hilary
- 31 Dec 2003 13:00
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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!
jeffmack
- 14 Jan 2005 21:22
- 2585 of 11056
Mos, good spot
jeffmack
- 16 Jan 2005 18:29
- 2586 of 11056
What time does FX start trading on D4F
chocolat
- 16 Jan 2005 19:00
- 2587 of 11056
It's 24 hrs jeffie
FX open at 11:00pm this evening
jeffmack
- 16 Jan 2005 19:39
- 2588 of 11056
Cheers choccie, it was this evenings open I was looking for
mostrader
- 16 Jan 2005 20:29
- 2589 of 11056
late night then jeff..
Seymour Clearly
- 16 Jan 2005 20:48
- 2590 of 11056
Chocolat, I didn't know that - I've been looking for something I can trade in the evening after the kids are in bed. Can anyone offer any pointers as to where to look for instruction in FX trading - I haven't a clue (much)!!
Edit, just looked at the header - lots of links - Doh!!!
chocolat
- 16 Jan 2005 21:40
- 2591 of 11056
:) SC
For anyone else looking to trade FX markets: FX finishes at 10:00pm on a Friday. You can still trade FX 24/7 with most outfits (NOT finspreads, they finish at 21:15, opening at 7:00 Mon-Fri)
www.netdania.com is a good site to look at for streaming info.
Seymour Clearly
- 16 Jan 2005 22:10
- 2592 of 11056
Thanks Chocolat. Will watch and learn from you folks. Have to say this type of trading is probably a chartist's dream.
jeffmack
- 16 Jan 2005 22:48
- 2593 of 11056
Sunday, January 16, 2005 20:23 GMT
Daily Report
By Forex Grand Capitals
http://www.ForexGrandCapitals.com
The Nazca Lines
As per the weekly base charts, the USD stays bullish across the board, as the JPY crosses do bearish.
Major currencies could not end up this week positively against the USD in the wake of trend reversal signs I particularly flagged first time on January 3rd, and reinforced last Sunday: "shooting star" (EUR/USD: bearish), "triangle" (GBP/USD: bearish), "bear trap" (USD/CHF: bullish) - all of these as encountered on the corresponding 1-week charts. But in fact, even some 1-month charts bring now some important signals, like the staying-bearish one on GBP/USD.
EUR/USD has been the forex pair where a major sell-off of impressive magnitude (in historical terms) - not really expected by most participants - took place during last week. During the current week yet the JPY crosses were the perfect victims. The sell-off seen on EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY has been fantastic with no sign of relief seen as of yet - while, falling under 78.50 AUD/JPY has just confirmed a spectacular formation as seen on the 1-week chart, consisting of two subsequent "head&shoulders" patterns.
We may have an important bearish reversal in progress on EUR/JPY - where on the same 1-week chart, an apparently "no-brainer" northward breakout had been seen in this timeframe not a long time ago out of a grand "symmetrical triangle". Several days behind I said the "bear trap" recently occured on USD/CHF ready to induce further bullish pressures on the pair (1-week chart) looked pretty much like the same pattern I saw in mid August last year on the Dow Jones (1-day chart). Well - on EUR/JPY right now (1-week chart) we have an almost identical situation in even the greatest details with what has happened recently on the Nasdaq 100 shares (QQQQ) on its 1-day chart, where a major breakdown has been receiving an extended follow-thru to the south up to date. Remains to be seen whether this resemblance will hold as well, even though I don"t believe history repeats unconditionally.
Sure it"s possible for corrective rebounds take place in shorter timeframes, and even the above mentioned are lines destined to show off what"s the dominant pressure to be considered by the strategic player. Remains to be seen whether we are currently dealing with impressive long-term trend reversals on the USD and JPY crosses, or merely a corrective period.
Especially on the USD across the board - as feared last Sunday - it is possible that a mid-term horizon of sideways, consolidative movement overall further take place - which is, quite spectacular intraday yet rather boring once timeframes are enlarged - before the next huge action should burst out.
chocolat
- 16 Jan 2005 22:55
- 2594 of 11056
Something else to bear in mind, SC (and any other venturers) is that the likes of the netdania site chart the cash (spot) market. I use a different package for futures, which, frankly, is more rewarding. It stores historical data, with 1 minute and tick data backfills, meaning that you don't have to be permanently connected for reliable information. The downside is that it is designed for traders who are using an Interactive Brokers account. IB provides actual quotes without any backfill. Although IB also permits you to store these quotes on your hard drive, the site I use is a more cost-effective hosting service. The good news is that they are currently developing a package that can be used independently of a broker. So if anyone is interested, mail me and I'll keep you posted.
By the way, the futures charting package mentioned above is not just for FX instruments.
Seymour Clearly
- 16 Jan 2005 23:04
- 2595 of 11056
Thanks, I'm only thinking of spreadbetting the cash prices in small amounts to start with so will use the cmc charts - after all, it's cmc's prices I'm betting on. A bit simple I know but I might go bigger in time and will look at the other packages later. Thanks for the info.
mostrader
- 17 Jan 2005 06:35
- 2596 of 11056
Daily updates on Australian Forex Market from CMC Group Asia Pacific
AUD drifts lower after USD gains on mixed economic data
The AUD eased recent gains on Friday, tumbling below US$0.7600 level in late Asian session and sank as low as US$0.7568 during the early London session. The AUD fell as the USD jumped against the EUR, building on overnight gains made after the ECB reiterated that Asian currencies should take some of the pressure off the single currency to climb against USD.
On the US economic data front, December PPI declined 0.7 per cent from 0.5 per cent rise in November against the market expectation of 0.1 per cent drop. Ex-food and energy PPI is up 0.1 per cent against the market expectation of 0.2 per cent rise. After the release of PPI, the AUD quickly crept above US$0.7600 level. Later, US December IP rose at 0.8 per cent from 0.2 per cent in November, beating market expectation of 0.5 per cent.
December capacity utilisation was up to 79.2 per cent versus the forecast of 78.9 per cent. The AUD lost ground again to drop as low as US$0.7570 before it consolidated within the US$0.7580-0.7600 range during US afternoon. Resistance is now eyed at US$0.7620 and US$0.7670, while support starts at US$0.7560 and US$0.7500.
The EUR slid more than 1 US cent after St. Louis Federal Reserve president William Poole said policy makers may drop their plan to lift interest rates at a 'measured pace' at some point. Some traders and analysts said the remarks may mean the central bank will accelerate the pace of rate increases, widening a gap with Europe. The USD also gained after ECB council member Axel Weber said higher US rate and faster US growth may support the currency. The EUR declined to an intraday low of US$1.3058 during early London session but recovered near the US$1.3100 level during most of the US afternoon. Resistance is now found at US$1.3130 and US$1.3170, while support is found at US$1.3060 and US$1.3040.
GBP followed the movement of the EUR overnight. It fell through the US$1.8700 level, dropping to intraday low of US$1.8640 during early London morning. But the pair gradually recovered towards US$1.8700 during the late US afternoon. Support level is seen at US$1.8640 and US$1.8600. Resistance begins at US$1.8730 and US$1.8770.
Japan's November machinery orders surged to 19.9 per cent month-on-month, far exceeding consensus forecasts a 3.3 per cent monthly rise. The much stronger than expected machinery orders data prompted another bout of Yen buying overnight. Also released were the November industrial output, which was upwardly revised to 1.7 per cent month-on-month from 1.5 per cent mom and capacity utilisation, which increased by 1.3 per cent month-on-month. The December domestic CPI was flat month-on-month and up 1.9 per cent year-on-year. During US afternoon session, USD/JPY broke through 102.00 level and dipped to an overnight low of 101.80 before it bounced back towards 102.00. Support is now found at 101.80 and 101.50 while resistance is found at 102.30 and 102.70.
Gold back-pedaled on Friday in holiday-shortened trade, hit by rising equities and the USD as traders focused on the prospect of accelerating US interest rate rises. It closed at US$423.00 from Thursday's closing level at US$424.50. Silver was dragged lower to end at US$6.59.
jeffmack
- 17 Jan 2005 06:37
- 2597 of 11056
Morning Mos. Any thoughts for an early few points
mostrader
- 17 Jan 2005 06:55
- 2598 of 11056
mng jeff to be honest all my screens are down which helps....could be a bit volitile with the yanks off,as london prob push around a few stops,but seems pretty range bound
cable support 86.00 86.40 86.60.... res 87.30 40 87.70 88.00
jeffmack
- 17 Jan 2005 07:10
- 2599 of 11056
Mos, thks for mails. Decided to follow mataf and short USD/JPY 102.11. Better get going for the day job, laters
Bobcolby
- 17 Jan 2005 07:28
- 2600 of 11056
Short cable at 8747
mostrader
- 17 Jan 2005 07:32
- 2601 of 11056
ditto @ 44
Seymour Clearly
- 17 Jan 2005 07:37
- 2602 of 11056
Morning, thanks for the mail Mos.
mostrader
- 17 Jan 2005 07:40
- 2603 of 11056
np seymore wont overegg the pudding just a few bits and bob`s
out @24