
update 30/1/09
just my personal preview geppy at h4 chart...i see price now break my diagonal support...this is time to running out sideway market..
Diskriminasi menjatuhkan aku
Reputasi kini menjadi bisu
dan aku , ku layu
disitu
Mengharapkan sesuatu yang baru
itulah impian aku
C/O
Dan bila kau menghilang
Musnah la, musnah impian
tuk menggapai bintang
terangi hidup ku
Ku mahu kau tahu
engkaulah, destinasiku
dalam ingatanku .. oh oh oh…
Kerana diri ini tak daya lagi
menempuh hidup yang ku temui
dan aku , ku tunggu .. oh oh oh
disitu
Mengharapkan sesuatu yang baru
itulah impian aku
C/O dan C/O lagi… =)
Soros Stopped Betting Against Pound After $1.40 Level (Update1) By Simon Kennedy Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor George Soros, who made $1 billion selling the pound in 1992, said he is no longer betting against the U.K. currency after it reached $1.40. “I did actually foresee the fall in sterling and that was one of the positions we carried,” he told reporters at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Below $1.40 “it seemed to me the risk-reward was no longer clear.” Soros said today that he has made money from the financial crisis. The British government’s efforts to protect the banking system from the turmoil last week led to a drop in the pound to the lowest level against the dollar since 1985. The currency traded at $1.4313 as of 12:56 p.m. in London today. “We did have a short position in sterling, but it doesn’t mean I’m bearish on sterling today or bullish,” Soros said. “It will continue to fluctuate.” Soros’s comments contrast with those of Jim Rogers, who co- founded the Quantum Fund with him and is now chairman of Singapore-based Rogers Holdings. Rogers said Jan. 20 that the pound was “finished” because of turmoil in the banking system and a decline in North Sea oil output. Hungarian-born Soros gained fame more than 16 years ago when he broke the Bank of England’s defense of the pound and drove the currency from Europe’s system of linked exchange rates. Other successful trades included a bet that the deutsche mark would rise after the collapse of the Berlin wall and a wager that Japanese stocks would start to tumble in 1989. Brown’s Comments U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown has so far resisted addressing sterling’s plunge and dismissed the warnings of investors by saying the government’s policy is to target inflation and not the exchange rate. “The experience of targeting the pound and targeting the exchange rate has not been one particularly beneficial to this country,” Brown said today in Parliament. Soros said his long-held pessimism in the outlook in the world economy allowed him to make money during the crisis. “I was able to protect my capital and get a rate of return,” he said. “In the current environment, to be in positive territory is itself an accomplishment.” Soros said President Barack Obama’s administration will struggle to revive the U.S. economy and financial system because President George W. Bush’s administration was “behind the curve” in responding to the crisis and now the money required is now “too big.” He urged the government to recapitalize banks and reduce the amount of housing foreclosures. “The situation will continue to deteriorate,” he said. Soros said the widening gap between the interest rates Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal must pay investors to borrow for 10 years and the rate charged to Germany reflects “structural weaknesses in the construction of the euro” and the lack of a common fiscal authority. Governments will eventually have to help each other out because individually they lack the “borrowing power” to protect their banking systems, Soros said. To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in Davos at skennedy4@bloomberg.net Last Updated: January 28, 2009 08:33 EST |
The European Central Bank has lowered its benchmark interest rate by 50 bps to 2%, yet in our opinion, the rate cut came a bit too late, and we expect more EUR/USD weakness going forward on speculation that we may have a considerable deterioration of the euro zone economy in 2009.
The Euro Zone Is Experiencing a Significant Slowdown, Trichet Said
In the introductory statement ahead of the regular press conference, Jean-Claude Trichet sounded very pessimistic. The president of the ECB said the euro zone is experiencing a significant slowdown and “today’s decision takes into account that inflationary pressures have continued to diminish, owing in particular to the further weakening in the economic outlook.” Looking further ahead, he said that we may “continue to see global economic weakness and very sluggish domestic demand persisting in the coming quarters as the impact of the financial tensions on activity continues.”
Euro/Dollar Forecast for 2009 (Updated)
It is always difficult to make exchange rate forecasts, particularly when the currency market is very volatile. Even so, in this article, we argue that a considerable deterioration of the euro zone economy in 2009 could lead to a significant shift of interest rate differentials in favor of the US dollar and keep the EUR/USD under pressure over the next few months. Indeed, recent economic data points toward weakening of real GDP growth in the euro zone economy, and a more accommodative monetary policy by the European Central Bank could be needed to prevent the region from falling into a much deeper recession. On the other hand, the recent selloff in commodities, particularly in oil, should alleviate some downward pressure from the US economy, which has been running a current account deficit of nearly 5% of GDP.
The ECB Underestimated the Size of the Financial Crisis
The biggest housing and credit bubble in history continues to threaten the entire global financial system, and the once-resilient euro zone economy is slowly succumbing to tight credit conditions and a slowing global economy. Initially, European policy leaders thought the financial crisis would be confined to the United States, and the ECB was slower to act than the Federal Reserve. Inflation in the euro zone was well above a level consistent with price stability, and the ECB was concerned with second-round effects of energy prices in wage and price setting. However, the credit storm that began in the US ended up affecting the euro zone and European banks were forced to write off $229 billion out of a global total of $588 billion in losses related the collapse of the US subprime market. While no one can deny that Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB president, has done a lot to boost the euro as a credible alternative for the US dollar, it is also becoming clear that the ECB perhaps underestimated the size of the financial crisis by keeping interest rates too high for too long. In fact, the euro zone is now in a technical recession and facing the most serious test since the euro was introduced to the world financial markets in 1999.
Risks for This Trade
In 2008, the US dollar appreciated against several of the world’s most heavily traded currencies. To some extent, investors were reluctant to take leveraged positions on higher yielding currencies, and the US dollar was helped by a strong demand from financial institutions seeking a safe-haven currency. However, holding a long position in the US dollar also involves some risks. In fact, the US economy is likely to continue to face substantial challenges in 2009, including further job losses and a rapid deleveraging in the financial sector. In addition, some investors are concerned with the fiscal impact of the rescue plan, which could cost almost 5% of GDP. Currently, the United States federal government runs a deficit of $438 billion, or 3% of gross domestic product, and the bailout plan could push the fiscal deficit next year to $1 trillion, or 7% of GDP.
Hi again, Everyone!
Despite the U.S. CPI coming “relatively in line”, the TIC Treasury Outflows Data atrocious , and Capacity Utilization and Industrial Production down… we are still making a decent bounce in our major “Match” of the Dollar Yen.
Here is our same Daily view from my previous Post…and we are grinding out some daylight here with the Dollar bounce off of Support.
Be sure to click once for the Captures, as most of the Analysis is on the Charts!
(Post-Time is 15:25 GMT)
Here on two Hourly captures, we can see the strength of the counter-trend move here…
We will meet again for the Sydney Open on Sunday and check our progress here with some more ideas!
A good weekend to all, and we’ll see you then!
Monday January 12th
By Don Curren
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Canada Morning
SOUTHAMPTON: Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has challenged his misfiring players to use today's FA Cup third round trip to Southampton as an opportunity to rediscover their scoring touch.
Psychological factors about the trading are well covered in the books, articles and in all sorts of media information and in this article all the ideas about emotions, caused by the “mad” movements of the market, probably will not be new, but solutions how to deal with them for some traders could be a discovery. I am not pretending to be a wizard of the market, but what helps me could help others as well.
Let me first express my opinion, what any trading strategy or investment plan, no matter how good it is, is completely useless without proper execution of that plan. I think here majority will agree without any big argument. But another idea - that not very good strategy, but with the proper execution of that strategy could bring good results - will bring a doubt in our busy heads. And I would agree with you, despite I personally know one Forex market trader who's strength is discipline, not the strategy. And he has excellent results. I think he is an exception. I still think that for successful trading you need a good strategy and discipline to execute that strategy.
Emotions, emotions, emotions... Trading is full of them, movement of the market based on them. Our rush to buy or sell sometimes overflow our plans. And later we question ourselves: “Why did I do this or that?” What is driving us to get into the market when we are not prepared and exit on completely different prices, which completely disagree with our plans? I think it is two major factors: greed and fear.
Greed – we want more! When market goes as we expected, we believe it will continue for very long time. We forgot that everything changes. Fear - we afraid to miss the profitable move or to loose the money. And until fear and greed will dominate us, our results will be very unstable. And worse: if our money management is not the strongest point (usually for emotional traders this is the weakest point), will soon will be out of money, before we even had a chance to establish ourselves as a trader.
Here I am going to give some solutions how to overcome emotions.
First let's start from the trading strategy. I am sure everyone has got one. If not, here my first advice – find one. Do not start “make millions” without a strategy. How and where? In the book stores, magazines, internet. There are plenty of it. Just look around and I am sure you will find lots, but choose just one. Just one at the time. Don't start trading six strategies at once, you will get confused.
So, let's say you have one. Now I have one question: where is your trading strategy and rules? In your head? On the screen? On the paper? Worst answer is - in my head. And here is my second advice – don't be lazy and accurately write it down on the clean paper. Write all your strategy, where you going to enter, where you are going to exit. About how to write a plan or strategy should be separate discussion, so here we are not going to do that. Advice is – write YOUR rules and plans, and strategies.
Next step will be an execution of the plan or strategy. At first it looks simple, you see the price, you know at what price you want to buy, where are you going to take the profit, where you will stop your position. Good. Just do it. Well, reality is - market does not know about your plans and even worst, market is living its own life and definitely, market does not care about your money. Before you go any further, here is my next advice - stop and think. Do you really want to be a trader? Are you ready to accept losses? If your answer is yes, I would suggest one interesting thing to do, before you enter the trade:
Find some quite place and give a promise to yourself: “I am going to execute my trading plan and I will accept any consequences for my actions” This could be your everyday some sort of prayer, until you start following your plan without any exceptions. And when you find yourself in the position, where you do not know what to do, repeat those words for yourself. It will help you to strengthen your discipline. By repeating to yourself , that every action you take is absolutely your responsibility, will make you realize, no one is guilty for your mistakes or losses. Just you. But it is important at this point do not blame yourself. Blame is simple weak point, in other words – another emotion. Instead of blaming yourself, analyse what have you done wrong, maybe is possible to improve trading strategy or plan, and write it on a paper. And when you find mistake of your actions, or hole in your strategy, simply next time do not repeat that mistake, improve your strategy.
By repeating to yourself: “I am going to execute my trading plan....” you will remind to yourself about a plan, which you created and at least you will look at it. That definitely will stop you at least for a moment.
Even if we have a plan, it is very hard to take losses. I know. We all have got a hope, we all believe in some sort of miracles. But at the same time we know, successful trader simply follows it's plan, unsuccessful one has a hope. Do not be afraid to take loss. One loss is not the end of the world. Even few of them in a row. If you are sure that your strategy works, stick to it and soon you will have very positive results. But how to cope with the loss mentally?
Next advice will be – find the time every day for some physical exercises. Any physical exercises will help you to feel better. Do not sit in front of the screen thinking: “I could do this, I had to do that...” Body likes to move and it will give some stress relief. Do not be afraid to get away from the screen. Do not think too much about market. There is certainly more life than markets.