Sent from my BlackBerry®

-----Original Message-----
From: MeLinda MeLisa <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 21 Oct 2010 12:41:08 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [StockForex] Japanese Stocks Poised for Bounce to 11,000

Japanese Stocks Poised for Bounce to 11,000


Japanese Nikkei 225 Stock Average, which has lost 9.6 percent this
year, may rise 20 percent through February next year, according to a
technical analysis by Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co.

The gauge may climb toward 11,408, the intraday high for the year
achieved on April 5, said Naohiko Miyata, chief technical strategist
at the brokerage unit of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Japanese
biggest bank by market value. Miyata says the gauge may be set for a
sustained period of advance as the yen enters its final phase of gains
against the dollar and after the measure found support at a key
Fibonacci level.

Day-by-day we are seeing more signs that the gauge has bottomed out.
Miyata said in a telephone interview. It;s very possible that the
Nikkei will start testing its April high in a pattern similar to the
one we saw last year.

Miyata also believes the yen may start weakening next month, helping
to boost the Nikkei.

The dollar-yen rate has been moving in an 11-month cycle, touching its
low when it enters a new phase, he said. The Japanese currency rose to
its highest level for 2009 when it traded at 84.83 on Nov. 27. Taking
that as a starting point, the end of the 11-month cycle will be this
month.

The yen should start to weaken significantly from next month, with the
Nov. 3 Federal Open Market Committee meeting as a turning point,
Miyata said.

As the saying goes: buy on expectation and sell on fact. If the U.S.
does carry out quantitative easing as people expected, there will be
selling of the yen, Miyata said.

The Fibonacci sequence was identified by Italian mathematician
Leonardo Fibonacci in the 13th century. The ratio between the numbers,
about 0.618, is known as the golden mean, and is used by technical
analysts to find levels of resistance and support.

According to Paul Chesson, manager of Invesco Perpetual's Japan fund,
which tops the best 10-year performance tables, it's all about timing.

In 2002, he said after the Nikkei bounced that it was "a false dawn''.
And again in 2006, he said that valuations were "too high'' to be a
bull. He was right both times.

"People usually sell Japan at the low points, and are all over it like
a cheap suit when it has gone up for a couple of years. Last time
everyone recommended it was 2006 when the market was 100pc higher than
it is today.

"If you buy on a high you'll be disappointed," said Mr Chesson, who
says valuations are a key factor today. "The market was too expensive
10 years ago, but now it's too cheap. A fund manager only invests in
30 companies, not the whole market, so he can still perform well even
if the market does not."

Mr Chesson's change of heart is the main reason why some investors are
optimistic.

Deflation has long been a factor in Japan, but Mr Rose said this
should not concern the investor too much.

"It has been tackled several times over the past 10 years, but I
invest in companies, not politicians, and these will succeed."

Although Japan may be geographically linked to the big emerging
markets of China and Russia, economically it could not be more
different.

Japan is a developed market and so does not have the same room for
exponential growth that its neighbours have experienced in the past
decade - and are expected to continue to have.

He invests in companies that are undervalued. He stresses that he
picks companies, rather than invests in sectors or the stock market as
a whole.


Japan Sets Interest Rates at 0 pct

Japan's central bank has launched a 5 trillion yen ($60 billion)
effort to buy a wide range of debt, including government bonds,
corporate IOUs, real-estate investment trust funds and exchange-traded
funds, setting off global concerns that central banks around the world
are prepared for more quantitative easing.

The moves by the Japanese and U.S. central banks indicate that global
monetary policy is approaching the end of the road, having exhausted
nearly every tool of monetary policy available to stimulate economies
that remain resistant to job growth.



Source: http://marketpin.blogspot.com/

Kirim email ke