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thepennyking

02/18/04 6:34 AM

#39 RE: stack #38

Fundamental vs. Technical

A major debate in financial market analysis is the validity of each of the two major forms of analysis: fundamental and technical. Several studies have concluded that fundamental analysis is more appropriate in predicting trends for the longer periods (one year or more), while technical analysis is more effective for shorter periods (less than ninety days). These studies suggest a combination of these approaches for periods between 3 months and one year. Conversely, more evidence shows that technical analysis of long-term trends helps identify longer-term technical waves and that fundamental factors can trigger short-term developments.

A good example of this is the declining USD/JPY exchange rate in 1999. USA and Japan both lost 16% in the second half of the year, reaching a year low of 101.90. Believers in both fundamental and technical analysis alike could explain the reason for the downward move. Fundamentals attributed it to the continuous capital inflows into Japanese assets, which reflected investors' increased optimism with the recovery of the Japanese, while technical analysts explained the move with the simple argument that the language of the market voiced a clearly downward tone that became clearer with the breach of key technical landmarks (115 yen and 110 yen).

Therefore, in different ways, the technicals and the fundamentals reached the same conclusion. Yet it is in the detail that the true difference is discerned. Fundamental analysts with a technical blind spot could risk missing key market turnarounds after the breach of an important support/resistance level.

On the other hand, a technically inclined analyst with no regard for fundamentals and news releases would have missed the rebound in EUR/USD (triggered by the release of a surprising German business sentiment survey (IFO) in July 19, 1999). Until then, the euro had lost 15% and finally reaching an all-time low of $1.010. Many observers of the market (both fundamentals and technicals) were predicting that the euro would break below $1.00. Technical analysts cited that moving averages, momentum and psychology would lead to further downfall. However, fundamentally-inclined analysts who paid attention to the strong survey would have been able to promptly exit their long dollar positions in favor of the euro. That day, the Euro jumped 200 points against the dollar. It gained an additional 260 points the following day and yet another 150 points in the third day. In just two weeks, EUR/USD soared more than 800 points.

It is obvious that the release of IFO's survey was not the only reason behind the Euros 7% rebound. Over the subsequent weeks, other factors also helped prop the currency, including a broadening improvement in economic fundamentals throughout the Eurozone and increasingly hawkish stance which favored higher interest rates from the European Central Bank. Nonetheless, it is still clear that the release of the IFO survey was the turning point in shifting expectations of the Euro.

Many times is has been said that combining fundamentals with technicals can be counterproductive. Due to the act that they are contrasting types, technical and fundamental analyses are often regarded as mutually exclusive. Yet, a large number of traders often combine these two approaches, sometimes even instinctually. Thus, technically inclined traders do pay attention to central bank meetings and give heed to the latest inflation numbers. Similarly, many fundamental traders are trying to determine the percentage of retracement formations and discern the major and minor levels of support.

There is no a specific formula that can create an optimum approach of combining fundamental and technical analysis in the foreign exchange market. Several software packages claim to be able to calculate such decisions, weighing one approach against another depending on economic, technical and quantitative parameters. Yet these decisions are based on models from previous patterns of inter-market dynamics and past technical and fundamental behavior. t is clear that the FX market is far too dynamic for such pre-formatted frameworks.

It cannot be denied that fundamental and technical factors are an essential factor in determining foreign exchange dynamics. There are, in addition to these two additional factors that are important to understanding short-term movements in the market: expectations and sentiment. Although they may sound similar, they are fairly distinct. Expectations are generated prior to the release of economic statistics and financial data. It has been shown that monitoring only the figures released does not suffice in grasping the currency's future course. For example, if the US GDP came out at 7.0% from 5% in the previous quarter, then the dollar may not necessarily move as you would expect it to. If market forecasts had expected an 8% growth, then the 7.0% reading might come as a disappointment. This could cause a very different market reaction from the one that was expected there was no awareness of the forecast.

Nevertheless, market sentiment can supercede expectations. That is the prevailing market attitude in relation to an exchange rate; it can be a result of the overall economic assessment towards the country in question, general market emphasis, or several other factors. Using the previous example of the US GDP, even if the resulting figure of 7.0% undershot forecasts by a full percentage point, markets could possibly show little or no reaction. One possible reason for this is that sentiment could be dollar positive regardless of the actual and forecasted figures. This could be due to poor fundamentals in the counter currency (Euro, Yen or Sterling) or solid US asset markets.

There is a term that is commonly interchanged with "sentiment," and that is "psychology." In first two months of 2000, the Euro dealt with fierce selling pressure against the Dollar, even though it was persistently improving fundamentals in the Eurozone. This may be due to the fact that market psychology favored US dollar assets due to continuous signs of non-inflationary growth, and sentiment that further increases in US interest rates would work in the advantage of US yield differentials without ruining the economic expansion.



http://www.cmcgroupplc.com/us/forex/home.jsp?OVRAW=Currency%2520Charts&OVKEY=chart%2520currency&...
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thepennyking

02/18/04 6:45 AM

#40 RE: stack #38

THE DOLLAR VS THE EURO FOR WORLD HEGEMONY

The U.S. economy is dependent on oil being traded in dollars, and the new European single currency, the Euro, seriously threatens that. Iraq switched from dollars to Euro in September of 2000; Iran has been seriously considering it, and has been advocating the Euro for all of OPEC.

This information has been largely suppressed in the U.S. media:

The Real Reasons for the Upcoming War with Iraq: March 2003. Excellent analysis of the U.S. Need to Invade Iraq to not only secure long term oil supplies, but more importantly to secure the hegemony of the dollar as the world’s dominant currency.

Bush’s Deep Reasons for War on Iraq: Oil, PetroDollars, and the OPEC Euro Question. 2/15/03 The title says it all.

Oil, Currency, and Iraq by Cóilín Nunan of Feasta: Very succinct explanation of why the U.S. is so economically dependent on the worlds’ oil supply being traded in dollars. More excellent information on the dollar vs the euro can be found on the Feasta website: www.feasta.org

When Will We Buy Oil in Euros? The Observer UK 2/23/03. The dollar has a challenger to its global oil trade supremacy: the Euro.

Oil, Dollars, Euros, and Dead Iraqis: Information Clearing House 02/03. Clear analysis of why the U.S. is driven to military means to overcome its major economic problems.

North Korea Embraces the Euro: BBC 12/01/02. As long as you’re going to be included in the Axis of Evil, you might as well meet the full criteria.

Dollar’s Decline Starting to Accelerate, Rattling Nerves: Dow Jones Newswire 1/25/03. “All of a sudden, the dollar’s supposedly slow and gradual decline isn’t looking so slow, or gradual.”

Iraq Nets Handsome Profit By Dumping Dollar for Euro: The Observer UK, 2/16/03

The Dollar, Euro, and War In Iraq: How control of the world economy depends on whose currency oil is traded in.

US Dollar Hegemony Has Got To Go: How Control of the world economy depends on whose currency oil is traded in

Why Now? Excellent Article from Australia on the currency of oil

Iran May Switch to Euro for Crude Sale Payments: First Iraq switched to the Euro, and Iran is seriously considering it. Perhaps that explains their mutual inclusion in the Axis of Evil

Iran Export Economics Drive Iran Euro Oil Plan: More on the country which the U.S. says is next for liberation

Iraq Moves to Euro: Crucial to understanding the U.S. aggression against Iraq

Dollar vs Hegemoney: More on the issue of U.S. economic control of world currency

US Dollar Losing Its Position As Asia’s Reserve Currency: 7/12/02 More on U.S. Hegemonic Loss to the Euro.

U.S. Involved in Venezuelan Assassination Plot: Not directly about Iraq, but has good information regarding the U.S. brutal attempts to keep the world oil currency in dollars

http://www.pressurepoint.org/pp_dollar_vs_euro.html


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stack

03/30/04 2:41 PM

#70 RE: stack #38

Continuing to hold those dollars...