Kongdicator Trades – Updates And Info

I’ve had signals initiated to get short /ES ( SP500 futures) under 1685.00

With U.S data  on tap here in the next 30 minutes, I would obviously wait until “after the dust settles” to consider any type of entries – with increased volatility surrounding Thursday mornings news releases.

Current positions:

  • Entered short CAD/CHF on Sept 8 at 90.00
  • Entered long EUR/AUD ( Insanity Trade ) on Sept 9 at 1.43
  • Entered long EUR/NZD ( Insanity Trade 2 ) on Sept 19th at 1.6260
  • Entered short CAD/JPY at 10:51 a.m Sept 25 at 95.81

Looking forward:

There is no question that I’ll be getting entries in the following pairs within the next 6 hours, so ideally at any price level “higher” than we see as of this moment.

  • short AUD/JPY
  • short AUD/USD
  • short NZD/USD
  • short NZD/JPY

In general , we see the trades to reflect a “risk off” scenario , with strength to be seen in both USD as well JPY, and weakness in commodity currencies.

Now keep in mind….when entries are given, the buy/sell orders are places “x” number of pips above or below that value in order to be picked up ON MOMENTUM.

Have I ever had an instance where the entire set of orders is missed/ not picked up – and the market has moved considerably in the other direction? Maybe a couple of times – but that’s a good thing, as we look to catch MOMENTUM in our direction of choice.

No MOMENTUM – NO TRADE = SMART TRADE.

More this afternoon, as trades in several other pairs ( including those with EUR as well GBP) look to materialize.

 

Market Structure and Risk-Off Positioning: The Devil’s in the Details

Reading the Tea Leaves: USD and JPY Strength Mechanics

The risk-off scenario I’m positioning for isn’t some wild guess – it’s based on cold, hard technical analysis combined with macro fundamentals that are screaming for attention. When we talk about USD strength in a risk-off environment, we’re looking at classic safe-haven flow patterns that have been reliable for decades. The dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency means that during periods of uncertainty, institutional money flows back to USD-denominated assets like a magnet.

JPY strength operates on a different mechanism entirely. Japanese investors are notorious for their carry trade unwinding during volatile periods. When risk appetite disappears, those massive JPY short positions that fund higher-yielding investments get closed out rapidly. This creates explosive upward momentum in JPY crosses – exactly what I’m positioning to capture with the AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY shorts I mentioned.

The technical setup on USD/JPY itself is particularly interesting right now. We’re seeing consolidation at key resistance levels, and any break lower would confirm that both currencies are strengthening, but JPY is strengthening faster. That’s the sweet spot for the cross-currency plays I’m targeting.

Commodity Currency Weakness: More Than Just a Technical Play

The AUD and NZD shorts aren’t just technical setups – they’re fundamental plays on global growth expectations. Both the Australian and New Zealand economies are heavily dependent on commodity exports, particularly to China. When risk-off sentiment dominates, it’s not just about safe-haven flows; it’s about growth expectations collapsing.

AUD/USD has been showing classic distribution patterns at higher levels, and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s recent commentary suggests they’re not exactly bullish on domestic growth prospects. Combine that with China’s ongoing property sector issues and iron ore demand concerns, and you’ve got a recipe for sustained AUD weakness.

NZD faces similar headwinds, but with an additional kicker – New Zealand’s economy is even more sensitive to global dairy prices and tourism flows. Both sectors are under pressure, and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand has been walking a tightrope between fighting inflation and not crushing their export-dependent economy. The momentum setup on NZD/USD is particularly compelling, with multiple failed attempts to break key resistance levels.

EUR and GBP Setups: The Continental Perspective

The European situation deserves special attention because it’s not fitting neatly into the traditional risk-on/risk-off framework. EUR strength against commodity currencies – like those “Insanity Trades” in EUR/AUD and EUR/NZD – reflects a more nuanced view of global capital flows.

The European Central Bank’s aggressive stance on inflation has created a unique dynamic where EUR is acting more like a high-yielding currency than a traditional safe haven. This is creating opportunities in cross-currency trades that wouldn’t normally exist in a pure risk-off environment. The EUR/AUD long I’ve been holding since 1.43 is a perfect example of this dynamic playing out.

GBP presents an entirely different challenge. Brexit aftereffects, ongoing political uncertainty, and the Bank of England’s inconsistent messaging have created a currency that’s neither clearly risk-on nor risk-off. The key with GBP trades is identifying when it’s moving on domestic factors versus global risk sentiment. Right now, global factors are dominating, which means GBP should weaken alongside other risk currencies, but the moves might be less predictable.

Execution Strategy: Why Momentum Matters More Than Precision

The momentum-based entry strategy I use isn’t just about being cute with order placement – it’s about market psychology and institutional behavior. When major moves begin in forex, they typically start with a burst of momentum that signals algorithmic and institutional participation. By waiting for that momentum confirmation, I’m essentially letting the market tell me when the big players are moving.

This approach means missing some moves entirely, but it also means avoiding false breakouts and choppy, sideways action that kills trading accounts. The SP500 futures signal under 1685 is a perfect example – if we don’t get clean momentum through that level, there’s no trade. Period.

Risk management in this environment means understanding that correlation increases during volatile periods. When risk-off hits, it tends to hit fast and across multiple pairs simultaneously. That’s why the position sizing and timing of these entries matters as much as the direction. The goal isn’t to catch every pip of every move – it’s to capture the meat of sustained directional momentum when it emerges.

Kongdicator Alert! – Free Trade Signal

It’s really no suprise that “The Kongdicator” has now tripped, and will produce entry signals within the next 24 – 36 hours.

I’ve done some tweaking here over the past few weeks in that – I’ve been “a touch early” with the initiation of new trades recently, and want to get this dialed right in.

As the system is “forward looking” I plan to post / alert to the exact trades that the Kongdicator suggests in real time during the trading day tomorrow.

I will outline each specific pair, as well perhaps a couple of stocks / indexes ( as I run it on /ES SP 500 futures  as well) so that you can get a real look at some specific entry levels – and follow along with a couple of trades.

The Kongdicator always suggests / places trades “above / below” the signal as these trades are then picked up “if/when” momentum moves in their favor.

I hope to get some feedback on this ( hopefully constructive ) as we move closer to making the indicator available to all.

Across the board I have a number of currency pairs signalling a trade, but each with it’s specific time / price so……I’ll plan to tweet as well post several times if need be, so that we can get a look at this in real time.

Thanks everyone.

Kong.

Real-Time Trade Execution Strategy

Understanding The Kongdicator’s Forward-Looking Framework

The beauty of a forward-looking system lies in its ability to position trades ahead of major momentum shifts rather than chasing price action after the fact. When I reference the Kongdicator “tripping,” I’m talking about multiple confluence factors aligning across different timeframes – momentum divergence on the 4-hour charts, volatility compression on the daily, and most importantly, institutional order flow patterns that suggest major players are positioning for the next move. This isn’t some lagging moving average crossover system that gives you signals after the move is half over. We’re talking about identifying accumulation and distribution phases before retail traders even know what hit them.

The recent tweaking I’ve mentioned addresses a critical issue in systematic trading – the balance between early entry advantage and false signal filtration. Being “a touch early” might sound like a problem, but it’s actually preferable to being late. The key is understanding that when the Kongdicator signals, we’re not looking for immediate gratification. We’re positioning for momentum expansion that typically occurs 12-48 hours after initial signal generation. This is why I place trades above and below current market price rather than at market – we want momentum to prove itself before we’re committed to the position.

Currency Pair Selection and Cross-Asset Correlation

Tomorrow’s signals are shaping up across multiple major and minor pairs, which tells me we’re looking at broad-based USD strength or weakness rather than isolated currency-specific moves. When you see EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and USD/JPY all generating signals simultaneously, you know the Federal Reserve’s policy trajectory is driving the bus. The fact that I’m also seeing signals on /ES SP 500 futures confirms this cross-asset correlation – when equity markets and forex are moving in tandem, it’s usually driven by interest rate expectations or risk-on/risk-off sentiment shifts.

The specific pairs I’m monitoring include the usual suspects – EUR/USD for its liquidity and tight spreads, GBP/USD for its volatility and clear technical levels, and USD/JPY because it’s the ultimate carry trade barometer. But I’m also watching some cross-pairs like EUR/GBP and AUD/JPY, which often provide cleaner breakouts when major currency themes are in play. Each pair has its own personality and optimal entry timing, which is why I’ll be posting specific price levels and timeframes rather than generic “buy” or “sell” recommendations.

Entry Level Precision and Risk Management

The above/below entry methodology isn’t just about catching momentum – it’s about letting the market prove the signal before putting capital at risk. If EUR/USD is trading at 1.0850 and the Kongdicator suggests a bullish signal, I might place buy stops at 1.0875 and 1.0890 with corresponding sell stops at 1.0820 and 1.0810. This way, whichever direction gains momentum first will trigger the appropriate position, while the opposing orders get cancelled.

This approach eliminates the emotional component of trade entry and ensures that we’re always trading with momentum rather than against it. The specific levels I choose are based on technical confluence – previous support/resistance, fibonacci retracements, and institutional order zones identified through volume profile analysis. Risk management becomes systematic rather than discretionary, with predetermined stop levels and profit targets calculated from the moment the signal is generated.

Real-Time Execution and Community Feedback

The real-time posting and tweeting serves multiple purposes beyond just sharing trade ideas. First, it creates accountability – when you put your analysis out there in real time, there’s no cherry-picking winners or revising history. Second, it provides valuable feedback on signal timing and market response. If the Kongdicator suggests a EUR/USD long at 1.0875 and the pair gaps through that level without triggering, that tells me something about liquidity and market structure that I can incorporate into future signals.

I’m particularly interested in feedback on signal timing across different sessions. Asian session signals might behave differently than London or New York signals due to varying liquidity and participation levels. The goal isn’t to create a perfect system – that doesn’t exist. The goal is to create a consistently profitable edge that can be replicated and improved over time. Your real-time feedback during live market conditions is invaluable for that process.

The Seinfeld Post – All About Nothing

Sitting here wracking my brain for a compelling headline ( an absolute “must” in financial blogging circles) suddenly it came to me! Seinfeld! The show about “nothing”.

Well……as the entire planet continues to sit watching “in awe” as the U.S Government stumbles around in the dark “yet again” , hoping to put a square peg in a round hole. What’s there to say?

Nothing.

At least with Seinfeld you got a good laugh out of it. This isn’t funny in the slightest.

Now hearing talk about “leaked information” seconds before the Fed’s announcement last week? Now that’s funny. Like the gang at Goldman and Ben’s “other buddies” had no clue they weren’t gonna taper!

I mean seriously….it came as an absolute “shock and surprise” to the big boys, and now  blamed on the media? Gimme a break.

Nothing to see here today that’s for sure.

Disgust. Revolt. Shame. Sickness. Loathing .Nausea.

Risk continues to sell off here “despite any kind of green arrows seen in U.S equities” today. The illusion continues to play out, as commodity currencies get wacked overnight, and the safe haven play for JPY makes considerable headway.

 

The Real Story Behind Market Manipulation and Currency Chaos

JPY Surge Exposes the Fed’s Credibility Crisis

The Japanese Yen’s rocket ship performance isn’t some random flight to safety – it’s a damning indictment of how completely the Fed has destroyed any semblance of credibility in global markets. When traders are piling into JPY faster than Goldman can front-run the next Fed decision, you know something is fundamentally broken. The USD/JPY pair has been getting absolutely demolished, and rightfully so. Every time Powell opens his mouth, it’s another nail in the dollar’s coffin. The big money knows exactly what’s coming before the retail crowd even gets wind of it, and they’re positioning accordingly in the one currency that still maintains some dignity – the Yen.

What we’re witnessing isn’t organic market movement; it’s institutional players hedging against the inevitable collapse of confidence in U.S. monetary policy. The JPY carry trade unwind is accelerating, and when that dam breaks completely, the flood of capital rushing back into Japan will make today’s moves look like a gentle breeze. Smart money has been quietly accumulating JPY positions for weeks, knowing full well that the Fed’s paper tiger routine was going to blow up spectacularly.

Commodity Currencies in Free Fall – No Accident

The absolute carnage in commodity currencies like AUD, NZD, and CAD isn’t happening in a vacuum. These currencies are getting systematically destroyed because the smart money understands what’s really happening – global demand destruction on a scale that would make 2008 look like a minor hiccup. The AUD/USD has been in pure capitulation mode, and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s desperate attempts to prop things up are about as effective as using a Band-Aid on a severed artery.

Here’s what the mainstream financial media won’t tell you: the commodity currency collapse is a leading indicator of what’s coming for risk assets globally. When nations whose entire economies are built on digging stuff out of the ground and shipping it to China see their currencies implode, that’s not a temporary blip – that’s a structural shift. The USD/CAD breaking through key resistance levels like butter should have every trader paying attention. Oil demand destruction, mining sector collapse, and agricultural commodity weakness are all feeding into this perfect storm.

The Equity Market Mirage

Those green arrows flashing across equity screens are nothing more than algorithmic window dressing designed to keep the sheep calm while the wolves position for the real move. The disconnect between what’s happening in currency markets and what’s being painted on equity screens is so glaring it’s almost insulting to anyone with half a brain. High-frequency trading algorithms are painting the tape while institutional money quietly exits through the back door, using forex markets as their preferred escape route.

The S&P 500’s artificial buoyancy in the face of currency market chaos is classic late-stage market manipulation. They’re propping up equities with one hand while betting against risk currencies with the other. It’s the same playbook they’ve been running for years, except now the cracks are too big to paper over with more monetary nonsense. When the correlation between equities and risk currencies finally snaps back into alignment, the adjustment is going to be violent and swift.

Currency Wars Enter the Final Phase

What we’re seeing isn’t random market volatility – it’s the opening salvo in the final phase of the global currency war that’s been brewing since 2008. Central banks have painted themselves into a corner with over a decade of unprecedented monetary experimentation, and now the chickens are coming home to roost. The EUR/USD is trapped in no man’s land, the GBP is still trying to figure out what Brexit actually means for its long-term viability, and emerging market currencies are getting systematically annihilated.

The endgame is becoming crystal clear: flight to quality in JPY, systematic destruction of commodity currencies, and the slow-motion implosion of confidence in fiat monetary systems globally. Traders who understand this paradigm shift and position accordingly will profit handsomely. Those who keep believing the fairy tales being spun by central bankers and financial media will get crushed.

Forex Trading – Tuesday Morning Update

I’ve “scooped” 3% overnight in a number of “long USD” trades, the largest of which being NZD/USD ( you were alerted to on Sunday night, then again via twitter last night ) as well long USD/CAD and short GBP/USD.

These pairs are still very much in play , only that these days when I see money on the table – I just flat-out take it. The short-term tech will kick in here soon, as we again can likely look to Thursday as the market pivot.

The Yen (JPY) has shown considerable strength in the past 24 hours, as every JPY related pair has seen reasonable moves ( a couple 100 pips even ) over the past few days. I still hold a couple trades ( still in the weeds ) long JPY.

The Insanity Trade is still holding as well, and in case any of you looked into following this pair (EUR/AUD) over the past week now – I hope you’ve seen “the light”. Dipping as much as 150 pips in a matter of hours, then back again etc….still hanging in profit but a wild ride if you’ve leveraged / are trading too large. Insanity Trade 2 has still yet to get picked up.

Otherwise…..another hum drum Tuesday on deck here today, as SP/ U.S Equities have certainly “come off” but nothing to write home about.

Gold continues to grind anyone silly enough to think they can actually “target an entry price” on an asset worth 1300.00. 30 dollar moves are nothing, and pointless to debate.

Good luck out there.

 

Reading Between the Lines: Market Psychology and Trade Management

The Thursday Pivot Pattern and Market Rhythm

When I mention Thursday as the market pivot, I’m not throwing darts at a calendar. There’s a distinct pattern that emerges week after week – Tuesday and Wednesday become the market’s “thinking days” where price action gets choppy, indecisive, and frankly annoying for anyone trying to scalp quick profits. Thursday typically brings clarity, often in the form of either a continuation of Monday’s momentum or a complete reversal that sets the tone for Friday’s close. This isn’t some mystical technical analysis – it’s pure market psychology. The big boys have had time to digest the weekend news, assess their positions, and make their moves. Retail traders have blown their accounts on Monday’s gap plays, and institutional flow starts to show its hand.

Right now, with the USD strength we’re seeing across multiple pairs, Thursday will likely determine whether this is a sustained dollar rally or just another head-fake before we see profit-taking into the weekend. The NZD/USD short that’s been printing money didn’t happen by accident – the Kiwi has been fundamentally weak for weeks, and technical resistance at 0.6180 was begging to be tested.

JPY Strength: More Than Just Safe Haven Flows

The Yen’s recent performance isn’t just your typical risk-off move. We’re seeing genuine strength across the board – USD/JPY dropping like a stone, EUR/JPY getting hammered, and even GBP/JPY finally showing some life to the downside. This isn’t panic buying; it’s institutional repositioning. The Bank of Japan’s recent policy signals, combined with Japan’s current account surplus and global uncertainty, are creating a perfect storm for JPY strength.

My long JPY positions that are “still in the weeds” aren’t accidents either. Sometimes the market needs to work through levels before the real move begins. The key difference between profitable traders and account blowers is understanding that being early isn’t the same as being wrong. When you’re trading with fundamental conviction and proper position sizing, you can afford to be patient while the market comes to you.

The Insanity Trade: Volatility as Strategy

EUR/AUD continues to be the poster child for why most retail traders fail. This pair moves 150 pips in hours, reverses completely, then does it again the next day. It’s pure insanity – hence the name – but it’s also pure opportunity if you understand what you’re dealing with. The problem isn’t the volatility; it’s traders who see big moves and immediately think “easy money” without understanding the risk management required.

This cross is driven by completely different economic cycles, monetary policies, and commodity flows. The Euro’s dealing with ECB policy uncertainty and European growth concerns, while the Aussie’s getting whipsawed by China fears and RBA speculation. When these forces collide, you get the kind of violent price action that either makes fortunes or destroys accounts. There’s no middle ground.

The fact that Insanity Trade 2 hasn’t triggered yet tells you something important about market timing. Sometimes the best trade is the one you don’t take until conditions align perfectly. Patience isn’t just a virtue in forex – it’s survival.

Gold and the Futility of Precision

Watching traders try to nail exact entry points on Gold is like watching someone try to catch a falling knife – entertaining until someone gets hurt. When you’re dealing with an asset trading above $1300, worrying about getting filled at $1299 versus $1301 is missing the entire point. Gold moves $30-50 in a session without breaking a sweat. The traders making money aren’t the ones sweating over perfect entries; they’re the ones who understand trend direction and position accordingly.

The current gold environment reflects broader market uncertainty, but it’s also being driven by currency flows, central bank policy expectations, and institutional hedging strategies. Trying to day-trade these macro forces with tight stop losses is financial suicide. Either you believe in gold’s direction over weeks and months, or you find something else to trade. The middle ground is where accounts go to die.

Held Hostage By Markets – Take The Pain!

This thing must be grinding your nerves to mush.

I’ve learned over as many years that “sideways” is a market dynamic that you “must” learn to deal with in order to survive. As the days grind on it gets easier and easier to just say “screw this!” and make some kind of a decision based in pure “emotion”.

That’s the idea. This type of market activity grinds equally on both sides, as bulls see “paper profits” diminishing, while bears can’t get enough traction to make a trade pay at all. The idea is to extract as much money from each sides as possible.

And there it is.

These days, it seems that “every day” brings reason for markets to just “sit there”. Waiting for the U.S to “go to war or not”, waiting for the U.S to “taper or not”, waiting for the U.S to “default/shutdown/ raise the debt ceiling” or not. See any pattern here?

Can these jack asses throw anything else on the pile while they’re at it?

You’ve got to just push through and not allow yourself to give in to it. That’s exactly what you’re supposed to do right?  Bulls continue to pile in on easing, bears pile in on “default speculation”.

Then “whoooooosh”! – both get their clocks cleaned.

I feel for you if you’re feeling the heat here. Markets are grinding nerves to pieces ( and I’ll say myself included). We need a move here, and you’ll want to be on the right side of it. Can the risk vs reward actually support further upside in “risk on”?

Breaking Through the Sideways Prison: Your Strategic Playbook

The Federal Reserve’s Double-Edged Sword

Here’s the brutal reality nobody wants to discuss: the Fed has painted themselves into a corner, and they’re dragging every major currency pair down with them. When you’ve got EUR/USD bouncing between the same 200-pip range for weeks, and USD/JPY can’t decide if it wants to break above resistance or crater through support, you know the central bank puppet masters are pulling strings in opposite directions simultaneously. The taper talk creates artificial dollar strength, but the moment default fears creep back in, that strength evaporates faster than morning dew. This isn’t random market noise—it’s systematic wealth extraction at its finest.

Every FOMC meeting becomes a coin flip for currency traders. Will they hint at reducing bond purchases and send the dollar screaming higher against commodity currencies like AUD and CAD? Or will they backtrack with dovish commentary that sends traders scrambling back into risk assets? The Fed knows exactly what they’re doing. They’re keeping everyone guessing, which means keeping everyone losing. Professional money managers are sitting on their hands, retail traders are getting chopped to pieces, and the only winners are the algorithmic systems designed to profit from this exact type of volatility.

Currency Correlations in Chaos Mode

Traditional currency correlations have gone completely haywire, and if you’re still trading based on old relationships, you’re getting murdered. The typical safe-haven flows into CHF and JPY aren’t behaving like they should when equity markets show weakness. Instead, you’re seeing Swiss franc strength get capped by SNB intervention fears, while the yen gets hammered by Bank of Japan’s continued accommodation stance even when global uncertainty spikes.

Meanwhile, commodity currencies are stuck in no-man’s land. Oil prices can’t sustain rallies with global growth concerns, but they can’t collapse either with geopolitical tensions simmering. This leaves CAD traders in absolute purgatory—not enough fundamental direction to justify major position sizing, but enough intraday noise to stop out anyone trying to scalp. The Australian dollar faces similar torture with China’s economic data painting mixed pictures week after week. One day it’s strong manufacturing numbers supporting AUD strength, the next it’s property sector concerns sending it lower.

The Smart Money’s Waiting Game

Here’s what the institutional players are doing while retail traders tear their hair out: they’re building positions in size during these grinding consolidations, but they’re doing it with time horizons that extend months, not days. They understand something crucial that most individual traders miss—sideways markets eventually resolve with explosive moves that more than compensate for the patience required.

The key is identifying which currency pairs are coiling for the biggest moves. EUR/USD might be boring now, but when it breaks, it typically runs 400-500 pips before finding the next major level. GBP pairs are even more explosive after extended consolidations, with cable capable of 600-800 pip moves when the range finally breaks. Smart money is accumulating positions near range extremes and adding to winners when breakouts confirm.

Positioning for the Inevitable Break

The resolution is coming, and when it hits, you better be prepared. Political deadlock in Washington can’t persist indefinitely—either they’ll reach a deal that sends risk assets soaring and crushes the dollar, or we’ll see genuine crisis that triggers massive safe-haven flows. Neither scenario supports continued sideways grinding.

Start thinking in terms of portfolio construction rather than individual trades. If you’re convinced we’re heading for resolution to the upside, you want exposure to high-beta currencies like AUD, NZD, and EUR against the dollar. If you think we’re heading for crisis, then CHF, JPY, and even gold-correlated positions make sense. The worst thing you can do is stay paralyzed by the current environment.

Most importantly, when the break comes, don’t second-guess it. These sideways markets create so much pent-up energy that the initial moves tend to be sustainable. The traders who’ve been ground down by weeks of choppy action often fade the breakout, thinking it’s just another false move. That’s exactly when the real money gets made—when everyone expects more of the same grinding action, but instead gets a decisive directional move that runs for days.

Emerging Markets – Effect Of QE

In recent years, central banks of developed markets have used quantitative easing (QE) in an attempt to stimulate their economies, increase bank lending, and encourage spending.

To date, however, the greater availability of credit in developed markets has not been offset by demand – resulting in an abundance of excess liquidity. Much of this surplus capital has flowed into emerging markets, which has had adverse effects on their currency exchange rates, inflation levels, export competitiveness, and more.

As historical low rates gave investors cheap money and forced them to find higher rates overseas (and with the continued mess in Europe) – emerging markets were the natural place to go.

In general, financial firms that are now free to lend rush their investments into the emerging economies. This is because there is a higher rate of return on investments in emerging countries compared to highly developed countries like the United States. So, instead of a U.S. financial firm pouring money into U.S. investments, the firm piles  into India ( or Mexico ) since the investment will make more of an impact and give them a greater return.

The symbol “EEM” can be used as a broad look at emerging markets.

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Sept_2013

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Sept_2013

The effect of Fed tapering could prove disastrous for emerging markets as the flood of easy money dries up – and dollars are brought back home.

Putting this in perspective I hope gives you a better understanding of how much “rides” on the current global “injection of stimulus” as all these things are so interconnected.

I would have expected EEM to “blast for the moon” on the Feds’ shocker, but apparently not. This in itself is also suggestive of the fact that the “big boys” might just be pulling back a bit here – which would also equate to USD strength.

I like what I’m seeing as this trade appears to be taking shape, although I’m ready at a moments notice to dump and run. USD has swung low as equities have “swung high” so…..another head fake / whipsaw? Just as likely with the current conditions so……trade safe and be ready for anything.

Reading the Capital Flow Reversal: Strategic Positioning for the USD Comeback

Carry Trade Unwinds Signal Major Shifts Ahead

The mechanics behind emerging market currency destruction go deeper than simple capital flight. We’re witnessing the systematic unwinding of massive carry trades that have dominated forex markets for years. When institutions borrowed USD at near-zero rates to fund investments in Brazilian reals, Turkish lira, or South African rand, they created artificial demand for these currencies. The moment Fed policy shifts toward tightening, these positions become toxic fast. Smart money doesn’t wait for official announcements – they’re already repositioning. This explains why pairs like USD/TRY and USD/ZAR have been creeping higher even before any concrete tapering timeline emerged. The writing is on the wall, and professional traders are reading it loud and clear.

What makes this particularly dangerous for emerging markets is the speed at which these unwinds accelerate. Unlike gradual policy changes, carry trade reversals happen in violent waves. One fund’s forced liquidation triggers stop losses across the board, creating cascade effects that can destroy currencies in days, not months. We saw this playbook during the 2013 taper tantrum, and the setup today looks eerily similar. The difference now is that emerging market debt levels are substantially higher, making these economies even more vulnerable to sudden capital outflows.

Dollar Strength: Beyond the Fed’s Next Move

The USD’s path forward isn’t just about Federal Reserve policy – it’s about relative positioning in a multipolar world where every major economy is dealing with its own structural challenges. While everyone obsesses over Fed tapering timelines, the real story is how dollar strength feeds on itself through multiple channels. Higher US yields attract capital, but more importantly, they force deleveraging of dollar-denominated debt globally. This creates structural demand for USD that transcends typical monetary policy cycles.

European weakness provides another pillar supporting dollar strength. The ECB remains locked in ultra-accommodative mode while dealing with persistent inflation concerns and energy crisis fallout. EUR/USD has shown consistent weakness on any hawkish Fed rhetoric, and this dynamic isn’t changing anytime soon. Meanwhile, China’s property sector crisis and zero-COVID policies have removed the yuan as a viable alternative reserve currency for now. This leaves the dollar as the only game in town for institutional flows seeking safety and yield simultaneously.

Tactical Opportunities in Currency Volatility

The current environment offers specific trading setups for those willing to position against consensus thinking. While everyone expects emerging market currencies to collapse, the real money is in timing these moves and identifying which currencies will fall hardest and fastest. Countries with current account deficits and high external debt ratios – think Turkey, Argentina, and parts of Eastern Europe – face existential currency crises if dollar funding costs continue rising. These aren’t gradual declines; they’re potential currency collapses that create generational trading opportunities.

On the flip side, commodity currencies like AUD and CAD present more nuanced plays. Rising global inflation supports commodity prices, but these currencies still suffer from broader risk-off sentiment and relative yield disadvantages. The key is recognizing when commodity strength can overcome dollar dominance – typically during periods when inflation fears outweigh growth concerns. This creates short-term counter-trend opportunities within the broader dollar bull market.

Risk Management in Unstable Markets

Current market conditions demand aggressive risk management because traditional correlations are breaking down. The usual relationships between stocks, bonds, and currencies are becoming unreliable as central banks navigate unprecedented policy normalization while dealing with persistent inflation. Position sizing becomes critical when volatility can spike without warning and correlations can flip overnight. What worked during the QE era of predictable central bank support no longer applies.

The smart approach involves building positions gradually while maintaining flexibility to reverse course quickly. Markets are pricing in scenarios, not certainties, and those scenarios can change rapidly based on geopolitical events, economic data surprises, or central bank communications. Successful trading in this environment means staying paranoid about risk while remaining aggressive about opportunity. The traders who survive and thrive will be those who respect the market’s ability to surprise while positioning for the most probable outcomes: continued dollar strength and emerging market pressure.

Trade Ideas For NZD/USD – Overbought

I’ve got my eye on the “Kiwi” regardless of which pair, for the pure reason that it looks severely overbought.

Overbought –  A situation in which the demand for a certain asset unjustifiably pushes the price of an underlying asset to levels that do not support the fundamentals.

Now, The Bank of New Zealand has recently made mention of a possible “hike” in interest rates (which has most certainly been the tail wind behind the latest advance) but the Kiwi still represents a “risk related currency” and is subject to large moves when appetite for risk wanes.

Have a look at the daily chart and see how “84.00” looks like a solid area of resistance.

NZD_USD_SEPT_2013_Forex_Kong

NZD_USD_SEPT_2013_Forex_Kong

Now, “86.00” doesn’t look completely out of the question, but with the usual “staggered mutli-order” approach, I’m seeing the risk vs reward looking pretty good for a short up here.

Another full day’s downward movement will likely trip the Kongdicator ( as I am free wheeling here on this one so far ) so we’ll keep our eyes peeled for that.

Kong….gone.

 

NZD Trading Strategy: Risk Management and Market Fundamentals

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand Factor

The RBNZ’s hawkish stance isn’t just talk—it’s a fundamental shift that’s been brewing since inflation pressures started mounting across the Pacific. When central banks hint at rate hikes, carry trade flows explode into that currency faster than you can blink. The Kiwi’s recent surge past 83.00 isn’t coincidence; it’s institutional money repositioning for higher yields. But here’s the kicker: the market’s already priced in at least two rate hikes over the next twelve months. That means we’re looking at a classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” setup brewing. The question isn’t whether the RBNZ will hike—it’s whether they can deliver enough firepower to justify these elevated levels. Smart money knows that once the initial rate hike euphoria fades, fundamentals take over, and New Zealand’s export-dependent economy faces serious headwinds from global slowdown fears.

Technical Resistance and the 84.00 Wall

That 84.00 level isn’t arbitrary—it’s where institutional profit-taking historically kicks in on NZD/USD. Look at the volume profile and you’ll see massive sell orders stacked above 83.80, creating a natural ceiling for this rally. The daily RSI is screaming overbought at 78, and we’re seeing bearish divergence forming as price makes new highs while momentum indicators lag. This is textbook reversal territory. The 200-period moving average sits way down at 79.50, meaning we’ve got a massive gap to fill once this speculative froth burns off. Additionally, the weekly chart shows we’re bumping against the upper Bollinger Band with conviction—historically, the Kiwi respects these technical boundaries more than most majors. When you combine overbought technicals with fundamental overextension, you get prime shorting conditions that professional traders dream about.

Risk-Off Scenarios and Correlation Plays

Here’s where the Kiwi’s risk currency status becomes critical. The moment global equity markets catch a cold, commodity currencies get pneumonia. NZD/USD has an 85% positive correlation with the S&P 500 over the past six months, and with market volatility increasing, that correlation becomes your best friend for timing entries. Watch AUD/USD closely—it typically leads NZD moves by 12-24 hours when risk sentiment shifts. If the Aussie starts cracking below its key support at 66.00, the Kiwi will follow suit with amplified moves. The agricultural sector’s struggling with weather disruptions affecting New Zealand’s dairy exports, which represent nearly 30% of the country’s export revenue. China’s economic slowdown continues pressuring commodity demand, and New Zealand’s trade balance is showing early signs of deterioration. When risk appetite inevitably turns sour, these fundamental weaknesses will compound the technical breakdown we’re setting up for.

Position Sizing and Exit Strategy

The staggered multi-order approach makes perfect sense here because catching exact tops is fool’s gold. Start with 25% position size at current levels around 83.80, add another 25% if we get that spike to 85.50, and complete the position if price somehow reaches 86.00. Your average entry will be superior to trying to nail the perfect short. Set your first profit target at 81.50—that’s where the 50-day moving average currently sits and where buyers might step in temporarily. The second target sits at 79.80, which aligns with the previous resistance-turned-support level from August. If we get a genuine risk-off event, don’t be surprised to see 78.00 in play within two weeks. Risk management is non-negotiable: use a 150-pip stop above your highest entry, and trail stops aggressively once we break below 82.00. The beauty of this setup is the asymmetric risk-reward profile—you’re risking 150 pips to potentially make 400-500 pips if the trade develops according to plan. That’s institutional-grade money management that separates profitable traders from the gambling crowd.

Stock Market Crash! – Monday Get Out!

He he he……gotcha.

Let’s get something straight here. When I make the suggestion of “a top” or (as I have been since April) a “topping process” – I don’t mean the world is gonna come crashing down around you like in some bullshit movie out of Hollywood.

The financial “powers that be” already got their wake up call in 2008 with Lehman Bros etc and it’s pretty much a given that we won’t be seeing something like that happening again anytime soon.

There is no “doomsday prophecy” here, no “go buy guns n ammo” cuz they’re coming for your gold, no “end of the world scenario’s” no. This stuff rolls out in “real time” and navigating the peaks n valley’s these days just gets tougher and tougher, as the situation gets more desperate.

We know the “coordinated Central Bank effort” is flooding the planet with cash, and we know the tensions between East and West are intensifying. We know the world’s largest consumer economy is still struggling to get back on its feet ( if ever ) and we also know that the large majority of people involved with investment / finance are hell-bent on making it so.

Global appetite for risk comes “on” and it comes “off”. Simple as that. Identifying these times can be extremely profitable for those who choose to fight it out in the trenches.

If you actually think you can weather “buy and hold” when a mere 10% correction in U.S equities has the potential to wipe your account to zero then fine! Do it! Buy all you can tomorrow – and disregard concern for the “global appetite for risk”.

I call it like I see it, and I see a lot.

I’m not particularly “optimistic” about the next few years but that doesn’t mean I think the world is gonna end.

You choose to trade, or you choose to invest. DON’T CONFUSE THE TWO.

Sorry about the misleading headline although – seriously………it’s all I can do these days not to “go completely mad” writing about this day after day. It “may” happen again but at least just this once….give ol Kong a break. (I bet you read the damn thing as fast you could get it open).

Forgive me.

We’ve ok here………………………..at least for Monday.

written by F Kong

Reading the Risk-Off Tea Leaves Like a Pro

The Dollar’s Safe Haven Dance Gets Complicated

Here’s what most retail traders miss when we’re talking about this topping process – the U.S. Dollar isn’t playing by the old rules anymore. Sure, when global risk appetite takes a dive, everyone still runs to Uncle Sam’s currency like it’s 2008. But we’re dealing with a different animal now. The Fed’s been printing money like there’s no tomorrow, yet USD still catches a bid every time the VIX spikes above 25. This creates some seriously twisted opportunities in pairs like EUR/USD and GBP/USD. When European markets start puking and the Euro gets hammered, that’s your cue. But don’t get married to the position – these risk-off moves are getting shorter and more violent. The key is recognizing when central bank intervention is about to step in and kill your party.

Commodity Currencies: The Canaries in the Coal Mine

You want early warning signals for when risk appetite is shifting? Watch AUD/USD and NZD/USD like a hawk. These commodity-linked currencies telegraph global growth expectations better than any economist’s forecast. When China starts sneezing and commodity demand drops, the Aussie and Kiwi get absolutely demolished. But here’s the kicker – they also bounce back faster than anyone expects when central banks coordinate their next liquidity injection. I’ve seen AUD/USD drop 200 pips in a day on nothing but weak Chinese manufacturing data, then recover half of it within 48 hours on whispers of stimulus. This isn’t your grandfather’s forex market where trends lasted months. We’re talking about capitalizing on violent swings that happen in hours, not days.

The Yen Carry Trade Unwind Nobody Talks About

While everyone’s focused on whether the Bank of Japan will finally abandon their yield curve control, the real action is happening in the shadows. The carry trade funding massive risk positions globally isn’t just USD/JPY – it’s flowing through every major cross. When risk-off hits hard, we’re not just seeing Yen strength against the Dollar. Watch EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, and especially AUD/JPY for the real carnage. These crosses can move 300-400 pips in a single session when the unwinding gets violent. The beauty is that most retail traders are still playing the majors while the real money is being made on these carry unwinds. When you see USD/JPY struggling to break above 150 while AUD/JPY is getting annihilated, that’s your signal that something bigger is brewing beneath the surface.

Central Bank Coordination: The Ultimate Market Manipulator

Let’s cut through the bullshit here – we’re not trading free markets anymore. We’re trading central bank policy expectations and coordinated interventions. Every time the market starts to break down and test these artificial support levels, boom – here comes another coordinated response. The ECB starts talking about additional stimulus, the Fed hints at dovish pivots, and the Bank of England suddenly discovers new tools in their monetary policy toolkit. This creates these massive whipsaw moves that destroy retail accounts but create goldmines for traders who understand the game. The trick is identifying when the coordination is breaking down. Watch for divergence between what central bankers are saying and what bond markets are pricing in. When German 10-year yields start moving independent of Fed policy signals, or when Japanese bond markets ignore BoJ guidance, that’s when you know the coordinated effort is losing its grip. These moments of central bank policy divergence create the most profitable trading opportunities, but they require you to think three steps ahead of the headlines. Don’t trade the news – trade the policy response to the news, and the market’s reaction to that policy response. That’s where the real money gets made in this manipulated environment we’re all forced to navigate.

Watch The Wilshire 5000 – I Do

The Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index, or more simply the Wilshire 5000, is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the market value of all stocks actively traded in the United States.

As of October 31, 2012 the index contained 3,692 components. The index is intended to measure the performance of most publicly traded companies headquartered in the United States, with readily available price data.

I keep the Wilshire on my radar, as a better means to “truly track” the performance / direction of U.S stocks, in that the index includes nearly ALL PUBLICLY TRADED COMPANIES.

I’ve borrowed the chart below ( and will certainly give credit where credit is due, should anyone object) to illustrate just how “extended” U.S equities are right now, and to further the case for inevitable correction.

This is a “monthly chart” so the implications / divergence in volume and price ( look at the volume bars below ) is of particular note as this “never-ending rally” has continued for months and months, on less and less volume.

Wilshire_5000

Wilshire_5000

As well the angle of the “RSI” up top ( gradually lower, then lower over time ). The distance price has stretched above the 200 Day Moving Average ( red line on chart ) as well the MACD (below) literally “off in space”.

The entire “structure” starts to look eerily like the tops in both 2000 ( Tech crash ) as well 2008 ( Credit crash ).

A close friend of mine and another mutual friend are considering buying Facebook stock this Wednesday, with plans on seeing it hit 100. As market particpants primarily act on emotion – this in itself may lend further creedance to the fact we are indeed – “near the top”.

Buy now?

The Dollar’s Dance: How Equity Tops Shape Currency Markets

Safe Haven Flows and the DXY Connection

When U.S. equities finally roll over from these astronomical levels, the Dollar Index (DXY) becomes the battlefield where fortunes are won and lost. History shows us that major equity corrections don’t occur in isolation – they trigger massive capital flows that reshape currency relationships for months, sometimes years. The 2008 credit crisis saw the dollar initially strengthen as panicked investors fled to Treasury bonds, despite the crisis originating on American soil. This counterintuitive move caught countless forex traders off guard, particularly those holding EUR/USD and GBP/USD long positions expecting dollar weakness.

The current setup presents similar dynamics but with critical differences. The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet remains bloated compared to 2008 levels, and global central banks have followed suit with their own money printing exercises. When the Wilshire 5000 correction materializes – and the technical evidence strongly suggests it will – watch for initial dollar strength as algorithms trigger risk-off positioning across asset classes. EUR/USD will likely test the 1.0500 level again, while AUD/USD and NZD/USD face potentially devastating moves below their 2022 lows.

Carry Trade Unwinds: The Yen’s Revenge

The Japanese Yen has been the funding currency of choice for the better part of two decades, financing everything from Australian real estate speculation to Turkish bond purchases. USD/JPY’s climb above 150 in recent months represents one of the most stretched currency relationships in modern history. When equity markets correct violently, carry trades unwind with equal violence. The mechanics are ruthless: leveraged positions get liquidated, margin calls trigger automatic selling, and what was once a gentle trend becomes a waterfall.

Smart money is already positioning for this reversal. USD/JPY monthly charts show clear divergence patterns similar to what we’re seeing in the Wilshire 5000 – price making new highs while momentum indicators roll over. The Bank of Japan’s recent interventions weren’t just about defending 150; they were warning shots fired across the bow of an overleveraged market. When the equity correction arrives, expect USD/JPY to plummet toward 130 faster than most traders think possible. The same dynamic will play out in crosses like EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY, where retail traders have been consistently buying dips for months.

Emerging Market Carnage and Commodity Currencies

Emerging market currencies will face the harshest punishment when U.S. equities correct from these levels. The relationship between American stock market performance and EM currency stability isn’t coincidental – it’s structural. When the S&P 500 and Wilshire 5000 decline significantly, capital flees emerging markets faster than it entered. This creates a feedback loop where falling EM currencies make dollar-denominated debt more expensive to service, further weakening their economies and currencies.

Pay particular attention to USD/ZAR, USD/TRY, and USD/BRL during the coming correction. These pairs have shown remarkable correlation with U.S. equity volatility over the past decade. The South African Rand, Turkish Lira, and Brazilian Real will likely experience double-digit percentage moves against the dollar within weeks of any major equity selloff. Commodity currencies like the Canadian and Australian dollars will face their own challenges as risk appetite evaporates and industrial demand forecasts get slashed. USD/CAD above 1.40 and AUD/USD below 0.60 aren’t fantasy scenarios – they’re probable outcomes when overleveraged equity markets finally surrender to gravity.

The European Dilemma: ECB Policy vs. Market Reality

The European Central Bank finds itself in an impossible position as U.S. markets teeter on the edge of correction. European equities have shown relative weakness compared to their American counterparts for months, yet the Euro has maintained surprising resilience against the dollar. This disconnect won’t survive a major equity correction. EUR/USD has been trading in a range between 1.0500 and 1.1000 for most of 2023, but these boundaries will shatter when panic selling begins in earnest.

European banks remain heavily exposed to both U.S. equity markets and dollar funding markets. When American stocks correct violently, European financial institutions face dual pressure: their equity holdings decline while their dollar funding costs increase. This dynamic historically drives EUR/USD significantly lower, regardless of ECB policy intentions. The technical setup in EUR/USD monthly charts already shows warning signs – declining volume on rallies and increasing volume on selloffs. When the Wilshire 5000 breaks its uptrend, expect EUR/USD to test 1.0200 within months.

It's A Currency War So – War On!

It’s easy to get caught up in the day-to-day “up’s n downs” of the markets.

A couple of days go by, you make a buck , then you lose a couple. Then slowly but surely the intraday / micro stuff “becomes your world”. Obsessed with the tiny “zigs and zags” that make up your charts, confounded by the “barage” of daily news – you’ve lost touch. You’ve lost your focus.

Have you forgotten?

Have you forgotten that we are smack dab in the middle of one of the most vicious currency wars of the past few decades – let alone your entire lifetime??

And you wonder why thing aren’t going so well.

A number of prior posts come to mind, in particular: https://forexkong.com/2013/01/31/2013-you-will-never-trade-it/ but that’s beside the point. The point is…..you’ve got to get a handle on you environment before you go running off into the sunset!

The zigs and zags will always be there. It’s the environment that changes.

Do you get all excited about going fishing in the rain?

That being said Japan has no idea what to do with respect to the Fed’s move yesterday, as markets are clearly stunned. My printing press , your printing press etc.. It’s “war on” people – no question about it.

In general we are seeing “all fiat currencies” falling, and it’s only a matter of “which is falling more” when considering your trade plan.

There is no “strength”.

Navigating the Currency War Battlefield

The Race to the Bottom Has Real Winners

Here’s what most traders miss while they’re staring at their 5-minute charts: currency wars aren’t about who wins or loses in the traditional sense. They’re about who can devalue their currency most effectively without completely destroying market confidence. The Fed’s latest move has thrown down the gauntlet, and now every major central bank is scrambling to respond. Japan’s been playing this game the longest with their decades of QE, but even they’re caught off guard by the Fed’s aggressive stance.

This creates massive opportunities if you know where to look. The USD/JPY pair becomes a proxy for this entire war. When Japan can’t match the Fed’s aggression, the yen weakens. When they overcompensate, we see violent reversals that catch everyone off guard. But here’s the kicker – both currencies are fundamentally weakening against real assets. The question isn’t which currency is strong; it’s which central bank is more committed to destroying their currency’s purchasing power.

Why Your Technical Analysis Is Failing You

Those support and resistance levels you’ve been drawing? They mean absolutely nothing in a currency war environment. When central banks are actively manipulating their currencies through unprecedented monetary policy, traditional technical analysis becomes about as useful as a weather forecast from last year. The fundamentals have shifted so dramatically that historical price action is largely irrelevant.

Instead of focusing on whether EUR/USD is going to bounce off 1.0500, start thinking about which central bank is more desperate. The European Central Bank has been relatively restrained compared to the Fed and BOJ, but that restraint comes with consequences. A stronger euro hurts European exports and makes their debt crisis more difficult to manage. This tension creates the real trading opportunities.

The smart money isn’t trading chart patterns right now. They’re trading central bank desperation and policy divergence. When you understand that every major currency is in a race to the bottom, you stop looking for “strong” currencies and start identifying which ones are falling faster and why.

The Commodity Currency Trap

Don’t think the commodity currencies are safe havens in this mess. The Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, and New Zealand dollar might seem like alternatives to the major fiat currencies, but they’re just as vulnerable – maybe more so. These currencies are tied to commodity prices, and when global trade slows down due to currency instability, commodity demand crashes.

The AUD/USD pair perfectly illustrates this dynamic. Australia’s economy depends heavily on exports to China, but China’s dealing with their own currency manipulation issues. When the yuan weakens, Australian exports become less competitive, and the Aussie dollar suffers. It’s a domino effect that most retail traders never see coming because they’re too busy looking at mining company earnings reports.

The real trap is thinking that commodity currencies offer stability. They don’t. They offer different types of instability tied to global trade flows and central bank policies you have no control over.

Your Action Plan in This Environment

Stop trying to predict daily movements and start positioning for the bigger picture. The currency war isn’t ending anytime soon – it’s just getting started. Central banks have painted themselves into a corner where they can’t stop printing without causing massive deflationary spirals. This means volatility is here to stay, and traditional trading approaches will continue to fail.

Focus on policy divergence trades. When one central bank is more aggressive than another, that creates sustained trends that can last months or even years. The key is patience and proper position sizing. You’re not day trading anymore; you’re positioning for macro trends driven by desperate central banks.

Most importantly, accept that this environment requires a completely different mindset. The markets aren’t behaving rationally because the underlying monetary system isn’t rational. Central banks are experimenting with policies that have never been tried before, and the consequences are unpredictable. Your job isn’t to predict the unpredictable – it’s to position yourself to profit from the chaos while managing the inevitable volatility that comes with it.