With the final round of the Masters on today I'd like to share with you
an analogy to trading. This weekend I had the pleasure of playing golf
at the newly opened Mayakoba
resort in Playa del Carmen with a friend. This course will host the
first ever PGA money event in Mexico next year, which is testament to
its caliber. My friend, Dean, is a PGA
professional who happened to be in the majority of professionals who
did not get invited to the Masters.
Over 18 holes I
averaged just one stroke more per hole than Dean, which doesn't feel
like much when you are playing. Jokingly, I pointed this out and we then
had a fun conversation about the similarities between what it takes to
be a successful money manager and being a pro golfer on tour.
We first agreed that
one of the parallel keys to success was the ability to accept losing and
being wrong. You will lose more than you win. Period. Once you have
accepted that you will lose more than you win, you minimize your losses.
Do this and you are ready to win. But to run with the best you need to
know how to win the big purse, because that is what carries you through
to a successful year.
A very good
professional golfer might at most win two tournaments a year, he said.
The analogy here is that you have maybe two chances a year for an
explosive trade. Today's final round is very close and we agreed that
any of the top 10 players could win but to do that they have to be
aggressive and manage risk today. If you can't do this as a trader at
the right times you will remain stuck in a rut because failure to
capitalize on your best chances means that you will have to average out
that failure with your expected losses, which for most pros exceeds
their wins by a wide margin. Knowing this we designed our services to
alert traders to points in the market that can win the big prize. When
we see a great opportunity we get aggressive and right now we see a big
move coming in the US dollar.
Stock Focus:
Conventional wisdom has it that the end of the Fed's rate hiking cycle
will be bearish for the dollar and bullish for stocks. As usual, this is
not exactly supported by past rate hiking cycles. Instead, stocks
normally peak before the top of the rate cycle while the dollar will
continue to run until its interest rate advantage is significantly
eroded.
Readers will recall
that we expected the market to roll over last year, but with earnings
and jobs numbers continuing to encourage the bulls the market has seen a
series of "ending diagonal" triangle patterns since peaking at
our expected high of 1,250 in 2005. This marks the 61.8% Fibonacci
retracement of the all time high to the 2002 lows.

The target retracement
level for an ending diagonal pattern in "wave 5" is back to
its point of origin, usually the "wave 4" low. Since we have
two diagonal triangles back to back in the chart above the first target
is 1,250 followed by 1,170.
With such obvious
momentum divergence going on in the daily charts, Friday's bearish daily
reversal from new multi-year highs gives traders a great risk reward
profile to go short on a sustained move below trendline support at 1,300
with risk limited to Friday's high at 1,314. As we said last week,
"We will turn outright bearish on a move below 1,250," (the
key Fibonacci level we mentioned).
Bond Focus: We
saw a spike in 10-year note net longs two weeks ago to near record highs
that equals in magnitude the new all time low in 30-year net shorts (not
shown)!?! Sentiment readings we collect suggest the market is especially
bearish on bonds which means the long positioning in the 10-year note is
the bizarre anomaly. For weeks we have maintained the bearish bias on
bonds to great success, but we now think traders should look to exit
their shorts initiated at our recommended level of 109 around the
104-106 level as we now expect a relief rally to get under way in the
coming weeks.

We first showed the
chart below three weeks ago, indicating that a reaction in yields would
come off of the 5% level. With yields having rallied 50 basis points
since then to a high of 4.96% on Friday, we consider our first target to
have been reached. We now see a pullback to 4.5% followed by further
chop and flop over the next year until we see a sustained move above 5%.
Only a move above here keeps us as bearish on bonds as we have been.

Currency Focus:
Longtime readers will recall that we correctly forecasted not only the
US dollar rally for 2006-2006 but also said the rationale as reported by
the media would focus on rate differentials. Over the course of the
dollar's rally, each and every significant setback can be related to
market "expectations" of when the Fed would end its rate
hiking cycle, not data. While the market is busy following conventional
wisdom you know that large rate differentials in low inflationary
environments have always supported the dollar even after the Fed rate
peaked and the rate advantage eroded.

Each of these setbacks
on "expectations" has seen a surge in euro bullishness. For
that reason we pointed out one month ago that changing rate expectations
could drive the euro above 1.21 to 1.23; above 1.23 we said would target
1.25/26. While this was contrary to our dollar bullish position, we said
a euro rally would be an excellent opportunity to buy the dollar on the
cheap as euro longs would likely reach unsustainable levels.

While a final rally to
1.25/26 cannot be ruled out just yet, the sharp bearish weekly reversal
from the 1.2330 highs last week (shown below) suggests that the last of
the dollar bulls' stops were hit on the 10 pip move above the previous
January high of 1.2320. But euro bulls got crushed following the ECB's
dovish statement and the bullish US payrolls numbers.
As we said, each time
the euro net long positioning spiked based on a perceived shift in
interest rate expectations, the result was an opportunity to buy the
dollar when the market was later determined to have guessed it wrong. So
is the market wrong?

Yes. With the market
now expecting a 50/50 chance of a peak in the Fed funds rate at 5.25%
(an additional 50 bp of rate hikes) following last week's payrolls
numbers and fading expectations for the ECB to deliver a series of
hikes, euro bulls are again sitting on thin ice following a spike in
longs.
Readers will recall
that we turned aggressively bullish on the dollar in late January after
the spike in EUR net longs set up a nice opportunity to go against the
crowd. As subscribers to our FxSignalZone™
service can see from our trading blotter, the bulk of our swing trading
profits came in February when we were leveraging into our wining long
dollar positions. We then took to the sidelines in March and made an
average of only one trade a week - each of them with the minimum
allocation we allow. Almost all of those traders were bullish on the
dollar and most of them were losers.
We mention this because
our opening statement indicated you must know when to be aggressive and
how to minimize your losses in order to be a good money manager.
The first chart below
we first showed you three weeks ago, indicating that despite the dollar
selloff and potential rally in EURUSD we were still targeting a move to
95/100 in the dollar index. Our favorite spot FX trade was in USDCHF
because of the large rate differential. As we indicated three weeks ago,
we have a large inverted head and shoulders pattern in the making. A
move above 1.32 targets 1.42.


Recall that as we
explained in our workshop at the Forex Traders Expo last week, the
inversion of the yield curve has no lasting near term effect on the
overall rate differential advantage. Therefore, a peak in the Fed-ECB
rate differential may now not come until July, 2006, which gives the
dollar plenty of room to run in the near to medium term.

© 2006 Jes Black
Editorial Archive
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Contact
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Jes
Black
FX Money Trends, LLC
One Henderson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
646.229.5401 Tel
201.222.5577 Fax
www.fxmoneytrends.com
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