Friday, April 8, 2016

This is what could create some turbulence Friday

  Fed officials from different camps speak ahead of Friday's Wall Street open, and they could make some waves in already seasick markets.

Market nerves are starting to get a little frayed right now. You can see it in the risk markets  there's potential (for market impact). What's been interesting to me is you've had a parade of Fed officials some of whom are extremely dovish, and they've been a whole lot less pessimistic and a lot less dovish than (Fed Chair) Janet Yellen, since the last meeting."
Speaking on Friday is New York Fed President William Dudley, who is seen as closely aligned with Yellen — in the dove camp. He speaks at 8:30 a.m. EDT on the regional and national economy in Connecticut. Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker gives remarks at an investment conference in Camden, New Jersey, at 9 a.m. EDT, and he has recently called for the central bank to get on with rate hikes. Dallas Fed President Rob Kaplan speaks later on the political economy of Texas and Mexico at 9:30 a.m. EDT.
Unfortunately they seem in muddled message mode right now,. Markets will also digest the comments of more hawkish Kansas City Fed President Esther George, who was to speak Thursday evening. George is the one member who dissented at the last central bank meeting, when it voted to keep rates unchanged.
There will also be comments to consider from Yellen herself, plus her last three predecessors, at an unprecedented panel discussion Thursday evening. 
Yellen said Thursday that the U.S. economy is strong and said it is not a bubble economy. She reiterated that the Fed is taking a cautious approach on raising rates and said the Fed's rate hike in December was not a mistake.
Her comments Thursday evening were viewed as more optimistic than in her appearance last week, and they helped support risk markets, including oil. Now the question is which way will the next speakers lean



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Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Brexit: GBP COULD FALL A FURTHER 15-20% vs USD




A Brexit vote could lead investors to worry about the UK’s ‘twin deficits’. To date, these have largely been ignored by the FX market. Brexit could raise concerns and Mark Carney, the BoE Governor, recently warned that Brexit could leave the UK reliant on “the kindness of strangers” in an environment of global economic volatility.

Already a gap has opened up between the observed level of sterling and the level implied by interest rate differentials. If the currency market is pricing in around a 33% probability of a Brexit vote, GBP-USD could fall by around another 15-20% should a Brexit vote occur (i.e. if the probability shifted from 33% to 100%). This would see GBP-USD falling to levels not witnessed since the early 1980s. We also think that the GBP would come under pressure against the EUR. Indeed, EUR-GBP could move towards parity in the aftermath of a Brexit vote.”

Monday, April 4, 2016

WELCOME BACK


Hello dear,It is my sincere pleasure to welcome you back to our darling blog website,doing what we always enjoy .My sincere apologies for the long absence, I know readers and well wishers would have missed my post a great deal.As  Business Entrepreneur,I have been busy working on some vital projects,but notwithstanding my love,determination and doggedness trading the capital market,sharing and networking,remains unwavered and I am absolutely committed to contributing my own quota in trading experience geared towards making consistent profits and at the same time reducing flaws to the barest minimum.
I strongly believe nothing is impossible to the mind that is ready to take the desired action,and you can achieve anything you want to be in life as far as trading is concern ,we will definitely all get to our various destinations and even surpassing our dreams,visions,and aspirations.The sky is just the starting point.See you on top,enjoy reading…..

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

CALENDER OF KEY EVENTS FOR JANUARY,IN THE EURO ZONE


As the euro approaches its 10th anniversary – fighting for survival – France will start the year with its first debt auction.

5: France will kick off a mad dash to financial markets by eurozone governments: Italy alone needs to raise €450bn (£375bn) in the next twelve months. France's first debt auction of the year comes as Paris anxiously awaits a long-expected credit downgrade.

6: The US releases its key monthly unemployment report for December, the non-farm payroll. A strong reading would underpin confidence; a weak one could create panic.

8: The deadline set by the new Spanish government has for deciding a package of labour market reforms as the latest part of Madrid's attempt to show investors it is serious about kick-starting its economy.

9: Germany will try to borrow €4bn from the financial markets in short-term loans. It will be watched closely as a measure of investors' confidence in the Euro after a failed auction in November.

11: Germany will be back to the markets, trying to sell €4bn-worth of 5 year Bunds, or government bonds, on the same day that the government reveals official GDP figures. A decline could point to the onset of eurozone-wide recession.

12: Italy auctions short-term bonds. Technocratic prime minister Mario Monti will hope to repeat last month's stunt of appearing before a chart of declining Italian bond yields.

Senior officials from europe will start a two-day meeting in Copenhagen; the Americans will no doubt repeat Washington's demand that eurozone leaders resolve the crisis.

Official figures will show what happened to industrial production in November in the UK and the eurozone.

The Bank of England will decide whether to increase its quantitative easing programme.

13: Italy will be back in the markets, to borrow money over 5 years.

16: Inspectors from the European Commission, the IMF and the ECB(Troika) will return to Greece to assess its progress towards resolving its debt crisis. Rumours are emerging to suggest they could recommend an even bigger debt writeoff.

17: Spain will be raising short-term debt, over a period of 12 and 18 months, while in Germany the key monthly survey from thinktank the ZEW will test the country's economic strength at the turn of the year.

18: Germany will be back in the markets to auction €4bn-worth in 2 year notes.

19: Two-day meeting of deputy finance ministers from G20 countries in Mexico City, giving eurozone governments another chance to urge developing countries such as China – and non-members such as the UK – to contribute extra resources to the IMF that could be used in the event of a euro meltdown.

Meanwhile back in Madrid, Spain will be auctioning (more) bonds.

20: Germany's turn – it will auction €3bn in 1 year bills, known as Bub ills.

Relief for Athens - or perhaps not - as the Troika inspectors depart.

Retail figures for the UK will give the official picture of Christmas shopping trends.

23: Finance ministers from euro zone member-countries will meet to hammer out the next steps in the battle to stabilize the currency; while Monti is scheduled to outline yet more austerity measures.

24: Spain auctions 3 and 6 month bills Eurozone ministers will be joined by their counterparts from non-members of the single currency – including George Osborne – to discuss the crisis.

25: Germany will auction €3bn in 30 year bonds, while the ECB will offer the next batch of emergency loans to banks in its so-called long-term refinancing operation.

Official GDP figures from the UK will be released, revealing whether the economy contracted at the end of 2011.

26 and 27: Italy auctions (yet) more bonds as US GDP figures for the end of 2011 are released.

30: Italy is at it again, this time selling 3 and 10 year bonds, against the background of a major summit for European leaders, at which they hope to make progress towards shoring up their bailout fund and tightening tax and spending rules.

31: The troika is due to deliver its report on Greece and talks with the country's private creditors, under which Athens hopes they will volunteer to accept a hefty write down on the value of their bonds, are due to end.


To Your success

Fxtycoon....

Stevens Adeola,S.

Monday, December 5, 2011

EURO ZONE ! A WEEK OF RECKONING


By week’s end, the EU heads of government and the ECB will have concluded a summit and announced a rate decision. Other central bank meetings by the BoC and RBNZ are expected to see policy left unchanged, while the market has priced in the RBA taking another step towards policy neutralization with a second consecutive-25bp ease. Currently, the growth and interest rate sensitive currencies seem well supported heading into the meetings, but, the risks are skewed towards disappointment.


The market believes Draghi and company will cut the rate by a further-25bp, with a “stronger” possibility of a larger move. They could be more proactive, some analysts expect them to announce a long-term repo operations of greater than one year, along with loosening of collateral requirements. However, it seems unanimous on the street that the ECB will “not” be offering definitive guidance on plans for sovereign bond purchases.

This is a big week for Merkel, Sarkozy and Draghi’s leadership. They now have limited opportunities to find a stabilizing solution. The market know that if Euro loses, the rest of the world loses. This week, from a policy stand point cannot be deemed a gamble, they have to deliver a concrete framework that the market at least perceives to be some sort of solution, otherwise there is the abyss! .

To your success.....

DEFXTYCOON

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN A CURRENCY COLLAPSES?


Fifteen years ago, both Bulgaria and Romania went through rampant inflation linked to a financial crisis. Bucharest narrowly avoided the collapse, but Sofia was less fortunate and experienced a meltdown of the sort Greece is currently trying to prevent.

"Those were very bad times. Every day my salary was worth less and less, and there were fewer things I could buy with it," says Krassimira Komneva from the Sofia-based Most Foundation, an employment and education outfit.

Back in 1996, Komneva was doing office work in a construction company. She recalls how the salary was late when the currency collapsed. "When I received it one month later, it was worth much less than expected. We all hurried to buy food, bread, oil. The prices were just crazy," she recalls.

According to the International Institute of Finance, inflation in Bulgaria hit 174.4 percent in 1996 and a record of 1,077.5 percent the next year. Its curency, the lev, went from 500 per US dollar in late 1996 to 2,200 per US dollar in February 1997.

Food shortages and a harsh winter drove people to despair, with mass rallies ultimately forcing out the post-Communist government largely blamed for the disastrous policies that led to the currency collapse.

"For the average people, it was just terrible. Nobody really understood what happened, the only thing we could see was that it all ended in disaster," says Komneva.

The central bank was subsequently stripped of its powers as the country entered in a "currency board" agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other international lenders in July 1997, with the lev being pegged to the German D-Mark. Aimed at lowering inflation, boosting national reserves and restoring market confidence in the country, the currency board nevertheless seriously dented Bulgaria's sovereignty.

Romania only narrowly avoided a similar fate in the same period.

According to former President Emil Constantinescu, elected to power in November 1996 as the first non-Communist leader of the country, the country's national reserves when he took over had just 600 million US dollars, compared to current levels of €20 billion. At the same time, Romania had taken up some 5 billion US dollars in loans, which had to be paid back during his mandate.

"All of this led the IMF to suggest Romania should declare default on its debt. The second day after Parliament had confirmed my mandate, I received international envoys who told me this and gave it to me in writing," Constantinescu said in a 2006 interview with Gardianul newspaper.

Like Bulgaria, Romania was struggling with failing banks - both state and private-owned. Taxpayers' money was poured into the ailing state giants to help save them after they had lent billions to former regime protegees and their respective companies.

Meanwhile, most so-called private banks were in fact pyramidal schemes "designed to steal the money from regular citizens, set up by the mafia of the former Securitate (Communist secret police)" Constantinescu recalled.

Inflation peaked at 150 percent in 1997 and Romania had to seek an IMF loan of 500 million US dollars. It also had to privatise and profoundly restructure its state enterprises. But it avoided the embarrassment of having its central bank replaced with a currency board.

Not everyone was miserable during those years in Romania. To 41-year old trader Paul Marian, those were lucrative times in Bucharest. He remembers people flocking to his exchange office to get rid of the quickly depreciating lei and turn them into more stable D-Marks, US dollars or Swiss francs.

"I made good money in those years, the exchange office was working well. Everybody was just crazy about buying foreign currency," Marian recalls.

A cap on 500 US dollars was put in place for each citizen and later on, "when things got crazy", traders were banned from selling or buying foreign currency at more than five percent above or below the central bank exchange rate, he says.

That put an end to the big profits earned by exchange offices which had mushroomed in every Romanian town.


To your success...

DETYCOON

STEVENS ADEOLA S.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

BENEFICIARIES OF BILL GATES LOANS TO FOREX TRADERS IN PIX










HELLO FOREX PALS,IF YOU HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING MY POST ON THIS
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THE IMMENSE OPPORTUNITIES TO FOREX TRADERS IN NIGERIA THROUGH,
THE BENEVOLENT GESTURE OF BILL AND MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION.


YES ! AN ACCESS TO MOUNTH WATERING LOANS TO TRADE FOREX ....WHAT OFFER COULD BE BETTER?


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To your trading success
D cybertycoon
Stevens Adeola S.