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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!

MightyMicro - 26 Nov 2006 23:23 - 6895 of 11056

SC: Yep, although it's fallen back having poked at 1.9465.

Better get my Armageddon gear ready, eh Hil?

Boyse - 27 Nov 2006 09:27 - 6896 of 11056

Drop the dollar
America has huge economic problems. Currently, the federal budget deficit is about 7% of GDP. Put plainly, the US is importing substantially more than it is exporting.

The problem is that for several years this trade gap has been financed by Asian central banks buying huge amounts of US Treasury bonds. In effect, the Asian central banks have indirectly lent money to American consumers and corporations, allowing them to carry on consuming. But this can't go on for ever.

Indeed, the flows are already slowing.

At the same time, foreigners are buying less dollar-denominated securities, so the demand for dollars from this source is falling too. This is the key reason to think that the dollar will keep depreciating.

Of course, there's much more to the story. Much, much more. But you'll discover that in your weekly issues of MoneyWeek. Each week, in our news roundup page we tell you not only what is happening in the world of money, but more importantly - what it MEANS.

What we're really seeing with the falling dollar is a consequence of 1971 - when the US Treasury cut the greenback loose from gold. This just goes to show how long these trends can be. This was inevitable, predictable and unavoidable. When people have the power to print money, sooner or later, they will print too much and destroy it. That's what has happened every time in history.

The fuse has been more than 30 years long, but now this TIME BOMB is set to blow up. Get out before it is too late.


maddoctor - 27 Nov 2006 09:30 - 6897 of 11056

.

Seymour Clearly - 27 Nov 2006 12:09 - 6898 of 11056

I love the bit "speaking ...with the Stoke Sentinel", that bastion of financial journalism.

UK MPC's Besley says current high debt levels not major concern for rate-setters

Mon, Nov 27 2006, 12:04 GMT
http://www.afxnews.com

LONDON (AFX) - Tim Besley, a member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee, said high levels of debt in the UK are not a major concern for rate-setters at the moment.
Speaking in an interview with the Stoke Sentinel, Besley said personal debt levels are high but not high enough to affect the whole economy.
"When we are setting interest rates we wouldn't say at this point that is one of the major factors we are concerned about from a macroeconomics point," he said.
Debt levels are not sufficient to be creating "significant weakness in the demand side of the economy", Besley told the paper during a visit to North Staffordshire.
"If there was sufficiently many more people getting into difficulty then that would create an effect but I don't think it has reached that level," he said.
In the minutes of their November meeting, when interest rates were raised to 5.00 pct, the MPC acknowledged that the "burden of rising debt" could weigh more heavily on spending than had been allowed for in the Committee's central forecast.
Besley is one of the newer members of the MPC and joined the body on September 1.
The newspaper was quoting figures showing that the number of people declaring themselves bankrupt in the Stoke area this summer jumped by 80 pct to 144 from just 80 in 2005.
Recent figures have shown a sharp rise in the number of bankruptcies, though this is partly due to changes in the law, making it easier for individuals to file for insolvency.

Melnibone - 27 Nov 2006 19:16 - 6899 of 11056

Evening. Apparently BT have finally got Miss M online. They reckon the Firewall I
put on her laptop was stopping their Broadband working. They better not be making
her use their product without a Firewall. It took me 2 days to chase all the nastys
out of her machine the last time she brought it home. (P2P music file sharing. Grr! )

She's had a tour round the Investment Bank that she may be getting a position
with. She may go into their IPO section, so that she can learn from grass roots
what makes a company tick and how to value companies properly with the
knowledge that she gains.
Hee-hee, the mentor started talking about how she would be useful for 'Spin'.
To which she replied, after me telling her all about financial spin, "you mean lies".
He was taken aback, and said something about Northeners being rather blunt. :-)

Apparently, they also know the Trading section as 'The Essex Boys'. :-))

Anyway, here's tonight's basic stuff.

Boyse - 28 Nov 2006 08:15 - 6900 of 11056

Monday view: Paulson re-activates secretive support team to prevent markets meltdown




Monday view: Paulson re-activates secretive support team to prevent markets meltdown Judging by their body language, the US authorities believe the roaring bull market this autumn is just a suckers' rally before the inevitable storm hits.

Hank Paulson, the market-wise Treasury Secretary who built a $700m fortune at Goldman Sachs, is re-activating the 'plunge protection team' (PPT), a shadowy body with powers to support stock index, currency, and credit futures in a crash.

Story

foale - 28 Nov 2006 08:59 - 6901 of 11056

nice article Boyse..

Cable behaving nicely atm..

goforit - 28 Nov 2006 13:35 - 6902 of 11056

Hi all, hope your all going well. Just like to add my thanks to melnibone for all your posting, findind it very informative and helpful. Slowly getting myself sorted, not trading at the moment as have been doing alot of other things as well.

Can anyone tell me how to use photobucket to upload charts from fxcm as seem unable to get it to work

Seymour Clearly - 28 Nov 2006 13:44 - 6903 of 11056

gfi, do a "Print screen", then save the image or edit it then save on your hard disc, then use photobucket to browse your hard disc for the location and upload from there.

goforit - 28 Nov 2006 13:59 - 6904 of 11056

ta SC

foale - 28 Nov 2006 14:00 - 6905 of 11056

Cable 1.9500 will she... wont she

Can someone please post the date that 1 buys $2's thats would really help me atm.

hodgins - 28 Nov 2006 14:04 - 6906 of 11056

Short Euro 3175
Retest break just below 1.30 and not stay above high of Monday?
Now see me get shot down?

hodgins - 28 Nov 2006 19:09 - 6907 of 11056

"gainlocked" out for +5 on Euro but will look for another entry short?

Melnibone - 28 Nov 2006 19:17 - 6908 of 11056

Evening. Tonight's stuff to the budding capitalist, Miss M. :-)

Melnibone - 28 Nov 2006 19:32 - 6909 of 11056

Link to Helicopter Ben's Stuff

He said the inflation is already "better behaved of late" and should continue to
slow gradually.

Much of his speech was used to gently dampen two of the major fears about the
outlook -- that the housing market would push the economy into a full-fledged
recession, or that inflation pressures were like a smoldering campfire, seemingly
controlled but ready to burst up in the next strong wind

foale - 28 Nov 2006 19:38 - 6910 of 11056

Cant see any reason to cut my long yet...

foale - 29 Nov 2006 07:24 - 6911 of 11056

Two way price action on Cable above 1.9500 this am

1.9500- 1.9550 the trading range so far

Heavy seling at the highs...closed my long...

foale - 29 Nov 2006 13:58 - 6912 of 11056

Interesting...grabbed 25 that should have been 50 but coudl not get a fill...off that spike..

However I am now only going to trade the break as follows

short if under 1.9470

long over 1.9550

any comments...?
especailly from our leader ...

foale - 29 Nov 2006 14:15 - 6913 of 11056

Hi John you in ?

chocolat - 29 Nov 2006 14:55 - 6914 of 11056

Long since Friday, and no time to actively trade for the foreseeable.
Support imo is currently 1.9410/20
Just hanging around for new home sales. Preference is to let it run.
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