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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Guest Post: Krugman’s Adventures In Fairyland

Submitted by William L Anderson of The Ludwig von Mises Institute,


After studying and teaching Keynesian economics for 30 years, I conclude that the “sophisticated” Keynes­ians really do believe in magic and fairy dust. Lots of fairy dust. It may seem odd that this Aus­trian economist refers to fairies, but I got the term from Paul Krugman.


According to Krugman, too many people place false hopes in what he calls the “Confidence Fairy,” a creature created as a retort to economist Robert Higgs’s concept of “regime uncertainty.” Higgs coined that expression in a 1997 paper on the Great Depression in which he claimed that uncertainty caused by the policies of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal was a major factor in the Great Depression being so very, very long.


Nonsense, writes Krugman. Investors are not waiting for governments to “get their financial houses in order” and protect private property. Instead, he claims, investors are waiting for governments to spend in order to create enough “aggregate demand” in the economy to bring about new investments and, one hopes, full employment.


According to Higgs, the “humor columnist for the New York Times, Paul Krugman, has recently taken to defending his vulgar Keynesianism against its critics by accusing them of making arguments that rely on the existence of a ‘confidence fairy.’ By this mockery,” Higgs says, “Krugman seeks to dismiss the critics as unscientific blockheads, in contrast to his own supreme status as a Nobel Prize-winning economic scientist.”


It seems, however, that Krugman and the Keynesians have manufactured some fairies of their own: the Debt Fairy and the Inflation Fairy. These two creatures may not carry bags of fairy dust, but they might as well, given that their “tools” of using government debt and printing money to “revitalize” the economy have the same scientific credibility.


Let us first examine the Debt Fairy. According to the Keynesians, the U.S. economy (as well as the economies of Europe and Japan) languishes in a “liquidity trap.” This is a condition in which interest rates are near-zero and people hoard money instead of spending it. Lowering interest rates obviously won’t spur more business borrowing, so it is up to the government to take advantage of the low rates and borrow (and borrow).


If governments issue enough debt, argue Debt Fairy True Believers, the econ­omy will gain “traction” as government spending, through the power of pixie dust, fuels a recovery. Governments spend, businesses magically gain confidence, and then they spend and invest. (At this point, we are apparently supposed to just overlook the fact that the Keynesians are saying that we need the Debt Fairy to resurrect the Keynesian version of the Confidence Fairy.)


The Inflation Fairy also plays an important role, according to Keynesians, for if bona fide inflation can take hold in the econ­omy and people watch their money lose value, then they will spend more of their savings. In turn, this destruction of savings will, through the power of Keynesian sorcery, revive the econ­omy. Thus inflation undermines what Keynesians call the “Para­dox of Thrift,” a theory that says if a lot of people withhold some present consumption in order to save for future con­sumption, the economy quickly will implode and ultimately will slip into a Liquidity Trap in which no one will spend anything.


These fairies can work their magic if (and only if) one condition exists: factors of production are homogeneous, which means that government spending will enable all lines of production simultaneously. The actual record of the boom-and-bust cycle, however, tells a different story. It seems that the Debt and Inflation Fairies enable booms along certain lines of production (such as housing during the past decade), but as everyone knows, the fairy dust lost its magical powers and the booms collapsed into recessions.


Austrians such as Mises and Rothbard have well under­stood what Keynesians do not: the structures of produc­tion within an economy are heterogeneous and can be distorted by government intervention through inflation and massive borrowing. Far from being creatures that can “save” an economy, the Debt Fairy and the Inflation Fairy are the architects of economic disaster.


Despite Keynesian protestations that the U.S. and European governments are engaged in “austerity,” the twin fairies are active on both continents. The fairy dust they are sprinkling on the economy, however, is more akin to sprinkling ricin on humans. In the end, the good fairies turn into witches.






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Guest Post: Economic Prosperity Ahead Or A Train A Comin'

Originally posted at Monty Pelerin's World blog,


Whether the light at the end of the economic tunnel represents sunshine or an on-coming train depends on whom you ask. I am of the opinion that it is a train a comin’. Economic matters cannot get better until we hit bottom and rebuild from the ashes. That need not be except government policies drive us there.


Government, especially the current one, has incented people to not work by providing overly long and generous benefits. Society has an obligation to take care of its less fortunate, but it does not have an obligation to encourage people to join that group and then make it comfortable enough that they have little incentive or ability to leave. The dole should not be a safety net, not a career choice!


One political party in particular has interest in seeing dependency grow. It forms a substantial part of their support and power. The creation of more dependents is the creation of more voters and more electoral success. No society can grow or recover when government deliberately undermines the need to work. That path leads to poverty and destruction.


Printing money is no substitute for effort. It does not create things or wealth. The myth of Keynesian economics is not the answer to a society that declines in labor force participation and has fewer productive people supporting more dependents. Incentives at the individual level must be changed in order to make work more desirable and attractive than welfare.


A society whose workforce is in decline is one that can pretend to live at former levels only by consuming the wealth and capital created by previous generations. This behavior is equivalent to the man who used to make $250,000 per year in a job and now is unemployed. To save face, he continues to live as if he is still earning at his previous rate. He achieves this short-run living style only by consuming the capital that he built up from years of hard work. At some point, he runs out of capital and must live as a pauper (or the modern equivalent of one).


Our economy and government both behave like this formerly rich man. Both are consuming the seed corn in order to maintain the appearance of well-being. Politicians will continue this behavior until the music stops. Hopefully when that happens there is enough left of society and freedom to allow a rejuvenation.


Many believe that government and its partner the Federal Reserve are wise and strong enough to avoid this crash. If printing money and spending money were a solution, there would be no poverty anywhere in the world. Even the poorest country has a government and can afford a printing press.


Thus far there has been no collapse. However, that is equivalent to the man who jumps off the Empire State building and is heard to say as he flashes by the fortieth floor: “So far, so good.” His fate was sealed when he jumped. Similarly, so is our economy’s. Economics has its own gravity. It is as powerful and immutable as that of physics.


“So far so good” is not acceptable for an economy. There has been no economic recovery since one was falsely declared in June of 2009. The distortions and mis-allocations imposed on the economy for the last several decades are cumulative and have finally reached that stage where they can no longer be covered up. The myth of a recovery is getting harder to maintain.


A complete cleansing of the mal-investments, distorted incentives and regulatory burdens must occur before a true recovery can take place.


Can the economy flutter around is some kind of air pocket at the fortieth floor for a year or even several before resuming its destiny with terra firma? Perhaps, but it cannot fly without wings and these have been removed by regulatory interference and economic interventions over the course of decades. They can re-grow, but not before a complete and total cleansing.


A major crash is coming. The dot.com bubble and the housing bubble were not crashes, at least as I imagine a crash. They were the beginnings of corrections that were aborted by government economic intervention. The country survived these two major bubbles, but only at the cost of making the next one bigger. Government did not save us from these two events. They created them and by deferring their correction assured the next one would be bigger and more painful.


The video below shows a train moving down a track. It struck me as a reasonable metaphor for our economy. The train represents market forces, slow but powerful. The train does not appear threatening. But, like markets, it represents a massive force. That the video is in slow motion exaggerates the surprise and the force.



Government may believe it is in control of the economy, but it is not. It may think it is influencing and controlling outcomes. To some degree it is and has. However the forces that have built up over decades of these interventions cannot, at some point, be controlled. The mismatch between Ben Bernanke, Barack Obama, the Federal establishment and all their dollars and regulations is about to be run over by the train that represents decades of suppressed market forces.


No government is a match for hundreds of millions of citizens who are represented by markets. Suppressing markets is suppressing the will of citizens. At some point markets dig in their heals and say enough. Then government is helpless.






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Weekly Review and Outlook: Yen Tumbled Before Month Close on BoJ Speculations, Dollar to Face ...

Yen's broad based weakness continued last week on the back of extended rally in risk markets as well as expectation of further stimulus from BoJ. US equities continued to make new record high with DOW hitting as high as 16174.51 while S&P 500 hit 1813.55. German DAX also hit new



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Friday, November 29, 2013

EUR/USD Weekly Outlook

EUR/USD's recovery from 1.3294 extended higher last week. While it started to lose upside momentum again, further rise could be seen as long as 1.3520 minor support holds, towards 100% projection of 1.3294 to 1.3578 from 1.3399 at 1.3683. But we'd expect strong resistance above there, and below 1.3832, to



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USD/JPY Weekly Outlook

USD/JPY's rally extended last week and reached as high as 102.60. But it's staying to lose momentum after breaking 101.53 resistance, as seen in mild bearish divergence condition in 4 hours MACD. While further rally cannot be ruled out initially this week, we'd stay cautious on reversal inside 101.53/103.73 resistance



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GBP/USD Weekly Outlook

GBP/USD rose strongly to as high as 1.6383 last week and breached 1.6380 resistance. But there was no follow through buying yet. Near term outlook stays bullish as long as 1.6257 support holds. Decisive break of 1.6380 will likely have long term trend line resistance taken out too. In that



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USD/CHF Weekly Outlook

USD/CHF's choppy corrective fall from 0.9249 extended lower last week and touched mentioned 61.8% retracement of 0.8889 to 0.9249 at 0.9027. Deeper decline would still be seen this week with 0.9092 minor resistance intact. But we'd remain cautious on bottoming below 0.9027 and above 0.8889 to bring rebound. Above 0.9092



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AUD/USD Weekly Outlook

AUD/USD's decline from 0.9757 continued last week and even though it's losing downside momentum, there is no confirmation of bottom yet. Deeper decline would still be seen initially this week towards 100% projection of 0.9757 to 0.9267 from 0.9447 at 0.8957. On the upside, though, break of 0.9203 will indicate



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USD/CAD Weekly Outlook

USD/CAD's rally continued last week and reached as high as 1.0628. The break of 1.0608 resistance confirmed resumption of whole rally from 0.9633. Initial bias remains on the upside this week and further rise should be seen to 1.0656 resistance and above. But we'd be cautious on reversal above there.



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GBP/JPY Weekly Outlook

GBP/JPY rose to as high as 167.89 last week as recent rally extended and is getting close to long term fibonacci level at 168.11. There is no clear sign of topping yet. With 165.28 support intact, further rally would be seen to 100% projection of 147.61 to 159.98 from 156.63



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EUR/JPY Weekly Outlook

EUR/JPY's rally accelerated further to as high as 139.70 last week and breached 139.21 resistance before losing some intraday momentum. Further rally is still expected with 137.98 support holds. But we'd be very cautious on strong resistance from long term fibonacci level at 140.98 to bring reversal. Break of 137.98



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EUR/GBP Weekly Outlook

EUR/GBP's choppy decline from 0.8463 extended lower last week to 0.8297. Break of 0.8299 argues that fall from 0.8768, as well as the correction from 0.8806 has resumed. Initial bias is mildly on the downside this week for 50% retracement of 0.7755 to 0.8806 at 0.8281. But we'd expect strong



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EUR/CHF Weekly Outlook

Much volatility was seen in EUR/CHF again last week but after all, it's still bounded in range of 1.2284/2375 and outlook is unchanged. Initial bias remains neutral this week first and more sideway trading could be seen. On the downside, break of 1.2284 will argue that rebound from 1.2213 has



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Week in FX Americas - Canadian Dollar A Thanksgiving Target

Everyone and their mother must have heard Goldman's recommendation for the loonie earlier this week "Sell Mortimer, Sell." It's certainly not new news to the forex market; however, their target is a tad steeper than most 88c or $1.12CAD within a year. The Goldman team have highlighted that "since



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Week in FX Europe - BoE's Carney Proceeds With Caution

The BoE is being prudent and is following in the footsteps of global regulators. Like all good Central Banks, the "Old Lady" is trying to stay ahead of the curve and be proactive, and not be held responsible for a return to reckless housing lending. No one wants to be



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Week in FX Asia - China's Gold Appetite Gets Bigger

India is to be officially dethroned as the world's biggest purchaser of the "yellow metal" by year-end. Many are forecasting that gold purchases in China will surge to +29% for this year. Physical demand has found some much needed support after Hong Kong reported that China has net imported from



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The Weekly Bottom Line

Over the next few months, decisions made in Washington will play an outsized role in the outlook for financial markets and the U.S. economy. On Capitol Hill, the House-Senate budget conference committee is in negotiations on a deal to fund the government and potentially reduce automatic spending cuts. A few



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Fundamental Breakdown: USD Saw Broad Strength in November

USD strengthened as expectations of the Fed to begin tapering QE in 2014 crept into the market GBP outperformed as the BoE appears to be the most hawkish of the major central banks JPY underperformed as the Nikkei 225 rallied nearly 10% in November AUD declined as RBA rhetoric talked down the



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Weekly Focus: Low Inflation and Stronger Growth to Boost Risky Assets

Although euro area inflation was up a little, an environment of very low inflation and low interest rates and a better growth outlook continue to support risky assets, as we saw in 2003-07 only more so. A five-year high in building permits indicates that the US housing market is getting



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Trade Idea Update: GBP/USD - Buy at 1.6265

As the British pound has retreated after rising to 1.6374 earlier today and broke below the Kijun-Sen, suggesting consolidation below this level would be seen and correction to the Ichimoku cloud top (now at 1.6294) cannot be ruled out, however, reckon support at 1.6258 would contain downside and bring another



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Trade Idea Update: EUR/USD - Sell at 1.3650 or on break of 1.3550

Although the single currency edged higher today and near term upside risk remains for recent upmove to extend gain to 1.3627-30 (61.8% Fibonacci retracement of 1.3833-1.3295), as this move from 1.3295 is still viewed as correction of early fall from 1.3833, reckon 1.3650-55 (100% projection of 1.3399-1.3560 measuring from 1.3490)



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Trade Idea Update: USD/JPY - Buy at 101.55

As the greenback has retreated after rising to 102.61, suggesting consolidation below this level would be seen and pullback to previous resistance at 101.92 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon 101.50-55 (38.2% Fibonacci retracement of 99.79-102.61) would limit downside and bring another upmove later, above said resistance at 102.61 would



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UK Mortgage Approvals Climb To Highest Since March 2008

UK mortgage approvals rose to highest level in more than five years, the Bank of England reported on Friday, one days after Carney unveiled changes to the BoE`s Funding for Lending Scheme. Mark Carney, head of the BoE, took action to restrain the UK’s house-price boom by ending incentives for



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EUR/JPY Elliott Wave Analysis

The single currency has continued to surge and indicated upside target at 137.75-80 (61.8% projection of 124.94-135.52 measuring from 131.22) and previous resistance at 138.72 and 139.26 had been met, bullishness remains for the upmove from 94.12 (first leg of wave C) to extend further gain in wave v to



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Today's Market Outlook

The Euro consolidates around 1.36 handle, after hitting marginally higher high at 1.3620, with yesterday’s close above 1.3600. Overall positive tone sees further upside favored, with weekly close above 1.36000 support, required to confirm. The price approaches immediate target at 1.3626, Fibonacci 61.8% retracement of 1.3831/1.3294, ahead of 1.3645, Fibonacci



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USD/CHF Elliott Wave Analysis

Although the greenback has remained under pressure and the fall from 0.9251 may extend marginal weakness, as this move is still viewed as a strong retracement of the rise from 0.8890 low, downside should be limited and 0.9000 should hold and bring another rise later. Above resistance at 0.9192-0.9201 would



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Morning Forex Fundamental

The single currency moved higher on Thursday, supported by positive data from Europe's leading economies– Germany and Spain. The EUR/USD currency pair has once again climbed to its one-month high at 1.3617; however, was not able to push any higher.



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Trade Idea: EUR/JPY - Buy at 138.00

As the single currency has eased after rising to 139.71 earlier today, suggesting minor consolidation below this level would be seen and pullback to 138.30-35 cannot be ruled out, however, previous resistance at 137.99 should limit downside and bring another upmove later. A break of said resistance would extend recent



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Morning Forex Technical

Given the recent behaviour of the currency pair, the resistance at 1.3627/19 (up-trend and monthly PP) is unlikely to nullify the current bullish momentum of EUR/USD. If this is the case, then the price will open the way towards the Feb high at 1.3711. Next it should aim for the



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Trade Idea: AUD/USD - Sell at 0.9250

Although aussie has remained under pressure and near term downside risk remains for marginal weakness, loss of momentum should prevent sharp fall below 0.9020 and reckon psychological support at 0.9000 would limit downside, risk has increased for a corrective bounce back to 0.9200, however, renewed selling interest should emerge around



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EURJPY Hit Fresh High On Good Japan CPI

The Japanese CPI readings were flat-to-positive in Oct/Nov data. The price inflation in Tokyo surprised on the upside (Nov CPI y/y +0.9% vs. +0.7% prev), the PMI manufacturing showed the fastest expansion in more than 7 years (55.1 in November vs. 54.2 prev). BoJ Governor Kuroda said to approach 2%



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Trade Idea: USD/CHF - Stand aside

The greenback has traded narrowly and further sideways trading is in store, however, a break of support at 0.9041 is needed to signal recent decline from 0.9251 has resumed and extend further weakness to 0.9024-28 (previous resistance and 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of 0.8890-0.9251), then towards psychological support at 0.9000



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Trade Idea: GBP/USD - Buy at 1.6265

As the British pound has retreated after rising to 1.6374 earlier today and broke below the Kijun-Sen, suggesting consolidation below this level would be seen and correction to the Ichimoku cloud top (now at 1.6285) cannot be ruled out, however, reckon support at 1.6258 would contain downside and bring another



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Pound Resumes Rally As BOE Moves To End Mortgage Loan Incentives

The British pound rose Friday after Mark Carney, the Bank of England Governor said the central bank will end mortgage incentives in its Funding for Lending Scheme to avoid possible threats from the housing market. The pound rose to its highest level since early January against the U.S. dollar Friday,



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Euro Stays Well Supported After German CPI Data

On Thursday, EUR/USD held close to the 1.36 mark as a rebound in German inflation questioned the room for more ECB easing. The yen remains in the defensive. EUR/JPY is testing the 2009 high. Sterling was also in good shape. The UK currency is nearing key resistance against the euro



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Trade Idea: EUR/USD - Sell at 1.3650 or on break of 1.3550

Although the single currency edged higher today and near term upside risk remains for recent upmove to extend gain to 1.3627-30 (61.8% Fibonacci retracement of 1.3833-1.3295), as this move from 1.3295 is still viewed as correction of early fall from 1.3833, reckon 1.3650-55 (100% projection of 1.3399-1.3560 measuring from 1.3490)



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Trade Idea: USD/JPY - Buy at 101.55

As the greenback has retreated after rising to 102.61, suggesting consolidation below this level would be seen and pullback to previous resistance at 101.92 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon 101.50-55 (38.2% Fibonacci retracement of 99.79-102.61) would limit downside and bring another upmove later, above said resistance at 102.61 would



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Technical Analysis for Major Currencies

The pair extended the positive trading, whereas it approached 61.8% correction at 1.3625 – 1.3630. The possibility of extending the upside move is valid today but the pair has to breach 1.3630 to trigger another bullish wave targeting 1.3705 and perhaps 1.3770 levels later. Anyhow, trading above 1.3500 is positive



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Technical Analysis for Crosses

The pair successfully settled yesterday above the ascending channel’s resistance, supporting the positive outlook over intraday and short term basis, supported by the MA 50. Momentum indicators offer some negativity that might force sideways trading and slight downside bias. Our targets initially start at 169.00 and require stability above 166.25.



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Eurozone CPI, Unemployment Data To Highlight Quiet Session

The consumer price index (CPI) has been falling for three months in a row now but a slight uptick is expected to 0.8% this month, compared with October's low of 0.7% the slowest rate in four years. The CPI forecast is still much below the ECB's unattainably high target



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Thursday, November 28, 2013

EUR/JPY Candlesticks and Ichimoku Analysis

As the single currency has continued to surge after breaking resistance at 135.52, suggesting medium term upmove from 94.12 is still in progress and indicated target at 137.75-80 (61.8% projection of 124.94-135.52 measuring from 131.22) had been met, further gain to psychological resistance at 140.00 and possibly 141.00 would be



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Daily FX Report

The euro rose to a four-year high against the yen as annual inflation in Germany accelerated in November more than economists forecast, damping bets the European Central Bank will further loosen monetary policy. The shared currency climbed for a third day against the dollar as separate reports showed consumer-price growth



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Daily Technical Analysis

The EURUSD didn't make significant movement yesterday. Despite hesitation to move consistently above 1.3600, the bias remains bullish in nearest term testing 1.3750. Immediate support is seen around 1.3550. A clear break below that area could lead price to neutral zone in nearest term testing 1.3500 – 1.3480, which need



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USD/CAD Candlesticks and Ichimoku Analysis

As the greenback has continued to move higher after brief pullback, indicated resistance at 1.0569 was penetrated, adding credence to our view that further upmove from 0.9633 low has resumed, above 1.0609 resistance would confirm and encourage for further gain to previous chart resistance at 1.0658, then 1.0700 and later towards 1.0750



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Asian Market Update

With the US markets closed for Holiday Asian bourses were mostly trading weaker on thin volumes. Japan's key inflation figure increased at the fastest pace in five years and reinforcing the positive effects from Abenomics. The yen declined to a five-year low versus the euro after Japanese inflation data. The



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EUR/USD Daily Outlook

Intraday bias in EUR/USD remains on the upside for the moment and current rise from 1.3294 is still in progress for 100% projection of 1.3294 to 1.3578 from 1.3399 at 1.3683. However, we'd expect strong resistance above there, and below 1.3832, to limit upside to complete the rebound. Fall from



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EUR/USD: Consumer Confidence In The Euro-Zone Unexpectedly Surged In November

The pair is expected to find support at 1.3580, and a fall through could take it to the next support level of 1.3547. The pair is expected to find its first resistance at 1.3634, and a rise through could take it to the next resistance level of 1.3655.



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GBP/USD: BoE To End Incentives For Mortgage Lending To Curb A Housing Bubble Risk

The pair is expected to find support at 1.6316, and a fall through could take it to the next support level of 1.6267. The pair is expected to find its first resistance at 1.6395, and a rise through could take it to the next resistance level of 1.6425.



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USD/JPY Daily Outlook

Further rise is still mildly in favor in USD/JPY with 101.14 minor support intact. But again, we'd remain cautious on strong resistance in the current zone, 101.53/103.73, to bring reversal. Below 101.14 will turn bias to the downside for another leg inside the consolidation pattern from 103.73. However, sustained break



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AUD/USD: Aussie Pares Its Losses In The Asian Session

The pair is expected to find support at 0.9042, and a fall through could take it to the next support level of 0.9001. The pair is expected to find its first resistance at 0.9137, and a rise through could take it to the next resistance level of 0.9191.



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USD/JPY: Japan's Consumer Inflation Rose To 1.1% In October

The pair is expected to find support at 102.04, and a fall through could take it to the next support level of 101.71. The pair is expected to find its first resistance at 102.65, and a rise through could take it to the next resistance level of 102.94.



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USD/CHF: Swiss Third Quarter GDP Surpassed Market Estimates For The Third Quarter

The pair is expected to find support at 0.9036, and a fall through could take it to the next support level of 0.9017. The pair is expected to find its first resistance at 0.9078, and a rise through could take it to the next resistance level of 0.9101.



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