Posted on February 29, 2008 at 17:36 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

YuanHi everyone

I want to congratulate Toni Juste for the BIG success of his blog

http://advisor.fxstreet.com/

As you very well know, Toni follows the FX market up-to-the-minute from London Open till London Close 08-17GMT, and also places trading tips and technical alerts, as well as general market information, charts, etc. throughout the day.

This hard daily work he started in February 2006 is being now recognized by over 1,000 subscribers to Toni’s feedburner and over 1,000 unique visitors entering the blog.

On Thursday February 28th Toni made a new all-times record high with 2,150 unique visitors reading his work either by entering his blog or by reading his posts by RSS through feedburner.

Congrats Toni!

Francesc


Posted on February 29, 2008 at 13:05 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

I found this very interesting article at the thread Itme keeps at FXstreet’s Forum "Low Risk / High Reward Trading System"

Itme´s thread is very much followed and I definetly found this article worth to read.

 

I suppose Itme took the article from FinFacts Ireland web site:

http://www.finfacts.com/irishfinancenews/article_1012701.shtml

Or Online Journal web site:

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3003.shtml

Congrats Itme. Great job!

Francesc

Bernanke Policies Failing, Long Recession Looms?

These are the personal views of Peter Morici, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Business and former Chief Economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission:

The National Association of Realtors reported January existing home sales sank to 4.890 million from 6.380 million a year earlier, and the average price was $201,100, down from $210,900 or 4.6% from a year earlier. In December, sales were 4.910 million and the median price was $207,000. The large price drop from December was particularly disturbing.

These numbers were hardly surprising. The National Association of Realtors tracking statistics for new sales contracts have been sinking precipitously in recent months. Buyers are scared, and recent actions by the Federal Reserve, the Bush Administration or the Congress offer little hope for better times soon.

The U.S. consumer faces a constant drumbeat of bad news. Housing prices are falling, gas prices are rising, good new jobs are getting scarcer than hens teeth, and credit card terms are getting tougher, even as the Federal Reserve makes credit to banks cheaper.

Federal Reserve efforts to increase liquidity and bank lending have not made mortgages adequately more available, especially in the Alt-A and subprime categories. Alt-A loans are for homeowners offering good repayment prospects but either less-than-perfect credit or recent income records. Fannie Mae, generally, only takes prime lenders, and does not finance most upper-end, more-expensive homes.

Ben Bernanke’s strategy has two components. The Fed has lowered short-term interest rates by slashing the Federal Funds rate 1.25 percentage points since January 22, and the Fed has permitted banks to use subprime-backed mortgage securities to borrow from the Federal Reserve. The latter is the so-called term auction facility.

These policies do not solve the basic problem, because these policies do not provide banks with opportunities to write many new non-Fannie Mae conforming mortgages.

Banks cannot provide the housing market with adequate amounts of mortgage finance by taking deposits, writing mortgages and keeping those mortgages on their portfolios. Bank deposits are not nearly enough to carry the U.S. housing market. Much the same applies for loans to businesses.

In normal times, regional banks bundle mortgages into bonds, so-called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), and sell these in the bond market through the large Wall Street banks.

The recent subprime crisis revealed the large banks were not creating legitimate bonds. Instead, they sliced and diced loans into incomprehensibly complex derivatives, and then sold, bought, resold, and insured those contraptions to generate fat fees and million dollar bonuses for bank executives.

This alchemy discovered, insurance companies, mutual funds and other private investors will no longer buy mortgage-backed bonds. Banks can no longer repackage mortgages and other loans into bonds and are pulling back lending.

Home prices tank, consumers spend less, businesses fail, and jobs disappear.

Private investors have taken massive losses, and the large banks have taken about $150 billion in losses on their books. This left the banks short of capital and in liquidity crises. The banks turned to foreign governments, through sovereign investment funds, to sell new shares and raise fresh capital, and to the Fed to boost liquidity.

Neither the sovereign investment funds nor Ben Bernanke have required the banks to change their business models, which essentially pays bankers for creating arcane investment vehicles that generate transactions fees, rather than writing sound mortgages and selling simple, understandable mortgage-backed securities to investors

Without those changes in business practices, the bond market remains closed to mortgage finance, other than CDOs offered by Fannie Mae, and it is inadequate to supply the volume and array of mortgage products necessary to support a full housing recovery.

The economic stimulus package tax rebates, interest rate cuts and Administration help for distressed homeowners are palliatives. The stimulus package at about $150 billion is less than the losses taken by private investors and the banks on CDOs.

Getting the housing market going and the economy growing will require Ben Bernanke to aggressively pursue banking reform. Without genuine changes in the way Wall Street handles mortgages, the economy can’t get back on track.


Posted on February 28, 2008 at 13:14 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »


Hi everyone,

Nordmarkets.com
has just informed us that we already got 426 participants registered for the FX
Trader of the Year 2008 contest.

That’s very
good news indeed!

Competition
will start on March 3rd, 0.00 h. EST and will last 3 months until June 3rd,
23.00 h. EST
.

Remember
that the winner of the contest will have the chance to manage an account at
Nordmarkets with $100,000.

Also he/she
will be invited to attend our next International Traders Conference 2008 edition and
give a speech. Winner accommodation in

Barcelona

will be on the house.

There will
be also prizes for the following subcategories:

* Minimum Drawdown (Casino is my
Birthplace)

* Best Sharpe Ratio (The Academic Trader)

* Best Winning Streak (Once in my Life)

* Best Wining Trade (The Lotta Pips Man)

* Worst Trader (Best Broker’s Friend)

You can
still register:

http://www.nordmarkets.com/toty/

To stay
tuned about the entire goings on the contest at:

http://www.fxstreet.com/forum/showthread.php?t=2102

Francesc


Posted on February 28, 2008 at 11:08 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

If you surf FXstreet.com and the next few days, you’ll notice that things does not look very nice at FXstreet.com from time to time.

We are changing website’s width from 800 pixels to 1,024 in order to make the site easier to read and easier to surf.

We now must adjust everything to the new width but I’m pretty confident that again the change will be for good.

Francesc


Posted on February 27, 2008 at 16:42 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

No doubt I must declare Sam Saiden`s webinar about “Using CCI and Stochastics For Long and Short Term Forex Trading”, the webinar of the month at FXstreet.com.

The visits to that webinar recording are touching new all-time record highs

http://transcripts.fxstreet.com/2008/02/using-cci-and-s.html

Congratulations Sam

Francesc


Posted on February 27, 2008 at 14:32 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

For those of you interested in Central and Eastern Europe economies, UniCredit Group’s has just released its quarterly report for the first quarter of 2008

Main issues:
* The CEE region copes with the new global environment
* Usual growth drivers remain supportive…
* …but vulnerabilities, arising from financing domestic growth through international savings, will now be priced
* Central European countries largely unaffected, with some cyclical tightening on the cards
* The new international environment unveils long lasting vulnerabilities in South Eastern Europe and in the Baltics
* Countries in the rest of Europe countries more sensitive to the international repricing of risk, but continuing to show very high growth
* More serious concerns for Kazakhstan in the short term, with medium to long term potential preserved

To read it, download it below:

Download cee_qu108.pdf


Posted on February 26, 2008 at 13:39 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

Thursday February 28th we will cover live the release of the US GDP on FXstreet.com homepage.

The release is expected at 13:30 GMT - 09:30 EST so live coverage will start at 13:15 GMT with a preview of the release and then it will last till around 14:00/14:15 GMT depending on the impact the release will have on the FX market.

Also, remember that you can follow the release of the event and its impact on the market on the Special Webinar: Watch Live Coverage of the US GDP with Jerry Furst

Do not miss it

Francesc


Posted on February 25, 2008 at 16:56 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Upon High Frequency Economics request, we must clarify that:

*FXstreet.com do not and never have had permission to distribute the economic research of high frequency economics in any form.
I regret to tell you that we never had such permission.

*High Frequency Economics, Ltd, in Valhalla, New York, is the sole distributor of its Daily and Weekly Notes and Snapshots products. For more information they can be contacted at info@hifreqecon.com."

http://forex.typepad.com/fxstreet/2007/12/high-frequency.html

Francesc


Posted on February 25, 2008 at 16:41 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

A busy day today

Upon our visitors request, we have added USD/MXN to the following sections:

http://www.fxstreet.com/rates-charts/tradable-rates/
http://www.fxstreet.com/rates-charts/live-charts/
http://www.fxstreet.com/rates-charts/currency-charts/

Enjoy it

Francesc


Posted on February 25, 2008 at 16:35 in Uncategorized by FrancescNo Comments »

Hi everyone

An interesting reading from YapiKredi about how foreign liquidity constraints could affect Turkish economy in 2008 and force New Turkish Lira correction

Download ea_liquidity_constraint_250208.pdf

Francesc

Older posts »