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- 82 Results (77 Replies , 5 Comments )
- CoffeeGamble commented Sep 28, 2011
Really ? Anyone with a half a brain realises the US is a bigger alcoholic than Germany.
- CoffeeGamble commented Sep 28, 2011
Goldman Sachs are not wizards at all. They just have the right greed connections. Goldman Sachs even helped Greece hide its problems from the EU.
- CoffeeGamble commented Sep 28, 2011
Bullshit. The Monetary Union is not the stupid idea. The stupid idea came from people who exploited the Union with extreme borrowing and lending. The extremity in lending and borrowing being possible, was no good reason to do it. And then we had ...
- CoffeeGamble commented Sep 28, 2011
They just want the Germans and Bernanke to artificially inflate stock prices, so that their equity fund managers can reverse their losses.
- CoffeeGamble commented Sep 28, 2011
All these idiots who believe Germany can wave a magic wand and solve all problems immediately. How stupid do you think the Germans are ? They're financially outperforming the Americans anyways. The sovereign debt crisis is a long term issue that ...
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 30, 2011
Short since 4410, SL a few pips in the money, TP at 4370.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 28, 2011
I suppose everyone in New Zealand should go to work a few hours later to satisfy your broker.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 28, 2011
In my opinion, the upside risks in Eurodollar lie mainly in the ECB's new sovereign bond acquisition program, which instills confidence in the Euro by slowly reversing the huge spreads between Italian and Spanish sovereign yields to the benchmark ...
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 28, 2011
Agreed, my SL's at 4545.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 28, 2011
The gap has already been filled for about two hours. Your broker is late.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 28, 2011
Entered short at 4500, SL 4545, TP 4420. I'll go short again from higher if my stop loss is hit.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 26, 2011
Shorted at 6254, SL 6330, TP 6169. No QE announced by Bernanke should be USD bullish and risk-off stimulant.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 22, 2011
The question is, what is the cumulative loss of your rate of getting stopped out ? You could get "stopped out" several times for every one "take profit" and still end up with a net profit.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 18, 2011
Breaking news ! Bloomberg reports that the 10 year Treasury yield has tested below 2.00% for the first time in history !
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 18, 2011
S&P 500 testing the 23.6% from the 22nd July high to the 9th August low. Should it break through, you can forget the step formation I just posted, as in that event, this fall on cable will most likely not be similar fakeout to the low we saw ...
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 18, 2011
Ah ok, and btw, I wrote the wrong word. I meant to say that I believe those risky currencies tend to follow equities more than the greenback. Just edited it. Well, as for my trade, I just closed it at -33 pips. Brilliant.
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 18, 2011
I think it's because Euro, Sterling, Aussie, Kiwi, and Loonie are all seen as more risky currencies than US dollar, and tend to follow equities more than US dollar. No ? PS - how come you got my chart display nice and big and I couldn't ? My trade ...
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 18, 2011
Went long at 6492, SL 6443, TP 6593. Based on this step formation on the hourly chart, plus nearing hopefully support levels on the S&P 500 and Eurodollar. image
- CoffeeGamble replied Aug 17, 2011
We're roughly at the May 31st high (6546 by my broker). Get ready!