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September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in forex signalsPt2, John Person: Top Techniques to Improve your Timing for Directional FX Option Strategies
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in forex strategies
John Person, a twenty-eight year industry veteran, walks through the most effective technical tools to improve your timing in directional trading using ISE FX Options.
Tags: Directional, Improve, John, Option, Person, Strategies, Techniques, Timing
Download FapTurbo forex robot – sell (read Description)
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in forex indicators
FapTurbo forex robot is the most powerful system in the world! This product is for MT4 trading platform This is the 100% FapTurbo copy!!!! You can download it there www.payloadz.com or contact me mrmarshal666@live.com and I will send it by e-mail
Tags: Description, Download, FAPTURBO, forex, Read, Robot, sell
Inversion Cuenta Gestionadda Real, Monitoreo Diario
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in forex indicators
www.HacerFortuna.com Invierta Su Dinero En Una Cuenta Gestionada es la manera mas facil de Ganar Dinero sin mover un solo dedo. Ahora sera facil que su Dinero se Incremente Mucho Más que en un Banco,No pierda Mas tiempo, Ingrese a nuestra pagina www.HacerFortuna.com y Le enseñaremos…
Tags: Cuenta, Diario, Gestionadda, Inversion, Monitoreo, REAL
Forex Signals Meet Forex Training as a Single Service
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in signal providerIs your forex signal provider providing enough value? Signal providers offer a valuable service. They monitor the markets and alert traders of great setups. I like to look at it as an affordable outsourcing solution. Instead of staring at the computer all day and night, I can spend time with my family.
The question remains, however, whether or not signal providers provide enough value to their clients. For a few traders, the traditional signal provider is a great solution. Those traders have no interest in learning to trade and simply want someone to tell them what, when and for how much, to trade. Most, however, seem to want more.
There is a new type of service that offers ongoing education, mentoring, and consistent contact between clients and the trader(s) who generate those signals. These new hybrid services offer hosted live trading rooms, libraries of e-books and video courses, trading systems with training, money management systems. The best among them offer private Master Mind forums with trading system support and even trading system development forums where aspiring professional traders and system marketers can work with others to develop new products and personal systems. At the very top of the class you’ll find even more features. The leaders of this pack offer detailed weekly forecasts, and even daily video analysis of the major forex pairs.
These new service providers offer signals as a way to pay for the service. The trader pays a monthly fee, has access to all of the features, and gains all of the benefits, then receives a few cherry-picked signals that help pay for that service. It’s almost like the service provider is building a business model that pays him but costs the client nothing. In fact, the service should actually make money for the client.
The Market Mover Edge is a service that offers all of the above features and more. Clients even get a live telephone consultation with the owner. The signals provided are based on the daily and weekly charts and consistently make money. Members are given a money management system, very simple systems to trade, live trading room sessions, and ongoing mentoring and support provided by a professional currency trader.
Global Market Analysis- Dawn of a Meltdown?
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in Forex arbitrageMarkets Outlook- Who’s moving the markets?
Global equity markets have been through volatile times and we noticed some rebound since been affected by the US subprime mortgage market collapse. What started of in the subprime sector enveloped the prime home loan as well as the securitized debt markets as a spillover effect. Yet, the Fed and the Central banks were quick enough to buffer the market crisis with the former cutting interest rates and the later pumping huge money, around $550 billion till now, into the markets. The cumulative effort saw the markets react with some bull rallies before turning volatile again. The CME volatility index has been around 21-23 last month against 37 in August, the highest since last year. Some banking consolidation has taken place since the subprime with major investment banks re-pricing risks on MBS bonds. Hedge funds also have reported some big losses exposed to the MBS bonds.
The other prime market mover is the crude oil, which have in fact quite rude on the markets. Oil price shock with Nymex touching nearly $100, have had enough stress on the economy. The OPEC is expecting some oil price moderation and the oil is expected to settle in the range of $ 70-$ 85 per barrel in 2008. The depreciating US $ have been implicated to be one of the cause of rising crude oil price, apart from supply constraint and gulf events. Sustained oil price rise could prove detrimental for the already struggling US economy, as it might further accentuate the chance of an US economic slowdown, fearing a faltering in Asian exports, according to Bloomberg.
We have also noticed some risk de-leveraging in the alternative investment sectors, but that would be a temporary effect, according to global economists, which they expect to pass off in recent times as investors, now being more risk averse, will tend to diversify their asset holdings in the emerging markets. Liquidity crunch within the interbank system have been somewhat contained with prompt central bank interventions, but credit conditions beyond the banking sector remain much stressed. Global investors certainly look forward for a better 2008 as macro-economic fundamentals have started to improve since the last quarter.
One of the prime agenda of the Bush administration and the Fed is targeted to rescuing distressed mortgage lenders and sheltering subprime borrowers. These measures have indeed upgraded the investor sentiments while they await to see more aid from the Fed, if it likely be so needed to cut interest rates further. Fed Fund rate outlook for the next session hovers around 4.0% or even 3.5%-3.75%, industry analysts expect.
Market Pulse-Asia-Pacific- Feeling the stability!
With stabilization of global assets, equity markets might see some rebounds as indices in the emerging markets have been in their best rallies in recent times. The BSE crossed a big milestone when it touched the 20k mark around October. The Hang Seng did cross the 30k mark too. It has been implicated that the opening up of investment opportunities for Chinese investors to invest outside China for the first time have been met with success, with more investors investing in H-shares traded in Hang Seng as an alternative to the A-shares trading at Shanghai’s SCI 300. This has also created an arbitrage opportunity for the same share being traded both in Hang Seng and SCI 300.
The Asia-Pacific market pulse indicates some positive trends in the coming, partly because of some recovery in the global equity markets, except Nikkie-225 that lost around 11% for the first time in last five years, and partly by the inflow of some good information about the US labor markets, consumer sentiments and about the festive season. With C/A surpluses of Asian economies and better industrial production rates in China, India, these countries have the least minimum exposures to US subprime and a likely US or Chinese slowdown, however, enjoys substantial freedom from a sudden capital outflow or a rapid currency devaluation as it happened during the last Asian Financial Crisis in 1997, according to some analyst.
Emerging markets are awash with abundant liquidity to propel their growth engines toward sustaining this economic boom in a healthy pulse, even in the event of an impending US slowdown. It should however be noted that the Dow Jones P/E ratios are far lower than their Asian counterparts which awaits some corrections likely, of the Chinese SCI 300, as the economy have become overheated , according to Bloomberg and other economists. On a sector-wise outlook, three sectors seems to have caught the fire in the markets; i.e, the cement, steel and the Oil. Prevailing infrastructure boom in many emerging economies like China, India, Vietnam and others, correlate between the sector performances with the infrastructure and real estate growth in these countries. The mineral stocks like copper, silicon are likely favored long term stocks as well as the diamond sector and the gold stocks and the utilities, that is expected to do well even in a bad market.
Global Liquidity-Is there enough out there?
Global markets now have more liquidity and assets than any other time in history. With buoyant credit markets funding LBO deals on high leverages along with the participation of Private Equity players, there is no dearth in liquidity in the market. If the developed markets are supplying liquidity, the Emerging markets are contributing to this sustaining the economic growth, like China that contributed to the highest global growth last year-15.6% compared to 15.4% from the US. In private capital investments, US and the Japan are the major sources of liquidity in the markets, with a bulk of it from the US. As such, any major US downturn would generally hit the credit markets hard and the Asian exports would be hit due to a low consumption in the US. India, being on the forefront with major infrastructure programs being financed, which would otherwise be delayed if hit by a credit halt.
Remittances from NRI’s (Non Resident Indians) form a substantial source of forex reserve in India as like Philippines, and as such, any events effecting demands for foreign workers in US and the gulf could have an effect on inward remittances. Analysts have a view that the Central Banks now should be more active in smoothing out any volatility, credit problems or other factors that might have some adverse effects on the markets.
India Outlook
With an ever increasing India’s middle class (100-200 million), along with the consumer boom that has started to take shape lately, India is flying high in the global capital markets like a dove. More FDI and FII are flowing into the markets, targeting hot sectors like IT, real estate and the infrastructure. Annual FDI flow close to US $30 billion are expected to hit the markets and will be canalized to the fund crunched much needed infrastructure sector. India is wooing Japan to invest in India’s infra-techs, one such example being the successful completion of the Delhi metro rail project. The ambitious plan drawn up to create DMIC, -Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridors of 1500 km long, at a projected cost of around US$90 billion is under consideration by the central planning commission. The government wants to create SPV (special purpose vehicles) to fund the project. And with multiple SEZs on the pipeline, it seems India has entered the same construction boom that prevailed during Deng Xiaoping’s era in China, early 1980’s. Recent visit by the Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to India and Indonesia did boost up Indo-Japan tie. Japan might be hedging against the dependency on China—an event that could be related to his more inclined visit to India.
However, Japan would be reluctant to deteriorate any ties with China, as India-Japan-China has more become like economic allies rather than pure competitor to say. India, would also like to take the opportunity to improve bilateral ties with
China, since India and China constitute the two largest and fastest growing economies in the world. Neither India nor Japan would like to jeopardize each other’s ties with China in the meantime. Though it is obvious that China and India would at some point of time in future will become chief competitors of Japan.
Thus, it throws some light that how India has positioned itself within the Asia-Pacific region demanding more attention in the regional economic cooperation and multilateral free trade ties with the ASEAN nations. Along with the US Nuke deal, India is also counting to tap on the Japan’s and France’s civilian nuclear technology for its energy demands. What could give a real boost to the FTA in the Asia-Pacific region if India lowers or removes some tariff on component businesses from Japan, the same Indonesia did remove tariffs on auto-components from Japan, and Japan responded with removing tariffs on agricultural imports from Indonesia. In Fact, Indonesia is still a bigger trade partner of Japan than India, and India needs to look into this prospect.
Bilateral trade between Japan and India stands around $8.5 billion and is projected to reach $14-20 billion by 2010-2012. Even though, due to widening of investment options for Indians, there might be a continued upside potential for the BSE Sensex, since some analysts have a view that BSE could reach well beyond 23k next year, and with continued upswing, there might be more overseas investors queuing up the lane, if all goes well.
See JETRO for more on Japan’s International Trade.
Forex Markets: Exchange Rate Swings
Major traded currencies like $ and the Yen have been highly volatile, and in-fact, the dollar has lost around 10% against global currency majors. The Indian rupee has appreciated further on account of FII inflows, and some analysts expect the rupee to tighten further till 36-37/$ mark as against 39.41/$ at present. But the Rupee along with other Asian currencies is also vulnerable to risk of devaluation against a sudden reversal in capital flow dynamics, i.e., capital flight. Though it may not likely to happen in the near term as long as the dollar remains week and the emerging market growth story remains firm. The Yen appreciation to 113/$ saw the unwinding of carry trade, a tool where one borrows cheap and invests in higher yielding assets. The low interest scenario of Japan-0.50% and the continued deflation has put the Japanese yen under pressure, which saw resumption in carry trade. There was a short term bounce in GBP/JPY (219/£) against the Yen (¥) trading at 248/£ in August this year and the present range have been somewhere around a low ¥111-119/$, according to Bloomberg and ET.
The Philippine Peso has also appreciated by 10% and thus risks depreciation if the US economy slows down. Since about 10% of Philippines are overseas workers that contribute remittances from abroad which constitute 10% of their GDP, a slowdown in Gulf or the US might affect the inward remittances in Philippines, thus hurting their consumer boom. There has been much pressure from the G7 nations to revalue the Chinese yen, as it has maintained an artificial low since it got un-pegged from the US $. The Chinese Yuan is devalued around 12% against the US$ that is causing much un-pleasure since it has resulted in a huge trade imbalance between the US and the China. This is in part good for the Chinese exporters who enjoy marginal competition among the Asian exporters.
Since consumption constitutes around 70% of US GDP, credit squeeze in the US could hurt the corporate sector that might bring down consumer sentiment heavily. According to analysts, real GDP in US is growing by around 2.3% y-o-y, and some analysts forecast it around 3.2% at best. The US still remains the largest economy followed by Japan, and with an increased possibility of the US slowdown, the growth story of the emerging markets might sing on the wrong tune. An equity outflow from the Asian markets could also trigger forex weakness, since emerging markets have increased their foreign ownership in stock market capitalization. As the US still remains the major investor in global economy, a redemption pressure in the US could also jeopardize the ambitious plans in the emerging nations. Considering all these risk factors on currencies, it might be said that the financial markets in Asia are in better shape than what they were in 1997-98, during the Asian financial crisis and it likely to buffer to some extent if a full fledge global economic slowdown comes around.
How To Profit in a Volatile Market
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in Technical AnalysisHow To Profit in a Volatile Market
Good news, bad news, up and down. Volatility is increasing and it’s easy to get stuck on the wrong side of a trade. From the July 1 lows the S&P rallied over 100 points. Since the August 9 highs, the S&P dropped as much as 90 points.
Read more on ETFguide.com via Yahoo! Finance
Forex Trading – Double Your Profit Potential With This Simple Rule!
September 5th, 2010 by | No Comments | Filed in Forex ScalpingIf you are not making as much money as you would like from your forex trading or want to get a great tip before you start, learn this simple rule and make it part of your forex trading strategy for bigger profits…
The rule is the 80 / 20 rule and it applies in many areas of life and that includes forex trading. This simple rule states that 80% of your income comes from 20% of your efforts.
Its used in business for example, where 20 % of clients very often give 80% of the income – so how does it apply to forex trading?
Simple – cut your trading frequency to high odds trades only!
Many traders take to many trading signals – but there is no correlation between how much you trade and your profits. Your judged on the accuracy of your trading signal and that’s it.
The fact is the big forex trends and high odds trades don’t come around that often.
For example, I know traders who trade less than 12 times a year yet make over 100% annualized gains.
These guys are not looking for 20 0r 30 pips there after 1,000s.
FACT
The big profits come from the big trends, that last weeks, months or years and if you want to make money, focus on these not the low odds trades.
If you consider how many people day trade and try forex scalping you will understand what I mean.
These are lots of low odds trades and day traders and scalpers lose. They try hard and lose, sad but true.
On the other hand the patient trader who hits high odds trades spends less time on his or her trading – but makes a lot of money.
Never confuse how frequently you trade with how much profit you will make.
Take high odds trades only, show patient and you will have higher profits, with less stress and spend less time on your trading.
Long term trend following is the way to make money don’t trade often but aim to make a lot when you do, understand this and you can enjoy currency trading success.
Tags: Double, forex, Potential, Profit, Rule, Simple, This, Trading
