Friday, February 6, 2009

Pounds to US Dollar rate rallies as things are worse elsewhere

Foreign Exchange - Global Currency Outlook

For stock markets to rally, even a little, on hope of an okay payrolls number and an acceptable Geithner plan is the triumph of hope over experience. The reduction in risk aversion is premature. A few points - Geithner was the NY Fed president who helped design the original $350 billion TARP handout that overpaid by 25-30%. What makes us think he can do a better job only a few months later? To be fair, maybe nobody can do a good job but that’s not what matters. What matters is that markets are so tired of fear and more fear that traders are grasping at straws. A little greed feels like relief.

But it’s just wishful thinking.

For another thing, the Jan payrolls number is not the only data point that counts. The combined totals over several months (and historical revisions) matter, too, not to mention the rest of the first quarter. Feb is a short month but it won’t be until the first Friday in April that we see the scope of the job losses. We could have had four months of 500,000+ losses, or over two million newly unemployed. This is going to scare the pants off everyone, and rightly. The Obama simulus plan is supposed to save or create 3 million jobs.

Well, two-thirds of it is probably already gone.

Foreign Exchange Analysts blythely say that if the payrolls number is horrendous (say 650,000), the us dollar exchange rate is expected to rise on renewed risk aversion (and presumably send the yen higher again). But back in the sane world, bad payrolls on this scale are bad for the US economic outlook and it’s simply ridiculous to expect a huge disconnect like this between growth and the currency to be long-lasting. At some point, the US and the US Dollar have to be punished for bad results. If your economy is getting a grade of F, your currency cannot thrive for long.

Unless "things are worse elsewhere." And they are. We still have not heard of all the scandals teeming under the surface of the European banking sector. Some of the European economies are in worse shape than the US, which must mean defaults and failures are about to hit the fan. Moreover, Trichet and the ECB are having a "profound" discussion of liquidity traps and why inflation is still a big risk. This is fairly dumb. The US, for all its faults, actually looks better. Whne the messy, inadequate, politically screwed-up US actions look good relative to others, the world is in truly, deeply bad shape.

No wonder gold is holding on to gains over $900 and clinging to the top of its channel. Many forecasters agree that another run to $1000 is inevitable given the high degree of uncertainty in the world today - regardless of the dollar rising or falling. UBS. For example, see demand doubling in 2009 from 2007, chiefly on the long-term inflation outlook. We say this is facile and simplistic. We will get economic contraction everywhere with falling incomes and falling wealth. Inflation is years away, not weeks or months. If this perception gains traction, gold is likely to fade back to the linear regression on the perception that yield is a desirable thing in a near zero-return world and that liquidity is a priority and not something to be shrugged off.

As always on payrolls date, we advise you clean your desk today and not hold any Foreign Exchange positions.
This is a crapshoot, not high-level decision-making based on deep intellectual considerations. You may want to sell euros up around 1.2950 if the payrolls number is really bad on the expectation that the dollar exchange rate will gain on the day and into Monday. That’s a medium probability outcome but it’s still gambling.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
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2 comments:

Luke said...

"Pounds to US Dollar rate rallies"! I'd say so. Obviously, Ms. Rockefeller did not see that one coming as I am subscriber and took a 342 pip loss per her short term RFT #357 recommendation on Feb 3, 2009 to Sell the GBP/USD. According to her tracking method, the Short Term recommendations resulted in an 842 pip loss for the week (my losses were slightly more due to post-recommendation market changes).
I am starting to question the size of her drawdowns as they are considerably larger than the targets for each trade. This method will only work if the recommendations are correct a majority of the time.
On a side note, there have been several issues with minor errors. In one example, a "buy" recommendation actually said "sell" but the reader was expected to catch this error by looking at the target and stop loss prices. Well, what if I placed the trade first and then enter the stop and target limits? To reverse that little mistake, I am out the 5 pip spread that the broker takes. In addition, when I emailed for clarification, the response was that I had to wait for explanation in the following issue (the next day!). Buy or Sell??
They say that the devil is in the details and it seems that the devil might be creeping in on Rockefeller's Trading Recommendations.
Can somebody please explain to me the reasoning behind recommendations with stop losses larger than targets (sometimes 2-3 times greater)? Some further insight into the Rockefeller method would be helpful.

Euro pound exchange said...

Hi Luke,

Sorry in the delay in answering my spam filter junk the BlogSpot notice.

I have been a client of Barbara's for a long time and keep this blog for her and I am very happy with her results. From time to time there will be errors and you should always check and you will pick up errors as it is very simple as she never uses stops as take profits and limits as stops. (Place your whole order with your broker – if he doesn’t pick up the errors – get a new broker!)

At present Ms Rockefeller is up $51k for the 1st quarter of the year and $4k for May.

This is fantastic results.

What is even more impressive is that she has never had a losing year. I have recommended a number of friends to Barbara and I always say the same thing – stay the course and don’t improvise.

Ms Rockefeller operates as a hedge fund would - they will never disclose their methods but study her charts they will help you understand what she is looking for and you can break it down. This will also help understand what the market is doing.

As to the take profits and stop losses Barbara has explained many times the Market is very volatile and if you don’t have wide stops at present you will be stopped out day trading. Personally I am breaking my own rules and trading without stops but much smaller size than normal to compensate.

For the record – I don’t not have and financial interest in RTS – nor am I paid to keep this blog by Barbara.

If you have any further questions please ask

Regards

Damian George