Der EUR/USD 2,0 Thread
um einen gefallen! vergleicht mal die markierten punkte in eurem 5mins chart, ich glaube mein system verarscht mich! der rechte punkt war gar nicht unter dem linken markierten, laut online charts.
Ausserdem sind die Dochte an den Kerzen oben und unten viel zu lang.
Da passt irgendwas mit der Einstellung nicht. ( Bid - Ask Spread ? )
- das ist meisst so, ich minimiere den chart und öffne ihn wieder und dann sind die kerzen vieeel länger, jetzt grad hat sich ne neue laaaange gebildet, bis zur 1,4000.ich denke nicht dass der kurs da heut schonma war! was soll das frag ich mich - zumal es irritiert im entscheidungsfall.
mit meinen einstellungen, funktioniert besser
und siehe da dort hatte ich um kurz nach 12 ein schönes short signal
bekommen also selbst den chart gestalten ist eben eigenverantwortung
für sein handel übernehmen :-)
Ich habe den Sack zu.
Heute 3 X auf long gesetzt 1X 10 Pips, 1 X 4 und 1X 11
Manchmal soll und kann man nicht lange überlegen. Ich arbeite meist bei 15 min
Das ist aufreibend zu sehen wie viele Gedanken man sich machen muss. Hoch oder runter? Wer hat recht? Wer erkennt die Indikatoren richtig? Ich habe den Sack zu. Heute 3 X auf long gesetzt 1X 10 Pips, 1 X 4 und 1X 11 Manchmal soll und kann man nicht lange überlegen. Ich arbeite meist bei 15 min
hat sich zwar verlängert aber gelohnt auf die Amis ist verlass !
Ich bin dann mal short KK 76 Ziel immer 10 pip,s
13:30 USD Core PCE Price Index m/m 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
13:30 USD Personal Spending m/m 0.7% 0.6% 0.3%
13:30 USD Personal Income m/m 0.3% 0.5% 1.2%
15:00 USD Pending Home Sales m/m 2.1% -0.5% -2.8%
16:00 EUR ECB President Trichet Speaks
20:40 USD FOMC Member Evans Speaks
The Inter-American Development Bank plans to help Latin American countries “de-dollarize” their economies by providing more financing in local currencies, said bank President Luis Alberto Moreno.
“Part of our role should be to help the countries in the region de-dollarize and to have more of their stock of debt in local currency,” Moreno said in an interview during the bank’s annual meeting in Calgary.
Surging foreign investment and faster economic growth are leading to stronger currencies in countries such as Chile, Brazil and Mexico. The region accounted for twice as much of global capital inflows in 2009 as it did in 2006, Moreno said.
“That is having a huge impact on our exchange rates, on the tradable sector,” Moreno, 56, said. “All countries are worrying about the impact of overheating.”
To offset the currency gains and to develop capital markets across the region, the Washington-based lender plans to increase borrowing in local currencies, while allowing more borrowers in the region to convert their IDB loans from U.S. dollars.
“This is a choice for countries, depending on their total pool of debt,” said Moreno, a Colombian native. “The important thing is the bank has the flexibility to accommodate them.”
The development bank, which received a capital increase of $70 billion last year, may borrow in the Chilean market, selling so-called “huaso” or “cowboy” bonds in pesos, said Chilean Finance Minister Felipe Larrain.
Deeper Market
“We are creating a local market and we are deepening our financial market,” Larrain said in a March 26 interview at the IDB meeting. “We are moving in the direction of internationalization of the Chilean peso.”
The IDB and private companies are among entities showing interest in huaso bonds, peso-denominated notes issued by foreigners, Larrain said.
“Over the next couple of months we will probably see some” issuance, he said. “We are seeing a lot of interest. The IDB is one example, but there are a lot of examples of private companies.”
Total bond sales by the IDB may reach $10 billion this year, down from $11.8 billion in 2010, according to a bank presentation in Calgary. The bank has bonds outstanding in currencies including Mexican pesos, Brazilian reais and Costa Rican colones. About 73 percent of borrowing was in U.S. dollars last year, down from 84 percent in 2009, according to bank data. Five percent of the bonds were sold in Latin American currencies last year, up from 2 percent in 2009.
Local Currencies
The bank has also been working with borrowers in the region to convert their U.S.-dollar loans from the IDB to their local currency using the swap market. Local currency loans accounted for $2.1 billion, or 3.3 percent, of the $63 billion total at the end of 2010, up from 2.5 percent the previous year, bank documents show.
“We are building capacity to support the increased demand we are seeing for local currency financing,” said IDB Treasurer Soren Elbech, in an interview in Calgary.
“We are actively engaging capital markets to do whatever we can to support this demand. If it makes best sense to issue a bond in local currency, we will of course look at that,” he said. “We are continually working with financial counter- parties in the swap markets to provide as cost-efficient funding as possible in the currencies in demand within prevailing bank policies and guidelines.”
Moreno, who was re-elected to a second five-year term at the IDB last year, said funding for infrastructure such as roads, airports and ports, is a priority for the bank. Education and productivity are also important.
Priorities Changing
“Infrastructure is the most important in terms of volumes of resources,” he said in a March 26 interview. “The gains of trade to be made are hugely dependent on the investment in infrastructure.”
With strengthening currencies and economic growth of more than 6 percent last year, the region’s priorities are changing, he said.
“The set of challenges the region has today are very different from the past in that we begin with a positive outlook, derived from the good macroeconomic stability that we have enjoyed over almost the last decade,” he said.
To contact the reporters on this story: David Scanlan in Toronto at dscanlan@bloomberg.net; Fabiola Moura in New York at fdemoura@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chris Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net; David Scanlan at dscanlan@bloomberg.net