• Home
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • News
  • Calendar
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Login
  • Join
  • User/Email: Password:
  • 10:59pm
Menu
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • News
  • Calendar
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Login
  • Join
  • 10:59pm
Sister Sites
  • Metals Mine
  • Energy EXCH
  • Crypto Craft

Options

Bookmark Thread

First Page First Unread Last Page Last Post

Print Thread

Similar Threads

The end of the US stock market is nearing 1,750 replies

How close does a stock CFD match the underlying stock? 3 replies

Profit whether a stock goes up or down (stock + options) 3 replies

QE2, exchange rates and US budget 0 replies

The "End Of QE2" Trade 17 replies

  • Trading Discussion
  • /
  • Reply to Thread
  • Subscribe

The FX Market, the Stock Market and the end of QE2

  • Post #1
  • Quote
  • First Post: Jun 10, 2011 1:47pm Jun 10, 2011 1:47pm
  •  Davidee
  • | Joined Oct 2009 | Status: Member | 298 Posts
Hello,

Yesterday, I closed out my last S&P 500 long trade, until I get a signal that we're in a medium to long term bull market again I'll be taking shorts only on the S&P 500; going short on peaks and closing the shorts on dips.

My reasoning is that QE 2 has inflated the stock market as all the newly printed money had to have some where to flow into, and stocks was one of those places. Now that is the end of QE 2 (for now) there is not enough hot air to further inflate the bubble. My own country (Scotland/UK) is suffering from stagflation, inflation is around 4%-5% and there is no real economic growth, I can only hope Scotland becomes independent and we build our own economy, one that is not dependent on casino banking ever increasing personal debt and ever increasing house prices. Casino banking and growing property prices and growing personal debt was, and still is, the UK's economic model of the Labour Party and the Conservatives.

What do you think the effects of the end of US stimulus will be on the FX market? On the one hand less supply should be a boost for the dollar, but if QE 2 is what was stopping reality biting (and the only thing stopping the US economy totally going down the drain) it might not.
  • Post #2
  • Quote
  • Aug 8, 2011 2:06pm Aug 8, 2011 2:06pm
  •  Davidee
  • | Joined Oct 2009 | Status: Member | 298 Posts
OK, the market didn’t collapse at the end of QE 2, but it’s falling like a stone now, QE 3 for the USA and QE 2 for Europe? I think it’s fairly likely, I’ll get back into the stock market if that happens…
 
 
  • Post #3
  • Quote
  • Aug 8, 2011 2:55pm Aug 8, 2011 2:55pm
  •  Islander
  • Joined Jan 2007 | Status: Member | 11,550 Posts
Quoting Davidee
Disliked
Hello,

Yesterday, I closed out my last S&P 500 long trade, until I get a signal that we're in a medium to long term bull market again I'll be taking shorts only on the S&P 500; going short on peaks and closing the shorts on dips.

My reasoning is that QE 2 has inflated the stock market as all the newly printed money had to have some where to flow into, and stocks was one of those places. Now that is the end of QE 2 (for now) there is not enough hot air to further inflate the bubble. My own country (Scotland/UK) is suffering from stagflation,...
Ignored
Your header looked interesting.........and good luck with this....."I can only hope Scotland becomes independent and we build our own economy".......but might I please ask that before that happens that the reclusive incompetent buffoon makes a start by returning the 400 tons of gold that he sold in an act of IMO treasonable stupidity back in 1999.....or perhaps he'd like to make up the some TEN and a HALF BILLION dollars that he cost the UK in this deal alone.

Brown offloaded the gold at a 20-year low in the market — now nicknamed the “Brown Bottom” by dealers. The 17 auctions achieved prices for the gold of between $256 and $296 an ounce, with an average of $275.

Todays price ~ $1710

PS:

Ed Balls, who was the Schools Secretary, Ed Miliband, then the Climate Change Secretary, and Baroness Vadera, another former minister, were all close aides to the chancellor during the relevant period.
Trading Levels with WRBs & Aggressive, Volatile Volume
 
 
  • Post #4
  • Quote
  • Last Post: Aug 8, 2011 3:54pm Aug 8, 2011 3:54pm
  •  Davidee
  • | Joined Oct 2009 | Status: Member | 298 Posts
1. Don't blame as all for Gordon.
2. Gold has been a nice trade, here's a system for trading it http://www.forexfactory.com/showthread.php?t=300890
3. Back to the point, is it time for QE2 in Europe and QE3 in the states?

PS. How's the Spanish economy looking, I heard things were pretty dire over there for many? The Euro gave Spain a horrendous property bubble.
 
 
  • Trading Discussion
  • /
  • The FX Market, the Stock Market and the end of QE2
  • Reply to Thread
0 traders viewing now
Top of Page
Forex Factory Blog Updated: Alerting All Members
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
About FF
  • Mission
  • Products
  • User Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Blog
  • Contact
FF Products
  • Forums
  • Trades
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Market
  • Brokers
  • Trade Explorer
FF Website
  • Homepage
  • Search
  • Members
  • Report a Bug
Follow FF
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

FF Sister Sites:

  • Metals Mine
  • Energy EXCH
  • Crypto Craft

Forex Factory® is a brand of Fair Economy, Inc.

Terms of Service / ©2022