Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Technical Analysis for Major Currencies

EURO

The Euro versus Dollar pair was able to reach the key resistance for the downside channel at 1.3320 before reversing to the downside as expected. The intraday trend is now to the downside affected by the above mentioned resistance level where we expect the pair is to correct to the downside towards 1.3120 - 1.3110 for today. This decline remains as far as 1.3320 remains intact

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.2800 and the key resistance at 1.3580

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.4710 remains intact with targets at 1.2120

Support: 1.3205, 1.3120, 1.3050, 1.2990, 1.2955
Resistance: 1.3320, 1.3340, 1.3395, 1.3450, 1.3525

Recommendation: According to our analysis, sell the pair below 1.3255 with targets at 1.3120 and stop loss with four hour closing above 1.3340

GBP

After mixed trading in the markets yesterday, the Cable versus the Dollar reached the resistance at 1.4845 after breaching the 1.4705 level before correcting to the downside to reach our targets at 1.4755 - 1.4705 to gather bullish momentum in an attempt to breach the resistance level at 1.4930. This incline remains as far as 1.4690 remains intact where a breach of this level will take the pair to 1.4590.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.4240 and the key resistance at 1.5400

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.5270 remains intact with targets at 1.3400

Support: 1.4755, 1.4705, 1.4655, 1.4590, 1.4530
Resistance: 1.4845, 1.4930, 1.4960, 1.5030, 1.5070

Recommendation: According to our analysis, buy the pair above 1.4755 with targets at 1.4845 and 1.4930 and stop loss with four hour closing below 1.4655

JPY

The USD/JPY pair reached the key resistance for the descending channel yesterday at 97.60 where it gave a false breakout of the level before declining once again from 97.45 level to currently target the support level at 95.40. The short term targets are at 94.00 as far as 97.45 remains intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 94.00 and the key resistance at 99.60

The general trend is to the downside as far as 102.60 remains intact with targets at 84.95 and 82.60

Support: 96.95, 96.35, 95.90, 95.45, 95.20
Resistance: 97.45, 97.70, 98.15, 98.75, 99.40

Recommendation: According to our analysis, sell the pair below 97.45 with targets at 95.45 and stop loss with four hour closing above 98.15

CHF

After breaching the key support at 1.1355, the Dollar versus Swissy declined to reach 1.1300 several times as it was pressured to the upside to retest the above mentioned level yet a close below it helps us keep our outlook to the downside on the intraday and short terms. Targets for today are at 1.1165 yet we may witness an upside correction towards 1.1410 - 1.1440 to gather bearish momentum. However, a close above 1.1355 may invalidate our expectations for a decline especially if the pair was able to breach the 1.1460 level to the upside.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0975 and the key resistance at 1.1800

The general trend is to the upside as far as 1.0570 remains intact with targets at 1.2245

Support: 1.1355, 1.1305, 1.1240, 1.1205, 1.1165
Resistance: 1.1410, 1.1460, 1.1520, 1.1585, 1.1645

Recommendation: According to our analysis, sell the pair below 1.1355 with targets at 1.1240 and 1.1165 and stop loss with four hour closing above 1.1460

CAD

The Dollar versus Loonie pair was able to complete yesterday's targets at 1.1955 before rebounding to the upside which may take the pair to levels between 1.2050 - 1.2070 in an attempt to retest the latter level and gather enough bearish momentum to support the short term trend to the downside targeting 1.1640. This decline remains as far as 1.2070 remains intact

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.1640 and the key resistance at 1.2505

The general trend is to the upside as far as 1.1780 remains intact with targets at 1.3400

Support: 1.1900, 1.1875, 1.1810, 1.1785, 1.1755
Resistance: 1.2050, 1.2070, 1.2100, 1.2150, 1.2225

Recommendation: According to our analysis, sell the pair below 1.2050 with targets at 1.1955 and 1.1875 and stop loss with a four hour closing above 1.2150

Ecpulse

Yen Gains After WSJ Says Chrysler Bankruptcy Talks Break Down from My-Zue by Admin

By Yasuhiko Seki and Ron Harui

April 30 (Bloomberg) -- The yen rose against the euro and the dollar after the Wall Street Journal reported Chrysler LLC’s talks to avoid bankruptcy have broken down, spurring demand for the safety of Japan’s currency.

The yen gained against 14 of the 16 most-active currencies on speculation Chrysler and General Motors Corp. will file for insolvency, deepening the global financial crisis. New Zealand’s dollar declined after the central bank reduced interest rates to a record low. The euro traded near a two-week high against the dollar on optimism the European Central Bank will refrain from cutting borrowing costs to zero and from buying bonds to help spur lending.

“We have a plethora of dismal news including a possible collapse of Chrysler,” said Daisuke Uno, chief strategist in Tokyo at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp., a unit of Japan’s third- largest banking group. “This will support the yen as a refuge from the global gloom.”

The yen climbed to 97.26 per dollar as of 1:45 p.m. in Tokyo from 97.66 in New York yesterday. Japan’s currency advanced to 129.11 per euro from 129.61. The euro traded at $1.3275 per dollar from $1.3271. It climbed to $1.3340 yesterday, the highest level since April 14.

The Obama administration’s auto task force had been working to convince hedge funds and other creditors to accept terms to cut the automaker’s debt, the WSJ report said, citing people involved with the talks.

Final Shape

U.S. President Barack Obama earlier said he is “hopeful” Chrysler will be able to finish its negotiations with debt holders and become a viable and competitive automaker paired with Italy’s Fiat SpA, people familiar with the situation said.

“If Chrysler is torn up and cut to bits and pieces, the dollar may face even stronger selling,” said Takashi Kudo, director of foreign-exchange sales in Tokyo at NTT SmartTrade Inc., a unit of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. Still, “if the company can maintain the bulk of its operation and secure most jobs in the end, the dollar-selling may turn out to be a blip.”

The yen also headed for its first monthly advance against the dollar and the euro since January on speculation the outbreak of swine flu will keep spreading and after the World Health Organization warned the first influenza pandemic since 1968 is “imminent.”

Mexico, where the death toll from the disease is highest, said 159 people may have died. The WHO said there have been seven confirmed deaths in the nation from the disease. Egypt ordered the immediate slaughter of the country’s pigs, numbering as many as 400,000, said a spokesman for the country’s mission to the United Nations. French Health Minister Roselyne Bachelot will ask European transport ministers to suspend flights to Mexico, she told reporters in Paris yesterday.

‘Paralyze’ Activity

“The spread of swine flu may temporarily paralyze the economic activity internationally and derail any recovery,” said Tatsushi Shikano, a senior economist in Tokyo at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co. “For Japan, this tragedy may slash economic growth by 0.4 percentage point.”

The Bank of Japan will probably cut its economic and price forecasts at a policy meeting today. The economy will contract 4.2 percent in the year to March 2010, more than twice the pace the central bank projected three months ago, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and his policy board left the overnight lending rate at 0.1 percent, as predicted in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

New Zealand Dollar

New Zealand’s dollar fell from near a two-week high against the greenback after the central bank cut borrowing costs to a record and said the benchmark will stay low till late 2010, reducing the appeal of the nation’s assets.

Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard reduced the overnight cash rate by half a percentage point to 2.5 percent. He has lowered borrowing costs by 5.75 percentage points since July to counter the nation’s worst recession in more than three decades. Rates may go lower and will stay down “until the latter part of 2010,” Bollard said.

This was “a huge reaction on a huge statement,” said Imre Speizer, a market strategist in Wellington at Westpac Banking Corp. “The yield support for the kiwi has evaporated even more after today, which should be a medium-term drag.”

New Zealand’s dollar dropped to 56.48 U.S. cents from 57.30 cents yesterday and declined to 54.97 yen from 55.98 yen.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at yseki5@bloomberg.net; Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: April 30, 2009 00:59 EDT

FXDD Maserati & Mini Cooper Winner



Interview with the Maserati Winner Ruslan N.

  1. Besides the prize and competition, did you have any other reasons for participating in the contest?
    This contest served the role of incredible promotion for my institutional investment program.
  2. How/When did you get started in Forex trading?
    My first experience in Forex Spot trading took a place in 1995 with a beginning balance of $1000.
  3. How did you find out about FXDD?
    I found out about this company at the first Metaquotes EA (expert advisor) contest in 2006.
  4. What do you like about trading with FXDD?
    FXDD is an honest broker with excellent order execution.
  5. Did you trade with another company before switching to FXDD? Why did you switch?
    I tried just about all the brokers who offer MT4 (MetaTrader4). With FXDD I found the most important component of trading: real stability in all aspects.
  6. What currency pairs did you mainly trade?
    Right now I mainly use Looney crosses (EUR/CAD and AUD/CAD).
  7. What kind of strategies did you use to win the contest?
    Continuous Scalping.
  8. What are your favorite technical indicators?
    Channels of all types.
  9. What else effects your trading? News, signals, indicators, special research?
    News and channels triggers.
  10. How did you deal with the emotional aspect of trading large positions?
    I imagine that I am trading on a demo account.
  11. Do you handle loosing trades any differently than winning trades?
    No.
  12. Trading Forex is very risky. How do you deal with the risk in your trading?
    Flexible money management helps me to select the right strategy and lot size.
  13. How much time did you spend trading during the contest? How much time do you normally spend on trading per day/week/month?
    8 hours per day.
  14. Would you consider yourself a professional Forex trader?
    Yes, because I only make money in Forex.
  15. Would you participate in another contest offered by FXDD?
    Of course! Why not?
  16. Would you like to take this opportunity to send a message to your fellow traders? If so what would this message be?
    Listen to your instincts to make your life better.

Interview with the Mini Cooper Winner Brian B.

  1. Besides the prize and competition, did you have any other reasons for participating in the contest?
    I funded my account again after loosing money using various signals, indicators, and alerts; none of them successful. I wanted to see if I could trade currencies the same way I trade stocks, but over a shorter time period.
  2. How/When did you get started in Forex trading?
    About a year and a half ago.
  3. How did you find out about FXDD?
    A friend.
  4. What do you like about trading with FXDD?
    The execution and the MetaTrader4 desktop and mobile software.
  5. Did you trade with another company before switching to FXDD? Why did you switch?
    Yes. I switched because of poor execution and supported trading platforms.
  6. What currency pairs did you mainly trade?
    I trade all and any crosses, whatever is trending that day.
  7. What kind of strategies did you use to win the contest?
    I trend trade.
  8. What are your favorite technical indicators?
    I've had my best result simply trading a 20, 50 and 100 Simple Moving Average.
  9. What else effects your trading? News, signals, indicators, special research?
    Simply put, I use Trade The News audio for news and trade 1-hour charts for the trend or pair direction. A 15-minute chart to determine entry and stop loss. A trend is the 20, 50 and 100 moving upper left to lower right (short) or lower left to upper right (long) on the 15-min chart. If I enter on the 20 moving average long or short, my stop is an open and close above (or below) the 50 moving average on the 15-minute chart respectively. The same applies for the 50 and 100 as an entry and the stop out. I use 1, 4 hour and daily charts for support and resistance and/or to take profit.
  10. How did you deal with the emotional aspect of trading large positions?
    If you are emotional, you are trading too large a position.
  11. Do you handle loosing trades any differently than winning trades?
    I always review a losing trade. It is occasionally news events but honestly, 90% or more of my losses were due to lack of discipline.
  12. Trading Forex is very risky. How do you deal with the risk in your trading?
    Minimize it. Learn to take losses early. For me, as soon as the trend breaks down I close the trade.
  13. How much time did you spend trading during the contest? How much time do you normally spend on trading per day/week/month?
    A few hours a day.
  14. Would you consider yourself a professional Forex trader?
    No.
  15. Would you participate in another contest offered by FXDD?
    Yes.
  16. Would you like to take this opportunity to send a message to your fellow traders? If so what would this message be?
    Learn to take a loss. Not closing bad trades keeps you from trading and always ends up with bigger losses. Have an entry and exit strategy.
Sources HERE

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Dollar Mixed Ahead Of Wednesday FOMC Meeting

Dollar Mixed Ahead Of Wednesday FOMC Meeting

Overall: The dollar closed Tuesday's trade mixed as the market continues to move in risk aversion mode, which benefits the greenback, but a stronger than expected read in consumer confidence brought dollar sellers back to the market on reduced demand for safe havens. The swine flu scare that had markets jittery on Monday continues to play a role in financial market activity but on a reduced level. The U.S. Conference Board consumer confidence numbers came in higher than analysts' expected at 39.2. this is a good sign for the overall economic picture as this may impact retail sales, CPI, durable goods and GDP in the future. The euro responded by moving higher, erasing 50% of Monday's losses. On the day the dollar weakened against the euro, Swiss franc and Japanese yen, closed flat against the Canadian dollar and strengthened against the pound and Australian dollar. A busy U.S. economic calendar on Wednesday could produce some volatility as advance GDP numbers will be released and the FOMC statement at 14:15 EDT.

The Euro (Eur/Usd) The euro moved higher on Tuesday, gaining 100 pips and erasing earlier losses after the Conference Board's consumer confidence numbers beat expectations leading to speculation that the U.S. economy may be finding a bottom in the current contraction phase and demand for safety decreased. The pair closed the day just below the 1.3150 level and moved back above the 50 day simple moving average. German preliminary CPI numbers came in slightly lower than expected at 0.0% but had little effect on the pair. Euro-zone money supply and consumer confidence data will be released tomorrow morning.

The Pound (Gbp/Usd) Cable traded in exactly the same fashion as it did on Monday, moving much lower overnight, but rebounding and closing the day lower by less than 20 pips. The pair has tried to push lower for 2 consecutive days but in both cases the 100 day simple moving average has provided strong support and prevented the pair from breaking below the 1.4500 level. On the day, the pair traded in a range of 170 pips. CBI realized sales crushed analyst's expectations coming in a 3 after economists had forecast a -40 reading. There are no U.K. economic releases scheduled for Wednesday.

The Aussie (Aud/Usd) The aussie moved lower again on Tuesday as the currency market continued to trade in risk averse mode increased by speculation that the stress tests will highlight weakness in U.S. banks and the continuing swine flu outbreak leading traders to sell higher yielding assets. The pair did recover some pips lost overnight and closed the day lower by approximately 30 pips. There were no economic releases from Australia last night and none scheduled for tonight's Asian session.

The Cad (Usd/Cad) The better than expected Conference Board's consumer confidence numbers helped the Canadian dollar as the positive news, which may be an indication the economy may be on the mend, tempered the decline in the currency on fears that travel may be quelled between North American countries because of the swine flu outbreak. The pair pushed higher ahead of the economic release but retreated after. The pair closed the day lower by less than 20 pips. There were no economic releases from Canada today and there are none scheduled for tomorrow.

The Swissy (Usd/Chf) The swissy moved much lower on Tuesday erasing a lot of the gains captured on Monday. The pair lost 130 pips on the day and closed the day back below the 20, 50 and 100 day simple moving averages which had been broken to the upside yesterday. The Swiss consumption indicator rose in March for the first time in four months, gaining 0.10 points, increasing to 0.99. The Swiss KOF economic barometer will be released tomorrow morning and analysts' are expecting a decrease to -1.89.

The Yen (Usd/Jpy) The yen continues to move lower in ‘fits and starts' losing another 35 pips on Tuesday but closing well off the lows of the day. Again, the move lower was due to traders continuing to be risk averse, helped by speculation the U.S. governments' stress tests will expose weakness in U.S. banks. The pair closed the day just below the 96.50 level but had tested the 95.60 level intra-day. There are no economic releases from Japan tonight and all Japanese financial markets are closed for a Bank Holiday.

Wall Street Moves Snuffed Out At The Close: Financials Drop As Dollar Holds

U.S. equities moved the S&P market under support at 845, the 20 day SMA area, in early trade as the impact of the financial sector imploding again weighed on sentiment. As the NYMEX markets closed a rally off the lows took place which went on the reverse tack again at the close. The day ended virtually flat, but it was not without its moments in between. Consumer based shares moved on the strength of the Conference Board's consumer confidence numbers, whilst financial sector assets took a beating from fears that stress test results will be short of good news next week.

The S&P is higher by more than 25% since March 9th, and is therefore susceptible to tests of support, but unless big volume increases come into the market it will be a struggle to get things moving from here. The 845 area may be the swing point, but ahead of the FOMC rate decision on Wednesday a damage limitation exercise may take place.

It is unlikely that there will be too many good news stories coming from the Fed on Wednesday, but conversely the bad news does look to be baked into to valuations. With earnings season in full swing the momentum may just have to be contained. It does however look as though the short selling is at least being matched with attempts to rally.

On Tuesday the NYSE posted losses that averaged 0.4%. The DOW was on 8016 after a loss of 8 points (0.1%), while the S&P traded at 855, lower by 0.2%, and the technology-heavy NASDAQ traded at 1673, after moving down by 6 points (0.3%).

The European markets dropped lower in trade on Tuesday, unable to spark anything that looked remotely positive, and produced a sea of red numbers that initially empowered the Usd. The German Dax closed at 4607 (-1.5%), the London FTSE closed at 4096 (-1.7%), and the French Cac 40 stood at 3.051 (-1.7%).

Financial Sector:

In trade on Tuesday the XLF, the financial sector ETF, dropped 3.1%, to trade at 10.43, and did it on dramatically lighter volume; 132,000,000 ETF's changed hands, below the daily average of 228,000,000. The banking sector moved lower after the previous session woes were added to by stress test results fears next week, and after earnings numbers were pushed to the fore again. Without a solid period of trade from the banking sector the main equity markets are going to struggle to hold the higher ground, and that by default will empower the Usd.

Federal Reserve Slides A Mass Of Notes Into The Market: Treasury Yields Touching Yearly Highs

Treasury notes were smashed lower on Tuesday as traders absorbed news that a 50 year note could possibly be introduced by the Federal Reserve, and on speculation that the 8 times a year Treasury auctions will be increased to 12, in an effort to increase the exposure of U.S. government debt. Fragile signals that the economy may be bottoming were cause enough to send yields higher as the potential for a move from bonds to stocks over the coming months was digested.

Traders weighed the supply and demand issues after another swath of $35b of 5 year notes hit the floors today. There is more coming to market this week in new notes, and the Treasury is now relentlessly getting these auctions completed before the market runs out of interest in holding/buying/swapping notes. There are so many notes out there, and so many more to come, that the values are now starting to drop heavily, in-line with yields increasing to seven week highs.

The Federal Reserve sold a record number of new issue notes last week, and created another mass of dollar backed Treasuries for the market to absorb at auction this week. That sent the 10 year yield up to touch 3.02%, within just 3 basis points of the yearly high. The Fed continued its short-dollar mandate by buying record numbers of U.S. debt over the last two weeks. A 50 year bond would certainly reduce the stress on this generation's ability to fund this debt via growth, taxation, and investment.

The Fed plans to buy as much as $300 billion of Treasuries over the next six months in an effort to lower consumer borrowing costs. The benchmark 10-year note has yielded between 2.46 percent and 3.05 percent since March 19th, the day after the Fed's purchase program was announced, as the buybacks offset concern that government debt sales are setting records.

Crude oil for May delivery held major support at $48.50, but still closed lower by 1.68% on the day, with a $0.82 loss. Futures trade held a very tight range on Tuesday, locked in by the 20 day SMA at $50.50.

Gold for April delivery closed lower by $13.90 at $895 per ounce, in a test of major support areas at $888, the 20 day SMA area. Gold prices were the lowest in three weeks after the move away from the asset class in reaction to fears that the global recovery may be impeded by earnings and possibly sold in the face of a flu epidemic that has gripped media and market attention.

Written by TheLFB Trade Team, © 2007-2008 LFB Services, LLC. All rights reserved.