GBP-USD Scalping Trade Result 31 July 2009
GBP-USD Scalping Trade Result 31 July 2009
GBP-USD Trade Results July 3, 2009
GBP-USD Trade Results July 3, 2009
The Plumber is Fixing Everything
I wish I could believe Obama but the umbers there just do not add up. Let us look at unemployment as an example of how the numbers are not what they seem. In Oregon, a state in the North Western part of the US just above California, Obama’s stimulus created 7,500 jobs – or at least that is the claim they are making. Now while it is true that those jobs were created, they were not permanent – in fact, most of them were no more than 37 hours, about 1 weeks’ worth of work.
Considering that they spent over 10 million dollars creating those jobs, you would think that 7,500 people would still be employed, in fact close to 74% of the recipients of those jobs are no longer in those jobs and are not eligible for unemployment insurance as they did not work long enough at this job to qualify for the benefits.
So, you can take 7,500 people off the unemployment lines, or more specifically, off the books – but the fact remains that they are still jobless. Forex Traders need to have all the information before making trades, they cannot rely on words alone as many times the choice of words used are meant to deceive.
Padding the numbers is not going to make things better, action will. And Obama seems intent on continuing his spending – overpaying for things like cheese and ham and toilet seats in the name of stimulating the economy.
A Federally subsidized program that repairs public toilets cost the taxpayers more than 18 Million Dollars, the total number of toilets that were repaired were 993, that is a total of 18,127 Dollars per toilet. I don’t know about you, but I would like one of those I my house.
I could use it to truly be presidential in my own home by flushing my Dollars down the drain.
GBP-USD Strong Support & Resistance
Along this week still there is no clear indication to where will the GBP-USD is heading to. Strong volatility movement along the 4 hourly time frame Bollinger band indicator making it very difficult to guess the intention of the big crowds.
Based on Daily time frame there is a likelihood, it should move down to the bottom of the bollinger band in daily time frame. From past historical analysis I have a strong opinion that it should move down to 1.6104 support level at least for this week. Then move up again to retest 1.6563 by next week.
We will see if my opinion is correct along this week.
Marketiva Forex: Trade as low as $1 & FREE $5 + $10000 Virtual Practice Money. Liberty Reserve, Webmoney, e-Dinar. The best practice account for forex beginner.
GBP-USD Strong Support & Resistance
Along this week still there is no clear indication to where will the GBP-USD is heading to. Strong volatility movement along the 4 hourly time frame Bollinger band indicator making it very difficult to guess the intention of the big crowds.
Based on Daily time frame there is a likelihood, it should move down to the bottom of the bollinger band in daily time frame. From past historical analysis I have a strong opinion that it should move down to 1.6104 support level at least for this week. Then move up again to retest 1.6563 by next week.
We will see if my opinion is correct along this week.
Marketiva Forex: Trade as low as $1 & FREE $5 + $10000 Virtual Practice Money. Liberty Reserve, Webmoney, e-Dinar. The best practice account for forex beginner.
Aussie and US Dollars rally - One on good news and one for bad
The Dollar recovered on Tuesday off its lowest level of the year against a basket of currencies, as a steep drop in US consumer confidence raised concerns over the pace of the economic recovery.
This brought back safe-haven flows into the USD and helped pick the Dollar up, after hitting new lows in the past week.
The ICE Futures US Dollar index, which measures the performance of the USD against six of the major currencies, rose to near 79. Earlier, the ICE had fallen to a low of 78.315, the lowest level it had seen since early December.
At 11:00PM GMT, the Dollar was up .43% to the Euro 1.4169, up .3% to the British Pound to 1.6437, up .15% to the Canadian Dollar to 1.0826, and up .5% to the Swiss Franc to .8284.
AUD
The Australian Dollar rallied in the Forex market, after Australia's Central Bank governor fuelled speculation that they might be raising interest rates in the coming months.
Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens commented that the risks to the economy were more balanced and manageable, and that low interest rates could create a housing bubble crisis. This was the clearest sign that the ACB was through with its quantitative easing policy.
At 11:15PM GMT, the Aussie was up .7% to the USD to .8275 after hitting an 11 month high of .8338. The Aussie was also up 1.1% to the Euro to 1.7117, up .3% to the Japanese Yen to 78.38 and up .4% to the New Zealand Dollar to 1.256.
Stock markets are rising? Look at the Big Picture!
With many of the primary stock markets reaching yearly highs, it would appear that optimism about the prospects for a global recovery is high. The increase in overall risk appetite in the Forex and the jump in stocks have been incredibly impressive.According to the news reports, these shifts in sentiment have been driven higher by better than expected corporate earnings out of the US along with good economic data. But something is just not adding up for me, and I am not quite sure where to place my disbelief.
It is odd that just as the markets are flying, bond yields for the major economic countries, the US, Japan, England etc, are going higher. Now obviously this is due in part to trader speculation that once the recovery takes hold, these countries will have no choice but to start raising their low rates.
But what concerns me is the effect of quantitative easing that many of these countries employed. Funnelling money into the system at such a large rate as many of these countries had, will no doubt cause mild to moderate inflation – which would require lower rates. So what is going on?
Last week gave us a clue that all is not so rosy though. England reported a weaker-than-expected GDP figures for the second quarter – much weaker than expected to be specific.
Perhaps the Brits are not fudging their numbers like the Americans are – not that I know anything for a fact, but it wont surprise me to find that out in a few months.
This week's vast amount of economic data coming out of Europe and the US should help paint a better picture. I fully expect sugar-coating, but I know that the Forex traders will be keen to pick up on that.
Among the core numbers to look for this week are the US GDP and the Chicago Purchasing Managers Index. Consumer Confidence and Housing Prices along with New Home Sales numbers are important, but this is where my scepticism is most pronounced as we have seen anomalies in these numbers in recent months and they are easier to manipulate – so keep a sharp eye out there.
I expect the general tone of this week's data to support the recent signs of improvement. It remains to be seen, however, whether the outturns will be sufficient to maintain the bullish momentum as we head into August. Short of very strong numbers, I doubt it will happen.
Look for a weaker week in the Dollar and look for the Aussie and Kiwi to be the beneficiaries of that.
Forex Strategy Outlook: US Dollar Action Bodes Well for Range Systems
Written by David Rodriguez, Quantitative Strategist Forex markets have remained rangebound as of late, boosting the appeal of currency range trading strategies. Indeed, the Euro/US Dollar currency pair initially looked as if it would break above critical resistance—ending the past month of directionless price action. Yet a US Dollar bounce quickly put an end to a sustained breakout. As a result, we continue to favor Range systems in our forex trading strategies. We reluctantly shifted our trading biases away from Momentum systems exactly one week ago, and that has worked in our favor. Though Momentum1 and Momentum2 trading signals typically offer superior risk/reward profiles than the Range systems, current market conditions make it especially difficult to pursue trend-based trading strategies. Absent a noteworthy shift in volatility expectations, we will continue to favor systems that do well in low-volatility environments. Namely, Range-based signals and to a lesser degree, very short-term Breakout systems. Recent market conditions have been especially challenging for trend-following Momentum1 and Momentum2 systems, while Range1 and Range2 systems have put in better performances on choppy price action. We have historically preferred higher-reward Momentum and Breakout systems, but it is clearly frustrating when currencies remain in small ranges for extended periods of time. In our opinion, risk/reward almost always favors lower probability trend trades. Yet we cannot ignore that volatility expectations remain exceedingly low, and a steady succession of trend trade losses can frustrate even the most seasoned traders. Given such factors, we will favor Range1 and Range2 trades for the time being—treating Momentum and Breakout system trades with caution until we break out of key ranges. NOTE: Data has once again been changed. Due to the ineffectiveness of the 30-day horizon, we are returning to the original 90-day time horizon. Volatility Percentile – The higher the number, the more likely we are to see strong movements in price. This number tells us where current implied volatility levels stand in relation to the past 90 days of trading. We have found that implied volatilities tend to remain very high or very low for extended periods of time. As such, it is helpful to know where the current implied volatility level stands in relation to its medium-term range. Trend – This indicator measures trend intensity by telling us where price stands in relation to its 30 trading-day range. A very low number tells us that price is currently at or near monthly lows, while a higher number tells us that we are near the highs. A value at or near 50 percent tells us that we are at the middle of the currency pair’s monthly range. Range High – 30-day closing high. Range Low – 30-day closing low. Last – Current market price. Strategy – Based on the above criteria, we assign the more likely profitable strategy for any given currency pair. A highly volatile currency pair (Volatility Percentile very high) suggests that we should look to use Breakout strategies. More moderate volatility levels and strong Trend values make Momentum trades more attractive, while the lowest Vol Percentile and Trend indicator figures make Range Trading the more attractive strategy. HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE RESULTS HAVE MANY INHERENT LIMITATIONS, SOME OF WHICH ARE DESCRIBED BELOW. Forex Strategy Outlook: US Dollar Action Bodes Well for Range Systems

DailyFX+ Market Conditions Outlook

Definitions

GBP Forecast Turns Bullish on Major Shift in Forex Positioning
EURUSD – Euro Forecast Remains Neutral on Balanced Forex Positioning The SSI sought a EURUSD rally since 1.26 and was signaling a reversal around 1.60. EURUSD – Our forex sentiment-based forecast for the Euro/US Dollar has remained relatively neutral, as trading crowds remain effectively balanced in their positioning on the pair. The ratio of long to short positions in the EURUSD stands at 1.00 as an equal number of traders are long and short the EUR/USD. This has remained unchanged since yesterday, but we do note that longpositions have grown an impressive 24.2 percent since last week. Increasingly EUR/USD-bullish crowd sentiment gives us a modestly bearish contrarian trading bias, but positioning is nowhere near extreme enough to make a forceful prediction. Our sentiment-based forex trading signals are accordingly flat the Euro/US dollar through current price action.
USDJPY – Forex Traders Remain Heavily Long the USD/JPY – Losses Likely
GBPUSD – British Pound Forecasts Turned Bullish on Shift in Sentiment
USDCHF – Forex Sentiment Gives Little US Dollar/Swiss Franc Bias
USDCAD – Canadian Dollar Forecast Unclear Against US Dollar
Historical Charts of Speculative Forex Trading Positioning
What Is Forex?
Which types of accounts are available for forex trading?
USD-CAD & GBP-USD connection technical analysis
USD-CAD & GBP-USD connection technical analysis
My Forex Blog says....The Shift from Fundmantals is Coming....
The equity markets are a marker for risk appetite, and the dollar and Yen usually suffers as investors flock to stocks to quench their hunger. But this week has seen the reverse happen alongside puzzling comments from US Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke, ECB President Trichet and to some degree, the Japanese Finance Minister as well.
As the US stock index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average raced towards 9,000, a level unseen since October 2008, the Dollar too made gains, albeit not as dramatic. The Nikkei Index was also up this week while the Yen as well did not suffer for the excitement of it all.
Patterns like this are rare, and make trading difficult, especially for fundamental traders who rely on hard data, not theoretical formulas and exotically named technical achievements (no offense Fibonacci…).
Yesterday saw Ben Bernanke, AKA helicopter Ben, give a second round of testimony to congress, this time in front of the Senate Banking committee. And while he pretty much towed the party line that he established the day before, he made one alteration which sent the Dollar on a roller coaster as Forex traders tried to figure out what he was saying.
He spoke of positive signs out of the housing market one day after putting part blame for the woes of the country on the depressed housing market. It is inconsistencies like this that can cause panic, and for a while with the Dollar it seemed as if it had.
I trade on fact, things I read, things I hear, things I piece together like a jigsaw puzzle – and for the most part it has worked out well for me. The stock market is not the same kind of market as the Forex, it is a market where emotions and psychology can rule the day.
The Forex market is too large for that, Online Forex traders know this to be true, sentiment cannot move a currency – but hard data, good or bad can. But what I witnessed this week has made me reconsider this. What I saw this week was pattern trading based on emotional instinct, not fact and numbers.
The US is in a bind, and while the Chairman of the Central Bank might allude to positive signs, the warning signs are large and in our faces. With swelling debt, with an administration bent on “fundamentally changing the United States of America” (Obama’s words, not mine) by redistributing wealth and socializing private industry at an enormous cost to not only the current taxpayer, but future ones as well – I do not see a strong Dollar right now. And I might not ever again if this continues.
It would be comforting to know that I am wrong, I would want nothing more than that. But seeing how the game of politics has consumed every inch of what is supposed to be objective and non-partisan departments – I do not believe I am.
Trichet wants to keep his job. Bernanke does too. Is it fair that their impartiality can lead to their dismissal (or non re-upping of their contracts)?
But, unfortunately, this is what we have – and in the long run it will ruin the trust that the markets have in any data that come out– and lead to the equitization of the Forex – we saw the beginning this week.
GBP-USD Trade Results - July 23, 2009
GBP-USD Trade Results - July 23, 2009
Forex Currency Trading Useful Information

Forex Worldwide Markets

GBP-USD Trade Results - July 22, 2009
Today's trade result is based on MACD strength and also close observation of the price movement. As the market is hanging in the balance i have to take a little bit of luck by depending on the MACD direction upwards to harvest some pips on the minor resistance level in the hourly time frames.
GBP-USD Trade Results - July 22, 2009
Today's trade result is based on MACD strength and also close observation of the price movement. As the market is hanging in the balance i have to take a little bit of luck by depending on the MACD direction upwards to harvest some pips on the minor resistance level in the hourly time frames.
Another Duality We Just Cannot Afford
I spoke yesterday about a duality that exists when Central Bank figure heads, like Ben Bernanke and Jean-Claude Trichet of the US and EU Central Banks, Respectively, straddle political affiliations with fair representations of their economies. My assessment yesterday was that both of them have toned down their views to appeal to a political agenda, rather than giving accurate interpretations of what is going on. One week they say this, and one week they say that was the thought.
Yet, after Chairman Bernanke gave his report to Congress yesterday, he seemed to play both cards on the same day – in the span of an hour, in front of the same panel, painting optimism and caution all at once.
In his remarks, the Fed Chairman said that he believes that the economy is moving along well for the situation and that he feels that the US can and will see growth in the coming months – that the recovery is poised to begin in the latter part of 2009.
Yet, only 15 minutes later he began to speak of a high unemployment rate, one that is at levels that were unanticipated, one that is expected to continue to grow through the end of the year.
He also spoke of a tight credit market which is squeezing consumers, even ones who traditionally have had great credit are finding it hard to manage in this climate. He spoke of record low real-estate prices which inhibit refinancing and have caused many relying on income from property bought at high prices to take monthly losses from leases and rental agreements.
As Mr. Bernanke spoke, the Dollar, which was down most of the day on a continued risk appetite rally, turned upward, then downward, then upward again – as if the Forex traders and those Forex online professionals tracking his words on the internet could not figure out where he was going.
This is a problem, a big one as I see it, because Mr. Bernanke’s role was, traditionally, to sober up the euphoria that exists or confirm that all is OK – not paint two pictures with one speech.
His predecessor, Alan Greenspan, was noted for his “party-pooping” ways – not giving in the political agenda’s of the administrations he served under – he served four presidents from Reagan to Bush 2.
Greenspan called the internet bubble two years before it happened – “irrational exuberance” he called the fervor with which public offerings were being valuated. He criticized presidential policy when he thought it was harming the economy – like with his testimony in Congress over Bill Clinton’s proposed health care reform – which ultimately failed before it even got to a vote in Congress.
This is the kind of honest and unbiased judgments the Central Bank chair needs to give – and what Bernanke did was coddle the administration of Obama, colluding with them so as not to cause any panic that might jeopardize Obama’s policy initiatives.
Forex traders are becoming less trustful of the Central Bank heads, and it is a problem as this is how fundamental trading is done. It used to be a reliable source of information that would directly affect the currencies of a specific country – now it is taken in stride like a stump speech before an election.
Obama is looking to overhaul the Health Care system by pushing through a bill that will cost more than 1 Trillion Dollar according to the Congressional Budget Office.
This is a bill he has even acknowledged that he has not read – and is making contradictory statements about what it contains because he really has no idea what is in it.
A dire economic outlook would kill it – and trust me, it is losing support by the day right now. Bernanke for his part, is up for re-nomination in January. It is widely expected that Obama’s senior political advisor, Larry Summers, will be the one tapped for the role instead of Bernanke, who was a Bush 2 appointee.
Bernanke would serve his job better, serve the people of America better and serve the Forex traders better if he would focus on his current job, and not worry about keeping it come next year. Chances are, he is not even in the running now anyway, and all this back and forth to help Obama is not going to change that.







Previous Article