DislikedThere appears to be a lot of evidence suggesting that GU will drop in the near term. The only detail working against a drop is the bias of retail traders to short! Typically that is an excuse for it to go higher not lower!Ignored
2
Cable Update - Continued 118 replies
Cable Update (GBP/USD) without Idiots 25 replies
cable short for gbpusd? 10 replies
Why is GBPUSD called cable? 76 replies
Cable (GBPUSD) vs Euro (EURUSD) 31 replies
DislikedThere appears to be a lot of evidence suggesting that GU will drop in the near term. The only detail working against a drop is the bias of retail traders to short! Typically that is an excuse for it to go higher not lower!Ignored
Disliked{quote} I was watching Elliott wave patterns, @georginson, @traderview, and more analysis all appearing to me to suggest that a top was near. We are in an area where the tradingview's market structure indicator suggests that price often turns around in the 1 hr and 4 hr intervals. For every trader that sees things going one way there will always be traders seeing it go the other way.As I suggested, it appears to me.
Ignored
Disliked{quote} Even the distance between the Higher Highs are getting closer each Time = buyer running out of gas But still shorting now will surely get us out of our trade Fundamental must be a No US banking Woes to be occurred againIgnored
Disliked{quote} You do have the FED stepping up with their support packages and you have the economy leaning toward showing the Fed that inflation is coming down. Now if only the FED would reduce the money supply to actually fix the blankety-blank inflation that they introduced by increasing the money supply!Ignored
Disliked{quote} i think it’s a load of crap. If everything was priced in we would be at equilibrium. However alot of things can be priced in temporally, it provides financial stability and evens out differences.Ignored
Disliked{quote} i think it’s a load of crap. If everything was priced in we would be at equilibrium. However alot of things can be priced in temporally, it provides financial stability and evens out differences.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Agreed. Thats my view too. Cause i think it is the disequilibrium that move price which is caused by the probability for the occurrence of an event, which continues to fluctuate untill that particular event becomes a fact, then the focus shift to the next main event...Ignored
Disliked{quote} Before we had fixed currency rates, then we had free floatimg currency rates. It would be rational to think that we now have a hybrid of the two, since we no longer see people like George Soros coming in as master puppeteers and crashimg currency after currency via shortselling. All the systems are integrated, the only major threat right now that can threaten that order is if BRICS started offering collateral in form of gold or rare earth metals. Other than that we are at static disequilibrium. Well of course this is just my opinion, and...Ignored
Disliked{quote} Now you have central banks placing buy and sell orders to manipulate prices by enticing trading computers to move prices towards those open orders. There is nothing preventing big traders from doing the same thing to attempt to manipulate prices, you would need very deep pockets and a well-thought-out multi-currency approach!Ignored
Disliked{quote} I mean it is in static disequilibrium as a means to stabilize each country’s economic cycle. It follows the key industry of each country. Economy always been a source of conflict between countries, with an integrated system where each player is dependant om each other and gets their fair share through the economic cycle, there can be less source of conflict and incentives for investors and banks to do run. I don’t believe the central banks do any manipulation with intention of setting disfavorable prices. In fact Powell were very worried...Ignored
Disliked{quote} A stronger dollar drove down the stock market. Of course 'Powell' (everyone in the US government/economy connected to anyone trying to export) was 'concerned' (panicking!). Each country trying to weather current economic conditions wants to balance their currency with respect to the export potential for local businesses and import potential or the cost of imported goods for residents or food, raw materials, and so on. Europe is getting crippled by the war between the US/Ukraine and Russia, with respect to financial obligations, refugees,...Ignored
Disliked{quote} well i agree with you. But overall i think it’s how it works. We are currently at a standstill point. i mean everything is relative of course. It been shown mathematically that criminals don’t commit a crime 99,9% of the time - thus it is very rare for any kind of villainy to occur. It is a statistical outlier to be a victim of crime in real life and/or in the market.Ignored