Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Positive Carry


Definition of Positive Carry: A strategy of holding two offsetting positions, one of which creates an incoming cashflow that is greater than the obligations of the other. It is also the name of a hedge fund manager's yacht that is now for sale - due to damage from the subprime debacle. READ ABOUT IT HERE

Should He Stay or Should He Go

Go, apparently. Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe suffered a humiliating defeat this weekend, and now it looks like he might be on his way out. Will it affect the Japanese Yen? READ ABOUT IT HERE

EUR/JPY Falling With DJIA, S&P 500


It's no coincidence that the reversal in US stocks - which opened nicely higher and traded well through most of the day - has also led to a reversal in EUR/JPY. I consider the US stock market to be the current barometer of risk, and when risk aversion rears its head, investments that had performed well tend to suffer. Few trades have performed as well as the Carry Trades over the past five months. Here on the 15 minute chart, we see EUR/JPY reversing in sync with US stocks.

AUD/USD Channel


Check out this channel formation on the daily chart of AUD/USD. Aussie has pulled back to major support, but the fundamentals still favor the Land Down Under. China is still growing like mad, and the demand for base metals will continue to increase, which favors Aussie. The interest rate differential means that long traders will collect interest in addition to the potential appreciation from here.

Forex Radio Show

Hey Everybody, I'll be on the VINCE ROWE RADIO SHOW today at 16:05 GMT (five minutes past noon New York time). See you there!

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Fresh Newsletter

Who is making money on the weak US dollar? Will the buck continue to slide? What about the British Pound, will it continue to reach new heights? For the answers to these and other questions, please read STOCKS RALLY ON WEAK US DOLLAR

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Wow! USD/CAD new 30-year lows

Its 5:30 am here in LA. Looks like the Loonie is breaking the last support level, falling hard below 1.04. Here is the scoop from Dow Jones Newswire:

12:30 GMT Canada Retail Sales Ex Autos +2.3% In May From Apr
12:30 GMT Canada Retail Sales +2.8% In May From Apr

estimates were for Retail Sales at just 0.5% with the core at 0.6%.

Forgive me for celebrating, but the entire LA seminar class is short USDCAD from 1.0478 using the MTF technique from the FXEducator DVDs. I love it when the class makes $$$!!! Sweet!

Friday, July 20, 2007

EUR/JPY Ascending Triangle


The EUR/JPY pair appears to be consolidating after another ferocious leg higher, and that consolidation is taking the form of an ascending triangle. I'm impressed by the fact that the triangle harmonizes with the overall trend, as the pair has been trending higher for over two years now. Bears have been defending the area just under 169.00, for a week or so, and I've got to believe there are stops above the figure. A break above that level could unleash a torrent of short covering.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

"Forex Patterns and Probabilities" Available NOW!


The official release date was July 27, so you can imagine my surprise when I saw this on Amazon.com

"Want it by July 20? Order it in the next 21 hours, 25 minutes and choose One Day Shipping at checkout."

This means if you order before 1 PM on July 19, New York time (17:00 GMT), you'll get the book on July 20th

I hope you enjoy it!

This Is Awesome, Too!

Another recent email from a student who placed a spectacular trade...it appears that he made about 650 pips on this trade in the GBP/JPY currency pair...check it out:

Dear Ed,

Once again, I couldn't help but to let you know of my success with this
pair....and as your humble student, 90% of the credit goes to your teaching and
mentoring...as always!

I opened the position with three Lots on the slight curvature of the 20EMA on
June 13th @ 240.27. Stop was placed at 238.47, which was under the previous 2-3
day consolidation as well as under the medium-term 50EMA.
I arrived at Exit I on the 19th @ 245.20...which turned out to be a Daily Doji
close...so I was concerned...but not overtly concerned. My Stop was moved
accordingly, of course, and on we went...

Exit II arrived @ 246.54...just above the round numbers and a strong dynamic
support there at 246.50...on the 22nd....and Stop was moved again.

At this point, I had a choice to make, as technicals were telling me a pullback
was certainly due.....as we were hovering around the 23.6% Fib of the current
upleg, which was 246.27 on my charts. I was certainly pleased that I "tweaked"
this second exit a bit...even if it was an "upside" tweak....I wanted to get
just a touch through the 246.50 level.....

My final exit arrived with some nervousness at 247.42 on the 25th...as the
previous day's close was a beautiful Doji.......

This is when I truly realized....so what! With proper management of the trade, I
could have been stopped out on the 19th with 497 pips risk free, as my stop was
properly moved.

When this little revelation hits...this is when I truly realize my level in
climbing the learning curve these past 20 months with you...and it's quite a
feeling....and this feeling is the best part! It tells me I have properly
planned the position, monitored appropriately, maintained my risk, and been
patient.

I know the Carries cannot go on forever and the markets will constantly
change...but having these plans and structures you have taught me, gives me all
of the solid foundations for anything that may arise in any trading situation!

Feel free to use this one as a shameless plug for your teaching experience, the
book, the DVDs, having someone by you a drink...anything!...hee hee... :-)

Sincerely,

5 Questions with Rob Booker

Since famed trading instructor Rob Booker was nice enough to ask a few questions of me about my techniques and experiences, I've decided to ask Rob a few questions as well. What followed was a fascinating interview where Rob relates his personal experiences, and how they inspired his book. Please read on...

*How did you get started in trading?*

A friend of mine had invested $750,000 (or even a bit more) with a currency
trader in Los Angeles. The terms of the deal: it was actually a loan, which
would pay at least 5% interest per month would be paid on the investment. When
I heard that this currency trader was paying 5% per month, I realized that
he must be making some serious cash. I decided I needed to know more about
that. However, I have to also say that during law school, I had a lot of
exposure to the financial industry in San Francisco, and it was during that
time that I "caught the bug," and I knew that somehow I would be involved in
the financial world.

*What inspired the "Harry Banes" character in your book?*

Some of my own experiences. Some of those trades in the book are my actual
trades. Working at a law firm inspired the depression that Harry feels at
having to work for someone else. Also, I believe that there is a little bit
of all of us in Harry Banes. He sort of goes through the real heartache,
terror, euphoria, and other emotions connected with trying to make a living
as a trader.

*What's a favorite trading war story (present or past)?*

This one is hard for people to believe but I am going to tell the story
anyway. I was teaching a seminar in Las Vegas two or three years ago, and
the 2nd day of the seminar was the Non Farm Payroll report. The night
before I had dreamed that after the report, the USD/CHF moved 121 pips
upward. I actually remember dreaming that I saw the candles move in a
particular order and speed and I could remember what I had seen on the chart
in my dream very clearly when I woke up. When I got to the seminar that
day, I announced it to the group. Also that morning I told Maxwell Fox, my
trading partner and good friend, that I was so confident that the USD/CHF
would move 121 pips upward that day, that I would insure any losses he
incurred by trading the report – that I would actually pay out of my own
pocket for any losses he took. I basically told him to light it up and
trade like a bandit.



Sure enough, the USD/CHF moved in exactly the same way that I had dreamed. It
was a surreal experience. I tell people now that if they are willing to
look at the same thing every day, in the same way, with the same indicators,
over and over and over again, that they will start to have an intuitive
sense for the market. By becoming an expert in one thing, they can actually
start to sense for when a move is going to happen.



And what did Max do that day? Typically, Max traded responsibly and
conservatively. He made money but didn't use a wild prediction of mine to
trade irresponsibly. That's one of the reasons Max is still the trader I
admire the most.

*In Chapter 12, Banes visits a hedge fund and is surprised at what he finds.
Was this inspired by a real life experience?*


Yes. My wife worked at a hedge fund in San Francisco during the time that I
was in law school. I was often shocked to see how that fund, and other
funds, were either terribly spendthrift, or cheap, or undisciplined, or
disciplined, in their trading. The fund she worked for lost something like
$70,000,000 – probably more than 25% of the total funds under management --
in one day on a bunch of OEX options. She had to reconcile those trades. The
story can be found in Jack Schwager's New Market Wizards under the chapter
for Dana Galante. My wife reconciled those trades; she came home absolutely
shocked. One of the first things she did the next week was walk back into
work and ask for a raise. She knew that she was needed more than ever.



There are lots more stories like that, as I visited with hedge fund traders
during the roaring 1990's.*
*
*What advice would you give to new Forex traders?*

You get better at trading by doing three simple things:



1. You focus on just one method of trading on just a few currency
pairs;
2. Make just a little bit of money at first – get disciplined with a
small amount of money, and then you will earn the right to trade with more
money;
3. 99% of traders can probably do 1-3% per month returns consistently,
but they fail because they're trying to get 10% per month.

Thanks Rob!

Forex Q&A with Ed Ponsi

Please CLICK HERE TO READ MY LATEST ARTICLE where I answer questions from readers about Forex trading.

Also, please note - I'll be signing my new book and giving away prizes at the following OTA locations:

OTA London: Friday, August 17


OTA Toronto: Friday, September 8



More dates to come...

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

This Is Awesome!

I just had to share this with you - an email from one of my students. Apparently, he entered the same USD/CAD trade that was recorded in real time on this blog - only he did it completely on his own. Check it out....

Ed,

(Name deleted by EP) here, I just found your blog last night and noticed that I was in the same trade as you had recommended earlier in the day. I had also covered a portion in the same area as you had recommended. I just wanted to let you know what a good feeling I got when I had already done what you were saying to do. Just goes to show you how great a teacher you are. It has been around 2 months since the Toronto class and my account has shown nothing but steady gains since.Thank you for the great (ED) ucation.

Rob Booker Interview

Please join me in welcoming Rob Booker to the FXEducator Blog!

Rob was kind enough to ask a few questions of me; how I got started, ect. Pretty cool stuff!

Please click here to see my INTERVIEW WITH ROB BOOKER

Monday, July 16, 2007

Fibonacci vs. Pivot Points

Ed,
I have a question for you on trading with the trends. I have been experimenting with Fib retracements and pivot points to help me better pick my pullback targets. I generally use a 4 hour chart for my smaller moves and use a weekly/daily chart to establish my overall trend directions and bigger retracement areas. I don't know much about Elliott Wave, I just draw my fib retracements off obvious up and down moves in the directions of the overall bigger trends. It seems to work pretty well but I still can't seem to spot when a pair is done retracing and at what level it should retrace to. I use weekly and monthly pivot points with fib retracement numbers to try and find areas at which a pair may turn around at also. I guess my question is how do you know which fib retracments or pivot point areas are most likely going to be your pullback targets? Thanks so much.

Hi i9markos,

Thank you for your question. I'm a big believer in Fibonacci when trading Forex, because it is such a huge part of the Forex trading "culture". This makes it much more likely to be effective in creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. Pivot points are an ingrained part of the futures trading culture. I think there are some inherent problems with Pivots regarding Forex. Fib retracements are price-based, they have no time reference, whereas Pivots depend on time (opening price, closing price are determined by the time used to begin and end the trading day). Because time is part of the equation, and because there is no standard time of day that every currency trader uses to begin and end the Forex trading day, it's highly likely that different traders are using different reference points for the opening and closing time of daily candles. If the time varies, the price is likely to vary also, meaning that the pivots themselves could vary. This reduces the chances of a self fulfilling prophecy.

To determine which Fib levels are more likely to work, I don't assume that any will work, instead try to observe price action when a level is reached. If it shows support or resistance, then I might use it - not before. Nobody knows for certain which levels will hold, but if I see some evidence, I know there is a chance. It's my belief that effective trading is nothing more than the art of stacking probabilities in your favor. Hope this helps!

Ed Ponsi
President
FXEducator.com
edponsi.com

Friday, July 13, 2007

Is the Forex Market Regulated?

Is the Forex Market Regulated? This is a question that many people find confusing. To get to the heart of the matter, we need to differentiate between the market participants and the market itself. We'll clear the air on this topic, and tackle a few others as well. Let's get started…CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Total Profit = 237 pips - Trade Closed


We have finally closed our live trade with a total profit of 237 pips. Final exit was 1.0465, duration was approximately 30 hours. I sure wish that it were always this easy! ;)

We entered yesterday at 1.0585 (see previous posts) We now have:

1/3 = profit of 40 pips
1/3 = profit of 77 pips
1/3 = profit of 120 pips

Total Profit = 237 pips

Feel free to hit me up with comments and questions. info@fxeducator.com is my email address

Thanks,

Ed Ponsi

Total profit = 117 pips (So Far)


Continuing coverage of our live trade. A big move in USD/CAD on the heels of the Trade Balance figures for the U.S. and for Canada. We are going to take additional profits here at 1.0508, and move the stop down to 1.0545.

We entered yesterday at 1.0585 (see previous posts) We now have:

1/3 = profit of 40 pips
1/3 = profit of 77 pips
Total profit = 117 pips (So Far)
1/3 = still open

Our target for the final 1/3 of the trade is 1.0465. So, well either gain 40 pips if the stop is hit at 1.0545, or 120 pips if the exit is reached at 1.0465.

Comments? Questions? Is anybody out there? ;)

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

USD/JPY Question

Quote:
Originally Posted by MR NO
How much the USD/JPY can went down,do you think that he will brake the 120.98?

Hi Mr No,

Thanks for your question. EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY are such good trading vehicles right now, so I don't really care for USD/JPY right now. AUD/JPY and to a lesser extent NZD/JPY have been pretty good too. When I think of USD/JPY, I think of two weak currencies - and I'd rather match a strong currency vs. a weak currency. But if the subprime mess boils over, and the risk aversion causes the Yen to strengthen, then USD/JPY should go well below 120.98. A strong JPY would give us just what I'd like to see - a strong currency vs. a weak currency.

USD/CAD - Managing The Trade


Hey Everybody,

I hope you're all having a great day and enjoying our live trade on USD/CAD. Now that we have a nice little profit of about 40 pips, it's time to move the stop. I'm going to lower the protective stop to 1.0585, which was also the entry point. At the same time I'm going to close 1/3 of my position. This means that we'll have a nice little gain on 1/3 of the trade, and at worst a break-even scenario on the other 2/3 of the trade. Hopefully this puppy will keep on running, and we can take additional profits and lower the stop further.

"Forex Patterns and Probabilities"


If you haven't seen it, here's my new website, dedicated to the new book "Forex Patterns and Probabilities"

CLICK HERE TO VISIT EDPONSI.COM

USD/CAD Resistance - Fibonacci, Moving Average


An addendum to the previous post, a glance at the daily chart reveals that the rally hit resistance at the 20-day moving average (about 1.0615) before slipping back below the 1.0600 figure. We also have a 50% Fibonacci resistance point near 1.0600, so the stop has a good degree of protection. This doesn't guarantee success, but it doesn't hurt, either.

USD/CAD Short @1.0585


USD/CAD is in a long term downtrend, and it has found some resistance on the hourly chart on the 1.0600 figure. Also showing overbought on the hourly RSI. Shorting here with a stop above the recent highs.

Hammer of the Gods?


The Japanese Yen has become extremely volatile overnight, due to a variety of factors.

1) Risk Aversion. Moody's Investors Service cut ratings on $5.2 billion of bonds backed by U.S. subprime mortgages, and S&P announced that it may downgrade $12 billion worth of subprime sludge. If hedge funds and other investors are forced to meet margin calls, they will liquidate their profitable carry trade positions.

2) Bank of Japan. The BoJ will announce its decision on interest rates this evening. While no change is expected, we may hear hawkish comments from BoJ officials, who are expected to raise rates in August.

All of this volatility has created some wicked looking potential hammers (potential because we never assume that we know how an open candle will close!), like the one on the daily GBP/JPY

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Harsh!

From the Wall St Journal...

China Executes Former Safety Regulator
Death Penalty Comes
After Food, Drug Woes
Attract Global Notice
By NICHOLAS ZAMISKA in Hong Kong and JASON LEOW in Beijing
July 11, 2007

China's swift execution of a top food and drug regulator convicted of bribery comes as concerns at home and abroad are mounting over the safety of Chinese products. Zheng Xiaoyu, the 62-year-old former head of the State Food and Drug Administration, was executed yesterday after he was sentenced to death on May 29 for taking bribes from drug companies and dereliction of duty.

The execution of such a high-ranking Chinese official is a rare event. Government officials charged with corruption often manage to negotiate lesser sentences given their stature and connections. Mr. Zheng appealed the verdict last month, but a higher court upheld it and the execution was approved by China's Supreme People's Court, according to Xinhua news agency.

Mr. Zheng's death follows a string of food- and drug-safety lapses -- ranging from tainted toothpaste and pet food to suspended anticancer drugs -- that have cast an unflattering light on China's regulatory standards.

Ordinarily, a case such as Mr. Zheng's wouldn't have merited the death penalty, given that the sums involved weren't extraordinary and that he confessed, said Fu Hualing, an associate professor on the faculty of law at the University of Hong Kong.

"But China is not in an ordinary time," Mr. Fu added. The widespread scale of the food- and drug-safety scandals and the international attention they have drawn put pressure on China's judges to impose the death penalty, he says. "It takes a courageous court to do the opposite."

One of Mr. Zheng's former deputies who was also convicted on corruption charges was given a suspended death sentence Friday. A second deputy was sentenced in November to 15 years in prison on similar charges.

An assistant at the law firm that had been handling Mr. Zheng's defense said the firm wouldn't comment.

Also yesterday, representatives of five Chinese state agencies that oversee food and drug safety appeared jointly for the first time to explain how they work together, an apparent effort to show that China is taking the issue seriously.

Commenting on the recent scandals, Yan Jiangying, a spokeswoman for the State Food and Drug Administration, said, "These cases have brought shame to my agency and revealed serious problems. We need to seriously reflect on what lessons we can draw from such cases and how we can carry out effective supervision and ensure the safety of our food and drugs."

Chinese officials who spoke at yesterday's briefing emphasized that China's safety problems stem from the fact that it is still a developing country.

Zhang Yanqiu, a vice director at the Ministry of Agriculture, said many farmers still work on small plots of land, and they vary greatly in their skills and how much they understand about food safety. Just six to seven years ago, their job was to produce enough food to feed the population, so food safety wouldn't have been a priority and the concept remains new to them, he said.

Also yesterday, China's quality-supervision authorities said they blacklisted 14 companies for planning to export substandard food products, according to Xinhua.

"They will be banned from exporting food products," said Lin Wei, an official with the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine.

The substandard products, which included preserved seafood and fruit, were set to be exported to Japan, Canada, the U.S. and the European Union, according to the administration.

Some of the products were found to be contaminated by bacteria or contain additives such as sulphur dioxide in excess of levels set by the importing countries.

Authorities said that most of the severe problems occurred at small factories with fewer than 10 employees and that the government was working to cut the number of such operations in half by 2010.

US Housing On Shaky Foundation

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Credit Suisse analysts estimated banks could lose up to $52 billion over time due to their exposure to collateralized debt obligations that invested in U.S. subprime mortgages.

Most of the losses would stem from loans to hedge funds, compared with an expected $5 billion to $10 billion from banks' direct investment in subprime CDOs, the Credit Suisse analysts said in a report dated July 6.

In June, fears of hedge fund losses in subprime mortgages, or home loans made to borrowers with blemished credit histories, rattled financial markets after news of hefty losses at two funds managed by Bear Stearns

Troubles at several other hedge funds have came to light since Bear Stearns' fund problems: Cheyne Capital's Queens' Walk, Cambridge Place Investment's Caliber Global Investment, and United Capital's Horizon Funds.

Japanese Yen Roars

Strength in the Japanese Yen may be attributed to comments by Japan's Minister of Finance earlier today. Courtesy of Dow Jones Newswire:

08:00 GMT Japan Tsuda: Want BOJ To Support Econ Via Monetary Policy
08:00 GMT Japan MOF Tsuda: No Plans To Change FX Makeup Of Reserves
08:00 GMT Japan MOF Tsuda: No Comment On If Tokyo To Intervene In FX
08:00 GMT Japan MOF Vice Fin Min Tsuda: Monitoring FX Mkts Carefully

Still, to me its just a pullback within an uptrend. Looking for support levels and oversold readings on EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, ect.

USD hammered; US home buyers stop buying hammers

Problems at Home Depot, the world's largest home-improvement retailer and a proxy for the US housing market, are helping to bring down the buck as well as US stocks.

Revenue may fall 2 percent this year, the first annual decrease in Home Depot's history. The sale of HD's contractor division, which is less tied to home building, means the company will lose a buffer against the biggest housing slump in 16 years.

Event risk - Bernanke speaks at 1pm New York time.

More on the BoC

GREAT REUTERS ARTICLE on BoC rate hike...

"Some modest further increase in the overnight rate may be required to bring inflation back to the target over the medium term," the central bank said in a statement explaining its first rate hike since May 2006.

Question from a Reader II

Originally Posted by Technocrat
Hi again Ed,

I'm used to the term 'breakout' applied to range trading. How does it apply to trend trading? Are you referring to breaking out of a channel or do you mean horizontal support and resistance levels? Sorry if this is too basic, I'm still wet behind the ears and this stuff is pearls, so I don't want to get it wrong.

Thanx again.



Hi T,

Great point - try to think of it this way. Trends often pause and consolidate, and this creates support and resistance levels. So many times, when you are looking at a range-bound currency pair, it is actually range-bound within a longer term trend. Hope this helps!

Ed

Canada Rates Up to 4.5%

From BoC, courtesy of Dow Jones Newswires:

13:00 GMT BOC:C$ Has Risen Sharply, CPI Higher, Longer Term Rates Up
13:00 GMT BOC:Econ Now Oper Further Above Potential Than Seen In Apr
13:00 GMT BOC:Risks In New Projections Appear "Roughly Balanced"
13:00 GMT BOC:New Projections Based On C$ In 93-95.5 U.S. Cent Range
13:00 GMT BOC Forecasts Econ Growth Of 2.5% In 2007, 2008, 2009
13:00 GMT BOC Now Sees Core,Total CPI Return To 2% Tgt By Early 2009
13:00 GMT BOC: Some Modest Further Rate Increase May Be Required
13:00 GMT Bank Of Canada Overnight Rate Tgt: Up 25 Bps To 4.50%

USD and CAD event risk

Bank of Canada is expected to raise rates to 4.5% from 4.25% today at 13:00 GMT. In addition, Ben Bernanke is going to speak about inflation at 17:00 GMT. READ THE BLOOMBERG ARTICLE on Bernanke's appearance here.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Question from a Reader

Say Ed,

What can be done with this pair? Or any of the multitudes of others for that matter that are at critical highs? Buy on the rallies?

So many of the pairs are at new highs it really throws a newbie trader like myself. The USD/CAD pair is certainly trending down, but is it worth it at this stage to look to keep shorting and just treat days like today as a minor retracement? It looks like it's trying in earnest to bottom out, but I got no game for this context. As a green trader all this sort of situation does is make me want to sit on my hands, I'd like the opine of experience.

Appreciate any feedback Ed, 'cause this phenomena is board wide and I'm weary of missing out every day. Strategies?


Thnx in advance


Hi Technocrat,

Great question. When the market is trending, we have a choice - trade the breakout, or wait for the pullback. I prefer to trade the pullbacks, because there are simply too many false breakouts, not just in Forex but in all forms of trading. If I were trading stocks, I'd like to use a William O'Neil style of buying breakouts on high volume, but of course we don't have readily available volume figures in the currency markets.

Since so many breakouts fail, I try to use them to my advantage in certain situations - for example, under the right conditions I'll fade a breakout that runs counter to a dominant trend. This is because failure for such a breakout is extremely common, and it also allows the trader to enter in the direction of the dominant trend. But on the whole, I'd rather wait for the pullback then enter on the breakout. This allows me to trade with the dominant trend without entering at extreme levels. Hope this helps!

Ed

USD/CAD, EUR/JPY - Yeah, Still Trending


Everywhere I look, I keep seeing articles and posts that suggest and even outright predict trend reversals in USD/CAD and other currency pairs. Well, guess what? Today, we have a new 30-year low in USD/CAD and a new 15-year high in EUR/JPY. The lesson is clear - although it is a natural human tendency to try to pick tops and bottoms, it is ultimately a loser's game to fight against the trend. It seems simple enough, but show me a trend, and I'll guarantee you that somewhere, someone is betting on a reversal. Avoid this tendency and you'll be miles ahead of most traders. Daily chart of USD/CAD tells the story...

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Forex Radio - Ed Ponsi on the Vince Rowe Show

HERE IS THE LINK to my radio show appearance from July 3rd. We covered a really wide range of topics - how to keep your money safe, choosing a broker, tactics for entering trades, and more. Please scroll down to July 3rd, Part One, Two, Three, and Four. I stayed on the radio with Vince for a full hour, so there is a lot of good info here.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Football and Forex Link

Hey, the link didn't work in the earlier post, sorry about that. Here it is:

WE PRACTICE LIKE WE PLAY

Forex and Football


Years ago, my football coach taught me a lesson that still applies today - especially in Forex trading. I hope you'll enjoy today's article , titled WE PRACTICE LIKE WE PLAY



Nov. 20, 1960 - Trailing the Eagles 17-10, the New York Giants were trying to mount a late comeback at Yankee Stadium. Halfback Frank Gifford reached back to catch Charlie Conerley's pass, and he turned upfield in routine fashion. That's when Chuck Bednarik came along and changed both their lives. "Chuck knocked him right out of his shoes," Eagles defensive back Tom Brookshier said.

Monday, July 2, 2007

Hello From Ed Ponsi

Welcome to the FX Educator blog! Come here for Forex articles, market commentary, and more.

My name is Ed Ponsi and I'm the President of FXEducator.com and EdPonsi.com and I'd like to welcome you!