War, Silver, AUD, Putin, China = Fun

I feel I’ve gotten a little soft here during the past few weeks.

In not being as “overly thrilled” with the market as I normally am – the blogging has suffered as……if you don’t have anything good to say well……you know.

This tiny blip / risk aversion based on “at least two” of the black swans we spoke of last week restores some faith in the fact that markets are still markets, people are still people, and emotions are still emotions.

The Central Banks do all they can to lull you to sleep but in reality are relatively powerless against the “true forces” of fear and greed – where human emotion will always take the front seat.

Take for example the massive printing efforts in Japan – propping up the Nikkei. It’s all going to look pretty ridiculous as “only a matter of days” can erase “1000’s of points” in a heartbeat. Imagine when things really turn? ( as they will ).

Russia has put Obama back in his bunker with suggestion ( if not action already ) dumping U.S Treasuries as well US Dollar reserves alongside their good buddy China – essentially holding the capability to “level the U.S economy” without the use of a single missile. You gotta love that eh?

As suggested earlier Putin will not let these tyrants in Washington get their grubby little mits on Ukraine without a fight….and rightfully so (if you understood anything at all of the importance of Ukraine, and its massive network of natural gas pipelines that feed Europe).

Obama can kiss my ass. He’s beyond desperate, and essentially “toying with war” as Russia merely protects what it already has.

Me…..I’ve got important things to take care of over the next couple of days – “very” important things…so I will look for WWIII to start Monday at the earliest ………..and “never” at the latest.

Have a good weekend all – keep your eyes peeled late Sunday.

Short AUD – killer, and the long list of gold and silver miners entered “weeks ago” doesn’t hurt either.

Kong……..gone.

The Real War Is Economic — And Washington Is Losing

Putin isn’t playing games with sanctions and diplomatic theater. The man understands something that Washington’s career politicians refuse to acknowledge — real power in the 21st century flows through economic channels, not military ones. When Russia and China coordinate to dump U.S. Treasuries and dollar reserves, they’re not making empty threats. They’re executing a financial strategy that could cripple the American economy faster than any conventional weapon.

The beauty of this economic warfare is its precision. No need for messy ground invasions or air strikes when you can systematically dismantle a currency’s global dominance. Every Treasury bond sold, every trade settlement conducted in yuan or rubles, every bilateral agreement that bypasses the SWIFT system — it all adds up to death by a thousand cuts for dollar hegemony.

AUD Collapse Accelerates as Risk Appetite Dies

The Australian Dollar is getting absolutely demolished, and this is just the beginning. When risk sentiment turns sour — and we’re seeing the early stages of that now — commodity currencies like AUD get thrown out first. Australia’s economy depends on Chinese demand for iron ore and coal, but when Beijing starts prioritizing domestic stability over raw material imports, the math gets ugly fast.

My short AUD position from weeks back is printing money because this isn’t a temporary dip. This is structural weakness meeting cyclical decline. The Reserve Bank of Australia can’t print their way out of a commodities downturn, especially when their largest trading partner is simultaneously reducing dollar reserves. USD weakness creates a double-edged sword — while it might theoretically help AUD, the broader risk-off environment crushes carry trades and speculative positioning.

Gold Miners: The Smart Money’s Hedge

Those precious metals miners I loaded up on weeks ago? They’re starting to show their true colors as geopolitical tensions ramp up. When currencies become weapons and traditional safe havens like Treasuries come under attack, gold becomes the ultimate refuge. But here’s the thing most retail traders miss — mining stocks amplify gold’s moves by 3-to-1 or better on the upside.

The institutional money is quietly accumulating physical gold and quality mining operations while the mainstream media focuses on stock buybacks and tech earnings. They understand what’s coming. When confidence in fiat currencies erodes — and we’re watching it happen in real time — precious metals don’t just hold value, they explode higher. metal moves are often violent and swift, catching the unprepared completely off guard.

Central Bank Impotence Exposed

The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, and Bank of Japan can print all the money they want, but they can’t print credibility. Every quantitative easing program, every emergency rate cut, every coordinated intervention just exposes their desperation more clearly. Markets are starting to see through the smoke screen.

When Putin threatens to weaponize Russia’s dollar reserves, he’s calling their bluff. The entire Western financial system depends on everyone agreeing to play by the same rules, use the same currency for international trade, and accept the same monetary authorities. But what happens when major powers simply opt out? What happens when they create parallel systems, alternative settlement mechanisms, and competing reserve currencies?

The Weekend Calm Before Monday’s Storm

I’ve got business to handle over the weekend, but come Sunday night and Monday morning, expect fireworks. This isn’t just another geopolitical spat that gets resolved with phone calls and press conferences. Ukraine represents a strategic chokepoint for European energy supplies, and Russia isn’t backing down. Neither is China when it comes to supporting their ally.

The market’s brief taste of risk aversion this week is nothing compared to what’s brewing. Those comfortable with their long equity positions and short volatility trades are about to get a reality check. The Central Banks have created the illusion of stability, but underneath, the fault lines are spreading.

Keep your powder dry, watch the overnight action Sunday, and remember — when everyone else is panicking about war, the smart money is positioned for the economic aftermath. That’s where the real profits get made.

4 More Days – USD Toast Or Treasure?

If you can believe it – the U.S Dollar has spent the entire last week “still hovering” near a well-known area of support, showing absolutely no interest in “getting off its ass” and making a move higher.

As forex markets have a tendency to move sideways for extended periods of time, this should come as no real surprise but in having held a number of small positions ( almost averaged out now ) “long USD” for some time now, I’m only giving it a couple more days before just “going with my gut” and likely pulling a “stop n reverse” – getting back on the short side of this dud.

The overall weakness and lack of any real “life” suggests ( as I’ve now suggested for some days ) that regardless of any “near term pop” – USD looks pretty much set on breaking support and continuing on its merry way – into the basement.

Considering the lack of movement ( in either direction ) scratching a trade that has consumed nearly two full weeks of trading doesn’t put a smile on my face. Not at all. If you consider the time and effort, and in turn the “lack of reward” you can easily see why we call this “work”.

I’ll give this dud a couple more days to “prove itself” but as it stands…..I’m a hair away from flat-out “stop and reverse”, wherein the probability of an actual “waterfall” exists.

It’s make it or break it time for USD. 4 days Max.

Forex_Kong_Face_Book

Forex_Kong_Face_Book

 

The USD Death Spiral: When Support Becomes Resistance

What we’re witnessing isn’t just another failed bounce — it’s the methodical dismantling of dollar dominance in real-time. The lack of conviction in this USD rally attempt tells you everything you need to know about institutional positioning. They’re not buying this bounce because they know what’s coming next.

Smart money has already rotated out. The window dressing is over, and the real move is about to begin. When the dollar finally breaks this support level, it won’t be a gentle decline — it’ll be a capitulation that catches every retail trader holding long USD positions completely off guard.

The Technical Picture Says Everything

Price action doesn’t lie, and right now it’s screaming weakness. We’ve got a textbook bear flag formation playing out in real-time. The inability to generate any meaningful buying pressure after two weeks of sideways action is the ultimate tell. Professional traders recognize this pattern — it’s the calm before the storm.

Volume patterns confirm the weakness. Every attempt to push higher has been met with pathetic participation. Meanwhile, any selling pressure gets absorbed immediately, suggesting big players are using this consolidation to quietly distribute their positions. The setup for a USD breakdown couldn’t be more obvious.

When support finally gives way, the next logical target sits well below current levels. This isn’t speculation — it’s basic technical analysis combined with fundamental reality. The dollar’s structural problems haven’t disappeared just because it managed to hold a support level for two weeks.

Why the Reversal is Inevitable

Global central banks continue diversifying away from dollar reserves. China’s gold accumulation hasn’t stopped. Russia’s developing alternative payment systems. The BRICS nations are actively working to reduce dollar dependency. These aren’t temporary headwinds — they’re permanent structural shifts that guarantee long-term dollar weakness.

The Federal Reserve’s policy constraints make the situation worse. They can’t raise rates aggressively without destroying the economy, but they can’t keep rates low without destroying the currency. It’s a lose-lose scenario that smart money recognized months ago.

Add in America’s unsustainable fiscal position, and you’ve got a recipe for currency debasement that makes the 1970s look conservative. The only question isn’t whether the dollar will weaken — it’s how fast the decline accelerates once it begins.

The Stop and Reverse Strategy

Professional traders know when to cut losses and flip positions. Holding onto losing trades based on hope rather than evidence is how retail accounts get blown up. The market is giving us clear signals, and ignoring them because of ego or stubbornness is financial suicide.

The beauty of the stop and reverse approach is its simplicity. When your thesis proves wrong, you don’t just exit — you position for the opposite move. This isn’t about being right or wrong; it’s about following price action and adapting to market reality.

Risk management demands this flexibility. Two weeks of sideways action followed by weak bounces isn’t normal behavior for a currency that’s supposed to be strengthening. It’s exhaustion, and exhaustion leads to breakdowns.

The Waterfall Scenario

Once the dollar breaks support, the selling pressure will intensify rapidly. Stop losses will trigger, algorithmic selling will kick in, and momentum traders will pile on. What starts as a technical breakdown quickly becomes a fundamental repricing of dollar strength.

This cascading effect creates opportunities for traders positioned correctly. But timing matters. Getting short too early means enduring the sideways grind. Getting short too late means missing the best part of the move. The market signals suggest we’re approaching the optimal entry point.

The four-day timeline isn’t arbitrary — it’s based on typical consolidation patterns and volume cycles. If USD can’t generate meaningful buying pressure within this timeframe, the probability of breakdown increases exponentially. That’s not opinion; that’s market mechanics.

Prepare for the reversal. Position sizing matters more than perfect timing. When the dollar finally breaks, the move will be swift, decisive, and profitable for those ready to act.

Deflation Vs Inflation – The Great Debate

It’s pretty rare that I get excited about something like this as I don’t really spend a lot of timing thinking about – but in this instance, I’m really looking forward to learning more.

We’ve had some discussion in the comments section over the weekend, with a couple of very  knowledgable participants really putting out some great info.

Deflation vs inflation…..the great debate.

I for one have thrown this around on occasion, only to find myself back where I started in the first place – time and time again. I hope I don’t create a “dead-end ” here (as I generally stick to spaceships, quiet time with ants, and the search for evidence of alien life on Earth ) and am certainly “not” an economist, but I hope we can wrangle these guys ( and whom ever else ) to shed a little light, on a an area of economics – often misunderstood.

The basics:

Deflation is a “decrease” in the general price level of goods and services. Deflation occurs when the inflation rate falls below 0% (a negative inflation rate). Deflation increases the real value of money ie…..the currency of a nation or regional economy.

Deflation allows one to buy more goods with the same amount of money over time.

*Thank you Wikipedia!” ( what you think I rattled that off the top of my head?)

Inflation is a persistent “increase” in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. When the general price level rises, each unit of currency buys fewer goods and services. Consequently, inflation reflects a reduction in the purchasing power per unit of money – a loss of real value in the medium of exchange and unit of account within the economy.

So…..in a nut shell – looking at the value of a dollar in a given economy, and the reflection of “how much of what” that dollar is able to purchase at a given time  – no?

The questions:

Given the current monetary policy – Is the United States “currently” in an inflationary environment or a deflationary environment? And more importantly ( as we are all much more interested in the future )…..

Where do you see the United States headed next? And….(bumbuddabum bumbumbbumbbumb!!!)

Why?

Woohooo! I’ll do my best to chime in but in all honesty I’ve likely got little to add…other than my own “backward / flipped over / nutty way” of looking at it, which ultimately may not have to do much with economics as it does making money trading forex.

All opinions / views more than welcome!

Let’s get this thing licked! And thank you in advance to JSkogs in particular. A valued reader and contributor here at Kong, and from what I gather – a pretty all around great guy.

Forex_Kong_Google

Forex_Kong_Google

The Reality Check: Where We Stand Today

Here’s the thing nobody wants to admit – we’re living in a deflationary nightmare disguised as an inflationary horror show. The numbers they feed you? Housing costs up, energy through the roof, food prices crushing families. But strip away the noise and look at what’s really happening: asset deflation is eating the system alive while they pump fake inflation numbers to keep you scared.

The Federal Reserve’s monetary circus has created the most distorted pricing environment in modern history. You’ve got tech stocks trading like monopoly money while real productive capacity gets hammered. That’s not inflation – that’s asset bubble insanity mixed with supply chain manipulation. Real deflation is crushing wages, productivity, and anything resembling genuine economic growth.

The Dollar’s Deception Game

Everyone’s screaming about dollar strength, but what are we really measuring against? A basket of equally debased currencies? The DXY hitting highs doesn’t mean the dollar is strong – it means everything else is weaker. That’s the deflationary spiral in action, not some triumphant return of American monetary power.

Look at what’s happening beneath the surface. Corporate debt restructuring, zombie companies getting life support, productivity falling off a cliff. This isn’t the environment where real inflation thrives – this is where currencies die slow, agonizing deaths while central banks pretend they’re in control. The dollar weakness we’ve been tracking isn’t temporary – it’s structural.

What the Charts Won’t Tell You

Here’s where it gets interesting for forex traders. The traditional inflation/deflation playbook? Throw it out the window. We’re in uncharted territory where deflationary forces are so powerful that massive monetary expansion barely moves the needle on real economic activity. That creates trading opportunities that most people miss because they’re stuck fighting the last war.

Currency pairs are reflecting this schizophrenic environment. You’ve got flight-to-quality trades happening simultaneously with debasement plays. EUR/USD isn’t just about interest rate differentials anymore – it’s about which economic bloc can better manage their controlled demolition. The smart money isn’t betting on inflation or deflation – they’re betting on which central banks will blink first.

The yen carry trade, the commodity currency collapse, even crypto’s wild swings – they’re all symptoms of the same disease. Markets know something’s fundamentally broken, but they can’t price it properly because the traditional models don’t work when you’re dealing with zombie economics.

The Path Forward: Trading the Chaos

So where are we headed? Here’s my take: we’re going to see deflationary pressure intensify while central banks double down on inflationary policy responses. That creates the mother of all trading environments – massive volatility with clear directional biases for those smart enough to read the signals.

The United States is heading into a deflationary spiral that no amount of money printing can stop. Demographics, debt levels, productivity collapse – the math doesn’t work for sustained inflation. But they’ll keep trying, which means currency debasement accelerates even as real economic activity continues shrinking. We’ve already seen this pattern play out in several market cycles over the past decade.

The Bottom Line for Forex Traders

Stop trying to predict whether we’ll have inflation or deflation – we’re getting both simultaneously in different sectors. Instead, focus on the currency flows that result from this impossible situation. Central banks trapped between deflationary reality and inflationary mandates create the best trading opportunities we’ve seen in decades.

The dollar will weaken not because of inflation, but because maintaining its artificial strength requires destroying the real economy. Other currencies will collapse not because of deflation, but because their central banks lack the political will to accept short-term pain for long-term stability.

This isn’t economics textbook theory – this is survival. The traders who understand that we’re in a new paradigm where traditional rules don’t apply will be the ones still standing when the dust settles. Everyone else? They’ll be wondering what hit them.

Gold And The U.S Dollar – Where To Next?

A fantastic question from another valued reader.

PT asks?

“Some time back you spoke of what readers wished to hear. So I thought I’d question a true professional. As a forex novice, my query pertains to gold, silver, and its shares.Where do you see the DXY in the intermediary term (3-6 months)? I know your trades often only last hours, but what is your “change” or expectation for the dollar going forward?”

Kong says:

We’ve seen the decoupling of the traditional relationship / correlation of “lower dollar = higher
gold” right? Or have we?

Pull a 25 year chart of gold and see that this “massive correction” isn’t really that massive at all.
Compared to any other asset / chart you see on the 25 year for example….this is ( Elliot boys
chime in please ) some kind of “wave 4” maybe…..but not a change in trend!

Gold_Bull_Market_Fine_Forex_Kong

Gold_Bull_Market_Fine_Forex_Kong

I have no change in expectation for the dollar ( as I expect it to essentially go to zero ) but will
be wary / watchful for correction “just like we see in all asset classes” when the time comes.

Knowing full well “nothing moves in a straight line for long” sure…..the buck will “buck us bears”
at some point…..as the correction in gold has equally “bucked the bulls”. This shit happens every
day, in one asset or another…..one chart or another.

What most people fail to understand is that “every single pivot / zig and zag” doesn’t play out/correlate/  “on a dime”. An asset like gold ( with such a high value ) has been “on it’s own correction” based on the value / time / zigs / zags etc, while the US Dollar struggles within it’s own set of parameters.

There are points where “stars align”, but in general “intermarket analysis” is extremely difficult for a novice to effectively “time”.

If you ask me what I think. I think the U.S Dollar is going to zero and I think that gold is going to the moon. If you ask me “how long is that gonna take”?

I’ll tell you you’re trading to large, reduce your position size, don’t expect this to be easy and “don’t” pull your life savings with any expectations that you’ll “be even close” in timing it.

Near term – I’m looking for this last leg lower in the dollar – then an obvious bounce.

The Bigger Picture: Why Dollar Bears and Gold Bulls Need Patience

Market Cycles Don’t Care About Your Timeline

Here’s what separates the pros from the amateurs – understanding that markets operate on their own timeline, not yours. You want to know when the dollar hits zero and gold rockets to $3000? Wrong question. The right question is: “How do I position myself to profit from the inevitable while surviving the noise in between?”

Look at any major currency collapse in history. The British Pound didn’t lose its reserve status overnight. It took decades of decline, punctuated by sharp rallies that fooled everyone into thinking the trend had reversed. Same story with every fiat currency that’s ever existed. They all go to zero eventually, but the path is never straight, never predictable, and never kind to impatient traders.

The DXY sits around these levels because we’re in that messy middle phase. Not quite collapse, not quite recovery. Just grinding, soul-crushing sideways action that kills both bulls and bears who can’t adapt. This is where fortunes are made and lost – not on the big obvious moves everyone sees coming, but on reading the subtle shifts in momentum that most traders miss completely.

Central Bank Policy: The Real Driver Behind Currency Movements

While everyone obsesses over GDP numbers and employment data, the real action happens in central bank meeting rooms. The Fed’s trapped in a corner of their own making. Raise rates? They crash the economy and the overleveraged government. Cut rates? They accelerate dollar debasement and inflation. Print more money? Same result, different mechanism.

Meanwhile, central banks worldwide are quietly diversifying away from dollar reserves. China, Russia, and even traditional US allies are buying gold and establishing bilateral trade agreements that bypass the dollar entirely. This isn’t happening overnight – it’s a slow, methodical process that most traders ignore because it doesn’t create immediate price action.

The smart money isn’t trying to time the exact moment of dollar collapse. They’re positioning for the inevitable outcome while collecting profits from the volatility along the way. That means trading the swings in EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and yes, even buying dollar strength when the setup is right, knowing it’s temporary.

Gold’s True Relationship with Currency Debasement

Forget the textbook correlation between gold and the dollar. That’s surface-level analysis that misses the deeper structural forces at play. Gold isn’t just reacting to dollar strength or weakness – it’s responding to the gradual loss of confidence in fiat currency systems globally.

The real catalyst for gold’s next major leg higher won’t be a weak DXY reading or some inflation print. It’ll be the moment when institutional investors finally acknowledge that no major currency offers a reliable store of value anymore. When pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and insurance companies start allocating serious percentages to gold – not 2-3%, but 15-20% – that’s when you’ll see price discovery that makes the 1970s look tame.

This shift is already happening, just slowly enough that most market participants haven’t noticed. Central bank gold purchases hit record levels last year, and they’re not buying to flip for a quick profit. They’re buying because they understand what’s coming better than the retail investors obsessing over daily price movements.

Positioning for the Long Game While Trading the Noise

Here’s the practical reality: you need two strategies running simultaneously. Your core position reflects your long-term view – dollar weakness, gold strength, inflation protection. But your trading capital exploits the short-term noise that creates opportunity every single day.

When the DXY bounces hard off support and everyone screams about dollar strength returning, that’s not a reason to abandon your thesis. That’s a gift – an opportunity to add to positions at better prices or profit from the counter-trend move before the larger forces reassert themselves.

The key is position sizing that lets you sleep at night. If you’re losing sleep over your trades, you’re trading too big and thinking too small. The dollar’s path to zero and gold’s path to the moon will be filled with gut-wrenching reversals that shake out weak hands. Don’t be weak hands.

Bottom line: stay convicted on the big picture, stay flexible on the execution, and remember that every major trend creates multiple opportunities to profit – if you’re patient enough to let them develop and disciplined enough to take them when they appear.

Trading Nightmare – I'm Awake And In Profit

One of my computers called me about an hour and a half ago.

Plucked from the grasp of yet another “unsettling dream” ( for what ever reason I am continually plagued by dreams of having my teeth pulled / ripped / removed / taken in ever increasingly “bizarre fashion” ) I welcomed the alert, and eagerly leapt from the bed to silence the soft repeating tone.

Several trades had been picked up, and to my surprise – the U.S Dollar taking a relatively huge hit as the London sessions moved into their first couple hours trading. My surprise? Of course not – you know that. Everything moving accordingly to plan with the added bonus of still having every single tooth intact! How wonderful!

And with so many caught in nightmares of their own, gobbling up useless news stories of tapering and the assumed effect of a “much stronger dollar”.

EUR and GBP are obviously the biggest winners here as per trades in the comment section some hours ago as well a quick tweet.

The “tooth removal” dreams are extremely unpleasant, and it’s really no wonder I don’t sleep a whole lot. Thankfully I was “saved by the bell” here this evening, and rewarded with some fantastic trade entries.

In celebration I plan to eat 3 lbs of chocolate, a full tub of ice cream and as many stale candy canes as I can wrestle from the kids across the street.

UPDATE:

I can fully understand that this must be moving way to fast for some of you as…..only hours later (in fact less ) I’ve already banked just under 400 pips across the board in 6 pairs total, and will now be looking for pull back on smaller time frames – and of course re entry.

When some of this goes down in the “dead of night” I don’t imagine there is much some of you can do about it , not having the alerts / computers chiming, the lifestyle ( never sleeping, no kids , no other job, likely insanity ) let alone the interest / dedication / commitment.

We’ll have to find a solution moving forward.

The Reality of Professional Forex Trading: Beyond the Headlines

Why the Market Ignored Taper Talk

While retail traders scrambled to position themselves for the supposed dollar strength that “should” follow tapering discussions, the institutional money was already three steps ahead. The EUR/USD breakout above 1.3750 resistance and GBP/USD surge past 1.6200 weren’t accidents – they were the result of smart money recognizing that Fed policy normalization is still months away, regardless of the noise. The algorithms don’t care about headlines. They care about order flow, positioning data, and the simple fact that European economic data has been consistently outpacing expectations while U.S. data remains mixed at best. When you see 150+ pip moves in major pairs during thin London morning hours, that’s not retail panic – that’s institutional repositioning based on real fundamentals, not fantasy narratives pushed by financial media.

The Advantage of Systematic Alerts in Volatile Markets

Most traders are flying blind, checking charts manually and hoping they catch the big moves. Professional trading requires systematic monitoring across multiple timeframes and currency pairs simultaneously. When USD/JPY breaks below 101.50 support while AUD/USD rockets through 0.9200 resistance and EUR/GBP pushes toward monthly highs – all within the same two-hour window – manual chart watching becomes impossible. The key isn’t just having alerts; it’s having the right alerts calibrated to actual support/resistance levels that matter, not arbitrary round numbers that amateurs watch. Real breakouts happen at levels where institutional stops are clustered, and those levels are rarely the obvious ones plastered across retail trading forums. The 400 pips captured across six pairs wasn’t luck – it was the result of having systems in place to identify and act on genuine momentum shifts before the crowd even realizes what’s happening.

Understanding Cross-Currency Dynamics

The beauty of last night’s move wasn’t just the individual pair performance – it was how the crosses amplified the underlying dollar weakness. EUR/GBP pushing higher while both currencies gained against the dollar signals genuine European strength, not just dollar weakness. GBP/JPY’s explosion above 162.00 confirmed the risk-on sentiment that the headlines completely missed. When you see synchronized moves across correlated pairs like EUR/CHF breaking above 1.2250 while USD/CHF collapses through 0.9050, that’s institutional money flowing in size. Retail traders focus on single pairs in isolation, missing the bigger picture that cross-currency analysis provides. The Japanese yen’s broad weakness against commodity currencies like AUD and CAD wasn’t coincidental – it reflected real money flows from Japanese institutions diversifying ahead of further BOJ accommodation measures that are coming whether they admit it or not.

The Professional Trading Lifestyle Reality

This business demands sacrifices that most people aren’t prepared to make. While others sleep peacefully through eight-hour cycles, professional forex traders live in a world where the most significant moves often happen during off-hours, driven by news flow from different time zones or algorithmic execution during thin liquidity periods. The Sydney session fade, the London breakout, the New York reversal – these aren’t just academic concepts, they’re real patterns that generate real profits for those positioned correctly. But being positioned correctly means being available when opportunities present themselves, not when it’s convenient. The retail trading fantasy of “set and forget” strategies falls apart when you realize that genuine edge in this market comes from recognizing when market structure is shifting and having the flexibility to adapt positioning accordingly. Those 400 pips weren’t captured by traders checking charts once a day or following generic signals from subscription services. They were captured by recognizing that institutional order flow was overwhelming retail positioning at key technical levels, and having the infrastructure and lifestyle flexibility to act on that recognition immediately. The pullbacks will come, the re-entries will present themselves, but only for those prepared to engage with the market on its terms, not their own convenience.

U.S GDP Data – Totally Bogus

You can get in here and argue your case til the cows come home! – and I honestly hope that you do, as perhaps you’ve some insight / information that can better help me understand.

The U.S data released this morning is absolutely hilarious. Not just “kind of funny” but so absolutely outside the realm of believable that I’m literally “on the floor laughing”.

Let’s see what the markets make of both this “ridiculous GDP number” and the “magical drop” in unemployment.

I’ve only added to USD shorts as well watching Japan continue to slide with long JPY’s starting to take shape.

Short and sweet this morning, as I want to get “back to the circus” as soon as possible.

I’ve not had this much fun in a while!

USD will continue to be sold here.

 

The Theater of Economic Data and What It Really Means for Traders

GDP Numbers That Defy Economic Reality

When economic data comes out looking like it was manufactured in fantasyland, you’ve got to question everything. This GDP print isn’t just optimistic – it’s completely divorced from what anyone with functioning eyeballs can observe in the real economy. Corporate earnings are getting hammered, consumer spending is contracting, and yet somehow we’re supposed to believe the economy is firing on all cylinders? The disconnect between official statistics and ground-level reality has reached comical proportions.

The market’s initial reaction tells you everything you need to know about how seriously professional traders are taking these numbers. Sure, we might see some knee-jerk USD strength in the immediate aftermath, but that’s just algorithmic trading programs responding to headline numbers. The smart money knows better. When data this absurd hits the wires, it actually becomes a contrarian indicator. The more ridiculous the official narrative becomes, the harder reality will eventually bite back.

Unemployment Magic Tricks and Currency Implications

The unemployment drop is perhaps even more entertaining than the GDP nonsense. When you dig beneath the surface of these employment figures, you find the usual statistical gymnastics at work. Labor force participation rates conveniently ignored, seasonal adjustments that would make a magician jealous, and birth-death model assumptions that exist purely in theoretical spreadsheets. This isn’t economics – it’s creative accounting.

From a forex perspective, this creates massive opportunity for those willing to see through the smoke and mirrors. The USD’s rally on this data will be short-lived because markets eventually price in reality, not government fairy tales. Dollar strength built on fabricated fundamentals is the kind of strength that collapses spectacularly when sentiment shifts. Every artificial USD bounce becomes another shorting opportunity for traders with patience and proper risk management.

The EUR/USD and GBP/USD pairs are particularly attractive here. European economic data might not be stellar, but at least it’s honest about the challenges ahead. When you’re choosing between currencies backed by transparent weakness versus currencies propped up by statistical manipulation, the choice becomes clearer. Honest weakness often outperforms dishonest strength in currency markets.

Japan’s Slide and the Yen’s Hidden Strength

While everyone’s distracted by the American data circus, Japan’s currency dynamics are setting up beautifully for those paying attention. The yen’s recent weakness isn’t a sign of fundamental deterioration – it’s monetary policy divergence playing out exactly as expected. But policy divergence trades have expiration dates, and we’re approaching that inflection point.

Japanese economic indicators might look soft on the surface, but the underlying structural improvements are significant. Corporate governance reforms, productivity gains, and demographic shifts are creating real value that currency markets haven’t fully recognized yet. When the Bank of Japan eventually shifts policy stance – and they will – the yen snapback will be violent and profitable for those positioned correctly.

USD/JPY shorts and EUR/JPY shorts both make sense from different angles. The dollar-yen trade captures both USD weakness and JPY strength, while euro-yen focuses purely on yen appreciation against a currency that’s dealing with its own structural headwinds. The key is patience – these macro shifts don’t happen overnight, but when they accelerate, the moves are spectacular.

Trading the Data Distortion Game

The current environment rewards skepticism more than blind faith in official statistics. Markets built on manipulated data eventually face reality checks, and those reality checks create the biggest trading opportunities. The challenge isn’t identifying when data looks suspicious – that’s obvious to anyone with basic analytical skills. The challenge is positioning for the inevitable correction while managing the timing uncertainty.

Risk management becomes crucial when trading against manufactured narratives. Official data manipulation can persist longer than rational traders expect, so position sizing must account for extended periods of market irrationality. Dollar shorts need to be scaled into gradually, with profit-taking planned for when reality finally reasserts itself. This isn’t a sprint – it’s a marathon requiring discipline and proper capital allocation.

The entertainment value of watching economic statistics become increasingly detached from observable reality shouldn’t distract from the serious profit potential these distortions create. When governments resort to data manipulation to maintain currency strength, they’re essentially providing patient traders with subsidized entry points for inevitable reversals.

USD Bullish Or Bearish? – You Tell Me?

I think it’s fantastic that I’ve “managed to wrangle” a number of intelligent readers here at Forex Kong, and that these guys also offer their opinions / beliefs / suggestions and projections.

You can surf around the net for a “looooooong time” searching for some of the “nuggets” that turn up in the comments section here at the site, with a large portion of these insights coming from a “small handful” of some mighty intelligent people.

Yesterday’s post on “the proposed downward slide of the U.S Dollar” brought about a couple of fantastic “alternate views” which I appreciate in that – we enter the world of “speculation” when we start looking out over longer periods of time – where in theory “it’s impossible” for anyone to “actually know” how things will play out.

Throwing the ball around with others allows for a better perspective, an acceptance of alternate views and an “opening of the mind” should you be so closed as to only consider your own ideas, as correct.

The future path for the U.S Dollar (having such impact on all else) seems like as good a place to start as any so…..I welcome “any and all” to weigh in on this post ( as I will leave the comments section open for eternity ) as to provide a lasting resource for readers in the future.

USD bullish or bearish? You tell me?

Breaking Down the USD: Key Factors That Will Drive Dollar Direction

When we’re talking about USD direction, we can’t dance around the fundamentals that actually move this beast. The Federal Reserve’s monetary policy remains the primary engine driving dollar strength or weakness, but it’s the interplay between multiple economic forces that creates the trading opportunities we’re hunting for. Interest rate differentials, inflation expectations, and global risk sentiment don’t operate in isolation – they feed off each other in ways that can catch even seasoned traders off guard.

The dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency gives it a unique position that most retail traders completely underestimate. When global uncertainty hits, institutional money flows into USD-denominated assets regardless of domestic economic conditions. This “safe haven” demand can override technical setups and fundamental analysis faster than you can say “risk off.” But here’s the kicker – this same reserve status becomes a liability when global central banks start diversifying their holdings or when confidence in U.S. fiscal policy wavers.

Interest Rate Differentials: The Foundation of USD Strength

The spread between U.S. Treasury yields and foreign government bonds creates the gravitational pull for international capital flows. When the Fed maintains higher rates relative to the European Central Bank, Bank of Japan, or other major central banks, carry trades naturally favor the dollar. But it’s not just about absolute rates – it’s about the trajectory and market expectations for future policy moves.

Smart money starts positioning months before actual rate changes occur. If you’re waiting for the Fed to actually hike or cut before adjusting your USD bias, you’re already three steps behind institutional traders who’ve been accumulating positions based on economic data trends and Fed speak. The key is understanding how bond markets are pricing in future rate expectations and whether currency markets are keeping pace with those adjustments.

Global Trade Dynamics and Dollar Demand

Here’s something most forex education courses gloss over – the structural demand for dollars in global trade settlement. Commodities priced in USD, international invoicing requirements, and cross-border payment systems all create consistent dollar demand that has nothing to do with speculation or investment flows. When global trade volumes expand, this creates natural USD buying pressure that can support the currency even during periods of domestic economic weakness.

But this dynamic works in reverse too. Trade wars, supply chain disruptions, or shifts toward bilateral trade agreements that bypass dollar settlement can erode this structural support. China’s push for yuan-denominated oil contracts and the European Union’s efforts to strengthen the euro’s international role aren’t just political posturing – they represent real threats to long-term dollar dominance that forward-thinking traders need to monitor.

Technical Confluence: Where Charts Meet Fundamentals

The Dollar Index (DXY) doesn’t tell the complete story, but it provides crucial insights when combined with individual currency pair analysis. Major support and resistance levels on DXY often coincide with significant fundamental developments, creating high-probability trading setups across multiple USD pairs simultaneously. When EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and USD/JPY all approach critical technical levels while fundamental catalysts align, that’s when the real money gets made.

Pay attention to how the dollar behaves around key psychological levels during different market sessions. Asian session dollar strength often reflects different dynamics than New York session moves, and understanding these patterns helps separate genuine trend changes from temporary fluctuations driven by thin liquidity or algorithmic trading.

The Inflation Wild Card

Inflation expectations create some of the most volatile USD movements we see, but not always in the direction newcomers expect. Moderate inflation that supports Fed tightening typically strengthens the dollar, while excessive inflation that threatens economic stability can trigger dollar selling as markets price in potential policy mistakes or economic disruption.

The relationship between inflation data and USD direction changes depending on where we are in the economic cycle and what the Fed’s current policy stance looks like. Reading inflation reports without considering the broader policy context is like trying to drive while looking only in the rearview mirror – you’ll eventually crash into something you didn’t see coming.

The bottom line: USD direction isn’t determined by any single factor, but by how multiple economic forces interact with market positioning and global risk sentiment. Traders who understand these relationships and can adapt their analysis as conditions change will consistently outperform those who rely on oversimplified bullish or bearish calls.

USD Headed Lower – And Then Lower

This won’t come as a surprise…coming from me but – USD is headed much lower.

I think it’s about time – we’ve had enough of this “mucking around” at these levels, having more or less “danced around” the past few months. It’s time for the next leg down.

I don’t have time here this morning but if you want to pull up a general chart of the $dxy or in some platform (like stockcharts) $USD, I’d get your sights set on a serious of long red candles taking us down into that area around 75 – 72 in coming months.

If this “doesn’t” correspond to an “inverse move” in the price of gold and silver ( looking at is as such a dramatic decrease in USD value ) I will be forced to take on “the Habanero challenge” as I have offered several times in the past.

Up 3% overnight alone with the majority “still coming” from trades entered in GBP vs Commods in the weeks past. I suspect the Nikkei will “attempt” a solid double / retest top at 16,000 ( the high from May ) as JPY futures inversely “double bottom” shortly.

Enjoy:

The Dollar’s Date with Destiny: Why 75-72 Isn’t Just a Target—It’s Inevitable

Look, I’ve been tracking this dollar weakness for months now, and what we’re seeing isn’t some temporary blip or market noise. This is structural deterioration playing out exactly as anticipated. The $DXY has been painting a textbook descending triangle pattern, and anyone still clinging to dollar strength at these levels is about to get schooled by the market in a very expensive way.

The fundamentals are screaming dollar weakness from every angle. Real interest rates remain deeply negative, the Fed’s balance sheet expansion continues to debase the currency, and global central banks are quietly diversifying away from dollar reserves. When you combine this with persistent current account deficits and mounting fiscal pressures, the 75-72 target zone becomes not just probable—it becomes mathematically inevitable.

JPY Futures and the Nikkei Double-Top Setup

The Nikkei attempting that retest at 16,000 while JPY futures carve out a double bottom is textbook inverse correlation mechanics. This isn’t coincidence—it’s monetary physics. As the yen strengthens from these oversold levels, Japanese equities will face the inevitable headwinds of reduced export competitiveness. The Bank of Japan’s intervention rhetoric has become increasingly hollow, and the market knows it.

What makes this setup particularly compelling is the timing. We’re seeing classic end-of-cycle behavior where correlations that held for months suddenly snap. The JPY carry trade unwind that’s been simmering beneath the surface is about to explode into full view. When EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY start their inevitable descent from these elevated levels, the Nikkei’s 16,000 resistance will prove as solid as a brick wall.

Watch for the yen to break above 108 against the dollar as the first confirmation signal. From there, 105 becomes the next logical target, with panic buying likely to push it even higher as overleveraged carry positions get squeezed mercilessly.

GBP vs Commodities: The Trade That Keeps Delivering

Those GBP versus commodity currency positions I’ve been hammering for weeks are finally showing their true colors. GBP/AUD, GBP/NZD, and GBP/CAD have been absolute money machines, and we’re still in the early innings of this move. The Bank of England’s hawkish pivot caught the market completely off-guard, while commodity central banks remain trapped in dovish rhetoric despite inflationary pressures.

The beauty of these trades lies in their multi-dimensional nature. You’re not just betting on sterling strength—you’re positioning for a fundamental shift in global growth expectations. As the UK economy shows surprising resilience post-Brexit, commodity currencies are beginning to reflect the harsh reality that China’s growth story isn’t the perpetual motion machine everyone assumed it was.

GBP/CAD above 1.75 is where things get really interesting. The next major resistance sits at 1.78, but given the momentum we’re seeing, a run to 1.82 is entirely within reach. The oil-correlated weakness in CAD combined with sterling’s unexpected strength creates a perfect storm scenario that could last months, not weeks.

Gold and Silver: The Ultimate Dollar Hedge Awakening

Here’s where my Habanero challenge comes into play—and why I’m supremely confident I won’t be eating any spicy peppers anytime soon. Gold and silver are coiled springs ready to explode higher as dollar weakness accelerates. The precious metals have been consolidating for months, building the foundation for what could be the most spectacular breakout we’ve seen in years.

Gold’s technical setup is particularly compelling. We’ve got a massive cup and handle formation on the longer-term charts, with the handle completion targeting $2,100+ on the initial breakout. Silver, as always, will be the volatile cousin—expect it to outperform gold by significant margins once this move gets underway.

The institutional money is already positioning. Central bank buying has been relentless, ETF inflows are accelerating, and the smart money has been accumulating on every dip. When the dollar breaks below 90 on the $DXY—and it will—precious metals will rocket higher with the kind of velocity that catches everyone off guard.

This isn’t just about currency debasement anymore. It’s about portfolio insurance against a monetary system that’s showing increasing signs of stress. The 75-72 dollar target isn’t the end game—it’s just the beginning of a much larger currency reset that’s been building for over a decade.

Done Deal – The U.S Is Now China

The plans/suggestions emerging from the weekend’s meetings in China are staggering!!

Ok ok….a little dramatic and perhaps overstated but get this…..

As part of an evolving proposal Beijing has been developing quietly since 2009 to convert more than $1 trillion of U.S debt it owns into equity, China would own U.S. businesses, U.S. infrastructure and U.S. high-value land, all with a U.S. government guarantee against loss!

The Obama administration, under the plan, would grant a financial guarantee as an inducement for China to convert U.S. debt into Chinese direct equity investment. China would take ownership of successful U.S. corporations, potentially profitable infrastructure projects and high-value U.S. real estate.

These points have been discussed for several years now so it’s really not anything new ( although I’m sure it’s the first you’ve heard of it ) but the message is very clear.

China will not tolerate / watch their dollar denominated assets ( treasury bonds ) go up in smoke via currency crisis and crash of the U.S dollar – BUT WILL ACCEPT HAVING THIS DEBT TURNED INTO DIRECT INVESTMENT IN OWNERSHIP OF U.S BUSINESSES AND LAND.

GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED!

Brilliant…..absolutely brilliant.

 

The Currency Chess Game: Why This Changes Everything for USD

The Real Driver Behind USD Strength Illusion

Here’s what most retail traders completely miss about this debt-to-equity conversion strategy: it’s the ultimate currency manipulation disguised as economic cooperation. While everyone’s watching Fed policy and inflation data, China is systematically reducing their exposure to dollar devaluation WITHOUT dumping treasuries and crashing the bond market. Think about it – if China suddenly liquidated even 10% of their treasury holdings, USD/CNY would spike, bond yields would explode, and the dollar would face immediate crisis. But converting debt to equity? That’s surgical precision.

This explains why USD has maintained artificial strength despite fundamentals that should have crushed it years ago. China isn’t selling treasuries – they’re converting them into real assets with government backing. It’s like having your cake and eating it too, except the cake is a trillion dollars and someone else is guaranteeing you won’t get food poisoning. The implications for major pairs like EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and especially USD/JPY are massive once traders wake up to what’s really happening here.

Infrastructure as the New Gold Standard

Forget about gold backing currencies – China is positioning for infrastructure backing. When you own the ports, the power grids, the telecommunications networks, and the transportation systems of your debtor nation, you control economic flow regardless of what happens to paper currency. This isn’t just investment; it’s economic colonization with a smile and a handshake.

The forex implications are staggering. Traditional safe haven flows into USD become questionable when foreign entities own critical infrastructure. During the next major crisis, will capital still flee to USD if China controls significant portions of American economic infrastructure? The answer reshapes everything we know about risk-off trading. AUD/USD, NZD/USD, and commodity currencies suddenly look more attractive as China’s infrastructure play reduces US economic sovereignty.

Corporate Ownership Equals Currency Control

Here’s where it gets really interesting for currency traders. When China owns significant stakes in major US corporations – with government guarantees against loss – they essentially gain influence over US monetary policy without sitting on the Federal Reserve board. Corporate earnings, employment data, and economic indicators all become partially influenced by foreign ownership with zero downside risk.

This creates a feedback loop that most forex analysts haven’t even considered. Chinese-owned US corporations can influence domestic policy through lobbying and economic pressure, while their parent country maintains currency policy that benefits their investments. It’s like playing poker when your opponent can see your cards and has insurance against losing. USD/CNY becomes less about trade war rhetoric and more about sophisticated economic integration that benefits one side disproportionately.

The Endgame for Dollar Dominance

What we’re witnessing isn’t just debt restructuring – it’s the methodical dismantling of dollar hegemony through backdoor ownership. China doesn’t need to challenge the dollar directly in international markets when they can own the underlying assets that give the dollar its strength. Oil infrastructure, technology companies, agricultural land, manufacturing facilities – own enough of the real economy and currency becomes secondary.

The smart money is already positioning for this reality. Watch the cross rates carefully – EUR/CNY, GBP/CNY, JPY/CNY. As China’s ownership of US assets grows, these pairs will reflect the true economic relationships rather than the USD-distorted versions we trade today. The dollar might maintain its reserve status on paper, but when foreign entities own the underlying economy, that status becomes ceremonial.

This is why I’ve been hammering the point about looking beyond traditional technical analysis. Support and resistance levels mean nothing when the fundamental structure of global economics is shifting beneath our feet. China’s debt-to-equity strategy isn’t just brilliant financial engineering – it’s economic warfare disguised as cooperation, and the forex markets haven’t even begun to price in the implications. Position accordingly.

QE In Japan To Increase – U.S.A Next

Some tough new out of Japan here this evening for those fans of “money printing” and “easy money” policy. News flash – It’s not working.

With the current QE program in Japan currently 3X LARGER than that of the U.S Federal Reserve, the first 6 months “pump job” has most certainly stalled out ( ironically in May – as I suggested markets topped then ) then traded flat across the summer,  and now into the fall.

If you can believe it:

“The BOJ is likely to step up stimulus in the April-June quarter to support the economy after the levy rise, according to 20 of the economists surveyed.”

“The BOJ will need to fire another arrow aimed at devaluing the yen if the Abe administration is unwilling to risk a sharp economic slowdown,” Credit Suisse Group AG economists Hiromichi Shirakawa and Takashi Shiono wrote in a report.

Expect lower stock prices in Nikkei, then further easing come April.

Now do some of you have a better idea as to why I expect the Fed to also INCREASE QE moving forward?? The numbers are just too large for any of us to clearly understand. A couple more “zero’s” on the Fed’s balance sheet aren’t going to make a single bit of difference as financial markets continue “hanging by a life line/thread”.

They will print, print, print until they can’t print anymore – and continue kicking the can hoping for a miracle.

Japan’s program is 3X larger than the U.S and it’s already “a given” they will increase QE with continued attempt to prop up the economy. This, in the face of “global growth projections” now being lowered by the IMF and anyone else with half a brain in their head.

I’ll say it again – keep your eyes peeled friends…..a bumpy road ahead.

The Domino Effect: What Japan’s QE Addiction Means for Global Currency Markets

USD/JPY: The Manipulated Cross That Reveals Everything

Let’s cut straight to the chase here – USD/JPY has become nothing more than a policy tool masquerading as a free-floating exchange rate. When Japan’s QE program dwarfs the Fed’s by a factor of three, you’re not looking at market forces anymore. You’re witnessing currency manipulation on an industrial scale. The yen’s artificial weakness isn’t some byproduct of their stimulus – it’s the entire point. Kuroda and the BOJ have turned their currency into a weapon for export competitiveness, and they’re not even trying to hide it anymore.

Here’s what the textbooks won’t tell you: when a central bank commits to unlimited bond purchases while simultaneously targeting a weaker currency, traditional technical analysis goes out the window. Support and resistance levels? Forget about them. The BOJ will step in at any level they deem “too strong” for the yen. This creates a one-way trade that savvy forex players have been riding for months, and it’s far from over. The April-June timeline mentioned by those economists isn’t speculation – it’s a roadmap.

The Fed’s Inevitable Response: Why QE4 Is Already Baked In

Think the Federal Reserve is going to sit back and watch Japan devalue their way to export dominance? Think again. The Fed’s dual mandate doesn’t explicitly mention currency strength, but you can bet your last dollar they’re watching USD/JPY charts just as closely as employment data. When your major trading partner is running QE at triple your pace, your relative currency strength becomes an economic headwind that no amount of domestic stimulus can overcome.

The mathematics here are brutal and unavoidable. Japan’s monetary base expansion makes the Fed’s balance sheet look conservative by comparison. This isn’t sustainable in a world where export competitiveness drives economic growth. The Fed will be forced to match Japan’s aggression or watch American manufacturers get priced out of global markets. It’s not a matter of if – it’s a matter of when. And when they do expand QE, expect the dollar to weaken across the board, not just against the yen.

EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD – every major pair will feel the impact when the Fed capitulates to the reality of competitive devaluation. The central banks are locked in a race to the bottom, and none of them can afford to blink first.

Safe Haven Currencies: The Last Standing Dominoes

While Japan prints and the Fed prepares to follow suit, where does real money go? The traditional safe haven playbook is getting rewritten in real time. Swiss franc? The SNB already showed they’ll peg it to prevent appreciation. Norwegian krone? Oil dependency makes it too volatile for serious capital preservation. This leaves precious metals and a handful of currencies tied to economies that haven’t completely abandoned fiscal discipline.

The Canadian dollar presents an interesting case study here. With natural resources backing the currency and a central bank that’s been relatively restrained compared to their G7 peers, CAD crosses might offer the stability that traditional safe havens can no longer provide. But even this is temporary – commodity currencies are only as strong as global demand, and if the IMF’s growth downgrades prove accurate, even these refuges won’t hold.

Trading the New Reality: Position Sizing for Currency Wars

Here’s the hard truth that most forex education won’t teach you: traditional risk management models break down when central banks abandon pretense of market-driven exchange rates. When intervention becomes policy and policy becomes intervention, your position sizing needs to account for unlimited firepower on the other side of your trade.

The smart money isn’t trying to pick tops in USD/JPY anymore – they’re positioning for the Fed’s inevitable response and the chaos that follows. This means looking at currency baskets rather than individual pairs, hedging with hard assets, and maintaining flexibility to pivot when the next round of competitive devaluation begins.

The writing is on the wall, and it’s written in freshly printed yen, dollars, and euros. The central banks have chosen their path, and it leads straight through currency destruction toward an outcome none of them can control. Position accordingly, because this train has no brakes.