Yep, I reckon every man and his dog is gonna be trading that reistance level, if it breaks, we'll be seeing 1.45 in no time. Gentlemen, place your stops :)
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Yep, I reckon every man and his dog is gonna be trading that reistance level, if it breaks, we'll be seeing 1.45 in no time. Gentlemen, place your stops :)
Hi DB,
I was long Euro from lower levels but i got shaken out at 1.3575.i am dubious as to just how high the Euro will go,all the data out of there is dismay as was the news Friday nite,having said that there is no meaningful reversal yet and price is always king
...there are possibly only two ways how to finance the US deficit:
1- The federal deficits could be financed by further flight from equities and other investments. The next financial shock could arise from commercial real estate. Stores are closing in shopping centers, and vacancies are rising in office buildings. Without rents, the mortgages can’t be paid.
Another scare and another big drop in the stock market will set off a second "FLIGHT TO QUALITY" and finance the budget deficits (buying up treasuries >to be on the safe side, the safest way would be to buy the shortest term treasuries)
2- The Federal Reserve will buy most of the new bonds and create demand deposits for the Treasury. In effect, the money supply will grow by the amount of Fed purchases of new Treasury debt. Printing money to finance the government’s budget normally leads to high inflation and high interest rates.
The initial impact of the announcement of the Fed’s plan to purchase existing debt was to drive up the bond prices. However, if the reserves poured into the banking system by the bond purchases result in new money growth, and if the Fed purchases the new debt issues to finance the governments’ budget deficits, the outlook for bond prices and the dollar becomes poor.
source: http://vdare.com/roberts/090319_bailout.htm
...looking at the long term trajectory of equity markets as well as the fact that the Fed's intention remains to keep interest rates at their lowest possible level for a prolonged period of time, it looks most likely that 1- should be the preferred strategy to tackle the deficit problem...
Kind Regards
...after 3 cent surge, USD looks like on its way to challenge 92.63 level...
...sweet, as long as key level remains *83.7 on downside
-demand for USD remains high globally as a safe haven bet as well as being the denominated currency of global issued debt
-NO INFLATIONARY PRESSURES due to huge gap in global economic output (DEFLATION)
-due to global QE to close global output gap, erecting protective tariff barriers, as well as competitive currency devaluations avoided
-expect NZD to depreciate (more rate cuts as well as QE) as further appreciation of exchange rate would be deflationary to the struggling NZ economy
Trading Strategy: long USD/NZD
Kind Regards
perfect H+Sh on the hourly
And it's opp mate usd/chf doing the same.
Cheers
Miner
no joy in that H+S for me tho, now above the shoulder so I guess thats a fail.
...most likely, next bullish move for USD to 92 index-level, likely coinciding with bearish correction tendencies in the US Blue Chips...
Kind Regards
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Into cloud resistance on 1h and 4h it looks like the grey box could be the maximum test area of the thick Kumo which has turned bearish going forward. If we see a turnaround at this point it could be followed by a circa 300 pip fall onto supportive Kumo on daily TF. However, if the action penetrates the Kumo, it could be a different story
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http://www.freeimagehosting.net/uploads/30ad015127.gif
For Peat
http://www.tradersedgeindia.com/images/ew18.gif
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