hilary
- 31 Dec 2003 13:00
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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!
hodgins
- 16 Sep 2004 21:16
- 1919 of 11056
If it's going up in Asia it should be going up already so went short and try to add tomorrow
Sue 42
- 17 Sep 2004 08:09
- 1920 of 11056
I'm not sure that's what hilary meant - she usually means buy /$ so go long ie expect the /$ to rise above the 1.79 its at (at least that's what I think she meant) so $ would be weakening
hodgins
- 17 Sep 2004 08:59
- 1921 of 11056
post 1913, I believe, suggested long the greenback. However, the actual trade is /$ so you are long or short the pound (but obviously relatively the opposite way on the dollar). So you would short the pound to be effectively long the greenback.
hilary
- 17 Sep 2004 09:21
- 1922 of 11056
hodgins has got it right, albeit that things have changed since I posted. I'm short Dec Cable and have been for some time and probably will be for a bit longer. When I posted yesterday, I was short Cable, short /$ and long $/CHF on daytrades. They were closed an hour or two after I posted and this morning I'm short greenback.
Sue 42
- 17 Sep 2004 13:40
- 1923 of 11056
Oh dear - I am utterly confused!
If I have (CMC S/B) a cable of 1.790 say, would you buy or sell to go long? and similarly to short?
hilary
- 17 Sep 2004 15:30
- 1924 of 11056
Sue,
Short greenback (USD) = Long Cable or EUR/USD (ie BUY) or short USD/CHF (ie SELL)
Long greenback = Short Cable or EUR/USD or long USD/CHF
hodgins
- 17 Sep 2004 15:42
- 1925 of 11056
Forex trades are always one currency relative to another while share trades just go up or down.
Convention has it that cable (historical term from days of cable under the sea between here and North America) is quoted as /$ (in that order!)Similarly for
Euro/$ but $/Swiss and $/Yen are traditionally the other way around.
So if you had 1.7899-1.7901 or whatever spread is on /$ (Cable) you would buy/go long cable at 1.7901 or sell/go short at 1.7899
You have to go long or short the pound but are effectively doing the opposite for the dollar.
So if you wanted to go long the dollar/greenback against those four other currencies you would need to sell/short the pound and the euro against the dollar but buy the dollar against the Yen or Swissie.
It is possible to find the trades in reverse order on some platforms and you may get more leverage or less risk but that is too confusing
hodgins
- 17 Sep 2004 16:27
- 1926 of 11056
closed short for most of the way between 1.7950 and just above 1.7900 (sb so approximate). Time for run on after school activities.
hilary
- 21 Sep 2004 07:20
- 1928 of 11056
You might be right MM. I've still got my longer term Cable short open, but my indicators are a bit mixed this morning across the European majors, so I'm going to handsit with the daytrades till I'm a bit more confident. Leaning towards Dollar bearishness atm ...... we'll see.
Sue 42
- 21 Sep 2004 09:51
- 1929 of 11056
Hilary - thanks - yes that is what I thought - long cable = BUY (GBP/USD) which is that the dollar wil weaken and vice versa - I thought I was going mad - but I am not!
Maggot
- 21 Sep 2004 19:23
- 1930 of 11056
I hardly believe this - just got a s/b requote on Cable by cmc!! Against me, of course - though it went back five seconds later and I got out. Taking the p**s I thought, though.
hilary
- 22 Sep 2004 21:09
- 1932 of 11056
I thought that adjusting interest rates was pretty much down to Alan Greenspan, MM. It's not in my job description, I'm afraid.
:o)
hilary
- 22 Sep 2004 21:09
- 1933 of 11056
Oh. You mean in the header.
BrianTrayda
- 28 Sep 2004 23:01
- 1935 of 11056
Forex trading volumes hit record levels
By Jennifer Hughes and Krishna Guha, FT
Published: September 28 2004 15:59 | Last updated: September 28 2004 19:53
Trading on the world's foreign exchange markets has leapt to a record $1,900bn a day, driven by renewed interest in currencies as an asset class and the return of hedge funds specialising in currency bets.
Turnover in currency and interest rate derivatives sold by banks also soared to new record levels, according to a three-yearly survey by the Bank for International Settlements.
The rapid growth in financial market transactions - far in excess of the growth in world trade - is a sign of growing integration of global capital markets and increasingly sophisticated risk management by companies and investors.
After slumping amid the introduction of the euro, which eliminated the currencies of some of the world's biggest economies, trade in foreign exchange bounced back between 2001 and 2004.
The BIS said investors disappointed by equity returns and low bond yields were searching out new forms of investment, including currencies.
Macro hedge funds - specialising in big currency bets - were back in business after having been eclipsed by funds betting on equities.
-------------
Guess I'll have to add my billions to their trillions then....
hilary
- 29 Sep 2004 07:22
- 1936 of 11056
Prospect of the greenback breaking through falling resistance against the European majors at some stage today. Oil backing off and GDP at 1:30pm could be the catalysts for the next Dollar up-leg.
Dil
- 29 Sep 2004 09:40
- 1937 of 11056
Closed my GBP/USD long yesterday , now looking for a pullback from here
hilary
- 29 Sep 2004 09:51
- 1938 of 11056
Nice call, Dilbert. Will you be a support buyer again at around 18020 or are you looking to short it down from here towards a retest of the 17750?