Sunday, July 29, 2012

Fiber major Correction???

hi guys

just my personal view base on wave degree count..fiber in progress to completed subwave h1-a? (1.2383 or 1.2480)...for new month plan trade...fiber more buying in area 1.22xxx or 1.21xx..Risk Sl at 1.20xx.major extension fiber can go 1.27xx just my personal view..good luck.


Merkel, Draghi, Rajoy, Monti and the bailouts: What to do? - Round press

In June during the last International Traders Conference in Barcelona, Ed Ponsi said in his speech, 'The Future of the U.S. Dollar,' that the reason Germany doesn't print money is that they still remember the 1-billion mark bill. I've been keeping this phrase on my mind during the last month as I've always believed that money is the tool to make better societies even if governments have to invest more money. But I also think that the current countries' leveraging levels are unsustainable. So I found Ed's idea a clever quote to define the Euro situation.

Germany's Merkel is reluctant to permit ECB to support banks directly but if Europeans finally decide to do it as it was hinted at the latest June summit and on Thursday by Mario Draghi, the process "must be implemented quickly" as Ed Ponsi said in this press round with FXstreet.com. "At the current pace, it could take months or even years and that is what the markets find unacceptable."

Richard Olsen, co-founder of OANDA, commented at the ITC too that "Central Banks are spending all tools they have." If necessary, "what Central Banks will use when things come worst?" In other words, what euro leaders must do to improve market sentiment and to ease borrowing costs across the South European countries?

"An exit from the Euro is growing," said John Kicklighter from DailyFX, speaking about Greece, Spain and even other countries. "But the risk that it confers is so large that we need to give the scenario greater weight when we incorporate it into our trading expectations." Kicklighter believes "a Greek exit is around 60 percent at this point."

In addition, the odds for a full bailout to Spain are growing fast and "Euro-area officials will likely force the member to take a full bailout," comments Kicklighter. "We already have an open promise of up to €100 billion of total support for the country and €30 billion of funds for immediate crises need; and confidence continues to evaporate regardless."

"With borrowing costs at unsustainable levels," states Ilian Yotov from Allthingsforex.com. "I would say the odds are about 99.9%." Market believes that Spain would need more than 600 billion for a full bailout to meet borrowing necessities for the next 3 years. In this way yield pressures would be avoided. "What is more pressing is the timing and the method of implementation," comments Ponsi. "If those issues can be resolved quickly, we could see a recovery in the Euro."

Early on Friday, Spain acknowledged it might require a full bailout from the European Union and the IMF worth €300 billion if its borrowing costs remain unsustainable high, Reuters reported citing an unnamed euro zone official.

According to the report, Spain's Economy Minister Luis de Guindos discussed the issue with its German counterpart Wolfgang Schaeuble in a meeting in Berlin on Tuesday as Spanish 10-year yields rose above 7.6%. The official said Germany wasn't comfortable with the idea of a bailout now, Reuters reported.

The IMF published its Article VI on Spain saying that the economic outlook for Spain "remains very difficult and vulnerable to significant downside risks." Spain's unprecedented double-dip recession will last at least until 2014 and poses a threat to the rest of Europe, the International Monetary Fund said. The Fund estimates that policy tightening will reduce output by 1% by 2014 and that unemployment will also rise.

Meanwhile, the Fund expects the Spanish economy to contract by double of previously estimated in 2013. They expect a 1.2% GDP drop in 2013 (previous estimate: -0.6%) and a 1.7% contraction this year (-1.5% previously estimated).

For the time being, ECB’s President Mario Draghi said in a speech in London on Thursday that the European Central Bank would "do whatever it takes to preserve the euro," and "it will be enough" to solve the situation. These words relieved market sentiment and the risk has been put in on mode with the Euro trading above 1.2300. Spanish 10-year bonds traded lower on the back of Draghi's comments. The Spain's Premium risk declined to the current 534 bps with the 10Y bond fell from euro-era highest at 7.73%, reached this week, to the current 6.77%. Italian premium risk eased to 453 bps with the 10Y bonds declining from Wednesday's 6.65% to the current 5.96%.



Despite the fact that Spain's spread decline by more than 40bps on Thursday, concerns on Spanish ability to support current borrowing costs remains as William Gross from PIMCO says, "Spanish yields drop 50 basis on Draghi. No matter. They need 400 basis more to remain solvent longer term."

"Greece, Ireland and Portugal were all pushed into bailout programmes shortly after their long-term borrowing costs exceeded 7%," thinks Megan Green, Head of European Economics at Roubini Global Economics. "But there is no magic number above which borrowing becomes unsustainable. In theory a country could survive if it made a bigger fiscal adjustment so that it had more money to pay down its debt."

"The Spanish government is going out of its way to avoid it [bailout]," continues Greene "In part this is because of concerns that it will be unable to regain market access once it loses it by borrowing from the EU bailout funds. But a delay is also important to the rest of the Eurozone."

In this line, "if the market is already on the path of avoiding risky investments," believes Kicklighter, "they will make a concerted effort to avoid Spain as they have seen too many repeat problems with troubled Euro countries in the past."

"The question is where the estimated 300 billion euro needed for Spain will come from?" rhetorically asks us Ilian Yotov. "There is not in practice enough bailout money for those two countries [Spain and Italy] now," remarks Greene.

Meanwhile, institutions like Citi, in the voice of its Chief Economist Willem Buiter, believes Greece is likely to leave the Eurozone over the next 12-18 months, with chances of 90%: "Our base case is for prolonged economic weakness and financial market strains in periphery countries, spilling over into renewed recession for the euro area as a whole this year and the next”, stating the increased chances from 50-75% now to 90%, most likely in the next 2-3 quarters.



On the other hand, "reports leak from the Spanish government that the prime minister is considering "putting on the table" the option of a withdrawal from the euro," remarks Yotov. And Buiter affirms that the crisis won’t be solved after the “Grexit” as Spain and Italy are expected to “form of troika bailout for the sovereign by the end of 2012”.

So what the leaders must do is act fast and quickly on banking union and allowing ECB to recapitalize banks directly. "If the Eurozone wanted to make sweeping strides towards stabilizing the Spanish troubles," says Kicklighter, "they could fast track the rescue of the nation’s banking system and offer us clear details about the size of the program and the conditions"

"If they wanted to take it even further," continues Kicklighter, "they could quickly adopt the Banking Union that would set the foundation for using the ESM to bailout banking system and further to purchasing government bonds (to stem both sovereign and bank issues)."

Providing the ECB with bank license "could be a good solution to the problem," underlines Yotov. "Give the permanent ESM fund a banking license which will allow it to borrow from the European Central Bank and will increase its firepower."

In other words, paraphrasing a fridge magnet that a friend gave me: "Euro got me into this mess and as God is my witness, Euro will get me out of it."

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Fiber Ending diagonal again???

hi guy..

just share my personal view base on m30...See eu form ending diagonal...to completed subwave v?...waiting break space point level and arithmatic line...fiber already form extended wave..know...waiting to form ending diagonal..before..make a major reversal..Just my 2 cent view..TAYOR..critical level area reject.. 1.2208 & 1.2184..good luck..

Monday, July 2, 2012

Plan trade fiber this week

Hi all

Just to share my plan trade this week..base on square block view..Fiber critical range area .1.2738(strong resistance)& 1.2419(strong support)..pivot level area at 1.2581.base on overall view h4 price still in downtrend side.my bias is downtrend mood...in fiber..this week my plan more selling then buying if price not break 1.2738..

just my 2 cent... ; P