No macro thinking, no fundamental reasoning. Probably there are dozens of very good fundamental reasons for either side of the trade. Why bother?Quote from dhpar:
what is your macro thinking behind shorting EURCHF?
Quote from Butterball:
No macro thinking, no fundamental reasoning. Probably there are dozens of very good fundamental reasons for either side of the trade. Why bother?
To me - just by means of anecdotal observation - many players are betting on one side of the boat thinking it's a no-risk 100% sure-fire bet to collect risk-free money. What if just hypothetically the 'real' odds are were only 85% or 90%? With the recent drop my risk is down to approx. half a percent with a potential payoff of a dozen or so percent. I love asymmetric setups like these.
Quote from Butterball:
No macro thinking, no fundamental reasoning. Probably there are dozens of very good fundamental reasons for either side of the trade. Why bother?
To me - just by means of anecdotal observation - many players are betting on one side of the boat thinking it's a no-risk 100% sure-fire bet to collect risk-free money. What if just hypothetically the 'real' odds are were only 85% or 90%? With the recent drop my risk is down to approx. half a percent with a potential payoff of a dozen or so percent. I love asymmetric setups like these.
I was short in size until they established the peg. Similarly long JPY during the half a dozen or so BOJ interventions. I didn't suffer any slippage to write home about.Quote from Daal:
There is also the chance the peg is lifted to 1.25, I don't believe its all that likely but its the other side of that tail one has to be careful about