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Posts by "djellal"

751 Posts Total by "djellal":
728 Posts by member
djellal
(LAUSANNE, Switzerland)
23 Posts by Anonymous "djellal":
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 27, 2013 14:08
In Thread: EUR
In reply to cat0nip's post
I agree indeed ecb could intervenne on bond market and in that case i will change my opinion.
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 27, 2013 10:52
In Thread: EUR
On eurusd i m short toward 1.2880 in first time may be 1.2700. And i will buy it at these levels i think.
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 27, 2013 10:42
In Thread: EUR
US ECONOMIE IS GROWING BETTER THAN EXPECTED AND EUROPE TURN WORSE THAN EXPECTED. So lot of correction to expect...
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 27, 2013 10:26
Italian 10yr 4, 83 against 4, 17 prior, it will be difficult for euro to hold above 1, 30 even if Bernanke is playing with the QE 3
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 27, 2013 10:13
Hi georges,
Bearish short term on nok 5, 80000 seems to be a good res.
Also bearish short term on oil but i don't see it below 90so i think is better to buy on the dip or being long call 3month
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 26, 2013 19:06
In Thread: EUR
Indeed Berlusconi will do bunga bunga party' with Merkel.
I think italian non democrats politicians want and will break austerity package.
We will have another choc in europe between north and south countries. Enven if greek central bank told today that the growth in greece will come next year...
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 26, 2013 18:33
In Thread: EUR
Berlusconi will push italia out of euro and europe this year ! European crisis is back again.
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 26, 2013 11:08
In Thread: EUR
Hold yen short long term !
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 25, 2013 20:33
In Thread: EUR
Nice day deleveraging
djellal
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
Posts: 531
11 years ago
Feb 25, 2013 13:21
In Thread: USD
As China’s economy becomes increasingly integrated with the rest of the world, it is a natural trend for its currency, the renminbi (RMB) to be more widely used in trade and investment. However, RMB in China has traditionally been a closed market with strict capital controls where currencies could not be delivered offshore. That has changed in recent years. In 2010, China launched a pilot program for RMB trade settlement through banks in Hong Kong. The Chinese government has a publicly stated ambition of internationalizing the RMB and putting RMB on track to be one of the world’s reserve currencies. The introduction of off shore renminbi (CNH) is one of the major step taken by the Chinese government in this direction.Since the launch of CNH, we’ve seen phenomenal growth in this market. For example, by the end of 2010, CNH deposits in Hong Kong were around RMB 300 billion. By the end of 2012, that figure doubled.In response to this rapid growth, CME Group announced today the launch of deliverable CNH Futures. CNH is literally the abbreviation for Chinese Yuan deliverable in Hong Kong. This is not an ISO code but it is commonly accepted code for Chinese Yuan transacted in Hong Kong.The launch of the CNH, coming off the subprime crisis and the US Fed QE policies and the onset of EU sovereign debt crisis has made this currency very appealing to cash-rich global investors. China’s strong global trade especially through Hong Kong has also helped. The above infographic illustrates the timeline of key market developments leading to this growth.Due to the popular belief that CNY is an undervalued currency, by most measures; the introduction of CNH in Hong Kong will allow people with that view to want to hold CNY for investment, hoping for appreciation as CNH is truly market driven and therefore has the ability to reflect demand and supply where CNY (the onshore currency) does not.In the path to internationalization, today marks a big step for China’s currency.CME Group senior managing director for financial products Derek Sammann discusses the launch of CNH futures