Monday, December 24, 2007

Happy Holidays and Market update

Today we see normal holiday trading activities. During thin markets someone always guns for stops...This is evident in gbp/usd and usd/jpy.

Although market is moving with trend I expect pullbacks on Wed.

Take notice that eur/gbp making all time highs.

Friday, December 21, 2007

stopped out

I got stopped out of aud/usd for -4 and usd/chf at 25 for +5

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Dammm

Dammm...I just accidently exited my aud/nzd at 1.1282 for +59.....This thing is going to keep going down....Ahhhhhhhhh I hate when this happens...

I was updating a stop on currenex and dammmmmmmmmmmmmmm......I'm not reselling here.

usd/chf just brought thru daily highs...Considering adding here but I dont like the time of day to add to a trade (5.23 p.m. EST)

Current positions

Just added to aud/usd short at 0.8588 maintain tight stop at 0.8610 bid

Short the aud/nzd (1.1341) which is coming in nicely.

I have a order to buy cad/chf at 1.1545

long usd/chf still considering adding to long..

Looking at cad/chf

Looking at cad/chf.....Interesting idea...

Current trend is up...mkt is pulling back...It is in a uptrend until it breaks 1.1495 (area)....I'll watch this on the hourly chart for a long entry.

Frustrated

Very annoying how this aud/usd is not cracking down when there is dollar strength in other majors. I've moved my stop to 0.8610 bid..So taking only 4-6 pip risk...I'll just let it work for me now.

Maintaining my long in usd/chf....My stops are advanced so I cant lose money on this trade...Really trying to let this one work for me as well...Not so easy some times to let the profit ride. currently about +75 pips....

I put on a small position in aud/znd at 1.1340 with s/l at 1.1435 ant tp at 1.1100. It was a "early entry" that was setting up on the daily charts. Its currently in my favor by around 35 pips. I am trying to devise a plan now to add into the trade.

Watching for end of day short

In aud/nzd.

Position update

got stopped out of usd/jpy at 112.98

exited usd/cad at 1.0045

still short aud/usd and long usd/chf

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

New Positions

Long usd/cad at 1.0066 stop at 1.0000 offer t/p at 1.0350

short aud/usd (small position) 0.8610 s/l at .8665 bid t/p at 0.8450

long usd/jpy at 113.35 s/l at 112.99 offer t/p at 114.30

Still long usd/chf at 1.1506

Monday, December 17, 2007

new position

Just bought some usd/chf at 1.1506 stop offer stop at 1.1445 offer looking for 1.1635
or better.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

New opportunities

Looking at usd/chf long again, eur/usd short, aud/znd retrace to sell short (4hr), usd/jpy long possibility watching 1 hr dont love this one as it didn't move as strongly as the other pairs last weak when dollar picked up strength.

KS

Friday, December 14, 2007

Exited Trade

I exited the usd/chf trade at 1.1528

U.S. Consumer Price Index
12/14/2007 8:30am EST

Facts

- The CPI’s impact on the Fed’s rate policy will once again be the primary focus for the currency market with more attention on core CPI.

- CPI m/m is expected at 0.6% while core CPI m/m is expected at 0.2%. Increased energy costs are expected to fuel a higher headline number.

- Thursday's PPI came in at a 30+ year high as a result of the sharp rise in energy prices, which rose a record 14.1%. Gasoline prices rose a record 34.8% and home heating oil prices rose 31.5%, the fastest gain since August 1990. But the core PPI number was only 0.4% which still doubled the estimates.

- The Fed's statement raised concerns that rising energy and commodity prices would contribute to price pressures well beyond the central bank’s tolerance level. Therefore, a higher read for the most part may be priced in.

Trade Analysis

- Extreme caution is advised as the impact of the CPI number has recently been reduced since focus has been put on other factors in the economy. It should be considered that any trades taken on this event risk would be best served with a substantial divergence between the actual print and the official consensus.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

A Little Foreign Exchange History

The word FOREX is derived from Foreign Exchange and is the largest financial market in the world. Unlike many markets the FX market is open 24 hours per day and has an estimated $1.2 Trillion in turnover every day. This tremendous turnover is more than the combined turnover of all the wordls' stock markets on any given day. This tends to lead to a very liquid market and thus a desirable market to trade.

Unlike many other securities (any financial instrument that can be traded) the FX market does not have a fixed exchange. It is primarily traded through banks, brokers, dealers, financial institutions and private individuals. Trades are executed through phone and increasingly through the Internet. It is only in the last few years that the smaller investor has been able to gain access to this market. Previously the large amounts of deposits required precluded the smaller investors. With the advent of the Internet and growing competition it is now easily in the reach of most investors.

You will often hear the term INTERBANK discussed in FX terminology. This originally, as the name implies was simply banks and large institutions exchanging information about the current rate at which their clients or themselves were prepared to buy or sell a currency. INTER meaning between and Bank meaning deposit taking institutions normally made up of banks, large institution, brokers or even the government. The market has moved on to such a degree now that the term interbank now means anybody who is prepared to buy or sell a currency. It could be two individuals or your local travel agent offering to exchange Euros for US Dollars. You will however find that most of the brokers and banks use centralized feeds to insure reliability of quote. The quotes for Bid (buy) and Offer (sell) will all be from reliable sources. These quotes are normally made up of the top 300 or so large institutions. This insures that if they place an order on your behalf that the institutions they have placed the order with is capable of fulfilling the order.

Now although we have spoken about orders being fulfilled, it is estimated that anywhere from 70%-90% of the FX market is speculative. In other words the person or institution that bought or sold the currency has no intention of actually taking delivery of the currency. Instead they were solely speculating on the movement of that particular currency.

Source: Bank For International Settlements http://www.bis.org Extract From The Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity.
Currency 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001
US Dollar 90 82.0 83.3 87.3 90.4
Euro . . . . 37.6
Japanese Yen 27 23.4 24.1 20.2 22.7
Pound Sterling 15 13.6 9.4 11.0 13.2
Swiss Franc 10 8.4 7.3 7.1 6.1


As you can see from the above table over 90% of all currencies are traded against the US Dollar. The four next most traded currencies are the Euro (EUR), Japanese Yen (JPY), Pound Sterling (GBP) and Swiss Franc(CHF). As currencies are traded in pairs and exchanged one for the other when traded, the rate at which they are exchanged is called the exchange rate. These four currencies traded against the US Dollar make up the majority of the market and are called major currencies or the majors.

Market Mechanics

So now we know that the FX market is the largest in the world and that your broker or institution that you are trading with is collecting quotes from a centralized feed or individual quotes comprising of interbank rates. So how are these quotes made up. Well, as we previously mentioned currencies are traded in pairs and are each assigned a symbol. For the Japanese Yen it is JPY, for the Pounds Sterling it is GBP, for Euro it is EUR and for the Swiss Frank it is CHF. So, EUR/USD would be Euro-Dollar pair. GBP/USD would be pounds Sterling-Dollar pair and USD/CHF would be Dollar-Swiss Franc pair and so on. You will always see the USD quoted first with few exceptions such as Pounds Sterling, EuroDollar, Australia Dollar and New Zealand Dollar. The first currency quoted is called the base currency. Have a look below for some example.

Currency Symbol Currency Pair
EUR/USD Euro / US Dollar
GBP/USD Pounds Sterling/ US Dollar
USD/JPY US Dollar / Japanese Yen
USD/CHF US Dollar / Swiss Franc
USD/CAD US Dollar / Canadian Dollar
AUD/USD Australian Dollar / US Dollar
NZD/USD New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar

When you see FX quotes you will actually see two numbers. The first number is called the bid and the second number is called the offer (sometimes called the ASK). If we use the EUR/USD as an example you might see 0.9950/0.9955 the first number 0.9950 is the bid price and is the price traders are prepared to buy Euros against the USD Dollar. The second number 0.9955 is the offer price and is the price traders are prepared to sell the Euro against the US Dollar. These quotes are sometimes abbreviated to the last two digits of the currency such as 50/55. Each broker has its own convention and some will quote the full number and others will show only the last two. You will also notice that there is a difference between the bid and the offer price and that is called the spread. For the four major currencies the spread is normally 5 give or take a pip (will explain pips later)

To carry on from the symbol conventions and using our previous EUR quote of 0.9950 bid, that means that 1 Euro = 0.9950 US Dollars. In another example if we used the USD/CAD 1.4500 that would mean that 1 US Dollar = 1.4500 Canadian Dollars.

The most common increment of currencies is the PIP. If the EUR/USD moves from 0.9550 to 0.9551 that is one Pip. A pip is the last decimal place of a quotation. The Pip or POINT as it is sometimes referred to depending on context is how we will measure our profit or loss.

As each currency has its own value it is necessary to calculate the value of a pip for that particular currency. We also want a constant so we will assume that we want to convert everything to US Dollars. In currencies where the US Dollar is quoted first the calculation would be as follows.

Example JPY rate of 116.73 (notice the JPY only goes to two decimal places, most of the other currencies have four decimal places)

In the case of the JPY 1 pip would be .01 therefore

USD/JPY: (.01 divided by exchange rate = pip value) so .01/116.73=0.0000856 it looks like a big number but later we will discuss lot (contract) size.

USD/CHF: (.0001 divided by exchange rate = pip value) so .0001/1.4840 = 0.0000673

USD/CAD: (.0001 divided by exchange rate = pip value) so .0001/1.5223 = 0.0001522

In the case where the US Dollar is not quoted first and we want to get to the US Dollar value we have to add one more step.

EUR/USD: (0.0001 divided by exchange rate = pip value) so .0001/0.9887 = EUR 0.0001011 but we want to get back to US Dollars so we add another little calculation which is EUR X Exchange rate so 0.0001011 X 0.9887 = 0.0000999 when rounded up it would be 0.0001.

GBP/USD: (0.0001 divided by exchange rate = pip value) so 0.0001/1.5506 = GBP 0.0000644 but we want to get back to US Dollars so we add another little calculation which is GBP X Exchange rate so 0.0000644 X 1.5506 = 0.0000998 when rounded up it would be 0.0001.

By this time you might be rolling your eyes back and thinking do I really need to work all this out and the answer is no. Nearly all the brokers you will deal with will work all this out for you. They may have slightly different conventions but it is all done automatically. It is good however for you to know how they work it out. In the next section we will be discussing how these seemingly insignificant amounts can add up.

More On Market Mechanics

Spot Forex is traditionally traded in lots also referred to as contracts. The standard size for a lot is $100,000. In the last few years a mini lot size has been introduced of $10,000 and this again may change in the years to come. As we mentioned on the previous page currencies are measured in pips, which is the smallest increment of that currency. To take advantage of these tiny increments it is desirable to trade large amounts of a particular currency in order to see any significant profit or loss. We shall cover leverage later but for the time being let's assume we will be using $100,000 lot size. We will now recalculate some examples to see how it effects the pip value.

USD/JPY at an exchange rate of 116.73

(.01/116.73) X $100,000 = $8.56 per pip

USD/CHF at an exchange rate of 1.4840

(0.0001/1.4840) X $100,000 = $6.73 per pip

In cases where the US Dollar is not quoted first the formula is slightly different.

EUR/USD at an exchange rate of 0.9887

(0.0001/ 0.9887) X EUR 100,000 = EUR 10.11 to get back to US Dollars we add a further step

EUR 10.11 X Exchange rate which looks like EUR 10.11 X 0.9887 = $9.9957 rounded up will be $10 per pip.

GBP/USD at an exchange rate of 1.5506

(0.0001/1.5506) X GBP 100,000 = GBP 6.44 to get back to US Dollars we add a further step

GBP 6.44 X Exchange rate which looks like GBP 6.44 X 1.5506 = $9.9858864 rounded up will be $10 per pip.

As we said earlier your broker may have a different convention for calculating pip value relative to lot size but however they do it they will be able to tell you what the pip value for the currency you are trading is at that particular time. Remember that as the market moves so will the pip value depending on what currency you trade.

So now we know how to calculate pip value lets have a look at how you work out your profit or loss. Let's assume you want to buy US Dollars and Sell Japanese Yen. The rate you are quoted is 116.70/116.75 because you are buying the US you will be working on the 116.75, the rate at which traders are prepared to sell. So you buy 1 lot of $100,000 at 116.75. A few hours later the price moves to 116.95 and you decide to close your trade. You ask for a new quote and are quoted 116.95/117.00 as you are now closing your trade and you initially bought to enter the trade you now sell in order to close the trade and you take 116.95 the price traders are prepared to buy at. The difference between 116.75 and 116.95 is .20 or 20 pips. Using our formula from before, we now have (.01/116.95) X $100,000 = $8.55 per pip X 20 pips =$171

In the case of the EUR/USD you decide to sell the EUR and are quoted 0.9885/0.9890 you take 0.9885. Now don't get confused here. Remember you are now selling and you need a buyer. The buyer is biding 0.9885 and that is what you take. A few hours later the EUR moves to 0.9805 and you ask for a quote. You are quoted 0.9805/0.9810 and you take 0.9810. You originally sold EUR to open the trade and now to close the trade you must buy back your position. In order to buy back your position you take the price traders are prepared to sell at which is 0.9810. The difference between 0.9810 and 0.9885 is 0.0075 or 75 pips. Using the formula from before, we now have (.0001/0.9810) X EUR 100,000 = EUR10.19: EUR 10.19 X Exchange rate 0.9810 =$9.99($10) so 75 X $10 = $750.

To reiterate what has gone before, when you enter or exit a trade at some point your are subject to the spread in the bid/offer quote. As a rule of thumb when you buy a currency you will use the offer price and when you sell you will use the bid price. So when you buy a currency you pay the spread as you enter the trade but not as you exit and when you sell a currency you pay no spread when you enter but only when you exit.

Leverage

Leverage financed with credit, such as that purchased on a margin account is very common in Forex. A margined account is a leverageable account in which Forex can be purchased for a combination of cash or collateral depending what your brokers will accept. The loan(leverage) in the margined account is collateralized by your initial margin (deposit), if the value of the trade (position) drops sufficiently, the broker will ask you to either put in more cash, or sell a portion of your position or even close your position. Margin rules may be regulated in some countries, but margin requirements and interest vary among broker/dealers so always check with the company you are dealing with to ensure you understand their policy.

Up until this point you are probably wondering how a small investor can trade such large amounts of money (positions). The amount of leverage you use will depend on your broker and what you feel comfortable with. There was a time when it was difficult to find companies prepared to offer margined accounts but nowadays you can get leverage from a high as 1% with some brokerages. This means you could control $100,000 with only $1,000.

Typically the broker will have a minimum account size also known as account margin or initial margin e.g. $10,000. Once you have deposited your money you will then be able to trade. The broker will also stipulate how much they require per position (lot) traded. In the example above for every $1,000 you have you can take a lot of $100,000 so if you have $5,000 they may allow you to trade up to $500,00 of forex.

The minimum security (Margin) for each lot will very from broker to broker. In the example above the broker required a one percent margin. This means that for every $100,000 traded the broker wanted $1,000 as security on the position. Margin call is also something that you will have to be aware of. If for any reason the broker thinks that your position is in danger e.g. you have a position of $100,000 with a margin of one percent ($1,000) and your losses are approaching your margin ($1,000). He will call you and either ask you to deposit more money, or close your position to limit your risk and his risk. If you are going to trade on a margin account it is imperative that you talk with your broker first to find out what their polices are on this type of accounts.

Variation Margin is also very important. Variation margin is the amount of profit or loss your account is showing on open positions. Let's say you have just deposited $10,000 with your broker. You take 5 lots of USD/JPY which is $500,000. To secure this the broker needs $5,000 (1%). The trade goes bad and your losses equal $5001, your broker may do a margin call. The reason he may do a margin call is that even though you still have $4,999 in your account the broker needs that as security and allowing you to use it could endanger yourself and him. Another way to look at it is this, if you have an account of $10,000 and you have a 1 lot ($100,000) position. That's $1,000 assuming a (1% margin) is no longer available for you to trade. The money still belongs to you but for the time you are margined the broker needs that as security. Another point of note is that some brokers may require a higher margin at the weekeneds. This may take the form of 1% margin during the week and if you intend to hold the position over the weekend it may rise to 2% or higher. Also in the example we have used a 1% margin. This is by no means standard. I have seen as high as 0.5% and many between 3%-5% margin. It all depends on your broker.

There have been many discussions on the topic of margin and some argue that too much margin is dangerous. This is a point for the individual concerned. The important thing to remember as with all trading is that you thoroughly understand your brokers policies on the subject and you are comfortable with and understand your risk.

Rollovers

Even though the mighty US dominates many markets most of Spot Forex is still traded through London in Great Britain. So for our next description we shall use London time. Most deals in Forex are done as Spot deals. Spot deals are nearly always due for settlement two business days day later. This is referred to as the value date or delivery date. On that date the counterparties take delivery of the currency they have sold or bought.

In Spot FX the majority of the time the end of the business day is 21:59 (London time). Any positions still open at this time are automatically rolled over to the next business day, which again finishes at 21:59. This is necessary to avoid the actual delivery of the currency. As Spot FX is predominantly speculative most of the time the trades never wish to actually take delivery of the actual currency. They will instruct the brokerage to always rollover their position. Many of the brokers nowadays do this automatically and it will be in their polices and procedures. The act of rolling the currency pair over is known as tom.next which, stands for tomorrow and the next day. Just to go over this again, your broker will automatically rollover your position unless you instruct him that you actually want delivery of the currency. Another point noting is that most leveraged accounts are unable to actual deliver of the currency as there is insufficient capital there to cover the transaction.

Remember that if you are trading on margin, you have in effect got a loan from your broker for the amount you are trading. If you had a 1 lot position you broker has advanced you the $100,000 even though you did not actually have $100,000. The broker will normally charge you the interest differential between the two currencies if you rollover your position. This normally only happens if you have rolled over the position and not if you open and close the position within the same business day.

To calculate the broker's interest he will normally close your position at the end of the business day and again reopen a new position almost simultaneously. You open a 1 lot ($100,000) EUR/USD position on Monday 15th at 11:00 at an exchange rate of 0.9950. During the day the rate fluctuates and at 22:00 the rate is 0.9975. The broker closes your position and reopens a new position with a different value date. The new position was opened at 0.9976 a 1 pip difference. The 1 pip deference reflects the difference in interest rates between the US Dollar and the Euro. In our example your are long Euro and short US Dollar. As the US Dollar in the example has a higher interest rate than the Euro you pay the premium of 1 pip.

Now the good news. If you had the reverse position and you were short Euors and long US Dollars you would gain the interest differential of 1 pip. If the first named currency has an overnight interest rate lower than the second currency then you will pay that interest differential if you bought that currency. If the first named currency has a higher interest rate than the second currency then you will gain the interest differential.

To simplify the above. If you are long (bought) a particular currency and that currency has a higher overnight interest rate you will gain. If you are short (sold) the currency with a higher overnight interest rate then you will lose the difference.

I would like to emphasis here that although we are going a little in-depth to explain how all this works, your broker will calculate all this for you. The purpose of this book is just to give you an overview of how the forex market works.

Accounts

Although the movement today is towards all transaction eventually finishing in a profit and loss in US Dollars it is important to realize that your profit or loss may not actually be in US Dollars. From my observation the trend is more pronounced in the US as you would expect. Most US based traders assume they will see their balance at the end of each day in US Dollars. I have even spoken with some traders who are oblivious to the fact the their profit might have actually been in Japanese Yen.

Let me explain a little more. You sell (go short) USD/JPY and as such are short USD and Long (bought) JPY. You enter the trade at 116.10 and exit 116.90. You in fact made 80,000 Japanese Yen (1 lot traded) not US Dollars. If you traded all four major currencies against the US Dollar you would in fact have made or lose in EUR, GPY, JPY and CHF. This might give you a ledger balance at the end of the day or month with four different currencies. This is common in London. They will stay in that currency until you instruct the broker to exchange the currency you have a profit or loss into your own base currency. This actually happened to me. After dealing with mainly US based brokers it had never occurred to me that my statement would be in anything other than US Dollars. This can work for you or against you depending on the rate of exchange when you change back into your home currency. Once I knew the convention I simply instructed the broker to change my profit or loss into US Dollars when I closed my position. It is worth checking how your broker approaches this and simply ask them how they handle it. A small point but worth noting.

It's a sad fact that for many years the forex market largely remained unregulated. Even today there are many countries that still don't regulate companies that trade forex. London has been regulated for many years and the US is now getting its act together and has also started regulating companies dealing forex. It was only recently in the US you could with no more than an Internet site and a few thousand dollars set up your own forex operation and give the impression that you were larger than you are. I am all for the entrepreneurial flair and everyone need to start somewhere but when dealing with people's money it is imperative that the company you choose is solid.

Preferably you want a company that is regulated in the country that it operates, insured or bonded and has some kind of track recorded. I cannot advise you on which broker you should use as there are just to many variables to each person, but as a rule of thumb, nearly all countries have some kind of regulatory authority who will be able to advise you. Most of the regulatory authorities will have a list of brokers that fall with their jurisdiction and will give you a list. They probably wont tell whom to use but at least if the list came from them you can have some confidence in those companies. Once you have a list give a few of them a call, see who you feel comfortable with, ask for them to send you their polices and procedures. If you live near where your broker is based, go spend the day with him. I have been to many brokerages just to check them out. It will give you a chance to see their operation and meet their team.

This brings up another interesting point. When you open an account with a broker you will have to fill in some forms basically stating your acceptance of their polices. This can range from a 1 page document to something resembling a book. Take the time to read through these documents and make a list of things you don't understand or want explained. Most reputable companies will be happy to spend some time with you on this. Your involvement with your broker is largely up to you. As a forex trader you will probably spend long hours staring at the screen without talking to anyone. You may be the sort of person who likes this or you may be the sort of person who likes to chat with the dealer in the trading room. You will normally get a call once a week or once a month from someone in the brokerage asking if everything is OK.

Statements

Before we move on to account statements I just want to touch on segregation of funds. In times past there was a danger that traders who deposited money with their broker who did not segregate their clients money from their own companies money were at some risk. The problem arose if the broker misused the deposited funds to either reinvest or otherwise manipulated these deposits to enhance their own standing. There were also instances were the broker became insolvent and many complications ensued as to what was the clients money and what was the broker's money. With the advent of regulation most broker now segregate their clients funds from the brokerage funds. Deposits are normally held with banks or other large financial institution that are also regulated and bonded or insured. This protects you money should anything happen to your broker. The deposit taking institution is normally aware that these deposits are client's funds. Depending on regulation in the particular country you live, each client may have their own segregated account or for smaller depositors they may be pooled. The point is that segregation of funds is a safeguard. Ask your broker if your funds are segregated and who actually has your money.

Just as with a bank you should are entitled to interest on the money you have on deposit. Some broker may stipulate that interest is only payable on accounts over a certain amount but the trend today is that you will earn interest on any amount you have that is not being used to cover your margin. Your broker is probably not the most competitive place to earn interest but that should not be the point of having your money with him in the first place. Payment on your account that is not being used and segregation of funds all go to show the reputability of the company you are dealing with.

In this section I will discuss briefly the basic account statement. I have to keep this basic as there are as many flavours of account statements as you can imagine. Just about every broker has their own way of presenting this. The most important thing is to know where you stand at the end of each day or week. Just because your broker is Internet based and has all the bells and whistles does not mean they are infallible. Many of the actions taken before information is imputed are still done by hand and if humans are involved there will be a mistake at some point. The responsibility lies with you. It is your money so make sure that all the transactions are correct.

Normally there is a ticket or docket number to help identify the trade. You will nearly always find the time and date of the trade. The value date if the currency were to be delivered. You should always see the direction of the trade, buy or sell (Long or Short). The amount and rate you bought or sold. Balance to let you know if you made a profit or a loss. You should also see any open positions you may have and the margin requirements for that position. A lot of the more modern systems will show your open position as though it has been closed just to give you an up to the minute balance.


The Main Players

Central Banks And Governments

Policies that are implemented by governments and central banks can play a major roll in the FX market. Central banks can play an important part in controlling the country's money supply to insure financial stability.

Banks

A large part of FX turnover is from banks. Large banks can literally trade billions of dollars daily. This can take the form of a service to their customers or they themselves speculate on the FX market.

Hedge Funds

As we know the FX market can be extremely liquid which is why it can be desirable to trade. Hedge Funds have increasingly allocated portions of their portfolios to speculate on the FX market. Another advantage Hedge Funds can utilize is a much higher degree of leverage than would typically be found in the equity markets.

Corporate Businesses

The FX market mainstay is that of international trade. Many companies have to import or exports goods to different countries all around the world. Payment for these goods and services may be made and received in different currencies. Many billions of dollars are exchanges daily to facilitate trade. The timing of those transactions can dramatically affect a company's balance sheet.

The Man In The Street

Although you may not think it the man in the street also plays a part in toady's FX world. Every time he goes on holiday overseas he normally need to purchase that country's currency and again change it back into his own currency once he returns. Unwittingly he is in fact trading currencies. He may also purchase goods and services whilst overseas and his credit card company has to convert those sales back into his base currency in order to charge him.

Speculators And Investors

We shall differentiate speculator from investors here with the definition that an investor has a much longer time horizon in which he expects his investment to yield a profit. Regardless of the difference both speculators and investors will approach the FX market to exploit the movement in currency pairs. They both will have their reason for believing a particular currency will perform better or worse as the case may be and will buy or sell accordingly. They may decide that the Euro will appreciate against the US Dollar and take what is called a long position in Euro. If the Euro does in fact gain ground against the US Dollar they will have made a profit.

position update

I was stopped out of usd/jpy and still long usd/chf...
Loophole Closed - No Tax Deferral for Hedge Execs
posted on Thursday 13 Dec 2007 09:53 GMT
From Bloomberg - see full story

Bloomberg reports: Hedge fund executives won't be allowed to defer taxes on unlimited funds in offshore accounts under a bill approved by the U.S. House today that also shields millions of taxpayers from the alternative minimum tax.

The $53 billion proposal, which also expands the child tax credit, passed 226 to 193, mostly along party lines. The Bush administration has threatened to veto the legislation. The measure also delays a 2004 law that allows corporations flexibility in allocating interest expense worldwide to reduce taxes and requires companies to show that tax-reduction strategies have a true business purpose.

Representative Charles Rangel, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, proposed the legislation, which extends a standoff between House Democrats who want to abide by pay-as- you-go budget rules and Senate Republicans, who want to rein in the minimum tax without boosting other levies. The failure to reach an agreement means millions of taxpayers' refunds will be slowed next year, according to the Internal Revenue Service. "Senate Republicans have defined themselves as an obstacle to providing responsible AMT relief," Rangel, a New York Democrat, said in a statement. The new House bill gives "the Senate one more chance to do the right thing and pass this critical tax relief without adding to the deficit."

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

New Positions and thoughts

I am long usd/jpy at 112.18 with stops at 11.60 offer and limit at 113.50...


long usd/chf at 1.1347 sl 1.1230 lt 1.1580

Considering long usdcad

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

No New Positions Today

looking for positions in

usd/chf long...I want to wait till around 3-5 p.m EST. optimal entry price is around 1.1365-80.

Looking for long in usd/jpy as well.

usd/cad looking interesting for a long as well.

I had a loser in eur/usd for 40 pips yesterday...

Last 3 or 4 trades did not make money. Time to scale down until I have some positive momentum. Once I start winning and I feel my market is around I will increase trading size.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

stopped out of usd/jpy

Ahhhhhhhhhhh.....No trades till Monday.

KS

Covered some positions

Covered half euro at 07 and half at 4556

New Positions

I added to eur/usd short at 1.4615 added in at 1.4565 and moved my stop to 1.4626

i just went long usd/chf at 1.1349 w/ stop loss at 1.1296 offer and take profit at 1.1450

Witht he exception of usd/jpy I am comfortable taking all these positions into NFP tomorrow.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Position Update

Now I'm short eur/usd at 1.4615 with stopsp at 1.4782 bid and take profits at 1.4315

i sold more usd/jpy to give me a average price of 110.31...I'm hanging short.

The 4 hour u/jpy chart suggest possible inverted head and shoulders and cup and handle pattern....I am staying sh ort against the top of the handle...Considering a reversal trade long if I get stopped out.

This is a bit confusing of a market here. It looks like USD may be finding a bottom after all. Time will tell.

"Everything is planned, there is no coincidence, the charts trend into the news. There is no need for crystal balls, just look at the action of currency to tell you the global news." MadTrader


ABout my old trades...I was stopped out of gbp/cad at break even (yes I was up about 120+ on that) and I was stopped out of my eur/usd long from yesterday...I cancelled the usd/chf short.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Closed and New positions

I closed out eur/cad for +300
and usd/cad for around +160

I just shorted usd/jpy at 109.89 with stop loss at 111.31 bid...

Kind of pissed I didn't follow my plans from the weekend to make actions after Monday close (short usd/chf and usd/jpy and long eur/usd)


I am watching for a retrace in usd/cad for re enetry to trend.

I hate saying that something "went to far" so I am taking a small position short at limit 1.1230 s/l at 1.1332 and t/p at 1.0850

Waiting for retrace in eur/usd as well.

Re-entered long in gbp/cad at 2.0785 with stop offer at 2.0750 and take profit at 2.1345

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Sunday Night Positions

Bought usd/cad at 0.9989 with stops at 0.9870 and take profits at 1.0350 (pending mkt movement of course)

Long eur/cad at 1.4642 stops at 1.45000 offer take profit at 1.5000.

I took a half position in eur/cad because it isn't moving with the same velocity as usd/cad and I already have exposure with my usdcad long....

Alright...New Month, new trades, new opportuniies lining up for tuesday (pending market action for newxt 20 hours.)

I am excited....Are you?


FYI i'm trading from my laptop in a airport. Snow sucks.....

Friday, November 30, 2007

Monday Opps continued

Possible re-entry long in gbp/cad

I want to buy usd/cad with stops at 0.09770 (very conservative stop)

USD/CHF could be setting up for a short if it rejects of these levels. I will wait to see how Monday closes...

There are no trades in cable...

USD/JPY if it rejects and goes down on close of Monday, I will take shorts with stops above todays highs.

Considering short aud/usd around 8827 with stops at 8950

I like eur/gbp short around 7114 with stops at 7182

If eur/usd hooks up on Monday I will buy after close or tuesday with stops around 1.4575

possible long in eur/cad with stops at 4460

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Possible Positions for Monday

Short usd/jpy, usd/chf

Long eur/usd usd/cad

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Closed all positions

I closed my aud/nzd for around +188 or so....Not happy to exit that trade....Really just exited the short for track record purposes. Of course it is trading lower now that I covered it....Time to move on although this trade would go for another 200-300 pips.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

ENd of month worries

It is the end of the month and I am traveling from thursday thru the weekend....I know the right thing to do is to put on another short in aud/nzd....Do I want to risk my up month for this?

I also like usd/cad long at 0.9956 with a stop at 0.9750 offer. Aud/jpy looks good short too at 94.95 with stop at 96.93

Trade Opportunity

I know this is kind of against my grain....I want to take aud/usd (1.1534) short here with stop at 1.1640....This looks like it has the potential to drop to 1.1200. It is the end of the month and I am up around 1% and dont want to give it back...argggggghhhhhhhh.....

I still have time to make a decision.

Confused.

Morning Strategist Summary

Ted Wieseman

  • LIBOR spreads over Fed Funds are high and have been rising

· The blowout in the spread of LIBOR over Fed Funds has partially short-circuited the transmission of the Fed's lowering of the fed funds rate into a positive impact on the economy

· The pressure in the interbank lending market is a key symptom of the biggest challenge facing the economy at this point: the forced reintermediation of the banking system that is pressuring bank balance sheets and reducing the availability/raising the cost of credit

· With significant, rising, and unpredictable demands on their capital, banks have preferred to stay liquid and demanded a significant premium to lend term in the interbankmarket

· Problems have recently been exacerbated by balance sheet pressures tied to the year-end for a number of key firms

· The Fed announced steps to attempt to tackle this problem directly by offering regular term repos bridging the year-end

· If targeted and unconventional measures fail and the Fed is determined to get LIBOR down, the only alternative would be the blunt measure of overcoming the widening in LIBOR/fed funds spreads through more aggressive fed funds rate cuts

o Even if spreads of LIBOR over fed funds stay wide or widen further, enough fed funds rate cuts could at least get the absolute level of LIBOR down substantially

· Expects Kohn to signal a change in Fed stance in his speech tomorrow: the market is fully expecting a rate cut and has been for some time now

Jim Caron

· "Renormalization thesis" - liquidity was cheap and it was easy to attain leverage, which fueled asset inflation

· Now we're finding the exact opposite, as liquidity has become more costly

· This will have the greatest impact on the assets with the highest dependency on liquidity and leverage - especially Financials

· Key with the Fed is to figure out how to address increased liquidity costs without cutting rates so much that it spills over into the broader economy

· Market of Many trade: re-pricing of risky assets with high dependence on liquidity and leverage = breakdown of correlation across different asset classes

· Fed is doing 45 day RP's to get us over the year-end hump, after which liquidity typically becomes more available

· Fed is trying to keep liquidity up over the next 4-6 weeks until we get past this rough patch

· The problem is that this seems to be a recurring theme and it doesn't seem to be just a rough patch

· The Fed is trying to allow the re-pricing to happen, but wants to slow the pace of it

· Jim thinks the yield curve will steepen quite a bit, out to 150-200 bps by the end of 2008

· If LIBOR/Fed spread continues to widen further, he'd expect a 50bps cut in December - thinks the fed would have no choice but to cut funds much more aggressively

· If your view is that the Fed will need to cut aggressively, he recommends putting on his "curve steepener" trade

Greg Peters

  • Expects a short-covering rally but is still negative
  • Policy makers and central banks do seem to have moved into an "action phase"- which is a good start but we have a long way to go
  • What's important about the Citigroup news is that it separates big fish from little fish - for the contrast, look at ABK continuing to weaken
  • Knock-on effects on economy should continue to play out
  • Started with homebuilders, then into financials, then consumer discretionary, and the next leg will likely be cyclicals
  • Recommending long position in AAA ABX - dealers and banks still have onerous positions which they've hedged out with ABX, which has depressed values beyond where they should be

Abhijit Chakrabortti

  • Behavior of the yield curve is important to Financials; we've seen LIBOR rates go up and treasury rates falling
  • In mid-89, fed started cutting rates and the YC was inverted-fed cut from 9.5% to 7% in a slow, sedate manner and the yield curve didn't move much (from 100 bps inverted to flat), while S&P financials fell 45%
  • Only after the Fed finally started to cut aggressively did the rally take place
  • Since the fed has cut this year, by 75 bps, Libor rates have come down by less than the Fed (65 bps) and the yield curve is virtually unchanged
  • So he thinks this provisioning cycle will be far worse than 1990
  • The unchanged YC will be devastating for NIM and overall earnings for Financials
  • For a sustained rally to be mounted in financials, the curve has to steepen with treasury yield going UP and MM/Libor rates falling, telling us that liquidity concerns have eased
  • Magic words the market is seeking is not that the balance is "roughly equal," but that the balance of risks has shifted decisively toward growth and that they will aggressively cut as much as is necessary to address the problem
  • In the July sell-off, MO and CL went flat, but this time they have rallied - this is a sign that the focus should be on - the market internals
  • Fed needs to shift from the denial phase at least to the recognition phase (not even the action phase)
  • Everyone keeps telling him the bearish view of Financials is such a consensus position - but everyone at Palmetto was bullish on Financials
  • Who thinks Financials could fall another 20%? That is the real contrarian view
    • Finding out what is non-consensus is just as important as being contrarian

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Closed gbp/cad

Closed out at 2.378 for +112

Got Stopped Out of usd/jpy

Stopped out usd/jpy at 108.10

Monday, November 26, 2007

New Position

Moved stop in usd/jpy to break even +8 so 108.08

I have a limit buy gbp/cad at 2.0475 with stop loss at 2.0350 offer and t/p at 2.1100

New Position

I just took usd/jpy short at 108.15 stops at 109.20 bid t/p at 104.50

When Good Traders Lose

Good traders lose money. They also go through slumps. I've seen it with people who have made millions for multiple years running. What makes them good traders is, in part, how they lose. Here are three qualities I've seen in good traders who go through rocky periods:

1) They're quick to identify when their ideas aren't working - They don't fight the market, and they don't become threatened or defensive. Rather, they quickly enter a mode where they look at what's working, what isn't, and what they can do about it. They accept that there will be periods when they see things well and periods when they don't.

2) They're quick to de-lever - They get smaller when they realize their trading isn't working. They avoid digging large holes for themselves, but they also don't stop trading. By trading smallest when they're having the most trouble and largest when they're seeing things clearly, they leverage their strengths.

3) They're patient in regaining their feel - They keep trading small until they have a good understanding and feel for what's going on. They don't press to catch up and make money; they ride out the storm and take minimum damage. Because they've been through this before, they know that their time will come--and that helps them sustain patience.

The traders who are most at risk are those that fight markets, trade larger or more often to recapture lost money, and can't stay out of the water when conditions are unfavorable. All traders lose money; it's how you trade when you're down that makes all the difference.
Dollar Displaces Yen, Franc as Carry Trade Favorite (Update1)

By Bo Nielsen

Nov. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Using the dollar to pay for purchases of currencies with higher yields is proving to be the most profitable trade in the foreign-exchange market.

A basket of currencies including the British pound, Brazilian real and Hungarian forint financed with dollars returned 17 percent this year, compared with 9 percent when funded in yen and 7 percent in Swiss francs, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Falling U.S. interest rates and increasing volatility in the yen and franc are making the trade even more appealing.

``With the dollar giving the appearance of being in free fall, it increases the attractiveness of using the currency to fund investments,'' said Avinash Persaud, chairman of London- based Intelligence Capital Ltd., which advises hedge funds that manage more than $89 billion. ``That process will only add more fuel to the decline.''

The last time the U.S. currency was used for so-called carry trades was in 2004, when the Federal Reserve's target rate for overnight loans between banks was 1 percent, said Niels From, a strategist at Dresdner Kleinwort in Frankfurt. Since then, it has weakened 18 percent on a trade-weighted basis, according to a Fed index. The International Monetary Fund says the dollar made up 64.8 percent of central banks' currency reserves in the second quarter, down from 71 percent in 1999.

Investors are borrowing dollars and using the money to buy assets in countries with higher interest rates even though U.S. borrowing costs are 4 percentage points more than the Bank of Japan's and 1.75 percentage points above the Swiss National Bank benchmark. In carry trades, speculators get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and invest in one with higher returns, earning the spread between the two.

Housing Slump

Speculation against the dollar increased as the worst housing slump since 1991 forced policy makers to cut the benchmark rate twice to keep the economy out of recession. The currency depreciated in five of the past six years leading central bankers from the Arabian Peninsula to China to diversify their reserves and increase holdings of non-U.S. assets.

The dollar has weakened 12 percent against the euro so far in 2007 and traded at $1.4824 as of 1:36 p.m. in Tokyo, after touching a record low of $1.4967 last week. The U.S. currency has depreciated 9 percent versus the yen this year, and last traded at 108.32 yen. It fell to a record 1.089 Swiss francs on Nov. 23.

Investors may switch more than $100 billion of borrowing from yen or francs into dollars in the next two years for carry trades said Jens Nordvig, a strategist with New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the biggest U.S. securities firm by market value.

Real, Won, Pesos

The value of futures contracts held this month by hedge funds and traders betting against the dollar was a record $33.9 billion more than contracts that profit from a gain, according to New York-based Morgan Stanley, the second-biggest U.S. securities firm.

Pacific Investment Management Co., which oversees the world's biggest managed bond fund, is selling dollars against the Brazil real, Mexican peso, Korean won and Singapore dollar.

``When we think about currencies on a three- to five-year basis we're very bullish on emerging markets versus the U.S. dollar,'' said Andrew Balls, who helps manage $80 billion for Newport, California-based Pimco. ``That view is only reinforced when you look at interest-rate differentials.''

The real rose 18.5 percent this year and Singapore's currency strengthened 6.4 percent, while the won was little changed. The Mexican peso fell 1.4 percent, the only one of the 16 most-traded currencies to do worse in the foreign exchange market.

Interest Rates

Pimco, a unit of Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, expects the Fed to lower borrowing costs to around 3 percent, from 4.5 percent. Policy makers have reduced the rate by 0.75 percentage point since Sept. 18.

Interest-rate futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show investors see a 58 percent probability that the U.S. benchmark will drop to 3.75 percent by March 31. Switzerland's key rate is 2.75 percent and Japan's is 0.5 percent.

The dollar produced a positive carry, the combined gain from the difference between interest rates and changes in foreign exchange, against 20 of the 24 most actively traded emerging market currencies this year, Bloomberg data show. The franc was positive against 12 and the yen versus 14.

Using a currency to finance bets can drive down its value. Former Japanese vice finance minister Hiroshi Watanabe said in May that one reason the yen had fallen to a record low against the euro was because it was funding about $500 billion of carry trades.

Attracting Speculators

The dollar attracted speculators when the Fed cut the target rate from 6.5 percent in 2001 to 1 percent in June 2003 and kept it there for a year, said Dresdner Kleinwort's From. When the Fed started to raise borrowing costs, traders fled. The U.S. rate surpassed the European Central Bank's benchmark in December 2004, helping the dollar gain almost 13 percent versus the euro the following year.

Strategists say the U.S. currency will recover because the economy is adding jobs and producing faster inflation, limiting the Fed from reducing borrowing costs. The dollar will rebound to $1.42 per euro and to 113 yen by the end of June, according to the median forecast of 41 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Fed Outlook

The Fed will probably cut its target a quarter-point to 4.25 percent in the next three months and leave it there through 2008, according to a separate survey from Nov. 1 to Nov. 8. The U.S. economy will accelerate to a 2 percent annual growth rate next quarter, from the current 1.5 percent, the survey showed.

``We're actually bullish the U.S. dollar,'' said Jack McIntyre, who helps manage $25 billion at Brandywine Global Investment Management LLC in Philadelphia. ``As long as the world doesn't fall off a cliff, we will see people continue to play the carry trades and the yen will be the premier funding currency.''

The dollar is becoming more attractive for speculators concerned that higher volatility will reduce profits from bets funded in yen. An increase in price swings dents returns by raising the risk that gains from the spread between interest rates will be erased by foreign-exchange losses.

The yen appreciated 8.2 percent against the dollar since Oct. 15 as implied volatility on one-month dollar-yen options climbed to 14.27 percent from 7.47 percent. Dealers quote implied volatility, a gauge of expectations for currency moves.

``The dollar becomes a safer source of funding'' as volatility rises, said Maxime Tessier, head of foreign exchange in Montreal at Caisse de Depot et Placement, which manages $151 billion.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bo Nielsen in New York at Bnielsen4@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 26, 2007 00:43 EST

Position Update

I'm still short aud/nzd from 1.1658...I will hold this baby till profit or stop loss.

I am planning on short aud/usd soon as well. The safest short would be to wait for a close of day bar lower today or tomorrow on daily.

Depending on todays close I want to short usd/jpy as well, possible short in usd/chf.

Possible long in eur/cad, eur/gbp. Short opportunity in aud/jpy....

Markets are clearly starting to trend again....Yippy!!!!

Madfx.

FX Commentary by Walid Salah El Din

The central banks in EU and UK are still stuck between stimulating the economy and fighting inflation. It the same situation in US the reports came mixed showing the need for holding for a while. Further cuts in US means further boost to the already boosted commodities prices. But the crediting problems head and the sub-prime issues have not ended and it can come up on the spot at any time among the concerns of slowing growth expectations.

We have seen and mentioned that the 2.6% y/y EU CPI could increased the market expectations of an Inflation pressure in Euro zone can force the ECB to open the door for further single currency appreciation amid these current high oil prices as the rate is away from the 2% ECB target. It is a similar case in UK too and both factors are helping their currencies appreciation for fighting inflation which is fueled by the energy and commodities prices as the interest rate outlook is still dovish anyway which supported the gold rates back above 800 again by the end of last week as the increased expectation of another interest rate cut by .25% by the end of the year.

Best wishes

FX Consultant

Walid Salah El Din

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Mad Commentary

11:32 a.m. EST ....FX Markets look like they are running out of steam here. Time for consolidation. Don't forget what happened last year on thanksgiving, major market moves.

Bank warns that complex debt products 'may not survive'

By James Mackintosh and Paul J Davies

Published: November 21 2007 02:00 | Last updated: November 21 2007 02:00

Investment banks need to standardise complex structured credit products if they want to restart growth in the stalled market, Sir John Gieve, the Bank of England's deputy governor for financial stability, said yesterday.

Sir John said "sophisticated opaque bespoke products may not survive" the recent market disruptions and called for structured credit instruments to be redesigned around easilyunderstood building blocks.

The markets for all kinds of structured finance products have been in turmoil since growing problems among US subprime mortgage borrowers spilled over into a broader fear about contagion to any and all complex debt products.

The consequent downgrades of some instruments and draining of liquidity from these markets has left banks and investors with some very large losses and exposure to products that are often very difficult to value.

Central bankers and policymakers around the world have been calling for efforts to improve these markets since the US mortgage problems grew into a full-blown credit squeeze in late summer.

Sir John also said there could be further tightening in money markets before the end of the year and said he suspected there was more bad news to emerge from the hedge fund sector - although he said hedge funds were not to blame for this year's crisis. "People are going to want products built up of units they understand," he told a conference organised by France's Edhec Business School. "The success the market has in doing that redesign will determine whether the rapid growth of the last few years resumes."

The value of collateralised debt obligations exposed to the US subprime meltdown have been hammered this year, and the difficulty of working out underlying exposure has tainted many other structured products.

Writing in the Financial Times in October, Christine Lagarde, France's minister of economy, finance and employment, said: "Transparency with regard to the actual packaging process of securitisation should be heightened."

The term "securitisation" covers almost as diverse an array of products as the term "hedge fund" does investors. Some people in the industry warn that while transparency and standardisation may be easy to improve in areas such as prime residential mortgage-backed bonds, these are not the areas causing problems.

In fact, they say, transparency is most needed in areas where it is most difficult to improve.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007


Risky Business: Dollar Losing Status As Reserve Currency

Thomson IM News reports: Negative sentiment toward the US dollar, both expressed and implied, intensified over the weekend, as the greenback's weakness emboldened some finance ministers and leaders of oil cartel countries to speak out against the buck. The negative tone called into question the dollar's ability to retain its status as a reserve currency.

Venezuela's Communist leader Hugo Chavez and Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaking at the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) summit in Riyadh, said they no longer want be paid in U.S. dollars for their petroleum, but in euros. The outspoken US political adversaries said the weak U.S. dollar is cutting their potential revenue. Ahmadinejad said countries are getting his oil, and in return he receives 'a worthless piece of paper.'

In addition, Saudi Arabia's foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal's own worries about dollar weakness were exposed, when he commented Friday that the U.S. dollar could collapse if OPEC mentioned dollar weakness in its closing comments. Al-Faisal's comments, intended to be confidential, were leaked to the press. No agreement was reached, and officials decided to meet before the Dec. 5 meeting to discuss the effect of a weaker US dollar on their earnings. The dollar comments at the OPEC meeting upstaged talk of oil production increases, and some currency analysts cited the negative weekend reports as yet another reason to sell the greenback.

Monday, November 19, 2007

aud/usd

Head and Shoulders on the daily chart.....Look to sell below 0.8800

New Positions

Short eur/chf at 1.6351 stop 1.6425 t/p 1.6200

I have a limit short usd/chf out at 1.1195 that hasn't been filled....I'm considering shorting some right here at 1.1150. I know its the right move as chf is very strong but I dont like the risk I have to take at these levels in usd/chf. I fear I may not be able to enter this trade at MY limit price....What to do??? I being in these dilema's My guy tells me to just go market.

Usd/chf is getting crushed, new daily, weekly lows and almost all time lows. Do you feel the rush coming? I do....