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January 24th, 2012 at 11:57 am

Nobody wants cheap money?

Following failed intervention in the Yen market few months ago, Japanese authorities decided to take advantage of strong domestic currency. To this end, they established a fund, which would allow Japanese companies to borrow money for, oversees acquisitions, or buyouts. This program has $130 billion at its disposal, coming from the country’s foreign-exchange reserves and is run by Japan Bank for International Cooperation. Loans from this facility would carry the six-month Libor rate, currently at around 0.34%, which is lower than financing these companies could get from private institutions.

While it sounds good, to date not one Japanese company took advantage of this source of capital. Interestingly, last year Japanese multinationals went on a largest oversee spending spree in at least 12 years, buying about $90 billion worth of foreign companies. Some analysts say that Japanese businesses simply have surplus of funds and do not need to borrow, while others argue they are simply avoiding cumbersome and time consuming government process. Whatever the reason, this program appears to be a failure. There was talk about expanding it, but since there is no interest, it could expire in eight months or so, leaving Japan with intervention as the most viable way to weaken the Yen.

On Sunday, I discussed a short-term reversal trade in the GBP-USD. I was looking for a bearish reversal candlestick pattern on the hourly chart within first few hours of opening. The price unfolded not exactly the way I wanted, with a bearish sign forming immediately after trading started. Regardless, I sold the GBP-USD at 1.5542, seeking 50 pips. My objective was probably too ambitious, the price only dipped to 1.5516 before turning bullish. Since things were not going my way, the trade was closed at 1.5562 or 20 pips loss.

A week ago, I covered CAD-CHF on these pages, or more to the point, its intermediate term chart. My idea was to go short at 0.9230, with 100 pips objective. The price rallied at first but eventually turned south and triggered my order. I closed it earlier today at 0.9163 or 67 pips profit. It is short of target, however, the price dipped much lower and rebounded, so I thought it prudent to pocket some gains and move on.

With the British Pound very strong today, it will be interesting to see if this continues. Some technical developments suggest it will. On the 4H chart of the GBP-CAD, for example, the price is finding repeated resistance at just above 1.5800. The more often this level is tested, the more likely it is to break with a bullish continuation. I have a buy order at 1.5815 looking for 100 pips. With any luck, it could happen before the end of this week…

Mike K.

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    [...] no currencies forming short-term reversal opening set ups (even though the last one did not work out), I will be looking for gaps in early trading. After that, the beast looks interesting. It already [...]

  • 2

    [...] no currencies forming short-term reversal opening set ups (even though the last one did not work out), I will be looking for gaps in early trading. After that, the beast looks interesting. It already [...]

 

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