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Hollande and Sarkozy in Shift of Power

05/06/2012 in EURO, Uncategorized

Francois Hollande defeated French President Nicolas Sarkozy as voters handed control of the second-biggest European economy to the Socialists for the first time in 17 years.
The 57-year-old Hollande got about 52 percent against about 48 percent for Sarkozy, according to estimates by pollsters CSA and Harris Interactive. The campaign isn’t over; France elects its lower house of parliament in five weeks.

The challenger inherits an economy that is barely growing, with jobless claims at their highest in 12 years and a rising debt load that makes France vulnerable to the financial crisis that has rocked the euro region the past two years. Sarkozy became the ninth euro leader to fall in that time and the first French president in 30 years to fail to win re-election.
“Hollande’s bet was that rejection of Nicolas Sarkozy was enough to get him elected,” Dominique Reynie, senior researcher at Paris’s Institute of Political Studies, said before the vote. “The message was that if you don’t like Sarkozy then I’m your best bet.”
Sarkozy’s departure may sharpen tensions with key allies as Hollande has advocated a more aggressive European Central Bank role in spurring growth — a measure opposed by Germany — and an accelerated withdrawal from Afghanistan.
While Socialists stand ready to dominate policy making for the first time since 1993 — holding both the presidency and the Cabinet — bond yields suggest Hollande may maintain market confidence. Ten-year French debt yields 124 basis points more than comparable German securities. That’s down from 145 basis points after he won the first round April 22 and lower than the 133 basis points at the start of the year.

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Morgan Stanley Shorts EUR/USD At 1.3300

02/23/2012 in EURO, Trading, Trading Forex

(Dow Jones via eFXnews) Morgan Stanley shorts EUR/USD at 1.3300 and will continue selling on rebounds. “Though a finalisation of the Greek bailout and PSI deals has spurred near-term optimism, we warn that implementation risks still loom high.

Furthermore, harsh fiscal austerity risks putting a number of European peripheral countries into a deep recession, pressuring debt/GDP ratios higher.”

The euro also faces downside risks to the upcoming 3-year LTRO next week, MS says. From 1.33, Morgan Stanley is targeting EUR/USD at 1.2390 with a 1.3460 stop.

Meanwhile the bank issues a cautionary note on commodity currencies . “It appears as if good news was already priced into high-beta currencies, consequently commodity currencies barely reacted,” says the bank.

Morgan Stanley Shorts EUR/USD At 1.3300 (full story)

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Greek troubles remain, EUR/USD Strengthens

01/26/2012 in EURO, Trading, Trading Forex

Open 1.3110 High 1.3120 Low 1.2929 Close 1.3105

On Wednesday, 25th January, 2012 Euro/Dollar increased significantly with 190 pips. The Euro appreciated from 1.2929 to 1.3120, matching the positive Interbank sentiment projection at almost +10%.

A break above the resistance and yesterday’s top at 1.3120 may trigger further strengthening of the Euro. Going bellow yesterday’s low at 1.2929, would confirm continuation of the bearish trend, towards 1.2818.

Today’s focus is on France and Italy Consumer confidence, at 7:45 and 9 GMT respectively.

Technical resistance: 1.3120 1.3237 1.3360
Technical support: 1.2929 1.2818 1.2700

Trading range: 1.2995 – 1.3170

Trend: Upward

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Euro Bounce May Find Added Fuel In Flash PMI Data

01/24/2012 in EURO, Trading, Trading Forex

Looking ahead, the focus turns to January’s preliminary set of Eurozone PMI figures, with consensus forecasts calling for narrow improvements.

The region-wide composite PMI reading is expected to rise to 48.5 in January from 48.3 in the previous month, meaning both the manufacturing and service sectors shrank at a slower pace.

While this hardly sounds like something that ought to make investors overly cheerful, the results offer a bit of additional fodder for the corrective Euro rebound to continue as over-stretched net-short positioning is unwound ahead of next week’s EU leaders’ summit (which likely explains the sanguine response to continued impasse on Greek PSI negotiations ).

Speculative bets on Euro weakness hit another record high last week according to data from the CFTC.

Source.

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The Fair Value of The Euro

04/24/2008 in EURO, General, JPY, USD

As a trader I think that Fair value for the Euro is 1.15/1.20!
We been under value at 0.82 on October, 2001, and now over value at 1.60. the balance line is 1.17.

That’s make the euro over value by 25% against the dollar. While the dollar at fair value against most asia ccys.

Asian currencies have been falling vs EUR with market focused on fall in USD past 6-9 months. While USD has fallen vs both G10, emerging market currencies, EUR has absorbed a very large part of USD decline. Since start of turmoil in July 2007, EUR has risen about 14%. Asian currencies have fallen on average about 10% vs EUR; even “strong” Asian performers like SGD, MYR, TWD, CNY have fallen more than 5% vs EUR on average, though fundamental backdrop for these currencies is stronger than that for EUR. Notes a fair few Asian currencies are managed; while officials are willing to tolerate more gains to combat inflation they “are still not allowing for fast and volatile moves.” Also, EUR often considered safe and very liquid proxy to trade USD decline story. If anything, EUR gains vs Asian FX have led to “more pronounced fundamental imbalances between Asia and Europe”; Asian currencies very undervalued vs EUR: By about 25% according to its valuation framework. Asia also has more favourable external position than Euroland with less reliance on trade to U.S. last few years. Inflation is on rise in Asia, triggering need for tighter monetary policy. Has long TWD vs basket of 50% EUR and 50%.

Goldman Sachs

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make money in the “imperfections” of Forex moves

02/20/2007 in EURO, GBP, General, USD

If supposed that a trader open pair positions in multiple currencies, long and short in direct currencies and long and long or short and short in indirect currencies: for example USD/CHF long and EURO/USD long at the same time and same lot size.
The Sum of the P/L of these two positions changes and when the total Sum of these two pairs reach to a specific profit, trader closes both positions at the same time. So in this strategy positions are always in hedge condition and have very low risk than other cases.
Why? Simply because correlation is important and they do not move in tandem accurately 100% of the time. And you can make money in these imperfections
Yes you could miss great opportunities to make a lot of money, but more important is that you will be stopped out less often.
Capital preservation is primordial and more important it all depends of your attitude towards risk.
It is not perfect but it works as long as you plan your trade and trade your plan.
I`ve tried this with EUR/USD and GBP/USD also with EUR/GBP and EUR/CHF daily trend as a base indicators.
This strategy worked 60% for me. Another 20% with ~0 profit, based on the SL/TP ratio (usually stop loses are far lower than take profits, but GBP moves have a higher amplitude. If one trade is wrong then SL is hit and that trade stopped, while the another trade is going its way until take profit is hit or trade is closed in advantage area).
20% of trades are unprofitable and want to say here that these 20% of loser will “eat” ~45% of earnings in total.
Statistics of this study:
Trades: 18 (*2) = 36
Time frame: 3 months.
Winners 11 (*2) trades. 11 wins, 11 loses. But the final result for every pair is a win.
50/50 7 trades.
7 losers, both pairs. All seven times first was hit one “stop loss”, then market turns back and hits another stop lose.
All stop loses were at 35-40 pips, TPs at 70-110 pips.

Advantage – ~2.5%/month of capital without stress.
Disadvantage – very long time frame, and low(?) level of earnings.