hilary
- 31 Dec 2003 13:00
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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!
Seymour Clearly
- 15 Jan 2008 09:36
- 9370 of 11056
+5 from cable
Gotta go to see the Quack now
hilary
- 15 Jan 2008 14:31
- 9371 of 11056
In truth, CC, I probably don't need MTF on anything else. It was just an idea that I had this morning to combine a couple of indicators into one and simplify my desktop. I'm all for keeping things simple as there's a tendency to think if things become too complex.
I've got a problem with a bug in one indicator though which I'm hoping GatorMan can solve. If not I might find a copy of Coder Guru's MT4 Programming Guide for my son so he can give it a go. It may as well be Dutch to me.
chocolat
- 15 Jan 2008 15:01
- 9372 of 11056
I is back ;)
Still re-loading all the guff at the moment.
Like you, Hil, my motto is simply simple - and one of my present goals is to persuade the cap'n to stop fiddling about when he gets bored :o)
Great charts, btw - good of you to go to so much effort.
chocolat
- 15 Jan 2008 20:43
- 9374 of 11056
Oh - is this a variation on the jolly green giant?
PS Still want the Stig for PM :P
chocolat
- 15 Jan 2008 21:07
- 9375 of 11056
And thanks everyone for your comments here and by mail.
I'll get back to you all with a bit of a plan soon.
hilary
- 16 Jan 2008 06:44
- 9376 of 11056
Oooh Delboy. I do hope you've got a tight green lycra suit befitting of your new found status.
:o)
CC
- 16 Jan 2008 08:23
- 9377 of 11056
from one of Kyoto's posts
Ashraf Laidi, a currency expert at CMC Markets, said futures contracts were starting to price in a serious likelihood of a half point cut before the next scheduled meeting at the end of January.
"With US equity indices testing their August lows and current macro-economic dynamics knocking at the door of recession, we place the probability of a 50 basis point inter-meeting rate cut as high as 70pc to occur as early as next week
A leaked client note by HSBC added fresh fuel to the rate excitement, suggesting that Fed may now have to slash a full percentage point by month's end to fend off a serious downturn.
The bank's highly-rated New York economist, Ian Morris, said a new tone of urgency had been struck by top US officials over recent days, raising the possibility of two sets of cuts this month.
Fed chair Ben Bernanke prepared the way for drastic cuts with a speech on Thursday saying the authorities were "exceptionally alert" to the risks as the housing slump triggers the first wave of jobs losses. US unemployment jumped from 4.7pc to 5pc in December, the sharpest jump in a quarter century.
hilary
- 17 Jan 2008 07:21
- 9378 of 11056
My daily cable (currently 1.9620) charts are suggesting that it's trying to stick it's head above the water and that we could see a rally in it back up towards $2 over the coming days/weeks.
That might be of interest to Sue 42. I guess a lot will depend upon what happens to it today, as it would be quite easy for it go either way at this stage. 24 hours down the line it should be a bit clearer which way it's going imo.
Divetime
- 17 Jan 2008 09:46
- 9379 of 11056
Hilary
Thanks for the info, nice run up this morning managed to catch a few.
CC
- 17 Jan 2008 11:53
- 9380 of 11056
odd moves half an hour ago on ecb comments that only options to hold or raise interest rates were discussed at last meeting.
chocolat
- 17 Jan 2008 14:38
- 9381 of 11056
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The dollar is weaker versus the euro following the release of housing data early Thursday, and is strengthening against the yen, as currency investors prepare for testimony by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke before Congress later this morning.
On the day, the dollar is weaker against the euro, which slid markedly Wednesday. One factor is that European Central Bank governing council member Yves Mersch backtracked early Thursday from dovish comments published a day earlier. Another is a disappointing, although expected, financial earnings report from Merrill Lynch & Co. (MER).
Against the yen, the dollar is also down, but is showing significant leaps Thursday morning as risk appetite begins to return after a stark unwind in anticipation of Bernanke's testimony before the House Budget Committee at 10 a.m. EST (1500 GMT). He is expected to offer his support for an economic-stimulus package from Congress.
Early Thursday in New York, the euro was at $1.4679 from $1.4657 late Wednesday. The dollar was at Y107.40 from Y107.54. The euro was at Y157.66 from Y157.60, according to EBS. The U.K. pound was at $1.9722 from $1.9628, and the dollar was quoted at CHF1.1020 from CHF1.0993 late Wednesday.
Home construction plunged 14.2% in December, tumbling to its lowest point in 16 years, after falling 7.9% in November, the Commerce Department said Thursday. The big decline surprised Wall Street. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires was a 5.0% drop.
But the effect on the dollar was mollified by the release of weekly jobless claims at the same time, which fell for the third straight week.
The fundamental near-term outlook for the dollar still looks bleak, say analysts, especially as U.S. interest rates are still expected to be cut relatively aggressively at the end of January - no matter Wednesday's jump. That was about euro weakness, which is still a factor Thursday. ECB's Mersch, a usually hawkish official, acknowledged that euro-zone growth might have to be downgraded from 2.0% this year Wednesday. Markets saw this as evidence that the ECB may not be in rate hiking mode after all.
"His remarks fed what is arguably a growing perception that the ECB has remained hawkish in part to discourage overly zealous wage demands from labor unions, but that rates are unlikely to move higher," said Camilla Sutton, currency strategist at Scotia Capital in Toronto.
But early Thursday, Mersch clarified that the central bank did not discuss cutting interest rates at its Jan. 10 policy meeting, causing a slight reverse to the consequent dollar boost.
"The key question we must grapple with is how much is already priced into the currency market, and whether shifts in the interest rate outlook elsewhere might be more important," Sutton said.
Merrill Lynch matched Citigroup Inc.'s (C) massive fourth-quarter net loss Thursday, as the company recorded $14.6 billion in losses related to subprime mortgages and complex debt instruments, and write-down expectations as high as $15 billion.
The dollar's recent decline against the yen has incited chatter that Japan might intervene in its foreign exchange market if the buck drops lower to Y100.
A former top Japanese currency official said Thursday that even if the U.S. dollar falls to around Y102, government intervention is highly unlikely.
"Japan would need agreement from the U.S. for any intervention, but the U.S. wouldn't comply," said Eisuke Sakakibara, Japan's former vice finance minister for international affairs. "Japan can't intervene either verbally or physically. A U.S. Treasury document last year clearly states the U.S. is against even verbal intervention."
chocolat
- 17 Jan 2008 15:44
- 9382 of 11056
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Thursday endorsed a "quickly" implemented fiscal stimulus package, saying it would complement the Fed's efforts to provide monetary-policy insurance against an economic downturn.
In prepared testimony to the House Budget Committee, Bernanke also repeated the pledge he made last week to enact "substantive" rate cuts if needed to counter the threat to the economy posed by fragile financial markets and weakening employment.
Those remarks were widely interpreted to mean that the Fed would reduce its short-term interest-rate target, probably by half a percentage point from its current 4.25%, at the central bank's next meeting, Jan. 29-30. It has already lowered the fed funds rate 100 basis points since September.
Recent data, including a steep rise in unemployment and decline in retail sales, have supported that view, though in the Fed's latest Beige Book assessment of economic conditions released Wednesday the central bank signaled the economy is slowing but not contracting. The latest jobless claims data also suggest last month's jobs report may have overstated the weakness in the economy.
Bernanke, whose remarks on the economy and monetary policy largely mirrored last week's speech, also repeated that the Fed is "prepared to act in a decisive and timely manner and, in particular, to counter any adverse dynamics that might threaten economic or financial stability." He also reiterated that downside growth risks have become more pronounced.
Housing, he said, will probably subtract more than one percentage point from gross domestic product growth in the fourth quarter and "may continue to be a drag on growth for a good part of this year as well."
But he stressed that the Fed is still keeping a close eye on inflation and inflation expectations. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices "has stepped up recently," Bernanke said, due to the pass-through effects of energy costs, the weakening dollar and higher prices for financial and medical services. But overall and core inflation should moderate this year and next, he said.
The government on Wednesday reported that consumer prices rose at a 17-year high on a December-over-December basis last year, and annual core inflation crept higher at the end of the year to 2.4%, putting it above the Fed's 1.5% to 2% comfort zone.
Any rise in inflation expectations or threat to the Fed's inflation-fighting reputation could "reduce the central bank's policy flexibility to counter shortfalls in growth in the future," Bernanke said, reiterating last week's remarks.
Thursday's remarks included an extensive discussion of fiscal stimulus, a topic Bernanke has avoided publicly until now. "I agree that fiscal action could be helpful in principle, as fiscal and monetary stimulus together may provide broader support for the economy than monetary policy actions alone," he told lawmakers.
Congressional leaders from both parties have met in recent days to craft an economic stimulus package, though specific plans vary. The expected tab is expected to be in the $100 billion range.
Fiscal stimulus is OK, Bernanke said, as long as it is "implemented quickly and structured so that its effects on aggregate spending are felt as much as possible within the next 12 months or so."
He stressed that any stimulus be "explicitly temporary" given that the U.S. faces "daunting long-run budget challenges associated with an aging population, rising health-care costs, and other factors."
Bernanke has in the past repeatedly warned lawmakers of the budgetary effect of rising entitlement spending as the roughly 78-million-strong Baby Boom generation retires and collects Social Security and Medicare benefits.
hodgins
- 18 Jan 2008 09:31
- 9383 of 11056
Not too pleased with the retail
Sue 42
- 18 Jan 2008 10:14
- 9384 of 11056
Hmmmmmmmm Thanks hils - I'm working away so can't really do anything! need to decide whether to close for a small profit, wait & make large loss, or wait & make large profit! Good thing I didn't decide last night.
CC
- 18 Jan 2008 11:51
- 9385 of 11056
i have taken a position in eurusd from 1.4626.
It has hit the downtrend line from 1.4900 now.
macd's have been turning positive over the last hour and i hope this will give it enough momentum to get through the downtrend line.
I have not decided how many pips I am looking for but i think 1.4725 would be a nice place to consider. depending on how things look later i hope to either bank half there or get a stop in say 30 pips below and let it run. 1.4725 is approx the 38 fib from the fall from 1.4900 and it conincides roughly with the spike high from the 16th at 1.4710 and today's R1.
I currently have a stop at 1.4589 below the consolidation lows since this time yesterday of 1.4605. It is not below the 2 spike lows of the 16th and 17th which worries me. I desperately want to move it up to breakeven but i want to give the trade a decent chance to suceed.
comments anyone ?
edit :1245 i've now moved the stop to breakeven
hilary
- 18 Jan 2008 13:28
- 9386 of 11056
Sue,
My comments were based upon the signals from the daily charts which were starting to show signs of a move up. The problem is that the daily cable range is often around 200 pips. A naff entry and exit on a longer term trade such as yours can easily erode 400 pips into your profit.
The daily range down here seems to be between about 1.9550 and 1.9750. I suggest that if you decide to exit that you bide your time till it gets down closer towards the lower figure.
CC
- 18 Jan 2008 14:04
- 9387 of 11056
well closed just over a third at 1.4692 for +66. moved stop up on rest to 1.4642
bit of a retrace before the next push up i hope.
chocolat
- 18 Jan 2008 14:04
- 9388 of 11056
LONDON (Dow Jones)--Sterling could be in for a bounce.
With the European Central Bank sounding a little less hawkish than usual, the outlook for the U.S. economy still deteriorating, and with continued strong U.K. inflation data making it more difficult for the Bank of England to cut interest rates, the pound's outlook could be looking brighter again.
Some forecasters suggest that the pound could bounce back over $2.00, with Steve Merrigan, technical analyst at The Royal Bank of Scotland in London, suggesting that if there is a weekly close over $1.9755 there could be a more protracted recovery to $2.0125.
Even without the shift in fundamentals, some analysts say that the pound's decline to a low of $1.9485 last week was overdone.
"The earlier selloff in sterling/dollar looks decidedly overdone relative to the moves in expected interest rate spreads, and this recovery is merely making amends," said Daragh Maher, senior foreign exchange strategist at Calyon Credit Agricole in London.
"It seems the pound may have found a floor for now," said Sue Trinh, senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Sydney.
Trinh suggested this may not last, however, if U.K. retail sales data due later Friday continue to show the sharp deterioration that many expect.
The consensus is for sales to have risen only 0.2% in December, less than the 0.4% rise seen in November. The British Retail Consortium warned last week that Christmas trading was the worst since 2004.
Concern over the pace of the economic slowdown increased this week when the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors said that house prices are falling at the fastest rate since the housing market crash and recession of the early 1990's.
"The effects of the credit crunch, weak employee earnings growth and worries about the economic outlook have led to housing activity slowing dramatically," said James Knightley, a U.K. economist at ING Financial Markets in London.
"Given the important (and strong) relationship with consumer spending that housing has, it looks as though the household sector growth is set to slow sharply," Knightley added.
He said there is a risk that sales growth could well slow to zero as a result.
Other data showing continued tightness in the U.K. labor market, with the claimant count falling 6,400 last month, failed to inject much optimism about the economy either.
"The strong labor market data is backward-looking and unlikely to drive monetary policy sentiment in the near term," said Lena Komileva, G7 group economist at international brokers Tullett Prebon in London.
Nevertheless, the initial assumption that the Bank of England would be able to respond to the economic slowdown with aggressive cuts in interest may prove wrong.
Recent data show that the consumer price index has remained above the bank's target for three months.
"With the labor market remaining tight, utility bills rising and sterling weakening, inflation remains a threat that the Bank of England will keep a watchful eye over," ING's Knightley warned, suggesting that this will make the bank more conservative about bringing rates lower.
BoE Deputy Governor John Gieve fed these more hawkish expectations Thursday when he warned that inflation could remain "well" above the bank's 2% target.
This slightly more hawkish adjustment on U.K. rate expectations has coincided with probably more dovish prospects for interest rates both in the U.S. and the euro zone.
In the U.S., a stream of disappointing economic data over the last week, combined with more explicit expressions of concern from the Fed, has raised expectations of more aggressive rate cuts in the months to come.
In the euro zone, the European Central Bank's previously hawkish stance on rates may have softened slightly as economic data continue to suggest that the region is starting to suffer from the impact of the credit global credit crunch.
This could mean that instead of hinting at the possibility of further rate hikes to keep price pressures in check, the ECB could actually contemplate lowering rates to preserve growth.
Steve Pearson, chief currency strategist at Bank of Scotland in London, pointed to the widening in the two-year swap rate differential in the U.K. relative to the euro zone to nearly 90 basis points now, from a low of 62 points, as trading got underway at the start of this year.
"This would ordinarily apply downward pressure on euro/sterling but the move is likely to be all the stronger now as the (currency) rate had clearly significantly overshot," Pearson said.
Earlier this week, the euro rose to a record high of GBP0.7613 but has since fallen back to trade at GBP0.7434 at 0745 GMT Friday. This was a little below GBP0.7439 late Thursday in New York, according to EBS.
The dollar was generally higher after a rebound in Japanese stocks helped to lift sentiment again, with the Nikkei ending 0.6% higher. This contrasted with a 2.5% fall in the Dow Jones Industrial Average after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke appeared to confirm that rates will be cut by 50 basis points at the end of this month, given the weakness of the U.S. economy.
The dollar was up at Y107.24 from Y106.73, while the euro rose to Y157.03 from Y156.51. The euro was also down at $1.4643 from $1.4659.