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....

Currency Report

G20 Meeting

A Group of Twenty (G20) Finance Ministers and Central Bankers met in Cape Town, South Africa on Sunday. From all the nations attending, represented was 90% of the global economy and two thirds of the world’s population and trade. Among topics discussed were development and trade, oil prices, market volatility, currencies, and global growth.

Many issues discussed were comprised of rhetoric which has been regurgitated time and time again. US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said once again, a strong dollar is in the best interest of the U.S. economy while China was asked indirectly, yet again, to allow more flexibility in its currency.

There was an interesting development. Since the yuan is not allowed any flexibility the impact that the weak U.S. dollar has to China is that they may have to buy more debt to keep their currency low to stabilize Chinese exports. Since the yuan is not absorbing any volatility from the weakening dollar, the Canadian dollar and the euro have seen their currencies soar. Canada may be the most sensitive to this as their exports may take the hit as prices soar. Canada’s finance minister Jim Flaherty has made it clear that Canada’s export reliant economy may soon face problems due to the dollar’s decline.

Other key points included:

- G20 offered little about the global downturn as they took the stance that it will be “difficult to predict.”
- A moderation in capacity and resources is expected while rising oil and commodity prices will be important inflationary pressures globally.

Traders will have to take a wait and see approach as to how this meeting will impact the markets.

British Pound

Recent Housing Data has only supported the notion that the British Pound is fundamentally weak. Real estate brokers and agents continue to warn about housing conditions. Many real estate analysts are currently advising to “sell now if you plan to sell soon.” Bank of England Governor Mervyn King used the words “particularly weak” when describing the property market in the U.K. Home values dropped this month in every part of the country except London.

Key economic data out of the U.K. this week are the MPC meeting minutes and GDP. The meeting minutes will be very important only if it shows that voting members are starting to vote for cuts. While many have changed their stance from hawkish, David Blanchflower remains the only member to actually cast a vote for any rate cuts this year. If a split decision is reported, the markets may react by pricing in a greater possibility of a rate cut in the December meeting.

Canadian Dollar

The Canadian dollar has been slowly retracing after hitting all time highs against the U.S. dollar. Canada’s currency has declined 7% since November 7th. Concerns have been looming about the Canadian dollar and its record levels. Canada relies on exports and a strong currency raises the prices of its exports. When these exports become too expensive buyers look elsewhere or just don’t buy at all. Canada is concerned about this and recently has called out China about the flexibility of the yuan. Canada feels it is absorbing too much of the U.S. dollar’s decline. There has been a quick reaction in recent weeks by Bank of Canada officials to stop further increases in the Canadian dollar. Some rumors have been circulating that a rate cut may be the answer.

Canada will release wholesale sales, CPI, and retail sales figures this week. These reports may perhaps generate market volatility. Inflation at the consumer level will provide the BOC with some guidance on whether or not they can consider a rate cut. Retail sales will have significance because consumption has yet to show considereable signs of any slowing. Wholesale sales is sometimes a leading indicator of how retail sales will be reported. The retail sales number will provide some insights on consumer confidence.

U.S. Dollar

Plenty of housing data is on tap this week. The Housing Market Index by the National Association of Home builders will provide measures of demand for single family homes. A low reading of 17 is expected. A number of 50 or higher shows strong demand. Housing starts and building permits is also due out. Housing starts are projected to come in at a 14-year low. Building permits are not expected to be much better with an alarming amount of contracts being cancelled.

Wells Fargo & Co. Chief Executive Officer John Stumpf is reported as saying the U.S. housing crisis is the worst since the Great Depression. This is on the heels of the G20 meeting where officials were convinced that the housing slump in the U.S. will get considerably worse. While the housing market will continue to take its toll, traders shift some of their focus towards monetary policy this week.

Currently, Fed funds futures are showing a 90% chance of a December rate cut to 4.25%. Speculation now is revolving around whether or not the Fed will cut rates by more than 25 basis points. The FOMC meeting minutes will be released this week which will provide the markets with some indication of the Fed’s intentions. The Fed has been reluctant to raise rates and with inflation on the rise the minutes will be highly anticipated.

It should be considered that losses in the dollar may be limited as traders look to reduce dollar short positions ahead of the long holiday.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Stopped out of gbp/usd and now short usd/jpy

Short usd/jpy at 110.14 stop at 110.85 bid t/p at 108.00

Monday, November 12, 2007

New Position

I am finally taking a new positions after these crazy markets have moved so much...

Short GBP/USD at 2.0615 with stop at 2.0650 bid current t/p at 2.0450

Friday, November 9, 2007

Ten Lessons I Have Learned From Traders

Ten Lessons I Have Learned From Traders

Brett N. Steenbarger, Ph.D.

www.brettsteenbarger.com
Note: This article is taken from the reading for my free Web lecture on 4/20 for Woodie's CCI Club. The lecture is scheduled for 4 PM CT.



1) Trading affects psychology as much as psychology affects trading – This was really the motivating factor behind my writing the new book. Many traders experience stress and frustration because they are trading poorly and lack a true edge in the marketplace. Working on your emotions will be of limited help if you are putting your money at risk and don’t truly have an edge.

2) Emotional disruption is present even among the most successful traders – A trading method that produces 60% winners will experience four consecutive losses 2-3% of the time and as much time in flat performance as in an uptrending P/L curve. Strings of events (including losers) occur more often by chance than traders are prepared for.

3) Winning disrupts the trader’s emotions as much as losing – We are disrupted when we experience events outside our expectation. The method that is 60% accurate will experience four consecutive winners about 13% of the time. Traders are just as susceptible to overconfidence during profitable runs as underconfidence during strings of losers.

4) Size kills – The surest path toward emotional damage is to trade size that is too large for one’s portfolio. We experience P/L in relation to our portfolio value. When we trade too large, we create exaggerated swings of winning and losing, which in turn create exaggerated emotional swings.

5) Training is the path to expertise – Think of every performance field out there—sports, music, chess, acting—and you will find that practice builds skills. Trading, in some ways, is harder than other performance fields because there are no college teams or minor leagues for development. From day one, we’re up against the pros. Without training and practice, we will lack the skills to survive such competition.

6) Successful traders possess rich mental maps - All successful trading boils down to pattern recognition and the development of mental maps that help us translate our perceptions of patterns into concrete trading behaviors. Without such mental maps, traders become lost in complexity.

7) Markets change – Patterns of volatility and trending are always shifting, and they change across multiple time frames. Because of this, no single trading method will be successful across the board for a given market. The successful trader not only masters markets, but masters the changes in those markets.

8) Even the best traders have periods of drawdown – As markets change, the best traders go through a process of relearning. The ones who succeed are the ones who save their money during the good times so that they can financially survive the lean periods.

9) The market you’re in counts as much toward performance as your trading method – Some markets are more volatile and trendy than others; some have more distinct patterns than others. Finding the right fit between trader, trading method, and market is key.

10) Execution and trade management count – A surprising degree of long-term trading success comes from getting good prices on entry and exit. The single best predictor of trading failure is when the average P/L of losing trades exceeds the average P/L of winners.

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.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

new position limit

Attempting to buy cable

gbp/usd limit buy 2.1035 stop 2.0958 exit 2.1275

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

STopped out of eur/cad

Stopped out of eur/cad for for -98....thank goodness that was half size...meanwhile I am sitting here considering a re entery short into usd/jpy.

Cover

usd/jpy at 113.01 for +25

New Positions

Short eur/cad at 1.3452 with stops at 1.3550

Short usd/jpy at 113.26 with stops at 113.55

FUNDAMENTAL UPDATE

FOREIGN EXCHANGE
RBA raised rates 25bps to 6.75% as expected saying the economy had to slow to contain inflation, leaving the door open for
further hikes (RTRS)
China should balance the make-up of its USD 1.4trl stockpile of foreign exchange reserves so strong currencies such as the
Euro offset weakening currencies such as the dollar, according to a senior political figure (RTRS)
ENERGY
Oil prices surged deeper into record territory touching $98 as the dollar hit new lows and traders fretted about a winter fuel
crunch due to thinning oil stocks and a North Sea storm (RTRS) At 0625 crude was trading $97.97 up 128c. Gold also trading up at
new 28-year highs, trading $836.27 at 0625.

U.S. ECONOMIC UPDATE

Fed's Plosser: October rate cut was close call, would take GDP growth of less than 1.0% for him to support another rate cut
(NYT)**
Plosser also said that he would not be surprised to see GDP growth of between 1.0%-1.5% in Q4.
Morgan Stanley could become the next bank to own up to further sub-prime losses in light of the continued stagnation of the
asset-backed commercial paper market (Telegraph)
Fitch fears put bond insurance sector in doubt (Times)
Fitch Ratings threatened to cut insurer's AAA ratings after a review of their USD 2,500bln exposure to the global market in CDOs.

News Updates

Greenspan and Soros say US is in worse position than Fed will admit (Times)
They said the American economy will deteriorate more and that its housing recession has a long way to go.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Closed nzd/usd

Long nzd/usd at 0.7800....exited long at 0.7859 for +59 pips.

ARRRGGGGGGGGGGGG

I am so frustrated that I am not in this cad move...I had some great positions and entries in eur/cad, usd/cad and gbp/cad.....I can't find any good entries into the trend. I can not define a proper trade. I am not entering until I see my set up....While this moves YES I am a bit pissed.

finally a new position nzd/usd

Long nzd/usd at 0.7800 stop loss at0 .7002 target 0.8250

Supermodel 'rejects dollar pay'

Supermodel 'rejects dollar pay'
Gisele Bündchen
The model reportedly demanded euros for a Pantene advert
The world's richest model has reportedly reacted in her own way to the sliding value of the US dollar - by refusing to be paid in the currency.

Gisele Bündchen is said to be keen to avoid the US currency because of uncertainty over its strength.

The Brazilian, thought to have earned about $30m in the year to June, prefers to be paid in euros, her sister and manager told the Bloomberg news agency.

However, Ms Bündchen, 27, declined to comment on her pay arrangements.

Last week the dollar hit long-term lows against the euro, the British pound and the Canadian dollar.

According to Brazil's weekly magazine Veja, when Ms Bündchen signed a deal to represent Pantene hair products, she demanded that the brand owner, Procter & Gamble (P&G), paid her in euros.

P&G was reported as saying that it could not comment on details of the contract.

There are also reports that she will be paid in euros for a deal with Dolce & Gabanna to promote its The One fragrance.

"Contracts starting now are more attractive in euros because we don't know what will happen to the dollar," Patricia Bündchen told Bloomberg.

'Still negative'

Last month, billionaire investor Warren Buffett said that he was not confident about the strength of the dollar.

"We are still negative on the dollar relative to most other currencies so we bought stocks in companies that earn their money in other currencies," he said of his Berkshire Hathaway investment vehicle.

And Jim Rogers, a former investor partner of George Soros, told the BBC that if he was buying currency now it would be the Chinese renminbi, the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc and not the US dollar.

The dollar has slipped amid US interest rate cuts which have been trimmed to 4.5% after standing at 5.25% in September.

This means that investors are looking to buy other currencies that will give a higher rate of return.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Self-Sabotage Revealed

Self-Sabotage Revealed Print E-mail
Trading Psychology Articles | Written by Dr. Van K Tharp |

Self-Sabotage Revealed

In my peak performance training with traders, I give a strong psychological slant to the concept of self-sabotage. Self-sabotage typically occurs when one lacks the discipline to act in one's own best interest. For example, when you have dessert, knowing it's taboo because you are trying get healthy, you might call that self-sabotage. Or perhaps you know you need to exercise and you really feel good when you do so, but somehow you just feel lazy and want to skip the exercise period. Self-sabotage occurs in trading in many instances:

  • When you know you should follow the ten tasks of trading, but you don't.
  • When you know you need to determine if your system will really work, but you just trade it anyway.
  • When you know you should develop a business plan for your trading, but somehow that just seems like too much work.
  • When you know you need to put a stop loss order in on a trade, but you don't.

These and numerous other examples characterize self-sabotage. And these examples of self-sabotage typically occur when you have internal conflict between various parts of yourself and when emotions pop up that result in behavior that is not in your best interest and when you just avoid doing what's important for success.

Many traders, however, avoid thinking about self-sabotage in this manner because they don't like to go inside of themselves to see what is going on. They prefer to think technically about systems rather than notice what their beliefs are and whether or not they are useful. As a result of this tendency, I've developed another definition of self-sabotage that everyone can relate to: repeating the same mistake multiple times.

My definition of a mistake is when you don't follow your rules. And if you don't have rules, then everything you do is a mistake. And self-sabotage occurs when you keep repeating the same mistakes over and over and over again.

For example, you don't raise your stop when the market makes a new high. When you skip it once, and your rules say you must do it, then it's a mistake. When you do it three times in the same week, then it is self-sabotage. When you develop this attitude, can start keeping track of your mistakes and see how much they cost you.

For example, suppose you are about to be stopped out for a 1R loss. (The definition of a 1R loss and R-multiples in general is explained in my book Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom and there is a brief description in my Tharp Concepts section of the website.) You don't want to be stopped out, however, so you cancel the stop – which is your mistake. The position keeps going down and eventually you get out with a 3R loss. That mistake cost you 2R (i.e., instead of a 1R loss you got a 3R loss).

Now suppose you have a system that makes you 100% per year. However, you make a 2R mistake each week. At the end of the year, instead of being up 100%, you have lost money just because of your mistakes. Now can you begin to understand how trading reflects your behavior and that one of the critical things that you must do as a trader is to eliminate mistakes.

Dr. Van K Tharp
TradingEducation.com

RAM Euro Weekly

This week will see the ECB policymakers holding their key rate decision for November, with expectations for an unchanged decision most likely with the Central Bank maintaining its upside inflation bias. The ECB press conference following the rate decision will as usual be dissected word by word as the market looks for President Jean Claude Trichet to guide the market in the central banks thinking. Many market players will be paying close attention to the ECB’s stance on inflation with October’s reading unexpectedly rising to 2.6% it highest in two years and well above the central bank’s target of 2%.

Taking a look at recent ECB commentary:

Weber

  • Will do what is necessary to preserve price stability.
  • Risks to German growth have increased, but pessimism is unjustified.

Wellink

  • Still worried about inflation prospects.
  • No reason to expect EMU inflation expectations will change.

Quaden

  • Market turmoil has clouded Euro-Zone future.
  • ECB policy ready to counter inflation risks.

Ordonez

  • Still uncertain how long turbulence will last and its impact on growth.
  • Does not see 2007 Euro-Zone economic growth above 2.5%.

The recent ECB tone maintains the usual hawkish tone with the majority of members still concerned about the risk of inflation. It would seen that if it was not for the credit crisis then the central bank would have been in no doubt to continue its hiking cycle. However, one must bear in mind that with the second consecutive Fed cut last week and European growth starting to ease there are some more down side indicators for the ECB to consider than there were in the summer. ECB sources seen last week may then sum up the situation most appropriately with “economic uncertainty and growth risks will keep the ECB on hold” and “a rate hike possible, but more data needed”.

Important economic releases this week will start on Tuesday with EU PPI, EU retail sales and services PMIs. PPI is forecast to rise from the previous month and retail sales expected to have increased, driven by Germany. The advance estimate of services PMI are already released but more attention will be paid to the specific country breakdowns. Other notable releases this week are from Germany where we will see Factory Orders on Tuesday and Industrial Production on Wednesday.

RAN Energy Weekly Outlook

After selling off on Tuesday after a Goldman Sachs research note advising clients to take profits in crude futures, energy futures recovered to finish higher on the week. WTI gained 4.4% to settle at a new record of $95.93 a barrel on Friday, while heating oil futures likewise ended at a record $2.5737 a gallon. The main catalysts for the upward price action were a weakening dollar following the Fed’s ¼ pt rate cut on Wednesday, a second consecutive large draw in U.S. crude inventories (e.g. 3.9M barrels), further comments by OPEC against another output hike and renewed geopolitical concerns about Iran following a Daily Telegraph article on Friday saying that the U.K.’s Defence Ministry will deploy a Royal Navy aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Iran next year. Market attention this week is likely to remain on U.S. petroleum supplies as wintry like temperatures are expected by one private forecaster to move into the Northeast. Traders will also be looking out for any changes in OPEC’s stance on output ahead of the Riyadh Summit and on the EIA’s latest Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), which is due out on Tuesday.

Regarding the STEO, the EIA told Ransquawk last Thursday that the Administration is likely to raise its price forecasts for WTI crude futures from $68.84 per barrel for 2007 and $73.50 per barrel in 2008, given where current prices are. The analyst we spoke to would not say whether the EIA would cut its forecast for U.S. oil demand, but did acknowledge that U.S. petroleum products demand last week of 20.41M b/d was below the EIA’s view for 2007 of 20.8M b/d. He also said that last week’s decline in crude inventories is explained by the state of backwardation in the futures market, where no one wants to hold inventory at a time when product refining margins are poor. Lastly, the analyst echoed concerns expressed early last week by EIA Director, Caruso, about the effect of a cold winter - particularly in the Northeast - on tight U.S. supplies.


RAn U.S. Weekly Outlook

The U.S. economic data flow will moderate a bit this week, after a full calendar in the previous week. That doesn’t mean the importance of the data will do the same though. Last week’s FOMC policy statement was a clear indication that every single piece of data will be important to the outlook for monetary policy ahead of the December meeting. While the FOMC statement was a bit more hawkish than many market participants would have liked, there was nothing in the statement that indicated that the FOMC would not be willing to ease policy again in December, although there was nothing there that said it would either. Last week we saw the release of the October Employment Report, which reinforced our view that outside of the housing market weakness, there have been no clear indications of a major slowdown.

The blackout period ended on Friday, and the first Fed-speaker in this inter-meeting period that comes is Frederic Mishkin (Board of Governors, voter), who speaks on derivatives on Monday afternoon, London time. ISM non-Manufacturing on October will be released on Monday as will the Senior Loan Officer Survey, where we’ll probably see more negative news on the mortgage/credit market. Fed’s Kroszner (Board Of Governors, voter) speaks at 1700 on subprime mortgages. The Tuesday calendar will be filled with a speech by Fed Chairman Bernanke at 1730, the weekly chain store sales data where we’ll be looking for exactly how strong or weak the Halloween sales where. Finally, we’ll have the release of the ABC News/Washington Post Consumer Comfort Index.

Wednesday brings us Fed’s Lacker (Richmond, non-voter), who speaks on the role of the central bank at 1345. Fed’s Warsh (Board of Governors , voter) speaks at 1700, Lockhart (Atland, non-voter speaks at 1810. Datawise, we’ll see the quarterly Non-Farm Productivity report at 1330, September Wholesale Inventories at 1345 and Consumer Credit at 2000. On Thursday, we’ll see Initial Jobless Claims and more chain store sales data. Fed’s Bernanke speaks at the JEC at 1500.

The data calendar finishes up on Friday with the release of the September Trade Balance, the October Import Price Index both at 1330. We’ll also see the release of the November Preliminary U. Michigan Consumer Confidence Index and the IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index for November.

In terms of supply, we’ll see the results of the $13.0 billion 10-year note auction on Wednesday and the $5.0 billion 30-year reopening on Thursday. Both at 1800.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Trading Education.com FX update

The state of the US economy remained a key market influence and there was a notable deterioration in market confidence during the week.

The US data was generally weak with durable goods orders falling by a further 1.7% in September while the underlying increase was held to a weaker than expected 0.3%. The latest jobless claims data was also higher than expected at 331,000 for the latest reporting week, maintaining unease over labour-market trends.

The housing sector remained under pressure with existing home sales falling by a further 8.0% in September to give an annual rate of 5.04mn, the lowest rate since the current series started in 1999. There was a monthly recovery in new home sales, but this reflected a sharp downward revision to August’s data.

Markets moved to price in fully a 0.25% Federal Reserve interest rate cut next week while there was increased speculation over a second successive 0.50% rate cut.

Investment bank Merrill Lynch moved to increase its bad-debt write-downs in the latest week while there were rumours of substantial AIG losses which renewed credit fears in global markets.

At last weekend’s G7 talks, the US administration appeared to reject European calls that there should be a stronger statement opposing further dollar weakness against the Euro. G7 repeated their call that excessive exchange rate volatility should be avoided.

The Euro-zone PMI manufacturing index weakened significantly for the second month running with a decline to 51.5 in October which was the lowest reading for 26 months. The services-sector PMI was more robust with a monthly increase.

The German IFO index edged lower to 103.9 in October from 104.2 while the IFO institute was generally optimistic over economic trends. German consumer confidence weakened over the month.

x

The dollar strengthened to 1.4125 against the Euro on Monday, but then reversed course and was subjected to persistent selling pressure with a drop to a record low around 1.4375 on Friday. There were reports of strong sovereign Euro buying support which helped the currency regain ground.

The latest UK data recorded a slowdown in the housing sector with a drop in BBA mortgage approvals to 52,700 in September from 61,100 the previous month while overall mortgage lending also dropped.

The CBI survey recorded a significant deterioration with the orders component weakening to -6 in October from +6 previously while business confidence fell to a 20-month low.

MPC member Barker expressed caution over the immediate need for lower interest rates. The Bank of England, however, issued a cautious statement by pointing to commercial and financial-sector vulnerability to shocks. Markets continued to price in a rate cut within the next few months. Sterling moves remained correlated with global stock market moves and levels of risk aversion with choppy trading against the dollar.

Sterling was unable to sustain levels stronger than 0.6950 against the Euro. The UK currency found support below the 2.03 level against the dollar and climbed back to challenge levels above 2.05 as the US currency came under renewed selling pressure.

x

Commodity-related currencies secured important support during the week from the high level of commodity prices and the general loss of confidence in the US dollar. The Australian and Canadian dollars dipped early in the week, but the Australian dollar then pushed to highs above 0.91 against the US currency while the Canadian dollar strengthened to a 33-year high near 0.96.

The Japanese corporate services prices index rose 1.4% in the year to September, but there was no significant shift in interest rate expectations as core consumer prices fell 0.1% over the year.

The Japanese yen moves were correlated strongly with moves in global stock markets with the yen securing some support from a firmer tone in Asian currencies and persistent upward pressure on the Chinese yuan.

The yen traded within a 113.30 – 115.0 range against the dollar during the week and there was a increase in volatility against the Euro with the yen weakening beyond 164.0 on Friday.

Have a great day and a wonderful weekend.

Position and market update

Another down week for the USD. Forget dollar bottoming. Seems as if the US powers that be just dont care about dollar strength. But you know who cares even less? No, not just me, but ENTIRE world. Some will argue that weak dollar policy is good for economy. I am not a fundamental trader and I have no conclusive thoughts on the dollar strength. All i care is about a trend and a what a nice trend we have.

In terms of my trading for the week here are my thoughts. Easy to say, looking back I would have liked to enter in more positions that I did. For the most part I stuck to my plans. The positions I exited early and did not take would have been in my favor now. It's easy to look back and say that. Discipline, Discipline, Discipline. I am more confident then ever in my strategy. It proves me right week after week.

I am still short usd/chf. I am waiting for some set ups in gbp/chf (market has not determined a trend yet).

I am waiting for pull backs in usd/cad, eur,cad to go short. I am waiting on pullbacks in eur/usd and gbp/usd to go long.

Overall this is a great market if your on the right side. The key is to identify the trend and stick to your plan.

Now its party time, TGIF.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Position Update

I exited gbp/cad for a 5 pip loss
I maintain my usd/chf short.

I dont really see any great set ups out there at this time...The GBP/CHF is looking like we could have a set up long over the next couple of days.