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January 19th, 2012 at 11:28 am

“Voluntary haircut” Might not Prevent Default.

Much is being done of the fact that Greece could be on the verge of reaching of some kind of agreement with its creditors. It started a few months ago when Sarkozy supposedly negotiated a “voluntary” forgiveness of about 50% of debt held in private hands. This includes hedge funds, banks, pension funds and other institutional investors. It is estimated they hold about EUR 155 billion of Greece’s debt load of about EUR 260 billion, or so. Now Greece is directly negotiating with this group, which is represented by Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute for International Finance.

These talks are not going well. According to some sources, the Greek government has proposed an even larger “haircut” of 68%, meaning a recovery rate of only 32 cents on the Euro. In addition, future interest payments would be lowered, too. There are plenty of conflicting stories, with some suggesting that the original 50% threshold is still valid. We shall see. Whatever it turns out to be, Greece is simply strong-arming, even blackmailing its creditors into taking losses, with only faint hope of actually recovering anything. According to Fitch, Greek default is inevitable and only a matter of time, and any talk to the contrary, including these negotiations is just posturing.

While that farce is playing out, trading goes on no matter what it actually is that drives the markets. In the last post, I discussed a buy in the GBP-JPY. The premise was to go long on a breakout above the latest minor high, with the exact entry at 118.33 and objective of 100 pips. That is what happened, the beast rallied with most of the gains taking place on Thursday. Perhaps this is a start of larger appreciation, but for that one should use the 4H chart, something I will look at later.

Another trade I covered earlier this week was in the EUR-NZD. Here I used the intermediate term chart, which formed a divergence with the MACD. Still needed a bullish candlestick reversal pattern, though, in order to pinpoint the entry. After a considerable wait, an engulfing line developed, providing entry at 1.5927. My objective was 200 pips, which was reached, if just. Later in the day, the EUR-NZD made another run at the high. For Friday, I will focus on short-term at the start of London session, using USD pairs.

Mike K.

3
  • 1

    [...] Friday trading was focused on short-term transactions at the start of the London session. As it turned out, the EUR-USD presented a good opportunity, with nice trading range established [...]

  • 2

    [...] Friday trading was focused on short-term transactions at the start of the London session. As it turned out, the EUR-USD presented a good opportunity, with nice trading range established [...]

  • 3

    [...] Friday trading was focused on short-term transactions at the start of the London session. As it turned out, the EUR-USD presented a good opportunity, with nice trading range established [...]

 

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