Trade Alert! – USD "Almost" Swings High

As per usual – you can take it for what it’s worth but..( I’m sure by now you’ve followed long enough ) The U.S Dollar is literally ” a single point ” from its swing high – and subsequent reversal lower to follow.

The U.S Dollar without question “is now being sold along side of risk” as opposed to taking inflows as a safe haven. THIS HAS CONSIDERABLE LONGER TERM IMPLICATIONS.

Risk off related trades are well within reach here as several including GBP/AUD entered yesterday morning – have already started taking off.

This will further validate the “short Nazdaq” signal issued here on Friday, with the holiday and low volumes of Monday and Tuesday – the entry is still very much “right on the money”.

I suggest getting in front of your screens over the next couple hours, as I feel we are on the cusp of another “reasonable sized move” here as of this morning.

The Dollar Breakdown: Positioning for the Next Phase

Safe Haven Status Under Siege

The fundamental shift we’re witnessing isn’t just another technical reversal – it’s a complete restructuring of capital flows that’s been building for months. When the Dollar loses its safe haven bid during periods of market stress, you’re looking at a paradigm shift that typically lasts quarters, not weeks. The correlation breakdown between USD strength and risk-off sentiment signals that global investors are finally questioning the sustainability of American monetary policy and fiscal dominance. This is exactly what happened in 2002-2008 when the Dollar entered its last major secular bear market.

Central bank diversification away from Dollar reserves has been accelerating, and now we’re seeing it manifest in real-time price action. The Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen are reclaiming their traditional safe haven roles, while gold continues its relentless march higher – further confirmation that Dollar dominance is cracking. Smart money has been positioning for this eventuality, and retail traders still clinging to “Dollar strength” narratives are about to get steamrolled.

Cross Currency Opportunities Expanding

The GBP/AUD signal mentioned earlier is just the beginning of what’s shaping up to be a massive cross-currency trade environment. When the Dollar weakens broadly, it creates exceptional opportunities in pairs that bypass USD altogether. EUR/GBP is setting up for a significant move higher as European assets begin outperforming British counterparts, while AUD/JPY remains a prime vehicle for expressing risk appetite.

Pay particular attention to the commodity currencies here – CAD, AUD, and NZD are all benefiting from the Dollar’s decline while simultaneously riding the coattails of rising commodity prices. The CAD/CHF cross is particularly attractive given Switzerland’s persistent current account surplus and the Bank of Canada’s hawkish stance relative to other central banks. These cross-trades often provide cleaner technical setups with less noise than major Dollar pairs during periods of USD uncertainty.

Equity Market Implications Crystallizing

The Nasdaq short position isn’t just a standalone tech play – it’s directly correlated to this Dollar breakdown theme. Technology stocks have been the primary beneficiaries of Dollar strength and quantitative easing policies over the past decade. As that dynamic reverses, expect continued underperformance from growth stocks relative to value, international equities, and commodity-related sectors.

European indices are already showing relative strength against their American counterparts, and emerging market equities are beginning to attract flows again after years of underperformance. The rotation out of US tech and into international value plays is gathering momentum. Currency-hedged international ETFs have been outperforming their unhedged counterparts, which tells you everything about where institutional money expects the Dollar to head next.

Timing and Execution Strategy

The beauty of this setup lies in its multiple confirmation signals aligning simultaneously. Dollar Index technical breakdown, shifting correlations, cross-currency momentum, and equity sector rotation are all singing from the same hymn sheet. These convergent themes don’t appear often, but when they do, the resulting moves tend to be substantial and sustained.

From an execution standpoint, layer into positions rather than going all-in immediately. The Dollar Index still needs to conclusively break its support levels to confirm the reversal, but being early by a day or two is infinitely better than being late by a week. Focus on pairs where the Dollar is the quote currency – EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD – as these will provide the cleanest expression of Dollar weakness.

Keep stops relatively tight initially but be prepared to add to winning positions as the momentum builds. The next 48-72 hours are absolutely critical for confirming this thesis. If we see follow-through selling in the Dollar accompanied by continued strength in risk assets, this trade has the potential to run for weeks or even months. The key is recognizing that we’re potentially at an inflection point that extends far beyond typical short-term trading opportunities.

Markets Standing Still – Forex, Commodity Recap

You can’t “make” this stuff move any faster.

As much as I wish I had a “new signal” every couple of hours – unfortunately that’s not the way it works. Here we are “yet again” looking at for a catalyst, with nearly every single thing under the sun – trading “oh so perfectly flat”.

  • Gold is currently trading at the same price as it was back in July (1270.area) once again touching the low-end of the range – 5 months running.
  • Pull up any forex chart involving the Yen / JPY and see that for the most part “they too” are currently at the same price going back as far as May! – 6 months later……same price today.
  • Oil has taken a trip over the past 6 months alright…up from around 92.00 back in May to 110 – and now? 92.00 again.

If you’d have been abducted by aliens in May, and not been returned back to Earth until this morning – you’d not have missed a single thing. As a trader it’s been a grind,  as an investor it’s been “time travel” of the worst kind, with 6 months spent going absolutely no where.

For anyone who has managed to squeeze a “single penny” out of this thing over the past 6 months – you should certainly count yourself as having some skills. I congratulate you – as you must be doing something right.

If this is what it means to have “markets screaming to all time highs” then I’m not entirely sure we’re all looking at the same things. Looks like flat to down to me.

 

Reading Between the Lines of Market Stagnation

The Central Bank Standoff That’s Choking Volatility

What we’re witnessing isn’t just random market malaise – it’s the direct result of central banks painting themselves into a corner. The Fed’s been telegraphing moves so far in advance that by the time they actually pull the trigger, every hedge fund and their mother has already positioned for it. Meanwhile, the BOJ continues its relentless intervention campaign every time USD/JPY threatens to break above 150, creating these artificial ceiling and floor dynamics that kill any real directional momentum. The ECB is stuck between a rock and a hard place with European energy costs, and the BOE? They’re still trying to figure out which way is up after the Truss debacle sent GBP into a tailspin earlier this year.

This coordinated uncertainty creates what I call “policy paralysis” – where major pairs like EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and USD/JPY get locked into these frustratingly tight ranges because nobody wants to make the first big move. Smart money is sitting on the sidelines waiting for actual conviction from policy makers, not more of this wishy-washy “data dependent” rhetoric that tells us absolutely nothing.

Why Commodity Currencies Are Stuck in Quicksand

The commodity space tells the real story of global economic uncertainty. When oil makes a complete round trip over six months – from $92 to $110 and back to $92 – that’s not normal market function, that’s confusion incarnate. The Australian Dollar and Canadian Dollar have been tracking this commodity malaise perfectly, with AUD/USD and USD/CAD essentially trading in the same ranges they established back in spring. China’s economic data keeps flip-flopping between “recovery” and “slowdown” every other week, making it impossible for commodity currencies to establish any sustained trend.

Gold’s behavior at that 1270 level is particularly telling. Traditional safe-haven flows should be driving precious metals higher given all the geopolitical noise, but instead we’re seeing this dead-cat-bounce pattern that suggests even the “smart money” doesn’t know where to park capital right now. When gold can’t catch a sustainable bid despite banking sector stress, inflation concerns, and ongoing global tensions, you know something is fundamentally broken in risk assessment mechanisms.

The Carry Trade Collapse That Nobody’s Talking About

Here’s what the mainstream financial media isn’t telling you – traditional carry trades have been completely neutered by this range-bound environment. The classic strategy of borrowing in low-yielding currencies like JPY or CHF to buy higher-yielding assets has become a fool’s errand when nothing moves more than 200-300 pips in either direction before snapping back. Hedge funds that built their entire Q3 and Q4 strategies around momentum plays are getting chopped to pieces by this sideways grind.

The Swiss Franc has been particularly frustrating for carry traders. USD/CHF keeps threatening to break out of its range, gets everyone positioned for a sustained move higher, then promptly reverses and traps late buyers. Same story with NZD/USD – it looks like it wants to break down through support, sucks in the short sellers, then rips their faces off with a 150-pip squeeze in the opposite direction. This isn’t normal market behavior; it’s systematic destruction of speculative capital.

What This Means for Your Trading Psychology

If you’ve been beating yourself up thinking you’re missing obvious opportunities, stop right there. The best traders I know are sitting mostly flat right now, and there’s a damn good reason for it. This environment rewards patience over aggression, and precision over volume. The guys making money right now are scalping 20-30 pip moves and getting out immediately, not trying to ride trends that don’t exist.

Your charts aren’t lying to you – major support and resistance levels that held six months ago are the exact same levels holding today. That’s not coincidence; that’s algorithmic trading creating artificial price anchors that prevent natural price discovery. Until we get genuine catalyst – whether that’s a central bank finally showing conviction, a real geopolitical shock, or actual economic data that surprises rather than meets expectations – expect more of the same grinding, range-bound action that’s been slowly draining trading accounts for half a year.

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.

Signals For Correction – What Do I See?

With more than a handful of general indicators already suggesting “a top”  – it’s important for investors to understand what “exactly” is happening. And I don’t mean with the “price” of U.S stocks” – I mean with investor sentiment and physcology.

You don’t really want to hear this from me….(not here…not now – with your neighbor and half the guys you know down at the pub all “ranting n raving” about how much money they’re making in the market) as the temptation to “jump in with reckless abandon” is near impossible to resist.

They “say” they’ve been making money but the sad fact is…..mindless bulls are now dropping like flies, with nothing more to go on that “the Fed’s got your back”. Hot shot stock traders caught flat footed, completely oblivious to the movements in currency markets are “feeling some serious pain” as “the grind across the top” takes no prisoners.

It won’t be long now, as everything I track “other” than the misguided euphoria playing out in U.S equities already has me on the move.

If you “don’t know” what I’m looking at by now “from a currency perspective”  – I encourage you to give it a shot. It’s all here.

What do I see – that perhaps you don’t?

The Currency Signals Everyone’s Ignoring

Dollar Weakness Hidden in Plain Sight

While retail traders pile into meme stocks and chase momentum plays, the dollar has been quietly bleeding out against every major currency that matters. The DXY might not be screaming headlines, but look closer at EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and especially AUD/USD – they’re telling a completely different story than what you’re hearing on CNBC. Smart money isn’t buying dollars here. They’re dumping them. And when I see consistent dollar weakness across multiple timeframes while stocks grind higher, that’s not coincidence – that’s capital flight disguised as optimism. The Fed’s liquidity injections aren’t creating wealth, they’re devaluing the very currency those stock gains are denominated in. You think you’re getting richer? Check your purchasing power against commodities, against real assets, against anything that isn’t priced in increasingly worthless dollars.

Carry Trades Unwinding Faster Than Expected

Here’s what your stock-picking buddies don’t understand: the massive yen carry trades that fueled this entire rally are starting to reverse. USD/JPY has been the backbone of risk-on sentiment for months, but watch how it behaves during any meaningful equity selloff. The correlation breaks down fast, and when it does, leveraged positions get liquidated in a hurry. I’m seeing early signs of this unwinding in the crosses – EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, AUD/JPY – all showing weakness when they should be strengthening if the “everything up forever” narrative held water. The Bank of Japan doesn’t need to hike rates to kill this party. All they need to do is hint at policy normalization, and these overleveraged carry positions will unravel themselves. Currency markets are already pricing in this possibility while equity markets remain blissfully unaware.

Commodity Currencies Telling the Real Story

Pay attention to the Australian dollar, the Canadian dollar, the Norwegian krone – these aren’t just random currencies, they’re direct proxies for global growth expectations and commodity demand. While tech stocks party like it’s 1999, commodity currencies are showing serious divergence patterns that spell trouble for the reflation trade. AUD/USD should be screaming higher if global growth was as robust as equity markets suggest. Instead, it’s consolidating near resistance levels that tell me institutional money is skeptical about sustained economic expansion. The same pattern emerges in USD/CAD – oil prices holding steady but the loonie can’t catch a sustainable bid against the dollar. This disconnect between commodity prices, commodity currencies, and equity markets is textbook late-cycle behavior. Something’s got to give, and it won’t be the currency markets that blink first.

Central Bank Divergence Creates the Setup

The real money is being made by traders who understand central bank policy divergence, not by retail investors chasing the latest stock tip. The European Central Bank is still years away from meaningful tightening, the Bank of England is trapped by inflation but can’t hike aggressively without crushing their economy, and the Federal Reserve is caught between inflation pressures and an overleveraged financial system that can’t handle normalized rates. This creates massive opportunities in currency pairs that most people never even consider. EUR/GBP, for instance, reflects the policy divergence between two central banks facing completely different constraints. Meanwhile, emerging market currencies are offering value that won’t last once the dollar’s decline accelerates. The Turkish lira, the South African rand, even the Mexican peso – these aren’t just exotic trades, they’re strategic positions for when capital flows reverse direction and investors remember that currency movements drive everything else. The setup is obvious once you stop focusing on daily stock price movements and start thinking like a macro trader.

China Leaders Meet – Huge Reforms Expected

President Xi Jinping is expected to unveil a new economic framework for the country after the “The Third Plenum” (simply the third time that Xi Jinping will meet with his top brass in his role as the party chairman) wrapping up on the 12th.

Traditionally reforms are expected at the Third Plenum, with new leaders  having had time to consolidate power. A senior Chinese official has already promised “unprecedented” reforms.

Xi Jinping is under tremendous pressure from many parts of Chinese society to unveil radical changes so  – alot rides on the outcome.

We all know how significant a role China currently plays on the world stage with respect to it’s economic importance and influence on the U.S.A. Large reforms in the banking sector or increased suggestion of “tightening” can and “will” have significant impact on global markets so…..whatever you “think” you hear next week on CNN don’t be fooled.

China will move the markets, as continued coverage of “locker room bullying” takes a back seat.

Shoot me now,  as I’m not sure if I can hang on another day. CNN has the “battle of the burgers” and “locker room bullying” rounding out the top stories of the day.

Market Positioning Ahead of China’s Policy Pivot

The Yuan’s Strategic Devaluation Window

Smart money knows exactly what’s coming. If Xi delivers on structural banking reforms and fiscal stimulus measures, we’re looking at a controlled yuan weakening strategy to boost export competitiveness. The USDCNY pair has been consolidating in that 7.20-7.30 range for months, but don’t mistake sideways action for indecision. Beijing’s been accumulating ammunition for a coordinated currency move that will catch retail traders completely off guard. Watch for any mention of “market-oriented exchange rate mechanisms” in the official statements – that’s central bank speak for “we’re about to let this thing slide.” The PBoC has been quietly building forex reserves while maintaining the facade of stability. When they move, it won’t be subtle.

The carry trade implications are massive here. With the Fed potentially nearing peak rates and China preparing to stimulate, that interest rate differential is about to compress hard. Anyone long USDCNY expecting continued dollar strength against the yuan is playing with fire. The technical setup is screaming reversal, and the fundamental backdrop is about to provide the catalyst. This isn’t some gradual rebalancing – this is a policy-driven currency realignment that will reshape Asian FX dynamics for the next two years.

Commodity Currency Carnage Coming

Here’s what the talking heads won’t tell you about China’s reform agenda: it’s going to absolutely demolish the commodity currencies in the short term. Australia and New Zealand have been living off China’s infrastructure boom for over a decade, but Xi’s pivot toward domestic consumption and away from debt-fueled construction is going to hit the AUD and NZD like a freight train. The AUDUSD has been painting a perfect head and shoulders pattern, and Chinese policy shifts will be the trigger for the neckline break.

Iron ore, copper, and coal – Australia’s economic lifeline – are about to face demand destruction as China prioritizes financial sector reforms over raw material consumption. The Reserve Bank of Australia can talk tough about inflation all they want, but when China reduces commodity imports by 15-20% over the next eighteen months, Australia’s terms of trade will collapse faster than you can say “mining boom.” Short AUDUSD, short NZDUSD, and don’t look back. The commodity super-cycle is over, and China’s Third Plenum is writing the obituary.

European Exposure to Chinese Slowdown

Germany’s export-dependent economy is about to get a reality check that will send the EUR tumbling. BMW, Mercedes, and Volkswagen have built their growth strategies around Chinese middle-class consumption, but Xi’s reforms targeting wealth inequality and financial sector leverage are going to slam the brakes on luxury spending. The EURUSD has been grinding higher on ECB hawkishness, but that rally is built on quicksand when you factor in Europe’s China exposure.

The manufacturing data out of Germany has already been softening, and Chinese policy changes will accelerate that decline. European luxury goods, industrial machinery, and automotive exports to China represent over 20% of the eurozone’s trade surplus. When Beijing implements stricter lending standards and targets speculative wealth, European exporters will feel it immediately. The EURUSD rally above 1.10 is a gift for anyone with the conviction to fade it. This isn’t about Federal Reserve policy or European Central Bank positioning – this is about fundamental demand destruction from China’s economic pivot.

Safe Haven Flows Into Yen Territory

While everyone’s focused on China’s domestic reforms, the real currency play is the Japanese yen. Regional uncertainty always drives flows into Tokyo, and China’s “unprecedented” policy changes will create exactly the kind of volatility that sends investors scrambling for safety. The Bank of Japan’s yield curve control policy has kept the yen artificially weak, but geopolitical and economic uncertainty in China will overwhelm those technical factors.

The USDJPY has been riding high on rate differentials, but safe haven demand for yen-denominated assets will reverse that trade quickly. Japanese government bonds, despite their microscopic yields, become attractive when the alternative is exposure to Chinese policy uncertainty. The yen carry trade has been one of the most crowded positions in global markets, and Chinese reform announcements will trigger the unwinding. Short USDJPY, long EURJPY puts, and position for yen strength across the board. When uncertainty hits Asia, money flows to Tokyo.

Trade Alert! – Tech Signals Short

Trade Alert For Monday November 11, 2013

I want to thank Gary and the group at Dumb Money Tracker for the consistant flow of new users / followers here at Forex Kong! Hopefully some of you still maintain a small chance of “seeing the light” or possibly even making some money with some sound trade suggestions!

Thanks guys!

The Kongdicator has “finally” issued a formal signal on the Nazdaq that would have entry approx 4 hours from now so…..Monday will certainly do.

The entry signal is “short” people, so to be clear – I will consider “selling” not “buying”. This is fantastic news really, as this “melt up” has been a long and drawn out affair, and has kept alot of people “out of the trade”.

I will be looking for significant strength in JPY as well as we “should” likely see “risk” sell – along with tech stocks. When risk sells off money floods back into Yen as we’ve discussed here a million times over.

There are plenty of ways for stock traders to take advantage of this also….and perhaps over the weekend “we can all chip in” and post / comment to put some creative ideas on the table.

I generally don’t enter markets on Sunday night / Monday morning so…take my advice…let this play out through the day Monday and have a look at the close.

Getting ahead on this and doing some solid research over the weekend could be a very valuable exercise for many of you, as you already know…

“I’m very often early…and rarely ever late.”

Breaking Down the Short Signal: What Smart Money Sees Coming

The Kongdicator’s Technical Foundation

Let me spell this out clearly for those wondering what drives this short signal on the Nasdaq. The Kongdicator isn’t some mystical black box – it’s built on divergence patterns between price action and underlying market internals that most retail traders completely ignore. What we’re seeing right now is a classic setup where the index continues grinding higher while breadth deteriorates, volume patterns shift, and smart money positioning tells a completely different story than what appears on your basic candlestick charts.

The four-hour delay I mentioned isn’t arbitrary timing – it’s based on specific momentum oscillator crossovers that need to complete their cycle before the signal becomes actionable. This is why I consistently stress patience over premature entries. The melt-up phase we’ve endured has trapped countless traders who kept shorting too early, getting stopped out repeatedly while the market continued its relentless climb. The difference between profitable traders and account blowers often comes down to waiting for these precise technical confluences rather than gambling on gut feelings.

JPY Strength: The Risk-Off Playbook

When I talk about significant JPY strength accompanying this move, I’m referring to the fundamental flow dynamics that drive currency markets during risk transitions. The Japanese Yen serves as the ultimate safe haven currency, not because Japan’s economy is particularly strong, but because of the massive carry trade unwind that occurs when risk appetite disappears. Billions of dollars borrowed in low-yielding Yen get frantically converted back when traders rush for the exits on risk assets.

Watch these pairs specifically: USD/JPY should break below key support levels as dollar strength gives way to Yen buying. EUR/JPY typically shows even more dramatic moves during these episodes since European assets often get hit harder than U.S. markets during global risk-off periods. GBP/JPY can be absolutely vicious on the downside when this dynamic kicks in. These aren’t small, scalping opportunities – we’re talking about potentially significant trending moves that can run for weeks once they establish momentum.

Stock Market Correlations and Cross-Asset Opportunities

The beauty of understanding these cross-asset relationships is that you can profit from multiple angles simultaneously. While the primary signal targets Nasdaq weakness, smart traders will be positioning across related markets that tend to move in harmony. Technology stocks don’t exist in isolation – they’re interconnected with currency flows, bond yields, and commodity prices in ways that create cascading opportunities.

Consider the relationship between falling tech stocks and rising bond prices. When equity risk premiums increase, money flows into government bonds, pushing yields lower. This yield compression often strengthens currencies like the Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen while pressuring higher-yielding currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars. AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY crosses become excellent vehicles for capturing this broader risk-off theme with potentially explosive downside moves.

Gold often catches a bid during these transitions as well, though the relationship isn’t as reliable as the Yen dynamics. The key is recognizing that modern markets are deeply interconnected systems where a significant move in one asset class creates ripple effects across multiple markets.

Timing and Execution Strategy

My emphasis on waiting until Monday’s close before taking action isn’t conservative hand-holding – it’s strategic positioning based on decades of watching how these setups develop. Markets have a tendency to fake out early participants with false moves that reverse quickly, especially around significant technical levels. The traders who survive and thrive are those who let the market prove its intention before committing capital.

Sunday night and Monday morning sessions are notorious for thin liquidity and erratic price action that doesn’t represent genuine market sentiment. Professional money managers aren’t making major allocation decisions at 3 AM on a Sunday. Wait for legitimate market participation before drawing conclusions about directional bias.

When this move does materialize, expect it to have legs. These aren’t day-trading setups that fizzle out after a few hours. Risk-off moves in equity markets, particularly when accompanied by Yen strength, tend to develop significant momentum as overleveraged positions get unwound and risk parity strategies adjust their allocations. Position sizing becomes crucial – this could be the type of trend that funds trading accounts rather than just providing quick profits.

Is Twitter The Top? – I.P.O or P.O.S?

You know…….If I was currently the CEO of one of the largest social media sites on the planet, I’d likely want to take my company public too. I mean why not right? You and your original investor base, board of directors, underwriters/bankers , family and friends, all made “multi millionaires” – practically overnight.

It’s a fantastic achievement, and an incredible opportunity for those so fortunate as to take advantage. During the internet craze of 2000 I too was encouraged to take my company public – but just couldn’t get through the paperwork / logistics etc…..

So here we are on the cusp of yet another “awesome internet offering” at a time / place where I for one am just a “tiny bit skeptical”.

Twitter has yet to turn a profit.

Of course I understand the model / internet / eyeballs / projections etc……but to be frank, and as an investor – the company evaluation looking like 23 – 25 dollars per share. No profits.

Could these guys be “even smarter” than you think?

Could Twitter’s I.P.O mark the top?

Food for thought people………I’m not involved.

Open’s 25 rips to 40…….then tanks to 12.50?

Sounds about right to me.

 

 

The Twitter IPO Signal and What It Means for Currency Markets

Tech Bubbles Create Dollar Demand — Until They Don’t

Here’s what most retail traders miss about these tech IPO frenzies: they’re massive USD demand engines, right up until the moment they become USD liquidation events. Think about it. When Twitter goes public at $25 and rips to $40, where’s that money coming from? International funds are converting EUR, GBP, JPY — everything — into dollars to chase the next big thing. This creates artificial strength in the dollar that has absolutely nothing to do with economic fundamentals.

I’ve watched this movie before. During the dot-com boom, we saw the DXY push higher not because the U.S. economy was fundamentally stronger, but because global capital was flooding into Nasdaq darlings that couldn’t even spell “profit.” The EUR/USD got crushed, GBP/USD took a beating, and everyone thought America had discovered the secret sauce. Then reality hit. When these overvalued tech stocks started their inevitable descent, all that foreign capital that flowed in? It flows right back out, and fast.

The Smart Money Moves Before the Obvious Signal

Professional currency traders don’t wait for Twitter to tank from $40 to $12.50. They’re positioning weeks, sometimes months ahead of the obvious reversal. Right now, while everyone’s getting excited about social media IPOs and “eyeball valuations,” the smart money is quietly building positions against the dollar. Why? Because they understand that unsustainable capital flows create unsustainable currency moves.

Watch the EUR/USD closely over the next few months. If I’m right about Twitter marking a tech top, we should see euro strength as European money stops chasing Silicon Valley fantasies and starts coming home. Same with GBP/USD — British pension funds and institutions have been major players in these tech IPOs, and when the music stops, sterling benefits. The yen is particularly interesting here because Japanese investors have been some of the most aggressive buyers of U.S. tech stocks. A reversal in that flow could send USD/JPY tumbling faster than most traders expect.

Central Bank Policy Meets Market Reality

Here’s where it gets really interesting for forex traders. The Federal Reserve has been keeping rates low to support the recovery, but they’re also inadvertently fueling these asset bubbles. When Twitter and similar companies start showing their true colors — remember, no profits — it’s going to force the Fed’s hand in ways they haven’t anticipated. They can’t raise rates to cool tech speculation without crushing the broader economy, but they can’t keep enabling this nonsense forever either.

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank and Bank of England are dealing with their own issues, but they’re not sitting on a tech bubble that’s about to pop. This creates a fascinating dynamic where U.S. monetary policy becomes constrained by Silicon Valley’s excesses, while other central banks maintain more flexibility. For currency traders, this means watching for policy divergence that favors non-dollar currencies as the tech bubble deflates.

Trading the Inevitable Correction

So how do you position for this? First, understand that timing matters more than being right about direction. I could be correct about Twitter marking the top, but if that correction takes eighteen months to play out, your short dollar positions could bleed for a long time. The key is watching for confirmation signals: tech stocks rolling over, foreign capital flows reversing, and currency correlations breaking down.

When it happens, it’ll happen fast. The same momentum that drives USD strength during bubble phases works in reverse during the bust. EUR/USD could easily rip 500-800 pips in a matter of weeks once the trend shifts. GBP/USD might see even bigger moves given how leveraged British institutions are to U.S. tech exposure. And don’t sleep on commodity currencies like AUD/USD and CAD/USD — they tend to benefit when dollar strength driven by financial speculation reverses.

Bottom line: Twitter’s IPO isn’t just about one company going public. It’s potentially the signal that we’ve reached peak speculation in an environment where currency flows have been distorted by fantasy valuations. Smart traders are already preparing for what comes next.

TLT Getting Crushed – 10 Yr Yield Rising

The symbol “TLT” which tracks the value of the “U.S Treasury 10 year bond price” has  “firmly been rejected” at a very strong level of resistance around 107.50 and continues to fall – now at 105.06

When “bond prices fall” ( the price at which you purchase the paper ) in turn “bond yields rise” ( the rate of interest paid out on the bond ) – as simple mechanics of how the bond market works.

When we see bond “yields rise” and “bond prices” fall, we better understand why the Fed currently buys around 85% of the new debt issued by the Treasury, as “if they didn’t” – bond prices would crater, and the rate of interest owed would skyrocket crushing the U.S under the “already unsustainable” debt load / interest payments.

We saw Greek bond yields move upward in the neighborhood of 27% to up to 48% during the crisis,  signalling to the world that in order to “encourage investment in their country” bond holders would require this kind of payout.

This kind of rise in bond yields is a massive forward indicator that ” a country is in real trouble” as sellers dump like mad – and bond yields shoot for the moon.

Always ALWAYS keep your eyes on the bond market for signals of larger moves to come.

Bond Market Dynamics and Their Direct Impact on Currency Markets

Dollar Strength Mechanics When Treasury Yields Surge

When Treasury yields climb as bond prices crater, we witness one of the most reliable currency plays in the forex market. Rising yields make dollar-denominated assets more attractive to international investors, creating immediate demand for USD across all major pairs. EUR/USD typically gets hammered first as European yields remain suppressed by ECB policy, widening the yield differential that drives capital flows. GBP/USD follows suit unless UK yields rise in tandem, which rarely happens given the Bank of England’s reluctance to match Fed hawkishness. Smart money recognizes this pattern early and positions accordingly in DXY calls or direct USD strength plays across the majors.

The velocity of this move depends entirely on whether the yield spike is policy-driven or market-driven. Policy-driven moves from Fed tightening create sustained USD rallies that can run for months. Market-driven spikes from bond selloffs create violent but shorter-term USD surges that savvy traders capitalize on through precise entry and exit timing. Watch the 10-year Treasury yield like a hawk – every 25 basis point move up typically correlates with 100-150 pip moves in EUR/USD over a 5-10 day period.

Carry Trade Destruction in Rising Rate Environments

Rising bond yields obliterate carry trades faster than any other market force. When traders have been borrowing cheap dollars to buy higher-yielding currencies like AUD, NZD, or emerging market currencies, a sudden spike in U.S. yields destroys the fundamental thesis overnight. The cost of borrowing dollars increases while the relative yield advantage of target currencies shrinks, forcing massive unwinding that accelerates the dollar’s rise.

AUD/USD and NZD/USD become particularly vulnerable during these episodes because commodity currencies lose their dual appeal of carry and growth exposure. The Reserve Bank of Australia and Reserve Bank of New Zealand cannot match Fed tightening without crushing their domestic economies, creating a yield differential trap that can persist for quarters. Professional traders position for these unwinds by monitoring not just Treasury yields but also credit spreads and volatility indicators that signal when leveraged positions face margin calls.

Central Bank Intervention Signals and Currency Implications

The Fed’s massive Treasury purchases – that 85% figure mentioned earlier – represent the ultimate currency manipulation tool disguised as monetary policy. When the Fed steps back from bond buying, either through tapering or outright selling, the dollar strengthens not just from rising yields but from reduced money supply growth. This dual impact creates some of the most powerful and sustained currency moves in the market.

Other central banks face impossible choices when U.S. yields surge. The European Central Bank, Bank of Japan, and Bank of England cannot allow their currencies to crater indefinitely, but matching U.S. rate increases risks domestic economic collapse. This creates intervention opportunities where central banks attempt to support their currencies through direct market action rather than policy changes. EUR/USD at major technical levels often sees ECB verbal intervention, while USD/JPY faces actual yen buying when the pair approaches levels that threaten Japan’s export competitiveness.

Crisis Scenarios and Safe Haven Reversals

The Greek bond crisis comparison reveals what happens when bond market confidence completely evaporates. During genuine crisis periods, normal relationships break down entirely. Rising yields no longer strengthen currencies – they signal imminent default and currency collapse. This distinction separates profitable traders from those who get crushed applying normal logic during abnormal times.

For the U.S. dollar, this scenario remains theoretical but not impossible. If Treasury yields spiked toward Greek crisis levels, the dollar would likely collapse despite higher yields because international confidence in U.S. solvency would shatter. The key warning signs include foreign central banks selling Treasury holdings, primary dealer failures at bond auctions, and credit default swap spreads on U.S. sovereign debt approaching levels seen in peripheral European countries during 2011-2012. Until those extreme conditions emerge, rising Treasury yields remain fundamentally bullish for USD across all timeframes and trading strategies.

The Fed – Do As I Say Not As I Do

What “is” wrong with me?

Have I become so crotchy and skeptical as to actually consider next weeks FOMC meeting as yet another “wonderful opportunity” for the Fed to “yet again” pull a fast one the unsuspecting and “all too trusting” American investor?

They said they where going to taper “last time” ( as the Fed “should” be trusted to give guidance on its plans moving forward ) with every analyst and talking muppet on T.V talking it up as if it was an absolute “given”. Then “blasted” anyone and everyone who may have been “preparing” by “not tapering”. The Fed lost what little credibility it still had, and many lost “mucho”.

Am I insane? Have I lost my mind?

Would I be completely out to lunch considering that there is just as likely a chance “this time” that the Fed ( in the current scenario with the massive blow over the debt ceiling, government shut down and still terrible employment data) has everyone assuming “it’s impossible to taper” ( which in theory it is) and “once again” finds opportunity to screw the lot of you?

“Fed announces small 10 billion tapering of bond purchasing program” and the markets go crazy….(Only to then INCREASE QE a month later and catch everyone again)

Or even better……”Fed announces INCREASED QE” Straight Up! Boom! Bet you didn’t see that one coming!

You can see where I’m going with this. It’s long past ridiculous, and “non of the above” would surprise me “any more” than the other.

The Fed’s involvement ( or lack of ) in today’s markets is unpresedented, and weilds such influence that getting it wrong could prove disasterous.

I KNOW what the Fed is going to do , but week to week, minute to minute –  NO ONE KNOWS what these weasels are going to “say” they are going to “do”.

My gut has me thinking that “no matter what the outcome” to the FOMC meeting here wrapping up Tuesday, the market is gonna “pop” on news….and sell like hotcakes. I’d have every confidence that we are “lower” looking a week out. I’ll get these trades lined up as they come.

The Fed’s Market Manipulation Game Plan – What’s Really Coming Next

USD Pairs Are Setting Up for Maximum Carnage

Look, here’s the brutal reality nobody wants to discuss. The Dollar Index has been dancing around like a drunk sailor for months, and it’s all Fed-induced volatility designed to shake out retail traders. EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and especially USD/JPY are sitting at technical levels that scream “trap” louder than a car alarm at 3 AM. The Fed knows exactly where the stops are clustered, and they’ve got the perfect setup to hunt both sides of the market within a 48-hour window.

Think about it – USD/JPY pushing toward those 150 levels has everyone and their grandmother positioned for a breakout. Meanwhile, EUR/USD is hanging around parity like it’s waiting for divine intervention. These aren’t coincidental price levels; they’re psychological warfare zones. The Fed announces something “unexpected,” and boom – every carry trade unwinds faster than you can say “risk-off.” Then, just as quickly, they’ll reverse course with some dovish commentary and catch everyone leaning the wrong way again.

The Real Play: Central Bank Coordination Behind Closed Doors

Here’s what’s really cooking behind the scenes. The ECB is drowning in their own policy mistakes, the Bank of Japan is practically begging for dollar weakness to save their economy, and the Fed is sitting there with the ultimate trump card. They can crash global markets with a hawkish surprise or inflate every bubble simultaneously with more dovish nonsense. Either way, they win, and retail traders get obliterated.

The coordination between central banks isn’t some conspiracy theory – it’s documented policy. When the Fed moves, the ripple effects hit every major currency pair within minutes. AUD/USD and NZD/USD will get destroyed on any hawkish surprise because commodity currencies can’t handle higher U.S. rates. But flip the script with more QE talk, and those same pairs rocket higher on risk-on sentiment. It’s textbook market manipulation disguised as monetary policy.

Technical Levels Don’t Lie – The Setup Is Obvious

The charts are screaming the same message across every timeframe. Major support and resistance levels are perfectly aligned for maximum destruction in both directions. Dollar strength breaks EUR/USD below parity convincingly, triggers stop-losses on GBP/USD around 1.20, and sends USD/CHF flying past 1.00. But dollar weakness? That’s the nuclear option that sends everything into reverse faster than most traders can react.

What’s particularly nasty is how the weekly and monthly charts are positioned. We’re sitting at inflection points that haven’t been tested in years. The Fed knows these technical levels better than the analysts drawing the lines. They’ve got algorithms calculating exactly how much volatility each announcement will generate across every major pair. This isn’t monetary policy anymore – it’s systematic market engineering.

The Only Winning Move Is Playing Their Game

So how do you actually profit from this rigged casino? Simple – you stop trying to predict what they’ll say and start positioning for maximum volatility in both directions. Options strategies, small position sizes, and quick profit-taking become your best friends. The moment you think you’ve figured out their pattern, they’ll switch it up and leave you holding the bag.

The smart money isn’t betting on tapering or no tapering anymore. They’re betting on chaos, volatility spikes, and the inevitable cleanup trade that follows 24-48 hours later. Currency pairs will gap, stop-losses will get triggered at the worst possible prices, and by Friday, half the retail traders who were “sure” about the Fed’s next move will be wondering what hit them.

Bottom line? The Fed has turned forex trading into pure psychological warfare. They’ll announce whatever creates maximum market disruption, watch the carnage unfold, then adjust their messaging to prevent complete systemic breakdown. It’s cynical, it’s manipulative, and it’s exactly what they’ve been doing for years. The only difference now is that they’re not even pretending to hide it anymore. Trade accordingly.

Caterpillar Earnings – What It Means To Me

I don’t care what anyone else says ( obviously no? ) as we’ve all got our own opinions.

You can listen to the constant stream of bull%&it coming across CNBC justifying company after company’s earnings misses – then the ridiculous “short-term reasons” they suggest.

Fact of the matter is, the majority of companies that indeed “have met earnings expectations” have  largely done so via cost-cutting and margin expansion. Don’t be fooled – this is not revenue growth. Your company might “appear” to be doing better as well –  with 60 fewer employees etc…

As “the “global supplier to construction and mining industries, Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT ) sees the very foundation of economic expansion,  and is often considered an economic bellwether, particularly in emerging economies like China. More machines sold means more holes dug, more roads built etc.

If in the absolutely “simplest sense” one can’t see / comprehend CAT’s massive earnings miss as indication of global growth “slowing” and forward guidance as “further slowing” – I’d be extremely concerned that you may need to have your head examined.

CAT is no “one hit wonder” or some “.com fly by night”.

As CAT goes………global growth goes.

The Forex Implications Nobody Wants to Discuss

USD Strength Isn’t What the Media Portrays

When CAT’s earnings crater and forward guidance gets slashed, you’re not just looking at one company’s problems – you’re witnessing the unwinding of the global commodity supercycle that’s been propping up currencies from AUD to CAD to NOK. The mainstream financial press wants to paint USD strength as some kind of economic triumph, but let’s get real here. Dollar strength in this environment isn’t about American economic dominance – it’s about capital fleeing to safety as global growth expectations implode. When construction and mining equipment sales tank globally, you can kiss goodbye to any bullish thesis on commodity currencies. The AUD/USD has been getting hammered not because Australia’s fundamentals suddenly changed overnight, but because CAT’s numbers are telling us that China’s infrastructure spending – Australia’s economic lifeline – is rolling over hard.

The Emerging Market Currency Massacre Has Only Just Begun

Here’s what the talking heads on financial television won’t tell you about CAT’s earnings disaster: it’s a leading indicator for emerging market currency chaos. When Caterpillar’s forward guidance gets butchered, you’re looking at reduced demand for copper, iron ore, and every other industrial metal that emerging economies depend on for their export revenues. The Brazilian Real, South African Rand, and Chilean Peso aren’t weak because of temporary political noise – they’re weak because the fundamental demand for their primary exports is evaporating. CAT doesn’t just sell machines; they’re essentially selling the infrastructure that processes and extracts the commodities these countries live and die by. When CAT’s management team starts talking about “challenging market conditions” and “reduced customer spending,” what they’re really saying is that the entire commodity-based economic food chain is breaking down. Smart money isn’t waiting around for confirmation – they’re already positioning short on every emerging market currency that depends on industrial metals.

Central Bank Policy Divergence Gets Amplified

The Federal Reserve’s policy stance looks completely different when you view it through the lens of CAT’s earnings collapse. While Jerome Powell and his crew might be talking about potential rate cuts, the reality is that USD strength driven by global economic weakness gives the Fed way more flexibility than other central banks. When you’ve got the Reserve Bank of Australia dealing with a collapsing mining sector, or the Bank of Canada watching their resource-dependent economy crater, their policy options become extremely limited. They can’t raise rates to defend their currencies without destroying their already-weak domestic economies, and they can’t cut rates without triggering even more capital flight. Meanwhile, the Fed sits pretty with the world’s reserve currency, benefiting from safe-haven flows regardless of what they do with interest rates. This isn’t some temporary divergence trade – it’s a structural shift that’s going to persist until global industrial demand stabilizes, which CAT’s guidance suggests won’t happen anytime soon.

The Real Trade War Impact Finally Surfaces

Forget everything you’ve heard about trade war impacts being “contained” or “manageable.” CAT’s earnings are showing us the real-world consequences of disrupted global supply chains and reduced infrastructure investment. When construction equipment demand falls off a cliff in China, it’s not just about tariffs on soybeans – it’s about a fundamental reorganization of global trade patterns that’s destroying demand for heavy machinery. The Chinese yuan’s weakness isn’t some temporary policy adjustment; it’s a reflection of an economy that’s shifting away from infrastructure-heavy growth toward consumption, which requires far less of what CAT produces. EUR/USD traders who think European industrial exports can somehow decouple from this global slowdown are deluding themselves. German machine tool exports, French industrial equipment, Italian manufacturing – they’re all tied to the same global capex cycle that CAT’s numbers are telling us is in free fall. When companies stop buying bulldozers and excavators, they’re also not buying the sophisticated manufacturing equipment that European exporters depend on. The currency implications are massive and long-lasting, not some short-term technical correction that’ll reverse next quarter.