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Saturday, February 28, 2015

Breaking Bad (Debt) - Episode One

Submitted by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog ,


“At this juncture, the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime market seems likely to be contained.”Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, Congressional testimony, March, 2007



“Capitalism without financial failure is not capitalism at all, but a kind of socialism for the rich.”James Grant, Grant’s Interest Rate Observer


The Federal Reserve issued their fourth quarter Report on Household Debt and Credit last week to the sounds of silence in the mainstream media. There were minor press releases issued by the “professional” financial journalists regurgitating the Federal Reserve’s storyline. Actual analysis, connecting the dots, describing how the massive issuance of student loan and auto loan debt has produced a fake economic recovery, and how the accelerating default rates in auto loans and student loans will produce the next subprime debt implosion, were nowhere to be seen on CNBC, Bloomberg, the WSJ, or any other status quo propaganda media outlet. Their job is not to analyze or seek truth. Their job is to keep their government patrons and Wall Street advertisers happy, while keeping the masses sedated, misinformed, and pliable.


Luckily, the government hasn’t gained complete control over the internet yet, so dozens of truth telling blogs have done a phenomenal job zeroing in on the surge in defaults. The data in the report tells a multitude of tales conflicting with the “official story” sold to the public. The austerity storyline, economic recovery storyline, housing recovery storyline, and strong auto market storyline are all revealed to be fraudulent by the data in the report. Total household debt grew by $117 billion in the fourth quarter and $306 billion for the all of 2014. Non-housing debt in the 4th quarter of 2008, just as the last subprime debt created financial implosion began, was $2.71 trillion. After six years of supposed consumer austerity, total non-housing debt stands at a record $3.15 trillion. This is after hundreds of billions of the $2.71 trillion were written off and foisted upon the backs of taxpayers, by the Wall Street banks and their puppets at the Federal Reserve.



The corporate media talking heads cheer every increase in consumer debt as proof of economic recovery. In reality every increase in consumer debt is just another step towards another far worse economic breakdown. And the reason is simple. Real median household income is still below 1989 levels. The average American family hasn’t seen their income go up in 25 years. What they did see was their chains of debt get unbearably heavy. Non-housing consumer debt (credit card, auto, student loan, other) was $800 billion in 1989.


The 300% increase in consumer debt, while incomes stagnated, has created a zombie nation of debt slaves. And this doesn’t even take into account the quadrupling of mortgage debt from $2.2 trillion in 1989 to $8.7 trillion today. This isn’t Twelve Years a Slave; it’s Debt Slaves for Eternity. And who benefits? The Wall Street bankers, .1% oligarchs, and corporate fascists pulling the levers of government and society benefit. An economic and jobs recovery for working Americans is nowhere to be seen in the chart below.



Total debt on the balance sheet of American consumers (formerly known as citizens) now tops $11.8 trillion, up from the $11.1 trillion trough in 2013. The peak was “achieved” in a frenzy of $0 down McMansion buying, Lexus leasing, and Home Equity ATM extraction in 2008, when the total reached $12.7 trillion. The $1.6 trillion decline from peak insanity had nothing to do with austerity or Americans reigning in their debt financed lifestyles.


The Wall Street banks took the $700 billion of taxpayer funded TARP, sold their worthless mortgage paper to the Fed, suckled on the Fed’s QE and ZIRP, and wrote off the $1.6 trillion. Wall Street didn’t miss a beat, while Main Street got treated like skeet during a shooting competition. Every solution proposed and implemented since September 2008 had the sole purpose of benefitting the criminals on Wall Street who perpetrated the largest financial heist in world history. The slogan should have been Bankers Saving Bankers Since 1913.


fedcinsdebt


The average American benefited in no way from the government/banker bailout. Their wages have deteriorated, their daily living expenses have risen, Obamacare has resulted in higher healthcare premiums, higher co-pays, more part-time jobs, less full-time jobs, and less healthcare choices for the working class, while Wall Street generates billions in risk free profits, bankers and corporate executives reap massive million dollar bonuses, and the .1% parties like its 1999. Rising wealth inequality has been systematically programmed into our economic system by bankers and their bought off puppet politicians in Washington D.C. – Corporate fascism at its finest.


The lack of real economic recovery for the average American has been purposely masked through the issuance of $500 billion of subprime student loan debt and $200 billion of auto loan debt (much of it subprime) since 2010 by the Federal government and their co-conspirators on Wall Street.



The issuance of debt by the government to people not financially able to repay that debt, in order to generate economic activity and boost GDP is nothing more than fraudulent inducement using taxpayer funds. Debt financed purchases is not wealth. Debt financed consumption does not boost the wealth of the nation. If adding debt produced economic advancement, why has the number of Americans on food stamps escalated from 33 million in 2009 to 46 million today during a five year economic recovery? Why have 10 million Americans left the labor force since 2009, pushing the labor participation rate to 30 year lows, during a jobs recovery?


Why have social benefits distributed by the Federal government surged by $2.5 trillion since 2012, reaching a record high of 20.8% of real disposable income? It resides 33% above 2007 levels and still above levels during the depths of the recession in 2009. But at least the stock market hits record highs on a daily basis, creating joy in NYC penthouse suites and Hamptons ocean front estates. American dream for the .1% achieved.


Social-Benefits-Percent-DPI-022315


Does this look like Recovery?


When you actually dig into the 31 page Federal Reserve produced report, anyone with a few functioning brain cells (this eliminates all CNBC bimbos, shills, and cheerleaders), can see our current economic paradigm is far from normal and an economic recovery has not materialized. Record stock market prices and corporate profits have not trickled down to Main Street. Janet, don’t piss down my back and tell me it’s raining (credit to Fletcher in Outlaw Josey Wales). The mainstream media spin fails to mention that $706 billion of consumer debt is currently delinquent. That is 6% of all consumer debt.


Could the Wall Street banks withstand that level of losses with their highly leveraged insolvent balance sheets? The number of foreclosures and consumer bankruptcies rose in the fourth quarter versus the third quarter. Does this happen during an economic recovery? Donghoon Lee, research officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, may be looking for a new job soon. When a Federal Reserve lackey actually admits to being worried, you know things are about to get very bad very fast.


“Although we’ve seen an overall improvement in delinquency rates since the Great Recession, the increasing trend in student loan balances and delinquencies is concerning. Student loan delinquencies and repayment problems appear to be reducing borrowers’ ability to form their own households.”


And he didn’t even mention the increase in auto loan delinquencies which will eventually morph into a landslide of bad debt write-offs, repossessions, and Wall Street bankers demanding another bailout. The pure data in the Fed report doesn’t tell the true story. The $306 billion increase in outstanding debt only represents a 2.7% annual increase. And even though mortgage debt increased by $121 billion, it was on a base of $8.17 trillion. That is a miniscule 1.5% increase. A critical thinking individual might wonder how national home prices could rise by 25% since the beginning of 2012, while mortgage debt outstanding has fallen by $220 billion over this same time frame, and mortgage originations are hovering at 1997 levels.


mortorigsq42014


It couldn’t have been the Wall Street/Fed/Treasury Dept. withhold foreclosures from the market, sell to hedge funds and convert to rental units, and screw the first time home buyer scheme to super charge Wall Street profits and artificially boost home prices. Could it? New home sales prices and new home sales were tightly correlated from 1990 through 2006. Then the bottom fell out in 2006 and new homes sales crashed. Nine years later new home sales still linger at 1991 recession levels. New home sales are 65% lower than they were in 2005, but median prices are 20% higher. This is utterly ridiculous.


If prices had fallen to the $100,000 to $150,000 level, based on the historical correlation, first time home buyers would be buying hand over foot. But the Federal Reserve, their Wall Street owners, connected hedge funds, and the Federal government has created an artificial price bubble with 0% interest rates and trillions of QE heroin. The 1% can still afford to buy overpriced McMansions, but the young are left saddled with student loan debt, low paying service jobs, and no chance at ever owning a home.



The chart that puts this economic recovery in perspective is their 90+ days delinquent by loan type. If you haven’t made a payment in 90 days or more, the odds are you aren’t going to pay. The Fed and the ever positive corporate media, who rely on advertising revenue from Wall Street, the auto industry, and the government, go to any lengths to spin awful data into gold. Their current storyline is to compare delinquency levels to the levels in 2009 at the height of the worst recession since the 1930s. Mortgage delinquencies have fallen from 8.9% in 2010 to 3.2% today (amazing what writing off $1 trillion of bad mortgages can achieve), but they are three times higher than the 1% average before the financial meltdown. Is that a return to normalcy? Home equity lines of credit had delinquency rates of 0.2% prior to the 2008 meltdown. Today they sit at 3.2%, only sixteen times higher than before the crisis. Is that a return to normalcy? Do these facts scream “housing recovery”?



The outlier on the chart is credit card delinquencies. The normal, pre-crisis level hovered between 9% and 10%. Banks can handle that level when they are charging 18% interest while borrowing at .25% interest. During the Wall Street created recession, delinquencies spiked to 13.7%, but after writing off about $150 billion of bad debt and closing 100 million credit card accounts, delinquencies miraculously began to plunge. Delinquencies have plunged to 7.3% as credit card debt still sits $170 billion below the 2008 peak. This is a reflection of Americans depending on their credit cards to survive their everyday existence.


With stagnant real wages and household income 7% below 2008 levels, the average family is using their credit cards to pay for food, energy, clothing, utilities, taxes, and medical expenses. They are making the minimum payments and staying current on their payment obligations because their credit cards are the only thing keeping them from having to live in a cardboard box. A Bankrate.com survey this week revealed 37% of Americans have credit card debt that equals or is greater than their emergency savings, leaving them “teetering on the edge of financial disaster.” Greg McBride, Bankrate.com’s chief financial analyst sums up the situation:


“Not only do most of them not have enough savings, they’ve all used up some portion of their available credit — they are running out of options. People don’t have enough money for unplanned expenses, and if they have more credit card debt than emergency savings, it’s a double whammy. In the event of unplanned expenses, their options are limited.”


Who doesn’t have an unplanned expense multiple times in a year? A major car repair, appliance repair, hot water heater failure, or a medical issue is utterly predictable and most people are unprepared to financially deal with them. As many people found in 2009, credit card lines can be reduced in the blink of an eye by the Wall Street banks. This potential for financial disaster is why Americans are doing everything they can to stay current on their credit card payments. That brings us to the Federal Reserve/Federal Government created mal-investment subprime boom 2.0, which is in the early stages of going bust.


I’ll address the Subprime bust 2.0 in part two of this article.











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STiNKiN BuLLeTS...


.


BLOOMBERG NEWS (April 2014)--- On April 14, Newsmax.com reported that the USPS was seeking to buy a large amount of ammunition on the heels of similar purchases by the Social Security Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


This alarmed some people whom Newsmax described as “second amendment advocates.”


One was Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League. “The problem is, all these agencies have their own SWAT teams, their own police departments, which is crazy,” he told the website. “Do we really need this? That was something our Founding Fathers did not like and we should all be concerned about.”






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Don’t Be Fooled By The Gold Price

gold


American investors might be extremely disappointed with the recent performance of the gold price as the yellow metal is once again trading below $1200/oz. This causes a lot of people to frown their eyebrows but the reality is that the gold price expressed in other currencies is actually showing signs of a break-out.


Indeed, when looking at the gold price in other currencies, the charts look extremely different. Let’s back this up with four charts of the yellow metal, expressed in different currencies. And indeed, all four charts (with the gold price expressed in respectively Canadian Dollar, Euro, Japanese Yen and Russian Ruble) show a considerable increase in the gold price.


Gold CAD


Gold EUR


Gold Yen


Gold Ruble


Source


If we would consolidate this view in a chart, a technical break-out pattern becomes clearly visible.


Gold Breakout


Source


The gold price has moved up again this week ahead of Yellen’s bi-annual testimony before the Congress and the fact that the Greeks are accusing their government of treason. Just as we expected in an earlier column, a new deal has been reached in the final hours before the deadline, and just as we expected, Tsipras and Varoufakis returned to Athens claiming the Greeks were victorious over the evil, naughty Troika.


This will also undermine the position of the anti-austerity parties and leaders as a sudden U-turn is only very rarely appreciated. Moreover, it now does sound like Greece was the demanding party for another extension even though it categorically refused to extend the program.


So what’s next for the gold price in US Dollar? Looking at the Money Flow index parameter of gold, the index has reached its lowest level in several months and the last time it reached this level was right before it ran from $1190/oz to $1300/oz.


Gold Price


Source


There are no certain things in life, but it sure does look like the gold price is bottoming out and preparing itself for another leg upwards as the last time we saw the Money Flow Index reach this level, the price of the precious metal came back to life again. Additionally, as it doesn’t look like things are calming down on the macro-economic level (the Ukrainian problems still haven’t been solved and the new Greek deal is merely an extension and not a permanent solution), investors will continue to pick up gold as a safe haven. The fundamentals haven’t changed and the recent softening in the gold price might merely be building a platform for the next break out.


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Weekly Review and Outlook: Dollar Index to 95.48 Resistance in a Jam Packed Week

Fed chair Janet Yellen's testimony last week as relatively balanced and triggered little reactions in the forex markets. Nonetheless, US equities were shot up to new record higher as Yellen reaffirmed that there would be no rate hike before June. On the other hand dollar attempted to rally after data



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EUR/USD Weekly Outlook

EUR/USD's fall last week argues that the consolidation from 1.1096 has possibly completed. Initial bias stays cautiously on the downside this week for 1.1096 first. Break will extend recent down trend and target next fibonacci level at 1.0283. Above 1.1379 will dampen this bearish case and bring another recovery. But



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USD/JPY Weekly Outlook

USD/JPY's sideway consolidation from 121.84 continued last week and outlook is unchanged. Initial bias stays neutral this week first. On the downside, below 188.22 will bring another fall. But decline attempt should be contained by 38.2% retracement of 105.19 to 121.84 at 115.47 and rebound. Above 120.46 will bring resistance



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GBP/USD Weekly Outlook

While GBP/USD's rebound extended to 1.5551 last week, it did face resistance from 1.5540, 38.2% retracement of 1.6523 to 1.4950 at 1.5551 and retreated since then. Initial bias is neutral this week. At this point, rise from 1.4950 is viewed as a corrective move and break of 1.5315 will indicates



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USD/CHF Weekly Outlook

USD/CHF faced some resistance ahead of 0.9553 but there was no sign of reversal. At this point, we'd still favor the case the recent rebound is merely a correction. And we'd expect strong resistance from 0.9553 to limit upside and bring near term reversal. Below 0.9370 minor support will turn



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AUD/USD Weekly Outlook

AUD/USD's consolidation from 0.7625 extended last week and reached 0.7912. Nonetheless it lost momentum since then and retreated. Initial bias is neutral this week first. Consolidation from 0.7625 might extend higher but should be limited by 0.8032 support turned resistance and bring down trend resumption. Below 0.7739 minor support will



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USD/CAD Weekly Outlook

USD/CAD stayed in sideway consolidation from 1.2797 last week and outlook is unchanged. Initial bias stays neutral this week first. Break of 1.2351 will bring deeper pull back. But in that case, we'd expect strong support from 61.8% retracement of 1.1564 to 1.2797 at 1.2035 to contain downside and bring



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GBP/JPY Weekly Outlook

GBP/JPY's rebound from 175.49 extended to as high as 185.00 so far. Initial bias remains on the upside this week and such rebound would target 187.79/189.70 resistance zone. We'd expect strong resistance from there to bring reversal. Meanwhile, below 181.65 minor support will suggest that rise from 175.49 has completed



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EUR/JPY Weekly Outlook

EUR/JPY stayed in tight range below 136.67 last week and outlook is unchanged. Initial bias stays neutral this week first. Price actions from 130.13 are viewed as a consolidation pattern. Even in case of another rise, upside should be limited by 137.63 resistance to bring down trend resumption. Below 132.53



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EUR/GBP Weekly Outlook

EUR/GBP's downtrend extended to as low as 0.7244 last week breached mentioned 0.7250/53 briefly. We'd stay cautious on strong rebound and reversal from the current level. Above 0.7403 will turn bias to the upside for 0.7591 and above. However, sustained trading below 0.7250/53 will pave the way to 0.7 round number next.



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EUR/CHF Weekly Outlook

EUR/CHF stayed below 1.0807 temporary top last week and weakened mildly last week. But it's staying above 1.0411 minor support so far. And initial bias stays neutral this week first. We'd maintain that recent rebound is merely a corrective move. And we'd expect down trend resumption at a later stage.



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Friday, February 27, 2015

Weekly Economic and Financial Commentary

Chair Yellen provided testimony to both houses of Congress this week. Her remarks indicated that the word "patient" would be removed from the press release prior to the meeting when the fed funds rate is actually increased. We expect that language to be removed during the March meeting and that



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Trade Idea: USD/CAD - Turn long at 1.2445

The greenback found support at 1.2388 yesterday and rebounded from there, retaining our view that further consolidation would be seen and we are keeping our count that the price action from 1.2799 top (wave iii peak) is possibly developing into a triangle, hence downside would be limited and bring rebound



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Trade Idea Update: USD/CHF - Stand aside

As dollar's retreat from 0.9547 (yesterday's high) turned out to be stronger than expected, suggesting top has possibly been formed there and consolidation with mild downside bias would be seen, however, a sustained breach below 0.9450 is needed to add credence to this view, bring retracement of recent upmove to



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Trade Idea Update: GBP/USD - Sell at 1.5480

As the British pound has rebounded after intra-day brief fall to 1.5384, suggesting consolidation above this level would be seen, however, if our view that top has been formed at 1.5552 is correct, upside should be limited to the lower Kumo (now at 1.5477) and bring another decline, a break



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Trade Idea Update: EUR/USD - Sell at 1.1280

As the single currency has recovered after falling to 1.1184 yesterday, suggesting minor consolidation would be seen and test of the Kijun-Sen (now at 1.1268) cannot be ruled out, however, reckon previous support at 1.1270-79 would limit upside and bring another decline, below said support at 1.1184 would add credence



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Trade Idea Update: USD/JPY - Stand aside

Dollar's rebound after holding above this week's low at 118.63 has retained our view that further consolidation would be seen and corrective bounce to 119.55-60 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon upside would be limited to this week's high at 119.84, bring another decline later. A break of 118.63 would



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Trade Idea Update: USD/JPY - Stand aside

Dollar's rebound after holding above this week's low at 118.63 has retained our view that further consolidation would be seen and corrective bounce to 119.55-60 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon upside would be limited to this week's high at 119.84, bring another decline later. A break of 118.63 would



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USD/JPY - Little Activity as Japanese Inflation Reports Meet Expectations

The Japanese yen is unchanged on Friday, as USD/JPY trades in the mid-119 range. On the release front, the US will issue its second estimate of GDP for Q4, with a forecast of 2.1%. This is lower than the initial estimate of 2.6% in January. We'll also get a look



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GBP/USD - Limited Movement Ahead of Key US Reports

The pound has stabilized on Friday, as GBP/USD trades at the 1.54 line in the European session. On the release front, the US will issue its second estimate of GDP for Q4, with a forecast of 2.1%. This is lower than the initial estimate of 2.6% in January. We'll also



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Week In FX Fed Gives Nothing Away, Dollar in Demand

As to be expected, the Fed dominated this past week. Although the markets did not get the anticipated price moves when Yellen was giving her testimony on the ‘hill, that came on the back of Thursdays U.S CPI, she has certainly been able to keep market guessing on the timing



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Gold Stable Ahead of US GDP Release

Gold has shown limited movement on Friday, as the spot price stands at $1205.02 in the European session. On the release front, the US will issue its second estimate of GDP for Q4, with a forecast of 2.1%. This is lower than the initial estimate of 2.6% in January. We'll



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EUR/USD - Euro Stable After Sharp Slide to 1.12

EUR/USD has stabilized on Friday, as the pair trades in the low-1.12 range in the European session. The euro took a dive on Thursday in response to better-than-expected US durables data. Durable Goods Orders jumped 2.8%, while Core Durable Goods improved to 0.3%. Friday is busy on the release front.



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EUR/JPY Elliott Wave Analysis

The single currency slipped this week and weakness to 133.50 cannot be ruled out, however, downside should be limited to 133.00 and as long as 132.20-25 holds, upside risk remains for another corrective bounce, above 135.35-40 would bring another corrective rise to 136.69 resistance, however, reckon upside would be limited



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USD/CHF Elliott Wave Analysis

The greenback has maintained a firm undertone, adding credence to our view that recent rise from 0.7401 (last month's low) is still in progress and indicated upside target at 0.9390-00 and 0.9450 had been met, we are keeping our view that the fall from 1.0296 has ended at 0.7401 as



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Trade Idea Update: USD/CHF - Hold long entered at 0.9500

Although the greenback resumed recent upmove yesterday, lack of follow through buying on break of previous resistance at 0.9536 and the subsequent retreat from 0.9547 (yesterday's high) suggest consolidation below this level would be seen but as long as 0.9465-70 holds, prospect of another rise remains, above said resistance at



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Trade Idea Update: GBP/USD - Sell at 1.5465

Cable's selloff after yesterday's brief rise to 1.5552 signals top has been formed there and consolidation with downside bias is seen for weakness to 1.5370, then towards 1.5333-37 (previous support and 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of 1.4989-1.5552), however, a firm break below there is needed to add credence to this view



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Trade Idea Update: EUR/USD - Sell at 1.1280

Yesterday's selloff together with the breach of indicated support at 1.1270-79 signal early rise from 1.1098 low has ended at 1.1534 and downside bias is seen for further weakness to 1.1180, then towards 1.1150-55, however, reckon 1.1125-30 would hold from here due to near term oversold condition.



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Trade Idea Update: USD/JPY - Stand aside

Dollar's rebound after holding above this week's low at 118.63 has retained our view that further consolidation would be seen and corrective bounce to 119.55-60 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon upside would be limited to this week's high at 119.84, bring another decline later. A break of 118.63 would



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EUR/JPY - Candlesticks and Ichimoku Analysis

The single currency slipped this week after meeting resistance just below 136.00 and initial weakness to 133.10-15 cannot be ruled out, however, reckon downside would be limited to 132.22 support and bring further consolidation. A daily close below this level would signal the rebound from 130.15 has ended there and



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European Session: Orders and Options Watch

EUR: The single currency has remained under pressure after yesterday's selloff, offers are lowered to 1.1250, 1.1280 and 1.1300, more sell orders are reported at 1.1320-25, 1.1350 and in good size at 1.1380-90 (stops above), selling interest should emerge around 1.1400 and 1.1425. On the downside, bids are seen at



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USD/CAD - Candlesticks and Ichimoku Analysis

The greenback continued to meet resistance below 1.2698 and has retreated again, suggesting further consolidation would be seen, however, downside should be limited to this week's low at 1.2388 and bring another rebound later, above the Kijun-Sen (now at 1.2576) would bring test of 1.2664 (this week's high) but break



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Trade Idea: EUR/JPY - Stand aside

Yesterday's selloff dampened our near term bullishness and weakness to 133.50-55 cannot be ruled out, however, break of support at 132.55 is needed to confirm the correction from 130.15 has ended earlier at 136.69, bring further weakness to next support at 132.22, then 131.90-00 but reckon said support at 130.15 would hold from here.



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