Say goodbye to the Euro

Discussion in 'Forex' started by Gcapman, Jan 5, 2010.

  1. Huh?

    Do I misunderstand you? I thought you were clearly saying that you expect the USD to go UP, not down.

    Why then the talk of shorting it?
     
    #31     Feb 27, 2010
  2. clacy

    clacy

    He's saying if he's wrong, he will reverse his long position to a short stance. He's bullish on the dollar, but would get short again if he's wrong.
     
    #32     Feb 27, 2010
  3. Gcapman

    Gcapman

    Nice short squeeze in the Euro guaranteed.....

    Whether it has any significant staying power to retrace a major portion of it's recent losses will be determined within the next 2-3 weeks......
     
    #33     Feb 27, 2010
  4. Thanks for your explanation.

    How does one trade on the dollar/Euro in a regular brokerage (Schwab, for instance) account?

    Thank you.
     
    #34     Feb 28, 2010
  5. PipHog

    PipHog

    #35     Feb 28, 2010
  6. clacy

    clacy

    You can trade via etf's, assuming you don't want to trade forex or futures........

    Bullish on the dollar = UUP

    Bearish on the dollar = UDN

    There are also etf's for the Euro (just google to find ticker symbols) and I'm sure there are alternatives to UUP/UDN in the dollar as well.
     
    #36     Feb 28, 2010
  7. Gcapman

    Gcapman

    Major sell-off going into the ECB interest rate decision?

    These price levels are screaming pullback..........
     
    #37     Mar 3, 2010
  8. cvds16

    cvds16

    All my charts from 4H, daily, weekly are screaming up here for euro ...
     
    #38     Mar 4, 2010
  9. Gcapman

    Gcapman

    LMAO

    Get ready for the pain! :cool:
     
    #39     Mar 4, 2010
  10. Government spending above the level needed to create a stable, functioning civilised society is generally going to be value-destroying. If you accept that $1 in the private sector, on average, over the long-run earns a profit in excess of the cost of capital, and a marginal $1 in the government sector doesn't, then 20 years of excessive government spending is going to destroy a heck of a lot of value (at the annual rate of the productivity difference between private & public sector.) This should be especially the case now, as a lot of the stupid destructive excesses of the credit boom are not going to be repeated any time soon.

    In other words, spending 100%+ of your GDP on bridges to nowhere, paper-shufflers and pork barrel projects is going to end painfully. Do that for 2 decades and it's a lot of value destruction. Less wealth/capital = lower real prices for assets.

    Contrast that to the asset price gains from a private sector that gets liberated from heavy government control e.g. former communist countries going to mixed/capitalist economies, like China and the former Eastern Bloc. Although in the shorter-term some of that can be attributed to credit cycles, the long-run trend is still clearly up, growing by many multiples, and is commensurate with wealth creation in those economies.
     
    #40     Mar 4, 2010