hilary
- 31 Dec 2003 13:00
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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!
FreemanFox
- 21 Jul 2008 07:59
- 9964 of 11056
Thanks Choccie, Yes I had another successful day trading the FTSE100 index on Friday. The long fight back begins ....
hilary
- 23 Jul 2008 17:09
- 9965 of 11056
When did USD/JPY fall to 80.00? Just after the Kobe quake of 1995.
Japanese insurers typically keep a large percentage of their reserves in higher-yielding overseas assets. If they suffered heavy losses, they would have to repatriate that cash invested overseas.
To review: Don't sell yen on a big Japanese quake, buy with both hands.
UPDATE: The wires report Japanese nuclear plants are operating normally after the 6.8 quake hit Honshu
Spaceman
- 30 Jul 2008 10:38
- 9966 of 11056
Today's silly question, is it possible to trade the USDX (US Dollar Index), it looks interesting above 74.
Very wise words from Chocolat in post 9959 above.
hilary
- 30 Jul 2008 12:48
- 9967 of 11056
Spacie,
I'm sure that it is possible, but I'm not sure who with I'm afraid, nor do I know what the likely spread would be.
Notwithstanding, why do you want to trade USDX? It is very good for identifying the major Dollar downtrend which has been in place now for several years together with the cycles which occur within that downtrend. Something like 52% composition of USDX is derived from fiber and the balance is from the other Europeans except for about 13% which comes from USD/JPY. Any broker who does trade USDX will need a SEK feed as that is used as part of the calculation.
Quite frankly, you might just as well trade a European pair such as cable or fiber.
goforit
- 31 Jul 2008 11:39
- 9968 of 11056
hils, cant download the book on mq4, do you have any suggestions where else might be able to get a copy. have sent them an email, but have had no response as yet
hilary
- 31 Jul 2008 14:27
- 9969 of 11056
What book, Gofe?
This manual is the only one I'm aware of.
chocolat
- 06 Aug 2008 11:05
- 9970 of 11056
Anyone else having problems with ODL-MT4 right now?
hilary
- 06 Aug 2008 11:09
- 9971 of 11056
Yes, that's a relief as I thought it was me, Chocopops. Invalid account.
chocolat
- 06 Aug 2008 11:11
- 9972 of 11056
Yep same here :S
Phew!
chocolat
- 06 Aug 2008 11:16
- 9973 of 11056
Actually, I hope they haven't booted us off, Hil - I've had a few emails recently about opening an account, and they appear to have extended their offer, I guess cos there's not much take-up?
Edit: All's well :) Was just in the middle of mailing Mr Newell too.
hilary
- 06 Aug 2008 11:21
- 9974 of 11056
It's possible that they purge all demo accounts every now and again, Chocopops, as it might well cost them a license fee to keep them open with MetaQuotes. If so, it'll just be a case of re-registering.
It's frustrating as hell though, because I was hoping to get some meaningful data from my EA today. This will have buggered up the sampling for sure!
I do have a backup Alpari a/c for "Condor" moments like this.
edit: Back here too. Not much damage done thankfully, so panic over.
chocolat
- 06 Aug 2008 11:29
- 9975 of 11056
Well he's just replied - system upgrade on the server, should be ok in a few more minutes.
jeffmack
- 06 Aug 2008 12:19
- 9976 of 11056
Mine gone also
goforit
- 06 Aug 2008 19:00
- 9977 of 11056
can also get mt4 at infobank, had mine running since beginning may without any problems, only problem is their bid/spread can go abit wide at times!
hilary
- 08 Aug 2008 10:02
- 9978 of 11056
Sad news last night that Thomson Reuters are going to shut the FX Hub next Friday.
chocolat
- 08 Aug 2008 10:05
- 9979 of 11056
Are the boys going somewhere else?
hilary
- 08 Aug 2008 10:08
- 9980 of 11056
Who knows, Chocopops? Jamie Coleman said something about his Facebook page, but I don't know whether that will work or not. I think Mark Mitchell's on holiday atm, so I don't know what his plans are.
Seymour Clearly
- 08 Aug 2008 11:43
- 9981 of 11056
Just logging in at the end of my jolly hollies. Real shame about the Fx Hub - I enjoyed the humour as much as anything. Have just about caught up with what's been going on with the automated trading thread as well, you seem to have been doing a lot Hils!
Will be at home Monday to catch up properly.
chocolat
- 08 Aug 2008 16:49
- 9982 of 11056
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The dollar is maintaining most of its huge gains against the euro Friday in New York in what has perhaps been its most impressive performance since the credit market crisis began last year.
The euro has dropped to as low as $1.5005, more than 2% lower on the day and nearly 4% lower since the week began. It's almost 7% under its record high of $1.6040, reached a few weeks ago.
The dollar is also sharply higher against virtually all other currencies around the globe, with commodity currencies such as the Canadian and Australian dollars feeling it the hardest.
The move up comes after nearly a full year of sharp, steady declines in the greenback as the U.S. housing market collapsed, credit markets seized up and fears of a U.S. recession escalated.
The U.S. economy is still in trouble, but fueling the dollar's rebound are signs that European and Japanese economies are now also taking a sharp turn for the worse.
Much of the dollar's gains came after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet Thursday alerted to serious downside risks to euro zone economic growth.
Trichet's remarks have reduced expectations the ECB may consider rate hikes any time soon, and some analysts say rate cuts may now be in the cards, which would likely extend the euro's declines.
"The primary trigger (for the dollar's rise) was Mr. Trichet ... it seems that the euro zone economy is going to crack," said Joseph Trevisani, chief market analyst at Forex Solutions in Saddle River, N.J. "This has been the biggest two- or three-day move since the credit crisis began."
Friday in New York, the euro was at $1.5036 from $1.5322 late Thursday. The dollar was at Y110.16 from Y109.41, while the euro was at Y165.60 from Y167.67, according to EBS. The U.K. pound was at $1.9163 from $1.9429, and the dollar was at CHF1.0809 from CHF1.0624 late Thursday.
Despite the dollar's big gains, analysts warn thin trading conditions - the first couple of weeks of August are typically the least active of the year as investors take summer vacations - may be making it easier for dollar bulls to muscle the currency higher. As such, a correction could be on the horizon.
A drop in crude prices has also helped bring a measure of respect back to the dollar. As crude oil prices trade under $120 a barrel, investors who had long oil positions are removing those bets and transferring back into dollars.
If crude rebounds, analysts say the dollar may also retreat from its large gains this week.
But for now, the dollar continues to look strong. The Canadian dollar is at a 12-month low, the Australia dollar a five-month low, and the U.K. pound is at its lowest point in nearly two years, falling as low as $1.9147.
Against the Japanese yen, the dollar surged above Y110.00 Friday, its highest level since early January. Stronger U.S. stock markets are giving an additional boost to the dollar as risk appetite improves and investors bail out of the low-yielding yen.
U.S. data out Friday also helped the greenback, as the Labor Department reported that second quarter productivity remained robust.
hilary
- 10 Aug 2008 19:19
- 9983 of 11056