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FTSE + FTSE 250 - consider trading (FTSE)     

cynic - 20 Oct 2007 12:12

rather than pick out individual stocks to trade, it can often be worthwhile to trade the indices themselves, especially in times of high volatility.

for those so inclined, i attach below charts for FTSE and FTSE 250, though one might equally be tempted to trade Dow or S&P, which is significantly broader in its coverage, or even NASDAQ

for ease of reading, i have attached 1 year and 3 month charts in each instance

cynic - 31 May 2013 19:37 - 12445 of 21973

lawn mowing is for the peasants :-)

cynic - 31 May 2013 21:01 - 12446 of 21973

wow! what happened to dow late on = -204 at close???? ...... have missed a lot of chances to trade (stupid boy!) but glad i had a short running, though it was looking pretty stupid at times

Seymour Clearly - 31 May 2013 22:58 - 12447 of 21973

Despite the gloom of the last week, May has been my most profitable month this year. I think June won't be so good!

cynic - 01 Jun 2013 08:06 - 12448 of 21973

DOW
around 14750 is a possibility - currently 15110, so not that far
will prob put a stop on my current short in case there's a sharp bounce


FTSE
6550 is prob not a bad buying level

===============

it seems to me that uk is in a somewhat strange position
unemployment is arguably/probably falling from its current 7.8% (or thereabouts) and is certainly massively lower than in the eurozone where it stands at around 22/23%

uk economy is starting to pick, though there is an inevitable considerable timelag before that and its accompanying feelgood factor feeds through to populace at large
on the other hand, eurozone (to me) looks to be still deep in the mire which is a concern as this is uk's traditional strongest market

uk housing starts and sales are at last on the way back up, and that will benefit not only the general economy, but also certain share sectors

june is likely to see an £15bn structural development plan put out, though how long those projects will take to get off the starting line is another matter

£ will almost certainly continue its slide against $, though € which i have long thought to preposterously o'valued, should slide against £ and will certainly fall against $

cynic - 03 Jun 2013 08:08 - 12449 of 21973

on balance, i don't think dow's fall on friday night was any more than computer generated profit-taking on the last trading day of the month ..... if i can pay attention (difficult for this dotard), then i think there'll be money to be made on both dow and ftse long

cynic - 03 Jun 2013 21:04 - 12450 of 21973

a quiet hooray as seem to be getting the feel back :-)

cynic - 05 Jun 2013 07:53 - 12451 of 21973

typical contrary markets clunk in anticipation of good news on the labour front in usa

ahoj - 05 Jun 2013 09:21 - 12452 of 21973

Thank you Cynic,
I think the situation in Europe is not as bad as it looks. Numbers are not representative of real facts, especially in Italy, and Spain where agricultural activities are high but many employees are not properly registered as employed.

cynic - 05 Jun 2013 09:33 - 12453 of 21973

you know that as a fact ahoj? .... i think not! ..... france is certainly in a dreadful mess; NL GDP (i think it was) fell 1% over the last 12 months (or was it just 3 or 6 months?); i certainly don't believe germany is nearly as robust as is put about; how many more eurozone countries would you like to check out

hilary - 05 Jun 2013 09:36 - 12454 of 21973

Spanish agriculture contributes 2.3% to national GDP. In Italy, that contribution is only 1.8%. Spanish unemployment on the other hand is 27%; Italy's is 12%.

If you are going to see black market employment in Club Med, it'll most likely be in the tourism sector which lasts only 4 (or 5 months at a pinch) each year.

ahoj - 05 Jun 2013 10:03 - 12455 of 21973

Cynic, I agree about France, BUT Germany is in robust shape, they export the most to growing markets in the Middle East, India, and China. Their problem is finding skilled workers. So well educated young Greeks who know English are employed there (while they might be still registered as unemployed in their country). Many highly educated Professors from Greece came to the UK to work at lower levels too.

Hilary, You are right the effect is not much, but this is the season with highest activities in agricultural and tourism industries (off course weather permitting!).

hilary - 05 Jun 2013 10:59 - 12456 of 21973

ahoj,

Did you see the IMF cut their German 2013 GDP forecast only this week?

Germany's main export partners are France (who are in the doggy doo doo themselves) and the US. The US may be on their way out of recession but, with fiber struggling to go any lower than €1.30, it means all those Porsches and Mercs aren't exactly as cheap as chips right now.

Germany doesn't export much to the middle east, nor to India. They export a reasonable amount to China, but actually have a Chinese balance of trade deficit (ie. they import more Chinese crap for their own consumption than they sell back to the tiddlywinks). The Chinese Yuan is also kinda pegged to the US dollar and that doesn't make export conditions particularly favourable.

cynic - 05 Jun 2013 11:04 - 12457 of 21973

i agree with hilary about germany ..... very little of our biz has ever come ex uk, but from a demand point of view, we find europe seriously lags far and middle east and usa, and this has been the case for at least the last 18 monthsb

HARRYCAT - 07 Jun 2013 08:05 - 12458 of 21973

Up or down this afternoon and next week presumably now all depends on the US non-farm payroll figures?

"A reading above 169k will surely escalate expectations that the Federal Reserve will unwind asset purchases in coming months, while a number sharply below would suggest otherwise. Today’s figure for that reason will dominate headlines, influencing price-action until the Fed’s next policy meeting this month,"

Shortie - 07 Jun 2013 09:29 - 12459 of 21973

USD/JPY and GBP/JPY are my favourites at the moment.

Shortie - 07 Jun 2013 09:33 - 12460 of 21973

FRANKFURT--Germany's central bank Friday cut its growth forecast for Europe's largest economy this year and next, tying the nation's fate to whether the euro-zone emerges from recession. "Much will depend on whether the economic situation stabilizes in the euro-area crisis countries," Jens Weidmann, president of the Deutsche Bundesbank said in a statement. In its semi-annual economic projections, the central bank lowered its growth forecast to 0.3% this year from its December estimate of 0.4% expansion, and also revised down its forecast for 2014 growth to 1.5% from 1.9%. Germany has managed ride out the euro-zone crisis while many other European economies have floundered, but weak investment and sagging exports amid recession in some euro-area countries and the slowing global economy caused Germany's economy to contract sharply in the fourth quarter. Germany narrowly escaped recession in the first quarter, when its gross domestic product, a measure of economic growth, increased just 0.1%, on the back of robust private consumption. The Bundesbank's forecasts follow those of the European Commission, which last month lowered its 2013 growth outlook for Germany to 0.4% from a previous estimate of 0.5%. Earlier this month, the International Monetary Fund also cut its estimate for German growth in 2013 to "around 0.3%" from 0.6%. Despite the dulled forecasts, the Bundesbank said Germany's economy is slowly picking up again, as other euro-zone economies bottom out and the world economy gains momentum. A solid labor market, wage increases and a general easing of inflation are supporting private consumption in Germany, Mr. Weidmann added. According to the Bundesbank, consumer price inflation, as measured by the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices, is set to accelerate modestly this year to 1.6% from its December forecast of 1.5%. Next year, it will slow to 1.5%, the central bank said.

ahoj - 07 Jun 2013 09:43 - 12461 of 21973

If Germany was not a part of Europe, their currency, Dutch Mark) would be much higher at levels equate with Euro $2. So, German companies they are the main beneficiaries of the single currency.

halifax - 07 Jun 2013 10:53 - 12463 of 21973

shortie excellent article and comments, the euro "nightmare" is not over by a long way.

Shortie - 07 Jun 2013 11:16 - 12464 of 21973

The article pretty well demonstrates why there will never be any beneficiary of a single currency, if Germany had exited the Euro back in 2008/9 then maybe it would have been seen today as having crystalised its gains. The same could be said of Greece if it had borrowed heavily as a member and then left devaluing its currency and debt in the process. Neither of these things happened, stability seams to be the buzz word at the moment, but just like trading stabilty doesn't lead to profits it leads to lower risk which is what EZ members strive for.
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