FOREX - Trends, Forecasts and Implications (Episode 19: September 2012) - page 159

 
Looks like it. North.
 

What do you think of this spiel?! SL was already at breakeven at 1.28910, but closed at 1.29070, and in minus, slipped, slipped. :((

How else to insure?

 
Dimka-novitsek:
Looks like it. North.
it's not clear yet. there are buyers on the downside and sellers on the upside. so it's scrambling.
 
borilunad:
What do you think of this steeple?! SL was already at breakeven, and I closed, and I'm down. How else to insure?
With a fence. On a move like this, the slippage is serious.
 
Dimka-novitsek:
Looks like it. North.
In another hour Benya will be dancing...
 
Wow!!!
 
and gold rumbles to 1,800 )))) pips without waiting for a pullback ))))
 

MARKET TALK: Fed's easing inclination favours risky trading - BBH

    September 13. /Dow Jones/. The US Federal Reserve's statement was "more prone to easing than expected", says Win Ting of Brown Brothers Harriman. This keeps positions on emerging market currencies intact. "Overall it's a green light for risk appetite," he says. The currencies of the Big Ten countries reacted more volatile to the news. The US dollar rose against the Japanese yen compared to the level of the dollar/yen pair before the release of the Fed statement. Despite this, the dollar was down 0.25 per cent from the previous trading day's closing level. One should be prepared to hear gloomy forecasts at US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's conference, says Tin.
 
nexter:
fence. on such movements the slippage is serious.

160 pips!
 
nexter:

*The Fed will continue to buy bonds if the labour market does not improve

*FED will buy agency mortgage-backed securities for an additional $40 billion a month

*The Fed will increase long-term securities in its holdings by another $85 billion a month

*FED-New York: New purchases of agency mortgage-backed securities to begin Friday, should reach $23 billion by the end of September

*FED-New York: Securities purchases schedule will be announced around the last day of each month