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Posts by "djellal"

751 Posts Total by "djellal":
728 Posts by member
djellal
(LAUSANNE, Switzerland)
23 Posts by Anonymous "djellal":
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Oct 10, 2011 23:45
In Thread: EUR
big players (h.fd) were there today
QE3 front of us

1.29 noooooo

1.44 yessssss

if france lose AAA 1.29 yesssss french "Caisse des dpt et consignation" & "Laposte on tous a y gagner" bankrupt ........
Bye bye france and sarkozy will have a black baby thanks to carla and lenny kravitz
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 29, 2011 7:17
In Thread: EUR
allen don't enter in the market , view your analisis before and wait the opening bel... the market is bull because it buy the rumour of german vote pass... wait and buy around 1.3580 and tp at 1.3630 for some pips around the opening bel after that be cautious to the german employment
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 29, 2011 6:28
In Thread: JPY

By Toru Fujioka
Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Japans finance ministry will
extend by at least one month its monitoring of currency market
positions, two government officials familiar with the matter
said, signaling policy makers continued concern that
speculative trades will strengthen the yen.
The ministry last month required about 30 major financial
institutions to disclose trading positions in the currency
market through Sept. 30. The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because the announcement hadnt been made public yet.
Japans currency has gained 6 percent against the dollar so
far this year even after policy makers intervened in the market
in August and March to slow an appreciation that could hurt
exports. The yen has also climbed close to 10-year highs against
the euro, a strengthening that Sony Corp. corporate treasurer
Hiroshi Kurihara said yesterday will have a huge impact on
the earnings of Japans largest exporter of consumer
electronics.
Finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group
of 20 nations said in a statement on Sept. 22 that excess
volatility and disorderly movements in currencies may hurt
economic and financial stability. Japan pushed for inclusion of
those comments in the statement, a Ministry of Finance official
who spoke on condition of anonymity said the next day.


For Related News and Information:
Japans top stories TOP JN <GO>
Most-read economic news MNI ECO <GO>
Global economy watch: GEW <GO>
Snapshot of Japans economy: ESNP JN <GO>

--With assistance from Aki Ito in Tokyo. Editors: Ken McCallum,
Lily Nonomiya

To contact the reporter on this story:
Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at +81-3-3201-2158 or
tfujioka1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Paul Panckhurst at +852-2977-6603 or
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 29, 2011 6:12
In Thread: EUR
german will vote EFSF packages don't expect any issue... after that euro will go higher in pricing the first efsf auction next week
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 29, 2011 5:19
In Thread: EUR
be cautious with your short eurusd there
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 29, 2011 1:52
In Thread: JPY
@ Ashraf,

Analyts at Nomura think that the Boj will be at 76.00, don't you think that they will be there... with Panasonic wich are forwarding their production in china, don't you think Boj will react ?
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 28, 2011 4:44
In Thread: EUR
@ digi
who is iggy ?
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 28, 2011 0:14
In Thread: EUR

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Sept. 27 (Telegraph) -- Germany and America were on a
collision course on Tuesday night over the handling of Europe's
debt crisis after Berlin savaged plans to boost the EU rescue
fund as a "stupid idea" and told the White House to sort out its
own mess before giving gratuitous advice to others.
German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble said it would be a
folly to boost the EU's bail-out machinery (EFSF) beyond its
440bn lending limit by deploying leverage to up to 2 trillion,
perhaps by raising funds from the European Central Bank.
"I don't understand how anyone in the European Commission
can have such a stupid idea. The result would be to endanger the
AAA sovereign debt ratings of other member states. It makes no
sense," he said.
Mr Schauble told Washington to mind its own businesss after
President Barack Obama rebuked EU leaders for failing to
recapitalise banks and allowing the debt crisis to escalate to
the point where it is "scaring the world".
"It's always much easier to give advice to others than to
decide for yourself. I am well prepared to give advice to the US
government," he said.
The comments risk irritating the White House. US Treasury
Secretary Tim Geithner has been a key driver of plans to give the
EFSF enough firepower to shore up Italy and Spain, fearing a
drift into "cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk"
without dramatic action.
The danger for Germany is that America will lose patience,
with unpredictable consequences. The US Federal Reserve is
currently propping up the European banking system in a variety of
ways, including dollar swaps.
Markets across the world ignored the mixed signals about the
true scope of EU rescue measures, convinced that EU leaders have
a "grand plan" up their sleeves and will unveil the details after
the Bundestag has voted on Thursday on the earlier July deal to
revamp the fund.
France's CAC-40 surged by 5.7pc, led by a 17pc rise for
Societe Generale. Germany's Dax was up 5.3pc. The FTSE 100 jumped
4pc in London, the biggest one-day rise this year. Oil jumped
almost $4 in New York to $88 a barrel.
In Berlin, Chancellor Angela Merkel was fighting for her
political life as the rump of lawmakers from her coalition vowed
to reject the EFSF package, though the latest tally suggests she
may squeeze by with her own majority. Angry dissidents suspect
that secret plans are being withheld until after the vote.
Greek premier George Papandreou told German business leaders
that his country would honour its austerity pledges, but also
issued a veiled warning. "The persistent criticisms levelled
against Greece are deeply frustrating, not only at the political
level, where a superhuman effort is being made to meet stringent
targets in a deepening recession, but frustrating also for the
Greeks, who are making these painful sacrifices."
"Drastic measures have had a dramatic impact on the living
standards of our citizens. Many Greeks feel they have little left
to give. If people feel only punishment and scorn, this crisis
will become a lost cause," he said.
Mr Papandreou's Pasok party passed a crucial vote on Tuesday
to raise property taxes, but at a high political price. The
party's approval rating has fallen to 15pc in the latest Mega
poll.
However, Greece was confronted with a new threat as it
emerged that several eurozone members are demanding the private
sector absorb bigger losses than originally agreed as part of a
second bail-out.
A deal struck in July would see creditors taking 21pc losses
on their Greek debt holdings, adding around 45bn to the 109bn
proposed second rescue. However, more than a third of the
17-member single currency bloc are now said to be demanding
bigger haircuts for the private sector. Talk of revisions to the
second bail-out may renew default fears as the IMF has yet to
re-engage with Greece over the latest 8bn tranche of its initial
110bn rescue. Greece is at risk of running out of money by
October 8, though analysts say the payment is almost certain to
be made whether or not Greece has complied fully with the terms.
Greece has a trump card in rescue talks with the IMF-EU
"Troika". If it opts for a "hard default", it could set off a
chain reaction. Lorenzo Bini-Smaghi, an ECB board member, said
those arguing that Europe's banks could withstand a Greek default
are misguided. "Similar views were held before Lehman. Those who
say this have no idea how contagion works," he said.
Analysts say the Troika will have to approve the next 8bn
tranche of aid for Athens in October whether or not Greece has
complied fully with the terms. It cannot risk a showdown before
Europe's banks have beefed up their capital base, or before the
EFSF is fully equipped to d
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 23, 2011 16:41
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
13 years ago
Sep 23, 2011 15:52
@ daveO,

Indeed it's our job to know how to change with the belief, measures of the Fed and the lack of QE I had not choice, but I'm attentive to the enthusiasm that the eurbonds might encourage