I'm not a currency trader. When I was referring to the "euro" situation, I'm talking about Greece, Spain, Italy, etc, not specially the currency which does play a part. That being said, euro currency has been declining so steeply, this momentary reprieve probably doesn't spell the end yet.
Quote from logic_man:
See, this is where "causes" ultimately become subjective. The Euro was actually up today. If Euroland weakness was part of the cause for US market weakness, the Euro should have been down, no? It was down every other day the market was weak this week and when the Euro spiked up on some rumor, the ES spiked up, too.
The Euro and the ES were moving in lockstep overnight early Friday, though, and only decoupled after the US employment report. So, for part of the night, you could say the cause was weakness in the Euro, but then at 8:30 Eastern time, that cause became inoperative.
But, ultimately, none of this matters, if you are a trader. You can either trade what the price action dictates or you can try to find external reasons for the price action. The two activities are both sufficiently time-consuming that no one individual can do both competently, even if they were to dedicate 24 hours per day to them combined. If you want to be a world-class trader, it takes more than 12 hours per day of work. If you want to be a world-class interpreter of the causes of market movements, it takes more than 12 hours a day to do that, too.
So, take your pick.
