Archief de Categorie voor van het Forex `Onderwijs'

Mei
07

Zijnd a forex handelaar is een het stimuleren beroep waar begrensd u uw dagelijkse van 24 uur het dagleven met forex nieuws alarm van rond bol vijf en een half dagen per week. De forex/munt handelmarkt begint van het Oosten waar Tokyo zal beginnen rond 9am Maandag uit te wisselen hun tijd die Zondag 7pm in New York is en het beëindigt ongeveer 4 p.m. (EST) Vrijdag in New York.

I was once a forex trader expert in the four major currencies operational in a small boutique currency trading company in San Francisco. I still remember the working hours was almost 16 hours per days where you only got few hours of sleep each day. We specialized in private investors’ funds and managing those funds were high in pressure and stress; the reasons are that the private investors will call you anytime to check their forex trading positions and forex account balances. The payout was high but the working hour was dreadful. Read more…

Apr
21

- Euro Breaks Below 1.3000 - German ZEW Survey Could Impact Trade on Tuesday
- British Pound Tumbles Against Safe-Havens - UK CPI May Fall Back Into BOE’s Inflation Target Range
- Canadian Dollar Under Pressure Ahead of Bank of Canada Rate Decision - What to Expect

US Dollar, Japanese Yen Rally on Flight-to-Quality as Investors Fear Results of US Bank Stress Tests
The US dollar and Japanese yen surged on Monday as risk aversion shook the markets once again. Indeed, there is substantial uncertainty about the health of the financial markets as the US government performs stress-tests on the 19 biggest US financial institutions, and the results will not be announced until May 4. Until then, investors could remain jittery, especially when they see announcements like the one released by Bank of America today, as they said the net charge-off rate rose to 2.85 percent from 1.25 percent a year earlier, while credit-card losses increased to 8.62 percent from 5.19 percent. With the US recession lingering on and job losses accelerating, banks may find that they are persistently weighed down by consumers’ inability to pay. Read more…

Apr
15

Technical analysis is the study of stock prices and pricing patterns that can help investors determine whether a stock is overbought (expensive) or oversold (cheap). By using various technical indicators together, called correlation, traders can bring the “big picture” about a stock into clearer focus.

Here we’ll look at volume, the Aroon indicator and Fibonacci numbers, three technical analysis tools that can be used to help facilitate more profitable trades. In fact, investors can use them in conjunction with each other to spot emerging trends and stay ahead of the crowd. Read on to find out how. Read more…

Apr
14

People’s emotions lead them to make bad financial moves in chaotic times. Here’s what to look out for. In a chaotic bear market like this one, it’s easy for investors to fall into traps. They might scramble to make trades based on the latest news reports. They might search for a miracle stock that will pay off big and let them recoup all their losses. Or they might go in the other direction — and get so scared of the market that they don’t make any moves at all. Read more…

Apr
08

Those trading in the foreign-exchange market (forex) rely on the same two basic forms of analysis that are used in the stock market: fundamental analysis and technical analysis. The uses of technical analysis in forex are much the same: price is assumed to reflect all news, and the charts are the objects of analysis. But unlike companies, countries have no balance sheets, so how can fundamental analysis be conducted on a currency? Read more…

Mar
24

The US dollar was put through the ringer this past week as market participants were left to wonder where the currency would find strength as its primary, fundamental pillars started to give way. There is no better gauge for the health of the greenback than price action itself. The dollar index suffered a 345 pip decline through Friday’s close – the biggest weekly drop in years. Read more…

Nov
26

Warren Buffett has already told the world what he’s doing in this frightful market. The Oracle of Omaha proudly proclaimed that he’s “been buying American stocks” with his personal funds.

But it should also be noted that Buffett has been putting his investors’ money on the line as well. After sitting on piles of cash for several years and lamenting the lack of attractive opportunities, Buffett has made several key acquisitions through his investment conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway, culminating in a flurry of late- September and early-October deals.

In just a two-week span, Buffett picked up Constellation Energy for the relative bargain price of $4.7 billion. He bought $5 billion in preferred stock from Goldman Sachs, receiving a fat 10% yield. And he purchased $3 billion in preferred shares of GE, also yielding 10%.

This doesn’t mean Buffett is saying go out and buy Goldman or GE (GE) stock. In fact, there are plenty of reasons why you shouldn’t try to follow his lead, not the least of which is the fact that Berkshire gets deals that individuals simply can’t.

But that’s not the point. The opportunity here is to pick up some valuable investing wisdom from the greatest practitioner alive. In this spirit, here’s what I think you can learn from Buffett’s moves:

Be Greedy When Others Are Fearful

It’s the most famous of all Buffett-isms: “Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.” Today there’s ample evidence that people are scared, as fund investors have been redeeming record amounts of money from their stock portfolios.

By contrast, Buffett is putting his money to work. Berkshire’s cash balance, by my estimate, is at its lowest level in recent memory.

Now, this doesn’t mean the market will turn around tomorrow. But Buffett’s point is that this is not the time to flee U.S. stocks. In fact, now is a great time to be looking for shares of high-quality firms that have been beaten down to affordable levels.

For examples of attractively priced industry leaders, see the suggestions to the right.

Don’t Be Hobbled by Past Mistakes

Buffett’s investment in Goldman Sachs (GS) was surprising to many, given his frequent digs at Wall Street’s casino culture and a problematic investment he made in Salomon Brothers.

In 1987, Buffett bought a stake in Salomon to ward off a hostile takeover, but the firm nearly collapsed amid a bond bid-rigging scandal a few years later, and Buffett had to step in as interim chairman.

Although the investment eventually worked out - Salomon was bought by Travelers, which merged with Citicorp to form Citigroup (C) - it’s safe to say that it was a longer and harder road than he had anticipated.

Still, Buffett understood that investment banking, for all its recent woes, is an attractive business if managed properly. The group of top-tier firms is fairly small, and it would be hard for a new competitor to break into the business, which gives Goldman Sachs tremendous bargaining power over its customers.

There’s an important lesson in this for individual investors. Just because many financial stocks in your portfolio have imploded recently, it doesn’t mean you should sell out of this sector entirely - or turn your back on these stocks for good.

Don’t Fall in Love With Your Stocks

Buffett is famous for having said that his favorite holding period is “forever.” But he will sell a stock he loves if conditions warrant. For example, late last year, as crude-oil prices were approaching $100 a barrel, Buffett jettisoned his stake in PetroChina (PTR).

Why? After multiplying more than fivefold since he bought it a few years earlier, PetroChina shares had reached fair value, so he sold. Since he cashed out, PetroChina shares have been cut in half.

Chalk this up to a lesson the Oracle learned in the late ’90s. As he admitted in 2003, “…I made a big mistake in not selling several of our larger holdings during the Great Bubble.”

Buffett similarly made what may be one of his best decisions when he sold Berkshire Hathaway’s long-held stake in Freddie Mac (FRE) in 2000. He’s never written about exactly why, but he noted presciently at his 2001 annual shareholder meeting that Freddie Mac’s “risk profile had changed.”

Keep Your Powder Dry

While the rest of the world gorged on cheap credit, Buffett maintained Berkshire’s conservative profile. This hindered his returns when times were good, but having lots of cash on hand enabled Buffett to snap up once-in-a-lifetime deals, like Constellation Energy (CEG).

Buffett, who owns several utilities, jumped on Constellation in September after its shares tumbled from around $60 to his purchase price of $26.50 in a mere matter of days. The result: He nabbed a company that produces nearly $1 billion in earnings a year for less than $5 billion.

Now, you may not be in a position to keep $40 billion in the bank. But as Buffett showed, it’s smart to have some cash on hand for opportunistic purchases. What’s more, there’s nothing wrong with being disciplined enough to turn your back on stocks that you’re not 100% confident in. That’s sage advice.

Why He’s Warren Buffett — and You’re Not

If investing were as simple as mimicking Warren Buffett, then all you’d have to do to retire rich would be to download a free copy of the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder letter and shadow the Oracle’s moves.

Given that you’re reading this article instead of relaxing at your seaside villa, it’s clear copying Buffett is no easy task. So as you marvel at the Sage, keep the following in mind:

Warren Can Strike Deals You Can’t

Buffett’s reputation and Berkshire’s financial heft are enormous advantages that regular investors simply don’t share. Take his recent investment in Goldman Sachs (GS). It was made in preferred stock that was offered only to Berkshire and pays a 10% fixed yield.

That’s twice what Uncle Sam is initially earning on the preferred shares it got from Goldman in exchange for injecting capital into the bank. But chalk that up to the Buffett premium. Firms want the Oracle to invest in them for his seal of approval.

Berkshire’s purchase of Constellation Energy offers a great example. Constellation’s shares had fallen 75% from their highs because the market was worried about the financial health of the company’s energy-trading operations.

If you or I bought the stock at that level, we would have been making a bet that Constellation would pull through. But we would not have been able to affect the odds. However, Berkshire’s financial strength and Buffett’s name assured Constellation’s survival, making the investment more valuable as soon as Warren bought the company.

Warren Is Smarter Than You Are

Many casual observers assume that Buffett simply buys great companies and hangs on to them. Simple, right? But the real key to Buffett’s success is far more complicated.

Buffett has created enormous value for Berkshire by buying all kinds of securities, from common stock and preferred shares to currencies, distressed debt and options.

He has also made money through merger arbitrage and fixed-income arbitrage. These are all areas that only the most sophisticated investor should dabble in.

Why Mimic Warren When You Can Hire Him?

Your best bet for benefiting from Buffett’s wisdom is the most obvious: Buy Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) stock.

It’s really an investment company. But unlike a fund, it doesn’t charge annual management fees. Buffett has deployed a lot of cash into attractive deals lately, which should add value for years to come.

Story from Yahoo! Finance

May
21

by Scott Owens

FX Engines


The “well-chosen example” of the perfect trade as shown on a chart is too often the basis for system building. When that system inevitably breaks down, the trader returns to the charts desperately searching for a picture that tells a compelling story. Instead of repeating this damaging cycle, traders must realize that system building is a methodical process with clear steps, most of which occur without the distortion created by charts.

Content

ANALYSIS

  • Understand why chart-based systems fail.
  • Learn the steps essential to system building.

ACTION

  • Use charts as an aid, not the foundation, of system building.
  • Create a wide array of systems and observe their performance.
  • Use multiplied historical tests to find hidden enhancements for existing systems. Read more…
Mar
29

Source: FXStreet

The U.S. Dollar Index (USDX®) is an index of the of the United States dollar relative to a basket of foreign currencies. The USDX® is a weighted geometric mean of the dollar’s compared to the Euro (EUR), Japenese yen (JPY), Pound sterling (GBP), Canadian dollar (CAD), Swedish krona (SEK) and Swiss franc (CHF) relative to March 1973. The USDX® measures the dollar’s general value relative to a base of 100.00. For example, a quote of 105.50 means that the dollar’s value has risen 5.5 percent since this base period. March 1973 was chosen as a base period because it represents a significant milestone in foreign exchange history when the world’s major trading nations allowed their currencies to float freely against each other. This agreement was reached at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC and was a victory for free market theorists. The Smithsonian agreement replaced the unsuccessful fixed rate regime established approximately 25 years earlier at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire.

The current level of the USDX® reflects the average value of the dollar relative to this 1973 base period. In March 1973, the value of the dollar index was 100.00. Since that time, the U.S. Dollar Index has traded as high as the mid-160’s and it recently set a new low of 71.99 on March 13, 2008. The index is updated 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Just as the Dow Jones Industrial Average provides a general indication of the value of the U.S. stock market, the U.S. Dollar Index (USDX®) provides a general indication of the international value of the U.S. Dollar. It is also important to note that the currencies and weights used in the calculation of the USDX® are the same as those used in the Federal Reserve Boards trade-weighted U. S. Dollar Index.

Similar to the stock market, investors can purchase the U.S. Dollar Index (USDX®\) through IntercontinentalExchange ® (ICE), which is considered a competing trading exchange to the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX). ICE operates global commodity and financial products marketplaces and is probably considered the world’s leading electronic platform for energy markets and soft commodity exchange. USDX® futures contracts trade electronically on the ICE electronic trading platform as well as an open outcry platform on ICE’s Future U.S.’s New York and Dublin trading floors.

Feb
24

by David Morrison
In this article, David describes the advantages of forex trading compared to other forms of trading. Certainly having no brokerage costs adds to the profitability of trading any product, and hence is one of the attractions of currency trading. Here’s the article:

There are many different advantages to trading forex instead of futures or stocks, such as: Read more…