Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Currency Traders Thread (£$Y)     

Shortie - 15 May 2014 10:47

Thought it about time we had a separate thread for currency plays.

Charts Currently Removed - New Ones To Follow Soon

Good Reading If You Like FX
http://www.mizuhobank.com/fin_info/exchange.html

Shortie - 02 Sep 2014 10:51 - 81 of 164

EUR/GBP gone long 0.79356

Shortie - 02 Sep 2014 16:33 - 82 of 164

0.79545 position closed for a small profit.

midknight - 03 Sep 2014 10:39 - 83 of 164

$ @ 7-month high

midknight - 12 Sep 2014 11:28 - 84 of 164

Sterling prospects

midknight - 18 Sep 2014 15:04 - 85 of 164

Sterling 2-yr high & Scottish Referendum

Shortie - 22 Sep 2014 10:25 - 86 of 164

EUR/GBP gone short @ 0.78697

midknight - 22 Sep 2014 10:38 - 87 of 164

Royal Mint to sell Bullion coins online

Shortie - 22 Sep 2014 11:08 - 88 of 164

Cheers for that link midnight, funnily enough I have a stash of bullion coins and have always purchased through a dealer. I'll no doubt have a look at that website very soon.

midknight - 22 Sep 2014 11:41 - 89 of 164

Sterling rising

midknight - 23 Sep 2014 15:53 - 90 of 164

$ drops

Shortie - 24 Sep 2014 10:40 - 91 of 164

0.78330 EUR/GBP closed +367.

midknight - 24 Sep 2014 10:49 - 92 of 164

Well done, Shortie.

Shortie - 24 Sep 2014 11:50 - 93 of 164

Cheers Midnight..

Shortie - 25 Sep 2014 17:30 - 94 of 164

Closed out position too soon... Oh well better a profit than a loss.

LONDON, Sept 25 (Reuters) - Sterling reached its highest against the euro in more than two years on Thursday, as the latest comments from Bank of England Governor Mark Carney helped the pound get to less than 78 pence per euro for the first time since July of 2012. Along with a raft of other major currencies, the pound was weaker against the dollar. But the contrasting outlooks for monetary policy in the euro zone and United Kingdom have taken sterling close to highs against the euro not seen since the 2008 financial crisis. Carney said that a rise in interest rates was "getting closer". He was also the latest central banker to warn that loose monetary conditions may have led investors to misprice risk and created the danger of a sharp reversal in markets - comments that would naturally point to tighter rates to cool sentiment. ID:nL9N0P503N Sterling pushed up to a high of 77.855 pence against the euro in response before retreating to 78.09 pence. EURGBP=D4 . "I don't think there is much mystery to Carney now: if he can hold off raising rates for the first six months of next year, he will, but that is not going to stop him from giving these sort of broad indications that rates will rise so that financial stability risks remain in check," said Stephen Gallo, a strategist with Canadian bank BMO in London. Sterling also recovered some of the day's losses against a broadly stronger dollar to trade at $1.6311, down just over 0.1 percent on the day. GBP=D4 After the pound's rough ride leading up to last week's vote on Scottish independence, market attention is swinging back to diverging policy in the UK and continental Europe, and analysts say the euro may continue to fall. "Notwithstanding some mixed messages from U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers, the economic fundamentals continue to point to dollar strength and a focus on the divergence in policy outlooks that will weaken the euro," said Phyllis Papadavid, senior global FX strategist at BNP Paribas in London. Until mid-July, the pound had been one of the best performers among leading currencies, surging 15 percent against the dollar in a year, on expectations the Bank of England would raise interest rates earlier than its peers. Those expectations have been pushed back, but some major investment houses still predict the bank will raise rates in November. On the gilt market, the premium that 10-year British government bonds GB10YT=RR offer over the equivalent German Bund EU10YT=RR neared its highest level this week after Carney's remarks. The gap between the two bond yields rose more than a basis point and eventually topped 149 bps, just shy of Monday's high of 149.2 bps, before receding back to around 148 bps. In the cash market, gilt prices rose modestly, boosted by a weaker-than-expected U.S. business survey that pushed U.S. Treasury and Bund prices higher.

skinny - 30 Sep 2014 11:36 - 95 of 164

GBP/USD (short)and GBP/EUR (long) would have been a nice pairs trade this morning.

GBP_EUR_zpsd0ee6121.pngGBP_USD_zps7d559bde.png

Shortie - 30 Sep 2014 11:42 - 96 of 164

Yep.

midknight - 01 Oct 2014 12:00 - 97 of 164

Euro in the doldrums

I reckon more downside is on the cards.

Shortie - 01 Oct 2014 14:20 - 98 of 164

Sure is, BOE and ECB are currently at poles on policy.

Shortie - 07 Oct 2014 09:41 - 99 of 164

TOKYO, Oct 7 (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda stressed his resolve to maintain massive stimulus for a prolonged period but shrugged off the need to expand it soon, remaining upbeat on the outlook despite signs the economy may be in a mild recession. Kuroda also stuck to his view that a weak yen is positive for Japan's economy. But he slightly modified his tone by nodding to concerns from the business community that further yen declines will hurt small firms and households by boosting import costs. "If the currency moves reflect economic and financial fundamentals, they should be positive, not negative, for the economy. But fundamentals themselves fluctuate, so it's important to take this into account," he said on Tuesday. As widely expected, the BOJ maintained its pledge of increasing base money, or cash and deposits at the central bank, at an annual pace of 60-70 trillion yen ($547-$638 billion) via purchases of government bonds and risky assets. The central bank maintained its view the world's third largest economy continues to recover moderately as a trend. But it offered a bleaker view on factory output, saying it was "weakening" as a slump in demand after a sales tax hike in April left auto and electronic makers with a huge pile of inventory. A government index gauging current economic conditions worsened in August, data showed on Tuesday, a sign the economy may be in recession as it suffers from the tax-hike hit. Kuroda acknowledged that the tax-hike pain and bad summer weather had weighed on consumption longer than expected. But he stressed that after a temporary soft patch, growth will pick up enough to accelerate inflation toward the BOJ's price target. "Job and income conditions are steadily improving, and the effect of the sales tax hike is easing as a whole. Both for companies and households, a positive cycle of income and expenditure remains firmly in place," he said. "Our policy is exerting intended effects," Kuroda added, signalling that he saw no need to expand monetary stimulus any time soon despite a slew of recent weak data. But Kuroda also stressed that the BOJ's quantitative and qualitative easing (QQE) won't be automatically terminated when the two-year deadline for meeting its price target approaches. "Rather, it's an outcome-based programme," which means the BOJ will maintain QQE for as long as necessary to ensure inflation stays at, not just temporarily hits, 2 percent, he said. An intense burst of monetary and fiscal stimulus, which were the first two "arrows" of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's strategy to end 15 years of deflation, has helped boost business sentiment by lifting share prices and weakening the yen. But measures to enhance corporate governance and deregulate highly-protected medical and farm sectors, which are part of his "third arrow" growth strategy, have failed to impress markets. With the tax-hike pain weighing on household spending, any further worsening of sentiment would complicate Abe's crucial decision by year-end on whether to proceed with a scheduled second sales tax hike to 10 percent in October next year. WEAK YEN DE-MERITS Abe's cabinet has also come under fire in parliament over the pain that the weak yen, generated in part from the BOJ's massive stimulus, inflicts on households via rising import costs. Kuroda himself was grilled in parliament from an opposition lawmaker on the yen when he was summoned to speak on Tuesday, a rare event that forced the BOJ to briefly interrupt its rate review for the first time in 16 years. Abe and his cabinet ministers have recently started to comment on the disadvantages of the weak yen, largely on the need as politicians to pay heed to their local constituencies. Kuroda, by contrast, has said a weak yen did not pose any big problem as it helps boost exporters' revenues, which would trickle down to households through higher wages and jobs growth. Given growing public attention, however, he shifted closer to the government's line by talking not just about the merits, but the demerits, of yen declines. "In general, a weak yen has some positive effect on exports and capital expenditure by pushing up revenues at companies with operations overseas. On the other hand, it's true a weak yen weighs on non-manufacturers' revenues by pushing up import costs," he told parliament. The central bank has stood pat on monetary policy since deploying an intense burst of stimulus in April last year, when it pledged to achieve its 2 percent inflation in roughly two years via aggressive asset purchases. Still, the central bank may come under renewed pressure to expand stimulus if the economic weakness persists, analysts say. After a surprise slump in August factory output, the BOJ cut its assessment on production, saying output has been weak due partly to inventory adjustments. It said last month that the trend in output was for a continued rise, albeit with some weaknesses. ID:nL3N0RW3GS Debate at Tuesday's meeting lays the groundwork for a more crucial policy meeting on Oct. 31, when the nine board members issue new quarterly long-term economic and price projections. Given signs of a delay in the recovery, they are likely to roughly halve their economic growth forecast for the current fiscal year from the present projection of 1.0 percent, the sources familiar with BOJ thinking said.

midknight - 08 Oct 2014 15:16 - 100 of 164

Dollar strengthens
Register now or login to post to this thread.