Archive for September, 2008

GFT Daily Market Commentary

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Forex Market Commentary for October 1, 2008 by Cornelius Luca

GFT Daily Market Commentary

The dollar surged across the board on Tuesday on expectations that the House of Representatives will actually pass the TARP as early as Thursday. The equity indices recovered nicely after being obliterated a day earlier. Do we still need a TARP? Illiquid market conditions on the last day of September and of the third quarter exacerbated the move.  The good US reports on confidence and Chicago PMI were nice but irrelevant, since the surveys were taken before the most recent financial meltdown. But the increase risk to the Eurozone should hurt the euro in the medium term. Following some early strength, the dollar should correct lower. Keep an eye on the Eurozone, UK and US manufacturing PMI.

Euro/dollar

The euro/dollar fell sharply to reach an 18-day low on Tuesday and my model remains short.  The pair is likely to bottom early and then to attempt to recover briefly.
 
Immediate support is at 1.4010. The next level is 1.3935. A distant pivotal low is at 1.3883. 
 
Good resistance is seen at 1.4210. The next level is 1.4275. Above 1.4335, resistance now follows at 1.4540.

Oscillators are mixed.

NEAR-TERM: Slightly bearish
MEDIUM-TERM: Mixed
LONG-TERM: Bearish

Dollar/yen

Dollar/yen reversed aggressively from a four-week low after holding above 103.55 and avoiding the risk of forming a massive head-and-shoulders formation, and my model promptly went long. The short-term outlook is only mildly bullish, as the upside looks limited.
 
Immediate resistance is at 106.75 from another 50-point pivot, which targets 106.25 and 107.25. The next level is 107.95 from a 50-point pivot, which targets 107.45 and 108.45.

Good support is now at 105.60 from a 50-point pivot that targets 105.10 and 106.10. Further support is 104.50 by a 50-point pivot, which targets 104.00 and 105.00.   

Oscillators are rising.

NEAR-TERM: Mixed to slightly bullish
MEDIUM-TERM: Mixed
LONG-TERM: Mixed

Sterling/dollar

Sterling/dollar fell further on Tuesday, nailing a two-week low, and my model remains short.  The downside is only mildly and early favored, as the pair is heavily oversold and needs to recover. 
 
Initial support is at 1.7760. Below 1.7710, support is at 1.7805. This is followed by 1.7540.   A distant pivot low is at 1.7448.
 
Initial resistance is at 1.7916. Good resistance follows at 1.8060. Distant resistance is at 1.8205. 

Oscillators are falling.

NEAR-TERM: Mixed to slightly bearish
MEDIUM-TERM: Mixed
LONG-TERM: Bearish

Dollar/Swiss franc

Dollar/Swiss franc exploded higher on Tuesday to the highest levels seen since September 19. My model remains long. The initial bias is bullish, but the pair is overbought and the risk is lower.  
 
Initial resistance now comes at 1.1250. The next level is 1.1279.  A key pivot high lies at 1.1417. 
 
Immediate support is seen at 1.1160. Below 1.1090, support is now pegged at 1.0920. Only a break below 1.0845 would turn the medium-term outlook negative, but this is unlikely.
 
Oscillators are rising.

 
NEAR-TERM: Mixed to slightly bullish
MEDIUM-TERM: Mixed  
LONG-TERM: Bullish

Despite Financial Turmoil, GFT Remains Strong

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Forex trading with GFTOne of the advantages of forex trading with a company like GFT is that you enjoy the advantages of a strong and stable company.

Even as the financial markets are rocked with turmoil, GFT remains stable and strong. This is due, in part, to GFT’s strong financial position and fundamentally sound decisions. GFT CEO Gary Tilkin points this out about the company:

“We are virtually debt-free, and our financial strength puts us in a position to serve the trading needs of our customers today and for many years to come.”


Additionally, it is worth noting that GFT is privately held, and therefore not subject to the whims of the stock market.

See Also

Asian Currencies Fall in FX Trading

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Currency trading with Asian marketsAsian currencies are falling in FX trading on the currency market. It is important to remember in currency trading that Asian markets are closely tied to what happens on the U.S. stock market.

With the U.S. stock market plunging yesterday, it is no surprise that emerging markets in Asia are dropping in currency trading. Bloomberg reports on Asian currencies and FX trading:

“We’ll see broad-based Asian currency weakness,” said Mitul Kotecha, global head of foreign-exchange strategy at Calyon in Hong Kong. “The weakness in equities results in further outflows from equity markets among foreign investors.”

See Also

Down Under Currencies to Fall

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Forex trading forecast for Australian dollarThe down under currencies are struggling right now, and the forex trading forecast does not look promising for the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar.

Much of the success of the down under currencies in FX trading relies on a strong commodities market and good global economic growth. Both of those indicators are in trouble, and that means that the Aussie and the kiwi are facing some severe challenges as the future approaches.

See Also

European Bailout Possibilities and the Euro in Forex Trading

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Currency trading and the euroThe euro continues to fall in forex trading against the U.S. dollar. And, even as the U.S. bailout package fails in Congress, some sort of bailout is being considered in Europe.

Even though the U.S. bailout package was rejected, the currency market sees hope for the U.S. dollar. There is speculation that the greenback will overcome the current crisis and continue rising in FX trading.

On the other hand, the euro is expected to continue faltering in forex trading, since there are signs that economic troubles are just beginning in the eurozone.

See Also