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Posts by "stationdealer"

750 Posts Total by "stationdealer":
666 Posts by member
Stationdealer
(London, United Kingdom)
84 Posts by Anonymous "stationdealer":
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 13, 2010 9:14
In Thread: GBP
Moved down towards the daily support at 14940 only to correct higher. Standard and Poors then announced that they are keeping the UKs outlook on negative. This sent the pair quickly lower. We now have daily support at 1.4940 and resistance at 1.5040. The bias is still slightly to the downside but we should not see a break of the low at 1.4950. I am looking for a move higher through 1.5070 to confirm the move back up has started.

UK CPI / Retail Sales at 9.30

Support levels: 15013 14994 14950

Resistance levels: 15066 15070 15122




EURGBP has made a perfect doji at the resistance (8414). The 1hr chart is still keeping its upward bias but a close below 8353 would turn the pair bearish. Our first support would then be 8315 followed by 8234, the channel support. Only a close (daily) above 8419 would negate the bearish view now. Target from last weeks post was at 82 and it still stands.

Support levels: 8381 8372 8354

Resistance levels: 8404 8420 8432
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 13, 2010 9:05
Trapped in a relatively small range, mirrored in all yen crosses, barely looking for direction. Expect sideways work, probably above 109.50, this week. Above 114.00 might be too much to hope for. Possibly attempt very small longs at 111.40; stop/reverse below 111.00 for 109.50. First target 112.00/112.65.

Consolidating slightly EURO unsteadily. Expect more consolidation around 1.2600 this week, possibly inching up to 1.2800, as we get used to these new fractionally higher levels. The Euro is not overbought and momentum is bullish.
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 13, 2010 9:01
In Thread: EUR
We made a lower high yesterday. First we sold off from 12648, the level we asked the bulls to recapture. After posting a low of 12547 we rallied up to 12614 and then sold off again. Weve made a new low this morning. That means the bears still have the short term initiative, and I will be watching closely for the reaction to our key skew bar reference at 12478. If price is accepted below that level we will abandon the bullish outlook.

The bulls now need to take out 12614 to break the short term downtrend.

R4 1.2722
R3 1.2684
R2 1.2648
R1 1.2614

S1 1.2540
S2 1.2478
S3 1.2398
S4 1.2304
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 13, 2010 8:44
"Gold registered another down week, but only by a slim margin," says the latest technical analysis from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta of Friday's finish at $1212.

"With a doji on the weekly candlestick, the market may have now finished testing the downside in gold," says Scotia, pointing to last week's price-pattern of falling sharply (down 2.2%), only to recover and end unchanged.

New data released late Friday from US regulator the CFTC meantime showed commercial "industry-side" players in the gold futures and options market cutting their bearish position at the fastest pace since April 2009 last week.

Falling to a 13-week low, the "net short" position of bullish bets minus bearish bets held by miners, refineries and bullion banks often referred to as the "smart money" shrank by 16.1% in the week-ending last Tuesday.

Overall, the commercial traders' "bull ratio" meaning the number of bullish contracts they hold as a proportion of all their directional bets on gold futures and options jumped above 1-in-3, the strongest bull ratio since December 2008.

Non-commercial "speculative" traders meanwhile slashed their net long position (of bullish minus bearish bets) to the equivalent of 852 tonnes, also down by 16.1% from a week earlier as hedge funds and institutional players as well as private investors closed almost one contract in every twelve they held the Tuesday before.

"The latest CFTC figures suggest that weak-handed speculators are largely out of the market," says Standard Bank's latest Precious Metals Monthly.

"Much of the shift in the net [speculative] position had come from short-covering, and so it is unlikely that there is scope for much more speculative liquidation in the current environment."

Over in the physical gold bullion market, "The sharp drop to $1200 has seen strong physical buying reappear and scrap sales dwindle," Standard Bank continues, while gold's typical summer lull now looks set to see gold "treading water" in July and August "all other things being equal".

Nevertheless, "Underlying financial tensions point to a buy-on-dips policy ahead of further inflationary concerns."

Friday saw a further "trickle" of redemptions, notes another London dealer, from the giant SPDR gold ETF the $51 billion gold-backed trust fund that trades as a stock in New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore.

Slipping back to 1,314.5 tonnes, the SPDR's hoard of gold bullion held at HSBC bank-vaults in London peaked as June ended at 1,320 tonnes, more 16% greater from the start of the year.

"Debt on government balance sheets and worries that the world could be heading towards a double-dip recession are behind the gold surge," says Charles Cooper at London brokerage Oriel Securities, speaking to The Guardian newspaper.

The fresh threat of economic downturn, he says, means governments "could be tempted to print more money to dig us out of a hole.

"That could precipitate inflation, making gold even more popular as a safe haven."

New figures published Monday showed the UK's 2008-2009 recession cutting GDP more sharply than previously reported, down by 6.4% peak-to-trough.

This week brings a raft of consumer- and business-price inflation data from the European Union, United States, Japan and New Zealand.

EU regulators are now conducting "stress tests" on 91 major banks accounting for almost two-thirds of the 27-nation union. Results will be published on July 23rd.

Minutes from the US Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting will be released on Wednesday, with analysts and traders watching closely for dissent over the promise of exceptionally low policy rates for "an extended period", as well as any talk of fresh quantitative easing of the money supply.
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 13, 2010 8:29
Cont....

And in Canada The jobs data on Friday, has people talking rate hikes left and right for Canada Whooooa there, Im still on board for a July 20 rate hike, which will be next week, when Im in Canada Im not fully convinced theres enough breathing room for another rate hike in September too! However, if the data keeps coming in strong, then Ill change my mind! Today we might see something that leads us to the rate hike path in September, when Canada prints their Business Outlook and Senior Loan Officer Surveys These will be the last data prints the Bank of Canada sees before their rate announcement next week.
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 9, 2010 10:29
sorry man typo error, I mean next month could we be in for a likely rate hike from RBA?
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 9, 2010 10:20
In Thread: JPY
Sell into Yen weakness

Sell USDYEN, CADYEN, AUDYEN, and CHFYEN
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 8, 2010 20:51
China Won't Dump U.S. Treasuries or Pile Into Gold

Unbeknownst to me at the time I sent in yesterday's commentary, the low at the Hong Kong close at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time on Wednesday morning proved to be gold's low price of the day. That time of day, coincidentally, is the precise time of the London a.m. gold fix. Gold subsequently gained and lost about $5 in London trading... but the moment that New York opened, the gold price was off to the races. The price rise even extended into electronic trading after the Comex closed. Gold's low price at the London a.m. fix was a hair below $1,185... a new low for this move down... and the high [$1,205.10 spot] was in electronic trading in New York late on Wednesday afternoon. Volume was pretty chunky with preliminary volume showing around 120,000 contracts traded net of spreads and roll-overs.
http://www.caseyresearch.com/displayGsd.php?id=239
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 8, 2010 20:28
In Thread: GBP
Cable Bouncing Within The Range

After this mornings failure to build on gains above 1.5230, cable looked ripe to wipe out stops below 1.5080So what happened? It bounced, and now trades at 1.5155. Such is a day in the life of the worlds worst currency.. I guess Cat & Pipster were right in calling the downside. Well done boys!

EUR/USD is firming in quiet afternoon trade, now at 1.2677 after finding central bank buyers in the 1.2650s.
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 8, 2010 17:37
In Thread: EUR
Yes Gunjack I agree! I think new regulation are to be blamed for it as it may reduce liquidity over all in the money markets.

Mean while I sold EURGBp 8374 and will sell again once it reaches 84 as its a 84 to 82/81 range play so easy trade here.