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
BigTed
- 16 Mar 2008 21:32
- 1491 of 21973
Useful site for currency information, although heavily weighted towards charting...
http://www.dailyfx.com/
niceonecyril
- 17 Mar 2008 06:52
- 1492 of 21973
Looks like tin hat time for the markets, with the Asian markets tumbling overnight?
cyril
BigTed
- 17 Mar 2008 08:43
- 1493 of 21973
Massive gap up by the Yen, USD and GBP taking a hammering, euro in the 157's... A run on the dollar???
BigTed
- 17 Mar 2008 12:22
- 1494 of 21973
Never seen anything like this before... GBPJPY massive drop now just over 19330... EURUSD hit 159 earlier, currently wondering if thats the top, lots of headlines using words like dollar capitulating, tanking etc would support this, possibly looking at G3 central banks intervening... thought it would take several weks for GBPJPY to reach 190, but a 7/800 pip drop overnight is bordering on ridiculous.... mores the pity i didn'thave a short open....
cynic
- 17 Mar 2008 12:28
- 1495 of 21973
you and me both Ted! .... was looking at it just a few weeks ago at 210/212 but did nothing
spitfire43
- 17 Mar 2008 12:35
- 1496 of 21973
have been away from home recently, and too busy to contribute, but still keeping a close on this interesting thread. still have one short running in GAW which is heading in the right direction.
can't see dow heading anywhere but down now, not even Ronnie Regan can save this one.
BigTed
- 17 Mar 2008 12:41
- 1497 of 21973
Cracking research site, although very bearish well worth reading some of their articles...
http://www.moneyweek.com/file/43864/a-rescue-for-bear-stearns-but-the-fed-is-destroying-the-dollar.html
explosive
- 17 Mar 2008 13:13
- 1498 of 21973
19199 have decided to buy GBP/YEN pair... My only open play at the moment.
cynic
- 17 Mar 2008 13:25
- 1499 of 21973
sooner or later, and jujst perhaps sooner than one might expect, currencies will start swinging the other way .... interesting to note that whereas only 2/3 months ago ZAR was quite strong, especially against US$, it has now reversed and US$ is equal to its 5 year high against ZAR
BAYLIS
- 17 Mar 2008 13:36
- 1500 of 21973
Nearly scared myself to death on the Dow OPEN DOWN 148
BigTed
- 17 Mar 2008 13:43
- 1501 of 21973
Have been saying so for a couple of weeks now, but its all about timing, thas why i suggest today may have seen a top for a couple of currencies.... the strong euro will start hitting exports hard and Trichet wont want that, at the endof the day, everyone needs the yanks business, decoupling is never going to happen...
BigTed
- 17 Mar 2008 13:58
- 1502 of 21973
And less than a week after getting badly burnt on Nymex oil shorts, it tumbles back to my break even point, now parity with Brent. Dont believe i've seen a day like this for while...
cynic
- 17 Mar 2008 17:11
- 1503 of 21973
wonder how scary GS's figures will be? .... surely not much worse than already built into the market, or at least damn well hope not
cynic
- 17 Mar 2008 17:35
- 1504 of 21973
would have been easy to catch a very bad cold with bullion today .... opened at about 1026 but is now hoverfing at 1000
HARRYCAT
- 18 Mar 2008 11:01
- 1505 of 21973
Would I be correct in saying that, as futures are currently +110, the market is expecting the figures from Goldman Sachs & Lehman Bros to be pretty good?
cynic
- 18 Mar 2008 11:07
- 1506 of 21973
GS should have published yesterday but withdrew their results, presumably with Fed's blessing.
institutions have been strictly instructed by Fed (and others?) not to rock Lehman's boat, so presumably their figures are or will be total shit ..... not sure when these are due
explosive
- 18 Mar 2008 11:07
- 1507 of 21973
My GBP/YEN future doing well, buy at 19199 yesterday and now 19384.
explosive
- 18 Mar 2008 11:16
- 1508 of 21973
March 18 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may be readying the deepest interest-rate cut in a generation as the central bank struggles to prevent a meltdown in financial markets and a recession.
Traders predict the Federal Open Market Committee, meeting today in Washington, will lower the overnight lending rate by a full percentage point or more, based on futures prices in Chicago. That would be the biggest reduction since 1984, when Paul Volcker led the central bank, and would bring the benchmark rate down to 2 percent.
The Fed took emergency steps over the weekend to stave off a financial panic, lowering its rate on direct loans to banks and becoming lender of last resort for Wall Street's biggest dealers in government bonds.
``The Fed has moved very aggressively to deal with liquidity problems that are major,'' said former Fed Governor Lyle Gramley, now a senior adviser at Stanford Group Co. in Washington, who said today's reduction may be as much as a full percentage point. ``They need to be aggressive on the monetary policy side. This is the worst crisis we have faced in more than 50 years.''
The severity of the crisis was underscored by the Fed's emergency action on the evening of March 16, the first weekend policy shift since 1979. A week ago, the debate among economists was whether the Fed would cut by 50 basis points or 75 basis points.
Volcker's Fed
Now, a reduction of 1 percentage point is seen as a sure bet among futures traders and some anticipate a move of as much as 1.25 percentage points. Either would be the deepest since Volcker's Fed lowered the federal funds rate to 10 percent from 11.75 percent in October 1984.
The dollar traded at $1.5757 per euro at 7:42 a.m. in London from $1.5729 yesterday. Against the yen, the U.S. currency was 97.51 yen from 97.33. Treasuries declined, pushing the two-year yield up 3 basis points to 1.38 percent.
Bernanke, whose views on monetary policy were shaped by his scholarly work on the Great Depression, has seen losses at the world's biggest banks and securities dealers balloon to $195 billion since the start of last year, culminating in the collapse last week of the fifth-largest securities firm, Bear Stearns Cos.
Bernanke has failed to calm the turmoil, which his predecessor Alan Greenspan calls the ``most wrenching'' since the end of World War II, even after lowering the overnight rate five times since September and committing to pump an unprecedented $400 billion in cash and securities into the banking system.
Avoiding a Crash
Policy makers have scheduled an announcement at about 2:15 p.m. in Washington.
Bernanke, 54, has already stepped up efforts to keep strains in markets from triggering a crash. The Fed agreed March 16 to help finance JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s purchase of the failing Bear Stearns and the central bank offered last week to lend $200 billion in Treasuries in exchange for debt that includes mortgage-backed securities.
``The Fed will be extremely hesitant to disappoint the markets,'' said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital Markets Inc. and a former member of the Richmond Fed staff, who predicts a full percentage-point cut. ``Things are still very fragile. We are in a situation where credit tightening has started to feed on itself, and it has real economic implications.''
Recession Signals
Recent economic data suggests the first recession since 2001 may have begun in December or January. Harvard University economist Martin Feldstein, a member of the committee that officially declares when a recession has started, said last week that he believed a recession was under way and it could be the most severe since World War II.
``They are worried about the spillover effects of financial markets and what they can do to keep that from happening,'' said Robert Eisenbeis, former research director at the Atlanta Fed who is now chief monetary economist at Cumberland Advisors Inc. in Vineland, New Jersey.
The economy expanded 0.6 percent at an annualized pace last quarter and economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month predicted the pace will slow to 0.1 percent in January to March.
``Bernanke believes the economy is in a very serious situation right now,'' said Paul Kasriel, director of economic research at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. ``The Fed is worried about a very severe credit contraction that can cause an even weaker economy.''
Fed's Forecast
Fed officials lowered their projections for economic growth by half a percentage point this year, according to quarterly figures published last month.
Fed Governor Frederic Mishkin said March 4 that the economy may face an ``adverse feedback loop,'' where tightening credit and a declining economy create a cycle that leads to further deteriorating conditions. The FOMC discussed that possibility during the January meeting, according to its minutes.
``The overriding concern is the condition of the financial markets.'' said William Ford, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and now chairman of the finance department at Middle Tennessee State University. ``They are fighting a financial panic and want to preserve orderly markets.''
cynic
- 18 Mar 2008 12:16
- 1509 of 21973
expect usual surge with the announcement followed by quick reversal ..... would be good if Dow could actually stay above 12000 or pref 12100
cynic
- 18 Mar 2008 12:19
- 1510 of 21973
just picked up from CNN ..... moderately interesting ..... Goldman Sachs reports earnings well above Wall Street forecasts; CEO says market conditions 'clearly very difficult.'