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.


