u should collaborate with GGB man his performance looks like yours.
Quote from amazingIndustry:
My take here is this: This current environment may just be one of the prime examples of complete market "irrational-ism". I believe the Fed will act ONLY when the real economy economy is accelerating its decent because they know full well that there is QE3, and after QE3 there is.....well......nothing. There is only the abyss left. It is the precisely same reason why ECB hesitates to re-start their bond buying program. No difference. Thus, I believe the market is expecting a timing for QE3 that the Fed cannot deliver, does not want to deliver because it would exhaust itself of all its remaining tools to support its mandate. Not that I believe they did a fine job at delivering on their mandate.
So where does that leave us? With patience! European politicians do what they do best, they take summer vacations just after they met at the EU summit in their hilarious belief they bought themselves a year or so. I think they inactivity and lack of urgency will be severely punished in due time. Until then the Euro is already heavily shorted and to be honest I do not see much to go for it until more euro-centric negative headlines hit the tape. To be honest I am eyeballing the Australian dollar right now, I believe it is way overvalued even against the dollar. Its life line, China, is in serious distress (even though they are professional at masking it), and stocks trade at very rich valuations given the current economic environment. As pointed out earlier it could go on for longer (the equity surge) but we may be close to a top in audusd.
This leaves me with patiently waiting for the right setup, sometimes its as simple as being around when the shit hits the fan and having the guts to pull the trigger or to start legging into a position. [/B]
Quote from amazingIndustry:
What an odd day, yesterday:
* UsdJpy sold off, dipping quickly below 78.00, rumors had it BoJ and MoF asking for prices in yen baskets but in the end no action taken. For me there is no doubt that medium to long term we will see EurJpy trading at 70 levels. Now this does not help much in my daily trading efforts but politicians, monetary policy setters and regulators, however, should have medium- to long-term views, and I get the impression that especially in Japan an understanding of market psychology by even self-proclaimed financial market experts (BoJ members, finance minister) is virtually non-existent. I have no idea why the finance ministry and BoJ make themselves to a clown by coming out every single day, repeatedly stating that "we are vigilantly watching excessive fx moves and we will act accordingly, no tools are off the table". Lol, and what really gets me is that such comments are coming out after usdjpy moved by some 50 measly pips.

Quote from gmst:
I enjoy your commentary and sometimes I get ideas from what you write. So, thanks for writing
All around nice commentary on the current market environment. However, I disagree with your view on BoJ guardians. Imo, they are acting in a very smart way by coming out verbally whenever u/j makes a 50 pip move intra-day. The huge interventions they did over the last 2-3 yrs is still back in the minds of market participants. The constant fear mongering that they are engaging in has kept market participants on their toes. The 76 line in the sand that they protected last year for months has almost removed the speculative interest from driving yen any higher. In fact, we saw a massive 76 to 84 rally in u/j in the first half of this year after speculative attack on strengthening of yen had subsided from the market. I think they have been very effective in using their policy tools, interventions and constant fear mongering - otherwise u/j would have been below 68 today (if you just look at the rate of u/j descent before they could engineer this mix of policy tools+ fear mongering. Look at u/j 3m historical volatility and compare it to todays levels. Its a clear testimony to the success of Japanese in controlling the u/j level. Agreed, however that none of this could prevent u/j from going from 200+ to below 100 over the last couple of decades and fundamentals did assert themselves over the long term. But then that time frame is not really material to short term traders.
Finally, have a great vacation. I have never been to Canada but I hear Vancouver is one of the best cities in the world to live.