Oil and the dollar under the microscope
Oil and gas stocks had a great run to the upside following the
correction low in earlier March.
The Amex Oil Index (XOI) rallied nearly 180 points from its March low of
1,100 to its most recent high of 1,280.
The Amex Natural Gas Index (XNG) was likewise bullish from March through
late April and rallied from its correction trough of 440 to its latest high of
500.
How much energy is left in the oil/gas stock sector after this
extraordinary rally? To answer that
question we turn to the internal momentum indicator series known as OILMO.
Earlier
last month I pointed out that the dominant interim momentum indicator for the
oil stocks would turn up strongly into March and April and would most likely
allow for some impressive gains to be made in the leading oil stocks. This turned out to be the case as
120-day oil stock internal momentum reversed in early March and roared ahead
into April, allowing the XOI to rally.
This week, however, witnessed the peaking of the 120-day oil stock
momentum indicator (OILMO). Based
on my rate of change calculations the peak has most likely been seen for
120-day momentum for some time.
It’s
somewhat sad that the most vigorous part of the rally is ending (or so it
appears); however, the trend is still technically bullish and there appears to
be enough lingering upward bias to not only keep the sector afloat near the
recent highs for a while longer but also to allow a few stocks to make higher
highs, especially those that are in a relative strength position versus the XOI
and XNG indices. There may even be
a few turnaround attempts among the lower-priced stocks, which we’ll look
at in coming reports.
Meanwhile,
the 5-day, 10-day and 20-day price oscillators for the XNG index have all
pulled back from an “overbought” extreme to a more normal
reading. This takes some of the
pressure off the gas stocks in the immediate term. Based on my rate of change calculations
the 20-day price oscillator for the XNG will remain neutral to slightly oversold in the coming two weeks and this should allow XNG
to maintain price support above its 30-day and 60-day moving averages.
On the oil front, a recent front page headline in the Financial
Times newspaper proclaimed that “Iraq could have twice
as much oil as estimated.”
The report was based on a study from the consulting firm IHS and it
estimated that Iraq’s
production could be increased from its current rate of less than 2m barrels a
day to 4m b/d in about five years, if international investment begins to
flow. This potential increase in
oil reserves is only the tip of the iceberg as other “mystery”
supplies of oil will be announced in the coming months. This will keep the oil price in check
and will prevent the oil price-related economic crunch the bears have been
expecting.
Dollar
collapse?
Will the U.S. dollar experience a catastrophic collapse? Books and articles galore have been
showered upon the public in which the writers purvey a coming dollar crash, a scenario which they say will destroy the U.S. economy as
well as render the dollar a has-been among the major world currencies. Could such an event actually transpire
in 2007?
Dollar bears point out that the dollar’s weakness so far
this year is due to a perceived deterioration in “U.S. economic
fundamentals as well as a rise in implied inflation.” (Financial Times,
April 20). A chief currency
strategist at Danske Bank was quoted as saying,
“Historically, a stagflationary environment has
been bearish for the dollar.”
With monetary liquidity making a major rebound in the U.S. and the
growth stock outlook looking most promising, capital inflows will end up
sustaining the dollar and preventing a stagflation-type of environment that the
gloom-and-doomers keep preaching. The simple fact remains that the dollar
is still the world’s reserve currency and as long as it maintains its top
status it will be supported and kept from crashing. There will undoubtedly be periods of
weakness, perhaps even extreme weakness, but such weakness won’t be
allowed to develop further into an outright collapse. The dollar has been likened by one
observer to a cancer patient: the
poor unfortunate is given chemotherapy to the point of death, then resuscitated
with vitamins and allowed to restore white blood cell count for a while. Then back to the chemo and the
inevitable decline in health that follows.
Same story with the dollar:
strong dollar, weak dollar, strong dollar, weak dollar….it’s
all part of how the global financial system operates -- a fact which apparently
escapes the dollar perma-bears. They don’t seem to grasp that
currency fluctuations are part and parcel of how the world’s financial
markets and economies are run; further, that periods of weakness, sometimes
prolonged weakness, are inevitable.
The news media will also use the weak dollar as a proverbial
“big stick” to beat the public on the head and scare them into
selling stocks whenever it is needed, as was done in part during the late
February/early March stock market correction. This is all part of the gamesmanship
that keeps the average retail investor out of equities while the smart traders
buy stocks on the cheap. Therefore
it shouldn’t be surprising if the recent talk surrounding the sub-prime
mortgage market is soon supplanted by talk of an “imminent dollar
collapse.” But as weak as the dollar is now, it won’t be
allowed to suffer a catastrophic decline.
The
latest headline in the Financial Times has once again put the spotlight on the
latest dollar weakness. Now
it’s time to watch for the dollar bears to come out in full force,
growling all the way. The U.S.
dollar index has fallen to a major benchmark low at the 82 level and is
threatening to test the major long-term low at 80. Support should be encountered in the
dollar somewhere between the 80 and 82 levels followed by a period of base
building and eventually a reversal of the weakness. Already the dollar index has made a
downside “channel buster” which normally implies exhaustion of the
short-term downtrend. The dollar
index has made three successive channel busters below the lower boundary of the
downtrend channel that has been intact since January of this year. See chart below for details. A triple channel buster usually succeeds
in at least ending the short-term downtrend.
Another
point well worth considering is the relationship between the dollar and
interest rates. In particular, the
3-month T-Bill Discount Rate can be used as a leading indicator for the
direction of the dollar. As Carl Swenlin points out in his
Decision Point web site: “The direction of interest rates is an important element
affecting the dollar. Rising rates give
the dollar strength and falling rates bring weakness. Changes in interest rate
trends tend to lead the dollar by about a year.” Note the dollar vs. interest rate chart
below.
As you can clearly see, the T-Bill rate has been rising steadily
since 2004. It’s time for the
dollar to respond by establishing support above its long-term base line and
reversing its current weakness, an event that should be witnessed in the coming
months.
Clif Droke is editor of the daily Durban Deep/XAU Report which
covers South African, U.S.
and Canadian gold and silver mining equities and forecasts PM trends, short-
and intermediate-term, using unique proprietary analytical methods and internal
momentum analysis. He is also the
author of numerous books, including "Stock Trading with Moving
Averages." For more
information visit www.clifdroke.com