hilary
- 31 Dec 2003 13:00
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Forex rebates on every trade - win or lose!
Bobcolby
- 29 Oct 2004 11:10
- 1981 of 11056
Any guesses as to which way dollar will go today?
Cloggs
- 29 Oct 2004 12:52
- 1982 of 11056
Have been scalping Cable Long for a few,now waiting for thev 13.30 GDP figures to come out, might try a long just before.
Bobcolby
- 29 Oct 2004 13:51
- 1983 of 11056
Nlce one Cloggs. I got in and out for 28
dscott62
- 29 Oct 2004 18:02
- 1984 of 11056
Thanks foale,
Been using the 30 day demo and am also very impressed with FXCM.
David
hilary
- 01 Nov 2004 07:35
- 1985 of 11056
[FXCM EUR/USD COMMENTS]
The currency markets have been very active these days with a tremendous amount of important economic data released over the past few weeks, volatility in oil prices and position adjustments ahead of the US elections. This morning, the flash CPI estimate for the month of October in the Eurozone topped estimates at 2.5%. This is far above the central bank's 2.0% target and exceeds the market's 2.3% forecast. The surge was primarily a result of rising oil prices. The ECB expects inflation to fall below their target level next year, but this is also contingent upon the easing of oil prices. Meanwhile industrial and economic confidence in the Eurozone in general improved while the number of unemployed individuals in France decreased by 17k. All eyes next week will be on the US Presidential Elections followed by non-farm payrolls on Friday. With the outcome of the Presidential elections still unclear, there could be quite a bit of volatility on Monday and Tuesday with traders either squaring or readjusting positions ahead of the results. There is of course the risk that the election will still be undecided after November 2nd. We can only see this as dollar negative since it raises and prolongs uncertainty, causing some investors to park their money in safer assets.
[IFRMARKETS EUR/USD COMMENTS]
[05:03 GMT 29th October] The EUR/USD opened in Asia around 1.2745 after
recovering from the low of 1.2630 that was hit in the wake of the surprise rate
hike by China. The late New York recovery stalled at 1.2765 due to a further
slip in the oil price and this level should be viewed as decent resistance in
the immediate-term. It is also the 61.8 fibo of this week's 1.2840/1.2630
high/low and a break above returns the pressure to the topside. The Asian market
stayed on the sidelines today after the volatile London/NY session and ahead of
a lot of event risk. U.S. GDP, Michigan Sentiment and Chicago PMI are out later
today and with election on Tuesday many traders decided to sit this one out. The
range for the session was 1.2734/56, 11 pips either side of the opening price. The effect of the China rate hike has faded and the risk later today is for
the EUR/USD to move higher. If the U.S. data doesn't surprise to the upside and
if oil doesn't move significantly lower it is unlikely that the market will be
comfortable holding dollars with the uncertainty surrounding the U.S. election
and the added threat of terrorist activity.
hilary
- 01 Nov 2004 07:35
- 1986 of 11056
[FXCM GBP/USD COMMENTS]
Unsurprisingly, net consumer credit fell once again in the month of September from 1.9B to 1.6B. Along with this week's sharp fall in the home prices, we believe that the Bank of England will stand pat at their monetary policy meeting next week. Movements in the pound should be dictated primarily by dollar developments next week given the importance of non-farm payrolls and the US Presidential elections. Meanwhile Rebecca Riley, a researcher at the NIESR attributed a part of the weakness in inflation to the strength in the British pound.
[IFRMARKETS GBP/USD COMMENTS]
[10:25 GMT October 29] There is a raft of potentially market-moving US data due
today: beginning with advance Q3 GDP at 12:30GMT; ensuing with October's final
Michigan Sentiment survey at 13:45GMT; and concluding with October's Chicago PMI
circa 14:00GMT. Advance Q3 GDP is the highlight, and is forecast +4.4%. A better than
expected number could spur some pre-weekend short USD covering, and depress
cable towards 1.8194 (yesterday's post-China rate hike one-week low). Pre-1.8194
support is located at 1.8289 (Asian session low), 1.8273 (Thursday's Asian
session base), and 1.8255 (Wednesday's late North American session low).
Offers at 1.8340/50, inclusive of UK and Asian name interest, kept a lid on
the pair before the 08:30GMT unveiling of a larger-than-expected easing in UK
September consumer credit growth, and a further decline in UK mortgage
approvals. The soft data makes next week's expected unchanged MPC rate verdict
(Nov 4) ever more certain, and adds to the perception that the peak of the UK
rate tightening cycle has already been reached.
hilary
- 02 Nov 2004 15:16
- 1987 of 11056
Uncomfortable with the manner in which Cable has been rising but the greenback has stayed firm against the other Europeans. Dumped my Cable long and staying out of the market for the moment until we get a clear break one way or the other.
Maggot
- 03 Nov 2004 06:02
- 1988 of 11056
Been watching late-night (early-morning)news and it seems likely the dollar will firm soon when Bush's victory is finally confirmed. But for how long?
Sue 42
- 03 Nov 2004 14:38
- 1989 of 11056
Hope it firms soon! I seem to be going in the wrong direction at the moment!
hilary
- 03 Nov 2004 14:41
- 1990 of 11056
Sue,
The Dollar broke support this morning. You should now be long Cable (ie short USD) above circa 18350 imo.
hilary
- 03 Nov 2004 14:43
- 1991 of 11056
CHICAGO (AFX) -- The dollar remained higher against the Japanese yen in U.S. trading Wednesday, with preliminary returns from the presidential election tipped toward incumbent President George Bush, although the final outcome may still be a week or so away.
U.S. stocks were expected to move higher as Bush emerged the probable winner, boosting demand from foreigners for the dollars needed to place U.S. equity investments.
The dollar had been higher against the euro, but had since given ground to Europe's shared currency. The buck also halved its gain against the yen.
'The pre-election bearish sentiment seems to have reasserted itself on the dollar amid deficit concerns and expectations that the reelected Bush administration will let the dollar soften,' said Ronald Simpson, currency analyst with Action Economics.
The dollar was quoted at 106.48 yen, up 0.4 percent from late U.S. trading. A holiday in Japan kept volume light in Asian trading.
The euro was up 0.1 percent at $1.2757. The British pound rose 0.1 percent to $.18436.
Against its Swiss counterpart, the dollar edged down 0.1 percent to 1.2013 francs.
White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card said Wednesday morning that President Bush has secured the Electoral College votes needed. Democratic challenger John Kerry's campaign has said it will await the counting of provisional ballots in the crucial swing state of Ohio.
The dollar was supported overnight as global financial markets grew more confident this year's election, despite its closeness, would be resolved more quickly than in 2000. Worries about a repeat of the prolonged recounting process in the last election have weighed on the dollar in recent sessions.
The key words were 'slight' and 'might,' said James D. Malcolm, foreign exchange strategist at Deutsche Bank in Singapore.
'We might -- might -- get a resolution sooner rather than later, which is giving the dollar a slight -- slight -- lift,' Malcolm said earlier in the trading day. 'In the meantime, everybody is watching the polls, and there's very little appetite to take risk. Volume is fairly low, with not much in the way of directional bets.'
For the euro, '$1.2630 is going to be an important test level,' said Malcolm, as the European currency's recent low was $1.2628. 'If we can trade below that, it will take out some support in the market.'
Bear Stearns currency strategist Steve Barrow said the election outcome is not really important for the dollar's long-term outlook, and therefore declines will likely resume shortly.
'One other issue to bear in mind is that the prospect of a Bush victory has already lifted oil prices sharply, and this could be reflected in some other commodities as well, helping commodity currencies and so limiting any dollar rally,' Barrow said.
J.P. Morgan currency strategist Yen Ping Ho said in a research note Wednesday, said that once the election outcome is decided, focus will switch to the upside risks of non-farm payroll data on Friday.
The latest report is expected to show the U.S. economy added 176,000 jobs last month, according to a survey conducted by CBS MarketWatch.
Robb
- 03 Nov 2004 14:48
- 1992 of 11056
Sue 42
- 03 Nov 2004 16:30
- 1993 of 11056
hilary - thanks.
hilary
- 04 Nov 2004 06:36
- 1994 of 11056
No fxcm???????????????????
Sue 42
- 04 Nov 2004 09:01
- 1995 of 11056
are all the strategies for the day before? they all seem to be dated 3erd Nov???
hilary
- 04 Nov 2004 09:25
- 1996 of 11056
They don't normally appear until mid-morning, Sue. John Hardy at Saxo probably gives the best precis imo shortly after 9am.
Sue 42
- 04 Nov 2004 09:44
- 1997 of 11056
thanks hilary.
Cloggs
- 05 Nov 2004 13:39
- 1998 of 11056
well that was fun,Hilary hope you did well.
Maggot
- 05 Nov 2004 13:54
- 1999 of 11056
Hilary. Could I ask you where you are getting your streaming news from - you posted the non-farm payroll figure so quickly. Thanks.
Was long with very tight stops, but made up my losses and a little bit more on the spike down and the first bounce up. Should have done what I was going to do - a long with cmc with tight stop, and a short with IG with a tight stop!
hilary
- 05 Nov 2004 14:02
- 2000 of 11056
Maggot,
They started buying the $ at 13:27, so I suspected that they'd beaten the street. I got the news from Bloomberg. Digital TV though, not the internet which seems to lag.