



Welcome to my Forex blog and journal, I plan to include my live trades, the good, the bad and the damm right ugly.
By Ilya Spivak, Currency Strategist Thu Dec 02 06:28:00 GMT 2010 Key Overnight Developments
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By David Song, Currency Analyst Mon Nov 22 12:30:00 GMT 2010 Talking Points
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By Joel Kruger, Technical Strategist Fri Nov 19 06:36:00 GMT 2010 Fed Chair Bernanke has been under some intense scrutiny over the past several days, with pressure and criticisms on the latest injection of liquidity into the system coming both domestically and internationally. Most recently, a letter from the Republicans calling into question the current ultra-accommodative policy has been getting a lot of attention, and the Fed has been forced to step up and defend its actions. The Fed has released the prepared text of a speech the Fed Chair is set to deliver at the European Central Bank conference in Frankfurt today, and the message is clear. The central bank will continue with the current policy as it is the only way to help the economy recovery from the latest crisis. There are two key takeaways from the speech. The first is that the central bank will continue to lower long-term rates, and the second is that foreign central banks are interfering with the Fed’s current policy through intervention efforts to weaken their own currencies.
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By John Kicklighter, Currency Strategist 18 November 2010 03:22 GMT Dollar Rally Cools Post Breakout as Investors Mull Financial Cracks, US Inflation Euro Buys Time with Irish Bailout Rebuke but Region-Wide Troubles will Force the Issue British Pound Traders Find Little Confidence in Employment Figures, What about Deficit Progress? Canadian Dollar Prepares for Capital Flows, Growth Forecast and BoC Quarterly Review New Zealand Dollar Boosted by Accelerated Inflation and Improved Consumer Confidence Dollar Rally Cools Post Breakout as Investors Mull Financial Cracks, US Inflation
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By John Kicklighter, Currency Strategist Thu Nov 18 00:16:00 GMT 2010 North American Commodity Update
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By Ilya Spivak, Currency Strategist Wed Nov 17 06:47:00 GMT 2010 Key Overnight Developments
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By Joel Kruger, Technical Strategist Mon Nov 15 06:05:00 GMT 2010 Price action in the early week has been USD positive thus far, with most of the major currencies marginally extending declines against the Greenback on the back of weaker risk appetite, and ongoing concerns over Eurozone sovereign debt issues. The latest headlines have Germany pushing Ireland to accept a bail-out package and help avoid contagion to Portugal and Spain, and this will be a critical theme over the coming sessions.
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
By Sumit Roy, Fri Nov 12 02:36:00 GMT 2010 Gold has been receiving an increasing amount of attention recently as the metal soars to new record levels. But you don’t have to trade gold to benefit from the metal’s recent volatility. In fact, many of the popular currency pairs have been moving in tandem with gold, offering forex traders an opportunity to piggyback on the uptrend or bet against it, with the added benefit of trading within the world’s deepest and most liquid market.
DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.
© 2010 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. Reuters content is the intellectual property of Thomson Reuters or its third party content providers. Any copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. "Reuters" and the Reuters Logo are trademarks of Thomson Reuters and its affiliated companies.
* Bonds would be denominated in dollars
* Would follow 30-year Eurobonds sold in April
By Patrick Werr
CAIRO, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Egypt is considering offers from international investment banks to launch 100-year "century bonds" that would help demonstrate appetite for longer-term Egyptian debt, the finance minister said on Wednesday.
Egypt has relied mainly on domestic debt to finance its budget deficit, which was equivalent to 8.1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the financial year to end-June, but has occasionally dipped into international markets.
"I don't need the money, but we are thinking about it," Finance Minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali told Reuters by telephone.
He added that a number of investment banks had offered to manage the bond issue, which would be denominated in U.S. dollars.
The government has gradually been lengthening the maturity profile of its international debt, and in April sold $1.5 billion in Eurobonds with maturities of 10 and 30 years.
"Before, we couldn't issue a five-year note. In 2004, we tested the market and they said 'forget it'. Then we got a 10-year note, then a 30-year note," Boutros-Ghali said.
Egypt's reform-minded government has been working to reduce the country's budget deficit since it came into office in 2004, but was set back by the 2008 global economic crisis which prompted it to adopt a series of economic stimulus packages.
"We have a very careful borrowing policy that the government has set out," Boutros-Ghali said.
Egypt's economy, which was spared the worst of the global economic crisis that began in mid-2008, was buoyed last year by a resurgent tourism industry and Suez Canal receipts, along with resilient construction and gas exports. [ID:nLDE66J1R9] (Editing by Catherine Evans)
No, it's not the explosion of global day-and-date Hollywood releases.
It's not even the preponderance of Euro talent in the latest spate of summer B.O. behemoths, from the largely British lineup behind and in front of the cameras for the latest "Harry Potter," or the Teutonic helmers of "Troy" and "The Day After Tomorrow" or the many Brit/Euro voice talents in "Shrek 2."
It's one small, deceased Mittel-European thesp who would have been 100 on June 26: Peter Lorre.
This month, the Austrian Film Museum in Vienna is hosting a retrospective celebrating Lorre's birth in Ruzomberok, Slovakia, and his 30-plus years of film artistry, from his startling lead debut in Fritz Lang's German crime classic "M" (1931) to Jerry Lewis' antic Hollywood comedy "The Patsy" (1964).
Lorre's career reminds one that the importance of Europeans in the Hollywood filmmaking process is far from some new development of globalization. As historian Neil Gabler brilliantly explained in his tome "An Empire of Their Own," the town was invented by Jews from Eastern Europe, and it has always been enriched by the blending of Euro voices and visions into the Hollywood pic mix.
What would a Hollywood classic like "Casablanca" have been without the talents of its Hungarian helmer (Michael Curtiz), European cast (including Lorre, Ingrid Bergman, Conrad Veidt and Brits Claude Rains and Sydney Greenstreet) or composer Max Steiner and art director Carl Jules Weyl, to name a few?
Look at the Lorre filmography and you see an American/Euro mix of the greatest names in Hollywood helming: Huston, Hitchcock, Siegel, Negulesco, Walsh, Mamoulian, Borzage, Capra, Tourneur, Dieterle.
Ironically, in my search for someone to talk about the qualities that Europe's Lorre brought to his Hollywood projects, it is his American helmer/writer/co-star of "The Patsy," Jerry Lewis, who best articulates the Lorre touch.
That touch involved the ultimate European accessory: the cigarette.
"He was the immaculate professional," Lewis recalls. "He came prepared and gave you what you wanted. But he was a reclusive actor who worked behind a facade, and his cigarette was his greatest prop. Without it, he couldn't function."
Lewis says he conspired with other actors on the film to concoct a scene where one of the characters would grab the cigarette from Lorre's hand. "Lorre came to me in a panic and said, 'I will do anything you want, but please don't take my cigarette.' Everything was in that prop: how he lit it, when he lit it, how he smoked it and when. It was an adjunct of his personality."
With all of the actors at his disposal, why did Lewis hire Lorre? At that point in the thesp's career, personal problems had taken a severe toll on Lorre; he died shortly after completion of the film.
"The guy I wrote was Peter Lorre," Lewis says. "I needed this little obnoxious schmuck who showed as little emotion as possible while delivering a performance filled with emotion. If you didn't watch carefully, you didn't see it. I needed that guy from 'Casablanca.'?"
He meant that guy from Ruzomberok.
The Austrian Film Museum's Peter Lorre retrospective runs through June 20.
LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks hit a fresh two-year high on Wednesday while emerging equities rose to their highest level since mid-2008 as investors anticipated further Federal Reserve monetary easing would support the global economy.
The Fed announces its monetary policy decision later on Wednesday. Markets are generally priced for the Fed to initially commit to buying at least $500 billion in Treasuries over five months.
MSCI world equity index .MIWD00000PUS rose as high as 320.05, bringing gains this year to nearly seven percent.
The MSCI emerging equities index .MSCIEF hit its highest since June 2008, as the prospect of further quantitative easing drives investors toward higher-yielding assets.
(Reporting by Natsuko Waki and Carolyn Cohn)
© Thomson Reuters 2010 All rights reserved.Keywords: Forex markets, Rupee, Dollar
RelatedTOPICSeconomy, business and finance
© 2010 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. Reuters content is the intellectual property of Thomson Reuters or its third party content providers. Any copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. "Reuters" and the Reuters Logo are trademarks of Thomson Reuters and its affiliated companies.
MANILA, Nov 3 - The Philippines will not block the peso's strength even on concerns its surge to 2-? year highs against the dollar may undermine export competitiveness and remittances from Filipinos abroad, a government official said on Wednesday.
"The BSP is not going to fight the market," Ricky Carandang, one of President Benigno Aquino's spokesmen, told reporters.
"We know that the exporters are worried that it may have an impact. We know that overseas Filipinos are worried about that and we're starting to think of what can be done about it."
Last week, the central bank approved measures to encourage capital outflows and help temper peso's gains of more than 8 percent this year.
For a list of the changes in the foreign exchange rules approved on Thursday, click on [ID:nSGE69R0I4]
The central bank has said it was not considering capital controls, and said while the inflows could complicate policy settings it did not want to discourage investors as the country needs funds to upgrade infrastructure. [ID:nSGE69I0E6] There have been concerns the inflows, part of a global shift to emerging markets by investors, pose a risk by strengthening currencies and undermining export competitiveness and remittance inflows, a key driver of domestic consumption.
"The best that monetary officials can do is really to make sure that the fluctuations are not so violent or not so volatile," Carandang said.
"You cannot force your currency to where you want it to go. It's a function of market forces that are in many cases beyond our control. So maybe more coordination, more talks between central banks in the region and governments in the region."