USD Topping Out – Nikkei Weekly Pin Bar

The other day’s 100 pip ramp up in USD/JPY has stuck – so far.

Sitting up here at the top end of the range it’s obvious that The BOJ did everything it could “pre U.S GDP debacle” to keep the status quo and defend the line at 101.20.

Please appreciate the significance of this as…..the ultimate “breakdown” in USD/JPY is the signal / breakdown required for this entire “house of cards” to take a serious, serious blow.

The fact that currency markets have literally “stood still” for the past 48 hours as global equities take their first serious hit in months says a lot – affirming “just how desperate” the co-ordinated effort of Central Bankers ( to keep this ball in the air ) has become.

The subsequent breakdown in /ES ( SP 500 futures ) has now broken below major support that “under any normal conditions” would signal what we usually call an “intermediate decline” but again…..considering who we’re up against – I can’t get too excited looking for much further downside short of this thing “popping” higher first.

Nikkei ( as suggested the other day ) appears to have “popped and dropped” back into it’s near term range , also generating an interesting looking “pin bar” on the weekly time frame. The likely “top of wave 2” in our existing framework.

 

Nikkei_Weekly_Aug_01_Forex_Kong

Nikkei_Weekly_Aug_01_Forex_Kong

Considering the waves of poor data that continue to flood out of Japan it’s “all but certain” that the recent ramp job was / was purely Central Bank induced, “yet again” keeping this thing afloat as long as they possibly can.

What we begin to understand here now,  is just how desperate the situation is and that….more than likely the fallout will be much worse / severe than your average “garden variet” BTD ( buy the dip ) and “everything will be ok” type thing.

Trade wise – considering the massive overbought conditions of The U.S Dollar one has to consider looking long both EUR/USD as well GBP/USD here but again with caution as the “solid up trend in USD” would have this trade originally manifest as “counter trend”.

I’m having trouble imagining the U.S Fed letting USD get much further out of the basement here as every single uptick essentially drives the cost of U.S Debt higher ( being denominated in USD of course ) and “how soon we forget” – The Fed still wants to crush the currency.

For those brave enough to get out and challenge the BOJ here in coming days, I see that many of the long JPY pairs have retraced a touch and could provide for “re entry” here next week including short NZD/JPY, CAD/JPY and entry short USD/JPY up here at the top end “should we see reversal first”.

Otherwise the blatantly obvious trade here is looking at EUR, considering that if USD rolls over here and spends the next 6-8 days retracing ( or perhaps generating a much larger fall ) the biggest returns will be seen vs EU currencies.

AUD has clearly had the wind taken out of it on the “risk off” move over the past couple days but it really depends “against what” with AUD/JPY still firmly under the grasp of The BOJ.

I’ll be looking for entry long EUR/USD above 1.34 after the U.S data release here this morning, and will cover the specifics of several other currency pairs ( if it really even matters in this situation ) over the weekend.

The ponzi either goes another “final round” ( likely trading flat to upward for the rest of August / early September ) or it doesn’t.

That’s really all there is too it.

USD/JPY – The Only Thing You Need

A bit of “make it or break it” mentality here this morning as The Nikkei has pushed higher ( with JPY now trading down to it’s “hard-line of support” ) with The U.S Dollar pushing near term highs – where it was turned back in both January and a February re-test.

This puts EUR at “its major line of support” at 1.34 as well GBP “just hanging around” the upper sloping trend line ( daily trend still very much up ) near 169.50

A significant junction to say the least, as correlations across currencies suggest “a move” is certainly pending.

Currency markets should likely make a solid move here in coming days – breaking the summer doldrums.

Transports have clearly broken below support suggesting further decline, and The Dow is now under the “previously suggested top” at 16, 950.

I’ve essentially had this boiled down to a “risk on vs risk off” mentality as of late considering all the larger geopolitical factors, coupled with continued “poor data” coming out of Japan. The Yen has been the largest driving force of this continued rally in risk, as the continued printing, then conversion to USD and purchase of U.S Equities works it’s magic. The Fed passes the buck to The Bank of Japan to do the heavy lifting.

Consider 200 billion per month in paper coming out of Japan, compared to the now “only 35-45 billion” from The Fed to put this in perspective.

JPY_Breakout_Breakdown

JPY_Breakout_Breakdown

 

Japan is where the money is coming from.

A close eye on the current “range” on currency pair USD/JPY is really all you’ll need.

Break out – or breakdown?

Feel free to check out how we’re trading it at www.forexkong.net

A Question? – For Fellow Forex Traders

You are all hotshots – I know.

So…..tell me.

As many of you have suggested “trading the fundamentals” is akin to “reading the entrails of dead animals” ( essentially suggesting that “pure technical analysis” is sufficient ) – what are your thoughts on USD/JPY?

JPY ( Japanese Yen ) being the largest contributing factor in the current and seemingly “never ending rally in risk” ( as Japan’s “printing machine” currently dwarfs that of The United States ) – why isn’t USD/JPY making “massive upside moves” along side the ridiculously manipulated run up in U.S Equities?

If currency markets where “taking the bait” wouldn’t we see USD/JPY bursting higher, then higher, and even higher alongside the current ponzi playing out in U.S Equities?

USD_JPY_July_23_2014

USD_JPY_July_23_2014

From a purely technical perspective the chart pattern seen above ( a descending triangle ) is extremely bearish – suggesting that the pair will “eventually break through support” and likely waterfall lower.

The Central Banks of both Japan and The Unites States are hell bent on preventing this from happening but…..would you imagine the opposite?

Risk at all time highs…but the “ultimate suggestion” of risk ( borrowing JPY at 0% and investing it in U.S Equities” in seeking yield ) hasn’t done jack shit for the past 6 months.

I invite you all to weigh in – as fellow readers can only benefit from the potencial “pissing match ” to ensue.

Perhaps a cat’s got your toungue? Or maybe you’re out in the back yard now…looking to kill one and have a good look at it’s insides – with hopes of figuring this out.

Good luck with that.

 

Nikkei Reversed – China PMI Next

What’s absolutely hilarious about this is that….

The “planetary growth engine” China has already posted 3 straight months of CONTRACTION, with the “flash manufacturing PMI” numbers set to be released later on this evening.

The industry “expectation” is ALREADY at 48.4 ( Above 50 indicates expansion – while under 50 suggests contraction ) so……market analysts already “know” the number is low – and that this will mark the 4th straight month of continued slow down in China.

China’s amazing growth over the past 5 years “fueled” the “planet wide sale of stuff” as China practically bought “everything under the sun” in order to keep on growing/building.

So who’s buying all that stuff now? All those goods and services that made corporations profitable, all the contracts / investment made during the “boom times”?

You’ve got to be “completely 100% nuts” if you haven’t figured this out by now, and seriously starting thinking about “becoming a seller”.

Get ready “bagholders”.

Here comes good ol USD on the “repatriation trade” I made light of a couple of days ago. If Japan hasn’t already stomped you into the ground…..get ready for China on deck tonight.

The Repatriation Trade: When Global Capital Comes Home

What we’re witnessing isn’t just another market cycle — it’s the unwinding of a decade-long global credit bubble that was artificially propped up by Chinese demand. When the world’s second-largest economy starts contracting for four straight months, you don’t get a gentle correction. You get a violent reallocation of capital that crushes anyone still believing in the “buy every dip” mentality.

China’s Manufacturing Collapse Triggers Global Capital Flight

The PMI numbers coming out tonight will confirm what anyone paying attention already knows: China’s manufacturing engine has stalled. Sub-50 readings aren’t just statistical noise — they represent the death of the commodity supercycle and the beginning of a deflationary spiral that will ripple through every economy that bet their future on Chinese growth.

Australian iron ore exporters, Brazilian copper miners, Canadian energy companies — they’re all about to learn what happens when your biggest customer stops showing up to the party. The smart money isn’t waiting around to see how bad it gets. They’re already moving capital back to USD-denominated assets, and this repatriation trade is just getting started.

USD Strength: The Only Game Left Standing

While everyone was busy calling for USD weakness, the fundamentals were setting up for exactly the opposite scenario. When global growth stalls, capital doesn’t flow toward risk assets in emerging markets. It flows toward the deepest, most liquid markets in the world — and that’s still the United States.

The Federal Reserve doesn’t need to pivot dovish when the rest of the world is falling apart. They can maintain restrictive policy while other central banks are forced into emergency easing cycles. This interest rate differential is rocket fuel for USD strength, and we’re just seeing the beginning of this trade.

Corporate Earnings Reality Check

Here’s what the earnings season cheerleaders don’t want to tell you: most of the “record profits” from the past two years were built on Chinese demand that no longer exists. Companies that expanded capacity, signed supply contracts, and hired workers based on continued Chinese growth are about to get steamrolled by reality.

The repatriation trade isn’t just about currency flows — it’s about corporate America realizing they need to focus on domestic markets and stop chasing growth in economies that are now contracting. This means massive writedowns, facility closures, and workforce reductions for any company that overextended into the Chinese market.

The Bagholders Get Left Behind

Every major market turning point creates two groups: those who see the shift coming and position accordingly, and those who keep buying the narrative that “this time is different.” The bagholders are the ones still talking about Chinese stimulus packages and infrastructure spending that isn’t coming.

Beijing can’t stimulus their way out of a demographic collapse and a real estate bubble that’s already burst. They’re dealing with deflationary forces that make 2008 look like a warm-up act. Any trader still long risk assets denominated in currencies tied to Chinese growth is about to learn an expensive lesson about global capital flows.

The market rally everyone expected for the holidays? That was based on fundamentals that no longer exist. Smart money is already positioned for what comes next: a flight to quality that makes USD king and leaves everything else fighting for scraps.

This isn’t a temporary blip — it’s the beginning of a new paradigm where US assets become the only safe harbor in a world where the previous growth engine has broken down completely. The repatriation trade is here, and it’s going to run longer and harder than most people think possible.

PinBar Anyone? – Nikkei Continues To Lead

You may scoff.

You….. there in your ivory basement suite. Wading through piles of overdue bills reaching for the phone – only to be greeted “once again” by your local collection agency.

For a while there, you fancied yourself a “stock trader” and perhaps “financial blogger” too but…the dream has now faded, and the stark reality of your situation clear.

You are 100% hooped.

Was it the Fed that got you? But I thought they had your back?

Or maybe it was those damn “high frequency traders” on Wall St. But…I thought you worked on Wall Street?  How on earth did you ( such an astute investor ) manage to get yourself trapped, and leveraged to the hilt – when the warning signs where so clearly seen via The Nikkei?

Oh yes…that silly Japan. It’s not “America”!! How could anything going on “over there” have any possible impact on “us!” Us Americans!

Silly silly……Wall St wanna be’s.

A pinbar to the abdomen I say! A pinbar to your right knee!

Nikkei gonna show you the way – DOWN.

Many thanks to those who’ve already signed up for the Premium Services – I really do appreciate it. I’ve got a couple spots left here short term so again will offer that if anyone wants to get in touch with me directly – you can drop me a line at: [email protected]

 

 

The Nikkei Warning System: Your Early Alert for Global Market Carnage

While you were busy chasing the latest Wall Street fairy tale, the Nikkei was screaming warnings louder than a fire alarm in a paper factory. But here’s the brutal truth: most American traders treat the Nikkei like background noise, completely ignoring the fact that Japan’s market has been the canary in the coal mine for every major correction in the past decade.

The Nikkei doesn’t lie. It doesn’t get caught up in Federal Reserve rhetoric or manipulated by aftermarket trading algorithms. When Japanese institutional money starts fleeing, it’s not because they’re reading tea leaves—it’s because they see something the rest of the world is too arrogant to acknowledge.

Why Japan’s Market Leads the Global Collapse

The Tokyo session opens while New York sleeps, giving Asian markets the first crack at digesting global economic data. When the Nikkei starts forming those beautiful bearish pinbars at resistance, it’s telling you exactly what’s coming for your precious S&P 500. The overnight futures don’t care about your patriotic attachment to American exceptionalism.

Japanese institutional investors manage trillions in global assets. When they start unwinding positions, the ripple effect hits every major market within 24 hours. The correlation isn’t coincidental—it’s mathematical certainty wrapped in market mechanics that most retail traders refuse to understand.

The Dollar’s False Foundation

Your beloved greenback has been riding on fumes and Federal Reserve promises for months. USD weakness was telegraphed by the Nikkei’s failure to break key resistance levels weeks before American markets even hiccupped. The smart money was already rotating out of dollar-denominated assets while you were still believing in Powell’s latest press conference performance.

The Nikkei’s relationship with USD/JPY tells the complete story. When the yen starts strengthening against a backdrop of falling Japanese equities, it signals capital flight from risk assets globally. This isn’t some exotic trading theory—it’s basic international capital flow dynamics that Wall Street conveniently ignores until it’s too late.

Reading the Asian Session Like a Professional

Every professional forex trader worth their salt monitors the Nikkei during Asian trading hours. The patterns are consistent: when the Nikkei fails to hold key support levels during high-volume sessions, European and American markets follow within days, not weeks.

The beauty of using the Nikkei as your early warning system is its pure price action. No earnings manipulation, no buyback programs inflating prices, no Federal Reserve interventions propping up zombie companies. Just raw supply and demand mechanics showing you where global institutional money is flowing.

Market bottoms follow the same pattern in reverse. When the Nikkei starts forming bullish reversal patterns after extended selling, it’s your green light for risk-on positioning across all major markets.

The Painful Reality Check

Your leveraged long positions didn’t fail because of some mysterious market manipulation or algorithmic conspiracy. They failed because you ignored the clearest warning system available to retail traders. The Nikkei was painting bearish pinbars at critical resistance levels while you were still buying the dip based on Federal Reserve fairy tales.

Professional money managers don’t have the luxury of nationalistic bias. They follow the money flow, and the money flow starts in Asia. When Tokyo institutional investors start selling, London follows, and New York gets steamrolled.

The next time you’re tempted to dismiss Asian market action as irrelevant to your American stock portfolio, remember this moment. Remember the bills, the collection calls, and the painful realization that global markets don’t care about your geographic preferences. The Nikkei will keep telling the truth, whether you’re listening or not.

Bearish On Japan – EWJ As A Play

Looking at the Nikkei “pump job” this morning, as well JPY getting hammered,coupled with the sales tax implementation and latest string of “terrible data” out of Japan I’m about as bearish on Japan as one could be.

It doesn’t look like Japan is going to be able to do much more “stimulus wise” until maybe even July.

Get this……the government is also now telling residents previously living a short 20 km from the Fukushima Plant that it’s SAFE to go back home. SAFE?!

Unreal.

For those into stocks one could consider short plays on “EWJ” or even a couple ( tiny tiny! ) longer dated put options “short” late tomorrow or even mid-week.

As for us currency guys..the Japanese Yen continues to wallow, as the BOJ continues to do all it can to keep this boat afloat. I’m still waiting for a more substancial signal / move before trying “yet again” to get long JPY ( short of a few trades already initiated ).

Look for continued news / headlines and likely larger moves DOWN in the Nikkei Japanese Stock Market up around 15,000.

 

The Japanese Yen Death Spiral Continues

The Bank of Japan has painted itself into a corner with nowhere left to turn. Every policy tool in their arsenal has been deployed, abused, and rendered ineffective. The yield curve control mechanism is cracking under pressure, and the yen continues its relentless slide into oblivion. This isn’t just monetary policy failure—it’s economic suicide wrapped in bureaucratic double-speak.

What we’re witnessing is the slow-motion collapse of a currency that once commanded respect on the global stage. The BOJ’s desperate attempts to stimulate growth through endless money printing have created a zombie economy propped up by artificial life support. When central bankers start telling displaced nuclear disaster victims it’s “safe” to return home, you know desperation has reached new heights.

The Nikkei Pump Charade

This morning’s Nikkei rally is nothing more than lipstick on a pig. The Japanese stock market has become a casino where the house always wins—until it doesn’t. These manufactured pumps are designed to create the illusion of economic vitality while the underlying fundamentals continue to rot. Smart money isn’t buying this performance; they’re positioning for the inevitable crash.

The 15,000 level on the Nikkei represents a critical resistance point where reality meets fantasy. Every push higher becomes more artificial, more desperate, and ultimately more unsustainable. The sales tax implementation has created a consumption cliff that no amount of stock market manipulation can overcome.

Currency Debasement Strategy Backfires

The BOJ’s currency debasement strategy was supposed to boost exports and reinflate the economy. Instead, it’s created import inflation that’s crushing Japanese consumers while doing little to stimulate genuine economic growth. The yen’s weakness isn’t a sign of competitive advantage—it’s a symptom of systemic economic decay.

This is where the USD weakness narrative becomes interesting. While the dollar faces its own structural challenges, the yen’s problems run far deeper. We’re looking at a race to the bottom where the yen might actually win by losing the most.

Trading the Breakdown

The technical setup for shorting Japanese assets couldn’t be clearer. The EWJ presents an excellent vehicle for those looking to profit from Japan’s economic mismanagement without dealing with currency conversion complexities. Put options on the Nikkei offer leveraged exposure to what appears to be an inevitable correction.

For currency traders, the waiting game continues. The yen has been so oversold for so long that any meaningful bounce will likely be met with fresh selling pressure. The key is patience—waiting for that substancial signal that confirms the next major move rather than getting chopped up in the noise.

The Bigger Picture

Japan’s situation represents a cautionary tale for other developed economies flirting with similar monetary extremes. When you’ve exhausted conventional policy tools and moved into experimental territory, the exit strategy becomes increasingly complex and potentially catastrophic.

The Fukushima situation adds another layer of surreal desperation to the mix. When governments start rewriting radiation safety standards to fit their narrative, you know the situation has moved beyond normal economic policy failure into something far more sinister.

This isn’t just about one currency or one stock market—it’s about the endgame of modern monetary policy taken to its logical extreme. Japan is the canary in the coal mine for what happens when central banks lose control of the narrative and reality starts asserting itself.

The market rally elsewhere might provide temporary cover, but Japan’s structural problems can’t be papered over indefinitely. The reckoning is coming, and when it arrives, it’s going to be spectacular in its brutality.

Japan To Raise Sales Tax – Consumers To Slow

Brilliance out of Japan as we see the country’s standard “sales tax” raised from 5% to a staggering 8% here for the beginning of April.

This is very likely going to cause a considerable downturn in consumer spending for the coming quarter as the BOJ finds itself “ounce again” in a very precarious position.

In April 1997, when the government last raised the sales tax, to 5% from 3%, consumption took a dive and along with the effects of the Asian financial crisis, pushed Japan into deflation and a recession that lasted more than 18 months.

Now after 16 months of printing money like there’s no tomorrow, an increase in sales tax hardly sounds like part of a “cohesive plan” but this is not at all uncommon in Japanese central planning.

It’s one step forward ( if you consider rampant currency devaluation a step forward ) and two steps back as consumers tighten their belts and plan to cut back on spending.

We’ll keep a watchful eye on the Nikkei as always, along with those pesky JPY pairs that still refuse to budge.

 

 

The BOJ’s Impossible Balancing Act Unravels

This sales tax increase exposes the fundamental contradiction at the heart of Japan’s monetary strategy. The Bank of Japan has been flooding the system with liquidity for over a year, desperately trying to generate inflation and economic momentum. Yet here comes the government, implementing a policy that will immediately choke off consumer demand and push the economy back toward the deflationary spiral they’ve been fighting.

The timing couldn’t be worse. Japanese households were just beginning to show signs of confidence after months of aggressive monetary stimulus. Now they’re facing a 60% jump in sales tax overnight. This isn’t some gradual adjustment – it’s a shock that will ripple through every sector of the economy.

JPY Pairs: The Stubborn Reality

Those JPY pairs aren’t moving because the market sees through the charade. Smart money recognizes that all this quantitative easing becomes meaningless when fiscal policy works directly against monetary policy. The yen should be weakening dramatically with the BOJ’s money printing, but traders know that consumer spending collapse will force the central bank’s hand.

We’re likely looking at a scenario where the BOJ will need to accelerate their stimulus programs just to offset the damage from this tax increase. That’s not currency devaluation – that’s policy desperation. The market is pricing in the reality that Japan’s economic planners have no coherent strategy.

Echoes of 1997: History Doesn’t Lie

The parallels to 1997 are impossible to ignore. Back then, Japan made the exact same mistake – raising the sales tax in the middle of a fragile recovery. The result was an 18-month recession and a deflationary death spiral that took decades to escape. Now they’re doing it again, apparently learning nothing from their own recent history.

Consumer confidence is about to crater. When people know prices are jumping 3% overnight on everything they buy, they postpone purchases. They cut back. They save more and spend less. This creates the exact opposite economic dynamic that the BOJ has been trying to engineer with their printing press.

Nikkei Under Pressure

The Nikkei is going to feel this immediately. Japanese corporations depend heavily on domestic consumption, and that’s about to fall off a cliff. Export-oriented companies might see some benefit if the yen finally weakens, but that won’t offset the domestic demand destruction.

We’re watching for the Nikkei to break key support levels as earnings expectations get slashed across the board. Retail, automotive, electronics – every sector that depends on Japanese consumers is going to take a hit. The only winners will be companies with significant overseas revenue that benefit from yen weakness, if that even materializes.

This whole situation exemplifies why centrally planned economies fail. You can’t have one branch of government printing money to stimulate demand while another branch simultaneously implements policies that destroy demand. It’s economic schizophrenia, and the market is starting to price in the inevitable failure of this approach.

The real question now is how long it takes for the BOJ to admit this was a catastrophic mistake. Will they wait for unemployment to spike and GDP to contract, or will they act preemptively to offset the fiscal tightening? Either way, USD weakness globally could provide some relief for Japanese exporters, but that’s a thin reed to lean on when your domestic economy is about to implode.

The BOJ has painted themselves into a corner with this tax increase. They’ll need to print even more aggressively now, which will eventually pressure the yen lower, but not before significant economic damage occurs. Global reckoning in currency markets may finally force Japan’s hand, but the domestic pain is already locked in.

Central Banks Salivating – Is It War Time Yet?

Well….It didn’t take long for one of those “black swans” to swim by, as not only has Russia “invaded” Ukraine ( yes, yes I know only Crimea where the population is primarily Russian anyway ) but Ukraine has also order “full military mobilization” in response.

With Forex Markets opening in just a few short hours it will be interesting to see if there’s any reaction to the news, as “the threat of war” would generally have investors looking for safety.

Obviously it’s far too soon to tell…but purely for interests sake, I myself am very curious to see if “even this” could possibly slow the advance of U.S Equities but again….far too soon to tell.

I’ll keep a close watch on the Japanese Yen (JPY) obviously as the first signs of “fear” will be seen with JPY rising.

Keep in mind that Central Banks absolutely “loooooove” wars, as they present governments with the need to borrow “even more money” than the copious already “being borrowed”.

Again….all that borrowing from the privately owned Fed…..”with interest”.

Is it war time yet?

Reading the Market’s Fear Response: Currency Movements in Crisis

When geopolitical tensions spike like this, the currency markets become a crystal-clear window into global sentiment. The initial hours after news breaks are where you separate the real traders from the tourists. While everyone’s watching CNN, smart money is already positioning for what comes next.

The Japanese Yen isn’t just a currency during times like these—it’s a fear gauge. When uncertainty hits, capital floods into JPY like water finding the lowest point. This isn’t sentiment or speculation; it’s institutional money seeking the safest harbor available. Watch JPY strength as your early warning system for broader market panic.

Safe Haven Flows and Currency Hierarchies

The beauty of geopolitical shocks is how they strip away all the noise and reveal true currency hierarchies. Swiss Franc strength will follow JPY, then you’ll see money rotating into US Treasuries despite America’s own fiscal mess. It’s not about fundamentals in these moments—it’s pure liquidity and perceived safety.

Gold will move, but not immediately. The initial reaction is always in currencies first, then precious metals catch up as the reality settles in. European currencies, particularly the Euro, will take the biggest hit given the geographic proximity to the conflict. This creates opportunity for those positioned correctly.

Central Bank Positioning and Market Manipulation

Here’s what the mainstream won’t tell you: central banks are already coordinating their response before the markets even react. They love crisis because it gives them license to intervene without political pushback. Emergency measures, liquidity injections, coordinated interventions—all justified by ‘extraordinary circumstances.’

The Federal Reserve will use this as another excuse to maintain their easy money policies. Any hint of tightening gets postponed when geopolitical risk emerges. It’s the perfect cover story for continuing the money printing that benefits the banking system while destroying currency purchasing power.

Trading the Reality vs. the Headlines

Most retail traders will chase headlines and get burned. The real money is made positioning for the second and third-order effects, not the initial panic. Once the knee-jerk safe-haven flows settle, you’ll see opportunities in oversold emerging market currencies and commodity-linked pairs.

Energy currencies like the Norwegian Krone and Canadian Dollar will initially sell off with everything else, but oil price spikes from regional instability will eventually drive them higher. The USD weakness we’ve been discussing becomes more pronounced as America’s role as global policeman comes with real costs.

The Bigger Picture: War as Economic Policy

Never forget that conflict serves the debt-based monetary system perfectly. Governments need excuses to spend money they don’t have, and nothing justifies deficit spending like national security concerns. Defense contractors get rich, banks collect interest on the borrowing, and politicians look decisive.

This Ukrainian situation, regardless of how it develops, will be used to justify monetary policies that would otherwise face resistance. QE programs, currency interventions, emergency lending facilities—all become ‘necessary measures’ when geopolitical risk is on the table.

The markets will eventually price in the reality that this crisis, like others before it, becomes another tool for financial engineering. Those positioned for continued currency debasement and metal moves will profit while others get distracted by the geopolitical theater.

Watch the Yen, position for the second wave, and remember that in a world of fiat currencies backed by nothing but promises, every crisis is ultimately bullish for real assets. The question isn’t whether this creates opportunity—it’s whether you’re prepared to capitalize on it when the dust settles.

All Eyes On Nikkei – A Lower High?

The new high attained by The SP 500 this morning correlates well with a “lower high” area on the Japanese Nikkei right here around the 15,100 level, as well with the U.S Dollar “again” testing the 80.20 level in $DXY.

As we all watch our own specific indicators / indices to get a better read on “where things are at” in a general sense, it’s my thinking that these things line up quite nicely, suggesting we’ve come into a solid area of resistance/support.

Should the U.S Dollar “finally” make a decent move upward, as well the Nikkei put in a “swing high” here (and create a “lower high”) we’d likely see this move retraced, as well perhaps – find some clarity in the medium term direction.

A move lower in Nikkei would suggest “risk off” as well a higher Yen/JPY and likely ( although these days…you never know for sure ) even a higher U.S Dollar so I’m far more interested in activity “over seas” this evening then I am in today’s “usual wash / rinse / repeat”.

Keep your eyes on Nikkei.

…hey that rhymes.

Forex_Kong_Face_Book

Forex_Kong_Face_Book

 

The Dollar’s Last Stand: Reading the Technical Tea Leaves

That 80.20 level in DXY isn’t just some random number on a chart — it’s the line in the sand that separates the dollar bulls from reality. We’ve been dancing around this level for weeks now, each rejection getting weaker, each bounce losing steam. The correlation between dollar weakness and equity strength is textbook stuff, but what’s happening underneath the surface tells the real story.

When you see the Nikkei struggling at 15,100 while the S&P hits fresh highs, you’re witnessing the classic divergence that marks major turning points. This isn’t coincidence — it’s the market’s way of telegraphing what comes next. The yen carry trade has been the silent engine driving risk assets higher, and that engine is starting to sputter.

Risk Off Signals Flashing Red

The Nikkei’s failure to break higher here isn’t just about Japanese equities — it’s about the entire risk complex. When Tokyo starts rolling over, it sends ripples through every carry trade, every risk parity fund, every algorithm programmed to chase momentum. The yen has been artificially weak for so long that traders forgot it can actually strengthen when the tide turns.

What we’re seeing now is the early stages of that tide change. The correlation between USD/JPY weakness and broad risk asset pullbacks isn’t breaking down — it’s intensifying. As the dollar weakens, the funding costs for these massive carry positions start to bite, forcing unwinding that accelerates the move.

The Overnight Sessions Hold the Keys

Forget about New York hours — the real action is happening while Wall Street sleeps. The Asian and European sessions are where currencies actually move these days, where the big institutional flows create the trends that day traders spend hours trying to figure out. The Nikkei’s behavior in the overnight hours will determine whether we’re looking at a minor correction or the start of something much bigger.

When Tokyo opens and the Nikkei gaps lower, watch how quickly USD/JPY follows. The algorithmic trading systems that dominate forex markets are hardwired to respond to these correlations, creating feedback loops that amplify the initial moves. A 200-point drop in the Nikkei can trigger a 100-pip move in dollar-yen before most retail traders even know what happened.

Multiple Timeframe Confluence

The beauty of this setup lies in how multiple timeframes are aligning. The weekly charts show the dollar index approaching major resistance, the daily charts show momentum divergence, and the hourly charts are painting classic reversal patterns. When technical analysis lines up across timeframes like this, it’s not just coincidence — it’s the market preparing for a significant move.

The rally patterns we’ve been seeing in equities are starting to show fatigue right at the levels where currency technicals suggest a reversal. This isn’t market timing — it’s market structure playing out exactly as it should.

Trading the Correlation Breakdown

Smart money isn’t waiting for confirmation — they’re positioning now while the correlations are still intact but showing stress fractures. The trade isn’t just about shorting the dollar or going long yen; it’s about understanding that when these correlations finally snap, they snap hard and fast.

The risk-off trade that’s brewing isn’t your typical flight-to-quality move. This is about unwinding years of distorted currency relationships and overleveraged carry trades. When it starts, it won’t be a gentle rotation — it’ll be a stampede for the exits that creates opportunities for those positioned correctly and destroys those caught on the wrong side.

Why Isn't Fukushima Front Page News?

I’ve learned everything, I’ve read everything – but I still haven’t “heard” anything!

What the hell is going on? I mean seriously!

We’ve got the Golden Globes front and center on a typical Sunday night here in the West, while a population of 13 Million people in Tokyo sit quietly unaware of the looming disaster only 150 miles away!

150 miles! Can you even imagine! A nuclear accident / disaster that makes Chernobyl look like a beach BBQ, and you’ve got an entire population ( not to mention an entire planet now that Japan has passed the laws “forbidding reporting” on the incident ) sitting in the dark!

Obama and the boys in Britain, France, Canada have sent millions in aid and stepped right up to help  tiny African countries work thru civil “disputes” ( not taking anything away from the horrors there in ) as well helped any number of countries through “national disasters” at the drop of a hat!!

How the hell can the entire world continue to turn a blind eye to what’s really going on in Japan?

It’s like sitting at home in Seattle, and the nuke site is in Vancouver – that close ( with winds blowing at a modest 6 km/h)…..and you’re not making plans to move????

Unreal…..we’ve seen more coverage of a “f$&kin cat stuck down a storm drain” than that of the largest industrial disaster known to mankind, let alone the largest impending threat to our human existence! Where are the news helicopters? Where’s the “minute to minute coverage” of the attempted removal of fuel rods etc?? Where’s the “evacuation plan” when ALL OF JAPAN needs to get off the rock?

How can this not be considered a “global event”? And immediately take the attention of the planets top ranking / thinking / experts in the field to “get their asses over there” and get this thing figured out!

I can’t believe that I will actually have to cross off one of the most highly anticipated travel / food / cultural adventures of my “proposed” future now knowing what I know.

I will never get to sit at “Nobu” in Tokyo and stuff my self to the gills with the finest sushi on the planet, and worse yet – I won’t be able to take anyone to enjoy it with me.

Japan now  – “officially” off limits.

Unreal. I am beyond sad.

 

The JPY Collapse: What This Nuclear Disaster Really Means for Currency Markets

While the world pretends everything’s fine, the Japanese Yen is screaming the truth that nobody wants to hear. This isn’t just about radiation levels or fuel rods – this is about the systematic destruction of one of the world’s major reserve currencies. When a nation faces an existential threat of this magnitude, their currency becomes worthless paper, and smart money knows it.

The Yen Death Spiral Nobody’s Talking About

Look at the charts. The JPY has been in free fall, and this disaster is the final nail in the coffin. You think the Bank of Japan can prop up their currency when they might need to evacuate their entire population? Every central banker on the planet knows what’s coming, but they’re all playing pretend because admitting the truth would cause immediate global financial panic.

The carry trade that made JPY the funding currency for decades is about to reverse with violent force. When leveraged positions start unwinding because traders realize Japan might become uninhabitable, we’re talking about trillions of dollars scrambling for exits simultaneously. This isn’t a typical currency crisis – this is currency extinction.

Safe Haven Flows: Where the Real Money Goes

While mainstream media focuses on celebrity award shows, institutional money is quietly repositioning for the inevitable. dollar weakness becomes irrelevant when you’re looking at total currency collapse. The smart money isn’t debating whether to buy USD or EUR – they’re buying hard assets and getting as far away from anything denominated in Yen as possible.

Swiss Franc, Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar – these become the new safe havens when one of the major currencies faces existential threat. But here’s the kicker: most retail traders are still analyzing JPY pairs like this is some normal correction. They’re drawing support and resistance lines while the entire foundation of the Japanese economy potentially crumbles.

The Global Currency Reset Nobody Sees Coming

This disaster accelerates everything. When Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, faces potential evacuation, it forces a complete reshuffling of global currency relationships. China’s watching this closely – they know opportunity when they see it. The Yuan positioning to fill the void left by a collapsed Yen isn’t coincidence.

Every major central bank has contingency plans for exactly this scenario, but they won’t implement them until the last possible moment. Why? Because executing those plans admits that one of their peer currencies is finished. The political and economic implications are too massive to acknowledge until absolutely forced.

Trading the Unthinkable

Here’s what the professionals already know: you don’t trade against existential threats. When a currency faces potential elimination due to national disaster, technical analysis becomes meaningless. Strategic positioning means recognizing that normal market relationships break down completely.

The JPY pairs aren’t exhibiting normal volatility patterns because this isn’t a normal situation. Every bounce is a selling opportunity, every attempt at support is temporary life support for a dying currency. Professional money managers are quietly rotating out of any JPY exposure, not because of technical levels or economic data, but because they understand what uninhabitable means for currency viability.

While Tokyo sits unaware just 150 miles from potential catastrophe, currency markets are already pricing in scenarios that most people can’t even imagine. The Yen isn’t just weak – it’s facing extinction. And when currencies die, they don’t send advance warning. They just disappear from relevance, leaving everyone holding them with worthless paper and the bitter realization that they ignored the obvious signs.

This is bigger than Forex. This is about recognizing when fundamental assumptions about major currencies no longer apply. Japan taught the world about currency strength and precision. Now it’s teaching us about currency mortality.