the technology for payment then the value would be 0.”

Hold On There, Speed…

I hate to burst your bubble, Mr. Faucette, but some of your facts are…shall we say…less than factual. Mind you, I am no financial analyst, but then you don’t need to be to pick out these errors.

FACT 1bitcoin has no inherent use

This one is a little tricky to refute, but I’ll give it a go. Playing devil’s advocate, let’s say that bitcoin as a cryptocurrency has no inherent use. It’s underlying architecture, the blockchain, has a wide range of applications. I know…”But blockchain and bitcoin are two separate things…” True, but without the blockchain, we wouldn’t have bitcoin to begin with, so one could conceivably argue that – in this instance – they are two sides of the same coin.

bitcoin has other uses too – especially in a socioeconomic sense. Consider the current economic conditions in Venezuela and Zimbabwe. These people have been utterly failed by their respective governments. Inflation is through the roof, their native currency has about as much value as one-ply toilet paper, and people – families – are starving. So where are they turning? bitcoin. People are mining bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies so that they can survive. That’s pretty useful if you ask me.

Starving Venezuelans Turn to Bitcoin Mining in Desperation

FACT 2bitcoin charges no transaction fee

Um…hello? There is absolutely a transaction fee, and right now, we’re paying it out the wazoo. It’s part of those “scalability issues” you mention in your research report. Now, if by transaction fee, you mean a centralized service provider collecting a fee that goes into its own coffers, then I guess maybe you’re technically correct, but you’ve still missed the point. Kind of like tech support at a software company whose name will not be mentioned here.

FACT 3bitcoin’s average trade volume over the last 30 days is only $3 billion

What rock have you been living under? Go look at the historical data for the last 30 days on CoinMarketCap. It’s okay. I’ll wait. Second column from the right. The one labeled Volume. If you take the average of all 30 days, as of this writing, it works out to $11.8 billion – just a wee bit more than your $3 billion estimate.

Bitcoin average 24hr trade volume

I respect your experience and your financial acumen, Mr. Faucette, and it even looks like we both believe in the same old adage, “Forewarned is forearmed,” but if you’re arming your clients with inaccurate information, what purpose does it serve?

What do you think of Faucette’s claims? Could the true value of bitcoin actually be zero or is this just more wharrgarbl? Let us know in the comments below.


Images courtesy of Morgan Stanley, Reuters

The post Morgan Stanley Analyst: True Price of Bitcoin Could Be Zero appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.