Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

Recommended Posts

In my experience, there is a slight (sometimes more profound) "personality change" that occurs during the summer months. Liquidity seems to be a bit lower and range-bound plays more abundant. The propensity for currencies to break major ranges is lessened during the summer, which of course makes sense if the liquidity is lower. But other than that, summer months can be just as profitable as any other. The activity (or lack thereof) we've seen in the last week has probably been more related to this upcoming FOMC statement than anything else. Ranges usually contract in the days leading up to the FOMC statement, just as they do prior to the release of other major news items (NFP). They then break out following the news events and resume somewhat of a more normal daily range. I've grown to despise FOMC statements specifically because of the lack of volatility that precedes them. But it always returns in the days that follow.

 

Happy hunting to you all.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
It's normally a little lighter on bodies May thru July Sledge. Various combinations of them scoot off to take advantage of the hospitality marquee's at Roland Garros, Queens & Wimbledon.

Art:

:o I'm not sure if I am more envious of them being able to take advantage of seeing such events, or feel bad that you are still at the helm back at base camp answering my silly inquiry.

 

Cowpip:

I have noticed that any time an FOMC decsion looms the markets go into slumber- then they act like a drunken monkey for a few days afterwards, trying to get their bearings again. Nice observation to point out!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Looks like the worry-warts came back in the market today. It wouldn't surprise me if we saw the Fed-heads crawl out of their holes in the very near future to try and limit the carnage. The question is, will anyone trust them? Have they shot all of their bullets? All they can do is what?... cut rates again after having just finished signaling that they're in a holding pattern? Hmmm.... that sounds eerily familiar. :bad idea:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Looks like the worry-warts came back in the market today. It wouldn't surprise me if we saw the Fed-heads crawl out of their holes in the very near future to try and limit the carnage. The question is, will anyone trust them? Have they shot all of their bullets? All they can do is what?... cut rates again after having just finished signaling that they're in a holding pattern? Hmmm.... that sounds eerily familiar. :bad idea:

 

I'll second that- hard to take a nice longer term long on a currency pair that is destined to do so- with all the pansy selling going on. But eh, looks like the pickings are ripe to get in nice and low on GBP/CHF :o

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Looks like the worry-warts came back in the market today. It wouldn't surprise me if we saw the Fed-heads crawl out of their holes in the very near future to try and limit the carnage. The question is, will anyone trust them? Have they shot all of their bullets? All they can do is what?... cut rates again after having just finished signaling that they're in a holding pattern? Hmmm.... that sounds eerily familiar. :bad idea:

 

They can't cut rates imo... that would only send prices even higher, causing more inflationary pressures and creating a vicious circle... In the end the question is, does it matter?

 

btw, Torero started an interesting thread:

http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/f18/definition-of-stagflation-in-wikipedia-4034.html?highlight=fiscal+policy

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
But eh, looks like the pickings are ripe to get in nice and low on GBP/CHF :o

 

You're prob better off running that pair via the shorter hourly studies back & forth off it's near-end s&r boundaries if you really have the urge to take it on.

 

Recent avg weekly range prints are lacklustre to say the least, with this week registering a dour 73% of it's norm.

 

2nd quarter play on this baby has definitely dealt to the continued short bias, with 2.0180-220 a bit of a magnet.

 

A pop under this flimsy floor here at that zone & a sniff at the early month lows would shake it up a little.

 

Topside, I guess you're lookin at nibbles back thru 2.0410 (mid) & 2.0565-90 (top) of this sluggish range.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Art-

Thanks for the insight, quick pops on all currencies seem to be the better route to take as of late. None of them seem to have the balls to pick a strong direction and stick with it.

 

I'l be sure to check my S&R's and be sure they match up with the levels you have posted.

Aaron

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I'll be sure to check my S&R's and be sure they match up with the levels you have posted.

 

I guess your wages are tucked safely in the satchel off those levels this week for sure ;)

Probing that lower floor zone again into late NY traffic. Like Krantzy said, should shake a little dust off the early June sub 2.0000 number if they shout loud enough.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I guess your wages are tucked safely in the satchel off those levels this week for sure ;)

Probing that lower floor zone again into late NY traffic. Like Krantzy said, should shake a little dust off the early June sub 2.0000 number if they shout loud enough.

 

Tess-

Good to see you back. Yeah $ is banked for now. With trading tonight looking pretty lean with the upcoming holdiay- may be a "tradeless night" going down.

 

Looking over the currency buffet- it appears most of the good fruit is picked over- only renegade pips and gambler trades for tiny scalps left-- I'll leave those for the desperate :o

Aaron

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I guess you don't pay very close att'n to your fundamental sheets or stay abreast of what actually is going on out there, otherwise you'd know why it was biased heavily to the short side regardless of whether they hiked or remained in neutral.

 

Go get yourself up to speed on the background to these pairs & the real drivers of the currency market. Then you can maybe stand an evens chance of playing ball with both hands instead of one ;)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
hi all bless traders. please someone explain why euro/usd dropped after announcement of rate hike to 4.25% ?

 

thanks so much for your reply. be bless always

 

Look back on this thread and study it- that is the best advice I can give. We are very lucky to have a very smart and great bunch of folks who have a lot of experience here that are offering steallar advice to get you to where you need to be in your trading.

Sledge

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I don't see why people have to respond with rude comments regarding a beginners inquiry. TL is not elite trader and people are supposed to help people over here. Any way the reason Eur fell hard on the rate hike is because some people had thought they would hike one more time. Mr. Trichet signaled that its very unlikely they will hike again so that caused the Eur to fall. If I can offer some advice don't concern yourself with why something is dropping only concern yourself that it is dropping. Fundamentals just get in the way of trading. I think the secret of this business is risk management and to ignore all news flow. Simply offset a few minutes before release time. Let the market digest the data and then wait for a trigger that will let you initiate a trade.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Fundamentals just get in the way of trading.

 

I think the secret of this business is risk management and to ignore all news flow.

 

Oh boy, I've heard it all now :o :o

What ship did you sail in on??

 

You got the risk management part down ok, but it appears you're getting your legs all tangled up with your generic fundamentals & specific news flow releases?!?

 

As for being rude?? I thought it was a perfectly polite straight up & down comment. I'd grow another skin if I were you buster :)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If I can offer some advice don't concern yourself with why something is dropping only concern yourself that it is dropping.

 

Fundamentals just get in the way of trading.

 

Those are pretty short sighted views if you ask me. Little wonder most retailers get so easily spooked & muscled out of decent (potential) core positions most of the time.

 

Whether you like it or not, your technical set-ups are the result of fundamental flows. You can dress it up however you want (sentiment runs…psychological herding…supply demand imbalance etc), but the core drivers are numbers & data - pure & simple.

 

I would have thought if someone was even half serious about making consistent long term profits in FX they’d at least familiarize themselves with what drives these instruments on a week to week basis & why?

 

After all, if you’re looking to build a core position & aggressively compound via appropriate pullbacks and/or consolidation phases, you’re going to action those kinda trades if you possess a better than average handle on the fundamentals/drivers, & more importantly who is jostling for the ideal position & why.

 

In my book that’s what separates the earners from the (constant) learners.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Dear, Mr Krantz I have to politely disagree with you. It is possible to derive an edge and be successful in the foreign exchange marketplace while systematically ignoring data releases and long term economic fundamentals. It may not be the best idea but its possible. Many beginners think they need to deeply understand the macroeconomic outlook ,read the wall street journal every mourning, and surf the websites like bloomberg and reuters for news updates. This is simply not true. The following is in essence the concept that I'm trying to illustrate. This quote is from a professional that I personally respect greatly John Person.

 

"You are not so much concerned with long-term macroeconomic situations as you are with riding a momentum wave. Granted, it helps to have a good understanding of fundamental conditions; but for the most part, you

are looking to ride a move and profit from it. That is your job. In short-term trading, conditions change; and you need to capture opportunities as they become present."

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Well, I guess you can respect/believe who you wish to, that’s of no concern to me. These vendor/sales/public trader type folks have a vested interest in getting their PR out to the masses, but that’s a whole other slugfest.

 

I certainly don’t disagree with your point about possessing an edge in your instrument/market of choice, but we’re not discussing trading edges.

 

Anyhow, I don’t see why a balanced diet of fundamental & technical knowledge can’t greatly enhance an edge, especially a beginners outlook. But then that involves a bit of (extra) hard work & application.

 

arifwise was scratching his head, totally oblivious as to why Euro popped to the downside on the back of the recent rates hike.

 

He was advised (rightly in my opinion) to go broaden his outlook & research base. That would undoubtedly offer him a little more confidence & structure to his trade planning, which would knock-onto, & compliment his technical awareness.

 

Tess wasn’t expecting him to enrol into an Economics degree course at his local college, but it wouldn’t do him (or anyone else, come to that) too much harm to become better acquainted with the key generic events which affect & drive these currency instruments on a regular basis.

 

I guess each individual will eventually decide how much armour they require to get the job done. But I know which trader I’d rather have in my corner when push comes to shove.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I'm afraid Art and Tess are right about this.

 

Look at it this way, idaxtrader: Anyone can drive a car without any lessons. They just need to be told what key to turn, what pedals to push, and what the steering wheel does. Some people will get along just fine with that information. But shove them into New York City during rush hour and they'll be mashed-potato soup in short-order. Sure, they could drive - anyone can, but CAN THEY NAVIGATE? Of course not. Not without some serious additional information and instructions on how to use that information.

 

The more information and knowledge you have to navigate by, the better your driving will become. It's that simple.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Yes, I thought Tess was polite and non-condescending. As for the fundamental analysis, you're right that it may not serve the short- and medium-term trader but a basic understanding the mechanics of why things move they way they do is warranted. Of course, after that, markets may move in the opposite direction, that is where your experience comes in as trader to guide you to make the right decision. Some people do well just using technicals while combine both.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I personally think Tess was prtty abrupt, but then again so is the market ;) And she's 100% right in saying that a thick skin is needed to take the knocks.

 

But fwiw Art's answer was imho the better talking point.

 

GJ

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

to all bless traders. pray all of you are being guided and making money so that you are an agent of change to so many people and bring smiles and cheers everywhere you set foot.

 

I feel so much gratitude and grateful to all of you for advising and giving your motivational inputs in helping to be cleared of the eur/usd reaction after the rate hike.

 

I see on the technical that eur/usd supposed should go down but undecided due the the fact that rate will be hike and end-up watching the screen.

 

Well, may all of you be bless always. I am so thankful to everyone and the feel is something like hitting a jackpot of 500 pips in a week !

 

Thanks again

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I see on the technical that eur/usd supposed should go down but undecided due the the fact that rate will be hike and end-up watching the screen.

 

Well, may all of you be bless always. I am so thankful to everyone and the feel is something like hitting a jackpot of 500 pips in a week !

 

Arifwise, if you really are "wise," you'll do exactly what you said, and WATCH THE SCREEN. Watch and watch and watch some more... and then when you get sick of watching, watch the screens even more. If you really want 500 pips in a week, expect to spend the next few years WATCHING. I wouldn't trade with real cash anytime soon either. You should be paper trading for a good long time before you try cash.

 

PS: A little less "blessings" would sure be nice. I'm fine without them, thank you. ;)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

hi all.

 

Its my faith, " the more we give the more we receive in return". Thats being the law of nature. I always feel bless and in deep gratitude. To certain extend, there were few incidents known acquitances and friends tried catching me off-guard. Some of them followed me literally 24 hours just to see me non-blessing and beind non-thankful. In so far I am okay and they still failed.

 

Life is so beautiful and wonderful..........

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Similar Content

    • By Jonh Smith
      I searched in google with keywords best forex robot 2019 and in the end I found fxflightproEA from their website fxflightpro.com . if anyone has ever bought, I was interested in their ea. I saw a very small drawdown, and monthly profit looks great.and I see myfxbook profit reaching 50% in 50 days. if there are buy please review here and I say thank you if anyone would like to share here.

      thanks
    • By StraussX
      Hi GUYS, Happy Wednesday!
      I'd like to share daily forex analysis from Followme, hope this information helps your trading.
      Today, Let's focus on AUD and NZD.
      AUDUSD is trading at 0.6761; the instrument is moving below Ichimoku Cloud, thus indicating a descending tendency. The markets could indicate that the price may test the cloud’s downside border at 0.6765 and then resume moving downwards to reach 0.6635. Another signal to confirm further descending movement is the price’s rebounding from the descending channel’s upside border. However, the scenario that implies further decline may be canceled if the price breaks the cloud’s upside border and fixes above 0.6825. In this case, the pair may continue growing towards 0.6905.
       
      NZDUSD is trading at 0.6447; the instrument is moving below Ichimoku Cloud, thus indicating a descending tendency. The markets could indicate that the price may test the cloud’s downside border at 0.6455 and then resume moving downwards to reach 0.6315. Another signal to confirm further descending movement is the price’s rebounding from the resistance level. However, the scenario that implies further decline may be canceled if the price breaks the cloud’s upside border and fixes above 0.6525. In this case, the pair may continue growing towards 0.6645.
    • By Georgebro8
      So I've been 18 for about 4 months, since I turned 18 I started up an account, and basically thought I was doing amazing because of beginners luck, put in some of my savings and managed to do well, some days I would make £200, one day I even made £900, after time I lost my profits and made a loss as well. I've realised I need to spend the time analysing the market and making technical judgments. I'm trying to read more and spend a lot of my time looking at the charts. is there any advice people can give me. and is making 5% a week a realistic goal to set myself? before anyone assumes that im looking for a get rich quick scheme, im certainly not, I see every loss ive made as a lesson and ensure that I learn from each mistake I make. 
      any advice about indicators, strategies, how to analyse the market, or even analysing earning reports would help me.
    • By edakad
      Firebird is an indicator to identify the price spikes in the market. Firebird indicator first calculates a 10-period moving average, then shifts this moving average a certain percentage above and below the 10-period moving average. The shifted averages are drawn on chart as the red and green line. When price touches these lines, price spike is identified. Usually after a price spike, the trend reverses for some time. The indicator can be used to take advantage of this price behaviors. In daily chart usually the 10 period MA is shifted by 2 percent to form the price bands. On lower time frames like Hourly, Four Hour a smaller percentage price shift is used like 0.5% . The important consideration here is most of the price bars must be contained within the upper and lower bands.
      When price reaches above the upper red band, a sell position is opened. When price reaches the lower green band, buy position is opened. Trades can be managed with proper stop loss and take profit. In the picture, Firebird indicator is attached to daily chart of EUR/USD with 2% shift on MA. Note that almost all price bars are within the price bands. And when price extends beyond these bands, price trend reverses and comes back into the bands.

      FireBird.zip
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Date: 25th November 2024. New Secretary Cheers Markets; Trump Trade Eased. Asia & European Sessions:   Equities and Treasuries rise, as markets view Donald Trump’s choice of Scott Bessent for Treasury Secretary as a stabilizing decision for the US economy and markets. Bessent: Head of macro hedge fund Key Square Group, supports Trump’s tax and tariff policies but gradually. He is expected to focus on economic and market stability rather than political gains. His nomination alleviates concerns over protectionist policies that could escalate inflation, trade tensions, and market volatility. Asian stocks rose, driven by gains in Japan, South Korea, and Australia. Chinese equities fail to follow regional trends, presenting investors’ continued disappointment by the lack of strong fiscal measures to boost the economy. The PBOC keeps policy loan rates unchanged after the September cut. US futures also see slight increases. 10-year Treasury yields fall by 5 basis points to 4.35%. Nvidia dropped 3.2%, affected by its high valuation and influence on broader market trends. Intuit fell 5.7% after a disappointing earnings forecast. Meta Platforms declined 0.7% following the Supreme Court’s decision to allow a class action lawsuit over the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Key events this week: Japan’s CPI, as the BOJ signals a possible policy change at December’s meeting. RBNZ expected to cut its key rate on Wednesday. CPI & GDP from Europe will be released. Traders will focus on the Fed’s November meeting minutes, along with consumer confidence and personal consumption expenditure data, to assess potential rate cuts next year. Financial Markets Performance: The US Dollar declines as US Treasuries climb. Bitcoin recovers from a weekend drop, hovering around 98,000, having more than doubled in value this year. Analysts suggest consolidation around the 100,000 level before any potential breakthrough. EURUSD recovers slightly to 1.0463 from 1.0320 lows. Oil prices drop after the largest weekly increase in nearly two months, with ongoing geopolitical risks in Ukraine and the Middle East. UKOIL fell below $75 a barrel, while USOILis at $70.35. Iran announced plans to boost its nuclear fuel-making capacity after being censured by the UN, increasing the potential for sanctions under Trump’s administration. Israel’s ambassador to the US indicated a potential cease-fire deal with Hezbollah, which could ease concerns about Middle Eastern oil production, a region supplying about a third of the world’s oil. Russia’s war in Ukraine escalated with longer-range missile use, raising concerns about potential disruptions to crude flows. Citigroup and JPMorgan predict that OPEC may delay a planned increase in production for the third time during their meeting this weekend. Gold falls to $2667.45 after its largest rise in 20 months last week.Swaps traders see a less-than-even chance the central bank will cut rates next month. Higher borrowing costs tend to weigh on gold, as it doesn’t pay interest. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business. Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report. Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar. Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE! Click HERE to READ more Market news. Andria Pichidi HFMarkets Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in FX and CFDs products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • SNAP stock, big day off support at https://stockconsultant.com/?SNAP
    • SBUX Starbucks stock, nice breakout, from Stocks to Watch at https://stockconsultant.com/?SBUX
    • INTC Intel stock settling at 24.25 double support area at https://stockconsultant.com/?INTC
    • CORZ Core Scientific stock, strong close, watch for a top of range breakout above 18.32 at https://stockconsultant.com/?CORZ
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.