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Dennis Gartman: 'I Sold All Gold in My Personal Account'

Once again Dennis Gartman is making headlines with his call on gold.

"The market is saying we need to be sellers!" the strategic investor and CNBC Contributor tells us. ”Gold [GCCV1  1574.80    -12.10  (-0.76%)   ] is not acting well."
Gartman turned bearish over only the past few days largely due to concerning technicals. “The highs made in September were demonstrably above the October highs which were above the current highs. And we’re breaking trend lines.”
In other words the gold charts are making a series of lower highs – a bearish sign and something many chart watchers considers quite telling.  ”Listen when the market talks to you,” Gartman says.
And Gartman is putting his money where his mouth is. He’s sold all the gold in his personal account.

You probably know all that - Gartman's call got a lot of attention across all media. But what you might not know is that he only suggests re-thinking your position - if you're a trader.
"Gold could move lower by $150 in the twinkle of an eye, and that’s too much for me!" he says as a pro who moves in and out of positions with ease. "But that won't destroy the long-term bull move."
Now if you're a long-term investor that last sentence was very important. Gartman is making a trading call. He still thinks the long-term bull trend remains in tact - with gold still moving from the lower left to the upper right.
If you have a time horizon of a year or more, you don't need to do a thing. However for traders, "it’s time to be neutral."
-----
As you might remember Dennis Gartman made a similar high profile call back on August 24th – and it turned out to be prescient.

”I pay great attention to something technicans call an outside reversal – that is, the market made an all-time new high – closed on the lows of the day – then closed below the previous day’s lows. If you don’t pay attention to that and don’t liquidate you’re going to find yourself in a lot of trouble.”

Since August 24th gold is down well over 10%.

Investors Still Reluctant to Buy Euro Zone Bank Debt

Investors are not likely to open their wallets to European banks any time soon despite the efforts of central banks to protect global funding markets from the euro zone debt crisis
Warnings from rating agencies that they might broadly downgrade euro zone sovereign debt, in which the region's banks have a significant stake, have added to investors' reluctance to lend their dollars.
U.S. interest rate futures, and other indicators of what money markets will charge banks charge for short-term dollar loans factor in a further rise in borrowing costs through the middle of next year.
The expectations of an increase are notable considering the European Central Bank cut interest rates last week to a record low of 1 percent, and the Federal Reserve has kept benchmark dollar rates near zero for three years.
It also means European banks could become increasingly reliant on the ECB for dollar funding, especially while investors remain wary of lending to the region.
"We are doing our best to avoid European bank debt," said Sean Simko, head of fixed income management with SEI Investments in Oaks, Pennsylvania, which manages $179 billion in assets.
Fears persist after last week's summit that European leaders are not doing enough to prevent weaker euro zone nations defaulting, which could trigger another global financial crisis.
Interbank borrowing costs are already approaching their highest levels since June 2009 at the tail end of the global credit crunch. Instead of making short-term loans to European banks, investors have preferred the perceived safety of U.S. Treasury and agency bills which are yielding nil.
Dollar scarcity persists for European banks even after the ECB cut its policy rate and lowered the cost for banks to borrow dollars over the past two weeks.
These ECB moves also have not stopped interbank borrowing costs from rising steadily. The benchmark London interbank offered rate for three-month dollars was fixed at over 0.55 percent on Wednesday — its highest since July 2009. It has more than doubled over the last six months.
"The tail risks have grown and that trend will continue," said Cliff Corso, chief investment officer at Cutwater Asset Management in Armonk, New York, which manages $38 billion.
Eurodollar futures and the forward rates contracts suggest three-month Libor could rise another 10 basis points to 14 basis points by the middle of 2012, which is a substantial rise for banks in this low-interest-rate environment.
Rising open interest on Eurodollar put options also signals some traders are betting interbank borrowing costs would rise into next year, analysts said.
Investor Exodus
In other areas of the short-term funding market, U.S. money market mutual funds are still reducing their investments in euro zone bank debt. Since May, these major providers of dollars have even more than halved their lending to French, German and Dutch banks, which are considered stronger than their Greek, Italian and Spanish counterparts.
In the foreign exchange market, lenders are charging a hefty premium of 1.4 percent for banks to borrow three-month dollars using euro-denominated assets as collateral, up from about 0.25 percent at the end of May.
Thus, European banks are likely to grow more reliant on central banks for dollars to fund trading and operations, or they might choose to reduce trading or sell assets in order to achieve enough of a capital cushion in case the debt crisis worsens.
On Wednesday, a total of 12 banks used the ECB's seven-day dollar swap line, borrowing over $5 billion — around three times the $1.6 billion borrowed at last week's tender.
Stuck
The one hopeful sign might be that, bad as things are, the deterioration in some funding is not accelerating, though the absence of a comprehensive solution to contain the euro zone debt crisis will keep investors on the defensive.
The $2.6 trillion money fund industry has slowed its rollback in euro zone exposure with funds sticking to ultra-short-dated commercial paper, certificates of deposits and repurchase agreements with French, German and Dutch banks.
"Right now there is a core holding that's stabilizing but it's hard to tell how stable it's going to be," said Alex Roever, short-term interest rate strategist at J.P. Morgan [JPM  31.51    0.22  (+0.7%)] Securities in New York.
At the end of November, prime money funds which could invest in non-U.S. government securities held $183 billion in euro zone bank debt, down $35 billion in November from October. Their euro zone exposure was down $296 billion since May when the euro zone debt crisis flared up again, according to Roever and his team which analyzed the latest fund data in a report last week.
Despite ECB support, few investors have shown a willingness to lend their dollars to euro zone banks. Instead they have socked their money into U.S. Treasury and agency bills, keeping their interest rates near zero.
"As long as there is no resolution from Europe, you will continue to see the perceived risk-free markets to be well bid," SEI's Simko said.
Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Most Economists Expect Another Global Recession

So acute are the risks that few economists are now willing to bet heavily against another global recession in 2012. By common consent, the world economic outlook is much darker today than it appeared in the early autumn.
The eurozone crisis has worsened with contagion spreading through Italy and Spain and now lapping at the door of France. Recoveries remain feeble in other advanced economies. And emerging markets are beginning to feel the pressure.
Policymakers are worried. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund repeatedly warned in September that the world economy had entered a “dangerous phase”. By December, she said those threats were materializing. “The global economic outlook will be lower, and in certain parts much lower than what we had initially envisaged,” she told journalists this month in Brazil.
Deeper gloom has infected the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, particularly with the response of advanced-economy politicians. Pier Carlo Padoan, its chief economist, said: “We are concerned that policymakers fail to see the urgency of taking decisive action to tackle the real and growing risks to the global economy.”
And that grim assessment is shared by economists in the private sector. As Goldman Sachs marked down its latest forecasts, Jan Hatzius, its chief U.S. economist, said that growth was being held back in many developed economies by higher taxes and efforts to pay back household and corporate debt. “That combination is likely to see another two years of sub-par growth in the major advanced economies, extending into 2013,” he argued.
The verdict of Eswar Prasad, of the Brookings Institution, was even bleaker. “In early 2009, it was difficult to come up with a glimmer of hope. Here we are again. But what is different now is that the crisis of 2008 has created a huge debt burden, so constraints on policy are much tighter now.”
But as the forecasters fret about 2012, not all of the world is yet suffering. Even in Europe, German employment hit another post-unification high in October, highlighting the disconnect between its current prosperity and the pain in the eurozone periphery.
Although forecasts are being revised down by the week, economists still generally expect the world economy to grow by a little more than 3 percent in 2012 — down only 1 percentage point from 4 percent in 2011, with a large majority of that expansion coming from emerging markets.
The center of the current crisis is Europe, where economies both in and around the euro zone appear on the verge of recession. With the hopes dashed that a “bazooka” could prevent contagion spreading to Italy and Spain, governments, households and companies face high interest rates in much of Europe even if official borrowing costs are again at historic lows.
Few expect the euro zone to recover quickly, with most forecasts now expecting contraction in the eurozone economy at the start of 2012 and near stagnation in countries, such as the U.K., surrounding the single currency area.
The great concern is that an economic downturn will exacerbate the stresses in the sovereign debt and bank funding market, which are far from solved, creating a vicious downward spiral akin to 2008 and the potential collapse of the euro.
With the money supply contracting at the fastest rate since early 2009, Neville Hill, of Credit Suisse, observes, that “for institutions that set great store by monetary indicators — the European Central Bank and the Bundesbank, for example — that should be an alarming signal”.
Most observers still expect the euro to survive, but not because policymakers have solved the manifest problems. The most that many thought last week’s summit would change was to turn the crisis from what Gavyn Davies, of Fulcrum Asset Management, described as an acute crisis to a “chronic phase”.
In the U.S., the world’s other huge advanced economic area, most economists still expect the country to enter election year in modest recovery mode. With unemployment falling and recent growth rates higher than in Europe on the back of higher consumer spending, recent survey data have pointed to continued growth at unexciting rates.
But a quiet year is far from guaranteed as election season approaches, political brinkmanship rises and the U.S. is buffeted by the European storms. Willem Buiter, chief economist of Citi, argues that even with modest expansion, “we do not expect that U.S. growth will be strong enough to pull unemployment materially lower in 2012-13”.
So long as Europe staggers along, most important to the continuing outlook, says Julian Callow, of Barclays Capital, is that Congress extends the payroll tax cut, scheduled to expire at the end of 2011.
As the advanced world contemplates another year of disappointment, the engine of the global economy has moved ever more decisively to large emerging economies.
Gerard Lyons, of Standard Chartered, says the western fundamentals are poor and confidence is shot. “In contrast, across the emerging world, the fundamentals are good, the policy cupboard is almost full and confidence is likely to prove resilient.”
But even these emerging economies are not problem-free. China, by far the most important, accounting for over 40 percent of global growth in 2011, according to Nomura. “No wonder we are so concerned about the risks of a hard landing in China,” says Paul Sheard, its chief economist.
It is feeling the slowdown in the rest of the world and the authorities are beginning to worry about their ability to sustain growth. At least, says Qu Hongbin, of HSBC, inflation is moderating increasing the scope for stimulatory policies. “The major macro risk in China is quickly shifting from inflation to disinflation, calling for more aggressive easing in policy going into next year,” Mr Hongbin said.
Such policies worked in 2009 to increase infrastructure spending, investment by state-owned enterprises and housebuilding and are likely to work again, even if such capital spending does nothing for the longer-term aim of rebalancing the global economy.
Elsewhere in the emerging world, growth is continuing but also at slower rates. Eastern Europe, including Turkey, is particularly vulnerable to the eurozone crisis and its banks are seeking to pull funds home. Growth in Latin America is slowing rapidly as the commodity boom levels off, while Africa, despite a hugely improved performance, is highly vulnerable to a global slowdown.
In all, the world remains a dangerous place with advanced economies a long way from recovering from the 2008-09 crisis and huge uncertainty over the scope of the emerging world to generate self-sustaining growth. Following robust recovery in 2010, this year has been a huge disappointment.

FOMC Statement - Release Date: December 13, 2011

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in November suggests that the economy has been expanding moderately, notwithstanding some apparent slowing in global growth. While indicators point to some improvement in overall labor market conditions, the unemployment rate remains elevated. Household spending has continued to advance, but business fixed investment appears to be increasing less rapidly and the housing sector remains depressed. Inflation has moderated since earlier in the year, and longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.
Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee continues to expect a moderate pace of economic growth over coming quarters and consequently anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Strains in global financial markets continue to pose significant downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee also anticipates that inflation will settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below those consistent with the Committee’s dual mandate. However, the Committee will continue to pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.
To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with the dual mandate, the Committee decided today to continue its program to extend the average maturity of its holdings of securities as announced in September. The Committee is maintaining its existing policies of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate.
The Committee also decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that economic conditions--including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.
The Committee will continue to assess the economic outlook in light of incoming information and is prepared to employ its tools to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price stability.
Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Richard W. Fisher; Narayana Kocherlakota; Charles I. Plosser; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen. Voting against the action was Charles L. Evans, who supported additional policy accommodation at this time.

Why Europe Has Investors Running Scared—Again

The search for a silver bullet to fix Europe’s debt mess again has come up empty.
Like so many proposals that came before it, the tentative agreement crafted from Friday’s European summit generated a day of euphoria followed by careful reflection and, then, more pain.
Global equity markets slumped Monday, bringing an abrupt end to the sharp rally that began Nov. 28 on the perpetual hopes that policymakers are nearing the end of their long journey toward figuring out the continent’s sovereign debt mess.
There seemed to be two issues at the heart of the matter:
1) The UK’s refusal to go along with proposals that would have tied it more closely to the euro zone, of which it is not a member.
2) A delayed reaction from European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi’s comments Thursday that there will be no ECB bond-buying of the toxic southern European debt.
Britain vetoed provisions that would have required it to follow the same rules as the nations in the European Union that use the euro as its currency. Without the UK's cooperation, some fear it could threaten the very existence of the EU.
“History may yet judge harshly British Prime Minister David Cameron’s untimely request for a Big Mac at this historic feast and creating a less than binding resolution,” Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak in New York, said in an analysis on the EU machinations. “Observers fear that the voluntary nature of national fiscal cuts waters down the political deal reached on Friday.”
Condemnation of Cameron’s stance was not universal. Dennis Gartman, a hedge fund manager and author of the widely followed Gartman Letter, praised Cameron for acting “courageously" in preserving London's independence.
“This was, from his perspective, an attack too severe upon British sovereignty and it was the breaking point that could not be papered over,” Gartman wrote.
Yet Gartman said Monday's weakness in stocks would be “ephemeral,” something that obviously did not hold up as trading progressed.
Critics said Cameron vetoed the Friday agreement because he was afraid to take a hard line on the country's banks, an allegation he denied.
Moody’s did little to lighten the mood, warning that it would continue to re-evaluate its position on European debt.
In total, Cameron’s proclamations kindled fears that if the European Union does not become fully subscribed to the uniform currency, chances for survival are slim.
In fact, some think that Friday’s market rally was itself unreasonable given the implications of the ECB position on buying the debt of Greece and the other periphery nations.
“We have warned already that courageous steps from the ECB would not prevent the euro-zone from breaking apart. But in their absence, the chances of some sort of break-up must surely be greater,” John Higgins, senior market economist at Capital Economics, said in a note. “We expect the selling pressure (for European debt) to build.”
“While the ECB met expectations of a further cut in interest rates and greater support for banks on Thursday, it emphatically dashed recently growing hopes that it is about to fire a silver bullet into the heart of the debt crisis by substantially ramping up its bond purchases,” Higgins’ colleague at Capital, chief European economist Jonathan Loynes, said in a separate analysis.
Miller Tabak’s Wilkinson said the events of the past several days provide a sobering reality for investors.
“While investors at large had become increasingly comfortable that the ECB held the key to resolving the debt crisis by standing behind national governments, such optimism is fast-fading,” he said. “While (Draghi) openly questioned interpretation of his earlier comments on the subject ahead of the summit last week and despite the fact he immediately hailed its delivery, Germany’s top banker poured more cold water on the theory that the central bank will intervene in government bond markets.”

European Central Bank Chief Offers No 'Bazooka' for Markets

Published: Thursday, 8 Dec 2011 | 10:25 AM ET
By: Simon Hobbs
CNBC Anchor







European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has almost completely closed-off the prospect of aggressive bond buying from the European Central Bank or the prospect of "quantitative easing".
Mario Draghi
Bloomberg | Getty Images

Not only did he say that he was surprised that some media outlets had inferred from his comments to the European Parliament last week that "other elements" might follow a sequence of events from Europe's politicians, he said that there was "no high probability of deflation" in the Euro Zone.
The risks of deflation might have given him legal cover for such an action.
Draghi added that the ECB would not circumvent Article 123, which prohibits it from supporting individual member states.
Despite the very important move to offer three-year loans to Euro Zone banks for the first time, without penalty interest rates, and loosening the rules for collateral that they have to post in return, the mood of the ECB is far from uniformly dovish.
Draghi revealed that Thursday's widely expected 25 basis points cut was not unanimous—indicating that some members of the Governing Council thought it was too soon to cut again after last month's similar move.
The new head of the ECB also went on to better define the "fiscal compact" that he wanted to see from politicians. Draghi wants primary legislation that would "automatically" limit deficits and debt "ex ante"—in other words before they can even come into being rather than after the fact.
Simon Hobbs

Simon Hobbs CNBC Anchor
Yet, France and Germany are talking about essentially political votes to penalize member states after they transgress, and it's not clear that under many member states constitutions the suggested addition of "balanced budget amendments" and "fiscal brakes" would necessarily bind politicians.
Draghi's announcement that the ECB would continue to "sterilize" it's buying of sovereign debt in the secondary markets also indicates that they do not intend to massively expand money supply to the Euro Zone at a time when their new projections indicate a rising risk of recession for the bloc.
In short, there will be no bazooka for market bulls from the ECB in the foreseeable future.

ForexLive US wrap: Draghi squelches bond-buying hopes

Written by
December 8, 2011 at 21:43 GMT
What a day. EUR/USD opened in NY in the 1.3380. It spiked to 1.3460, just far enough to trigger some weak stops, after very upbeat weekly jobless claims before sliding sharply a short while later as new ECB chief Draghi did his best Bundesbanker imitation and stated that he had not signaled a willingness to rescue the euro zone bond market if the EU got its fiscal house in order. He also denied that the ECB or national central banks would lend to the IMF so as to evade laws prohibiting the ECB from monetizing government debt.
Hopes for a two-pronged attack on the sovereign debt crisis (ECB and EU) were dashed, leaving the summiteers in Brussels all alone to come up with a solution. Few expect a quick resolution to come via political channels.
EUR/USD dipped as low as 1.3289 before steadying. We began to drift higher on short-covering in late afternoon, finally triggering stops above 1.3350 up to 1.3375 after it was reported that an EU draft statement said the ESM would be granted a banking license (something Germany has adamantly opposed) as well as being brought forward to run simultaneously with the EFSF for year.
Germany swiftly rejected that they would accept those provisions, sending EUR/USD slumping back into the 1.3330s. We end in the 1.3345 region.
AUD/USD was violently whipsawed during the US session, breaking through stops at 1.0330/40 level and spiking to 1.0377 after the US jobless claims data. It fell out of bed as the ECB threw cold-water on the idea of a bond-buying spree. We fell as low as 1.0146 late in the day. Some stops were triggered on the 1.0150 break. More are seen in the 1.0225/40 area.

Analisa Mata Uang

US Dollar (USD)
  • Dollar Amerika Serikat (USD) adalah mata uang resmi Amerika Serikat. USD juga digunakan secara luas di dunia internasional sebagai kurs cadangan devisa di luar AS.
  • Penerbitan uang USD dikontrol oleh sistem perbankan Federal Reserve. Simbol yang paling umum digunakan untuk dollar AS adalah lambang dollar ($). Kode ISO 4217 untuk Dollar AS adalah USD.
  • AS adalah salah satu dari banyak negara yang menggunakan mata uang bernama Dollar. Beberapa negara lainnya menggunakan USD sebagai mata uang resmi mereka, dan banyak lainnya yang memperbolehkannya digunakan dalam kapasitas legal de facto.
  • Kata buck umumnya digunakan oleh orang Amerika untuk merujuk kepada satu dollar AS dalam percakapan sehari-hari (informal). 
  • USD adalah mata uang yang paling banyak diperjual-belikan diseluruh dunia.
Euro (EUR/USD)
  • Euro adalah mata uang yang dipakai di 16 negara anggota Uni Eropa. Secara giral, mata uang ini mulai dipakai sejak tanggal 1 Januari 1999, tetapi secara fisik baru dipakai pada tanggal 1 Januari 2002. Uang kertas Euro di mana-mana rupanya sama, tetapi uang logamnya di belakang berbeda-beda. Uang logam setiap negara diberi lambangnya sendiri. Negara-negara yang menggunakan mata uang ini adalah: Jerman, Irlandia, Belanda, Perancis, Luxemburg, Austria, Finlandia, Belgia, Italia, Portugal, Spanyol, Yunani, Slovenia, Siprus, Malta, Slowakia, Andorra, Monako, San Marino, Vatikan.
  • Negara utama di Euro Zone adalah Perancis, Italia, Jerman, dan Spanyol.
  • Lebih dari 500 juta orang menggunakan mata uang Euro.
  • EUR/USD adalah pasangan mata uang yang paling banyak diperjual-belikan dalam pasar valuta asing. Meliputi sekitar 50% dari seluruh aktivitas perdagangan mata uang dunia.
  • Nilai EUR/USD terutama dipengaruhi oleh US Dollar Index. US Dollar Index terdiri dari Euro 57.6%, Yen 13.6%, Pound sterling 11.9%, Canadian dollar 9.1%, Swedish krona 4.2% dan Swiss franc 3.6%. (AUD & NZD tidak termasuk dalam indeks).
  • Jika USD melemah maka EUR menjadi mata uang yang signifikan menguat karena merupakan mata uang terbanyak diperdagangkan setelah USD. Sebaliknya jika USD menguat maka EUR akan melemah dengan signifikan.
Pound Sterling (GBP/USD)
  • Pound Sterling atau Pounds saja, sering pula disebut “Cable” adalah mata uang Britania Raya. Mata uang Pound sterling adalah mata uang tertua di dunia yang telah ada dan tidak berubah sejak 600 tahun terakhir. Kata "pound" dan "sterling" sendiri merujuk pada logam perak seberat satu pound yang digunakan sebagai nilai pembanding mata uang tersebut. Pada masa modern, nilai Pound Sterling tidak lagi dikaitkan dengan nilai perak dalam berat tertentu - melainkan ditentukan oleh mekanisme pasar berdasarkan penawaran dan permintaan. Pihak yang paling bertanggung jawab atas sirkulasi dan nilai tukar Pound Sterling adalah Bank of England selaku bank sentral. Britania Raya adalah anggota Uni Eropa, namun tidak menggunakan Euro sebagai mata uang, setelah referendum yang dilaksanakan mengindikasikan keengganan penduduk negara ini untuk menggunakan mata uang Euro. 
  • London merupakan pusat keuangan terbesar didunia, terutama jasa perbankan dan asuransi. Karena itu Pound sangat sensitif terhadap “Equity market news”.
  • Pound merupakan satu-satunya mata uang yang nilainya tidak berkorelasi dengan perdagangan komoditi.
Yen (USD/JPY)
  • Japanese Yen (JPY) merupakan merupakan mata uang negara Jepang.
  • Yen adalah mata uang ketiga terbanyak diperdagangkan setelah USD dan EUR. Transaksi mata uang Yen berjumlah sekitar 17% dari total aktivitas perdagangan mata uang dunia.
  • Dalam jangka panjang, Yen berkorelasi dengan "Equity market".
Dollar Australia (AUD/USD)
  • Australian Dollar (AUD) merupakan mata uang negara Australia.
  • Dollar Australia merupakan "Commodity Currency". Karena Australia adalah negara penghasil emas terbesar di dunia maka Dollar Australia sangat dipengaruhi pergerakan harga emas. Jika harga emas naik maka Dollar Australia cenderung akan menguat dan sebaliknya.


    Forex News Trading

    What is Forex News Trading, and Why is it important to you, as a trader?
    Forex News Trading, or Fundamental News Trading, is the primary driver of currency market movements. Forex market is driven by high impact news events, and by understanding how to take advantage of these events, you can increase your profitability and avoid many costly mistakes. Many novice day traders come to a rude awakening realizing the importance of news events only after seeing a perfectly profitable trade turn into a huge loss in a matter of seconds, whereas experienced traders add to their daily profits in a consistent manner, almost like clockwork… (as a matter of fact, most high impact news releases are scheduled at the same time every month, so yes, like clockwork.)
    Forex News Trading, in a nutshell, is basically taking advantage of market volatility in the event of a surprise. Almost all high impact news events have a Forecast, or Consensus Number, which is usually an average number derived from a survey of economists, usually done by news agencies such as Reuters or Bloomberg. This Forecast number, represents what the market as a whole is expecting the Actual release to be; therefore, in the event that the Actual Release turns out to be different than the Forecast, we have a surprise in the market… Since Forex trading is basically Futures Trading of currencies, market speculators will price in the surprise immediately in the direction of the surprise, and create an opportunity for traders to make some pips.
    News Surprise Factor, Deviation
    In order to trade these news events successfully and profitably, traders must concentrate on high impact news releases with high probability of A) Moving the Market and B) Predictable Reaction .
    • Moving the Market: Since there are literally hundreds of news events scheduled around the calendar month, it is important to trade only the high impact ones that are most likely to move the market. Do not waste time on ALL news events since they may or may not move the market, and because Forex market is sometimes sentiment driven, lesser news reports might not have adequate effects to counter the predominant pre-market trend.
    • Predicatable Reaction: Based on historical reaction, high impact news events will generally move a certain amount of pips (or points) if the surprise difference from the consensus number to the actual release is by a certain deviation. For instance, if the UK Retail Sales Consensus is at 0.5% and we are looking for a Deviation of 0.6%, we’ll BUY GBP/USD if we get a 1.1% release and SELL GBP/USD if we get a -0.1% release.
    Therefore, as Fundamental Forex Traders, we always pick the right news releases to trade, wait for the right deviation, and for the right amount of pips in profit.

    As a Novice News Trader, What should you do next?
    1. Look for an economic Calendar such as Econoday or Forexfactory.
    2. Get a news wire service such as TradetheNews or use the freebie from Forexfactory (you need to refresh the page at release time).
    3. Be at your trading station at least 30 minutes prior to high impact news events and watch market reactions.
    4. Record market reaction, such as how many pips did a certain currency pair move based on the difference of forecast to actual release.
    5. Repeat until you have collected 12 ~ 24 months of data.
    There is actually an easier way, since I’ve done these steps already. I have a list of tradeable news releases along with a “safe” deviation and expected pips range. You can find more information from my Ebook “Definitive Guide to Fundamental News Trading“.
    Fundamental News events are the primary driver of the currency market. A series of fundamental news in the same direction, such as better US Job Report, better US Housing Report, better US economy report, etc… will tend to create a long term trend of US Dollar rally… By understanding these news events, a trader could easily add 20 ~ 50 pips of profit daily to his/her account.
     
    Henry Liu -www.henryliuforex.com

    5M Intraday Strategy by Phillip Nel

    Aturan yang harus diikuti dalam menerapkan strategi ini adalah sebagai berikut:
    • Gunakan garis 50 SMA
    • Gunakan garis 21 EMA
    • Gunakan garis 10 EMA
    • Tetapkan stop loss sebesar 6 pip ditambah spread.
    • Tetapkan target profit sebesar 8 - 10 pip.
    • Lakukan maksimal 3 transaksi perhari.
    • Pair yang cocok untuk strategi ini adalah EURUSD dan GBPUSD
    Lakukan transaksi jika sudut garis 50 SMA lebih dari 20 derajat dan harga sedang berbalik ke zona 21 EMA. Transaksi buy jika garis 10 EMA dan 21 EMA berada diatas garis 50 SMA dan transaksi sell jika sebaliknya.