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Marketiva Tutorial, Study Marketiva Step by step, Tutorial Forex Trading Step by Step

Introducing a business trading foreign currencies or better known as the Foreign Exchange (FOREX). Marketiva is a broker international, professional and legal in Switzerland, this company has been granted permission to the international no. IBC CAP.291 REG.NO. 646819th

Now through Marketiva you do not need to have more money with a large number of soon to be able to invest in foreign currency trading, but just 10 $, 50$, or up to 70 $ in accordance with the desire and financial ability of your course. Even more extreme is you can immediately make a continental trade without money, because once you're done registering you will be given prizes of U.S. $ 5 as the initial capital.
Not interesting ..? why do not you try it out now ..! all FREE
Investment program is not only suitable for the top, but it is suitable for middle to lower investor. Employees such as, small traders, even for students.

You Receive $5.00 FREE Money to Try Live Forex Trading Today.
Marketiva Start Trading Forex Today With as Little as $1 Dollar. If you ever thought about Forex Trading you will never find a better place to learn than right here at Marketiva plus they pay you $5.00 real money just to open your account and another $10.000 virtual money to practice with.

Marketiva are a Swiss company based in Lausanne and have recently launched their Forex Trading Platform fully integrated with e-currencies. It is a state of the art platform with many advanced features but really user friendly for beginners with 24 hour live support via their onboard chat room.

So join marketiva , you got nothing to loose and lots to gain. Spend some time on the website and you just might surprise yourself by how much you learn and in six months or a year from now you could be trading for a living.

Enjoy Forex Trading in Marketiva, doing Trade from Home or Office. Earn income Us $ 50 - $ 100 per day from Easy Trading, It’s Fun !

join marketivaDownload Streamster Software now, be successful trader in the forex market.
Visit Marketiva website, Open Account Today !

Some Coupon you can use, the codes are the
following:

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0JQJ0M4Y0G, F6DD2QL4WD, GD7DPMRZBL, IZGF2TV4JJ, 2RBZDKPHAN, EFZUA0UO5G,
6U3K64DQ4K, BZPB2IH62Q, K9HCTD0S96, U8GABP9K5B, 6DSB5K42DN, Y45SQQS09D,
CBO7STQ97U, BEEDD90U5F



STEP-STEP REGISTRATION To Join Marketiva

1.Marketiva Register to the site
Click the banner below to open the official site Marketiva

2. Click on the link "Open an Account" and then the registration form will appear

Fill out the registration form in accordance with the ID that you have

Description:

1. All marked * must be filled;
2. Username: select the name or call you a unique, because this will be used to berchatting Marketiva with the other members;
3. Password in the body of at least 8 characters, to combine with a number;
4. Frist Name: your first name;
5. Midle Initial: initial middle name if you have;
6. Last Name: your last name;
7. Street Address: fill in your address in accordance with ID;
8. City: your city name on the ID;
9. ZIP / Postal Code: Postal Code;
10. State: provinces that you tempati;
11. Country: Select Australia;
12. Phone: enter the house or no telp HP that is still active;
13. E-mail: fill in your email address is still active and there is often use, because each notification and confirmation will be sent to the E-mail address that you fill now;







After you have finished filling the form above, click "Continue". both form and conten




In the "User Template" there are two options, namely "Standard Forex Trader" and "Compact Forex Trader", that is the option to type memeilih Marketiva streamer software. Both the software is basically the same menu - menu just for the "Compact Forex Trader" is much more simple so that it does not take place on the windows.
you select one of the types of software mentioned above.



There are the coupons, where the function of this coupon can be as a discount card, member chat, and many more others. to get the coupon, you can obtain on this site

Coupons can be seen in the bottom of the main web page (see the main page bottom)

For while the "Recovery Question" and "Recovery Answer" please fill in your match that you remember and like, because this will be asked if you forgot your password Marketiva.
Click "Next" to go to the appointment and confirmation with Marketiva
On this page, is a procedural broker to the company's investors. It is a duty to notify the company's risk - the risk of trading in foreign currency so that the Investor does not feel aggrieved if there is a loss so great, and does not require the company because the company only as a facilitator pialan only

Stetment and then on the next, from the Investor that the Investor has its own understanding of all agreements made with Marketiva.

Click "Finish" as a symbol that you agree with the existing agreement. and then you will be direct to the "Get Streamer" to download the software from Marketiva

Click "Streamer TM instalation Package" after that please you install on your computer.

The registration process has been completed.

3.Identity Verivikasi Up

After the registration process is complete, then you have enjoined on to upload data for verivikasi the data you have provided earlier. it aims not to occur because of multiple accounts you can only create one account only. if you do not verivikasi then in a few days your account will be closed.
Data is a need in the Image ID, so you must first scan your ID and berformatkan JPEG.
Example:

1. Image ID: Scan your ID card at the berfoto;
2. Image Address: Scan the ID cards that have lamatnya (must be in accordance with the data)

as notes, scan data is to be colored and each file size of 100kb, so when you scan in the set to be 70 - 100 dpi only.

How verivikasi:

Click here to direct the process to verivikasi Marketiva

after you click the link above you will be asked usernama and password terebih first.
enter the username and password that you've made before, and then click "Login"

Or

Open your email and click on the link for the identification

or

You go with the first site to www.marketiva.com
and enter the Username and Password click the "Login"
click on "Service" on the top-right corner
click on "Identify Yourself" and upload your ID

upload ID: both boxes must be uploaded in the same ID even though ID

4. Running the Program Marketiva has been installed in
After Verivikasi Up finished ID can make trading, after the program is installed, do not do trading or run the program before the Verivikasi ID is made, because the registration must be repeated because at approximately your data is not valid.

Coupon Marketiva

undefined
There are the coupons, where the function of this coupon can be as a discount card, member chat, and many more others. to get the coupon, you can obtain on this site :

Enter a coupon code below, if you can not just empty columns
(coupon code below can be used only once for a username so if the code fails pilh you, try to select the other empty or
Please try)

YSWOB3HKZZ, J2R6AXRLNV, VSX6S0ENVI, JYA1ICKC5C, Z6DBRFTG8C, QJMY64C0KN,
0JQJ0M4Y0G, F6DD2QL4WD, GD7DPMRZBL, IZGF2TV4JJ, 2RBZDKPHAN, EFZUA0UO5G,
6U3K64DQ4K, BZPB2IH62Q, K9HCTD0S96, U8GABP9K5B, 6DSB5K42DN, Y45SQQS09D,
CBO7STQ97U, BEEDD90U5F



US equity fund weekly inflows hit 79-wk high-EPFR

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Investors poured $11.1 billion to U.S. equity funds in the week ending Dec. 23, the highest amount in 79 weeks and slightly offsetting the record outflows from such funds this year, fund tracker EPFR Global said on Tuesday.

Stocks | Currencies | Bonds | Global Markets | Funds News | ETFs News

The outflow from money market funds slowed in the penultimate week of 2009 while emerging market funds remained on track to post a record annual inflow.

Equity and bond funds tracked by EPFR absorbed $13.3 billion and $4 billion respectively during the week, with U.S. equity funds and global equity funds dominating inflows to equity funds and U.S. and global bond funds leading the fixed income categories.

U.S. EQUITY, BOND FUNDS

Investors poured $11.1 billion into U.S. equity funds during the week -- the highest weekly commitment since June 2008 -- with U.S. large cap equity funds and U.S. financial-sector Exchange Traded Funds (ETF) attracting strong commitments.

This category of funds have seen year-to-date net outflows of $69 billion.

The focus on ETFs is in in keeping with the tendency at this time of year to take positions that "dress" the books for 2009, EPFR said.

BOND FUNDS

Global bond funds attracted $2 billion in the week, extending their record yearly inflows.

U.S. bond funds absorbed another $1.7 billion in the week to add to their record inflows for the year.

- EPFR said the fixed income inflows have been driven by commitments to U.S. municipal bond funds, which posted a record of nearly $50 billion so far this year.

- High-yield bond Funds posted modest outflows of $31 million for the week but emerging markets bond funds took in another $369 million, with interest in local currency debt rising to the fore.

EMERGING MARKET EQUITY FUNDS:

Emerging market equity funds took in about $1.7 billion of net inflows in the week, boosting their inflow for the year to $80.3 billion.

- Geographically diversified emerging markets funds took in $1.9 billion for the week, pushing year-to-date inflows above $40 billion.

- Asia ex-Japan funds posted modest inflows of $179 million for the week, with investors rotating some exposure from smaller markets like Taiwan and Singapore to bigger ones such as China.

- China equity funds took in another $153 million, maintaining their record-setting pace, and BRIC country funds -- Brazil, Russia, India and China -- remained on track for a record year after absorbing another $451 million.

- Equity funds focused on Latin America look set to fall just short of their 2007 inflow record, after suffering their second consecutive week of redemptions with an outflow of $136 million.

MONEY MARKET FUND

Flows out of Money Market Funds slowed, with redemptions only a tenth of the previous week's $37 billion. But this fund group remains one of eight that seem likely to end 2009 with record outflows or inflows.

EUROPE AND JAPAN EQUITY FUNDS

Equity funds focused on Japan failed to stem a weekly outflow despite the weakness of the yen, which helped the country's exporters regain ground.

- Investors pulled $830 million out of Europe equity funds.

- Global equity funds that invest primarily to developed markets took in $1.1 billion with year-to-date inflows climbing over $18 billion.

SECTOR FUNDS

Flows into financial sector funds hit a 2009 high of $887 million for the week while property-focused and consumer sector funds also saw healthy inflows.

Technology sector-focused funds took in $173 million for the week while commodity sector Funds enjoyed inflows for the 16th successive weeks to absorb $113 million.

Utilities sector funds took in $76 million and energy sector funds saw $33 million in fresh money
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Home prices flat after five months of gains

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U.S. home prices were unchanged in October, according to the widely watched Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller indexes released on Tuesday, indicating stabilization in the hard-hit housing sector though the figures dashed hopes for a sixth straight monthly increase.

The S&P composite index of home prices in 20 metropolitan areas was flat in October, falling short of expectations for a rise of 0.2 percent according to a Reuters survey. September's index was revised upward to a gain of 0.4 percent, from a previously reported 0.3 percent.

Only seven of the 20 cities in the composite index had month-over-month gains in prices in October, S&P said.

A sustained upturn in home prices is seen vital in the fledgling rebound in the hardest hit housing market since the Great Depression. There has been growing concern that record-high levels of foreclosures will mount even further and depress prices anew.

The stock market opened higher after the data and analysts said the numbers showed the housing market is stabilizing.

"The report signals that we have a growing stabilization in house prices. Obviously it's at a very slow pace and that is because the market is still saddled with a significant amount of inventory," said Anna Piretti, senior U.S. economist at BNP Paribas.

"We're likely to see some negative cross currents come into home prices in November, but that doesn't really change the trend--the trend should be toward stabilization."

S&P said the annual rate of price declines improved, with the 20-city index dropping 7.3 percent from a downwardly revised 9.3 percent in September. A 7.2 percent downturn was forecast in the Reuters survey.

All 20 metropolitan areas and both the 20-city and 10-city indexes showed smaller rates of decline in October compared with September.

"The turn-around in home prices seen in the spring and summer has faded with only seven of the 20 cities seeing month-to-month gains, although all 20 continue to show improvements on a year-over-year basis," David M. Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P, said in a statement.

S&P said its 10-city composite index was also unchanged in October and fell 6.4 percent in the year. The 10-city index rose 0.5 percent in September.

Average home prices have returned to levels last seen in the autumn of 2003.

From the peak in the second quarter of 2006 through the trough in April 2009, the 10-city index has fallen 33.5 percent the 20-city has dropped 32.6 percent.

After the price improvement over the past six months, total price declines from 2006 highs through October are 29.8 percent for the 10-city index and 29.0 percent for the 20-city index.

S&P's Blitzer said that while the numbers may spark worries that housing prices could be poised for a second dip, he sees little risk of that occurring because of the U.S. Federal Reserve's current monetary policy.

"Before jumping to conclusions, recognize that the one time that happened at the beginning of the 1980s Fed policy saw dramatic reversals, which is very different from the stable and consistent Fed policy we have today," Blitzer said.

Las Vegas was worst-performing market. Prices have declined for 38 straight months, dropping 55.4 percent from the peak to just about 5 percent above their January 2000 levels, S&P said
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FOREX-Euro, Aussie gain vs dollar as stocks rise

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The euro and higher yielding currencies such as the Australian dollar rose against the U.S. dollar on Tuesday, lifted by improved appetite for risk as equities gained ground.

Volumes were thin, however, and analysts were wary of drawing too many conclusions from intraday movements.

European shares rose 0.3 percent as investors remained in optimistic mood going into the year end to keep the euro and perceived riskier currencies supported.

"With so little in the way of data and not many people around the market has gone back to what it is familiar with and is trading on the back of stronger risk appetite, which is pushing the euro and higher-yielding currencies higher," said Christian Lawrence, currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets.

Against the yen, the dollar stayed supported, hovering close to a two-month high on the view that the U.S. economy is recovering well, which has lifted U.S. Treasury yields. Later in the session, investors will scrutinise U.S. consumer confidence for December at 1500 GMT and the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index for October at 1400 GMT. ECONUS

At 1144 GMT, the euro was up 0.4 percent at $1.4438 EUR= as it continued to rebound from a 3-1/2-month low of $1.4218 hit a week ago.

The higher-yielding Australian dollar rose 1.2 percent to a 12-day high of $0.8984, edging back towards the $0.90 level. The New Zealand dollar NZD=D4 also gained 1.3 percent to $0.7180.

The dollar index, a gauge for the greenback's performance against other six major currencies, fell 0.3 percent to 77.395 .DXY.

The dollar index was still in sight of a 3-1/2-month high of 78.449 hit last week, although some traders said the U.S. currency may struggle to rise further after speculators have finished covering short dollar positions.

Data on Monday showed speculators were long in the U.S. currency for the first time since May, ending 32 straight weeks of short dollar positions. [nN28138355]

"Anything that points in the direction of the Federal Reserve raising interest rates earlier than previously thought will support the dollar -- there has been no indication of this from the Fed but U.S. data recently has been coming in on the strong side," said Johan Javeus, SEB currency strategist in Stockholm.

Against the yen, the dollar rose 0.1 percent to 91.69 yen JPY=, within reach of a two-month high of 91.88 set last week.

Traders said upward pressure on long-term Treasury yields is providing support to the dollar against the yen after U.S. government bonds traded lower the previous day and pushed the benchmark 10-year note yield to its highest in nearly five months. [US/]
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U.S. indexes close at 2009 highs

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MARKETWATCH FRONT PAGE

If the Dow holds its level through the close, it will reach a new 2009 closing high. Its highest close so far this year was at 10,501.05 on Dec. 14. See full story.
How to keep your finances on track in 2010

If there’s any consolation for investors from the past 18 months, it’s that many people now pay more attention to their total financial picture -- not just stock and bond investments, but saving and spending habits as well. See full story.
Investor sentiment bullish, but far from stampede

The portion of investors who say they expect stocks to keep rising shows bullish sentiment has yet to reach 2007 highs, suggesting to some analysts the rally has more room to run. See full story.
Dollar edges down after positive U.S. data

The dollar trims its loss in thin Christmas Eve trading, as the euro and Japan's yen win back some ground, but relatively upbeat U.S. economic reports counter that trend. See full story.
Oil rises above $78 mark; natural gas turns lower

In pre-holiday trading, crude futures reclaim the $78-a-barrel mark, although market concerns remain that petroleum demand will stay weak. Data showing natural gas in greater abundance than had been anticipated turn the fuel's benchmark contract lower. See full story.
MARKETWATCH COMMENTARY

Larry Ellison is not one to make concessions, writes Therese Poletti. See full story.
MARKETWATCH PERSONAL FINANCE

Holiday travelers are likely to see shorter security lines this year, fewer delays and friendlier customer service, but they’re going to pay for it with their bags.
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Japanese shares head lower, as tech exporters fall

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Japanese stock indexes fell in the early minutes of Friday trade after a slightly positive open, with tech exporters giving back some of their gains from the previous session, helped lower by a rise in the yen. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Average fell 0.4% to 10,492.1, and the broader Topix lost 0.3% to 910.6. Canon Inc. /quotes/comstock/!7751 (JP:7751 4,020, +230.00, +6.07%) /quotes/comstock/13*!caj/quotes/nls/caj (CAJ 43.84, +1.91, +4.56%) lost 1.2% of its value, while Hitachi Corp. /quotes/comstock/!6501 (JP:6501 274.00, +5.00, +1.86%) /quotes/comstock/13*!hit/quotes/nls/hit (HIT 29.83, +0.18, +0.61%) was down 1.1%, and Panasonic Corp. /quotes/comstock/!6752 (JP:6752 1,347, +33.00, +2.51%) /quotes/comstock/13*!pc/quotes/nls/pc (PC 14.70, +0.26, +1.80%) fell 0.8%. Toyota Motor Corp. /quotes/comstock/!7203 (JP:7203 3,890, +90.00, +2.37%) /quotes/comstock/13*!tm/quotes/nls/tm (TM 84.79, -0.15, -0.17%) also lost ground, down 0.8%, a day after a Nikkei business news report saying it will recall over 43,000 cars sold in China due to possible oil leaks. Tokyo's stock market was one of the few open for trade Friday, with bourses in Australia, Hong Kong, India, Singapore and South Korea, among others, closed for Christmas Day
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Stocks Close Out Solid Holiday Week

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Stocks closed higher as a holiday rally got a further push from big technology, banks and commodities, though most investors took Christmas Eve off.

The Dow posted a modest gain of less than 2 percent for the week, but that was good enough for its 2009 closing high on Thursday and came amid asome daunting economic news out of the housing market. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was better, posting a gain that approached 3 percent for the Christmas-shortened week.

Major U.S. Indexes
.DJIA
10520.10
53.66
+0.51%
0
.NCOMP
2285.69
16.05
+0.71%
0
.SPX
1126.48
5.89
+0.53%
0

With portfolio managers looking to tidy up their books by the end of the year, the market's direction was stubbornly higher.

The market closed at 1 pm amid a day of light volume but a strongly positive direction to trading, with gainers beating losers about 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange. The NYSE saw just 316 million shares change hands, slow even for a holiday.

Banks and gold stocks led the way, while technology continued its leadership role.

The Senate approved the health care reform bill in a historic Christmas Eve vote. House and Senate conferees will have to work out the differences between their two bills some time after the holidays.

Alcoa
ALCOA INC
AA

16.35 0.35 +2.19%
NYSE
Quote | Chart | News | Profile
[AA 16.35 0.35 (+2.19%) ] led the Dow while insurance giant Travelers
TRAVELERS COS INC (THE)
TRV

49.89 0.71 +1.44%
NYSE
Quote | Chart | News | Profile
[TRV 49.89 0.71 (+1.44%) ] also was among the top gainers, and pharmaceutical Merck
MERCK & CO INC
MRK

36.99 -0.26 -0.7%
NYSE
Quote | Chart | News | Profile
[MRK 36.99 -0.26 (-0.7%) ] was the bluechip index's biggest drag.
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Market Report -- Story Stocks ()

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A weaker dollar and overseas strength put stocks on track for modest gains this morning, but disappointing new home sales numbers caused a retreat. Stocks have made a recovery, though.

The major indices started the session in higher ground amid more broad-based buying, which had helped the stock market notch a new 52-week closing high in the previous session. Continued support came from healthy moves by major markets throughout Europe and Asia.

Though stocks were able to log gains in the face of a firmer dollar during the previous session, a pullback by the greenback has provided a boon to the broader market this session. After a three-month high in the previous session, the Dollar Index is down a substantial 0.7%.

That drop has also been helpful to commodity prices, which are up 1.2%, as measured by the CRB Commodity Index. Oil prices are up 2.8% to $76.50 per barrel, but that move has also been helped by a larger-than-expected draw in weekly inventories.

With commodities prices and energy prices up, materials stocks and energy stocks have jumped out to gains of 1.5% and 0.8%, respectively. They are this session's best performing sectors.

Conversely, financial stocks have been among the worst performers this session. The sector is down 0.4%. It started the session in higher ground, but buckled on the back of disappointing new home sales.

According to data, new home sales for November fell 11.3% month-over-month to an annualized rate of 355,000 units. That is not nearly as strong as the consensus forecast, which called for a 1.7% month-over-month increase to an annualized rate of 438,000 units.

Though the data induced some midmorning selling pressure, stocks have managed to recover. Micron (MU 9.96, +0.55) has been a primary leader for the broader market, thanks to its better-than-expected quarterly earnings.

Meanwhile, large-cap tech and Internet retailers have spurred buying in the Nasdaq Composite, which has made its way to another new 52-week high.

Briefing.com is the leading Internet provider of live market analysis for U.S. Stock, U.S. Bond, and world FX market participants.
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Notice to Investors in Certain ProShares ETF Funds of Filing Deadlines and Submission of Investor Reply Briefs by Gilman and Pastor LLP -- SCO, DIG, S

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NAPLES, Fla., Dec. 23, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Gilman and Pastor LLP is investigating claims on behalf of all persons who purchased or otherwise acquired shares in the ProShares UltraShort DJ AIG Crude Oil (NYSE:SCO); Ultra Oil & Gas (NYSE:DIG); and UltraShort Basic Materials (NYSE:SMN). The ProShares Funds are exchange-traded funds ("ETF") offered by ProShares Trust ("ProShares") and Plaintiffs and class members were damaged pursuant or traceable to ProShares' false and misleading Registration Statement, Prospectuses, and Statements of Additional Information (collectively, the "Registration Statement"). The Plaintiffs seek a Class and Subclasses for the ProShares Fund purchased by the Plaintiffs. The Class is seeking recovery for investors under Sections 11 and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act").

If you bought shares in any of the ProShares Funds and would like to consider serving as lead plaintiff or have any questions about the lawsuit, please contact Kenneth G. Gilman, Esq. at (239) 221-8269, or via email at kgilman@gilmanpastor.com. You can also join this class action online at http://proshares-lawsuit.com. Lead Plaintiff motion papers must be filed with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York by the following deadlines:

December 28, 2009 ProShares SCO Fund
January 4, 2010 ProShares DIG Fund
February 1, 2010 ProShares SMN Fund

Gilman and Pastor LLP is one of the country's premier national law firms that represent institutional and individual investors in class action, complex securities and corporate governance litigation. The firm has been a champion of investor rights for over 30 years and has been recognized for its reputation for excellence by the courts.
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FOREX-US dollar falls on housing data in thin holiday trade

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The dollar declined for the first time in five sessions against the euro on Wednesday after U.S. new home sales unexpectedly fell to a seven-month low last month, denting optimism about the economy.

The government's housing report also included a downward revision to the previous month's figure, just one day after an industry report showing a 7.4 percent increase in November existing home sales had increased hopes the hard-hit housing market was stabilizing. For more, see [ID:nN2277248].

Trading was extremely thin, which may have exaggerated currency moves; Tokyo markets were closed for a national holiday and many market players elsewhere have already wound down for the Christmas holidays and year-end.

"It's clearly a disappointing number," said Nick Bennenbroek, head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo in New York. "You're going to get bumps along the road every so often as far as recovery is concerned. It might change sentiment regarding interest rates and the dollar a little bit."

Optimism about the U.S. economy had stoked expectations the Federal Reserve may raise its borrowing costs sooner rather than later, pushing the dollar to a 3-1/2-month high versus the euro and a basket of six major currencies the previous day.

Analysts said the dollar also dropped as investors sought to lock in gains on the greenback's recent rise.

"You've seen a big move in euro/dollar already. Folks are taking some profits on their long dollar positions ahead of the holiday," said Samarjit Shankar, managing director of global FX strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.

In midday trading, the euro was up 0.8 percent at $1.4357 EUR=, rebounding from a 3-1/2-month low of $1.4216 on Tuesday after a third rating agency downgraded Greece's credit rating [ID:nLDE5BL0NG].

Adding to pressure on the dollar was a survey showing that although U.S. consumer sentiment rose in December, it fell short of analyst expectations and trailed the preliminary December figure. See [ID:nN23151816].

Against the yen, the dollar last dropped 0.5 percent to 91.41 yen, after earlier climbing to 91.87 yen JPY=, its highest level since late October, according to Reuters data.

CANADIAN DOLLAR RALLIES

The ICE Futures dollar index, which values the greenback against a basket of six currencies, fell 0.6 percent to 77.775 .DXY, down from a 3-1/2-month peak of 78.449 hit on Tuesday.

Sterling fell after minutes from the Bank of England's December policy meeting showed that officials felt little had changed since November, which was seen as leaving the door open to a further expansion of the central bank's asset buying program. [ID:nLDE5BM0JP]

"The minutes confirm that the committee is in wait-and-see mode until February, but don't close the door entirely on further policy action of some sort," said Jonathan Loynes, economist at Capital Economics.

The pound GBP=D4 fell as low as $1.5924, one tick from Tuesday's trough, which was the weakest level since mid-October. It was last little changed at $1.5966.

The Swiss franc rose against the euro to 1.4878 EURCHF=. Traders remained wary of possible action by the Swiss National Bank to curb the franc's strength. The dollar fell 1.2 percent to 1.0361 francs CHF=.

The Canadian dollar hit a more than two-week high against the U.S. currency after Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said in an interview with Bloomberg that China and Russia may diversify their currency reserves into Canadian dollars. The greenback last dropped 1 percent to C$1.0471 CAD=. (Additional reporting by Steven C. Johnson; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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Commodities prices mostly fall, gold sharply lower

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NEW YORK

Commodities prices are mostly falling, with gold prices tumbling following a recovery in the dollar.

Gold for February delivery is down $15.50 at $1,096.00 an ounce. It is the first time since Nov. 6 that gold settled below $1,100 an ounce.

The price of gold dropped as the dollar strengthened throughout the day. Demand for gold tends to increase when the dollar is weak because it's used as a hedge against inflation.

The ICE Futures U.S. dollar index is up 0.3 percent, after falling early on.

Volume is light heading into the Christmas holiday on Friday.
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Merger news from Sanofi, Bucyrus drives stocks up

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NEW YORK

Another wave of corporate dealmaking carried stocks sharply higher Monday.

Major stock indexes rose more than 1 percent in midday trading after French drug maker Sanofi-Aventis SA announced plans to buy health care products company Chattem Inc. for $1.9 billion, and mining equipment maker Bucyrus International Inc. said it will buy Terex Corp.'s mining equipment division for $1.3 billion. Meanwhile Dutch auto maker Spyker Cars submitted a new offer to buy Saab from General Motors Co.

Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors, said the flurry of corporate deal activity is giving the stock market a major boost of confidence.

"Companies are using their cash to go out and make some strategic acquisitions," Orlando said. "They believe the economy has bottomed and will continue to improve."

Aluminum maker Alcoa Inc. was the biggest gainer of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow Jones industrial average, jumping more than 9 percent after an analyst upgrade and the announcement of an $11 billion joint venture deal in Saudi Arabia.

An upgrade of chip maker Intel Corp. helped boost technology stocks, adding to gains from Friday that followed upbeat earnings reports from business software company Oracle Corp. and BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd.

Trading is likely to be volatile this week as investors take vacation ahead of the Christmas holiday on Friday. Stock market volume has been thinning out since November, as many investors step back from the market following a historic rally in stocks over the past nine months. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is still up 23.5 percent for the year.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 118.20, or 1.1 percent, at 10,447.09. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 14.60, or 1.3 percent, at 1,117.07, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 29.38, or 1.3 percent, at 2,241.07.

Bond prices fell sharply as stocks rose. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite to price, rose to 3.63 percent from 3.54 percent late Friday.

Oil rose 28 cents to $73.64 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gold fell.

The dollar was slightly higher against other major currencies.

Chattem shares surged more than 32 percent, adding $22.92 to $92.90 after Sanofi-Aventis SA agreed to buy the company for $93.50 a share, a 34 percent premium over Friday's closing price. Chattem, which is traded on the Nasdaq, helped to lift that index to its highest point of the year.

Also trading on the Nasdaq, Bucyrus shares soared more than 11 percent, rising $5.68 to $56.52 after announcing its purchase of Terex' mining equipment division. Terex shares rose $1.27, or 6.6 percent, to $20.48.

Alcoa shares shot up as much as 9.6 percent after the announcement of the Saudi deal and Morgan Stanley's upgrade of the stock to "Buy" based on a forecast of higher aluminum prices. Shares jumped $1.24 to $15.82, after earlier hitting a 14-month high of $15.98.

Intel shares rose 64 cents, or 3.3 percent, to $20.27 after a Barclays Capital analyst upgraded the stock, calling it a good value based on expectations for solid fourth-quarter results.

More than three stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume was low at 413.5 million shares compared with 996.9 million shares at the same time on Friday.

Volume was exceptionally high Friday as several types of options contracts expired and S&P made changes to the S&P 500. That index is the basis for many indexed mutual funds, so those funds were forced to alter their holdings to match the reconstituted index.

In other trading, the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 7.75, or 1.3 percent, to 618.32.
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Agriculture futures rise, livestock prices mixed

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CHICAGO

Agriculture futures were mostly higher Monday on the Chicago Board of Trade.

Wheat for March delivery added 1.25 cents to $5.2925 a bushel; March corn gained 6.75 cents to $4.045 a bushel; March oats were unchanged at $2.6025 a bushel; and March soybeans rose 5.5 cents to $10.255 a bushel.

In other trading, beef futures rose while pork futures dropped on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

February live cattle added 0.42 cent to 85.27 cents a pound; January feeder cattle rose 0.28 cent to 95 cents a pound; February lean hogs dropped 0.37 cent to 64.75 cents a pound; and February pork bellies slid 1.20 cents to 85 cents a pound.
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Preparing For Bearish Action In MannKind

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news - people ): Bearish option traders threw in the towel on out-of-the-money calls in the February contract and initiated pessimistic trades using in-the-money calls. Traders sold nearly 3,600 calls at the February 12.5 strike for one dollar per contract. Open interest at that strike of 6,381 contracts suggests the sale of the calls is likely the work of traders abandoning previously established bullish positions on MNKD. Meanwhile, investors expecting shares of the biotech company to move substantially lower by expiration in February sold roughly 7,000 in-the-money calls at the February 7.5 strike price for an average premium of $1.97 apiece. Option implied volatility on the stock fell 26% during the first half of the session, from an intraday high of 125.94%, to the current reading of 99.90%.

Life Technologies Corp. ( LIFE - news - people ): The global biotechnology tools company attracted one options optimist to the February 2010 contract as LIFE's shares rallied 0.75% during the trading day to $51.72. The investor initiated a bullish risk reversal on the stock by selling 5,000 puts at the February 50 strike for $1.75 apiece, spread against the purchase of 5,000 calls at the higher February 55 strike for $1.35 each. The trader pockets a net credit of 40 cents per contract on the reversal, which he retains in full as long as shares stay buoyant above $50 through expiration day. Additional profits accumulate if shares rally 6.5% to surpass the breakeven price of $55.
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Alcoa Inc. ( AA - news - people ): A double-whammy of positive news on top of an already buoyant stock market saw investors forge gains of 9% to $15.90 for shares of Alcoa in early trading on Monday. The stock suddenly looks comfortable above $15 for the first time in 2009. Alcoa announced a $10.8 billion joint-venture with a Saudi mining company in which the two companies would develop an aluminum industrial complex in Saudi Arabia. Investors are clearly putting stock in the words of Alcoa's CEO who referred to a change in the operating dynamics and cost base within the aluminum industry. Broker Morgan Stanley ( MS - news - people ) also upgraded its status to "buy."
Even after an explosive move higher, is Research in Motion (RIMM) a great short position? Click here for guidance in Option Strategist.

In examining today's most active options on the stock it appears that one trader was already positioned for an improvement in the prospects for Alcoa. Some 13,000 call options reserving buying rights before they expire in January at the fixed strike price of $15 were sold for a $1.30 premium. With substantial open interest already present at the strike it's of interest to us that these calls traded through the bid price at what was a deep in-the-money option at the time. It appears that this investor read the prospects for Alcoa pretty well. Those call options just about doubled in today's trading and earlier this month traded at as low as 20 cents per contract.

PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bull ( UUP - news - people ): With the exception of a weak performance against an inspired Canadian dollar, the U.S. dollar is up across the board, although not so that you'd know it according to a marginally changed dollar index. Yet we continue to see heavy volume in the PowerShares ETF where option traders have recently made significant trades in the expectation that the dollar might rise. With the ETF trading at $23.02 today the most heavily trafficked call option series is at the 23 strike where investors over recent weeks have amassed positions amassing to a reading of open interest of some 469,000 contracts.
Click here for buy-sell-hold updates on Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, ArcSight and Baidu.com in the Oberweis Report.

In today's action in which the UUP is one of the most active ETFs, it appears that investors are closing out some long call positions by selling out profitable plays. The calls appear to be trading largely to the 55 cent bid and the volume is buoyant despite the fact that the dollar index is not going anywhere today. At 4.63% the 10-year yield looks set to breach overhead resistance that could see another 20 basis points on yield pretty quickly. The UUP was trading at $22.05 just three weeks ago.

Level 3 Communications ( LVLT - news - people ): The fixed line telecommunications firm suffered a 2.75% decline in the value of its shares early today to $1.42. One investor dabbled in put options on the stock. It looks like the trader rolled a long put position in the near-term January contract out to the June 2010 contract. The investor likely sold 7,900 puts at the in-the-money January 2.5 strike for a premium of $1.05 apiece in order to buy the same number of puts at the June 2.5 strike for $1.15 each. It is unclear how much the investor initially paid for the January 2.5 strike put options. However, the trader could be banking gains on the original bearish stance given the in-the-money status of the puts today. The net cost of the calendar roll--in isolation--amounts to 10 cents per contract, and positions the trader to amass profits to the downside beneath the breakeven point at $2.40.
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FOREX-Swissie off highs but dollar slips in bumpy market

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TOKYO, Dec 18 (Reuters) - The Swiss franc rose on Friday as investors unwound long euro positions in the approach to the year-end, helped by rumours of a coup in Pakistan that were quickly denied and by stop-loss orders which propelled it up.

In turbulence that also sent the dollar and other currencies down against the low-yielding yen, the euro fell to 1.4910 francs, its weakest level since March when the Swiss National Bank intervened to sell francs after announcing steps to fight deflation.

The dollar remained under pressure but the euro later recovered to stand just 0.3 percent lower on the day at 1.4968 francs EURCHF=R, with traders edgy the central bank might opt to intervene later to bring it above the 1.50 francs threshold.

The yen also later gave up the steepest of its gains on crosses such as the Australian dollar perceived as riskier trades, which have also been hit against the dollar this week as investors close out long positions for the year.

"I get the impression that market players are not wasting time to clean up their positions as we have only a few more days," a hedge fund sales trader for a Japanese bank said.

"Today's move in euro/Swiss, dollar/yen and cross/yen are all part of that last-minute liquidation."

The Swiss franc had gained on Thursday after a one-year tender by the European Central Bank, as banks in the eurozone sold euros to buy francs for Swiss franc-denominated loans. [ID:nLDE5BF21L]

Yen crosses fell in early trade as a weak day on Wall Street set the market up for closing out riskier positions. Talk of a coup in Pakistan fuelled that sentiment, helping send the euro even lower and triggering sell orders below 1.50 francs.

A spokesman for Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari dismissed the coup rumours that started after a government minister suspected of corruption was stopped from leaving the country, saying there was no coup. [ID:nSGE5BH00F]

"Stops below 1.50 francs accelerated falls in a market with low liquidity and spurred risk avoiding trade at the year-end," said Tomohiro Nishida, treasury department manager at Chuo Mitsui Trust and Banking Company.

Forex moves have become more erratic as dealers tend to be unwilling to hold positions for long before the year's close.

"In this thin market, it's no surprise that the market could be volatile. And since there is no clear direction now in the market, stops could play a major role," said a trader at a Japanese trust bank.

The net result of a series of position liquidations was the dollar retreating from three month highs hit the previous day.

The euro, which struggled on Thursday after S&P became the second rating agency this month to downgrade Greece, rose 0.3 percent to $1.4383 EUR= after falling to $1.4304 the previous day, its lowest since early September.

The dollar index, a gauge of the greenback's performance against other six major currencies, fell 0.3 percent to 77.498, off Thursday's high of 77.943, its highest since early September.

Yen crosses fluctuated but came off the steepest of their earlier lows on short-covering.

The euro was steady on the day at 128.90 yen EURJPY=R, sterling slipped 0.2 percent GBPJPY=R and the Australian dollar fell 0.2 percent AUDJPY=R.

The Bank of Japan voted as expected to keep its overnight call rate target at 0.1 percent on Friday and said it would not tolerate deflation, backing concerns from the government and potentially setting the scene for more easing. [ID:nTKV006319]

BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa holds a news conference later with embargoed comments expected to come out some time after 4:15 p.m. (0715 GMT) and markets will be watching for hints on policy.
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Indian rupee may lack clear direction early

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MUMBAI, Dec 18 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee may lack clear direction in early deals on Friday, with the impact of an expected fall in the stock market countered by weakness in the dollar that should support the currency.

* At 0315 GMT, the index of the dollar .DXY against six majors was down 0.27 percent.

* The MSCI-index of Asian stocks ex-Japan .MSCIAPJ was down 0.72 percent and the Nifty SINc1 India stock futures was also down 0.2 percent, pointing to a weaker domestic opening.

* The partially convertible rupee INR=IN had ended at 46.88/89 per dollar on Thursday, after hitting 46.97 during trade, its lowest since Nov. 27. It fell about 0.5 percent from Wednesday's close of 46.655/665. (Reporting by Neha D'silva)
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Top 10 Outrageous Predictions for 2010

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As New Year's approaches, money managers, strategists, sell-side analysts and economists turn their attention to what the next year holds.

Which sector will do best? Which currency, country, asset class? Is it time to invest in that leather-bound waste-paper basket that would really tie the office together?

But one group of analysts at Saxo Bank goes one step further to lay out its "outrageous predictions," or "Black Swans" for the year ahead.

It looks to those high-impact, hard-to-predict and rare events that can blindside investors. The exercise aims to challenge market conceptions, but the chance of one of the predictions actually coming true is no better than 50 percent, they say.

Judging by last year's list of predictions, it would appear the success rate is closer to zero. Click here to see last year's "Black Swans" and read below to see what Saxo Bank thinks could be happening in 2010.

Bunds Yields Will fall to 2.25%

German bunds, and other sovereign fixed-income assets, will see their yield slump because of deflationary forces and easy monetary policy, according to Saxo Bank. Traders will refuse to buy into the "growth story" that is being pushed by the stock market, the report said. The German 10-year government bond could be forced from 122.6 to 133.3 by the end of 2010, it added.

VIX Will Fall to 14

The VIX could fall from 22.32 to 14 points as trading ranges narrow and implied options volatility declines, according to the report. Investors are showing the same kind of complacency toward risk as they were in 2005-06, Saxo Bank said.

Yuan Will be Devalued by 5% Vs. Dollar

The yuan could be set to fall 5 percent against the dollar due to the spare capacity in China and the general economic backdrop, according to Saxo Bank. The efforts of Chinese authorities to stem the credit growth and avoid bad loans, coupled with the creation of several growth bubbles could spell weakness for the Chinese currency, the report said.

Gold Will Fall to $870 in 2010

The rally in gold prices will be brought to an end by a strengthening dollar, Saxo Bank claimed. Pushing gold higher has become too easy and too widespread to bring results in the short term and a serious correction could send the precious metal toward $870, the analysts said. However, it will reach $1,500 within five years, they said.

Dollar Vs. Yen to Reach 110

The dollar could snap back next year, sending the yen to 110, because the greenback carry trade has been too easy and too obvious for too long, Saxo Bank said. Meanwhile, the yen is not reflecting the economic reality in Japan, which is laden with growing debt and an ageing population, the report said.

Angry Americans to Form Third Party

Next year will bring see an anti-incumbent mood in U.S. politics as a result of bail-outs and general disapproval of both the big parties, the analysts said. The demand for change could bring about a new third party to offer an alternative, they added.

US Social Security Trust Fund Will Go Bust

"This is not so much an outrageous claim as an actuarial and mathematical certainty," the report said. "The outrageous part is that social security taxes and contributions have been squandered for so long."

Next year outlays for the non-existing trust fund will have to be part-financed by the federal government's General Fund, Saxo Bank said. Part of the social security outlays will have to be financed by higher taxes, which will bring more borrowing or more printing, they said.

Price of Sugar Will Drop One Third

Predictions '10 - See Complete Coverage

A return to more normal weather conditions in 2010 could make sugar one of the less attractive commodities, Saxo Bank said. Meanwhile, Brazil and the US have lowered the ethanol content of gasoline by five percentage points because of the rising price of the commodity, the report pointed out. Both factors could push prices of sugar lower.

Tokyo Small Caps Will Rise by 50%

Tokyo's small-cap stocks have been underperforming the Nikkei 225, but their fundamentals indicate this is a "bargain index," according to Saxo Bank.

"With a price/book ratio of only 0.77 and only about 12 percent of the index consisting of financials, we know no other index this cheap," the report said.

US Trade Balance Will Turn Positive

The dollar has become weak enough to stimulate US exports and put strain on imports, the report pointed out. The changing trend could see one or two months of positive US trade in 2010, it said.
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Commodities' Rally Falters

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Commodities prices fell almost across the board as a sharp jump in the U.S. dollar heightened concerns that key drivers of the big rallies lately for products from cotton to gold could be faltering.

Commodities have generally benefited in recent months from dollar weakness, which has made the products more affordable for investors using other currencies. They also have gained as investors, flush with cash in an ultralow-interest-rate environment, have abandoned the dollar in favor of higher-yielding assets.

However, the dynamics that have supported commodities broadly as an asset class, and some products in particular, have started to unravel in ...
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Regulators Approve Key Contract for New 48-Megawatt Sempra Generation Solar Power Plant

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Sempra Generation announced today that the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has approved Pacific Gas & Electric's (PG&E) contract to purchase 48 megawatts (MW) of photovoltaic solar power from Sempra Generation's Copper Mountain Solar facility.

The CPUC's approval of the contract signals the January 2010 construction start for the facility, an expansion of Sempra Generation's existing 10-MW El Dorado Solar power plant. Both projects are located near Boulder City, Nev., about 40 miles southeast of Las Vegas, and each will provide power to PG&E under two 20-year power contracts.

When completed by late 2010, the combined 58-MW installation will become the largest operational photovoltaic solar-power facility in North America. Together, the two facilities will utilize nearly 1 million photovoltaic panels.

"The approval of this power contract will allow us to bolster and expand a vital renewable energy hub for the western United States, one that will provide citizens in California with reliable and sustainable power for years to come," said Michael W. Allman, president and chief executive officer for Sempra Generation. "The prime desert location for this solar project provides a reliable, efficient daytime source of energy for more than 330 days a year. We continue to be very pleased with the positive reception Sempra Generation's wind and solar projects have received from existing and potential customers and look forward to continuing the development of large, utility-scale renewable power projects that meet North America's ever increasing demand for clean energy."

Unlike other solar-power facilities, Sempra Generation's plants do not use heated water or other liquids in the power-generation process. Solar facilities generate electricity during the day when customer demand typically peaks.

Sempra Generation operates and maintains a fleet of natural gas fueled and solar power plants serving the U.S. market and is in the process of developing renewable power projects in the Pacific Southwest. Sempra Energy (NYSE: SRE), based in San Diego, is a Fortune 500 energy services holding company with 2008 revenues of nearly $11 billion. The Sempra Energy companies' 13,600 employees serve more than 29 million consumers worldwide.

This press release contains statements that are not historical fact and constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements can be identified by words like "believes," "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "estimates," "may," "would," "could," "should," or similar expressions, or discussions of strategies, plans or intentions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance. They involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Future results may differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon various assumptions involving judgments with respect to the future and other risks, including, among others: local, regional, national and international economic, competitive, political, legislative and regulatory conditions and developments; actions by the California Public Utilities Commission, California State Legislature, California Department of Water Resources, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Federal Reserve Board, and other regulatory and governmental bodies in the United States, the United Kingdom and other countries; capital market conditions and inflation, interest and exchange rates; energy and trading markets, including the timing and extent of changes and volatility in commodity prices; the availability of electric power, natural gas and liquefied natural gas; weather conditions and conservation efforts; war and terrorist attacks; business, regulatory, environmental and legal decisions and requirements; the status of deregulation of retail natural gas and electricity delivery; the timing and success of business development efforts; the resolution of litigation; and other uncertainties, all of which are difficult to predict and many of which are beyond the control of the company. These risks and uncertainties are further discussed in the reports that Sempra Energy has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These reports are available through the EDGAR system without charge at the SEC's Web site, www.sec.gov and on the company's Web site, at www.sempra.com.

Sempra Pipelines & Storage, Sempra Generation, Sempra LNG and RBS Commodities dba Sempra Energy Solutions and Sempra Energy Trading are not the same companies as the utility, San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) or Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas), and Sempra Pipelines & Storage, Sempra Generation, Sempra LNG and RBS Commodities dba Sempra Energy Solutions and Sempra Energy Trading are not regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission.
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PRECIOUS-Gold rises; funds buy after 4 days of decline

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Gold rose Thursday, snapping a four-session losing streak as institutional investors and exchange-traded funds added positions after bullion retreated from record highs last week.

A steady U.S. dollar also improved gold market sentiment. Earlier this week, bullion investors braced for the dollar to surge against other currencies amid worries about sovereign debts in Spain, Greece and possibly other countries.

William Rhind, strategic director of ETF Securities' U.S. unit, said he noted a big pick-up in demand for both of the company's U.S. physical gold and silver ETFs as bullion prices fell.

"We are seeing more fund buying, and the Indian jewelry demand has picked up. People are using these opportunities to get back into the market," said Rhind, whose London-based company manages more than 130 exchange-traded products around the world with more than $17 billion in assets.

Spot gold was at $1,130.60 an ounce at 3:10 p.m. EST , up from $1,128.80 late in New York on Wednesday.

U.S. gold futures for February delivery settled up $5.30 to $1,126.20 an ounce on the COMEX division of the NYMEX.

Analysts said it will probably be January before gold revisits record highs at $1,226.10 an ounce that it hit a week ago, although they believe the upward trend in gold is intact.

"Year-end considerations, book squaring, argue for further dollar strength, which will keep gold under pressure," said Calyon analyst Robin Bhar.

"As we go into the new year, with fresh allocations, gold is one of the commodities that will be in favor due to a whole host of longer-term positive factors."

Further losses in the dollar would boost gold's appeal as an alternative asset, and make dollar-priced commodities cheaper for holders of other currencies.

The dollar was largely flat after initially falling against the euro on a narrower-than-expected U.S. trade deficit for October and some improvement in U.S. jobless claims.

Private banking group Pictet said on Thursday that gold was one of its preferred picks for 2010.

UNCERTAINTY REIGNS

Fears over the economic outlook and sovereign debt will also continue to support gold, analysts said.

Bud Conrad, chief economist at Casey Research, said gold fell earlier this week on follow-through selling following a sharp pullback last Friday.

"We are nowhere near through the long-term bull-market run in gold. In fact, pullbacks should be seen as a good buying opportunity," Conrad said.

The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust, said its holdings were unchanged on Wednesday after an outflow of nearly 14 tonnes a day before, their biggest drop since July.

In supply news, South Africa, a major gold producer, said its output of the precious metal fell 5.8 percent year-on-year in October.

Meanwhile platinum was at $1,122 an ounce against $1,416.50, while palladium was flat at $362 compared with Wednesday's finish. Silver was at $17.37 an ounce against $17.38.
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US Grain Exports-Wheat demand poor despite price cut

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U.S. wheat has failed to generate new interest on the export market as prices remain too high despite a 12 percent drop in recent weeks, traders and analysts said Thursday.

"We are well out of the world market still," said Shawn McCambridge, grains analyst at Prudential Bache Commodities. "We are dealing with other exporters also having very large supplies looking to move their supplies."
The futures market, which has dropped sharply since reaching a five-month high of $5.83-1/2 a bushel about three weeks ago, needs to fall another 75 cents or so to bring prices for U.S. wheat offerings in line with supplies from around the globe, a trader on the export market said.

Prices for wheat rose throughout autumn amid a weakening dollar, which makes U.S. supplies relatively less expensive on the world market, and heavy influx of money from investment funds.

But the market turned lower during the past three weeks as investors focused on the growing surplus of supplies around the globe.

"I do think it is down to the fundamentals right now," Frank Cholly, senior market strategist at brokerage Lind-Waldock in Chicago. "Through the remainder of this year and into next year, I think we continue to trend lower."

The U.S. Agriculture Department said Thursday export sales of wheat were 245,200 tonnes (all old crop) in the latest reporting week, below analysts forecasts for 350,000 to 450,000 tonnes.

USDA left its forecast for 2009/10 U.S. wheat exports at 875 million bushels, which was 13.8 percent below the 2008/09 export pace of 1.015 billion bushels.

USDA raised its forecast for U.S. ending stocks of wheat to 900 million bushels for the 2009/10 crop year, up from its previous estimate of 885 million bushels. Analysts had been expecting wheat ending stocks of 887 million bushels.

CHINA BUYING CUTTING SOY STOCKS

Soybean ending stocks were seen declining due to persistent strong demand from China.

Weekly export sales of soybeans were 920,100 tonnes, including 613,700 tonnes to China, USDA said. Analysts had been expecting soybean export sales in a range from 700,000 tonnes to 850,000 tonnes.

China is expected to import 42.48 million tonnes of soybeans during 2009, up 13.5 percent from 2008, according to the China National Grain and Oils Information Center, a state-backed think-tank. Imports in November and December would total 7.6 million tonnes.

USDA pegged 2009/10 ending stocks of U.S. soybeans at 255 million bushels, down from its November forecast of 270 million bushels but above the average analyst forecast of 233 million bushels.

Export sales of corn were 847,700 tonnes in the latest reporting week, up 29 percent from a week ago and topping forecasts for 600,000 to 800,000 tonnes, USDA said.

Despite the strong weekly sales, USDA slashed its forecast for total 2009/10 exports of U.S. corn to 2.05 billion bushels from 2.10 billion bushels.

Farmers made good progress on the much-delayed harvest of a bumper crop of U.S. corn during the past few weeks, flooding the export pipeline with supplies.

But snowy weather around the U.S. Corn Belt this week has halted the final stages of the harvest and shut off delivery of corn to elevators at river locations, traders said.
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CANADA STOCKS-TSX may open higher on commodities

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Toronto's main stock market index could halt a four-session losing streak on Wednesday as strong gold and energy prices looked ready to underpin the resource-heavy index.

Stocks

A lower U.S. dollar .DXY could also help prop up the Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index .GSPTSE as investors shift focus to resource plays.

The Toronto index slid to its lowest level in more than a week Tuesday on a drop in commodity prices and shares of Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS.TO) added pressure after it missed profit expectations. For details, see[ID:nN08213633]

Below is some news that could affect the market:

FIRM GOLD

Gold rose nearly 1 percent in Europe on Wednesday, recovering from three-week lows in the previous session, as the dollar weakened against the euro on concerns that selling in the single currency had been overdone.[ID:nGEE5B80UE]

OIL RISES

U.S. crude oil CLc1 rose more than 1 percent a barrel Wednesday after several days of declines, as industry data showed a big drop in U.S. crude stocks and on a weaker U.S. dollar. [ID:nSP59369]

ENCANA CORP

Canada's EnCana Corp (ECA.TO) said Wednesday it will renew its stock buyback program. The energy producer plans to repurchase and cancel up to 37.5 million, or 5 percent of its common shares. [ID:nN09155500]

FIRST QUANTUM MINERALS

Canada's First Quantum Minerals Ltd (FM.TO) will buy BHP Billiton Ltd's (BHP.AX) closed Ravensthorpe nickel mine for $340 million, paving the way to revive production that could add nearly 3 percent to world supply. [ID:nSYD519009]

HUSKY ENERGY

Husky Energy Inc (HSE.TO), Canada's No. 3 integrated oil company, said Tuesday it tapped into another big gas field off China's coast similar to its massive Liwan discovery in 2006, one of the biggest-ever gas finds off the country's shore.[ID:nN08216430]

VECTOR AEROSPACE

Vector Aerospace Corp (RNO.TO), a Canadian aviation repair and overhaul company, is looking for acquisitions and plans to expand its share of a market expected to be flat next year, its chief executive said Tuesday.[ID:nN08214459]

RESEARCH ROUNDUP

Following is a summary of research actions on Canadian companies reported by Reuters Wednesday. [RCH/CA]

* UBS raises Bank of Nova Scotia price target to C$56 from C$54; rating "buy"

* RBC raises Reitmans Ltd (RET.TO) price target to C$18 from C$17; rating "sector perform"

* MacQuarie cuts Cameco Corp (CCO.TO) price target to C$36.50 from C$39.40; rating "outperform"
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SE Asia Stocks-Major indexes hit one-week low; Thailand leads

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Major Southeast Asian stock
markets hit their lowest level in a week on Wednesday, with
Thailand leading the decline ahead of a holiday as investors
unloaded heavyweights such as Siam Commercial Bank and Banpu.
Worries about the strength of the global recovery weighed on
market sentiment across Asia, triggering broad selling in
Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Thailand's benchmark SET index .SETI fell 0.6 percent, at
one point touching its lowest since Nov. 30, with third-ranked
lender Siam Commercial Bank SCB.BK down 2 percent and coal
miner Banpu BANP.BK off 3 percent.

Some brokers said the current share price of Banpu was
close to its fair value for 2010 and that a surge in coal
prices had already been priced in.

Investors were cautious and market turnover remained thin
at 16.1 billion baht ($485 million) as supporters of ousted
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra plan to stage an
anti-government rally on Thursday, which is a public holiday.

"If the rally turns out to be peaceful, we should see a
mild market rebound when it resumes trading on Friday," said
Phillip Securities analyst Teerada Charnyingyong.

"Sentiment in Asia was weak due to global recovery concerns
and the Thai market was also under selling pressure from
foreign investors," she said.

Singapore's index .FTSTI eased 0.3 percent, after falling
to its lowest since Dec. 2, with bank DBS Group (DBSM.SI)
sliding 1.2 percent and publisher Singapore Press Holdings
(SPRM.SI) dropping 5.7 percent.

In Kuala Lumpur, the main index .KLSE fell 0.5 percent to
its lowest since Nov. 30, with Malayan Banking (MBBM.KL) down
1.03 percent and shipping firm MISC (MISC.KL) 1.8 percent
lower.

In Jakarta, the index .JKSE touched its lowest since Dec.
2 and ended down 0.1 percent, with the biggest telecom firm
Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLKM.JK) and top automotive
distributor Astra Internatiional (ASII.JK) both losing more
than 2 percent.

The Philippines .PSI closed down 1.02 percent, with
Philippine Long Distance Telephone (TEL.PS) falling 1.2 percent
and Philex Mining (PX.PS) declining 3.2 percent.

Vietnam .VNI was off 3.7 percent, with Vietcombank
VCB.HM down 3.8 percent and VietinBank CTG.HM off 4.8
percent.
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SE Asia Stocks-Major indexes hit one-week low; Thailand leads

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BANGKOK, Dec 9 (Reuters) - Major Southeast Asian stock
markets hit their lowest level in a week on Wednesday, with
Thailand leading the decline ahead of a holiday as investors
unloaded heavyweights such as Siam Commercial Bank and Banpu.
Worries about the strength of the global recovery weighed on
market sentiment across Asia, triggering broad selling in
Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Thailand's benchmark SET index .SETI fell 0.6 percent, at
one point touching its lowest since Nov. 30, with third-ranked
lender Siam Commercial Bank SCB.BK down 2 percent and coal
miner Banpu BANP.BK off 3 percent.

Some brokers said the current share price of Banpu was
close to its fair value for 2010 and that a surge in coal
prices had already been priced in.

Investors were cautious and market turnover remained thin
at 16.1 billion baht ($485 million) as supporters of ousted
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra plan to stage an
anti-government rally on Thursday, which is a public holiday.

"If the rally turns out to be peaceful, we should see a
mild market rebound when it resumes trading on Friday," said
Phillip Securities analyst Teerada Charnyingyong.

"Sentiment in Asia was weak due to global recovery concerns
and the Thai market was also under selling pressure from
foreign investors," she said.

Singapore's index .FTSTI eased 0.3 percent, after falling
to its lowest since Dec. 2, with bank DBS Group (DBSM.SI)
sliding 1.2 percent and publisher Singapore Press Holdings
(SPRM.SI) dropping 5.7 percent.

In Kuala Lumpur, the main index .KLSE fell 0.5 percent to
its lowest since Nov. 30, with Malayan Banking (MBBM.KL) down
1.03 percent and shipping firm MISC (MISC.KL) 1.8 percent
lower.

In Jakarta, the index .JKSE touched its lowest since Dec.
2 and ended down 0.1 percent, with the biggest telecom firm
Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLKM.JK) and top automotive
distributor Astra Internatiional (ASII.JK) both losing more
than 2 percent.

The Philippines .PSI closed down 1.02 percent, with
Philippine Long Distance Telephone (TEL.PS) falling 1.2 percent
and Philex Mining (PX.PS) declining 3.2 percent.

Vietnam .VNI was off 3.7 percent, with Vietcombank
VCB.HM down 3.8 percent and VietinBank CTG.HM off 4.8
percent.
(Editing by Alan Raybould)
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'Hot Money' Leaving Gold and Oil: Commodities Pro

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Kevin Ferry says the "hot money" is fleeing gold and oil for another commodity: coffee. The co-founder of Cronus Futures Management offered CNBC his insights into Federal Reserve policy and the commodities/futures markets now.

As long as the Fed maintains "patience" with its current rate policy, the dollar should hold, he said.

"At some time, [dollar strength] will be a big concern. But not right now."

So why coffee?

Surprisingly to some, the crop is "the second largest commodity traded in the world," even topping steel, Ferry noted.

As to the apparent coffee bubble forming, Ferry borrows a phrase from Alan Greenspan:

"The situation is 'fundamentally unusual' — meaning, the prices on these things can get away from the fundamentals because everyone wants in on the trade
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Stock market down but not out, according to Dow transports

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One wouldn't necessarily know it in looking at the U.S. stock market Tuesday, but investors were recently sent a bullish signal by an indicator imbued with longtime meaning.

Coming on the heels of the Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed (INDU 10,286, -104.45, -1.01%) tallying on Nov. 25 its closing high for 2009, the Dow Jones Transportation Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:djt (DJT 4,055, -4.80, -0.12%) on Friday closed at 4,101.76, its high mark for the year.

"The transports are the first pillar of technical analysis that has a lot of historical relevance. When the transports break to a new high, and the Dow also breaking to a new high, it's a very important signal that can't be denied," said Richard Ross, global technical strategist at Auerbach Grayson & Co.
/quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed INDU 10,286, -104.45, -1.01%
/quotes/comstock/10w!i:djt DJT 4,055, -4.80, -0.12%
20%
0%
-20%
-40%
-60%
M
M
J
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On Tuesday, the transport index fell 0.4% to 4,045.11, while the major stock indexes also retreated on global economic concerns. The Dow Jones Industrial Average /quotes/comstock/10w!i:dji/delayed (INDU 10,286, -104.45, -1.01%) fell 81.85 points to 10,308.26. The S&P 500 Index /quotes/comstock/21z!i1:in\x (SPX 1,092, -11.32, -1.03%) declined 7.59 points to 1,095.66. The Nasdaq Composite Index /quotes/comstock/10y!i:comp (COMP 2,173, -16.62, -0.76%) shed 5.37 points to 2,184.24.

"Amidst this sea of red we're seeing FedEx up 2% today on the back of very strong earnings," said Ross of the delivery giant's quarterly results and raised outlook. See full story on FedEx's increased demand.

"It's always nice for the fundamental story to support the technical picture," said Ross of the results from FedEx, one of 20 components on the transport index, but one that represents 10% of its market valuation.

In a related development, Delta Air Lines Inc. /quotes/comstock/13*!dal/quotes/nls/dal (DAL 9.85, -0.03, -0.30%) will replace YRC Worldwide Inc. /quotes/comstock/15*!yrcw/quotes/nls/yrcw (YRCW 1.00, +0.01, +1.01%) on the index at the close of business Friday.

YRC Worldwide is being ousted from the index because its plans for financial restructuring could lead the trucking giant to file for bankruptcy protection, an event that would disqualify it from any of Dow's indexes, the index provider said
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FOREX-Euro drops amid Fitch cut of Greece rating

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The dollar rose against the euro for the third straight session Tuesday after Fitch cut Greece's credit rating, stoking fear about government deficits and concern about the obstacles still facing global recovery.

Renewed concerns about Dubai's debt woes also discouraged risk appetite, lifting the dollar as investors unwound "carry trades" that involved borrowing the U.S. currency at low rates to finance purchases of higher-yielding currencies and assets.

The yen also rose broadly as investors reduced yen-funded carry trades, and Moody's ( MCO - news - people ) Investors Service further stoked unease when it said fiscal crises in a number of top-rated countries could last for "several years."

"Prospects for sovereign downgrades are really creating a bearish backlash in the market right now," said Andrew Wilkinson, senior analyst at Interactive Brokers' Group in Greenwich, Connecticut.

He added that Fitch's move to cut Greece's debt rating to BBB+ from A- also dashed expectations that the European Central Bank would lift interest rates soon, a view that undermined the euro. That followed a Standard & Poor's report saying Greek banks faced the highest risks in western Europe.

The euro fell 0.8 percent to $1.4698 , well off a 2009 high above $1.51 and its lowest sine Nov. 3. It fell 2.1 percent to 129.91 yen and was on track for its biggest one-day loss against the Japanese currency since late October.

The dollar fell 1.3 percent to 88.37 yen but rose 0.8 percent to 1.0272 Swiss francs . Sterling fell 1 percent to $1.6282 .

Risk aversion was also stoked on Monday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the U.S. economy still faced headwinds and unemployment could stay high for some time.

That dulled optimism seen after surprisingly strong U.S. employment data last week and dashed hopes that the Fed would hike interest rates sooner than previously expected.

Analysts said the yen was the main gainer because Friday's jobs data had sparked talk the yen would return to being the funding currency of choice.

"We're in a period of dialing back risk, though I still think there's a material amount of risk appetite out there," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at BNY-Mellon in New York.

He said the dollar would likely renew its struggles in the coming months, at least until the Fed signals it's ready to lift interest rates from record lows.

An unexpected 1.8 percent month-on-month decline in German industrial output also weighed on the euro, while concerns about Dubai's debt woes pushed investors to seek the safety of the U.S. currency.

Worries about Dubai deepened after Moody's downgraded six Dubai-linked issuers after concluding that no "meaningful" government support would be provided for top firms like DP World or Emaar Properties . .

The Bank of Canada held its key interest rate Tuesday at 0.25 percent, as expected, and maintained its outlook on the economic recovery despite unexpectedly weak third-quarter growth. . The dollar was up 1.1 percent against the Canadian dollar at C$1.0639 .
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Crude falls on stronger dollar

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NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Crude futures fell Monday to their lowest level in nearly two months, pacing broad losses in commodities as the dollar strengthened on concerns that the U.S. may tighten interest rates next year, pressuring dollar-denominated commodities prices. January crude was last down 0.9% at $74.77 a barrel in early North American electronic trading. It fell to $74.56 earlier, the lowest intraday level since Oct. 13.
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HK, Shanghai shares down; commodities fall, Geely shines

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HONG KONG/SHANGHAI, Dec 7 (Reuters) - Shares in Hong Kong and
Shanghai retreated on Monday on bets the dollar will remain firm
following signs the U.S. economy is on a steady path to recovery,
prompting investors to dump commodity stocks.

China's key stock index edged 0.23 percent lower at midday as
a slew of initial public offerings (IPOs) diverted funds from the
market.

Nine IPOs are open for subscriptions on the Shanghai and
Shenzhen stock exchanges this week, with three on Monday
including China Shipbuilding Industry (601989.SS: Quote, Profile, Research), the country's
largest ship equipment maker, which aims to raise up to 14.7
billion yuan ($2.2 billion).

In Hong Kong, China Starch (3838.HK: Quote, Profile, Research), China Gas (0384.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) and
Geely Automobile (0175.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) bucked the downward trend.

China Starch surged 9.26 percent. The company plans to double
its corn starch production capacity to 1.5 million tonnes through
mergers and acquisitions or by building its own plant, the Sing
Tao Daily reported. [ID:nTOE5B600M]

The benchmark Hang Seng Index .HSI was down 0.62 percent or
139.27 points at 22,358.88 at midday. Turnover slipped to HK$35.1
billion ($4.5 billion) from midday Friday's HK$41.1 billion.

The China Enterprises Index .HSCE of top locally listed
mainland Chinese stocks slid 0.40 percent to 13,407.76.

"Investors are a bit shaky right now," said Jackson Wong,
investment manager at Tanrich Securities. "We have been trading
on the weak dollar, especially commodities."

"Expectations that interest rates in the U.S. may go up are
very high because of very good jobs data on Friday. That's the
main reason why investors are unwinding risky assets," he said.

The U.S. dollar slipped against the yen on Monday on
profit-taking, but is expected to remain buoyant after employment
data stoked speculation the Federal Reserve may consider raising
interest rates sooner than previously thought. [ID:nTOE5B602G]

China Gas Holdings (0384.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) rose 6.43 percent after the
South China Morning Post said it was in talks to sell a stake in
its liquefied petroleum gas subsidiary Shanghai PetroPower to
PetroChina (601857.SS: Quote, Profile, Research)(0857.HK: Quote, Profile, Research). [ID:nTOE5B600M]

PetroChina was down 0.91 percent in Hong Kong.

Geely Automobile (0175.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) rallied 6.37 percent. The stock
earlier rose to a record high of $4.38 after the Chinese carmaker
gave an upbeat sales target. [ID:nTOE5B605H]

Contract cellphone maker Foxconn International (2038.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) rose
7.61 percent on an improving outlook for the U.S. economy.

Bank of Communications (3328.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) was down 1.28 percent. The
lender said it aimed to set up a branch in Taiwan.
[ID:nHKV000050]

Commodities fell after gold prices slumped. Gold counter
Zijin Mining (2899.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) lost 5.14 percent and Realgold Mining
(0246.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) shed 3.14 percent. Aluminum Corp of China (2600.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) was
down 2.45 percent and Jiangxi Copper (0358.HK: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 2.51 percent.

In Shanghai, Zijin Mining (601899.SS: Quote, Profile, Research) was one of the
morning's 10 most active stocks, down 2.23 percent at 10.50 yuan.
Shandong Gold (600547.SS: Quote, Profile, Research), one of the top losers, shed 3.97
percent to 83.55 yuan.

Both stocks had outperformed the broad market sharply in the
past few months, propelled by a global gold price rush.

SHANGHAI FALLS

The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC ended Monday morning at
3,309.532 points as some investors cashed in their gains to
subscribe to IPO shares after the index rose 7.13 percent last
week in its best weekly performance in more than eight months.

Trading was range-bound and turnover fell as investors
awaited the outcome of an ongoing key economic meeting to map out
a strategy for China's economy next year.

The meeting, scheduled to end on Monday, is expected to
indicate a continuation of China's existing loose monetary
policy, but may also stress the need for more frequent policy
fine-tuning to reflect the Chinese and global economic recovery.

"Many investors stayed on the sidelines today as they awaited
the outcome of the central economic meeting," said Gui Haoming,
head of research at Shenyin & Wanguo Securities in Shanghai.
"Most of us believe the outcome will be neutral for the market."

Despite the index fall, gaining Shanghai A shares outnumbered
losers by 515 to 364 as investors focused on small caps. Turnover
fell to 99 billion yuan from Friday morning's 125 billion yuan.

Yanzhou Coal Mining Co (600188.SS: Quote, Profile, Research) bucked the broader
market's mild downtrend, adding 3.12 percent to 24.82 yuan after
it said China's top economic planner, the National Development
and Reform Commission, had approved its plan to buy Australian
miner Felix Resources Ltd (FLX.AX: Quote, Profile, Research). [ID:nSYD362329]

Kweichow Moutai Co (600519.SS: Quote, Profile, Research), a leading Chinese liquor
maker, rose 3.04 percent to 176.10 yuan after it said it would
raise prices for its products by an average of 13 percent from
Jan. 1, citing factors including rising raw materials costs.
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WORLD FOREX: Dollar Extends Gains Across Board; Up 2.8% Vs Yen

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TORONTO (Dow Jones)--The dollar extended its gains across the board Friday afternoon as rival currencies capitulated to the greenback's show of strength on expectations U.S. interest rates could rise earlier than previously thought.

The dollar's renewed rally took it to its biggest single-session advance on the yen so far this year, up 2.8% on the day. It hit a one-month peak versus the yen and its highest level in two weeks against the euro.

The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a trade-weighted basket of currencies, also hit a one-month high, up 1.7% since late Thursday.
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CENTER MARKET SNAPSHOT: U.S. Stocks To Get Another Run At Jobs And Retail

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U.S. stocks in the week ahead face another round of reports on how consumers are dealing with tough but recently improving job prospects, information that could swing a market shown to make sudden reversals on minor shifts in sentiment.

A push by Congressional Democrats to pass a new jobs-spending package, combined with weekly jobless claims, will give investors a fresh sense of whether the 15.4 million unemployed in the U.S. will still soon start to find work.

Then, retail sales and consumer sentiment reports, plus a handful of quarterly results from retailers including Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST), will show whether individuals are able to start spending again. And Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks Monday.

Stock strategists said factors that dominated trade in the past week -- optimism about the improving job market, mixed reads on consumers' buying abilities, and nervousness on the market's 66% rise since early March -- are likely to crop up in the week ahead.

"We're trying to come back to normalcy, with this constant fear of the next shoe to drop," said Erik Davidson, managing director of investments for the western U.S. for Wells Fargo & Co.'s private bank unit.

Caution by investors looking to preserve gains has held the market from making a bolder move higher, say some analysts.

"It's been a long two years," Davidson said. "It's time for people to take a deep breath."

Plus, the market is wrestling with the downside of a recovering economy - the likelihood that the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates, now near zero percent, over the next year. Higher benchmark rates would raise borrowing costs and make the U.S. dollar more valuable, possibly curtailing gains in high-flying investments.

Stocks surged early after Friday's jobs report showed nonfarm payrolls dropped by 11,000 in November, blowing away expectations for a 100,000 drop.

But stocks gave up much of those gains by day's end, and even dropped into the red for a while, in part because a jump in the U.S. dollar sank commodities prices and stocks in natural resource firms.

For the week, notable for below-average volume, the Dow Jones Industrials Average (DJI) gained 0.8%, the S&P 500 (SPX) added 1.3% and the Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) advanced 2.6%.

The U.S. dollar ended the week 1.1% higher as measured by the U.S. dollar index (DXY). Its nearly 16% drop this year has helped stoke the recent rally in stocks and commodities, in part by providing cheap credit to buy equities, oil, metals and emerging-markets currencies.

Any of these factors could change investors' daily take on where they want to place their money - in stocks and oil, on the hope of more gains tied to a recovery, or in assets thought to preserve value while offering little yield, including bonds, gold and the dollar.

"The market has had a good move, it's one of these periods where anything could push it easily," said Andrew Brooks, head of U.S. equity trading at T. Rowe Price & Co.

At the end of the day, said Brooks, improving economic fundamentals will help propel stocks higher. But, he cautioned, "it will grind higher, it won't be a moon shot."

Week ahead

Events that could sway sentiment include efforts by Congressional Democrats to pass a $170 billion jobs-spending package. President Barack Obama will deliver a speech Tuesday at the Brookings Institution, where he intends to lay out his own ideas for a narrowly targeted jobs bill, says the Wall Street Journal.

Investors are likely listen closely to a speech Monday by Fed chief Bernanke.

In past speeches he's reaffirmed the Fed is likely to keep its policy of near zero interest rates in place for an extended period, as the central bank waits for more signs the economy is firmly in recovery mode.

But Friday's jobs report encouraged speculation the Federal Reserve would be able to raise interest rates as soon as mid-2010.

The report "was a game changer," wrote Stephen Stanley, chief economist for RBS Securities.

Stanley kept his outlook unchanged, that the Fed would start raising rates in June, but said now he expects some market participants might be "more receptive to our view."

Economists will be looking at Thursday's report on claims filed for unemployment insurance for signs of whether the pace of layoffs is starting to slow.

The government's report on retail sales in November is likely to show a modest rise after a jump in October. The first version of a December consumer sentiment survey, also out Friday, may show some recovery after a drop in the prior two months.

Plus, alternative energy stocks could move into the limelight as policymakers gather in Copenhagen starting Monday for two weeks of climate-change talks.

The world's top politicians have lowered their original goal of setting a new global agreement on climate change to update the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.

Still, even a less ambitious resolution on lowering global emissions could shift more attention to renewable stocks, such as First Solar (FSLR), wind-power producer Iberdola Renewables and exchange-traded fund Market Vectors Global Alternative Energy ETF (GEX).

And votes by Senate lawmakers on amendments to a 10-year, $848 billion health- care bill - including amendments on abortion and the creation of a national insurance plan - could sway health-care stocks such as Humana Inc. (HUM), WellPoint Inc. (WLP), Aetna, Inc. (AET) and Cigna Corp. (CI).

It's also expected to be a busy week for capital raising, both by the U.S. government and companies selling stocks.

The Treasury Department will sell $74 billion in notes and bonds, including $ 40 billion in 3-year notes (UST3YR) on Tuesday, $21 billion in 10-year notes on Wednesday and $13 billion in 30-year bonds (UST30Y) on Thursday.

Plus, several companies are making their U.S. stock-market debuts and issuing secondary offerings.
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Crude remains lower after ADP jobs data

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Crude futures remained lower Wednesday after ADP data showed private-sector firms in the U.S. eliminated 169,000 jobs in November. Crude for January delivery was last down 0.6% at $77.90 a barrel. In other commodities, gold for December delivery gained 0.9% to $1,209.60 an ounce
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UK investors adopt cautious approach to investing

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UK investors have become increasingly more cautious towards investing amid overall uncertainty about the economic recovery.

More than 50 per cent of investors believe the economy is still in a recession, according to a new investor confidence survey by TD Waterhouse. A further 45 per cent say they have adopted a more careful approach to investing.

Many are also relying less on IFAs to help them to choose where and when to invest with more than half of UK investors now making their own investment decisions compared with with 19 per cent who depend on the advice of their adviser or broker.

But individuals are still optimistic about equities and the majority of those surveyed said they were satisfied with the performance of their portfolios which are up, on average, by 16 per cent from a year ago.

“It is interesting to note the mixed views regarding the shape of our economy and it is clear that many investors do not think we are out of the woods just yet,” said Angus Rigby, CEO of TD Waterhouse UK.

“The general tone from our respondents this year seems to be cautious optimism coupled with a desire to take control of their investment decisions.”

UK companies remain the most popular choice among UK investors, with 85 per cent devoting a large proportion of their portfolio to this sector, while 37 per cent favour international companies as their second choice.

Banking sector stocks ranked among the best and worst performing investments over the past 12 months, though 35 per cent of UK investors predict the sector will rebound in the next few months.

Investors remain partial towards the health care and commodities industries. Nineteen per cent expect precious metals and energy to perform the best, followed by the Asian, UK and European stock markets.
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FACTBOX-Goods and commodities shipped by CN Rail

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(Reuters) - Locomotive engineers at Canadian National Railway (CNR.TO) (CNI.N) walked off the job after talks with management broke down on Saturday.

The strike could disrupt the delivery of goods worth millions of dollars. [ID:nN28392589]

The last strike at CN, Canada's largest railroad, was in February 2007. It ended after the federal government passed back-to-work legislation, citing the importance of the rail service to the economy. The government has said it may intervene again. [ID:nN30425723]

Canada's rail network is used heavily by grain shippers and other exporters of raw materials. The Canadian Wheat Board has already warned that the latest strike could create a serious slowdown in the country's grain transportation system. [ID:nN30453930]

Commodity traders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange also warned that the strike could slow lumber deliveries into the United States and drive up prices. [ID:nN30448596]

The following are some of the major goods and commodities shipped by CN Rail: CARS AND AUTOMOTIVE PARTS

CN transports more than 2.3 million vehicles annually, according to its website. It offers bi-level and tri-level auto carriers, along with specialized boxcars for auto parts. COAL

The railroad ships thermal coal, metallurgical coal and petroleum coke to customers in North America. CN, which has access to over 13 coal mines and 7 petroleum coke facilities, provides access to ports on the Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf coasts for exports to Asia and Europe. FERTILIZER

CN provides transportation facilities for North American fertilizer producers and distributors throughout Canada and United States. Its rail network delivers nitrogen, phosphate and potash to the U.S. Midwest corn belt and to ports for export overseas. FOREST PRODUCTS

The company is the largest shipper of forest products in Canada and the United States, according to its website. It transports lumber, wood pulp, newsprint and wood chips, along with a wide array of other forest products. GRAIN:

As many as 11 million tonnes of western Canadian wheat, durum and barley are shipped each year on CN Rail. Its network runs through the grain-growing areas of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. METALS AND MINERALS

CN's rail network has access to 11 aluminum smelters, 12 integrated steel mills, as well as more than 10 mini mills and eight base metal smelters and refineries in North America. PETROLEUM AND CHEMICALS
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FOREX-Dollar weakens vs euro on strong data, Dubai optimism

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The dollar slipped against the euro on Monday as easing concerns about Dubai's debt problems and an upbeat U.S. regional business activity report diminished the greenback's safe-haven allure.

The U.S. currency decline began in Asia as equities advanced on a pledge by the central bank of the United Arab Emirates to provide emergency support to the region's banks. Dubai's oil-rich neighbor, Abu Dhabi, also offered to provide selective support to Dubai companies. For details, see [ID:nGEE5AS0AH]

Investors remained cautious, however, and the yen rose as a top Dubai finance official said the government will not guarantee Dubai World's debt and said creditors are responsible for their actions. [ID:nSP362937]

"Even though the dollar is down, risk has been definitely taken off the table," said John McCarthy, director of foreign exchange at ING Capital Markets in New York, citing weakness in stocks.

Dollar selling may also have something to do with month-end flows related to foreign portfolios, he added.

Since the U.S. stock market rallied in November -- the S&P 500 is on track to post gains of 5 percent this month -- and boosted foreign funds' dollar holdings, managers needed to sell dollars to maintain hedge ratios at the end of the month.

"If not for the month-end flows, we would see the dollar much higher. What the Dubai news has confirmed is that the world (economy) is not as robust as the equity markets would like us to think," McCarthy said.

In early afternoon trading, the ICE Futures U.S. dollar index .DXY, a gauge of the greenback's performance against six other major currencies, was down 0.2 percent on the day at 74.860. The index touched a 15-month low of 74.170 last week.

The euro rose 0.2 percent to $1.5001 EUR=, pulling back from last week's 15-month peak just above $1.5140.

ROBUST MIDWEST ACTIVITY

A report showing business activity in the U.S. Midwest expanded more strongly than expected in November briefly lifted the euro above Major currencies, however, stayed in narrow ranges as U.S. stocks fell in choppy trading and investors worried that markets will remain volatile until year-end.

"We will have a lot of window dressing as the year winds down and investors and fund managers tend to shy away from riskier assets and currencies," said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD Securities in Toronto.

For the month, the euro gained about 1.9 percent against the dollar. The greenback fell 4.3 percent against the yen, its worst monthly performance since the end of 2008.

The yen held steady after hitting a 14-year high at 84.81 yen last week, according to Reuters data. The dollar last traded down 0.2 percent at 86.25 yen JPY=, while the euro dipped 0.1 percent to 129.38 yen EURJPY=R.

A Japanese official on Monday said the government would try to stem the currency's rise, although he did not cite any specific measures.

"In light of the Dubai shock, we want to respond more aggressively than originally planned with an extra budget," Japan's Strategy Minister Naoto Kan, who is also deputy prime minister, told reporters. "We also want to stop the yen's rise and cooperate with the BOJ." [ID:nT77759]

Those remarks, however, did not deter investors from buying the yen. Most analysts believe Japanese authorities will not intervene in the market to slow the yen's gains given that the rise in the currency is more a reflection of the dollar's weakness than yen strength.
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Eye on the consumer Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Obama, Bernanke and the jobs market are all in focus as the year's final month approaches.

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Wall Streeters returning Monday after an almost five-day holiday weekend better be well rested: the week ahead brings an onslaught of reports on retailers, consumer spending and the jobs market.

Financial markets were closed Thursday for Thanksgiving and Friday's half day was barely attended. Dubai's debt problems, a rallying dollar and a selloff in commodities dragged on stocks and may continue to exert pressure Monday.

But tempering that will be what looks to be a mildly positive start to the holiday shopping period. Reports released over the weekend suggest that despite the brutal jobs market, decline in personal wealth and lingering worries about the economy, consumers are willing to spend if the deal is right.

"So far, so good on Black Friday," said Karl Mills, chief investment officer at Jurika, Mills & Keifer. "But more important than what happens this weekend is what happens to the consumer longer term."

This week also brings significant readings on manufacturing, housing and the labor market, with the big November jobs report from the government due at the end of the week.

President Obama speaks Tuesday night about Afghanistan and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's confirmation hearing is Thursday.

Retail: Initial reports and projections for Black Friday and the weekend show consumers have been taking advantage of deals on clothing, toys, electronics and entertainment. Best Buy (BBY, Fortune 500), Wal-Mart Stores (WMT, Fortune 500), Toys R Us and Amazon.com (AMZN, Fortune 500) are among the companies that are already benefiting.

ShopperTrak, a retail analytic firm, said Black Friday sales were up 0.5% from last year.

Cyber Monday, the first day back to work after the holiday, will also be scrutinized for signs that the consumer is participating at a critical time for the economy.

Most economists believe the recession is over, thanks in part to copious amounts of fiscal and monetary stimulus. But an unemployment rate at a 26-year high of 10.2%, lower household income and a still-tight lending environment mean any recovery is likely to be tepid.

Consumer spending fuels roughly two-thirds of economic growth and, with some of the government stimulus programs set to wind down, a still-reticent consumer could be a disaster.
0:00 /2:45Zhu Zhu's hot!

Slide or surge anew? Despite ongoing calls for a bigger selloff, the market has shown an amazing amount of resilience over the last 10 months, posting only slim declines during an otherwise strong, upward trek.

Since closing at a 12-year low on March 9, the S&P 500 has gained just over 60%. Year-to-date, it's gained 21%.

Yet, there is little to suggest a selloff is brewing as the year winds down.

"There are only five weeks left in the year and we are likely to see a measured move up," said David Levy, portfolio manager at Kenjol Capital Management.

"With only a few small corrections since March, the people who are still sitting on the sidelines are going to have to jump in," he said.
On the docket

Monday: Black Friday passes the torch to Cyber Monday, the big online shopping day that follows the long Thanksgiving weekend.

The Chicago PMI, a regional read on manufacturing, is due out shortly after the start of trading. The index is expected to have fallen to 53 from 54.2 in October.

Tuesday: The ISM Manufacturing index is the standout on a busy day for economic news. The index is expected to have fallen to 54.8 from 55.7 in October.

Construction spending for October is expected to have fallen 0.4% after rising 0.8% in September.

The pending home sales index for October is expected to have fallen 0.5% after rising 6.1% in the previous month.

Also on tap: reports on November auto and truck sales.

On Tuesday evening, President Obama is expected to announce his strategy on Afghanistan in a speech given at West Point, N.Y. (For a preview of what to look for, click here.)

Wednesday: Payroll services firm ADP releases its survey on private-sector employment shortly before the start of trading. Employers in the private sector are expected to have cut 148,000 jobs from their payrolls in November, after cutting 203,000 in the previous month.

Challenger, Gray & Christmas will also release its November report on planned job cut announcements in the morning. In the afternoon, the Fed releases its periodic "beige book" report on the economy.

Thursday: The weekly jobless claims report from the Labor Department is due before the start of trading. Approximately 483,000 Americans are expected to have filed new claims for unemployment, up from 466,000 the previous week.

Continuing claims - a measure of people who have been receiving benefits for a week or more - is expected to have risen to 5,517,000 from 5,423,000 the previous week.

The nation's retailers release their sales figures for November in the early morning. The figures will include the critical Black Friday period.

At 10 a.m. ET the Senate Banking Committee holds a confirmation hearing on Ben Bernanke's second term as Federal Reserve Chairman.

The revised reading on third-quarter productivity, the third-quarter employment cost index and the November ISM services sector index are all due as well.

Friday: The November employment report from the Labor Department is the biggest economic report of the week. Employers are expected to have cut 114,000 jobs from their payrolls in the month after cutting 190,000 in the previous month.

The unemployment rate, generated by a separate survey, is expected to hold steady at 10.2%, unchanged from October.

The October factory orders report is due out after the start of trading. Orders are expected to have risen 0.1% after rising 0.9% in September. To top of page
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UAE push to head off debts damage

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The United Arab Emirates on Sunday stepped in to shore up its banks and head off any potential capital flight as the nation’s federal authorities attempted to counter concerns over Dubai’s debt problems.

The UAE central bank set up an emergency liquidity facility to ease fears about its banking system, but investors remained nervous about the short-term impact on local markets as regional traders digested the global sell-off caused by the announcement that one of Dubai’s flagship entities – Dubai World – was seeking a standstill deal with creditors until May.
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Dubai shockwave hits global markets

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Tremors from the shock request by Dubai’s flagship government-owned holding company for a debt standstill spread through global equity markets on Friday, triggering a sell-off in Asia and heavy losses on Wall Street.

While European markets staged a modest but nervous rally after heavy sell-offs this week, investor sentiment remained jittery amid a scramble to assess the broader fallout of the problems of Dubai World.
Continue Reading...


Trader: Commodities

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If you’re worried about inflation, buy commodities. Assets that you can actually touch tend to maintain their value better during inflationary times. But even though agricultural products are in the commodities sector, they may not offer such great protection.

While grains did well during the inflation of the 1970s, they enjoyed more muted success than, say, precious metals. Gold and silver production cannot be increased rapidly, giving the metals scarcity value. The same is not true of agricultural produce.

Today’s record high gold price is interpreted by some as evidence of a pending inflationary spurt. But this has not yet fed through to the price of many soft commodities. Corn, for example, fell by almost two thirds from its summer 2008 high and hit a three-year low in September.

Still, it is possible to make a bullish case for corn and other crops. World population is buoyant and increasingly wealthy consumers in emerging economies are lifting consumption. Also, falling real grain prices for much of the 1980s and 1990s discouraged investment in agriculture, creating the risk of new shortages.

Corn’s price has bounced since September, but its chart is far from appetising. It has failed three times to break decisively above its 21-month exponential moving average (EMA), currently at $402.90. It also faces a daunting barrier from the weekly Ichimoku cloud indicator, the bottom of which is at $396.

In fact, corn’s movements since 2006 have traced out what is potentially a gigantic topping pattern. If it now drops decisively, a revisit of its lows of $305.25 could be in order. Admittedly, the price has twice recently found support there, and the 200-month exponential moving average at $302.31 might also prove helpful. Were corn to drop through that zone, a strong target exists at $280. My Elliott-wave forecast suggests that it might head for $244-$232. By contrast, a determined monthly close above the 21-week EMA would turn me neutral, and a move above $450 would be bullish.
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FOREX-U.S. dollar drops on Fed comments, stocks gain

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NEW YORK, Nov 24 (Reuters) - The dollar fell against a basket of currencies on Monday after comments from a Federal Reserve official reinforced expectations U.S. interest rates would stay low for some time.

A rally in stock markets and gains in gold and oil prices also dented safe-haven demand for the dollar and lifted commodity-linked currencies like the Canadian and New Zealand dollars.

St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard on Sunday said the Fed should keep alive its mortgage-related assets purchase program beyond a planned end date to stimulate the economy. Investors saw the Fed keeping wider monetary policy accommodative for the foreseeable future. See [ID:nN22246631]

"Risk appetite is back ... with stocks up globally," said John Doyle, foreign-exchange strategist at Tempus Consulting in Washington. "Also weighing on the dollar was speculation that the Federal Reserve will keep stimulus measures in place for longer than many expect, ensuring that interest rates remain virtually zero," he added.

Low rates would limit returns on many U.S. investments, prompting investors to diversify out of the greenback and seek other riskier currencies and assets with higher yields.

In afternoon trading, the euro was up 0.7 percent at $1.4969 EUR=, after hitting a session high of $1.5001, according to Reuters data. The euro has struggled to stay above $1.50 in recent weeks.

Analysts said moves were exacerbated by thin liquidity with Tokyo markets shut and ahead of Thursday's U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.

The euro EURJPY=R rose 0.9 percent to 133.34 yen. The dollar gained 0.2 percent to 89.08 yen JPY= after hitting a six-week low of 88.58 yen, according to Reuters data.

An industry report showing U.S. existing home sales jumped to a more than 2-1/2-year high in October further spurred risk appetite and pressured the dollar. See [ID:nN23249040].

"The (housing) data adds to bearish U.S. dollar momentum, as stronger-than-expected home sales data is bullish for equity markets," said George Davis, chief technical strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto.
In contrast to the Fed's stance, both the European Central Bank's president, Jean-Claude Trichet, and executive board member Jose Manuel Gonzalez Paramo discussed plans for the ECB to exit its quantitative easing strategy.

On Monday in Madrid, Trichet said as the situation becomes more normal, the focus in the medium term calls for a "gradual and timely phasing out of these measures." [ID:nGEE5AM1L9]

Paramo said on Sunday the ECB could detail plans for phasing out its quantitative easing at the December meeting. [ID:nGEE5AL04Z].

Their remarks have boosted the view the ECB is likely to exit its easing strategy ahead of the Fed, underpinning the euro against the dollar.

The euro was also supported after a survey showed the euro zone's service sector grew at its fastest pace in two years in November, suggesting an economic recovery will continue in the fourth quarter, albeit at a slower rate. [ID:nGEE5AM0RG]

The ICE Futures dollar index .DXY, which tracks the greenback against six major currencies, dropped 0.7 percent to 75.132, off a two-week high of 75.879 hit on Friday.
Continue Reading...


 

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Foreign exchange market
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Forex)
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Foreign exchange

Exchange rates
Currency band
Exchange rate
Exchange rate regime
Fixed exchange rate
Floating exchange rate
Linked exchange rate
Dollarization

Markets
Foreign exchange market
Futures exchange
Retail forex

Assets
Currency
Currency future
Non-deliverable forward
Forex swap
Currency swap
Foreign exchange option

Historical agreements
Bretton Woods Conference
Smithsonian Agreement
Plaza Accord
Louvre Accord

See also
Bureau de change / currency exchange (office)
Hard currency

The foreign exchange market (forex, FX, or currency market) is a global, worldwide decentralized financial market for trading currencies. Financial centers around the world function as anchors of trading between a wide range of different types of buyers and sellers around the clock, with the exception of weekends. The foreign exchange market determines the relative values of different currencies.[1]

The primary purpose of the foreign exchange is to assist international trade and investment, by allowing businesses to convert one currency to another currency. For example, it permits a US business to import British goods and pay Pound Sterling, even though the business' income is in US dollars. It also supports direct speculation in the value of currencies, and the carry trade, speculation on the change in interest rates in two currencies.[2]

In a typical foreign exchange transaction, a party purchases a quantity of one currency by paying a quantity of another currency. The modern foreign exchange market began forming during the 1970s after three decades of government restrictions on foreign exchange transactions (the Bretton Woods system of monetary management established the rules for commercial and financial relations among the world's major industrial states after World War II), when countries gradually switched to floating exchange rates from the previous exchange rate regime, which remained fixed as per the Bretton Woods system.

The foreign exchange market is unique because of

its huge trading volume representing the largest asset class in the world leading to high liquidity;
its geographical dispersion;
its continuous operation: 24 hours a day except weekends, i.e. trading from 20:15 GMT on Sunday until 22:00 GMT Friday;
the variety of factors that affect exchange rates;
the low margins of relative profit compared with other markets of fixed income; and
the use of leverage to enhance profit and loss margins and with respect to account size.

As such, it has been referred to as the market closest to the ideal of perfect competition, notwithstanding currency intervention by central banks. According to the Bank for International Settlements,[3] as of April 2010, average daily turnover in global foreign exchange markets is estimated at $3.98 trillion, a growth of approximately 20% over the $3.21 trillion daily volume as of April 2007. Some firms specializing on foreign exchange market had put the average daily turnover in excess of US$4 trillion.[4]

The $3.98 trillion break-down is as follows:

$1.490 trillion in spot transactions
$475 billion in outright forwards
$1.765 trillion in foreign exchange swaps
$43 billion Currency swaps
$207 billion in options and other products

Contents
[hide]

1 Market Size and liquidity
2 Market participants
2.1 Banks
2.2 Commercial companies
2.3 Central banks
2.4 Forex Fixing
2.5 Hedge funds as speculators
2.6 Investment management firms
2.7 Retail foreign exchange traders
2.8 Non-bank foreign exchange companies
2.9 Money transfer/remittance companies and bureaux de change
3 Trading characteristics
4 Determinants of FX rates
4.1 Economic factors
4.2 Political conditions
4.3 Market psychology
5 Financial instruments
5.1 Spot
5.2 Forward
5.3 Swap
5.4 Future
5.5 Option
6 Speculation
7 Risk aversion in forex
8 Further reading
9 See also
10 Notes
11 References
12 External links

Market Size and liquidity
Main foreign exchange market turnover, 1988–2007, measured in billions of USD.

The foreign exchange market is the most liquid financial market in the world. Traders include large banks, central banks, institutional investors, currency speculators, corporations, governments, other financial institutions, and retail investors. The average daily turnover in the global foreign exchange and related markets is continuously growing. According to the 2010 Triennial Central Bank Survey, coordinated by the Bank for International Settlements, average daily turnover was US$3.98 trillion in April 2010 (vs $1.7 trillion in 1998).[3] Of this $3.98 trillion, $1.5 trillion was spot foreign exchange transactions and $2.5 trillion was traded in outright forwards, FX swaps and other currency derivatives.

Trading in the UK accounted for 36.7% of the total, making UK by far the most important global center for foreign exchange trading. In second and third places, respectively, trading in the USA accounted for 17.9%, and Japan accounted for 6.2%.[5]

Turnover of exchange-traded foreign exchange futures and options have grown rapidly in recent years, reaching $166 billion in April 2010 (double the turnover recorded in April 2007). Exchange-traded currency derivatives represent 4% of OTC foreign exchange turnover. FX futures contracts were introduced in 1972 at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and are actively traded relative to most other futures contracts.

Most developed countries permit the trading of FX derivative products (like currency futures and options on currency futures) on their exchanges. All these developed countries already have fully convertible capital accounts. A number of emerging countries do not permit FX derivative products on their exchanges in view of controls on the capital accounts. The use of foreign exchange derivatives is growing in many emerging economies.[6] Countries such as Korea, South Africa, and India have established currency futures exchanges, despite having some controls on the capital account.
Top 10 currency traders [7]
% of overall volume, May 2011 Rank Name Market share
1 Germany Deutsche Bank 15.64%
2 United Kingdom Barclays Capital 10.75%
3 Switzerland UBS AG 10.59%
4 United States Citi 8.88%
5 United States JPMorgan 6.43%
6 United Kingdom HSBC 6.26%
7 United Kingdom Royal Bank of Scotland 6.20%
8 Switzerland Credit Suisse 4.80%
9 United States Goldman Sachs 4.13%
10 United States Morgan Stanley 3.64%

Foreign exchange trading increased by 20% between April 2007 and April 2010 and has more than doubled since 2004.[8] The increase in turnover is due to a number of factors: the growing importance of foreign exchange as an asset class, the increased trading activity of high-frequency traders, and the emergence of retail investors as an important market segment. The growth of electronic execution methods and the diverse selection of execution venues have lowered transaction costs, increased market liquidity, and attracted greater participation from many customer types. In particular, electronic trading via online portals has made it easier for retail traders to trade in the foreign exchange market. By 2010, retail trading is estimated to account for up to 10% of spot FX turnover, or $150 billion per day (see retail trading platforms).

Because foreign exchange is an OTC market where brokers/dealers negotiate directly with one another, there is no central exchange or clearing house. The biggest geographic trading center is the UK, primarily London, which according to TheCityUK estimates has increased its share of global turnover in traditional transactions from 34.6% in April 2007 to 36.7% in April 2010. Due to London's dominance in the market, a particular currency's quoted price is usually the London market price. For instance, when the IMF calculates the value of its SDRs every day, they use the London market prices at noon that day.
Market participants
Financial markets

Bruxelles Bourse.jpg

Public market

Exchange
Securities
Bond market

Fixed income
Corporate bond
Government bond
Municipal bond
Bond valuation
High-yield debt
Stock market

Stock
Preferred stock
Common stock
Registered share
Voting share
Stock exchange
Derivatives market

Securitization
Hybrid security
Credit derivative
Futures exchange
OTC, non organized

Spot market
Forwards
Swaps
Options
Foreign exchange

Exchange rate
Currency
Other markets

Money market
Reinsurance market
Commodity market
Real estate market
Practical trading

Participants
Clearing house
Financial regulation

Finance series
Banks and banking
Corporate finance
Personal finance
Public finance
v · d · e

Unlike a stock market, the foreign exchange market is divided into levels of access. At the top is the inter-bank market, which is made up of the largest commercial banks and securities dealers. Within the inter-bank market, spreads, which are the difference between the bid and ask prices, are razor sharp and not known to players outside the inner circle. The difference between the bid and ask prices widens (for example from 0-1 pip to 1-2 pips for a currencies such as the EUR) as you go down the levels of access. This is due to volume. If a trader can guarantee large numbers of transactions for large amounts, they can demand a smaller difference between the bid and ask price, which is referred to as a better spread. The levels of access that make up the foreign exchange market are determined by the size of the "line" (the amount of money with which they are trading). The top-tier interbank market accounts for 53% of all transactions. From there, smaller banks, followed by large multi-national corporations (which need to hedge risk and pay employees in different countries), large hedge funds, and even some of the retail FX market makers. According to Galati and Melvin, “Pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, and other institutional investors have played an increasingly important role in financial markets in general, and in FX markets in particular, since the early 2000s.” (2004) In addition, he notes, “Hedge funds have grown markedly over the 2001–2004 period in terms of both number and overall size”.[9] Central banks also participate in the foreign exchange market to align currencies to their economic needs.
Banks

The interbank market caters for both the majority of commercial turnover and large amounts of speculative trading every day. Many large banks may trade billions of dollars, daily. Some of this trading is undertaken on behalf of customers, but much is conducted by proprietary desks, which are trading desks for the bank's own account. Until recently, foreign exchange brokers did large amounts of business, facilitating interbank trading and matching anonymous counterparts for large fees. Today, however, much of this business has moved on to more efficient electronic systems. The broker squawk box lets traders listen in on ongoing interbank trading and is heard in most trading rooms, but turnover is noticeably smaller than just a few years ago.[citation needed]
Commercial companies

An important part of this market comes from the financial activities of companies seeking foreign exchange to pay for goods or services. Commercial companies often trade fairly small amounts compared to those of banks or speculators, and their trades often have little short term impact on market rates. Nevertheless, trade flows are an important factor in the long-term direction of a currency's exchange rate. Some multinational companies can have an unpredictable impact when very large positions are covered due to exposures that are not widely known by other market participants.
Central banks

National central banks play an important role in the foreign exchange markets. They try to control the money supply, inflation, and/or interest rates and often have official or unofficial target rates for their currencies. They can use their often substantial foreign exchange reserves to stabilize the market. Nevertheless, the effectiveness of central bank "stabilizing speculation" is doubtful because central banks do not go bankrupt if they make large losses, like other traders would, and there is no convincing evidence that they do make a profit trading.
Forex Fixing

Forex fixing is the daily monetary exchange rate fixed by the national bank of each country. The idea is that central banks use the fixing time and exchange rate to evaluate behavior of their currency. Fixing exchange rates reflects the real value of equilibrium in the forex market. Banks, dealers and online foreign exchange traders use fixing rates as a trend indicator.

The mere expectation or rumor of central bank intervention might be enough to stabilize a currency, but aggressive intervention might be used several times each year in countries with a dirty float currency regime. Central banks do not always achieve their objectives. The combined resources of the market can easily overwhelm any central bank.[10] Several scenarios of this nature were seen in the 1992–93 ERM collapse, and in more recent times in Southeast Asia.
Hedge funds as speculators

About 70% to 90%[citation needed] of the foreign exchange transactions are speculative. In other words, the person or institution that bought or sold the currency has no plan to actually take delivery of the currency in the end; rather, they were solely speculating on the movement of that particular currency. Hedge funds have gained a reputation for aggressive currency speculation since 1996. They control billions of dollars of equity and may borrow billions more, and thus may overwhelm intervention by central banks to support almost any currency, if the economic fundamentals are in the hedge funds' favor.
Investment management firms

Investment management firms (who typically manage large accounts on behalf of customers such as pension funds and endowments) use the foreign exchange market to facilitate transactions in foreign securities. For example, an investment manager bearing an international equity portfolio needs to purchase and sell several pairs of foreign currencies to pay for foreign securities purchases.

Some investment management firms also have more speculative specialist currency overlay operations, which manage clients' currency exposures with the aim of generating profits as well as limiting risk. Whilst the number of this type of specialist firms is quite small, many have a large value of assets under management (AUM), and hence can generate large trades.
Retail foreign exchange traders

Individual Retail speculative traders constitute a growing segment of this market with the advent of retail forex platforms, both in size and importance. Currently, they participate indirectly through brokers or banks. Retail brokers, while largely controlled and regulated in the USA by the CFTC and NFA have in the past been subjected to periodic foreign exchange scams.[11][12] To deal with the issue, the NFA and CFTC began (as of 2009) imposing stricter requirements, particularly in relation to the amount of Net Capitalization required of its members. As a result many of the smaller and perhaps questionable brokers are now gone or have moved to countries outside the US. A number of the forex brokers operate from the UK under FSA regulations where forex trading using margin is part of the wider over-the-counter derivatives trading industry that includes CFDs and financial spread betting.

There are two main types of retail FX brokers offering the opportunity for speculative currency trading: brokers and dealers or market makers. Brokers serve as an agent of the customer in the broader FX market, by seeking the best price in the market for a retail order and dealing on behalf of the retail customer. They charge a commission or mark-up in addition to the price obtained in the market. Dealers or market makers, by contrast, typically act as principal in the transaction versus the retail customer, and quote a price they are willing to deal at.
Non-bank foreign exchange companies

Non-bank foreign exchange companies offer currency exchange and international payments to private individuals and companies. These are also known as foreign exchange brokers but are distinct in that they do not offer speculative trading but rather currency exchange with payments (i.e., there is usually a physical delivery of currency to a bank account).

It is estimated that in the UK, 14% of currency transfers/payments[13] are made via Foreign Exchange Companies.[14] These companies' selling point is usually that they will offer better exchange rates or cheaper payments than the customer's bank. These companies differ from Money Transfer/Remittance Companies in that they generally offer higher-value services.
Money transfer/remittance companies and bureaux de change

Money transfer companies/remittance companies perform high-volume low-value transfers generally by economic migrants back to their home country. In 2007, the Aite Group estimated that there were $369 billion of remittances (an increase of 8% on the previous year). The four largest markets (India, China, Mexico and the Philippines) receive $95 billion. The largest and best known provider is Western Union with 345,000 agents globally followed by UAE Exchange[citation needed]

Bureau de change or currency transfer companies provide low value foreign exchange services for travelers. These are typically located at airports and stations or at tourist locations and allow physical notes to be exchanged from one currency to another. They access the foreign exchange markets via banks or non bank foreign exchange companies.
Trading characteristics
Most traded currencies by value
Currency distribution of global foreign exchange market turnover[3] Rank Currency ISO 4217 code
(Symbol) % daily share
(April 2010)
1
United States United States dollar
USD ($)
84.9%
2
European Union Euro
EUR (€)
39.1%
3
Japan Japanese yen
JPY (¥)
19.0%
4
United Kingdom Pound sterling
GBP (£)
12.9%
5
Australia Australian dollar
AUD ($)
7.6%
6
Switzerland Swiss franc
CHF (Fr)
6.4%
7
Canada Canadian dollar
CAD ($)
5.3%
8
Hong Kong Hong Kong dollar
HKD ($)
2.4%
9
Sweden Swedish krona
SEK (kr)
2.2%
10
New Zealand New Zealand dollar
NZD ($)
1.6%
11
South Korea South Korean won
KRW (₩)
1.5%
12
Singapore Singapore dollar
SGD ($)
1.4%
13
Norway Norwegian krone
NOK (kr)
1.3%
14
Mexico Mexican peso
MXN ($)
1.3%
15
India Indian rupee
INR (Indian Rupee symbol.svg)
0.9%
Other 12.2%
Total[15] 200%

There is no unified or centrally cleared market for the majority of FX trades, and there is very little cross-border regulation. Due to the over-the-counter (OTC) nature of currency markets, there are rather a number of interconnected marketplaces, where different currencies instruments are traded. This implies that there is not a single exchange rate but rather a number of different rates (prices), depending on what bank or market maker is trading, and where it is. In practice the rates are often very close, otherwise they could be exploited by arbitrageurs instantaneously. Due to London's dominance in the market, a particular currency's quoted price is usually the London market price. A joint venture of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Reuters, called Fxmarketspace opened in 2007 and aspired but failed to the role of a central market clearing mechanism.[citation needed]

The main trading center is London, but New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore are all important centers as well. Banks throughout the world participate. Currency trading happens continuously throughout the day; as the Asian trading session ends, the European session begins, followed by the North American session and then back to the Asian session, excluding weekends.

Fluctuations in exchange rates are usually caused by actual monetary flows as well as by expectations of changes in monetary flows caused by changes in gross domestic product (GDP) growth, inflation (purchasing power parity theory), interest rates (interest rate parity, Domestic Fisher effect, International Fisher effect), budget and trade deficits or surpluses, large cross-border M&A deals and other macroeconomic conditions. Major news is released publicly, often on scheduled dates, so many people have access to the same news at the same time. However, the large banks have an important advantage; they can see their customers' order flow.

Currencies are traded against one another. Each currency pair thus constitutes an individual trading product and is traditionally noted XXXYYY or XXX/YYY, where XXX and YYY are the ISO 4217 international three-letter code of the currencies involved. The first currency (XXX) is the base currency that is quoted relative to the second currency (YYY), called the counter currency (or quote currency). For instance, the quotation EURUSD (EUR/USD) 1.5465 is the price of the euro expressed in US dollars, meaning 1 euro = 1.5465 dollars. The market convention is to quote most exchange rates against the USD with the US dollar as the base currency (e.g. USDJPY, USDCAD, USDCHF). The exceptions are the British pound (GBP), Australian dollar (AUD), the New Zealand dollar (NZD) and the euro (EUR) where the USD is the counter currency (e.g. GBPUSD, AUDUSD, NZDUSD, EURUSD).

The factors affecting XXX will affect both XXXYYY and XXXZZZ. This causes positive currency correlation between XXXYYY and XXXZZZ.

On the spot market, according to the 2010 Triennial Survey, the most heavily traded bilateral currency pairs were:

EURUSD: 28%
USDJPY: 14%
GBPUSD (also called cable): 9%

and the US currency was involved in 84.9% of transactions, followed by the euro (39.1%), the yen (19.0%), and sterling (12.9%) (see table). Volume percentages for all individual currencies should add up to 200%, as each transaction involves two currencies.

Trading in the euro has grown considerably since the currency's creation in January 1999, and how long the foreign exchange market will remain dollar-centered is open to debate. Until recently, trading the euro versus a non-European currency ZZZ would have usually involved two trades: EURUSD and USDZZZ. The exception to this is EURJPY, which is an established traded currency pair in the interbank spot market. As the dollar's value has eroded during 2008, interest in using the euro as reference currency for prices in commodities (such as oil), as well as a larger component of foreign reserves by banks, has increased dramatically. Transactions in the currencies of commodity-producing countries, such as AUD, NZD, CAD, have also increased.
Determinants of FX rates
See also: exchange rates

The following theories explain the fluctuations in FX rates in a floating exchange rate regime (In a fixed exchange rate regime, FX rates are decided by its government):

(a) International parity conditions: Relative Purchasing Power Parity, interest rate parity, Domestic Fisher effect, International Fisher effect. Though to some extent the above theories provide logical explanation for the fluctuations in exchange rates, yet these theories falter as they are based on challengeable assumptions [e.g., free flow of goods, services and capital] which seldom hold true in the real world.

(b) Balance of payments model (see exchange rate): This model, however, focuses largely on tradable goods and services, ignoring the increasing role of global capital flows. It failed to provide any explanation for continuous appreciation of dollar during 1980s and most part of 1990s in face of soaring US current account deficit.

(c) Asset market model (see exchange rate): views currencies as an important asset class for constructing investment portfolios. Assets prices are influenced mostly by people's willingness to hold the existing quantities of assets, which in turn depends on their expectations on the future worth of these assets. The asset market model of exchange rate determination states that “the exchange rate between two currencies represents the price that just balances the relative supplies of, and demand for, assets denominated in those currencies.”

None of the models developed so far succeed to explain FX rates levels and volatility in the longer time frames. For shorter time frames (less than a few days) algorithms can be devised to predict prices. It is understood from the above models that many macroeconomic factors affect the exchange rates and in the end currency prices are a result of dual forces of demand and supply. The world's currency markets can be viewed as a huge melting pot: in a large and ever-changing mix of current events, supply and demand factors are constantly shifting, and the price of one currency in relation to another shifts accordingly. No other market encompasses (and distills) as much of what is going on in the world at any given time as foreign exchange.

Supply and demand for any given currency, and thus its value, are not influenced by any single element, but rather by several. These elements generally fall into three categories: economic factors, political conditions and market psychology.
Economic factors

These include: (a)economic policy, disseminated by government agencies and central banks, (b)economic conditions, generally revealed through economic reports, and other economic indicators.

Economic policy comprises government fiscal policy (budget/spending practices) and monetary policy (the means by which a government's central bank influences the supply and "cost" of money, which is reflected by the level of interest rates).
Government budget deficits or surpluses: The market usually reacts negatively to widening government budget deficits, and positively to narrowing budget deficits. The impact is reflected in the value of a country's currency.
Balance of trade levels and trends: The trade flow between countries illustrates the demand for goods and services, which in turn indicates demand for a country's currency to conduct trade. Surpluses and deficits in trade of goods and services reflect the competitiveness of a nation's economy. For example, trade deficits may have a negative impact on a nation's currency.
Inflation levels and trends: Typically a currency will lose value if there is a high level of inflation in the country or if inflation levels are perceived to be rising. This is because inflation erodes purchasing power, thus demand, for that particular currency. However, a currency may sometimes strengthen when inflation rises because of expectations that the central bank will raise short-term interest rates to combat rising inflation.
Economic growth and health: Reports such as GDP, employment levels, retail sales, capacity utilization and others, detail the levels of a country's economic growth and health. Generally, the more healthy and robust a country's economy, the better its currency will perform, and the more demand for it there will be.
Productivity of an economy: Increasing productivity in an economy should positively influence the value of its currency. Its effects are more prominent if the increase is in the traded sector [1].

Political conditions

Internal, regional, and international political conditions and events can have a profound effect on currency markets.

All exchange rates are susceptible to political instability and anticipations about the new ruling party. Political upheaval and instability can have a negative impact on a nation's economy. For example, destabilization of coalition governments in Pakistan and Thailand can negatively affect the value of their currencies. Similarly, in a country experiencing financial difficulties, the rise of a political faction that is perceived to be fiscally responsible can have the opposite effect. Also, events in one country in a region may spur positive/negative interest in a neighboring country and, in the process, affect its currency.
Market psychology

Market psychology and trader perceptions influence the foreign exchange market in a variety of ways:

Flights to quality: Unsettling international events can lead to a "flight to quality", a type of capital flight whereby investors move their assets to a perceived "safe haven". There will be a greater demand, thus a higher price, for currencies perceived as stronger over their relatively weaker counterparts. The U.S. dollar, Swiss franc and gold have been traditional safe havens during times of political or economic uncertainty.[16]
Long-term trends: Currency markets often move in visible long-term trends. Although currencies do not have an annual growing season like physical commodities, business cycles do make themselves felt. Cycle analysis looks at longer-term price trends that may rise from economic or political trends.[17]
"Buy the rumor, sell the fact": This market truism can apply to many currency situations. It is the tendency for the price of a currency to reflect the impact of a particular action before it occurs and, when the anticipated event comes to pass, react in exactly the opposite direction. This may also be referred to as a market being "oversold" or "overbought".[18] To buy the rumor or sell the fact can also be an example of the cognitive bias known as anchoring, when investors focus too much on the relevance of outside events to currency prices.
Economic numbers: While economic numbers can certainly reflect economic policy, some reports and numbers take on a talisman-like effect: the number itself becomes important to market psychology and may have an immediate impact on short-term market moves. "What to watch" can change over time. In recent years, for example, money supply, employment, trade balance figures and inflation numbers have all taken turns in the spotlight.
Technical trading considerations: As in other markets, the accumulated price movements in a currency pair such as EUR/USD can form apparent patterns that traders may attempt to use. Many traders study price charts in order to identify such patterns.[19]

Financial instruments
Spot

A spot transaction is a two-day delivery transaction (except in the case of trades between the US Dollar, Canadian Dollar, Turkish Lira, EURO and Russian Ruble, which settle the next business day), as opposed to the futures contracts, which are usually three months. This trade represents a “direct exchange” between two currencies, has the shortest time frame, involves cash rather than a contract; and interest is not included in the agreed-upon transaction.
Forward
See also: forward contract

One way to deal with the foreign exchange risk is to engage in a forward transaction. In this transaction, money does not actually change hands until some agreed upon future date. A buyer and seller agree on an exchange rate for any date in the future, and the transaction occurs on that date, regardless of what the market rates are then. The duration of the trade can be one day, a few days, months or years. Usually the date is decided by both parties. Then the forward contract is negotiated and agreed upon by both parties.
Swap
Main article: foreign exchange swap

The most common type of forward transaction is the FX swap. In an FX swap, two parties exchange currencies for a certain length of time and agree to reverse the transaction at a later date. These are not standardized contracts and are not traded through an exchange.
Future
Main article: currency future

Futures are standardized and are usually traded on an exchange created for this purpose. The average contract length is roughly 3 months. Futures contracts are usually inclusive of any interest amounts.
Option
Main article: foreign exchange option

A foreign exchange option (commonly shortened to just FX option) is a derivative where the owner has the right but not the obligation to exchange money denominated in one currency into another currency at a pre-agreed exchange rate on a specified date. The FX options market is the deepest, largest and most liquid market for options of any kind in the world.
Speculation

Controversy about currency speculators and their effect on currency devaluations and national economies recurs regularly. Nevertheless, economists including Milton Friedman have argued that speculators ultimately are a stabilizing influence on the market and perform the important function of providing a market for hedgers and transferring risk from those people who don't wish to bear it, to those who do.[20] Other economists such as Joseph Stiglitz consider this argument to be based more on politics and a free market philosophy than on economics.[21]

Large hedge funds and other well capitalized "position traders" are the main professional speculators. According to some economists, individual traders could act as "noise traders" and have a more destabilizing role than larger and better informed actors.[22]

Currency speculation is considered a highly suspect activity in many countries.[where?] While investment in traditional financial instruments like bonds or stocks often is considered to contribute positively to economic growth by providing capital, currency speculation does not; according to this view, it is simply gambling that often interferes with economic policy. For example, in 1992, currency speculation forced the Central Bank of Sweden to raise interest rates for a few days to 500% per annum, and later to devalue the krona.[23] Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad is one well known proponent of this view. He blamed the devaluation of the Malaysian ringgit in 1997 on George Soros and other speculators.

Gregory J. Millman reports on an opposing view, comparing speculators to "vigilantes" who simply help "enforce" international agreements and anticipate the effects of basic economic "laws" in order to profit.[24]

In this view, countries may develop unsustainable financial bubbles or otherwise mishandle their national economies, and foreign exchange speculators made the inevitable collapse happen sooner. A relatively quick collapse might even be preferable to continued economic mishandling, followed by an eventual, larger, collapse. Mahathir Mohamad and other critics of speculation are viewed as trying to deflect the blame from themselves for having caused the unsustainable economic conditions.
Risk aversion in forex
See also: Safe-haven currency
Fig.1 Chart showing MSCI World Index of Equities fell while the US Dollar Index rose.

Risk aversion in the forex is a kind of trading behavior exhibited by the foreign exchange market when a potentially adverse event happens which may affect market conditions. This behavior is caused when risk averse traders liquidate their positions in risky assets and shift the funds to less risky assets due to uncertainty.[25]

In the context of the forex market, traders liquidate their positions in various currencies to take up positions in safe-haven currencies, such as the US Dollar.[26] Sometimes, the choice of a safe haven currency is more of a choice based on prevailing sentiments rather than one of economic statistics. An example would be the Financial Crisis of 2008. The value of equities across world fell while the US Dollar strengthened (see Fig.1). This happened despite the strong focus of the crisis in the USA.[27]
Further reading

The National Futures Association (2010). Trading in the Retail Off-Exchange Foreign Currency Market. Chicago, Illinois.


See also

Balance of trade
Bretton Woods system
Currency codes
Currency pair
Currency strength
Foreign currency mortgage



Foreign exchange autotrading
Foreign exchange controls
Foreign exchange hedge
Foreign exchange reserves
Foreign exchange scam
Foreign exchange swap



Money market
Nonfarm payrolls
Special Drawing Rights
Tobin Tax
World currency






Notes
References

^ The Economist – Guide to the Financial Markets (pdf)
^ Global imbalances and destabilizing speculation (2007), UNCTAD Trade and development report 2007 (Chapter 1B).
^ a b c 2010 Triennial Central Bank Survey, Bank for International Settlements.
^ "What is Foreign Exchange?". Published by the International Business Times AU. Retrieved: February 11, 2011.
^ BIS Triennial Central Bank Survey, published in September 2010.
^ "Derivatives in emerging markets", the Bank for International Settlements, December 13, 2010
^ Source: Euromoney FX survey FX survey 2011: The Euromoney FX survey is the largest global poll of foreign exchange service providers.'
^ "The $4 trillion question: what explains FX growth since the 2007 survey?, the Bank for International Settlements, December 13, 2010
^ Gabriele Galati, Michael Melvin (December 2004). "Why has FX trading surged? Explaining the 2004 triennial survey". Bank for International Settlements.
^ Alan Greenspan, The Roots of the Mortgage Crisis: Bubbles cannot be safely defused by monetary policy before the speculative fever breaks on its own. , the Wall Street Journal, December 12, 2007
^ McKay, Peter A. (2005-07-26). "Scammers Operating on Periphery Of CFTC's Domain Lure Little Guy With Fantastic Promises of Profits". The Wall Street Journal (Dow Jones and Company). Retrieved 2007-10-31.
^ Egan, Jack (2005-06-19). "Check the Currency Risk. Then Multiply by 100". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-10-30.
^ The Sunday Times (UK), 16 July 2006
^ The 5 largest in the UK are Travelex, Moneycorp, HiFX, World First and Currencies Direct
^ The total sum is 200% because each currency trade always involves a currency pair.
^ Safe haven currency
^ John J. Murphy, Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets (New York Institute of Finance, 1999), pp. 343–375.
^ Investopedia
^ Sam Y. Cross, All About the Foreign Exchange Market in the United States, Federal Reserve Bank of New York (1998), chapter 11, pp. 113–115.
^ Michael A. S. Guth, "Profitable Destabilizing Speculation," Chapter 1 in Michael A. S. Guth, Speculative behavior and the operation of competitive markets under uncertainty, Avebury Ashgate Publishing, Aldorshot, England (1994), ISBN 1856289850.
^ What I Learned at the World Economic Crisis Joseph Stiglitz, The New Republic, April 17, 2000, reprinted at GlobalPolicy.org
^ Summers LH and Summers VP (1989) 'When financial markets work too well: a Cautious case for a securities transaction tax' Journal of financial services
^ But Don't Rush Out to Buy Kronor: Sweden's 500% Gamble - International Herald Tribune
^ Gregory J. Millman, Around the World on a Trillion Dollars a Day, Bantam Press, New York, 1995.
^ "Risk Averse". Investopedia. Retrieved 2010-02-25.
^ "Global markets-US stocks rebound, dollar gains on risk aversion". Reuters. 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
^ Stewart, Heather (2008-04-09). "IMF says US crisis is 'largest financial shock since Great Depression'". London: guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-02-27.


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