Quote from ralph00:
I assume everybody has read Randy McKay's interview in Market Wizards II about how he made millions in the 70s betting the British would give up on $1.70 as a ceiling on GBPUSD. All his trader buddies were shorting the hell out of GBP at $1.70 because it was a "risk free" trade. He just kept accumulating GBP knowing eventually the BoE would give up. One morning he woke up and GBP was trading at $1.7050 and he knew he had won. A month or two later, it was at $1.90.
I agree it's probably too early to bet on the SNB giving up, but when necessary, give up they will.
Quote from Butterball:
If your broker supports EUREX/DTB then you can simply trade the German fixed income futures. They're highly liquid across the maturity spectrum.
Also - as opposed to ETFs - no pesky withholding taxes on dividends to deal with.
Quote from Daal:
I don't think I even understand your example, if he bought GBP, 1.90 is supposed to be bad for him
Quote from ralph00:
No, the U.K. set a ceiling on GBPUSD of $1.70. The conventional wisdom was to then sell GBP at $1.70 since it could only go down from that level. McKay instead bought at $1.70 and continued to buy. Finally, the U.K gave in on the ceiling and let sterling go. It rose to $1.90 over the next weeks, making McKay a fortune.
Quote from Daal:
I have to say I find it highly amusing to see people on ET skeptical the SNB can hold the peg. Those are the same people who claim central banks are insane with their money printing efforts that don't end
They essentially are betting the CBs will turn hawkish, which goes completly against their own views. Of course, they don't realize that. The truth is that they are skeptical because they are free market purists and it breaks their heart to see a goverment fixing a market price, so their instinct is to say it won't work because the market is stronger. If they like the gold standard then it just adds another layer to their contradiction because the gold standard is quite similar to a fixed currency. I don't see them claiming gold pegs are unsustainable