re

Enviado:
8/3/2007 14:52
por Infoo
sim senhor... depois de um amuo noturno, pela manhã lá se recompôs e veio de 116,3 pr 116.7 e toca de saltar pt 117.1 antes de almoço

Enviado:
8/3/2007 9:17
por petar
Infoo, e afinal aquilo deu a volta a acabou positiva.

Enviado:
8/3/2007 8:11
por Pata-Hari
lol, infoo. Desde que o aquilo não nos caia na cabeça...
re

Enviado:
8/3/2007 1:07
por Infoo
hum.... ali o dito cujo jornalista.. blá blá blá.... e já repararam que nunca aparece um valor do usdjpy? rien ZERO... mas fala de quebra a que horas? em que valores? hummmm... será uma charada pr adivinhar?
andam nervosos com os dados de 6ª nos states?
entretanto algo mandou akilo da zona dos 116,30 pr a dos 115,60 e vão 80 em 3h

Enviado:
7/3/2007 23:29
por petar
Pata-Hari Escreveu:e esse será apenas um dos formatos de sobre-alavancagem do mercado e qualquer um deles tem potencial para induzir a correcções do mercado...
Exacto Pata. No entanto parece que corrigiu das quedas e encontrava-se nos -0.04%, o que nao me parece que seja factor suficiente para atirar o Nikkei por ai abaixo.
Bjs,
Pedro
PS: desculpem o portugues mas o teclado e polaco


Enviado:
7/3/2007 23:11
por Pata-Hari
e esse será apenas um dos formatos de sobre-alavancagem do mercado e qualquer um deles tem potencial para induzir a correcções do mercado...
Yen Rises After Greenspan Comments on Carry Trade

Enviado:
7/3/2007 23:07
por petar
The Japanese yen edged up against the dollar and the euro after former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the yen carry trade at some point has "got to turn."
Greenspan was speaking at a trading technology conference in New York. He also said that the U.S. housing sector wasexperiencing an "inventory recession."
Investors have avoided placing large bets before central bank policy meetings on Thursday and a U.S. payrolls report on Friday.
Traders have curbed their exposure to riskier assets in the past week, prompting a worldwide sell-off in equities markets, on concern about the health of the U.S. economy and its subprime mortgage market as well as global political jitters.
This has led to a rise in the yen with the unwinding of carry trades, in which investors borrow low-yielding currencies to fund purchases of higher-return assets.
"After the big move on the yen, we are seeing some consolidation today, with the currency stalling," said Michael Kaizer, a currency trader at M&T Bank in Buffalo, New York. "On top of that, we have a lot of data and central bank meetings in the next two days. People don't want to make a big commitment without that information."
The dollar was down about 0.4% against the yen. The euro rose slightly versus the yen after posting its biggest weekly loss in 2-1/2 years last week, followed by a bounce back of 1% on Tuesday.
Traders and analysts, however, were split on whether the recent moves were the start of a deeper unwinding of the carry trade or whether investors will return to the strategy once market volatility eases.
One potential risk for carry trades is that returns are wiped out by the appreciation of the funding currency, and thus investors are unwilling to hold such trades in times of high volatility.
The euro was unchanged against the dollar before a widely expected European Central Bank rate rise to 3.75% on Thursday. The focus will be on the post-decision news conference for clues on how soon rates may move to 4%.
The Bank of England's interest rate decision is also due on Thursday, with most economists polled by Reuters expecting UK rates to stay on hold at 5.25%.
In the United States, the week's key event is Friday's February nonfarm payrolls report. Signs of a slowing jobs market are likely to boost expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts late this year.
U.S. private employers likely added 57,000 new jobs in February, according to a survey by ADP Employers Services, released this morning.
Later on Wednesday, the Fed will release its survey of regional economic conditions. The report is due at 2 p.m. New York time.
"The looming event risk in the form of tomorrow's ECB and BoE meetings and Friday's U.S. employment and trade data, may deter significant position-taking today," Brown Brothers
Harriman said in a note to clients.