30, June 2010

Sterling hit a 19-month high against the euro yesterday as investors shunned the single currency ahead of the closure of the European Central Bank’s emergency one year loan provision. With a July 1st deadline, banks have to repay €442bn of borrowed funds in the biggest amount lent in a single liquidity operation.

Fears that a cash shortfall could total more than €100bn drove the pounds value above 1.23 euros. The one year loans can be rolled over and be replaced with three month loans at a base rate of 1%.

From the UK, we heard comments from the MPC’s Fisher supporting the recent decision not to tighten fiscal or monetary policy in sharp contract to those of Andrew Sentance who has remained hawkish even after the recent budget. Data was limited to British mortgage approvals showing an unexpectedly flat in May while consumer credit increased £300m. The mixed data could lead the BoE to maintain a neutral stance over the next quarter as it aims to encourage a sustainable recovery.

The euro has hit an all-time low against the Swiss franc as the funding concerns about the euro zone prompted investors to move their funds to the safe-haven Swiss currency. ECB council member Ewald Nowotny said “the ECB is not considering offering banks another batch of 12-month loans to replace those expiring on Thursday”.

As a result, market participants may continue to see pressure on the euro as the debt crisis weighs on the outlook for future growth. Nevertheless, economic confidence in the Eurozone unexpectedly increased in June, with the index rising to 98.7 from 98.4 in the previous month, while the gauge for business sentiment held steady at 0.37.

The U.S dollar gained ground against most of its major counterparts following the rise in safe-haven flows as investors scaled back their appetite for risk. US consumer confidence has also weakened as investors weigh the prospects for a sustainable recovery in the world’s largest economy.

The Conference Board’s gauge for household sentiment is expected to fall to 62.5 in June from 63.3 in the previous month and the ongoing weakness within the private sector may lead the Fed to support the economy throughout the second-half of the year as Chairman Bernanke maintains a dovish outlook for future policy.

Report by Tim Lewis

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Amazon’s 20 Month Run Is Finally Broken

This timely video clearly shows the break in the fortune of the mighty Amazon after a 20 month rise dating back to Nov 2008.

The question now is how far will Amazon fall? Indications suggest it could be quite heavy.

Whether it is the technical superiority of the iPad and the loss of e-book sales is as yet unclear but certainly it is something to be aware of. See the detail here.

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A Look At How The Nasdaq And S&P 500 Are Faring

The new video from Adam Hewison of the Market Club shows how much attention we should pay to the negative engulfing lines in both the Nasdaq and S&P idecies. Using and seeing the Japanese candlesticks it becomes obvious that there is danger lurking…

Watching the video, it is far easier to see than have it explained in mere words.

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28, June 2010

Towards the end of last week concerns over debt crept back into the market psyche. It marked a disappointing end to the week which started so positively in response to China’s de-pegging of the CNY. The good news didn’t last as it became evident that there was still plenty of two-way risk on the CNY.

Other key events were a new PM in Australia, who faces a difficult start in office over the contentious new mining tax and the G20 summit in Canada which took place yesterday.

The US Assembly confirmed a major regulatory reform bill towards the end of the week and markets, especially financial stocks, reacted positively as the bill appeared to give some support to banks and was not as brutal as feared.

However, equity market drive has clearly faded against the background of new growth concerns including developing evidence of a double-dip in the US housing market in addition to fresh worries about the European banking sector. In line with the bearish news, US Q1 GDP was accordingly revised lower once again, to a 2.7% annualised rate of growth.

Recent US data has managed to hold back the USD, suggesting that cyclical factors and not just risk aversion are beginning to play into foreign exchange markets. This can be seen with Cable breaking through the key 1.50 level and even the flagging Euro is reaching nearly 1.24 against the greenback at the time of writing.

Cable has found further support with talk in the market that a UK clearer needs to buy cable today for dividend payment purposes. The effect is not likely to be excessively large, however it may well be helping underpin the pairing in recent trade.

Sunday saw the biggest non event after a certain football match with the G20 summit which like England, the communiqué failed to get a grip on challenges that face them. Maybe a little harsh as they agreed new targets for reducing deficits and sovereign debt, however questions regarding tougher capital and liquidity requirements for banks were delayed until November’s summit in Seoul, providing leaders with time to work out their individual differences.

All in all, economic data this week is unlikely to lessen growth concerns, with Eurozone, US and UK consumer and manufacturing confidence indicators likely to post declines due to a host of factors. The data will suggest a slowing in growth momentum following Q2 2010, in the short term turning lower, albeit gradually. Whilst a double-dip scenario still seems doubtful there can be no doubt that austerity measures and the weakening of fiscal stimulus measures are starting to weigh heavily on global growth prospects.

Report by Philip Ryan

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25, June 2010

The pound strengthened to 1.22 against the euro yesterday for the first time since November 2008. Sterling continues to benefit from the UK budget announced earlier this week and the news that one MPC member voted for a rate hike this month. A strong response from the credit agencies took away fears that the UK’s AAA rating could be downgraded.

Concerns over the European debt crisis were on the rise again yesterday with Greek credit default swaps hitting a record high. ECB president Trichet said he is “pleased” with Germany’s decision to concentrate on fiscal discipline, he also commented that the idea that austerity measures could trigger economic stagnation is “incorrect” and he does not think the risks around deflation will materialise.

Another cause for concern in the Eurozone is the requirement for European banks to repay the $540bn of ‘special’ 1-year loans that they borrowed from the ECB. The added problem here is that a number of the banks used the loans to buy up bonds in Greece, Spain and Portugal – fixing in a healthy interest margin in the process. Now they have to repay their ECB loans, the banks may decide to offload some of these bonds, which could reignite tensions in European financial markets.

The USD dropped for a second day against the euro as markets believe the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates near zero through the middle of next year as the US economic recovery falters. Fed officials said at a policy meeting earlier this week that financial conditions have become “less supportive” of economic growth.

US data yesterday showed durable goods orders fell 1.1% m/m in May after a 3.0% gain in April. The entire decline reflected volatility in transportation orders. Orders excluding transportation items rose 0.9% m/m in May after a 0.8% decline in April. Also, US initial jobs claims fell slightly more than expected to 457k, a fall of 19k, pointing to an improvement in the labour market that is taking time to develop.

Today, ahead of the G20 meeting in Canada, promises to be very quiet. The G8 have already had a pre-meeting meeting and although there was fairly consistent agreement on what needed to be done, there was a large divergence in the views and the methods to be used to get there. Expect more of the same once the group is expanded although I would anticipate a broadly agreed message come Sunday, especially with regards to regulatory issues for the financial sector.

Report by TiM Lewis

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Euro leads the equities market by the nose as the S&P 500 defies the good news.

As always it is good to keep abreast of the forex market situation. We like to keep a balanced view from both sides of the Atlantic and in line with that here are two new videos from Adam Hewison of the Market Club.

Today’s question is, is the euro having undue influence on the US and European equity markets? It would definately seem so as they are shadowing the euro at every move. Take a look at the ETF FXE, the spot euro, and also the euro futures market at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), as they are all tradable.

This video shows exactly how the Market Club thinks the euro will play out in the future which as reported in an earlier blog the thought is that we are heading for EUR/USD parity.

In the second of these market analysis videos you will see how the “Fibonacci factor” is playing a part in the retracement levels in the S&P 500. Occasionally, markets reverse for no apparent reason and seem to defy any news that would support the direction of the trend.

Look out later this week when the Market Club unveils their new educational trading video debuts on Friday, which they dub, “Fibonacci Friday”.

Video 1: Forex Should Not be Foreign to You

Video 2: Why markets reverse… blame it on Fibonacci

Whether you agree, disagree, or just want to comment on these videos, please do so below.

Videos curtesy of Adam Hewison, President and Co-creator of MarketClub.

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23, June 2010

UK Chancellor George Osborne’s produced the toughest Budget in a generation yesterday with Britain facing drastic cuts of 25% to government departments. The exception will be those departments with “protected budgets,” such as the National Health Service and foreign aid.

Other key take outs include an increase in the VAT from 17.5% to 20% from January next year and a new £2 billion levy on the banks. The budget reveals a more rapid fiscal response than that planned by the previous Labour government. The Chancellor said, “This emergency budget deals decisively with our country’s record debt.”

The budget also found support from Fitch, the rating agency, who stated the budget “…sets out an ambitious deficit reduction path that, if delivered upon, will materially strengthen confidence in UK public finances and its ‘AAA’ status.” The Office for Budget Responsibility cut it’s economic growth forecast to 1.2% this year and GDP growth next year has been cut to 2.3%.

The news provided further support for Sterling yesterday as it rallied against the Euro and the Dollar. Pre-budget we were trading GBPEUR 1.1960 and GBPUSD 1.4730, the markets view this as a credible plan and we currently sit at 1.2139 and 1.4924 respectively.
Despite the positive reaction, some city analysts have taken a different view and fear that removing £40 billion out of the economy might halt the recovery from recession and ultimately push borrowing higher as tax receipts fall and welfare costs increase.

It was a mix bag of data from Europe and the US yesterday. As expected, German IFO indicated steady current conditions amongst business leaders but a more pessimistic outlook in the long term. This was coupled with strong German consumer confidence. Over to the US and existing house sales numbers were below par despite the continuing tax incentives for the housing market. Although we saw little reaction in the currency markets, (EURUSD currently sits at 1.2279 from a high of 1.2320 yesterday) equities did sell off at the close leaving a weaker outlook for stocks across Europe and Asia.

This morning, we had the minutes from the last MPC meeting who voted 7-1 in favour of holding interest rates at 0.5% which has boosted the Sterling rally against the single European currency and the green back mentioned earlier in the report.

Later tonight we have the Fed Reserve interest rate decision who are expected to leave interest rates on hold…. It is also widely anticipated that the England team will continue their terrible form and will be back at Heathrow airport tomorrow.

Report by Philip Ryan

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21, June 2010

But first the Chinese whispers…

The announcement by the Chinese of an end to a fixed exchange rate regime, allowing the remminbi to appreciate, has given stocks, commodities and risk-on currencies a boost in early trading. Investors moved out of the safe haven USD with Cable reaching 1.49 before falling back slightly and the Aussie Dollar also performing well on the back of the news.

The move by the Chinese is wildly seen to be a political rather than economic one. With the G20 meeting coming up shortly and the current ‘currency manipulation’ bill working it’s way through the US congress, the decision to let the Yuan have a much greater degree of flexibility sends a positive message to the Americans. The markets have open higher as the announcement has released some of the pressure that was building and any potential trade dispute between the US and China is much less likely.

As well as the G20 meeting, the Chinese may have had one eye on pre-empting the forthcoming US Treasury report on FX polices of US trading partners. Tim Geithner may have been ready to single out China explicitly – not something the ruling party in China needs or wants as it tries to gradually integrate China into the world economy.

The Euro has also performed well this morning, the successful Spanish bond auction last week and the announcement that the EU will release the results of stress tests on 25 European banks, has helped the single currency move towards 1.25 against the USD and 1.19 versus Sterling.

EU president Herman Van Rompuy said data on any institution that failed or performed poorly in the stress tests (published in July) will be publicly available. Such a strong commitment to transparency has gone down well in markets, but there are still doubts around. Such confidence by EU leaders on the strength of its banks (some of which are quite clearly struggling to raise funds in the market) either shows serious confidence in the figures banking chiefs are giving them, or that the tests are designed a priori to show banks strength to the markets.

Call me a cynic, but the latter rather than the former seems much more plausible, until we get greater detail on the underlying assumptions of the tests will cannot know for sure quite what the stress tests are telling us.

UK news: The weekend before any budget is always marked by wild speculation on what might happen to taxes or spending over the next year. The theme this time is universally negative as one would expect. What is going to get cut (child tax credits, public sector numbers & public sector pensions if the papers are to believed) and how fast (straight away) has dominated thinking ahead of tomorrow emergency budget.

A hike in VAT to 20% along with the anticipated rise in capital gains tax and also significant increases in taxes on items such as alcohol and cigarettes seems likely. However, it remains speculation and Sterling will likely tread water in the run up to the announcement at midday tomorrow. Whatever happens, it is the most important budget in the UK for many years and investors will be looking to the Chancellor to create the right balance between reducing the deficit and maintaining economic growth.

Report by Alistair Cotton

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16, June 2010

After a quiet night in the FX markets in Asian trading, the markets opened today with some sell pressure on the pound particularly against the USD. The pound slipped from a touch over 1.48 down to 1.4760. This could be attributed to weaker consumer confidence data released last night- the May index fell sharply by 10 points from April to 65.

However the prospect of another Mervyn King speech tonight at Mansion House could be more on the button, spooking the sterling bulls. In the recent past, whenever Mervyn King has made a public address sterling has always suffered due to his negative but admittedly realistic sentiment on the UK economy. Data already released this morning focused on the UK jobless sector, the data was actually not too bad with May jobless claims in at -30,900 better than the forecasted -20,000.

In addition the claimant count rate came in at 4.6% and the unemployment rate at 7.9%, again slightly better than forecasts at 4.7% and 8% respectively. A muted response to this mornings data for the pound as the market is well aware that unemployment levels should suffer following the emergency budget next week.

Look for the pound to remain subdued today ahead of Mr King’s address later- in fact I would not expect any significant movement in the pound until after Tuesday’s budget.

The surprise in the markets is the recent fightback of the euro which pushed to 1.2353 yesterday against the dollar. This is despite further pressure in the bond markets- this morning we have seen the Spanish/German 10 year government bond yield widen to 218bps, this is a lifetime high and Portuguese/German equivalent widened to 312bps. The move higher for the euro despite the negatives looks reflective of a short squeeze in the markets to shake up what was a market biased on shorting the euro.

I would not expect this relief rally to be sustained especially if the bond markets continue to deteriorate. On top of this there is also news of disagreement to stress testing of the European banking sector with Spain in favour and Germany against, which raises the question why are the Germans so against the idea?

The USD has unwound some of its recent gains following a week with little excitement (like the World Cup so far) and no huge surprises leading to gradual appetite coming back into the frame. Later today from the US, the pick of which is the Producer Price Index, Industrial production and a speech from Fed chairman Ben Bernanke.

Report by Phil McHugh

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Japanese Candlesticks and The Gold Market

The first market analysis video is a short one on the spot gold market using Japanese candlestick charts. In it you will see some important elements that you would not necessarily see using traditional Western charts.

Whether you agree, disagree, or just want to comment on this video, please do so below.

How to Tell When a Market is Oversold

Markets can get oversold, but when is a market really oversold?

In this video you will see a specific example of how markets can become oversold, stay that way, and why sometimes a relief rally doesn’t change anything.

Watching this video will help you in the future to be aware of the oversold phenomenon.

Videos curtesy of Adam Hewison, Presidentand Co-creator of MarketClub.

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The Market Mastery Protege Program

15 June 2010

Bill Poulos is going to reveal the actual daily trading plan he and his most advanced students use to spot the 4 low-risk, high-potential “profit pockets” that can occur on almost any stock chart.

The Market Mastery Protege Program online training session, Tuesday, June 15th will be repeated 3 times at 12pm, 4pm, and 9pm EST.

Bill Poulos will show…

* How he “fast filters” stocks…

* How he automatically gets “spoon fed” the highest-potential tradeable stocks every night via his special “Profit Feeder” report…

* How to trade his 4 “Market Mastery” methods against the “hard right edge” (when you don’t know what the next day looks like)…

* How to “add on” his “F_R_E_E Trade Strategy” to any trading method you’re currently using – it’s his favorite way of taking as much profit potential as possible…

* His time-tested risk management strategy inspired by Albert Einstein, yet so simple to execute that an 8th grader could do it…

Capacity on the training sessions is limited so reserve your seat now and make sure you can get in the room before the training begins.

You can “choose your slot”, 12pm, 4pm, and 9pm EST (New York time).

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14, June 2010

This morning the Office of Budget Responsibility delivers its first independent assessment of the outlook for the British economy and the budget deficit. This has some important ramifications for the British Pound in the both the short and log run.

We will get the first glimpse of whether the scorched earth legacy supposedly left by the previous Government is as bad the new Government has said it is – and a downbeat fiscal forecast would undoubtedly see a fall in the value of the Pound. However, the Chancellor would love to see the forecasts confirm the message he has been driving home, namely that to get the British economy back on the road to recovery, deep cuts to government spending are needed.

Returning Britain to long term sustainable growth would see the Sterling rise towards it long run average levels against the Euro and the Dollar (but it is far from clear if demand in the economy after the cuts are implemented will be able to support growth in the medium term)

The quarterly inflation report from the Bank of England also released this morning suggests the market expects interest rates to stay low for an extended period. Spencer Dale, chief economist at the Bank, highlighted the Eurozone fiscal crisis as the main concern over UK growth and said that Britain will continue to suffer the ill effects of the crisis even as the economic recovery continues.

Mixed messages from the Bank however as Andrew Sentence, member of the MPC, raised the possibility of higher interest rates (due to far lower excess capacity in the economy than the bank originally thought and the higher inflation that this may produce). Sentence suggested rates may rise as early as the second half of the year. Early today we saw Sterling trading strongly on the back of this news.

On Friday, currency markets continued to track the swings in global investor sentiment. European stocks extended earlier gains in the US and Asia. There was some market chatter arising from a press article that the EU was preparing to activate a rescue package in case Spain asked for it. However, Spanish-German bond spreads widened only slightly and EUR/USD easily held north of the 1.21 mark.

Italy also succeeded in selling all of their planned €7bn of bonds. EUR/USD even tested the key 1.2150 area going into the publication of the US retail sales data which came out at a disappointing -1.2% month-on-month. However, even as the figure was a disappointment, the damage for equities and also for EUR/USD was limited. A better than expected Michigan consumer confidence release also eased the potential negative impact of the retail data.

This week the main data releases are UK CPI and claimant count data and also inflation figures from the US later in the week.

Report by Alistair Cotton

Currency Market Updates by Tom Nadir

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What Makes Deflation Likely Today?
Bob Prechter, Deflation Survival Guide, free Club EWI eBook

Following the Great Depression, the Fed and the U.S. government embarked on a program…both of increasing the creation of new money and credit and of fostering the confidence of lenders and borrowers so as to facilitate the expansion of credit. These policies both accommodated and encouraged the expansionary trend of the ’Teens and 1920s, which ended in bust, and the far larger expansionary trend that began in 1932 and which has accelerated over the past half-century. Other governments and central banks have followed similar policies. The International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and similar institutions, funded mostly by the U.S. taxpayer, have extended immense credit around the globe.

Their policies have supported nearly continuous worldwide inflation, particularly over the past thirty years. As a result, the global financial system is gorged with non-self-liquidating credit. Conventional economists excuse and praise this system under the erroneous belief that expanding money and credit promotes economic growth, which is terribly false. It appears to do so for a while, but in the long run, the swollen mass of debt collapses of its own weight, which is deflation, and destroys the economy. A devastated economy, moreover, encourages radical politics, which is even worse.

The value of credit that has been extended worldwide is unprecedented. Worse, most of this debt is the non-self-liquidating type. Much of it comprises loans to governments, investment loans for buying stock and real estate, and loans for everyday consumer items and services, none of which has any production tied to it. Even a lot of corporate debt is non-self-liquidating, since so much of corporate activity these days is related to finance rather than production.

Total credit market debt as a percent of U.S. annual GDP 1915-2002

Figure 11-5 is a stunning picture of the credit expansion of wave V of the 1920s (beginning the year that Congress authorized the Fed), which ended in a bust, and of wave V in the 1980s-1990s, which is even bigger.

…it has been the biggest credit expansion in history by a huge margin. Coextensively, not only is there a threat of deflation, but there is also the threat of the biggest deflation in history by a huge margin. …

Read the rest of this important 63-page deflation study now, free! Here’s what you’ll learn:

  • What Triggers the Change to Deflation
  • Why Deflationary Crashes and Depressions Go Together
  • Financial Values Can Disappear
  • Deflation is a Global Story
  • What Makes Deflation Likely Today?
  • How Big a Deflation?
  • Much, Much More

 

 

Bulls and Bears Battle It Out

The S&P 500 index trend is down and we are looking for it to remain that way for a while.

Because trading has been far from uncertain of late the battle between the Bulls and Bears continues. Who is winning is also unclear. The rally from a potential double bottom is cause for concern for the Bears, however the Bulls are in a similar situation as they have to prove their case with sustained market action.

This market analysis video shows some of the key levels that are important in the S&P 500 market. Volume continues to to be light and consequently the markets are watching for signs and are volatile at the moment.

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Yahoo Finance Video 3: Prechter: Bank Reform Will Shrink Credit and Kill the Economy

The Senate version of financial regulation is bad for business on Wall Street and, according to the Wall Street Journal, could cut the profits of major financial institutions by roughly 20%. Find out why Robert Prechter thinks it’s also bad for the economy in the third excerpt from Robert Prechter’s May 20 interview with Yahoo! Finance Tech Ticker host Aaron Task.

Get Robert Prechter’s FREE 60-Page Deflation Survival Guide
With you in mind, financial analyst Robert Prechter scoured thousands of pages of his warnings and teachings about deflation. He then handpicked his most important deflation writings and compiled them into a special, unedited, 60-page Deflation Survival Guide. If you havent yet given Prechter’s deflation argument your full attention, you should know now that yesterday was the best time to do so. Download Your 60-page Deflation Survival Guide Now FREE.

About the Publisher, Elliott Wave International
Founded in 1979 by Robert R. Prechter Jr., Elliott Wave International (EWI) is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.


 

 

Market Mastery Protege Program

It looks like a lot of traders are getting it. Understanding the importance and sheer power of the 4 low-risk, high-probability stock trading methods used in the Market Mastery Protege Program. They do help you to find the “profit pockets” on nearly any stock chart.

Stock market of Brussels
Image via Wikipedia

For more details on the 4 specific methods used there will be an interactive online training session next Tuesday, 15th June.

View the latest trading video which dissects parts of the first video in the series: “Trade Dissection”

Good Trading,
Tom

Currency Market Updates by Tom Nadir

View the previous video here.
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9 June 2010

Sterling held steady yesterday as the reintroduction of a star chamber to quiz ministers on spending decisions marked the start of the Governments formidable challenge of reducing its €156 billion budget deficit. The last time a star chamber was in use was under Margaret Thatcher, but even she did not face cuts of the scale that now face George Osborne.

To maintain a triple AAA rating, Britain must cut £92 Billion (or roughly the annual National Health Service budget) over the next five years according to the credit rating agency Fitch and Mr Osborne made it clear to MP’s yesterday that the role of the State is about to change significantly.

UK social security payments, tax credits and public sector pensions are likely to bear the brunt of any cuts, which may end up being as high as 20 per cent. Mr Osborne cited the example of Canada, which faced similar difficulties to the UK in the 1990’s, but successfully turned a large budget deficit into surplus by strongly challenging ministerial spending decisions. What he failed to point out was the Canadian restructuring was achieved in a period of strong world growth with foreign demand able to replace government spending.

We are certainly not in this situation now, and we are far from a consensus over whether current fiscal tightening will put Britain back on the long term path to growth or tip the economy back into recession. This uncertainty is reflected in the markets; Sterling is treading water in the run up to the Bank of England meeting tomorrow and the Emergency budget on the 22 of June.

The euro broke the physiologically important 1.20 level against the dollar on Monday and continues to trade weakly against all the major currencies. This morning there are reports that Spanish banks are having difficulty accessing funding in the European interbank markets, an ominous sign if true.

The contagion from Eurozone members to periphery nations continues to spread with Hungarian Ministers stating their economy was left in a perilous state by the previous government, sparking significant price action in the Florint-Swiss pair. ECB head Jean-Claude Trichet speaks today ahead of the official policy meeting tomorrow and his words will be watched closely for any changes in stance or signals of the outcome of the meeting.

The dollar continues to perform strongly as the safe haven currency, against sterling we saw a slight rebound yesterday as Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested the US economy was on track and had gained “a good bit of momentum” in consumer spending and investment. The US Stock market also finished yesterday in positive territory and with data from China showing export growth of 50% yoy, we may see a return to risk today and the corresponding move out of dollars and into riskier currencies.

Report by Alistair Cotton

Currency Market Updates by Tom Nadir

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7 June 2010

A new stock trading video has been released today. It is 23 minute stock trading training video. The visual chart used in this video represents the 4 market conditions the new Market Mastery Protege Program teaches you to go after.

MMPP is the brainchild of Greg Poulos, a world renown trading expert and veteran of 35 year or more.

On any given stock chart, there are very specific & precise low-risk,  high-probability entry points that can lead to some potentially deep “profit pockets”. The new training videos show you what they look like, how they work together, and how you can spot them on your own.

Pay close attention to the chart that is displayed early on in the training video that outlines these 4 “profit pockets”, which are identified by these custom methods designed to “pinpoint” each one:

* The Profit Pipeline Method…

* The Trend Validator Method…

* The Velocity Method…

* The Countertrend Cash Method…

These are 4 additional ways to pull more profit potential out of almost ANY stock chart, because they can complement any existing method that you are currently using giving you even more of an edge over those traders who do not know about these techniques.

Make the time to look this Market Mastery Protege Program video today.

Good Trading,
Tom

Currency Market Updates by Tom Nadir

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7 June 2010

“The Euro will be dead in five years”- the startling view from an interview with 25 leading city economists in Sunday newspaper this weekend.

The article suggests that the 16 state currency may not continue in its existing membership “for a week let alone the next five years”. In the first major collection of City opinions since the election, the findings suggest that the new government will face a serious full-scale crisis with their biggest trading partner in their first few years in office.

The latest European administration to worry the markets is the new Fidesz Hungarian government, who suggested their predecessors had mis-led the population and markets about the financial state of the country. In order to try and prepare the population for the strict austerity measures that they will need to introduce, a newly appointed senior member of the government stated that Hungary has only “a slim chance” to avoid a “Greek situation”.

So with markets still concerned how the untried Fidesz Party are intending to marry up their populist policies with the austerity demanded by the IMF in return for its ongoing aid programme, the government’s first action was an apparent threat of default. Given the Eurozone countries’ exposure to Hungary, it is no wonder that the Euro dropped in value. Concerted fire-fighting has limited further erosion this morning but EUR/USD has hit a new low of 1.1873 over night.

Over to the US and the Non Farm Payroll. It was a disappointing Jobs report on Friday afternoon after figures suggested that 431,000 jobs were added to the economy in the month of May after it was widely considered to be in excess of 500k. In addition to the top line weak data, the fact that temporary census workers accounted for 411,000 of the jobs could suggest that Uncle Sam’s recovery could be slowing.

Finally, UK Prime Minister, David Cameron, has spoken this morning and given a stark warning about the action needed to tackle Britain’s budget deficit and public debt. His key take outs were:

* Overall scale of deficit problem is even worse than we thought

* Potential consequences of deficit more critical than we feared

* Last government’s estimates show debt interest payments at 70 bln in 5 years

* Economic growth will not fix borrowing as much of deficit is structural

In terms of significant data this week we have an interest rate decision on Thursday in the UK and Retail Sales figure in the US on Friday.

Report by Philip Ryan

Currency Market Updates by Tom Nadir

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