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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!

mg - 24 Nov 2006 10:06 - 6875 of 11056

Crisis - wot crisis!!

I reckon it's currency traders catching the Yanks with their pants down on Thanksgiving weekend - got to admire the cheek of it :)

Having a pop at seeing whether it'll give up a few points - so short from 310 ..... with tight stops - EEK

hilary - 24 Nov 2006 10:32 - 6876 of 11056

Story doing the rounds of a large (200m) USD/CHF sell order leading the way, but it all seems a bit vague.

Looks to me like a combination of both USD selling and European buying, giving a doubly whammy. USD/JPY has fallen, but EUR/JPY has risen.

edit: I happen to think that it was simply a case of it finally gathering the momentum needed to break through the previous barriers. It's been threatening to do it for months.

foale - 24 Nov 2006 10:39 - 6877 of 11056

well finally got some lines drawn and price extension up to ...1.9340 area looks enough..so since we are exactly that...staying flat... for now

normality will return on monday...

mg - 24 Nov 2006 10:39 - 6878 of 11056

Looks evn more like the big buy 2 get one free for Xmas - but being all contrarian trying to get a few - looks like I'll probably get burnt. Need to get my trading pants changed :(

Seymour Clearly - 24 Nov 2006 11:16 - 6879 of 11056

Gordon Bennet! Just looked in !!!!! That's my risk / reward ratio up in smoke!!!

Seymour Clearly - 24 Nov 2006 13:45 - 6880 of 11056

Sterling heading for $2 barrier

Edit - it's an old story but still valid.

Seymour Clearly - 24 Nov 2006 13:56 - 6881 of 11056

Some sober analysis:

Euro and Pound reach multi-month highs

hilary - 24 Nov 2006 14:12 - 6882 of 11056

Contrarian SSI suggests 80% of the open market is short fiber and 82% short cable.

hodgins - 24 Nov 2006 14:29 - 6883 of 11056

Would that Contrarian SSI (which I have to admit I don't even know exactly what it is?) be now or last night. Despite barrier options falling over on the dollar this morning those figures above must still show where most of the market is

Seymour Clearly - 24 Nov 2006 14:35 - 6884 of 11056

Having done sober contrarian analysis I have decided I am now short with a stop above the top for today. So between us, that's 75% of the market, Who else is short?

MightyMicro - 24 Nov 2006 14:58 - 6885 of 11056

To interpret Hil's Delphic comment:

SSI = Speculative Sentiment Index

The FXCM SSI is based on proprietary customer flow information and is designed to recognize price trend breaks and reversals in the four most popularly traded currency pairs. The absolute number of the ratio itself represents the amount by which longs exceed shorts or vice versa. For example if the EURUSD ratio is 2.55, long customer orders exceed short orders by a ratio of 2.55 to 1. If the EURUSD ratio is -3.00 short customer orders in the EURUSD exceed long orders by a ratio of 3 to 1. A negative number indicates that traders are net short while a positive number indicates that traders are net long. Conceptually similar to contrarian analyses using the CFTC IMM open position data or COT Report, the SSI provides an alternative approach that is both more timely and accurate in forecasting currency price movement. The SSI is a contrarian indicator that tells you how the market is weighted and where the trend may head. More long positions don't necessary suggest more confidence in the direction of the current trend. In general, when traders start having adverse movements against their position, many tend to increase the size of their position with the purpose to average down their entry price in one last attempt to recover from previous losses. However, higher the number of short orders in a bull market more dangerous is to take additional shorts because many of those traders who just entered the markets are also leaving their protective stop losses just above the current price action.

hilary - 24 Nov 2006 15:43 - 6886 of 11056

I had to look up what Delphic meant.

:o)

That was before today's move, hodgins. Here's one for Mel.

[15:17 EUR/USD: Bond Market Not Displaying USD Jitters] Boston, November 24.
Major bouts of USD weakness usually drag US bond prices lower, but that is not
the case so far today. Prices are being held aloft as dealers buy US paper and
sell EUR-denominated instruments in anticipation of tightening interest rate
differentials. US 2-year notes yield a healthy 112 bp more than 2-year German
schatz, well within recent ranges. 10-year spreads are closer to range lows
about a basis point below where we stand now at 90 bp.
US equities are not displaying many USD jitters either. After opening 70 points
or so lower on the Dow, prices have rebounded, now down 45 points. An argument
can be made that a lower USD will boost profits for US multinationals.
EUR/USD is drifting up in its range, trading close to the 1.3100 level once
again. Barriers are rumored at 1.3125 and 1.3150.

chocolat - 24 Nov 2006 15:55 - 6887 of 11056

Blimey it's cold here :S

MightyMicro - 24 Nov 2006 16:21 - 6888 of 11056

What ho, Choccie! Welcome back. Cable's warm though.

chocolat - 24 Nov 2006 16:58 - 6889 of 11056

Brrrrr.
Cheers Dezza ;)

Time for my pink hottie.

bosley - 24 Nov 2006 18:01 - 6890 of 11056

'ow do, cockle. did you have a good time?

hope you brought back that table :S

mg - 24 Nov 2006 18:11 - 6891 of 11056

Welcome back choccipops. Is that the pink thing shaped like a rabbit ?????

markusantonius - 24 Nov 2006 18:42 - 6892 of 11056

_

Seymour Clearly - 26 Nov 2006 16:46 - 6893 of 11056

From the Sunday Times:

THE pound could break the $2 barrier this week, analysts say, if last weeks dollar selling wave continues. The dollar fell sharply on Friday amid fears about the American economy, unsettling financial markets.

The dollars fall was felt in a range of markets. The price of crude oil rose in dollar terms as a direct reflection of the American currencys weakness.

Sterling has strengthened against the beleaguered dollar in spite of the fact that expectations of further British interest-rate rises have faded.

It closed at $1.93 on Friday, its highest for 18 months, even though American interest rates, at 5.25%, are higher than Britains 5% rate.

More significantly, the euro climbed above $1.30, hitting its highest level since April 2005.

The dollar is the big story, said Nick Stamenkovic, an economist with RIA Capital. The question is whether it has been exaggerated by thin markets. American trading was quiet ahead of the Thanksgiving weekend holiday.

Carsten Fritsch, a currency strategist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt, said: The break of $1.30 is a strong signal that the dollar has to weaken. The sentiment for the dollar is negative. In the eurozone, growth will remain strong.

Analysts believe that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next year in response to economic weakness, undermining the dollar.

Global Insight predicts that the euro will rise to $1.40 during 2007, implying that sterling will break through $2 and stay there.

Seymour Clearly - 26 Nov 2006 22:19 - 6894 of 11056

Erm, anyone looking tonight. Needless to say my stop got taken out!

Looks like we're on our way to $2
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