Hello and welcome to our FX blog. If you are wanting active management of your funds without having to pay high commissions and be able to access your capital any time without penalties, you have come to the right place. With our assistance, we can set up your account to be hedged across 8 different currencies, instead of it all based in one potentially volatile currency.
Membership
Are you well diversified? Is your savings all in USD or spread across multiple types of assets, but still based in USD? If it is, you are still not what we consider ultimately hedged, as in hedged into other nations currencies which are backed by their allocations, production, resources and politics. We believe the best way to be hedged to to be spread across the 8 most respected western currencies. Those being the Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, Euro dollar, Great British pound, Japanese yen, New Zealand dollar and United States dollar. Rotating among these with a slight edge producing a gain above equilibrium.
This strategy uses the same free floating cash approach as all large banks, but with the tactical advantage of intermittent currency exposure utilizing a probable edge.
Think of this system as exactly the same as holding cash in a bank account, but with the ability to use leverage, letting trades sit until hitting either a Target, Stop or direction reversed. This strategy is extremely diversified and as such, is not subject to over weighted moves due to all your cash being held in a single currency bank account.
The goal of the system is to minimize the volatility associated with a traditional cash bank account. Substituting single currency volatility and buying power decay, with account stability and growth.
There is no obligation and you can cancel the program at anytime.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Yellow fever turned green
Is the USD a crutch for traders? On the other hand, is it fear?
With Asia’s ever expanding economy and the growing emphasis on strengthening the middle class it is somewhat surprising that the consumer demand for gold is so low. Or is the demand still as strong but all the restrictions on imports that the government and the Reserve bank has put on China and India in the last year. The two countries that are the largest consumers of gold, are with the same demand but their hands are tied. This seems to be the theme world wide with so many factors swaying the people from political to the strong equity markets taking investors away from buying gold, however many central banks will still need to buy gold to secure a viable reserve currency. Traders seem to be afraid of the ERO, for a while all the political turmoil in Russia hadn’t caused any shift in trades but we now see that after a few months it fell dramatically. Now with Scotland’s vote just in a few days the GBP is suffering as well. The strength of the USD seems to remain a safe haven for investors as of now. However with The unforeseen realization is that as the U.S. dollar gets stronger the price of international goods gets cheaper and become more enticing for the U.S. to buy overseas. This can cause a major turn of events for the USD and with low domestic demand, we then will be keeping our USD in international waters instead of on U.S. soil. The U.S. economy will be right in the red again with the USD weak and the competition of the ERO, GBP and JPY strong.
Holding short at 1309.88 current price 1235.00 gain of 5.7%
Fxmade2trade