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The Forex Thread (FX)     

hilary - 31 Dec 2003 13:00

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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!

hilary - 16 Nov 2004 09:17 - 2015 of 11056

Bob,

I also suggest that you keep an eye on the Euro for Dollar support buying at the 1.30 level.

Bobcolby - 16 Nov 2004 09:56 - 2016 of 11056

Ok Hilary. I have to go out now on an errand of mercy, so will probably not trade today. bibi

Divetime - 16 Nov 2004 10:18 - 2017 of 11056

Been scalping this morning for a few, going to leave cable long,have to go and scrape the boat`s bum this morning.

Tellon - 16 Nov 2004 13:05 - 2018 of 11056

GBP/USD Possible Short Daily & Hourly.

Hourly Short Close below 1.8520 (Divergence)
Daily Short Close Below 1.8450 (Divergence)

Any thoughts?

Maggot - 17 Nov 2004 08:40 - 2019 of 11056

Both the and Euro are making determined efforts to break up through 1.8550 and 1.3000, and to hold up there. Looks to me as if they may well make it today. But I'm not betting on it!

Bobcolby - 17 Nov 2004 08:49 - 2020 of 11056

I hope they wait till tomorrow as I have a very important meeting on the golf course and will give trading a miss today ( Again).

Bobcolby - 17 Nov 2004 09:06 - 2021 of 11056

Change my last post to Friday for any serious cable moves as I am on a booze cruise to Calais tomorrow. Euro resistance looks rock solid at 1.3, but the the Euro bankers all knock off early for the weekend on Fridays so will probably not intervene with dollar support after 11am.

hilary - 17 Nov 2004 09:49 - 2022 of 11056

Tally Ho. There she goes.

hilary - 17 Nov 2004 12:57 - 2023 of 11056

Anyone here use IntelliChart from FXtrek (and FXCM)? I've regularly been having a problem with their 5-min charts freezing for a couple of weeks or so now.

Wondered if I was alone??????????

dscott62 - 17 Nov 2004 13:34 - 2024 of 11056

Currently using the demo of FXCM.

Had problems with charts freezing on/off over the last week.

I am now using the unlimyed demo account on Visual Trading package which has excellent charts. See link below:

http://www.visualtradingsystems.com

hilary - 17 Nov 2004 13:53 - 2025 of 11056

Ok, thanks dscott. I wasn't sure whether it was them or me.

dscott62 - 17 Nov 2004 14:20 - 2026 of 11056

Just tried the charts on FXCM and they seem fine at the moment.

hilary - 17 Nov 2004 14:41 - 2027 of 11056

Well my 5-mins have gone again for the 2nd time today while my 1-hours have stayed online. NBG!

edit: It looks like it's the S&P Comstock feed into FXtrek that's a bit dodgy ..... The FXCM feed seems fine.

pegasus - 17 Nov 2004 22:38 - 2028 of 11056

Thanks for the link dscott, wonder when the demo account will expire.

dscott62 - 18 Nov 2004 08:20 - 2029 of 11056

I understand that the demo accout is for an unlimited period, got the info from:

http://www.learntrading.co.uk

hilary - 19 Nov 2004 07:34 - 2030 of 11056

cndoll18big.jpg

dscott62 - 19 Nov 2004 09:05 - 2031 of 11056

Nice chart Hilary

hilary - 21 Nov 2004 10:55 - 2032 of 11056

Prepare for a very weak dollar

The dollar is on the slide. The consequences for all of us will be profound.

ccecag21big.jpgIn the red

The essence of the problem can be stated simply. For many years now, Americans have been spending freely, while people in the euro-zone and Japan have not. And Americans have a strong appetite for goods and services produced abroad. The result is an enormous and still-growing current-account deficit with the rest of the world.

As our top chart shows, this amounts to almost 6 per cent of America's GDP. In plain English, this means that American income from the rest of the world, from exports of goods and services and investment and other income, is considerably exceeded by what America buys from, and remits to, the rest of the world. In fact, the gap currently stands at more than $600bn per year.

It has been quite fashionable, of late, to denigrate the importance of the current-account deficit. After all, it has been around for some time. Moreover, in today's sophisticated capital markets, there is no problem financing such a deficit - particularly not for the United States, which can effectively issue IOUs in its own currency. In any case, the US is a fast-growing country, so private capital should be flowing to the US.

But these arguments are dangerously wrong-headed. Of course the deficit can be financed, but at what price? As for capital flowing in to the US, whereas it was true in the boom years of the late 1990s that large amounts of finance came in the form of real investment in plant and machinery or the purchase of American companies, now the overwhelming bulk of the finance comes in the form of the purchase of US securities by Asian central banks.

Solutions

How can the deficit be corrected? There are three ways: Americans can be persuaded to spend less; foreigners can be persuaded to spend more; and/or both Americans and foreigners can be persuaded to spend a higher proportion of their overall expenditure on American-produced goods and services. The first would undoubtedly work but it would hardly be the answer to a maiden's prayer.

It would imply weaker growth in the US, at a time when the economy has been recovering only fitfully and unemployment remains high. Moreover, this would impose pain on the rest of the world, as it would be able to export less to America. The second is the answer to prayers from maidens and matrons alike - but how do you achieve sustained rapid growth in domestic demand in the euro-zone and Japan? There are things that could be done, but both the structural economic barriers and the self-inflicted political obstacles are enormous.

So, we are left with the third path. The dirigiste way of achieving a higher share of your domestic market is through protection; the market route to achieving a higher share of both domestic and international markets is through a lower exchange rate. That is indeed the solution that the financial markets are starting to impose.

Consequences

What would be the consequences of a sharp fall in the dollar? If world portfolio managers were to shun dollar investments, that would potentially cause a significant problem in American capital markets. In particular, there could be a sharp sell-off in American bond markets. But this is nothing compared to the improvements in American competitiveness that would be wrought by a much weaker dollar. And the key point is that, if the weaker dollar did turn round the current account deficit, then America would be less dependent upon the flows of Asian capital.

The real losers from a weaker dollar would be outside America. If the Chinese and other Asian currencies do not rise against the dollar, then all of the dollar's ebbing strength will shift into the euro. People often ask how the euro could possibly rise against the dollar when the economic fundamentals of the euro zone do not look very good. Their concern is understandable but misplaced.

Strong currencies do not always go hand in hand with strong economies. Moreover, in this case, it is a matter of the absence of alternatives. It is not so much that there are good reasons why the euro should be strong; rather, there are good reasons why the dollar should be weak. And the euro is still under-represented in world-asset portfolios, while dollars are continually pumped out by the US.

The economic consequences for Europe would be serious. The euro-zone economy is still limping along. In Germany, consumer spending is stagnant and such economic growth as there is is driven largely by exports. The economy needs a stronger currency like it needs a hole in the head. European Central Bank officials mutter about the need for higher interest rates. Frankly, they are deluded. If the dollar falls sharply then the ECB will have to think about cutting interest rates.

This logic is not lost on the American administration. They are frustrated with the poor growth rates in Europe and Japan. If, by their talk, they can encourage the markets to produce a much lower dollar that will suit their book. Not only would this help to reduce the American current account deficit and boost American output, but it would also put pressure on the rest of the world to boost domestic demand. In this way, a weaker dollar might, after all, prove to be good news, not just for America but also for the world as a whole.

Here in the UK, our position is more complicated. Recently, as our lower chart shows, the pound has tended to rise against the weak dollar but to fall against the euro. Particularly now that the housing market seems to have turned and consumers finally seem to be feeling the pinch, it is vital that we at least achieve this intermediate position. If the pound were to attach itself firmly to the euro and rise the whole hog against the dollar, and not weaken against the euro at all, that would be very serious for our exports.

In fact, I am hopeful that, as the housing market slackens off and the prospect looms of much lower interest rates, the pound will weaken independently, allowing it to fall sharply against the euro and to remain roughly constant, or even eventually to fall, against the dollar. This would allow us to hold our own in the scramble for market share in world markets.

Let the glitterati in Brussels luxuriate in the virility symbol of a strong currency while we reap the real benefits of a competitive exchange rate. After all, if you have chosen to stay outside the single currency to allow flexibility, then you might as well use it.





MightyMicro - 21 Nov 2004 13:00 - 2033 of 11056

Hil: Can you tell me the source of your post above (#2031)?

Cheers, D.

Exotoxin - 21 Nov 2004 13:26 - 2034 of 11056

Today's Money section in the Sunday Telegraph

http://money.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2004/11/21/ccecag21.xml
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