Emerging Markets – Signal A Trade

Forex Trade Signal – October 22, 2013

You can visit a thousand different financial websites, each evaluating the markets using a different sets of tools, each with their own “take” on where things are headed next. More often than not I find the majority of  these sites generally have a steadfast view either “bullish or bearish” – and tend to just stick with that. Each looking like “heroes” for a time then taking their turn getting wacked when the market turns against them.

Staying objective and working to “trade both sides” can be challenging no question.

I wanted to draw your attention to a chart and concept I had posted on some weeks ago “EEM” the Ishares ETF tracking emerging markets. Take note that we are now at “the exact same spot” as some weeks ago, as U.S equities have continued to reach new highs.

We had discussed how “lots of those freshly printed U.S Dollars” find their way into investments in emerging markets ( as the yield on anything U.S related is nil) and how when “risk aversion” comes into play – these dollars are repatriated back to the U.S and converted “back into USD.”

Why no breakout in “EEM” then? We’re at all time highs everywhere else?

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Forex_Kong

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Forex_Kong

Perhaps I’ll eat my words here, but to see this turn downward “again” in light of the fact that “everything U.S” is apparently headed for the moon certainly warrants interest.

Tomorrow’s “highly anticipated employment report” may prove to be the catalyst either way.

I remain focused on AUD and NZD as well ( and obviously ) USD here as “yet again” we find ourselves in a precarious position. It’s tough to argue with the continued “ramp” in risk assets but my analysis suggests we’ll see pullback before heading higher.

Reading Between the Lines: What Emerging Market Divergence Really Means

The Dollar Carry Trade Unwind Signal

When we see EEM stalling at these levels while the S&P continues its relentless march higher, we’re witnessing something far more significant than simple market rotation. This is the early warning system for a potential unwinding of one of the largest carry trades in modern history. Since 2008, investors have borrowed dollars at virtually zero cost and deployed that capital into higher-yielding emerging market assets. The fact that EEM can’t break higher despite fresh dollar printing tells us that smart money is already positioning for the reversal.

This divergence becomes even more critical when you consider the mechanics of how this trade unwinds. It’s not a gradual process – it’s violent and swift. When risk aversion kicks in, those dollars don’t just slowly trickle back home. They flood back, creating a massive bid for USD that crushes emerging market currencies and sends the dollar index screaming higher. We’ve seen this movie before in 1997, 2008, and we’re setting up for another showing.

Currency Pairs to Watch for Confirmation

My focus on AUD and NZD isn’t arbitrary – these currencies are the canaries in the coal mine for risk appetite. Both the Australian and New Zealand dollars have benefited enormously from China’s infrastructure boom and the global hunt for yield. AUD/USD and NZD/USD have been prime vehicles for carry trades, with investors borrowing cheap dollars to buy higher-yielding Aussie and Kiwi bonds.

But here’s what’s interesting: despite continued strength in U.S. equities, both currencies are showing signs of fatigue against the dollar. The Reserve Bank of Australia has been increasingly dovish, and New Zealand’s housing bubble concerns are mounting. When these currencies start breaking key support levels, it will confirm that the risk-off trade is gaining momentum. USD/JPY is another critical pair to monitor – any move below 97.50 would signal that even the most crowded risk trade is coming undone.

Employment Data as Market Catalyst

Tomorrow’s employment report isn’t just another data point – it’s potentially the trigger that forces the Federal Reserve’s hand on tapering. Here’s the critical insight most traders are missing: the market has been pricing in gradual, telegraphed policy normalization. But employment data strong enough to surprise could force the Fed into more aggressive action than markets expect.

A blowout jobs number doesn’t just mean dollar strength – it means emerging market capital flight accelerates as investors price in higher U.S. yields sooner than expected. Conversely, a weak number might provide temporary relief for risk assets, but it also confirms that the U.S. recovery remains fragile despite equity market euphoria. Either scenario creates trading opportunities, but you need to be positioned for the volatility that’s coming.

Positioning for the Reversal

The beauty of this setup is that we don’t need to predict the exact timing – we just need to recognize that the probabilities are shifting dramatically in favor of dollar strength and emerging market weakness. The risk-reward on being long USD against commodity currencies and emerging market currencies is becoming extremely attractive.

I’m particularly interested in USD/CAD as oil prices remain vulnerable to any global growth concerns, and the Canadian dollar has been a prime beneficiary of the commodities super-cycle. Similarly, keeping a close eye on USD/MXN as Mexico’s peso has been one of the strongest performers against the dollar this year – a position that looks increasingly vulnerable.

The key is patience and discipline. These macro trends don’t reverse overnight, but when they do move, the profits can be substantial. The divergence we’re seeing in EEM is just the beginning. Smart money is already repositioning for a world where the dollar strengthens not because of U.S. economic strength, but because of global capital repatriation and the unwinding of massive carry trades built up over five years of zero interest rate policy.

The employment report may provide the spark, but the kindling has been building for months. Stay focused, stay disciplined, and prepare for the volatility that’s coming.

Macro Intermarket Analysis – Stocks, Gold, Risk And All

My feelings are that…..we’ve reached a major low in the U.S Dollar.

With this in mind, some major “MAJOR” questions come to mind as to the near term direction in markets, but much more importantly – the longer term view.

U.S equities have been stretched “beyond stretched” on the seemingly never-ending “Fed pump” but as we’ve seen recently – are most certainly showing the “final signs” of exhaustion.

What happens in the next two weeks is 100% completely irrelevant as to the forward direction of markets.

My take is…….we’ll see “some kind” of relief rally in risk, when the U.S finally get’s its act together ( if you can even call it that ) – but that’s all it’s gonna be. A relief rally.

If “incredibly” equities stretch to make a “higher high” ( which I seriously doubt but don’t rule out ) it will be “blow off” in nature and extremely short lived. New retail investors will undoubtly believe that “all has been saved” and buy the top with reckless abandon – as Wall Street hands off the bag.

We know interest rates can “go no lower” so……anyone with half a brain in their head should recognize –  we are entering a time of contraction – not expansion!

Quietly, behind the scenes several other countries are already “hinting” at possible rate hikes ( Great Britian as well as New Zealand) as the writing is cleary on the wall. The big boys are preparing……as it’s now painfully clear that the U.S.A money printing efforts have done nothing to bolster a “true recovery”, and that the U.S government itself….is in no position to “govern” much.

What we are seeing unfold is a considerable shift in “investor sentiment” – and sentiment drives markets. People are now losing faith that “even the never ending printing / easing” can pull the U.S out of it’s current downward spiral.

I feel very stongly that at “some point” the Fed will print more – but the kicker will be…the markets just won’t buy it.

Charts and more in part 2.

The Dollar’s Reversal: Forex Market Implications and Strategic Positioning

Major Currency Pairs Set for Violent Reversals

With the Dollar Index (DXY) having potentially carved out a significant bottom, we’re looking at massive implications across the major currency pairs. EUR/USD has been riding high on dollar weakness, but don’t be fooled into thinking this party continues indefinitely. The European Central Bank is walking a tightrope with their own monetary policy, and as the dollar finds its footing, EUR/USD could see a swift reversal from current levels. I’m watching the 1.1200 area as critical resistance that likely holds on any final push higher.

GBP/USD presents an even more compelling case for dollar strength ahead. The Bank of England’s hawkish posturing is already priced in, and with the UK’s economic fundamentals remaining shaky at best, cable is ripe for a significant correction. The pound’s recent strength is purely a function of dollar weakness – remove that dynamic and sterling gets exposed quickly. USD/JPY is where things get really interesting. The Bank of Japan’s commitment to ultra-loose policy creates a perfect storm scenario as other central banks pivot toward tightening cycles.

Commodity Currencies Face Reality Check

AUD/USD and NZD/USD have been absolute beneficiaries of the dollar’s decline, but this trend is living on borrowed time. Australia’s economy remains heavily dependent on China’s appetite for raw materials, and with Beijing’s property sector showing serious cracks, the Aussie’s fundamental support is weakening by the day. The Reserve Bank of Australia can talk tough about rate hikes all they want, but their economy simply cannot handle aggressive tightening given household debt levels.

New Zealand’s situation is particularly precarious. Yes, the RBNZ is making hawkish noises, but their housing bubble makes the Fed’s dilemma look simple by comparison. USD/CAD offers perhaps the cleanest trade setup as oil prices remain elevated but are showing clear signs of topping out. The Bank of Canada’s rate hike cycle is already well underway, limiting their ability to surprise markets further, while a resurgent dollar creates the perfect recipe for loonie weakness ahead.

Central Bank Divergence Drives the Next Major Trend

The Federal Reserve has painted themselves into a corner, but don’t mistake this for permanent dollar weakness. When push comes to shove, the Fed will choose the dollar’s stability over equity market performance – they always do. The foreign exchange market is already positioning for this reality, even as equity bulls remain oblivious to the shifting dynamics. Other central banks recognize what’s coming and are positioning accordingly through their policy communications.

This divergence creates massive opportunities for forex traders who understand the bigger picture. The Swiss National Bank remains one of the most interesting wildcards in this environment. CHF has been relatively quiet, but as global uncertainty increases and the SNB’s massive equity holdings come under pressure, expect some serious volatility in USD/CHF. The franc’s safe-haven appeal combined with Switzerland’s relatively stable economic fundamentals makes it a prime beneficiary of global market stress.

Risk Management in a Shifting Paradigm

Position sizing becomes absolutely critical in this environment because the moves, when they come, will be swift and brutal. The forex market has become accustomed to central bank intervention smoothing out volatility, but we’re entering a period where central banks themselves become sources of volatility rather than stability. Stop losses need to be wider to account for increased market noise, but position sizes must be smaller to manage overall portfolio risk.

The correlation between equity markets and currency pairs is about to break down in spectacular fashion. For years, risk-on meant dollar weakness and risk-off meant dollar strength. This relationship is already showing signs of strain and will likely completely invert as markets realize the Fed’s credibility gap. Smart money is already repositioning for a world where traditional correlations no longer hold, and retail traders clinging to old playbooks will get destroyed in the process. The next six months will separate the professionals from the amateurs in spectacular fashion.

The Seinfeld Post – All About Nothing

Sitting here wracking my brain for a compelling headline ( an absolute “must” in financial blogging circles) suddenly it came to me! Seinfeld! The show about “nothing”.

Well……as the entire planet continues to sit watching “in awe” as the U.S Government stumbles around in the dark “yet again” , hoping to put a square peg in a round hole. What’s there to say?

Nothing.

At least with Seinfeld you got a good laugh out of it. This isn’t funny in the slightest.

Now hearing talk about “leaked information” seconds before the Fed’s announcement last week? Now that’s funny. Like the gang at Goldman and Ben’s “other buddies” had no clue they weren’t gonna taper!

I mean seriously….it came as an absolute “shock and surprise” to the big boys, and now  blamed on the media? Gimme a break.

Nothing to see here today that’s for sure.

Disgust. Revolt. Shame. Sickness. Loathing .Nausea.

Risk continues to sell off here “despite any kind of green arrows seen in U.S equities” today. The illusion continues to play out, as commodity currencies get wacked overnight, and the safe haven play for JPY makes considerable headway.

 

The Real Story Behind Market Manipulation and Currency Chaos

JPY Surge Exposes the Fed’s Credibility Crisis

The Japanese Yen’s rocket ship performance isn’t some random flight to safety – it’s a damning indictment of how completely the Fed has destroyed any semblance of credibility in global markets. When traders are piling into JPY faster than Goldman can front-run the next Fed decision, you know something is fundamentally broken. The USD/JPY pair has been getting absolutely demolished, and rightfully so. Every time Powell opens his mouth, it’s another nail in the dollar’s coffin. The big money knows exactly what’s coming before the retail crowd even gets wind of it, and they’re positioning accordingly in the one currency that still maintains some dignity – the Yen.

What we’re witnessing isn’t organic market movement; it’s institutional players hedging against the inevitable collapse of confidence in U.S. monetary policy. The JPY carry trade unwind is accelerating, and when that dam breaks completely, the flood of capital rushing back into Japan will make today’s moves look like a gentle breeze. Smart money has been quietly accumulating JPY positions for weeks, knowing full well that the Fed’s paper tiger routine was going to blow up spectacularly.

Commodity Currencies in Free Fall – No Accident

The absolute carnage in commodity currencies like AUD, NZD, and CAD isn’t happening in a vacuum. These currencies are getting systematically destroyed because the smart money understands what’s really happening – global demand destruction on a scale that would make 2008 look like a minor hiccup. The AUD/USD has been in pure capitulation mode, and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s desperate attempts to prop things up are about as effective as using a Band-Aid on a severed artery.

Here’s what the mainstream financial media won’t tell you: the commodity currency collapse is a leading indicator of what’s coming for risk assets globally. When nations whose entire economies are built on digging stuff out of the ground and shipping it to China see their currencies implode, that’s not a temporary blip – that’s a structural shift. The USD/CAD breaking through key resistance levels like butter should have every trader paying attention. Oil demand destruction, mining sector collapse, and agricultural commodity weakness are all feeding into this perfect storm.

The Equity Market Mirage

Those green arrows flashing across equity screens are nothing more than algorithmic window dressing designed to keep the sheep calm while the wolves position for the real move. The disconnect between what’s happening in currency markets and what’s being painted on equity screens is so glaring it’s almost insulting to anyone with half a brain. High-frequency trading algorithms are painting the tape while institutional money quietly exits through the back door, using forex markets as their preferred escape route.

The S&P 500’s artificial buoyancy in the face of currency market chaos is classic late-stage market manipulation. They’re propping up equities with one hand while betting against risk currencies with the other. It’s the same playbook they’ve been running for years, except now the cracks are too big to paper over with more monetary nonsense. When the correlation between equities and risk currencies finally snaps back into alignment, the adjustment is going to be violent and swift.

Currency Wars Enter the Final Phase

What we’re seeing isn’t random market volatility – it’s the opening salvo in the final phase of the global currency war that’s been brewing since 2008. Central banks have painted themselves into a corner with over a decade of unprecedented monetary experimentation, and now the chickens are coming home to roost. The EUR/USD is trapped in no man’s land, the GBP is still trying to figure out what Brexit actually means for its long-term viability, and emerging market currencies are getting systematically annihilated.

The endgame is becoming crystal clear: flight to quality in JPY, systematic destruction of commodity currencies, and the slow-motion implosion of confidence in fiat monetary systems globally. Traders who understand this paradigm shift and position accordingly will profit handsomely. Those who keep believing the fairy tales being spun by central bankers and financial media will get crushed.

Emerging Markets – Effect Of QE

In recent years, central banks of developed markets have used quantitative easing (QE) in an attempt to stimulate their economies, increase bank lending, and encourage spending.

To date, however, the greater availability of credit in developed markets has not been offset by demand – resulting in an abundance of excess liquidity. Much of this surplus capital has flowed into emerging markets, which has had adverse effects on their currency exchange rates, inflation levels, export competitiveness, and more.

As historical low rates gave investors cheap money and forced them to find higher rates overseas (and with the continued mess in Europe) – emerging markets were the natural place to go.

In general, financial firms that are now free to lend rush their investments into the emerging economies. This is because there is a higher rate of return on investments in emerging countries compared to highly developed countries like the United States. So, instead of a U.S. financial firm pouring money into U.S. investments, the firm piles  into India ( or Mexico ) since the investment will make more of an impact and give them a greater return.

The symbol “EEM” can be used as a broad look at emerging markets.

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Sept_2013

EEM_Emerging_Markets_Sept_2013

The effect of Fed tapering could prove disastrous for emerging markets as the flood of easy money dries up – and dollars are brought back home.

Putting this in perspective I hope gives you a better understanding of how much “rides” on the current global “injection of stimulus” as all these things are so interconnected.

I would have expected EEM to “blast for the moon” on the Feds’ shocker, but apparently not. This in itself is also suggestive of the fact that the “big boys” might just be pulling back a bit here – which would also equate to USD strength.

I like what I’m seeing as this trade appears to be taking shape, although I’m ready at a moments notice to dump and run. USD has swung low as equities have “swung high” so…..another head fake / whipsaw? Just as likely with the current conditions so……trade safe and be ready for anything.

Reading the Capital Flow Reversal: Strategic Positioning for the USD Comeback

Carry Trade Unwinds Signal Major Shifts Ahead

The mechanics behind emerging market currency destruction go deeper than simple capital flight. We’re witnessing the systematic unwinding of massive carry trades that have dominated forex markets for years. When institutions borrowed USD at near-zero rates to fund investments in Brazilian reals, Turkish lira, or South African rand, they created artificial demand for these currencies. The moment Fed policy shifts toward tightening, these positions become toxic fast. Smart money doesn’t wait for official announcements – they’re already repositioning. This explains why pairs like USD/TRY and USD/ZAR have been creeping higher even before any concrete tapering timeline emerged. The writing is on the wall, and professional traders are reading it loud and clear.

What makes this particularly dangerous for emerging markets is the speed at which these unwinds accelerate. Unlike gradual policy changes, carry trade reversals happen in violent waves. One fund’s forced liquidation triggers stop losses across the board, creating cascade effects that can destroy currencies in days, not months. We saw this playbook during the 2013 taper tantrum, and the setup today looks eerily similar. The difference now is that emerging market debt levels are substantially higher, making these economies even more vulnerable to sudden capital outflows.

Dollar Strength: Beyond the Fed’s Next Move

The USD’s path forward isn’t just about Federal Reserve policy – it’s about relative positioning in a multipolar world where every major economy is dealing with its own structural challenges. While everyone obsesses over Fed tapering timelines, the real story is how dollar strength feeds on itself through multiple channels. Higher US yields attract capital, but more importantly, they force deleveraging of dollar-denominated debt globally. This creates structural demand for USD that transcends typical monetary policy cycles.

European weakness provides another pillar supporting dollar strength. The ECB remains locked in ultra-accommodative mode while dealing with persistent inflation concerns and energy crisis fallout. EUR/USD has shown consistent weakness on any hawkish Fed rhetoric, and this dynamic isn’t changing anytime soon. Meanwhile, China’s property sector crisis and zero-COVID policies have removed the yuan as a viable alternative reserve currency for now. This leaves the dollar as the only game in town for institutional flows seeking safety and yield simultaneously.

Tactical Opportunities in Currency Volatility

The current environment offers specific trading setups for those willing to position against consensus thinking. While everyone expects emerging market currencies to collapse, the real money is in timing these moves and identifying which currencies will fall hardest and fastest. Countries with current account deficits and high external debt ratios – think Turkey, Argentina, and parts of Eastern Europe – face existential currency crises if dollar funding costs continue rising. These aren’t gradual declines; they’re potential currency collapses that create generational trading opportunities.

On the flip side, commodity currencies like AUD and CAD present more nuanced plays. Rising global inflation supports commodity prices, but these currencies still suffer from broader risk-off sentiment and relative yield disadvantages. The key is recognizing when commodity strength can overcome dollar dominance – typically during periods when inflation fears outweigh growth concerns. This creates short-term counter-trend opportunities within the broader dollar bull market.

Risk Management in Unstable Markets

Current market conditions demand aggressive risk management because traditional correlations are breaking down. The usual relationships between stocks, bonds, and currencies are becoming unreliable as central banks navigate unprecedented policy normalization while dealing with persistent inflation. Position sizing becomes critical when volatility can spike without warning and correlations can flip overnight. What worked during the QE era of predictable central bank support no longer applies.

The smart approach involves building positions gradually while maintaining flexibility to reverse course quickly. Markets are pricing in scenarios, not certainties, and those scenarios can change rapidly based on geopolitical events, economic data surprises, or central bank communications. Successful trading in this environment means staying paranoid about risk while remaining aggressive about opportunity. The traders who survive and thrive will be those who respect the market’s ability to surprise while positioning for the most probable outcomes: continued dollar strength and emerging market pressure.

Stock Market Crash! – Monday Get Out!

He he he……gotcha.

Let’s get something straight here. When I make the suggestion of “a top” or (as I have been since April) a “topping process” – I don’t mean the world is gonna come crashing down around you like in some bullshit movie out of Hollywood.

The financial “powers that be” already got their wake up call in 2008 with Lehman Bros etc and it’s pretty much a given that we won’t be seeing something like that happening again anytime soon.

There is no “doomsday prophecy” here, no “go buy guns n ammo” cuz they’re coming for your gold, no “end of the world scenario’s” no. This stuff rolls out in “real time” and navigating the peaks n valley’s these days just gets tougher and tougher, as the situation gets more desperate.

We know the “coordinated Central Bank effort” is flooding the planet with cash, and we know the tensions between East and West are intensifying. We know the world’s largest consumer economy is still struggling to get back on its feet ( if ever ) and we also know that the large majority of people involved with investment / finance are hell-bent on making it so.

Global appetite for risk comes “on” and it comes “off”. Simple as that. Identifying these times can be extremely profitable for those who choose to fight it out in the trenches.

If you actually think you can weather “buy and hold” when a mere 10% correction in U.S equities has the potential to wipe your account to zero then fine! Do it! Buy all you can tomorrow – and disregard concern for the “global appetite for risk”.

I call it like I see it, and I see a lot.

I’m not particularly “optimistic” about the next few years but that doesn’t mean I think the world is gonna end.

You choose to trade, or you choose to invest. DON’T CONFUSE THE TWO.

Sorry about the misleading headline although – seriously………it’s all I can do these days not to “go completely mad” writing about this day after day. It “may” happen again but at least just this once….give ol Kong a break. (I bet you read the damn thing as fast you could get it open).

Forgive me.

We’ve ok here………………………..at least for Monday.

written by F Kong

Reading the Risk-Off Tea Leaves Like a Pro

The Dollar’s Safe Haven Dance Gets Complicated

Here’s what most retail traders miss when we’re talking about this topping process – the U.S. Dollar isn’t playing by the old rules anymore. Sure, when global risk appetite takes a dive, everyone still runs to Uncle Sam’s currency like it’s 2008. But we’re dealing with a different animal now. The Fed’s been printing money like there’s no tomorrow, yet USD still catches a bid every time the VIX spikes above 25. This creates some seriously twisted opportunities in pairs like EUR/USD and GBP/USD. When European markets start puking and the Euro gets hammered, that’s your cue. But don’t get married to the position – these risk-off moves are getting shorter and more violent. The key is recognizing when central bank intervention is about to step in and kill your party.

Commodity Currencies: The Canaries in the Coal Mine

You want early warning signals for when risk appetite is shifting? Watch AUD/USD and NZD/USD like a hawk. These commodity-linked currencies telegraph global growth expectations better than any economist’s forecast. When China starts sneezing and commodity demand drops, the Aussie and Kiwi get absolutely demolished. But here’s the kicker – they also bounce back faster than anyone expects when central banks coordinate their next liquidity injection. I’ve seen AUD/USD drop 200 pips in a day on nothing but weak Chinese manufacturing data, then recover half of it within 48 hours on whispers of stimulus. This isn’t your grandfather’s forex market where trends lasted months. We’re talking about capitalizing on violent swings that happen in hours, not days.

The Yen Carry Trade Unwind Nobody Talks About

While everyone’s focused on whether the Bank of Japan will finally abandon their yield curve control, the real action is happening in the shadows. The carry trade funding massive risk positions globally isn’t just USD/JPY – it’s flowing through every major cross. When risk-off hits hard, we’re not just seeing Yen strength against the Dollar. Watch EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, and especially AUD/JPY for the real carnage. These crosses can move 300-400 pips in a single session when the unwinding gets violent. The beauty is that most retail traders are still playing the majors while the real money is being made on these carry unwinds. When you see USD/JPY struggling to break above 150 while AUD/JPY is getting annihilated, that’s your signal that something bigger is brewing beneath the surface.

Central Bank Coordination: The Ultimate Market Manipulator

Let’s cut through the bullshit here – we’re not trading free markets anymore. We’re trading central bank policy expectations and coordinated interventions. Every time the market starts to break down and test these artificial support levels, boom – here comes another coordinated response. The ECB starts talking about additional stimulus, the Fed hints at dovish pivots, and the Bank of England suddenly discovers new tools in their monetary policy toolkit. This creates these massive whipsaw moves that destroy retail accounts but create goldmines for traders who understand the game. The trick is identifying when the coordination is breaking down. Watch for divergence between what central bankers are saying and what bond markets are pricing in. When German 10-year yields start moving independent of Fed policy signals, or when Japanese bond markets ignore BoJ guidance, that’s when you know the coordinated effort is losing its grip. These moments of central bank policy divergence create the most profitable trading opportunities, but they require you to think three steps ahead of the headlines. Don’t trade the news – trade the policy response to the news, and the market’s reaction to that policy response. That’s where the real money gets made in this manipulated environment we’re all forced to navigate.

Forex Market Volume – Where Is It?

When trade volume is low it’s not uncommon to see unusual swings in price, as with fewer market participants making trades – moves are often highly exaggerated.

Forex Market Volume has been trailing off fairly steady since June, with yesterday and the day previous scraping the bottom – as the “lowest of the low”. Where’s the volume? Isn’t everyone back to work , sitting in their cozy little cubicles staring into the abyss of their computer monitors, toiling over every little “tick”?

As I understand it, U.S equities trade volume has now hit a 15 year low!

Perhaps the number of “risk events” still out in front us, has a large majority of traders “sitting on the fence” waiting for clarification, or perhaps tomorrow being Sept 11th, or perhaps it’s that tapering thing, or the debt ceiling or Syria. With so many factors it’s obviously a difficult thing to put your finger on one way or another.

Bottom line – It’s a ghost town out there with the bulk of trade volume made up of HFT ( high frequency trading ) computers just buying and selling to each other.

One needs to be cautious, and not let these “low volume pump jobs” throw you off your game. I would have assumed we’d be back up n running here as it’s already the 10th but as it stands. Chop, chop, churn, churn on “yet another” low volume day.

I’ve got 1680 on /ES SP 500 as a reasonable “top” for this last correction upward, and will be watching this in conjunction with the usual intramarket dynamics as things start picking up again.

Navigating the Low Volume Maze: Strategic Approaches for Serious Traders

The HFT Domination Problem

When human traders step aside, the algorithms take over – and that’s exactly what we’re seeing unfold. High frequency trading systems now account for roughly 70% of daily forex turnover during these anemic volume periods, creating a false market dynamic that can fool even seasoned professionals. These algorithmic systems don’t care about fundamentals, technical support levels, or your carefully planned EUR/USD breakout strategy. They’re programmed to scalp microsecond price discrepancies and create artificial liquidity where none exists organically.

The real danger here isn’t just the choppy price action – it’s the illusion of normal market behavior. You’ll see what appears to be a legitimate breakout in GBP/JPY, complete with volume confirmation, only to watch it reverse violently thirty minutes later when the algos decide to flip direction. This isn’t your grandfather’s forex market where institutional flows and economic fundamentals drove price discovery. We’re trading in a computer-generated sandbox, and the sooner you accept that reality, the better positioned you’ll be to exploit it.

Identifying Real Breakouts vs. Algorithmic Noise

The key to surviving these low-volume environments is distinguishing between genuine market moves and HFT-generated head fakes. Real breakouts during thin trading conditions require at least three confirmation signals: a decisive break of a significant technical level, sustained momentum beyond the initial thrust, and most importantly, follow-through volume that builds rather than immediately dissipates.

Watch the major pairs like EUR/USD and GBP/USD during the London-New York overlap. Even in low volume conditions, legitimate institutional flows will show up during these windows. If you see a move in cable that holds for more than two hours during peak session overlap, with gradually increasing participation, that’s your signal that real money is behind the move. Conversely, those violent 50-pip spikes in AUD/JPY at 3 AM EST that reverse just as quickly? Pure algorithmic manipulation designed to trigger stops and create artificial volatility.

The Macro Picture: Why Volume Stays Suppressed

This volume drought isn’t just a temporary summer lull – it reflects deeper structural issues plaguing global markets. Central bank policy uncertainty has created a environment where institutional players are genuinely afraid to take large positions. The Federal Reserve’s tapering timeline remains murky, the European Central Bank continues its accommodative stance, and the Bank of Japan shows no signs of backing down from its aggressive easing program.

When you have three major central banks operating with conflicting monetary policies, currency traders naturally gravitate toward smaller position sizes and shorter time horizons. Nobody wants to be caught holding a massive USD/JPY position overnight when Kuroda might announce additional stimulus measures, or when Bernanke drops hints about accelerating the taper timeline. This macro uncertainty creates the perfect storm for sustained low volume trading, which could persist well into the fourth quarter regardless of how many geopolitical issues get resolved.

Adapting Your Strategy for the New Reality

Successful trading in this environment demands tactical adjustments that go against conventional wisdom. First, reduce your position sizes by at least 30% compared to normal volume periods. The risk-reward calculations that worked during healthy market conditions become meaningless when a single algorithmic burst can gap through your stops without warning.

Second, focus on the commodity currencies during their respective session overlaps. AUD/USD and NZD/USD still show occasional genuine price discovery, particularly when Chinese economic data hits the wires or when commodity prices make significant moves. These pairs haven’t been completely overtaken by HFT systems the way the major European crosses have.

Finally, embrace the chop instead of fighting it. Range-bound trading strategies become incredibly profitable when you can identify the algorithmic support and resistance levels. The computers are predictable in their unpredictability – they’ll consistently defend certain price levels until they don’t. Learning to read these artificial patterns gives you a significant edge over retail traders who keep trying to apply traditional breakout strategies to a fundamentally broken market structure.

The bottom line: this low-volume environment isn’t going away anytime soon. Adapt your approach, reduce your risk, and remember that surviving these conditions is more important than trying to extract maximum profits from a compromised market.

Forex Market Moves – Thursday Is The Day

Once again we find that markets have more or less traded flat through the first few days of the week – looking to Thursday’s release of U.S data for the catalyst. I’ve suggest this several times in the past, and again am asking myself “what is the point of even entering a trade these days – if not on / around Thursday?”

This sets up a relatively dangerous dynamic, as that – in the past traders would usually have considered “holding trades” over the weekend a bit of a risk. Well these days, the way things are – you really don’t have a choice. The majority of intraday moves occur in the pre-market now ( before you even get a chance to see them) and now traders are faced with the quandary of entering trades late in the week, and holding through “risk laden” weekend volatility. Talk about a tough trading environment. I’d say the toughest I’ve seen – ever.

USD movement has also held traders hostage early this week, as we teeter on the edge of a breaking point. It’s touch and go here this time, as global concerns over Syria and a handful of other “risk events” have kept us hovering at relatively crucial levels.

I’m flat as a pancake more or less – with a couple “long JPY” trades a few pips in the weeds.

The Nikkei hit suggested resistance last night, and has formed a bit of a reversal but it’s too soon to call it. I imagine we’ll get our move (one way or the other) sometime this morning after U.S data hits the news.

 

written by F Kong

Navigating the New Reality: Strategic Positioning in a Data-Driven Market

The structural shift we’re witnessing isn’t just a temporary phenomenon – it’s the new market reality. Central bank policy divergence has created a scenario where traditional technical analysis takes a backseat to macro data releases, leaving traders scrambling to adapt their strategies. The Federal Reserve’s data-dependent approach has essentially turned every Thursday into a mini-FOMC meeting, with employment figures, inflation readings, and GDP revisions carrying the weight that used to be distributed across the entire trading week.

This concentration of volatility around specific release times has fundamentally altered risk management protocols. Where we once could rely on gradual price discovery throughout the week, we’re now dealing with binary outcomes that can gap currencies 100-200 pips in minutes. The EUR/USD, traditionally the most liquid and predictable major pair, now moves more like an emerging market currency during these data windows. It’s a trader’s nightmare and a market maker’s dream.

The Thursday Trap: Timing Entry Points

The cruel irony of our current environment is that the very day offering the most opportunity – Thursday – also presents the highest risk of catastrophic losses. Pre-positioning has become a game of Russian roulette, yet waiting for confirmation often means missing the entire move. The GBP/USD demonstrated this perfectly last week, gapping 80 pips higher on better-than-expected UK retail sales, only to reverse completely within the New York session when U.S. data painted a different picture.

Smart money has adapted by splitting positions into thirds: one-third entered on Wednesday close, one-third on Thursday pre-market, and the final third reserved for post-data confirmation. This approach mitigates the all-or-nothing mentality that’s been destroying retail accounts. The key is accepting that you’ll never catch the full move, but you might survive long enough to profit from the next one.

Dollar Dynamics: The Pivot Point Reality

The DXY sitting at these crucial technical levels isn’t coincidental – it’s the manifestation of global uncertainty meeting domestic monetary policy constraints. Syria represents just one piece of a larger geopolitical puzzle that includes ongoing tensions with China, energy market instability, and European banking sector stress. These factors create a dollar bid that’s part safe-haven demand, part interest rate differential, and part pure momentum.

What makes this particularly treacherous is that traditional dollar correlations have broken down. Gold isn’t behaving as the anti-dollar hedge it once was, and even the Swiss franc has lost some of its safe-haven appeal. This leaves traders without their usual hedging mechanisms, forcing position sizes smaller and risk management tighter. The USD/CHF has become almost untradeable in this environment, caught between competing safe-haven flows that cancel each other out.

Japanese Yen: The Contrarian Play

Those long JPY positions sitting in the red might be the smartest trades on the board right now. The Bank of Japan’s intervention threats have created an artificial ceiling in USD/JPY that’s becoming increasingly difficult to maintain. More importantly, the yen’s correlation with global risk appetite has inverted – it’s now strengthening on both risk-on and risk-off sentiment, depending on which narrative dominates.

The Nikkei’s rejection at resistance confirms what currency traders have been sensing: Japanese assets are pricing in policy normalization faster than the BOJ wants to admit. This creates a feedback loop where yen strength forces the central bank’s hand, potentially accelerating the timeline for intervention or policy shifts. It’s a contrarian bet, but the risk-reward setup is compelling for patient traders.

Weekend Risk: The New Normal

Holding positions over weekends used to be about avoiding Sunday night gaps from Middle Eastern developments or Australian economic releases. Now it’s about avoiding Twitter storms, geopolitical escalations, and emergency central bank meetings that can reshape entire currency trajectories. The traditional Friday afternoon position square has become a luxury most active traders can’t afford.

The solution isn’t avoiding weekend exposure – it’s sizing positions appropriately for 72-hour holding periods and accepting gap risk as part of the cost of doing business. This means smaller position sizes, wider stops, and a fundamental shift in how we calculate risk-adjusted returns. It’s not the forex market we learned to trade, but it’s the one paying the bills.

Russia Hosts G20 – Obama To Attend?

Obama is headed for Sweden on Tuesday, then off to the next G20 meeting in…………if you can believe it – RUSSIA!

The uphill battle in looking for global support in attacking Syria looks to be moving as suggested. Britain’s out, and as suggested The U.N Security Council shows no support for the move, as well I believe NATO ( please don’t quote me as I’ve read a million stories here this morning) has also squashed the idea.

This leaves Obama “literally” on his own, as actions against Syria under these conditions would now put “HIM” in breach and violation of International Law.

I’m trying my best to wrap my head around a scenario where this quack shoots “unauthorized missiles” at a country where “proof of wrong doing” is still just a “headline in U.S news” , and then plans to sit around a table with other world leaders at the G20 in Russia  – just a few days later.

If this Bashar al – Assad guy is a nut bar, then we’d better create another category of “nut bars” for Obama.

You’d have to be out of your mind to do something like this – absolutely out of your mind.

The Market Implications of Going Rogue

USD Weakness Already Pricing In Political Isolation

Look, the dollar has already started telegraphing what happens when you become the global pariah. We’re seeing classic risk-off flows accelerating, and it’s not just about Syria anymore – it’s about credibility. When your closest allies won’t back your play, when NATO gives you the cold shoulder, and when you’re literally flying solo into what could be the biggest foreign policy blunder since Vietnam, the market takes notice. The DXY has been bleeding out steadily, and this is just the beginning. Smart money doesn’t wait for missiles to fly – they position ahead of the inevitable diplomatic fallout. Every time Obama opens his mouth about “red lines” and “decisive action,” we see another leg down in USD strength. The market is pricing in a president who’s lost his international mojo, and that spells trouble for dollar dominance across all major pairs.

Safe Haven Flows Scrambling Traditional Logic

Here’s where it gets really interesting from a trading perspective. Normally, when America rattles sabers, you’d expect classic safe haven flows into USD and treasuries. But this time? The market is treating the U.S. as the risk factor, not the safe harbor. We’re seeing money flood into CHF, JPY, and even gold – anything that’s not tied to American foreign policy credibility. The Swiss franc has been absolutely ripping higher against the dollar, and the BOJ’s intervention threats are looking more hollow by the day as investors pile into yen. This is a complete inversion of normal geopolitical risk dynamics. When your own military actions are seen as the primary threat to global stability, you lose that reserve currency premium real fast. Watch EUR/USD closely here – despite Europe’s own structural problems, the euro is starting to look like the stable alternative to dollar chaos.

Oil Volatility Creating Cross-Currency Carnage

The energy complex is going absolutely haywire, and that’s sending shockwaves through commodity currencies that most retail traders aren’t even connecting. Crude is pricing in everything from Strait of Hormuz disruptions to full-scale Middle East conflagration, and every $5 move higher is hammering currencies tied to oil imports while boosting the petro-currencies. CAD, NOK, and even RUB are seeing flows as traders position for energy supply disruptions. But here’s the kicker – if Obama actually pulls the trigger without international backing, we could see oil spike to levels that crash the global recovery entirely. That would flip this whole trade on its head. The commodity currencies would get crushed on demand destruction fears, and we’d see a massive flight to quality that might actually benefit USD despite the political mess. This is the kind of multi-layered volatility that creates career-making opportunities for traders who can read the shifting narratives correctly.

G20 Showdown Could Trigger Coordinated Dollar Intervention

Now picture this scenario: Obama bombs Syria without authorization, then shows up in Russia expecting to play nice with the same world leaders he just gave the finger to on international law. You think Putin is going to roll out the red carpet? This G20 meeting could turn into a coordinated assault on American economic hegemony. We could see currency swap agreements that bypass the dollar, coordinated central bank interventions to punish USD strength, and trade pacts that explicitly exclude American participation. China and Russia have been looking for an excuse to challenge dollar dominance for years – Obama might just hand it to them on a silver platter. The technical setup on major USD pairs is already looking precarious, and if we get any hint of coordinated foreign intervention against the greenback, we could see waterfall declines that make the 2008 crisis look tame. This isn’t just about Syria anymore – it’s about whether America maintains its role as global financial hegemon or gets relegated to just another country that other nations actively work to contain. The forex implications of that shift would be absolutely massive, and it could all start with one rogue decision in the next few days.

Reader Poll – U.S Attack On Syria

For me it’s pretty simple.

An attack on Syria for “proposed use of chemical weapons” is 100% completely ridiculous, and absolutely out of the question. Let alone the real world implications and ramifications of such actions considering big players like China, Russia and Iran. Let alone that the U.S currently can’t afford to pay its own credit card bill ( so let’s add a “war” to the list).

Curiosity has gotten the better of me this morning ( not to mention sitting here doing “zip” while temporarily “down on the canvas” short USD)

What do you think?

[polldaddy poll=7356509]

The Real Market Impact: Beyond Political Theater

USD Weakness Accelerates on Geopolitical Uncertainty

While politicians grandstand about military intervention, the forex markets are telling the real story. The dollar’s continued decline isn’t just about Syria – it’s about America’s complete inability to project strength when it can’t even manage its own fiscal house. Every threat of military action that isn’t backed by actual economic power just exposes the USD’s fundamental weakness further. Smart money knows this, which is why we’re seeing sustained pressure across major pairs like EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and AUD/USD.

The irony is thick here. Threatening war while simultaneously hitting the debt ceiling is like a broke gambler doubling down at the casino. Markets don’t buy empty threats, especially when those threats come with a hefty price tag the U.S. simply cannot afford. This isn’t 2003 when America had some semblance of fiscal credibility. This is 2013, post-financial crisis, with a balance sheet that looks like a disaster waiting to happen.

Safe Haven Flows: Gold and Yen Tell the Truth

Forget the political noise and watch what real money is doing. Gold is catching a bid, and the Japanese yen is showing strength despite the Bank of Japan’s aggressive easing policies. When USD/JPY starts showing weakness amid geopolitical tension, that’s your signal that the dollar’s reserve currency status is being questioned in real time. The yen traditionally strengthens during global uncertainty, but this move is different – it’s strengthening specifically against USD weakness, not just general risk-off sentiment.

Gold’s move above key resistance levels isn’t just about Syria – it’s about the fundamental breakdown of confidence in U.S. economic management. When you’ve got the world’s reserve currency being printed like monopoly money while threats of expensive military campaigns fly around, precious metals become the obvious alternative. XAU/USD breaking through technical levels with this kind of momentum suggests we’re looking at a longer-term shift, not just a temporary safe haven play.

Emerging Market Currencies: The Unexpected Winners

Here’s where it gets interesting for forex traders. While everyone expects emerging market currencies to get hammered during geopolitical uncertainty, some are actually showing surprising resilience. The Chinese yuan, despite all the rhetoric about China’s involvement, is holding steady against the dollar. Why? Because China doesn’t need to threaten military action to project power – they simply hold U.S. Treasury bonds hostage.

Even more telling is how currencies like the Russian ruble aren’t collapsing despite direct involvement in the Syrian conflict. Markets are starting to price in the reality that America’s threats carry less weight when everyone knows the financial constraints. The traditional flight-to-USD-safety trade is breaking down because the USD itself represents instability rather than security.

Trading Strategy: Positioning for Reality

Being short USD during this circus isn’t just a geopolitical play – it’s a fundamental economic position. The dollar is caught between impossible choices: fund another military adventure and destroy what’s left of fiscal credibility, or back down and expose the hollowness of American threats. Either outcome is bearish for USD.

The key pairs to watch aren’t just the majors. Look at USD/CAD for commodity-linked dollar weakness, EUR/USD for European strength against American dysfunction, and even exotic pairs where dollar weakness shows up most dramatically. The carry trade dynamics are shifting as the dollar’s role as a funding currency becomes questionable.

This isn’t about being unpatriotic or anti-American. This is about reading markets without political bias. The forex market doesn’t care about flags or patriotic speeches – it cares about economic reality. And the economic reality is that America cannot afford military adventures while simultaneously managing a debt crisis. The sooner traders accept this truth, the sooner they can position properly for what’s coming: continued systematic USD weakness as global confidence erodes.

The poll results will be interesting, but the market has already voted with real money. And that vote is decisively against the greenback.

Trading The Week Ahead – Stocks And Gold

I’m pretty sure by now – everyone has fallen under the “Bernanke spell” and is more or less convinced that stocks will go up forever. As a currency trader this is really of no consequence to me “directly” although I’ve always maintained a measure of “risk” via the SP500  – in my week to week analysis. Looking at the index unto itself it would be hard to argue that “risk is off” as U.S equity prices “appear” to just keep going up and up and up.

Although If you removed the banks ( and their reported profits in the 2nd quarter – thanks to the “Bernank”) you’d be left with an entirely different picture. Heavy weights like Apple, IBM and CAT all down, down ,and down some more.

The SP500 is now about as far stretched above its mean price ( the 200 Moving Average ) as it’s ever been in the history of the index and has taken on the characteristics of  a large, thin membrane , floating translucent object. You’ve got it – a bubble.

SP500_Aug_2013_Forex_Kong

SP500_Aug_2013_Forex_Kong

Gold on the other hand is also stretched about as far from the mean as it’s been in a very long time, and has recently shown evidence of bottoming. As we’ve discussed earlier –  since the massive liquidity injections / stimulus provided by both The Fed as well The Bank of Japan there really hasn’t been a “need” to own gold, as investors have had little need to seek safety.

Gold_Aug_2013_Forex_Kong

Gold_Aug_2013_Forex_Kong

TIming trades on these longer time frames is difficult for the newcomer, as well not exactly what one considers “exciting trade action” but it’s important to get a lay of the land before stepping out on the field. With “all things” as stretched as they are – the elastic band will always ALWAYS snap back. It’s important to weigh the odds of “risk vs reward” – and even more important when things are pushed to these extremes.

Could the U.S stock market continue to climb forever? as Canada’s market still can’t break higher? As Japan has just put in a “lower high”? As EU Zone continues to struggle? As the U.S dollar continues to grind lower?

I suppose anything is possible, but generally speaking – non of this exists in vacuum. I assume that Gold and the precious metals in general “should” take a large part of the “safety trade” when we do finally see the turn.

Will it be next week?

The Currency Reality Behind Market Extremes

Dollar Weakness Creates the Perfect Storm

The grinding dollar weakness I mentioned isn’t happening in isolation – it’s the direct result of Bernanke’s monetary madness, and it’s creating massive distortions across currency pairs that smart traders need to recognize. When the Federal Reserve keeps rates at zero and continues quantitative easing, the dollar becomes the funding currency of choice for carry trades worldwide. This pushes USD lower against practically everything, but more importantly, it creates artificial strength in risk assets that simply cannot be sustained.

Look at EUR/USD – we’re seeing the euro gain ground despite the eurozone’s fundamental problems simply because traders are fleeing dollar weakness. The same story plays out in AUD/USD, where Australian dollar strength has little to do with Australia’s economic fundamentals and everything to do with Fed policy. These currency moves are telling us that the market is chasing yield and risk wherever it can find it, regardless of underlying value. That’s bubble behavior, plain and simple.

The JPY Factor Nobody’s Talking About

Here’s what gets really interesting – Japan’s aggressive monetary policy under Kuroda is creating a secondary wave of liquidity that’s amplifying these distortions. USD/JPY has been on a tear, but notice how this strength in the dollar against yen contradicts the broader dollar weakness theme? This isn’t sustainable. When the Bank of Japan’s policies inevitably hit diminishing returns, we’re going to see JPY strength that catches everyone off guard.

The yen carry trade has become so crowded that any hint of risk-off sentiment will create a massive unwinding. Remember, when leverage unwinds, it unwinds fast and violently. GBP/JPY, AUD/JPY, EUR/JPY – all these crosses are sitting ducks for a major reversal when the music stops. The Japanese market putting in that lower high I mentioned? That’s your early warning signal that domestic investors aren’t buying what their central bank is selling.

Gold’s Currency Implications

Gold’s recent bottoming action isn’t just about precious metals – it’s a currency story through and through. When gold starts moving higher, it’s typically signaling that faith in fiat currencies is cracking. The relationship between gold and the dollar has been inverse for good reason: gold is the anti-dollar trade par excellence. But here’s the kicker – gold’s bottoming while other currencies are still riding the anti-dollar wave suggests that smart money is already positioning for the next phase.

Watch the gold-to-euro ratio, the gold-to-yen ratio, and especially the gold-to-Australian dollar ratio. When gold starts outperforming these “strong” currencies, you’ll know that the broader currency debasement trade is coming to an end. Central banks can print money, but they can’t print confidence forever. Gold’s technical bottoming pattern coinciding with these extreme currency distortions isn’t coincidence – it’s preparation.

The Timing Game and Risk Management

The challenge with these macro themes is that central bank intervention can extend trends far beyond what seems rational. The Bank of England proved this, the ECB has proven this, and now the Fed and BOJ are proving it again. But intervention doesn’t eliminate cycles – it amplifies them. The longer these distortions persist, the more violent the eventual correction becomes.

For currency traders, this means positioning for the turn while respecting the existing trend. Short-term, the dollar weakness and risk-on themes might continue. Medium-term, we’re setting up for massive reversals across all major pairs. The key is managing position size and timeframes appropriately. Don’t fight the Fed with your entire account, but don’t ignore the setup either.

Risk management becomes critical when markets are this extended. Use smaller position sizes, wider stops, and focus on longer-term timeframes where these macro themes will play out. The elastic band will snap back – the only question is when and how violently. Position accordingly, because when this reversal comes, it’s going to reshape the entire currency landscape practically overnight.