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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 - 10 Aug 2006 07:20 - 5848 of 11056

It's all about terrorism this morning.

hilary - 10 Aug 2006 10:41 - 5849 of 11056

goforit,

Depends what you call a large amount, but you'll probably find that most people who use FXCM look at 10/pip on cable as a minimum. Anything less and it's not worth getting out of bed in the morning.

I'll hazard a guess that the average position size with them is around 30 or 40/pip.

bakko - 10 Aug 2006 13:06 - 5850 of 11056

30 -40 p/p....that's enough to keep me awake forever!

The recent talk about fxcm has goaded me to download their platform. It's cost me an absolute fortune in dummy money as been putting through lots of trades, orders etc. Extremely impressed :-))

It's time to ditch the SBs and move on.

markusantonius - 10 Aug 2006 14:43 - 5851 of 11056

Bakko, 30-40 pence per pip is enough to make me lose sleep, the way my investments have been nose-diving over the past 18 months or so!!

bakko - 11 Aug 2006 13:54 - 5852 of 11056

Still putting fxcm through it's paces.

Placed buy and sell limit orders just ahead of an announcement earlier. The sell order got triggered and I was out for a 1400 profit...what a pity it was only funny money :-(

Can't wait to ditch Fins now!


STORMCALLER - 14 Aug 2006 21:40 - 5853 of 11056

markusantonius,

Re 5840, if you are new to FX, CMC is ideal......but only as a TRAINING PLATFORM!!
The reason is simple, whether S/B or CFD spread is generally small, and fixed! also they will do small trades, ie S/B 1 per point, CFD about 60p per point.
Hopefully you will progress and become accomplished, this WILL require a better platform.....which means just about anybody else.
To illistrate, I have E-Trade and CMC CFD platforms, when things are zinging on cable, like FOMC rate days, E-Trade fill is 1-3 secs, CMC....30secs to 5 mins, and this is not a one-off!!!
It is also not unheard of to find CMC will re-quote you, but take so long that the re-quote has expired before you see it, when this happens as cable moves 100 points in less than a minute, the result, as I recently found to my cost, can be very painful...:-(
Hope this helps

Regards

SC

STORMCALLER - 14 Aug 2006 21:46 - 5854 of 11056

While I am here, I need some help if possible....can anyone tell me how FOMC rate days, and minute days, are scheduled?
I have a memory like a sieve, and always forget them, if I knew the schedule in advance I could programme the electric diary
(And yes I do mean electric, not electronic......it's wired to my n*ts as a guarantee it will get my attention...LOL)

SC

bakko - 14 Aug 2006 22:27 - 5855 of 11056

SC

http://www.federalreserve.gov/FOMC/

Scroll down this link and you should find all the info and dates you're looking for.

STORMCALLER - 14 Aug 2006 23:58 - 5856 of 11056

bakko,

Thank you for the info!!, now have pretty new button on browser, and will do diary tomorrow, can't wait for the next event...LOL

Thank you again

Regards

SC

MightyMicro - 19 Aug 2006 09:16 - 5857 of 11056

This week's Economic Data Release Calendar is brought to you by Fairy FX Services while Hil is a-doing what she says in the header.

Harlosh - 19 Aug 2006 12:48 - 5858 of 11056

Many thanks MM

goforit - 20 Aug 2006 23:09 - 5859 of 11056

Thanks MM.

Just getting back into trading after a summer break. Just reread come into my trading room by Elder and just had my best week trading on currencies so odviously a few things have sunk in(discipline definitely), certainly recommend anyone to read it who hasn't.

Harlosh, hows the P&F going?

Have a good week everyone from sunny(and crowded) Spain

MightyMicro - 21 Aug 2006 08:34 - 5860 of 11056

My pleasure folks. I'll try and keep my end up while Hil is frolicking.

goforit - 22 Aug 2006 10:14 - 5861 of 11056

anyone watching cable, bit volatile this am

Harlosh - 22 Aug 2006 13:11 - 5862 of 11056

Hi Gfi,

Not around much for a couple of days.

Still using P&F. It's great for pattern recognition and the more I watch Cable on it the more clues it gives me. I'm still here and profiting after several months so pleased with how things are going.

Good to see you back and good luck with your trading again.

chocolat - 25 Aug 2006 00:10 - 5863 of 11056

Following on from this week's data, if Bernanke offers comments of substance tomorrow, his views and choice of words are likely to become part of the market's dialogue going into next month's FOMC meeting.


Forex - Dollar firms, shrugs off more weak housing data
AFX


NEW YORK (MNI) - The dollar posted its third successive day of gains Thursday, bucking the notion that weak data from the US housing sector would undermine the greenback this week.

Euro-dollar was trading at 1.2770 usd in afternoon trade Thursday, noticeably below its 1.2832 usd starting level of the U.S. session and at the lower end of a 1.2755/2840 usd US hours trading range.

Similarly dollar-yen was trading around 116.50 yen, modestly above its 116.30 yen starting level and in the upper part of a 116.15/116.57 yen range seen in US hours.

On the day, the dollar saw slight losses early in the session as traders reacted to the release of data on durable goods orders for July where the overall headline of a drop in orders masked a better picture in the details of the report.

But traders were saving their firepower for a report later in the session that would enable the pulse of the US housing market to be taken, but when the report on new home sales was released, showing weaker than expected sales in July, the dollar barely blinked, holding steady and then lifting slowly in subsequent trade.

That reaction mirrored similar action seen Wednesday where the greenback lifted in the wake of data that underscored a slowing of sales of existing homes.

Late last week, and early this week, traders had anticipated that signs of a slowdown in the US housing market could undermine the dollar, the greenback already on the defensive amid speculation that the US Federal Reserve may be done with its multi-year tightening cycle that has lifted the key fed funds target rate from a record low 1 pct to the current 5.25 pct.

But despite the soft economic data, the dollar has posted steady gains versus the euro and yen in recent days, pressing the euro down from Monday highs at 1.2940 usd and dragging dollar-yen up from lows near 115.30 yen.

On the day, euro-dollar found support from bids at 1.2750 usd, a level seen just ahead of a report that showed sentiment among German business held about steady in the month. With some business sentiment indicators from Europe showing falling confidence, concern was that weakness in German business sentiment could undermine plans by the European Central Bank.

While the ECB has declared that it has no 'ex-ante' plans for future rate hikes, remarks by ECB officials have indicated that the bank remains concerned about inflation pressures at a time when the European economy appears to be strengthening.

Such is a recipe for future rate hikes, market participants remind.

US economic data released Thursday:

July durable goods orders fell 2.4 pct but, ex-transportation, orders were up 0.5 pct after subtracting the impact of civilian aircraft orders and motor vehicle orders.

Analysts quickly determined that orders are still strong - non-defense orders are up 3 months in a row, and up in 10 of the last 12 months.

July new home sales fell a steeper-than-expected 4.3 pct to a 1.072 mln seasonally adjusted annual rate, below the median expectation of 1.100 mln and following downward revisions to the sales pace in the prior three months. The supply of new homes rose 1.1 pct to another new record of 568,000 in July, while the months supply rose to 6.5 at the current sales rate, the highest since November 1995. The July median sales price fell 1.6 pct to 230,000 usd, up only 0.3 pct from a year earlier.

Weekly US jobless claims fell 1,000 to 313,000 in the Aug 19 week and were the lowest since July 29 versus 315,000 expected and 305,000 in the July employment survey week.

goforit - 27 Aug 2006 20:51 - 5864 of 11056

ta fx fairy from a pleasantly warm spain, have a good week all

MightyMicro - 27 Aug 2006 21:14 - 5865 of 11056

goforit: you're welcome, as are all the intrepid FXers. I think our Hil is in Spain this week as well.

goforit - 27 Aug 2006 22:08 - 5866 of 11056

MM.

Expect Hils taking it abit more leisurely than I've been. Do you know which part of spain she's gone to? Been helping a friend set up for a concreting job over the wkend that he's doing next week up on the campo. It only got upto 33c today(36 yesterday), we unloaded over a ton of cement about 3pm, pleased he didn't have room for the other ton because I was F....D! Certainly lost a few lbs until we had lunch!

chocolat - 27 Aug 2006 23:43 - 5867 of 11056

Thanks Dezza :)

Don't you just love the name Swonk ...


No consensus on Fed's next move on rates
AFX


JACKSON, Wyo. (AFX) - After two-plus years, is the pain from the long march of higher interest rates over for good? Borrowers finally got a reprieve this month when the Federal Reserve decided to halt a campaign that produced the longest stretch of rate increases in recent history.

Where the Fed is headed next, at its next meeting Sept. 20 and later, generated chatter on the sidelines of economic conference that focused on globalization. Outside the meeting, talk turned to how the Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, and his colleagues at the central will steer the course of interest rate policy.

The goal is to lift rates enough to subdue inflation, but not so much that the strategy would cripple the economy.

It's a tricky task.

While the economy is slowing, inflation is outside the comfort zone of some economists and Fed policymakers.

At its last meeting, on Aug. 8, the Fed held steady at 5.25 percent an important rate. As a result, commercial banks' prime interest rate -- for certain credit cards, home equity lines of credit and other loans -- stayed at 8.25 percent.

Given that the housing market is losing more steam and companies are showing caution in hiring, some economists at the conference said the Fed should keep to the sidelines in the months ahead. That would give policymakers time to assess how the most recent moves in a rate-raising campaign that started in June 2004 are affecting economic activity.

Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial, believes the Fed will not change rates in September. Adds a former Fed governor, Laurence Meyer, 'I think they will stay on the sidelines for a while.'

If the economy continues to lag, Swonk said there is a chance the Fed might cut rates in December or early next year.

Options include:

--boosting rates to fend off inflation.

--cutting rates to shore up a wobbly economy.

--holding rates steady, which gives policymakers time to assess which risk is greater, inflation or a weakening economy.

Allan Meltzer, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, questioned whether it was wise for the Fed to halt its credit-tightening campaign with inflation on the rise. 'The Fed may be on the verge of a very big mistake,' he suggested.

Meltzer is concerned that inflation could creep higher and that the Fed might lose some of its inflation-fighting credibility with investors. Then investors, companies and consumers might change their behavior in ways that could worsen inflation. For instance, companies might opt to boost prices even more and workers might demand bigger pay increases because of that.

Inflation is a worry for R. Glenn Hubbard, professor and dean of Columbia University's business school who once was viewed as a potential successor to longtime Fed chief Alan Greenspan.

'It is hard for me to believe that inflation will come down without further policy action,' Hubbard said.

It was Bernanke, an economist, academic and former Fed member, who got the chairman's job and took over in February.

Economists and investors will have more insight into the Fed's thinking when minutes of its Aug. 8 meeting are released Tuesday.

Upcoming government reports on the economy also may help shape opinions on the fate of interest rates.

An updated reading on economic growth in the April-to-June period comes out Wednesday. Economists predict a higher revision in growth, to a rate of 3 percent, compared with an earlier estimate of 2.5 percent.

Yet that still would fall short of the first quarter's brisk 5.6 percent pace, the strongest in 2 1/2 years.

The Fed believes the slowing economy eventually will ease inflationary pressures. Yet lofty energy prices are a concern and are under close watch by the Fed. They were the main culprit for the 0.4 percent rise in consumer prices in July, twice the increase in June.

Fresh employment figures come out Friday. Hiring slowed in July, with companies adding just 113,000 new jobs. The unemployment rate climbed to 4.8 percent, a five-month high.

Economists are looking for better jobs figures for August, forecasting a 4.7 jobless rate and the addition of 125,000 jobs.

'I would want the Fed to stay on the pause button until we get much clearer signs of where the economy is going,' said Gene Sperling, senior fellow for economic policy for the Council on Foreign Relations and a former official in the Clinton administration.

--


And from Mr Bean:

Winds of globalization could turn sour

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