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Cable Breaks Range

After watching cable remain rangebound all summer, the market used the Federal Reserve as a reason to weaken the USD further. As a result, the $GBPUSD broke its range to the upside. Traders know this to be a bullish signal but I am skeptical of this rally.

GBPUSD daily chart August 22 2012

1. The Bank of England

The BoE is also very dovish. It, too, has signaled more QE is coming. That’s QE4 folks.

2. UK Economy

The British economy was the first of the G10 to slip back into recession when it did so in the Q1 2012. The Olympics may give the economy a welcomed bump, it will be temporary rather than a kickstart to a recovery.

3. The Eurozone

The UK’s biggest trading partner remains on the brink of financial collapse. To boot, the Eurozone countries are also falling into recession one by one and suffering staggering unemployment.

So the GBP fundamentals are very weak. But the market is all about the USD for the moment. And for that reason, $GBPUSD can go higher. In fact, the bullish close 60+ pips above the key 1.5800 level confirms a technical breakout has occurred. However, follow through could be hampered by the big 61.8% Fibonacci level on the daily chart. Will this breakout turn into a fakeout? It is still a very real possibility. Like I said, I’m skeptical. But trade what you see!

GBPUSD daily with Fibs

Trust The Chart

While this move higher into 1.5800 has peaked a lot of interest, $GBPUSD still closes below the key resistance level. Cable remains rangebound. It looks like a big move but she has yet to prove herself. I love how 50 puts it this morning

 

Trust the chart. And this is why I love StockTwits because that wise nugget comes through to keep things in perspective. Because I actually understand the bulls. It seems the market expects a dovish move from the Fed. I am more skeptical but that doesn’t matter. All that matters today is the market’s reaction to the Fed minutes. If they support the market’s notion for a QE move in September then a breakout could be imminent.

But it is still summer. Trust the chart. The $GBPUSD has yet to become bullish after yesterday’s big move. Not very constructive as the market awaits the release of the Fed minutes. Trade what you see.

 

 

It’s Still Summer

Vacation is over. Kids head back to school this week. It’s back to business. My family is excited for the routine to return. I’m sure traders are too. It’s been a slow-moving, rangebound market.

While vacation may be over, it is still summer. And the $GBPUSD has been rangebound all summer. It’s been a choppy range though. Channel traders who stuck through it profited very nicely.  Showing the kids a good time this summer, I mostly watched from the sideline shaking my head. There were days that the market didn’t even move. There were days it moved 70 pips. $GBPUSD typically has an ATR of 150+ pips. In a trending market, cable can be a thing of beauty. But it is summer. And the long term downtrend has consolidated into a nice-looking channel.

GBPUSD daily Aug 19 2012

But it takes trust to trade the channel. Given the state of the market right now, it’s hard to trust this market. But with several more weeks left of summer, there is little reason for $GBPUSD to move beyond 1.5800 to the upside and 1.5300 to the downside. As traders play the range, we take care not to get lulled by the lazy days of summer. Rather, sentiment is cautious. Will cable actually follow through on its range break? Because eventually the range will break. Until then, we trade what we see.

The Temperamental USD

The USD has threatened to rally for months now. But the $GBPUSD remains in its 300-pip range between 1.5500 and 1.5800. Every time traders, and I do mean ME, gets bullish or bearish due to price action, the USD finds a way to do just the opposite.

For example, despite completing the quarter to 1.5750 on USD ($DX_F) weakness this week, cable never broke above the level to challenge the highs at 1.5800 midterm support and resistance. I was bullish cable going into this trading session. I thought price would continue to rally into 1.5750 – 1.5800 zone and then experience a sharp selloff. The selloff came sooner than expected when risk aversion kicked in as Spanish bond yields and equities spooked the market

So what happens next week? With Spanish (and Italian) yields hitting these high rates at the end of the European session, we can expect the USD to continue to rally when the market opens in Monday trading causing this “Strong USD, Strong GBP” theme to play out once again. As such, this week’s GBP bears should enjoy some profits heading into the weekend. $GBPNZD and $GBPAUD short positions, in particular, paid out nicely this week with continuations in the weak sterling vs. commodities trend. However, do not underestimate this USD. It still rules capital flows and when it is strong on risk aversion fever, GBP will also benefit in the crosses. Most notably, the $EURGBP, $GBPNZD, and $GBPCAD are strong candidates into next week. Trade what YOU see!

EURGBP DAILY
Looking for 0.7800 to hold on a bounce
GBPNZD DAILY
This week’s hold above 1.95 despite kiwi rally looks very good for bulls
GBPCAD DAILY
A close above 1.58 supported by the 61.8 Fib gives some life to bulls

 

 

Commodities Still Strong Against Sterling

BoE easing and QE increases have been dovish for sterling. $GBPNZD and $GBPAUD have staged reversals that has dragged the $GBPCAD right along with it. The GBP breakout against the commodity dollars in the Q1 of this year was all but undone during Q2.

GBPNZD DAILY CHART
Breaks 1.95
GBPAUD DAILY CHART
Breaks 1.5250
GBPCAD DAILY CHART
Breaks 1.5750

After breaking key levels, all 3 pairs are at lows to end the week. No interest in new entries here. Watch for profit-taking to end the week but it is more likely that sellers will be holding their positions for new lows in the short term.

Despite the current weakness in commodities versus the US dollar, the rally in the commodity dollars versus sterling continues to advance. It seems to me that commodities bears shouldn’t get too comfortable. While the USD is likely benefiting from an on-hold Fed while other central banks are cutting rates, commodities may find strength again when the Fed does also move on monetary policy. And the China and global slowdown theory is overblown. While China rates are lower-than-expected, 7% growth in an economy is still ridiculously fantastic. Especially when there is no growth in the UK and only 1.9% in the US. China and other fast-growing economies will likely continue to demand commodities at decent rates to keep prices ultimately higher. Food prices around the world are still very high even as oil dropped nicely. When commodities finally turn and rally again versus the USD, it is more likely that the current bear trend in $GBPNZD, $GBPAUD, $GBPCAD will only steepen and continue the mid term bear trend.

GBP/USD Sets Up

Cable is setting up ahead of the Bank of England decision tomorrow and Friday’s US jobs report. Both releases have impact on both sides of this currency pair so I always find it interesting to look at where the pair trades ahead of these back-to-back releases. Despite the overshoot break below 1.5500, the 61.8% Fib held to see cable rally back to 1.5700. With price exhausting at the whole number, a weak sterling has taken $GBPUSD lower into the zone between 1.5575 and 1.5600. This move lower technically gives bulls a nice buying opportunity. However given the event risk over the next 2 days, traders should assess their risk accordingly ahead of the BoE and NFP.

GBPUSD daily chart

If cable closes the week above 1.5500, the pair remains bullish and favors a move back into the major 1.5800 support-turned-resistance level. A move into 1.5500 still remains a buying opportunity unless $GBPUSD closes out the week below the major psychological level. At current levels, it is still all about 1.5500.

Summer Season

Spring was hectic. This year I was School Site Council Chair, PTA Secretary, and a GATE parent volunteer. I managed to teach 2 classes at the art college. The big kids eeked out 2 activites each over the course of 3 months. The baby started school for the very first time complete with her first extracurricular activity too. Hubby and I did a high five after the last ballet recital. The school year is officially over! So happy for the kids because it has been a great year. Lots of growth in us this year.

I say all that because it’s no surprise that this hectic schedule has forced me to trade slow. Slow and deliberate. More so than I ever have. And I found that there is a peace in not rushing trades. Trades are now limit orders triggered by my rules. And once set, I am free to watch the market however I choose: at my computer, in a meeting, during the boy’s basketball practice or the girl’s art class.

The high-energy of active day trading has very little appeal anymore. Instead, checking price becomes a check on the chart rather than a check on my trades. That subtly in grammar is also the subtly in psychology that has really helped my trading. The chart is a 3rd person. My trade is very personal and very 1st person. Personal matters tend to be emotional whereas we can all can detach from a 3rd party’s issues because they are not our own. As a trader, markets work when it becomes less about me and more about it.

The timing of my slower trading is not lost on me. The kids are back home full time. The whirlwind of winding up a school year is one I more appreciate now as a teacher and parent than when I was a student. The seasons have changed and, quite naturally, my trading changed with it. Trading is certainly a marathon, not a sprint. If you are in it for the quick thrills you probably can’t stay at it long enough to truly be rewarded. The longer I do this the more I understand that. Now I have entered a season in which I am truly living that out.

TRADE SLOW — my new mantra.

Why I do what I do how I do it 🙂

Europe Contagion Hits Japan

chart of Japan trade balance with EU

Europe hit Japan right where it hurts – in the wallet – for the first time in 38 years. We all know that Europe is hell bent on carrying out austerity-driven policies. That drop in exports above is vicious. The following recovery has been tepid at best. It looks like the recession that has gripped Europe since 2009 is spreading beyond its borders.

As its second largest trading partner, Japan needs European business to help inflate its economy. Decreasing trade, however, leads to decreasing price hikes which leads to more deflation which equals a strong yen. Currencies from low-inflation countries are always in favor with investors. With $USDJPY around 80.00 and the $EURJPY having traded to record lows, the BoJ has quite a fight on their hands as Europe only gets worse still.

But who cares? Interesting chart, nonetheless.

Source: Reuters

A Pre-FOMC Look At Cable

cable daily chart

While the $GBPUSD has been bearish since tumbling from 1.63, it turned bullish when it climbed back above 1.5500 after putting in a higher low. This week opened with a 1st test of 1.5800 major support level with the high at 1.5790.

Now the market waits on the FOMC. QE3 is supposed to be revealed today. If so, cable will soar. Support at 1.5800 certainly sets the stage for a return to 1.6000. However, if the Fed decides to wait, the $GBPUSD may fall back towards 1.5500. A break below 1.55 would certainly have bears hoping for new lows below 1.5220.

Trade what you see!

Strong USD, Strong GBP

There is a new theme emerging with the USD BREAKOUT this week. Everything is weak against USD. $GBPUSD has fallen over 650 pips in 4 weeks. It ended last week on a technical break of the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level of its entire rally off the January 2012 lows. That was the last defense for bulls though their case was lost with price action below 1.60 for 2 weeks now. However bearish cable may be this does not at all roll neatly into a weak sterling story.

On the contrary, sterling is killing almost everything else. GBP is at multi-year highs against the euro. No secret there as to why. But the commodity dollars are also weakening tremendously against sterling on broad-based weakness in commodities. The strong USD combined with slowing Chinese growth is looking to make commodity weakness a new trend in the short-term.

When trading these markets, timing is crucial. The reason for the choppy consolidation around 1.60 in $GBPAUD and $GBPCAD is due to the sterling weakness in $GBPUSD and general GBP strength in $EURGBP and $GBPNZD. The EURGBP close below 0.80 signals more GBP strength; even as the $GBPUSD close below 1.5750 signals more GBP weakness there. The correlation is ironic. But price action is truth. The strong USD — strong GBP theme bears paying attention to as we head into summer trading.