Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Summary: Today we discuss the key companies reporting in this week's earnings bonanza with Saxo Equity Strategist Ruben Dalfovo, including Meta, Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft and Apple. We also note Nvidia's big drop on an otherwise positive day for the market - a concerning sign. Next week features several companies of note. Elsewhere, we note everyone rushing to declare a top in the crude oil market because of a classic Economist cover indicator. Really? Finally, a look at the macro and FX space, where the focus is on a strong bout of JPY intervention that sparked significant JPY volatility. This and more on today's pod, which is hosted by Saxo Global Head of Macro Strategy John J. Hardy.
The magazine cover old saw.
The Economist magazine cover (dated May 2) that everyone is passing around as the holy grail for a turn lower in crude oil prices. So the editorial staff of the Economist have magic powers? Apparently so!
For The FX Trader
The FX Trader piece from today, rounding up the week’s action, the JPY intervention and the focus for next week, as well as the latest trend status across G10, CNH and metals.
How much should one pay for SpaceX shares when they IPO?
The investment valuation sage Aswath Damodaran takes a thorough look at how to value SpaceXand suggesting the rumoured USD 1.75 trillion valuation is too expensive, not that it won’t trade there and not that Damodaran isn’t interested in the company, provided it trades at an appealing price.
Wait - Brent Johnson still likes the US dollar?
Every appearance sees him trotting out the same viewpoints - Johnson is very much a booster for the prospects of American power and global hegemony-ish, especially via the dominance of the US dollar, but he is still worth listening to for his thoughts on global markets.
The AI Apocalypse - is it closer than we think?
There are lots of articles like this one demonstrating how AI agents are already “exhibiting self-preservation instincts” and talking up the profound risks, even existential ones, for humanity. Are we too complacent? Will it take an AI agent robbing my bank account or my identity or sabotaging my internet-linked car (thankfully, my car is too old for that, at least I hope it is) for me to feel real fear. Either that or something large scale that happens in the public sphere?
Significant middle east oilfield capacity has been shut in - how much will be permanent?
Some are worried that this Hormuz Strait closure may have destroyed significant production capacity permanently for some of the fields that have been shut in due to the inability to export through the Hormuz Strait. If these fields are compromised for years, or even permanently, we will see the world moving on the more reliance on natural gas, electrified (EV) transport, etc., but there will be a sustained disruption for the near term until global alternative supply or demand can respond. It is worth noting that crude oil supplies are on the decline already, with booming natural-gas-liquids (liquids that condensate from gas production and are very useful) growing so rapidly that overall liquids production is still rising slightly.
Yeah, we’ve heard about the SaaSpocalypse, but the Apple-pocalypse is a new one.
Here is Naval Ravikant making the case for both - with the latter triggered by the “commoditization of the OS”. I don’t know who is right about all of this, but it does feel like profound disruption is afoot for incumbent giants in many areas that are enjoying too fat profits for their rapacious monopolies.
USDJPY saw a chunky sell-off intraday yesterday from the 160.50+ levels that traded just ahead of the official “final” intervention warning from Japan’s currency diplomat Atsushi Mimura, which according to sources also saw actual intervention and dro ve price action a much as five figures lower to below 156.00. A second flurry of apparent intervention this morning saw the pair testing the lows briefly. If we look at where USDJPY trades, we are still less than a percent from the bottom of the 158.00-160.00 range that corralled most of the price action in recent weeks. The next steps for a proper breakdown are 1) a close below the daily Ichimoku cloud, which is around 156.26. Then we have the 61.8% Fibo retracement of the rally off the lows that comes in near 155.30. The 200-day moving average near 154.11 currently could weigh at some point, but the bigger breakdown level is the significant pivot low near 152.10. To the upside, if the price action backs up on a daily close above 158.00, it’s a real sign that the market wants to put up a fight with Japan’s officialdom on its intent to strengthen the yen.