Trade Opportunity EURUSD
Posted on Wednesday, April 13th, 2011 at 9:45 am.
The Euro is currently range bounce between 1.4510 and 1.4453. Most other currencies traded against the USD have seen some losses over the last 2 days except the EUR and CHF. I think this presents a great opportunity to get in on a EURUSD trade. Look for a break of 1.4453 on the 1 hr chart. Preferrably during the London session and the look to ride it down to 1.4400 or beyond.
EurGbp Breakout
Posted on Wednesday, April 21st, 2010 at 3:42 pm.
Dr. Blythe here,
Hey guys, I am watching the EurGbp currency pair with great anticipation. There is a large pendant formation on the daily chart this is about to breakout. This will be a great trading opportunity this week. I am currently waiting for the daily candle to close and confirm the breakout. There is a very strong s/r line at 0.8646 which will be a good place to target. Happy Trading.
Consolidation and the Cad
Posted on Tuesday, April 13th, 2010 at 3:59 pm.
The UsdCad right now is setting up for what I believe will be an excellent breakout. On the day time frame, for the last 5 candles we have had lots of downward pressure created from the quick downward swinging market. This is very visible on the hourly time frame, semi slow upward movement followed by huge red candlestick dropping down, which has created those downward pushing big wicked candles on the daily chart. This combined with a very nice little consolidation area tells me we should have a breakout very soon, and if it goes short, we should be able to take the trade for a pretty large profit. Two things I’m using for a breakout both on the hourly time frame. First, there is a clear trendline with points of support on the 7th, the 9th, and just two hours ago. If it breaks the trendline I will consider entering. Second yesterday’s low which is at 1.0009, if we get a close beyond there, I’m in. Now it’s just a waiting game for that breakout, good luck with this one and I wish you guys the best with your trades!
EurGbp current trading setup
Posted on Tuesday, April 13th, 2010 at 3:47 pm.
Right now the market is about 1 hour from getting our new pivots for Tuesday the 14th of March. The Eur/Gbp is completing a double bottom that it has been forming for the last two days. This is visible on the hourly time frame in the same support hit twice and on the daily time frame as two apposing candles with major upward pressure. I really like the setup on this right now and am simply waiting for the neckline breakout on the hourly time chart and I will trade back to the fibo level or the daily gap.
Possible top out
Posted on Wednesday, March 31st, 2010 at 1:58 pm.
UsdJpy is right now at a major s and r level day chart wise. Look for the ascending triangle or wedge forming 1 hour chart. We will be talking about this pair on tonight’s session. Make sure to attend if possible. Look for a breakout one way or the other. We had a nice one the other day, and I hope to have again an easy trade on this pair.
continuation with the AUDUSD
Posted on Tuesday, March 30th, 2010 at 5:47 am.
The AUDUSD has really come back hard and is not going to weaken yet. This currency at this time has alot of momentum but now is showing signs that it has slowed down a bit. So we are either going to see 3 things happen with the AUDUSD currency pair. it’s either going to consolidate, retrace or continue the trend. You probably heard it a thousand time the trend is your friend. So at the moment with this pair i would look for reason for buy positions.
Usd Jpy
Posted on Monday, March 29th, 2010 at 1:56 pm.
Major consolidation. Just waiting for a breakout either way. If the move is Long, taking it near the WR1 for my tp. It is in a one trend two trend so if it breakouts short, going to the original trend. Every hour I will be looking at it until liftoff!
GBPUSD
Posted on Thursday, March 25th, 2010 at 5:48 pm.
The GBPUSD has just completed the 4th wave of the Elliot Wave Theory. As of now I am waiting for confirmation that the 5th wave is beginning and will be taking this pair short to around 1.46 even. I have already taken several positions on this one and am awaiting a retest of the daily pivot point before getting in at around 1.4882. I will then be looking for just under 300 pips for a profit target on that position not to mention multiple positions along the way, looking to bank in over 1000 pips on this Currency move.
Yen Consolidation
Posted on Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010 at 11:08 pm.
Dr. Blythe here,
How about the consolidation on the USD JPY currency pair over the past few weeks? The longer the market consolidates, usually the better the move on the other side will be. So keep your eyes on this pair. Also continue your forex education every chance to get by joining us in Chart Therapy for the open of the major sessions, London, New York and Tokyo.
GBP gain some strengh
Posted on Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 at 6:18 am.
March 16 European finance ministers laid the groundwork for a financial lifeline to debt-stricken Greece, breaking a taboo against aid to cash-strapped governments in order to avert a crisis for the euro.
Officials from the 16 countries using the currency worked out a strategy for emergency loans in case Greece’s plan for 4.8 billion euros ($6.6 billion) in tax increases and wage cuts fails to stave off fiscal disaster.
“We clarified the technical arrangements that would enable us to take coordinated action which could be swiftly put into place in the event it is necessary,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters late yesterday after leading a meeting of euro-area finance officials in Brussels.
With the euro undergoing the harshest test in its 11-year history, the unprecedented pledge reflected concern that Greece’s budget woes could spread, poisoning investor confidence and aggravating the currency’s 10 percent decline against the dollar since November.
The meetings resumed at 9 a.m. today with all 27 EU finance ministers. The agenda also includes proposals to clamp down on hedge funds and credit-default swaps.
Aid to Greece would probably come through governments pooling funds to extend direct loans, said a European official who asked not to be named. The meeting didn’t resolve the size of future loans, which countries would offer them or how long they would last and cost.
Financial Stability
“The objective would not be to provide financing at average euro-zone interest rates, but to safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole,” the ministers said in a statement.
Greek bonds gained, pushing the 10-year yield down 4 basis points to 6.17 percent. The 10-year German yield rose 1 basis point to 3.16 percent. That trimmed the extra yield on Greek over German bonds to 300 basis points, the lowest since March 5.
“The clear hope is that the mere promise of support will reassure investors enough to bring Greek bond yields down further,” said Ben May, an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. “But if this does not happen, euro-zone governments will come under greater pressure to provide further details.”
What would trigger the lending also was left open. Loan guarantees wouldn’t be part of the package, Juncker said. Final decisions will be up to EU leaders, though not necessarily at their next scheduled summit on March 25-26, he said.
‘Effective Premium’
“There is no loan facility at the moment,” Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado said before today’s session. “If this is the case, I’m sure all the euro countries will be there.”
Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager said any contribution from the Netherlands would require “an effective premium on top of the cost of funding so that there will be also an incentive for Greece to refinance through the markets.”
Appeals for aid to Greece have raised hackles in Germany, the country behind the low-debt, anti-inflation policies that make the euro what the German high court said must be a “community of stability.”
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who last week called for the expulsion of uncompetitive, debt-prone countries from the euro, quit his hospital bed two weeks after undergoing surgery to attend the meeting. He didn’t speak to reporters yesterday.
‘Tricky Game’
“It’s a very tricky game for politicians right now,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING Group in Brussels who used to work at the European Commission. “They have to play for time.”
While Greece this month sold 5 billion euros in bonds, it faces more than 20 billion euros in debt redemptions in April and May.
Doubts that Greece will tame Europe’s largest deficit on its own contributed to declines in German bonds last week amid concern that Europe’s largest economy will bear the bulk of the costs of a rescue package.
“What will happen if necessary, and we’re still convinced it won’t be necessary, is that we’ll reach an agreement in the euro zone to offer bilateral aid in a coordinated form,” Juncker said.
The euro weakened 0.7 percent to $1.3677 yesterday on concern that a protracted battle over a financial backstop for Greece would expose the flaws in how Europe manages the $12 trillion economy. It traded at $1.3673 at 9:20 a.m. Brussels time today.
‘Excessive’ Drop
“The euro is certainly not in danger,” European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told Euronews. “But we must not be complacent.”
The currency will rebound from the “excessive” drop as concern ebbs that Greece will default, JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts including Jan Loeys, global head of market strategy in London, wrote in a March 12 research note. The euro may rally to $1.42 in the “short term,” they predicted.
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou’s bid to cut the deficit to 8.7 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 from 12.7 percent last year hinges on quelling the unrest that led last week to the year’s second general strike.
More than 60 percent of Greeks back the austerity plans, while more than 52 percent doubt they’ll work, according to a Marc poll published this week in To Ethnos newspaper.
Greece’s Deficit
Greece’s deficit for the first two months of this year dropped 77 percent to 903 million euros, the Finance Ministry said on March 12.
Greece’s belt-tightening steps won the EU’s seal of approval, with Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn hailing the “very bold and ambitious package of measures.”
The risk that Greece will be unable to repay its bond investors may be exaggerated, according to Standard & Poor’s.
“Capital markets have been overshooting relative to Greece’s fundamentals,” Moritz Kraemer, Frankfurt-based managing director of European sovereign ratings at S&P, said yesterday. “Greece’s default is very unlikely.”
