Newbie macroeconomic question to anyone knowledgeable

Discussion in 'Economics' started by Pluralsight, Apr 17, 2017.

  1. Zzzz1

    Zzzz1

    Lol, you did not answer the question at all. I think the term yen appeared once in your entire diatribe of unrelated FOMC policy setting.

     
    #11     Apr 17, 2017
  2. Zzzz1

    Zzzz1

    BoJ's easing program has nothing whatsoever to do with the FOMC nor with the US dollar, not even with trade balances nor trade surplus.

    It has to do with the fact that the Japanese Central Bank was basically politicized and instrumentalized to pump tons of yen into the domestic economy without the government having to lean too far out the window (pretty much a direct financing of the government) . It also has to do with the former fight against domestic deflation. The Japanese QE program has purely domestic reasons and is not related to the US, trade, or the FOMC at all.

    Of course it has implications for international markets but the origin and the reasoning behind the entire program are home based.

    An entirely different question is the reason for the correlation between dollar-yen and US yields. But let's first tackle one issue before mixing it all up

     
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2017
    #12     Apr 17, 2017
    victorycountry likes this.
  3. I agree with you ZZZ. The main objectives of QE is to stimulate the domestic economy although the end results could be improved trade balance.

    ZZZ, do you do spread trading (buy low and sell high using one currency pair)? or pairs trading (using multiple currency pairs) ? or both? I guess you must be doing both. But is that the main strategy of hedge fund? Because we all know pairs trading is very famous hedge fund strategy
     
    #13     Apr 17, 2017
  4. Zzzz1

    Zzzz1

    I don't trade pairs or spreads. Despite describing my trading approach as being quantitative in nature I do not believe in correlations between assets almost at all (with very few exceptions). If you study finance history almost all spectacular blowups are related to people having misjudged correlations. Correlations in financial markets are dynamic, sometimes change even randomly.

     
    #14     Apr 18, 2017
    JackRab likes this.
  5. Yes, In the old days. If a trader blows up then, it's their fault, they simply did not have skills but they are too egotistical to admit that.
    I don't look at correlation at all. Prices are not fixed, they float. It's a basic fact but 99% traders repeat the same mistake over and over and believe one day they can hit the jackpot.

    So what's the name/style of the strategy you use if you don't mind? I am just curious. Because when I watched documentaries on algo traders, they said they use pairs trading strategy.
     
    #15     Apr 18, 2017
  6. Zzzz1

    Zzzz1

    Well, its a discussion for an other thread. First of all, terms have to be clearly defined. Hft, algorithmic trading, systematized trading, quant trading,...all mean different things to different people. In a nutshell I trade low latency strategies that are based on order book dynamics and I trade volatility base approaches for most discretionary trades. But that does not tell you anything, hence my earlier point, unless one really talks about very detailed, well defined, strategy related issues there is hardly a point to discuss it because it does not add value.

     
    #16     Apr 18, 2017
  7. I have seen what you have mentioned on one of algo trader documentary.
    I also look at probabilities but I use option's implied volatility to estimate whether the current price could appreciate (depreciate) above (below) a strike price. So I kinda understand what you're saying. I also look at Moving average. People thinking is limited so they can't think out of the box unless some expert points it out. Moving average shouldn't be limited to below 300 in 1 minute interval. I also look at order flow as it has predictive power upto 1 hour. I use 6.2 billion transaction data to explore the price efficiency of financial markets and I find this concept of law of one price - or price efficiency is very important and some methodologies developed by well known academia gives me a good insight into how market system "should" work.

    Thanks ZZZ, you have given me enough info that I wanted to know :)
     
    #17     Apr 18, 2017
  8. Zzzz1

    Zzzz1

    glad it helped, though I do not think I have given anything "away". Everyone has to find their edge by themselves and the edge is highly a function of one's utility which in turn is a function of risk aversion, account balance, and a number other variables. Good luck.

     
    #18     Apr 18, 2017
    victorycountry likes this.
  9. It does show the USDJPY numbers, but look at a USDJPY chart and a 5 year note chart, they are almost opposite. Now if you put the 6j future (which is JPYUSD) you'll see the same movements.
     
    #19     Apr 18, 2017
  10. This was my understanding as well, that QE would generally be a domestic thing. So this is why I asked why this correlation appears. The article's author doesn't believe it is coincidental, but I can't understand the point he wants to get across either.
     
    #20     Apr 18, 2017