Insanity Trade 2 – Updates And Add Ons

In case you’ve forgotten about it. The “insanity trade” is still very much alive. So much so in fact,  that I want to (not only bring you up to speed) – but also introduce……..Insanity Trade 2!

Not much different from the original “insanity trade” we’re talking about EUR/NZD this time.

Ok. Wrapping your head around the “reasoning” or the “fundamentals” behind these trades is a stretch for even the most experienced of traders. Pitting the Euro against AUD and now NZD?  What the hell? Why? How? What could you possibly be thinking about “fundamentally” to consider such a bizarre trade / pairing? Now?

I’m not going to tell you.

These are the Insanity Trades remember! You need to be insane to take them, and possibly insane to understand them!

I am placing an order long EUR/NZD a full 100 pips above the current price action – my order to buy is at : 1.6260

The current insanity trade is currently sitting EXACTLY BREAK EVEN at 1.43 ( what? you think I sold / freaked on the Fed? Hell no! ) – It’s an insanity trade.

That’s it. Do not try this at home.

Kong….in”song”?

Why the Insanity Trades Actually Make Perfect Sense

The Central Bank Divergence Play Nobody Sees Coming

While every retail trader and their grandmother are staring at USD pairs, completely obsessed with Fed policy and inflation data, the real action is happening in the cross pairs. EUR/NZD represents one of the most extreme central bank policy divergences on the planet right now. The RBNZ has been hiking aggressively, sure, but they’re also operating from a tiny economy that’s completely dependent on commodity exports and tourism recovery. Meanwhile, the ECB is sitting on a powder keg of energy crisis management and structural reforms that could send the Euro screaming higher when everyone least expects it.

The beauty of EUR/NZD is that it strips away all the noise from USD movements and gives you pure exposure to European monetary policy versus New Zealand’s resource-dependent economy. When the ECB finally gets serious about defending the Euro’s purchasing power against energy inflation, the Kiwi doesn’t stand a chance. This isn’t about short-term rate differentials – it’s about structural economic power and which central bank has more ammunition in the long game.

Correlation Breakdown Creates Massive Opportunities

Here’s what the textbooks won’t tell you about cross pairs like EUR/AUD and EUR/NZD: when traditional correlations break down, that’s when the real money gets made. Normally, AUD and NZD move in lockstep because they’re both commodity currencies tied to similar economic cycles. But we’re not in normal times. Australia’s iron ore and coal exports to China are in a completely different universe from New Zealand’s dairy and tourism recovery story.

The insanity trades capitalize on these correlation breakdowns. While everyone’s trading EUR/USD or AUD/USD, they’re missing the fact that EUR/AUD and EUR/NZD can move independently of both the Dollar and each other. When correlations collapse, volatility explodes, and that’s exactly what we want. The market hasn’t priced in the possibility that European industrial demand could surge while Oceanic commodity prices plateau or decline.

Technical Levels That Defy Conventional Logic

Setting buy orders 100 pips above current market price sounds certifiably insane until you understand how thin the order books are on these exotic crosses. EUR/NZD doesn’t have the liquidity cushion of major pairs, which means when it moves, it moves violently. That 1.6260 level isn’t arbitrary – it represents a breakout point where algorithmic stops will trigger cascading buy orders from institutional players who’ve been short this pair based on outdated fundamental assumptions.

The current EUR/AUD position sitting at breakeven around 1.43 is actually proving the thesis. It’s holding steady despite all the market chaos, Fed volatility, and general risk-off sentiment. That’s not luck – that’s structural support from underlying economic forces that most traders are completely ignoring. When these crosses finally break their ranges, they don’t just trend – they explode.

The Psychology of Counter-Trend Thinking

Every successful trader eventually learns that the biggest profits come from trades that feel completely wrong at the time you put them on. EUR/NZD long feels insane because conventional wisdom says you should be shorting the Euro against everything and buying high-yielding currencies like the Kiwi. But conventional wisdom is what gets you mediocre returns and blown accounts.

The insanity trades work precisely because they go against every instinct that retail traders have been conditioned to follow. While everyone’s focused on yield differentials and short-term data releases, these positions are betting on longer-term structural shifts in global capital flows. The Euro isn’t just another currency – it’s the reserve currency of the world’s largest trading bloc. The Kiwi, despite its attractive yield, represents an economy smaller than most individual US states.

When risk appetite eventually returns and institutional money starts looking for alternatives to Dollar-denominated assets, EUR crosses are going to be the beneficiaries. The insanity isn’t in taking these trades – the insanity is in ignoring them while chasing the same overcrowded USD pairs as every other trader in the market.

The Revenge Trade – Don't Do It

A common psychological reaction for traders ( when presented with a situation such as we’ve seen today ) is to jump in / make assumptions / over trade / freak out / spazz with the notion that:

  • I’ve missed something so huge and now I MUST find a way to be a part of it.
  • I’ve lost so much money on the wrong side of this move that I MUST place another trade in the opposite direction.
  • I’ve now got this nailed down to an “absolute science “and will now look to double / triple my exposure as I’m sure to be a millionaire come sunrise.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

Patience young grasshoppa.

  • Yes you’ve missed something huge ( I did ). No big deal. These things happen many times throughout a year, and if you’ve survived at all – just be thankful.
  • If you’ve lost so much money that you are compelled to place a “revenge trade” ( or even considering trading based essentially in your “need for revenge” – I COMMAND YOU TO STOP! – YOU ARE NOT TRADING……..YOU ARE GAMBLING.
  • You made out really well and should be very pleased with yourself. Now take your profits ……go buy yourself ( and your family and friends ) something nice, and DON’T EXPECT THE SAME THING TO HAPPEN AGAIN TOMMOROW.

The psychology of trading will be the one element you struggle with the most, as most of you will likely blow your accounts long before you ever really address it – or have the opportunity to work on it at all.

You need to stay in the game…………………………… long enough to “understand the game”.

The Mental Game: Why Most Traders Self-Destruct Before They Learn

Understanding Your Position Size Psychology

Here’s what separates the amateurs from the professionals: position sizing discipline when emotions are running high. When EUR/USD makes a 200-pip move in a single session, or when the Bank of Japan intervenes and USD/JPY gaps 300 pips overnight, your brain starts doing stupid math. You calculate what you “could have made” with 5 standard lots instead of your usual 0.5 lots, and suddenly your carefully constructed risk management plan looks like cowardice.

This is where traders die. Not from bad analysis, not from missing economic data, but from letting their position sizing fluctuate with their emotional state. The trader who risks 2% per trade when calm suddenly risks 10% when desperate to “catch up” from a missed move. Your position size should be calculated before you even look at the charts, based on your account size and predetermined risk tolerance. Period. No exceptions for “sure thing” setups or revenge scenarios.

The Revenge Trade Trap in Major Currency Pairs

Revenge trading shows up most viciously in the major pairs because they’re liquid enough to let you dig your grave quickly. You got caught short on GBP/USD during a surprise hawkish Bank of England statement? The pair rips 150 pips against you in an hour, and now you’re staring at a loss that makes your stomach turn. Your lizard brain screams: “This has to reverse! Sterling can’t keep going up like this!”

So you double down. Maybe you flip long, convinced you’ve identified the new trend. Or worse, you add to your short position because you’re “averaging down.” Both approaches are financial suicide. Currency pairs can trend for weeks or months beyond what seems rational. The Swiss National Bank’s franc cap removal in 2015 saw EUR/CHF drop 2,000 pips in minutes. Traders who fought that move with revenge positions got obliterated.

When you’re in revenge mode, you’re not analyzing support and resistance levels, economic fundamentals, or central bank policy divergence. You’re just throwing money at your wounded ego. This isn’t trading; it’s expensive therapy.

Profit-Taking Discipline: The Hardest Skill to Master

Winning trades create their own psychological traps. You nail a perfect short on AUD/USD ahead of weak employment data, catch a 120-pip drop, and suddenly you’re a genius. Your brain floods with dopamine and starts whispering dangerous thoughts: “If this move continues overnight, I could make triple.” So instead of taking your planned profit, you hold on, dreaming of bigger gains.

Here’s the brutal truth: that euphoric feeling after a big winner is just as dangerous as the despair after a big loser. Both emotions make you abandon your trading plan. The professional takes their predetermined profit target and walks away, regardless of whether the pair continues moving in their favor. They understand that trying to capture every pip of a move is a fool’s errand that usually ends with giving back gains.

Set your profit targets based on technical levels—previous support/resistance, Fibonacci retracements, or key psychological numbers. When USD/CAD hits your target at 1.3500, you close the trade. You don’t care if it runs to 1.3600 afterward. Consistency in profit-taking builds account equity over time, while hoping for home runs leads to striking out.

Market Survival: Time in Game Beats Timing the Game

The forex market generates multiple significant moves every month. Central bank meetings, GDP releases, employment reports, geopolitical events—opportunities are constant if you’re alive to see them. But most traders eliminate themselves from future opportunities by betting too heavily on current ones.

Your primary job isn’t to maximize every trade; it’s to ensure you can take the next trade. This means accepting that you’ll miss moves, sometimes big ones. When the Federal Reserve pivots unexpectedly and sends the dollar index on a 500-point rally over two weeks, and you’re sitting in cash, that’s not failure—that’s survival. The trader who survives ten years in this market will vastly outperform the trader who flames out in ten months chasing every move.

Risk management isn’t about being conservative; it’s about being mathematical. Calculate your maximum acceptable loss before entering any position. Stick to those numbers regardless of market conditions or your emotional state. The market will always provide another opportunity, but only if you’re still in the game to see it.

QE5 – Rain On My Parade

It’s wet here today. Really wet.

Like there’s a two foot deep lake out front of my place…with cars stalled in it “type” wet.  Hurricane “Ingrid” blew thru early in the week, and a smaller tropical storm has now developed in her wake. As with the weather here in the Yucatan “so it goes” in financial markets as well. Having missed one of the largest one day moves in USD in the history of my career “sitting out” – I can honestly say ” I’ve had better days”.

So there it is. Rain on my parade.

Bernanke “toes the line” and doesn’t even blink with the smallest suggestion of tapering. Zip. Zero. Nada.

The U.S Dollar absolutely crushed with one of the largest one day moves lower I’ve ever seen ( all be it sitting here looking to smash my computer screens to bits). Epic dollar destruction. Continued printing. Ponzi scheme “on”.

You’d expect that anyone in there right mind would perceive this as “very , very , very bad news” as obviously, if the U.S cannot afford even the “tiniest of tapering” you’ve gotta know the trouble runs far deeper than most imagine. This is bad news. It’s bad, bad , bad news – but what’s a guy to do?

You’re supposed to go back to work , mind your own business, but stay tuned to that T.V for further updates on the destruction of your economy and currency.

If I was “modestly bearish” some time ago, I’m now OUTRIGHT growling now, as this has now passed “all levels of reason”.

Trade ideas to follow but as it stands….we’ll wait to see reaction to this over the next “day or two” and stay open to the idea of a solid dollar bounce.

 

Reading the Storm: Dollar Devastation and What Comes Next

The Technical Carnage Nobody Saw Coming

Let’s cut through the noise and look at what really happened here. EUR/USD blasted through 1.3500 like tissue paper, GBP/USD shattered resistance at 1.6200, and don’t even get me started on what happened to USD/JPY – a complete capitulation below 98.00 that wiped out months of dollar strength in a single session. This wasn’t your garden variety Fed disappointment. This was systematic destruction of dollar positioning across every major pair, and the speed of it should terrify anyone holding greenbacks.

The DXY didn’t just fall – it collapsed through critical support at 81.50 with the kind of momentum that suggests we’re looking at a fundamental shift in sentiment, not just a temporary setback. When you see moves this violent, this coordinated across all dollar pairs, you’re witnessing forced liquidation of massive positions. The smart money got caught wrong-footed, and when that happens, the carnage spreads like wildfire.

Bernanke’s Cowardice Reveals the Truth

Here’s what nobody wants to admit: the Fed’s complete unwillingness to even hint at tapering tells you everything you need to know about the real state of this economy. They had months to prepare markets, countless opportunities to set expectations, and when push came to shove, they folded like a cheap suit. This isn’t monetary policy ��� this is desperation dressed up in central banker speak.

The bond market called their bluff, and currencies followed suit. When your central bank signals that any reduction in stimulus – even a measly $10 billion monthly cut – is too risky to attempt, you’re essentially admitting the patient is on life support. Markets interpreted this correctly: more printing, more debasement, more reason to flee dollar assets. The velocity of capital leaving dollar positions yesterday wasn’t panic – it was rational actors making logical decisions based on policy admissions.

Cross-Currency Chaos and Hidden Opportunities

While everyone fixates on dollar destruction, the real action is happening in the crosses. EUR/JPY exploded higher, breaking 133.00 with authority as carry trade flows resumed with vengeance. AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY are screaming higher, signaling a complete reversal in risk appetite that could sustain for weeks. These aren’t just technical breakouts – they’re reflective of massive capital reallocation away from safety trades and back into yield-seeking behavior.

The commodity currencies got the memo loud and clear. AUD/USD punched through 0.9400 resistance, CAD strength accelerated past 1.0300 against the greenback, and even the battered emerging market currencies found their footing. When central bank policy signals unlimited liquidity, commodity-linked currencies become the obvious beneficiaries. Resource extraction becomes more profitable, carry trades become viable again, and suddenly those beaten-down commodity dollars don’t look so terrible.

The Bounce That’s Coming (And How to Trade It)

Here’s the thing about moves this extreme – they create their own reversal conditions. Dollar positioning is now so universally bearish that any hint of stabilization could trigger massive short covering. We’re talking about a potential 200-300 pip bounce in major pairs over 48-72 hours if sentiment shifts even slightly. The question isn’t if it happens, but when and from what levels.

Watch for EUR/USD to struggle around 1.3650-1.3700 – that’s where the real selling should emerge. GBP/USD faces major resistance at 1.6350, and if we get there, expect fireworks on the downside. The key is recognizing that while the dollar’s medium-term outlook remains grim, these parabolic moves always retrace. Smart traders will fade the extremes rather than chase the momentum.

USD/JPY below 97.00 would be the ultimate gift – a chance to buy dollars against a currency whose central bank makes the Fed look hawkish. Sometimes the best trades come disguised as disasters, and dollar weakness at these levels might just be setting up the contrarian opportunity of the month. Stay alert, stay flexible, and remember – in forex, today’s massacre often becomes tomorrow’s entry point.

Commodity Currencies – Trade Up

In case you haven’t noticed  – commodity currencies are strong across the board this morning. The Kiwi , Loonie as well the Aussie all making reasonable moves upward against nearly everything under the sun.

Generally associated with “risk” I do find it interesting that these currencies are exhibiting relative strength a short 24 hours ahead of the Fed’s Announcement. Further “blurring” the markets expectations of a “modest taper”, a “super taper” ( highly unlikely ) or no taper at all , seeing these currencies on the move could be perceived a couple of ways.

  •  Ramp job into tomorrow’s announcement ( with consideration/expectation of “selling at higher levels”) and selling the news.
  • Heightened expectations that “everything is gonna be just fine” and money flowing into these currencies early.

Unfortunately it requires “speculation” as to which way things are gonna go tomorrow as the market isn’t “giving it away” that easily. Low volume is also a contributing factor as price moves are exaggerated.

The Kiwi in particular is on a real tear this morning but “just now” bumping into its resistance zone.

I’ve stopped out on a couple of scalps from the night prior, as I’ve no intention of holding anything “for fun” under the current market conditions. JPY longs are a long-term hold regardless, and I’m out of all USD related pairs, more or less 85% cash – looking for entry after Wednesday’s announcement.

 

Reading Between the Lines: What Commodity Currency Strength Really Means

The Divergence Signal Everyone’s Missing

Here’s what most traders aren’t grasping about this commodity currency surge – it’s creating a massive divergence signal that could define the next few weeks of trading. When you see AUD/USD pushing through 0.6750 resistance while simultaneously EUR/USD remains range-bound below 1.0950, that’s not random noise. That’s institutional money positioning for a specific outcome. The smart money knows something retail doesn’t: commodity currencies don’t just randomly spike 24 hours before major Fed decisions without serious conviction behind the move.

This divergence is particularly telling when you consider that traditional risk-on correlations have been completely broken for months. Normally, we’d expect to see equity futures rallying hard alongside NZD and CAD strength. Instead, we’re getting selective currency strength without the broader risk appetite confirmation. That screams tactical positioning rather than broad-based sentiment shift. Someone’s betting big that tomorrow’s Fed announcement won’t deliver the hawkish surprise that’s been priced into USD strength over the past two weeks.

Volume Analysis: The Real Story Behind the Moves

The low volume environment isn’t just exaggerating price moves – it’s revealing where the real liquidity sits. When AUD/JPY can punch through 97.50 on thin volume, that tells you there was virtually no seller interest at those levels. Professional traders pulled their offers, creating a vacuum that allowed momentum algorithms to push prices higher with minimal resistance. This is classic pre-announcement positioning where institutions don’t want to show their hand but still need to establish positions.

CAD/JPY breaking above 109.80 on equally light volume confirms this pattern across multiple commodity currencies. The Japanese banks clearly aren’t defending these levels aggressively, which suggests they’re also positioning for a potentially dovish Fed outcome. When Tokyo trading desks step aside simultaneously across multiple JPY crosses, that’s coordination, not coincidence. They’re preserving ammunition for tomorrow’s real battle rather than fighting today’s tactical moves.

The New Zealand Dollar: Leading or Misleading?

NZD/USD hitting that resistance zone around 0.6180 is the key technical level everyone should be watching. The Kiwi has been the strongest performer in this commodity currency rally, but it’s also the most vulnerable to a reversal if tomorrow goes sideways. New Zealand’s economic fundamentals don’t justify this strength – their housing market is still correcting, China demand remains questionable, and their yield advantage over USD has compressed significantly.

What makes this particularly interesting is how NZD/JPY has outperformed AUD/JPY over the past 48 hours despite Australia’s superior commodity export profile. That suggests this isn’t purely about commodity demand expectations. Instead, it looks like carry trade positioning where traders are using JPY weakness to fund positions in higher-yielding currencies, with NZD offering the most attractive risk-adjusted carry at current levels. If volatility spikes tomorrow, these positions unwind fast and ugly.

Strategic Positioning for Post-Fed Reality

Being 85% cash going into tomorrow isn’t defensive – it’s aggressive positioning for the opportunities that volatile events create. The market’s current setup screams binary outcome potential where being wrong costs you weeks of profits in a single session. Smart money doesn’t try to predict Fed announcements; they position for the aftermath when mispricings become obvious and volume returns to normal levels.

The key insight here is recognizing that today’s commodity currency strength could be setting up the perfect short entries for tomorrow afternoon. If the Fed delivers anything hawkish or even neutral-hawkish, these elevated levels in AUD, NZD, and CAD become gift-wrapped short opportunities. Conversely, if they surprise dovish, the breakouts become legitimate and we’re looking at extended moves higher across all three currencies.

The JPY long positions remain the anchor trade regardless of Fed outcomes. Whether tomorrow brings dollar strength or weakness, the Bank of Japan’s commitment to ultra-loose policy means JPY remains the funding currency of choice for global carry trades. Every spike in risk appetite translates to JPY selling pressure, while any flight-to-safety flows benefit the dollar more than the yen in current market structure. Tomorrow’s announcement doesn’t change that fundamental dynamic – it just determines which timeframe those moves play out over.

Forex Daily Market Commentary – Not

Daily market commentary gets a little dry for me.

With Wednesday’s Fed announcement looming, it makes little sense delving into too much else – short of suggesting patience, patience, and oh yes…….a little more patience.

The news of Larry Summers dropping out of the running for the “New Fed Chairman” has hit news headlines across the globe, yet I’ll bet you 50 bucks you had absolutely no clue “who he was” – or would have cared much anyways. Me neither frankly.

When we step back and consider that Ben Bernanke has pretty much filled the role as ” the most important and influential man on planet Earth” for some time now – would you want that job?

Kong appointed Chairman of the U.S Federal Reserve – could you even imagine?

Forex trading is stressful enough at times, and I’m always up for a new challenge – but could you actually imagine walking into the office on your first day as Fed Chairman and just picking up the ball and running with it? No thanks.

As it stands, the word on the street is that this “Janet Yellen” is all for the printing presses ( surprise , surprise right?) so obviously she fit’s the bill quite nicely. After all – why on Earth would the Fed ever jeopardize loosing their biggest client ( the U.S Government) to some “half cocked Obama boy” like Summers. NEVER GONNA HAPPEN.

This gal is deep , deep , deep in someone else’s pockets – and I don’t mean that in a good way ( could that be in a good way? ).

Personally, I’m not particularly “thrilled” with things being on hold here any longer. The gap in USD action has provided a couple of scalp opportunities  but has also done a great job of further “blurring” further USD direction. Most charts / asset classes I follow suggest “some kind of USD bounce” but this tempered with the fundamental fact that Yellen is 100% on board with money printing.

The market’s reaction on Wednesday is really only a small part of the puzzle, as debt ceiling / default issues come next.

When does it end?

It doesn’t.

Trading Through the Fed Circus: What Really Matters for Your Bottom Line

The Yellen Put: Why Money Printing Means Everything for Currency Pairs

Let’s cut through the noise here. Yellen’s appointment isn’t just Fed politics – it’s a roadmap for every major currency pair for the next four years. When someone is “100% on board with money printing,” that’s not some abstract policy discussion. That’s your EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and AUD/USD setups for months ahead. The dollar weakness we’ve been dancing around? It just got a green light with a Federal Reserve stamp on it.

Think about it logically. Every time the printing presses fire up, dollar debasement accelerates. The carry trade currencies – your Aussie, Kiwi, even the beaten-down Loonie – suddenly look attractive again. We’re not talking about some subtle policy shift here. This is monetary policy on steroids, and smart traders position accordingly. The question isn’t whether dollar weakness continues, it’s how violent and sustained the move becomes.

Debt Ceiling Theater: The Real Market Mover Nobody’s Pricing In

Here’s what drives me absolutely nuts about current market commentary – everyone’s obsessing over Fed meeting minutiae while completely ignoring the debt ceiling train wreck bearing down on us. You want to talk about USD direction? Forget the Fed speak for a minute. Washington’s fiscal dysfunction is the real currency catalyst nobody wants to acknowledge.

Every time we approach these artificial deadlines, the same pattern emerges. Initial USD strength as safe haven flows dominate, followed by brutal selling once the political reality sets in. The politicians will cave – they always do – but not before maximum market disruption. That’s your trading opportunity right there. The debt ceiling resolution trade is worth more than ten Fed announcements combined, yet traders keep staring at the wrong ball.

Smart money isn’t waiting for congressional drama. They’re positioning now for the inevitable cave-in and subsequent dollar selloff. When political theater meets monetary accommodation, guess which currency gets crushed? Every. Single. Time.

Cross Currency Opportunities: Where the Real Money Hides

While everyone’s fixated on major USD pairs, the real opportunities are hiding in cross rates. Think EUR/GBP, AUD/JPY, even CAD/CHF. These pairs move on relative monetary policy expectations, not absolute Fed positioning. When global central bank divergence accelerates – and Yellen’s appointment guarantees it will – cross rates become volatility gold mines.

The Bank of England’s tapering timeline looks completely different against Yellen’s endless accommodation backdrop. That EUR/GBP setup becomes crystal clear when you factor in ECB desperation versus Fed printing priorities. Same logic applies across the board. Australia’s resource economy strength against Japanese monetary insanity? That’s not a trade, that’s a mathematical certainty.

Cross trading requires more homework, but the reward-to-risk ratios are infinitely better than trying to time USD reversals in this policy fog. Let the amateurs fight over EUR/USD direction while you’re banking consistent profits on cleaner, more predictable cross rate moves.

Positioning for the Inevitable: Beyond Wednesday’s Noise

Wednesday’s announcement matters for about forty-eight hours. What matters for the next forty-eight weeks is positioning for structural dollar weakness under guaranteed Yellen accommodation. This isn’t about timing perfect entries on Fed day volatility – that’s amateur hour thinking. Professional positioning means building systematic exposure to dollar weakness themes that compound over time.

Commodity currencies benefit from both dollar debasement and global liquidity expansion. Emerging market currencies become viable again when Fed tightening fears disappear. Even beaten-down European currencies find footing when relative monetary policy shifts in their favor. The key is building these positions gradually, not gambling on single-day Fed reactions.

The bigger picture remains unchanged regardless of Wednesday’s market theater. Structural fiscal deficits plus accommodative monetary policy equals systematic currency debasement. Yellen’s appointment removes any lingering doubt about Fed commitment to that path. Trade accordingly, ignore the noise, and focus on the mathematical certainty of where these policies lead. The market will eventually catch up to the obvious – make sure you’re positioned before it does.

O"Bomb"A Doesn't Choose The Next Fed Head

You’ll need to look back a lot further than most of your are interested.

Back to the war of 1812, and back even further to get your head wrapped around the “Rothschild Family”, Free Masonry and the birth of Central Banking.

Main stream media would have you believe this to be “conspiracy theory”, conjured up by a bunch of disgruntled whack jobs – but you’re used to that right? You watch it every single day on your television screens. The truth that is (right).

Incredibly you still find ways to “justify” why your investments just keep costing you money.  “Ya the market’s going for shit”, “Damn, I guess Europe caused it”, “Wow…War in Syria”….all the while Central Banks plotting every move.

You’d need to have your head examined if you don’t see / understand that Obama doesn’t “choose” the next head of the Federal Reserve. Larry Summers “stepping out of the race” is more likely due to death threats or sizeable pressure on Obama ( from….hmm I wonder who?) from external influences – the forces that DO CHOOSE the next head of the Federal Reserve.

Central Banks ( and in particular the Federal Reserve) sit one notch “above” government – and if you don’t believe it then ask yourself this:

Why the f#/%K would a government have a need to “borrow money” from an independent entity holding an exclusive license to “print that money” ? And in turn “pay interest” to this entity?!?!

Open your eyes!

It’s no wonder I need keep this blog anonymous as – I’m now concerned that “the men in black” may be lurking outside my home. Funny stuff – yet …not really so funny.

 

 

The Real Game Behind Currency Markets

Let’s cut through the noise and talk about what’s actually moving your currency pairs. While retail traders are busy drawing trend lines and watching RSI crossovers, the big boys are orchestrating moves that make your technical analysis look like finger painting. The USD’s strength isn’t some organic market phenomenon – it’s engineered through coordinated central bank policy that serves very specific interests.

When you see EUR/USD dropping 200 pips overnight, don’t blame “weak European data.” That’s the cover story. The real action happened in boardrooms where decisions about interest rate policy, quantitative easing programs, and currency swap agreements were made months in advance. The Rothschild influence didn’t disappear after 1812 – it evolved into something far more sophisticated and profitable.

The Federal Reserve’s Currency Manipulation Machine

Every FOMC meeting is theater designed to give the illusion of democratic monetary policy. But ask yourself this: why does the market always seem to “predict” Fed moves with uncanny accuracy? Because the real decisions are made by people who control both the policy and the narrative. When Jerome Powell speaks, he’s not revealing new information – he’s executing a predetermined script.

Look at how USD/JPY moves in the hours before major Fed announcements. Institutional money flows suggest someone knows exactly what’s coming. The Bank of Japan’s intervention threats are coordinated with Fed policy to maintain specific exchange rate ranges that benefit the banking cartel. It’s not coincidence that these central banks hold regular “coordination meetings” that are barely reported in financial media.

The carry trade isn’t some brilliant retail strategy – it’s a mechanism designed to transfer wealth from small traders to institutional players who control the timing of policy shifts. When the yen suddenly strengthens and wipes out thousands of carry positions, that’s not market forces. That’s coordinated execution.

European Central Bank: The Ultimate Wealth Transfer

The ECB’s role in this game makes the Federal Reserve look subtle. Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” wasn’t a desperate plea to save the euro – it was a declaration that European sovereignty would be sacrificed to maintain the banking system’s control. Every quantitative easing program, every negative interest rate policy, serves to concentrate wealth upward while destroying the purchasing power of ordinary Europeans.

Watch how EUR/CHF behaves around ECB announcements. The Swiss National Bank’s currency interventions aren’t independent policy decisions – they’re coordinated moves to prevent capital flight that would expose the fragility of the entire European banking system. When the SNB abandoned the EUR/CHF peg in 2015, wiping out retail brokers worldwide, that wasn’t poor communication. That was a calculated wealth extraction event.

The TARGET2 imbalances within the Eurozone represent the largest wealth transfer in human history, yet mainstream financial media treats them as boring technical details. Germany’s massive TARGET2 credits aren’t signs of economic strength – they’re evidence of how the euro system was designed to benefit specific interests while impoverishing peripheral nations.

Commodity Currencies and Resource Control

The coordination extends beyond major currencies into commodity-linked pairs that most traders ignore. AUD/USD and CAD/USD movements aren’t just about iron ore prices or oil demand. They’re about controlling resource extraction and ensuring that commodity-rich nations remain subordinate to the central banking system.

When you see sudden moves in USD/CAD that don’t correlate with oil prices, that’s currency manipulation designed to influence Canadian monetary policy. The Bank of Canada’s rate decisions are made with full awareness of how they’ll affect the country’s resource sector and its relationship with U.S. financial interests.

The same pattern exists with the Australian dollar. China’s demand for Australian resources is real, but the currency moves around that demand are amplified and controlled through derivative markets that dwarf the underlying commodity flows. AUD/JPY cross-rates are particularly susceptible to manipulation because they combine two currencies whose central banks coordinate policy more than they admit.

Your Trading Strategy in This Rigged Game

Understanding this reality doesn’t mean you can’t profit – it means you need to think differently about risk and timing. The best opportunities come when you can position yourself alongside the institutional flows rather than fighting them. When central bank coordination becomes obvious, follow the money instead of fighting the manipulation.

Stop believing that economic fundamentals drive currency markets. They provide the narrative, but policy coordination drives the price action. Your job as a trader is to recognize when the narrative diverges from the underlying power structure and position accordingly.

Raise Cash – Don't Be A Hero

I’ve touched on this a couple of times before.

When trading ahead of what we in the biz refer to as a “risk event”, you’ve seriously got to question “why” you’d look to take on any additional risk in “getting it wrong”. The fact of the matter is – you’ve got absolutely no clue how it’s going to pan out, and you’ve got no good reason to “trade it” if not looking at it as a complete and total “roll of the dice”. You want to gamble – fine. Take a small percentage of your account, have fun with it, take your chances and hope for the best.

That’s “NOT” how I roll.

This Wednesday’s Fed meeting, and expected announcement of reduced stimulus,  is undoubtedly the most highly anticipated and potentially dangerous “risk event” we will have seen in markets in at least the last couple years.

You cannot afford to be on the wrong side of it.

Reading/researching over the weekend , I’ve come to the conclusion that the bond market has clearly priced in the news, but that U.S equities haven’t moved a muscle, and that forex markets are hanging in wait.

I will look for any “and every” opportunity over the next 72 hours to eliminate exposure, take profits, reduce positions, sell into strength etc in order to “ideally” be as close to 100% cash for Wednesday afternoon’s announcement.

This is trading not “fortune-telling”, and I don’t give a rat’s ass which way the market decides to go “post Bernanke” – only that I’m going along with it.

We’ve got fron Sunday night til Wednesday afternoon. Raise cash – don’t be a hero.

Strategic Positioning for Maximum Flexibility

The USD Index Will Tell the Real Story

Here’s what most retail traders completely miss about Fed announcements – it’s not just about what Bernanke says, it’s about how the dollar reacts across the entire spectrum of major pairs. The DXY has been coiling like a spring for weeks now, and Wednesday’s announcement will either launch it through resistance at 84.50 or send it crashing back toward support at 81.00. There’s no middle ground here, and that’s exactly why you don’t want to be caught holding EUR/USD, GBP/USD, or any major dollar pair with size going into this thing. The whipsaw potential is absolutely massive, and I’ve seen too many good traders get their accounts cut in half trying to “predict” Fed outcomes. Smart money isn’t guessing – they’re waiting.

Pay attention to what’s happening in USD/JPY specifically. The pair has been grinding higher for months on taper expectations, but it’s been doing so with decreasing momentum. If the Fed delivers on tapering and USD/JPY can’t break convincingly above 100.00, that’s going to tell you everything you need to know about how overbought this dollar rally has become. Conversely, if we get a dovish surprise and the pair crashes through 95.00, you’re looking at a complete unwind of the carry trade that’s been driving risk assets all year.

Why Cash is King Before Major Central Bank Events

Every wannabe trader thinks being in cash is “missing opportunities.” That’s amateur hour thinking, and it’s exactly why 90% of retail traders lose money. Professional traders understand that capital preservation is the first rule of the game. When you’re sitting in cash 24 hours before a massive risk event, you’re not missing anything – you’re positioning yourself to capitalize on whatever chaos unfolds without having your judgment clouded by existing positions that are bleeding against you.

The beauty of being flat going into Wednesday is simple: you get to see which way the institutional money flows, then you ride the wave instead of fighting the current. Think about it logically – if the Fed tapers and the dollar explodes higher, do you want to be stuck in a long EUR/USD position that you put on because you “thought” the news was already priced in? Hell no. You want to be free to short that same pair at 1.3200 when it’s obvious the market is repricing everything.

Reading the Cross-Asset Tea Leaves

Here’s something that separates profitable forex traders from the herd – we don’t just watch currency pairs in isolation. The fact that bonds have already moved while equities are sitting there like deer in headlights tells me the real fireworks are still coming. When the S&P finally decides to react to whatever the Fed announces, the corresponding moves in risk-sensitive pairs like AUD/USD, NZD/USD, and especially USD/CAD are going to be violent and swift.

Oil’s been hanging around the 108 level for weeks, which keeps USD/CAD pinned near parity, but a major shift in risk sentiment could blow that correlation apart temporarily. Same goes for the Australian dollar – it’s been trading more on China fears than Fed expectations, but Wednesday could completely realign those dynamics overnight. These are the kinds of dislocations that create real trading opportunities, but only if you’re positioned to take advantage of them rather than being trapped in positions that are moving against you.

The Post-Event Playbook

Once the dust settles Wednesday afternoon, the real money gets made in the 48-72 hours that follow. This is when the algorithmic trading systems and institutional flows really kick into gear, creating sustained directional moves that can run for days or even weeks. But here’s the key – you need to be patient enough to let the initial volatility shake out before committing serious capital.

I’ll be watching for failed breakouts in the first hour post-announcement, then looking for the secondary moves that typically happen in the Asian and European sessions that follow. These tend to be the higher-probability setups because they’re driven by real money flows rather than knee-jerk reactions. Whether we’re talking about a sustained dollar rally that pushes EUR/USD toward 1.2800 or a complete reversal that sends it back to 1.3500, the best entries come after the market shows its hand, not before.

Taper Trading – The Week That "Wasn't"

In the history of my career, never in my life have I seen a week as flat,  and as dull as this one.

If you’ve survived great, and if you’ve managed to “squeeze” a little money out of it – even better. Putting it in perspective can help you cope. “Knowing” the week’s trade volume was so slow and “knowing” it’s pretty irregular has one better manage their expectations for profit. Sitting there staring at it minute by minute questioning “what am I doing wrong” doesn’t do a guy any good. It’s not your fault. It’s one of the dynamics of trading forex that we just have to accept. A dud. Clearly – the week that “wasn’t”.

It’s obvious to me now that the Fed’s impending decision to “taper or not to taper” later next week, has the entire planet’s investment community sitting on their hands. As much as I truly don’t believe any “actual tapering” will take place ( as it’s will only manifest as an accounting entry of a “few less zero’s” for a couple of weeks/months ) I have come to realize that an “announcement of tapering” (however small and meaningless) may certainly be in the cards.

If it’s 10 billion or 15 billion again….the number is meaningless. The puppet strings moving behind the curtain will continue to pull markets as they see fit. If we do get a significant “sell off in risk” ( as emerging markets will stumble on the suggestion of less stimulus) it may only be further manipulation to “further justify” more QE down the road. If tapering “isn’t” announced, I would have to assume markets to perceive trouble in the U.S to be “worse” than previously thought ( as QE “full on” is still needed ) which may also contribute to a selling event.

Either way, it’s a very good idea for any trader to “buckle up” , manage their risk , and not get caught leaning to heavy in either direction.

I currently hold “no position” in USD, and have previously held long JPY’s as well a couple “stragglers” short commods ( AUD and NZD) that have not moved more than a hair for the entire week. The “insanity trade” finishes the week 65 pips in profit and holding.

 

written by F Kong

Positioning for the Fed’s Next Move: A Strategic Framework

The Real Impact of Taper Talk on Currency Flows

While the actual dollar amounts being discussed for tapering are indeed meaningless in the grand scheme of global liquidity, the market’s perception of Fed policy direction creates massive currency flows that smart traders can capitalize on. The key is understanding that emerging market currencies will face the brunt of any hawkish surprise, while safe havens like CHF and JPY will see inflows regardless of the Fed’s decision. This isn’t about the fundamentals of a 10 or 15 billion reduction – it’s about positioning ahead of the algorithmic selling that will hit EEM currencies the moment any tapering announcement hits the wires.

The carry trade unwind we’re already seeing in AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY is just the beginning. When institutional money gets spooked by the mere suggestion of reduced stimulus, they don’t discriminate – they dump everything with yield and run to quality. This creates opportunities in pairs like EUR/CHF and GBP/JPY that most retail traders completely miss because they’re too focused on the USD majors.

Reading Between the Lines of Market Manipulation

The current market paralysis isn’t accidental. Large institutional players are deliberately keeping volatility suppressed while they position for the Fed announcement, creating the exact type of compressed volatility environment that leads to explosive moves. This is classic market manipulation 101 – squeeze volatility to nothing, let retail traders get complacent with tight stops, then unleash the real move that stops everyone out before the trend begins.

Watch the USD/JPY closely here. The pair has been held in an artificially tight range while smart money accumulates positions. When the breakout comes, it won’t be a gentle 20-pip move – it’ll be a violent 100+ pip explosion that catches everyone off guard. The same pattern is setting up in EUR/USD, where the recent consolidation between 1.3200 and 1.3400 is creating the perfect spring-loaded setup for a major directional move.

The JPY Long Trade: Why It Still Makes Sense

Holding long JPY positions during this environment isn’t just about safe haven flows – it’s about positioning for the inevitable reality check that’s coming to global markets. The Bank of Japan’s aggressive weakening campaign has created an oversold condition in JPY that’s ripe for a violent snapback when risk sentiment deteriorates. The carry trade unwinding we’re seeing is still in its early stages.

USD/JPY has been artificially supported by intervention threats and jawboning, but when the real selling pressure hits global equity markets, none of that verbal intervention will matter. The technical setup in GBP/JPY is even more compelling, with the pair sitting at levels that are completely disconnected from the underlying economic fundamentals between Japan and the UK. These JPY short positions built up over months of carry trading will unwind in days, not weeks, when the selling starts.

Commodity Currency Outlook: More Pain Ahead

The sideways grind in AUD and NZD isn’t consolidation – it’s distribution. These currencies are being systematically sold by institutional players who understand that the commodity supercycle narrative is finished. China’s credit tightening, combined with reduced Fed stimulus expectations, creates a perfect storm for commodity currencies that most traders aren’t prepared for.

AUD/USD has been holding above 0.9000 purely on technical support, but the fundamental picture is deteriorating rapidly. Australia’s terms of trade are rolling over, China’s demand for iron ore is weakening, and the RBA is clearly preparing for more rate cuts. The same story applies to NZD/USD, where dairy price weakness and housing bubble concerns are creating a fundamental backdrop that can’t support current exchange rates.

The key to trading these commodity currencies isn’t trying to pick the exact top – it’s understanding that any bounce from current levels is a selling opportunity. The structural bear market in AUD and NZD is just beginning, and traders who position correctly for this multi-month downtrend will see significant profits as these currencies eventually find their true equilibrium levels against both USD and JPY.

JPY And Nikkei – Thank You Japan!

I’m absolutely fascinated with “all things Japanese”.

In particular – The Yonaguni Monument (与那国島海底地形 Yonaguni-jima Kaitei Chikei, lit. “Yonaguni Island Submarine Topography”) a massive underwater rock formation off the coast of Yonaguni, the southern most part of the Ryukyu Islands. There’s debate as to whether the site is completely natural, is a natural site that has been modified, or is a human-made artifact.

Of course I’m convinced it’s evidence of “ancient aliens” but then again…..I digress.

I likely eat / prepare sushi 3 to 4 times a week, love saki….and am currently practicing some “simple spoken word” while not on the rooftop  – working on the spaceship.

A special thanks today – to Japan!

For all you have that’s wonderful, and of course the Nikkei! ( kindly respecting my wishes and turning downward), for JPY and it’s strength, for sushi, for sake, and all the other wonders of this incredible land!

 

 

 

 

 

The Yen’s Archaeological Strength: Digging Deeper Into JPY Dominance

Just like those ancient stone formations beneath Yonaguni’s waters, the Japanese Yen’s recent strength didn’t appear overnight. This currency has been carved by decades of economic pressure, central bank intervention, and global market forces that most traders completely misunderstand. While everyone’s chasing the latest EUR/USD breakout or getting excited about some Fed announcement, the real money has been quietly accumulating JPY positions against a basket of deteriorating currencies.

The Nikkei’s downward trajectory I’ve been anticipating isn’t just some lucky guess – it’s the logical result of understanding how Japanese institutional money flows work. When domestic equities weaken, that capital doesn’t vanish into thin air. It flows back into JPY-denominated assets, creating the exact strengthening pattern we’re witnessing across major pairs like USD/JPY, GBP/JPY, and AUD/JPY. This isn’t rocket science, but it requires the patience to see beyond the noise of daily economic headlines.

Carry Trade Unwind: The Hidden JPY Catalyst

Here’s what most retail traders miss completely: Japan’s ultra-low interest rates have made JPY the funding currency of choice for carry trades worldwide for over a decade. Institutional players borrow cheap Yen to invest in higher-yielding assets across emerging markets, commodities, and risk-on currencies. But when global uncertainty increases – whether from geopolitical tensions, inflation concerns, or central bank policy shifts – these massive carry positions get unwound faster than a poorly constructed ancient monument crumbling under water pressure.

The unwinding process creates enormous buying pressure for JPY as borrowed Yen must be repurchased to close positions. This mechanical demand often overwhelms fundamental factors that traditional analysis focuses on. Watch the correlation between VIX spikes and sudden JPY strength – it’s not coincidental. It’s the sound of billions in carry trades getting liquidated simultaneously.

Bank of Japan: Masters of Calculated Patience

The BoJ operates with a geological timeline that makes other central banks look like hyperactive day traders. Their approach to monetary policy resembles the slow, methodical process that created those mysterious Yonaguni formations – whether natural or artificial, the result demonstrates incredible persistence over time. While the Fed flip-flops on rate policy and the ECB struggles with fragmented member state economics, Japan maintains its ultra-accommodative stance with surgical precision.

This patience creates predictable opportunities in JPY crosses. When USD/JPY approaches key technical levels around 110 or 115, BoJ intervention becomes increasingly probable. They don’t announce it with fanfare – they simply act, moving billions in currency markets with the same quiet efficiency that characterizes Japanese institutional culture. Smart money watches these intervention zones like ancient astronomers tracking celestial patterns.

Technical Confluence in JPY Pairs

The beauty of trading JPY pairs lies in their respect for technical analysis. Japanese markets have always honored chart patterns, support and resistance levels, and fibonacci retracements with almost religious devotion. This cultural respect for technical discipline creates self-fulfilling prophecies that Western traders often dismiss as coincidence.

Currently, multiple JPY crosses are approaching critical junctures. EUR/JPY is testing major support that’s held for eighteen months, while GBP/JPY faces resistance that’s been rejected four times since early 2021. These aren’t random price levels – they represent institutional decision points where massive position sizing occurs. The key is positioning before these levels get tested, not reacting after they break.

Cultural Economics: Why Japan Stays Relevant

Japan’s economic influence extends far beyond GDP numbers or trade balances. The cultural commitment to quality, precision, and long-term thinking permeates their financial markets. While other economies chase short-term growth spurts that inevitably reverse, Japan builds sustainable competitive advantages in technology, manufacturing efficiency, and capital allocation.

This cultural foundation supports JPY strength during global uncertainty periods. When investors seek stability, they don’t just buy Japanese government bonds – they buy into an entire economic philosophy that prioritizes consistency over volatility. The same mindset that creates perfectly balanced sushi presentations and sake brewing processes that span centuries also drives conservative monetary policy and disciplined fiscal management.

Understanding Japan means understanding patience, precision, and the power of compound improvements over time. Just like those ancient underwater structures continue revealing new mysteries to patient researchers, JPY will continue rewarding traders who appreciate its unique characteristics rather than trying to force it into Western economic models that simply don’t apply.

U.S Employment Numbers – A Real Shame

Once again we find ourselves here on Thursday morning, awaiting  the release of “the unemployment claims” data out of the U.S. I know the number will be dismal, there’s no question of that………only the question of how markets will interpret the news.

If history is any record, it really doesn’t seem to matter how many “more people” get in line to file unemployment claims each week as U.S equities continue on their grind.

I would “like to think” – this time will be different.

A disappointing number “should” propel USD upwards and U.S equities down but of course….that’s what “should” happen.

Overnight’s “risk off trade” gathered some traction with JPY moving higher, and a brisk sell off of AUD – as expected.

I am 100% out of USD related pairs as of yesterday / last night, and well in profit on the “insanity trade”.

We’ll let the dust settle here this morning….and continue forward with a “now USD long bias” starting to materialize across several currency pairs.

More trades….later.

 

Reading Between the Lines: Why This Employment Data Cycle Matters

The Fed’s Employment Mandate Versus Market Reality

Here’s what the talking heads on CNBC won’t tell you: the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate puts employment data at the center of every monetary policy decision, yet markets have been trading on pure liquidity injections for months. When unemployment claims spike above consensus, traditional economic theory suggests the Fed should maintain dovish policy to support job growth. But we’re not in traditional times. The disconnect between Main Street employment and Wall Street valuations has reached absurd levels, creating opportunities for traders willing to bet against the herd mentality.

Today’s claims data isn’t just another number – it’s a litmus test for whether Powell and company will finally acknowledge that their money printer can’t solve structural unemployment. If we see claims jump significantly above the 210K consensus, watch for an immediate USD rally as bond traders start pricing in the reality that infinite QE has limits. The market’s Pavlovian response to bad news with equity buying is showing cracks, and employment data could be the catalyst that breaks this pattern.

Currency Correlations Breaking Down

The traditional risk-on, risk-off correlations we’ve relied on for years are fracturing in real time. Yesterday’s AUD selloff against a strengthening JPY tells the story perfectly – commodity currencies are no longer moving in lockstep with equity markets. This breakdown creates massive opportunities for swing traders who understand the new dynamics at play.

AUD/JPY has been my go-to barometer for global risk sentiment, but even this reliable pair is sending mixed signals. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s hawkish stance should theoretically support the Aussie, yet we’re seeing persistent weakness as China’s economic data continues to disappoint. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan’s intervention threats are losing credibility as USD/JPY pushes higher despite their verbal warnings. Smart money is positioning for a continued unwinding of the yen carry trade, which explains why JPY strength feels different this time.

Building the USD Long Case

My shift toward USD long positions isn’t based on American exceptionalism – it’s based on the simple fact that every other major economy looks worse. The European Central Bank is trapped between inflation concerns and recession fears, making EUR/USD vulnerable to any hawkish surprise from the Fed. GBP continues its slow-motion collapse as the Bank of England proves they have no coherent strategy for managing inflation without destroying growth.

The technical picture supports the fundamental case across multiple timeframes. EUR/USD is testing critical support at 1.0500, and a break below this level opens the door to parity – again. Cable looks even worse, with GBP/USD showing no signs of life above the 1.2000 handle. These aren’t short-term trades; these are structural shifts that could define the next six months of forex markets.

CAD presents an interesting case study in commodity currency weakness. Despite oil prices holding relatively steady, USD/CAD continues grinding higher as the Bank of Canada signals they’re done with aggressive rate hikes. This divergence between energy prices and the Canadian dollar suggests deeper issues with global growth expectations that haven’t fully played out in forex markets yet.

Tactical Positioning for the Next Move

Sitting on the sidelines isn’t a strategy – it’s a luxury I can afford because the previous trades banked solid profits. But cash doesn’t generate returns, and the setup for USD strength is becoming too compelling to ignore. The key is patience and precision in entry points rather than chasing momentum after the move has already begun.

My radar is focused on three specific setups: EUR/USD break below 1.0500 for a move toward 1.0200, GBP/USD failure to reclaim 1.2100 for a test of yearly lows, and AUD/USD weakness below 0.6400 targeting the 0.6000 psychological level. These aren’t guaranteed trades, but they offer asymmetric risk-reward profiles that make sense in the current environment.

The employment claims number will either confirm this bias or force a reassessment, but either way, we’ll have clarity. Markets hate uncertainty more than bad news, and today should provide both direction and opportunity for those positioned correctly.