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Develop a habit of reviewing and analyzing

Develop a habit of reviewing and analyzing your good and bad trades. Then you will have a much better sense of what will work best in your future trades.

Trading is always full of emotions

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software which aims at predicting future trends

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Trade wisely

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Invest in a good Forex trading education

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Sunday 14 July 2013

USD/JPY Outlook July 15-19


The Japanese yen enjoyed a good week, asUSD/JPY broke below the 100 level and surrendered over 200 points. Will the yen continue to rally? The upcoming week is very quiet, with only two events on the schedule. The markets will be closed on Monday for a holiday. Here’s an outlook for the Japanese events and an updated technical analysis for USD/JPY.
The yen took advantage of a broadly weakened dollar last week. The US currency sagged after the Federal Reserve chair Bernard Bernanke said that monetary policy would remain accommodative for the time being, so QE tapering appears to be on hold. The yen also got some help as the BOJ sounded optimistic about the Japanese economy in its policy statement.
USD/JPY daily chart with support and resistance lines on it. Click to enlarge: 
  1. BOJ Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes:Tuesday, 23:50. The Bank of Japan continues to be in the spotlight this week, as it releases the minutes of its policy meeting last week. At the meeting, the BOJ left its monetary policy unchanged, but sounded cautiously optimistic about the Japanese economy, noting that it was “picking up speed”. Analysts will comb through the minutes, and this market-mover could impact on the movement of USD/JPY.
  2. All Industries Activity: Friday, 4:30. This business indicator tends to show sharp moves from month to month, but the markets have done a good job of producing accurate forecasts for the past two releases. The markets are expecting a strong improvement in the indicator, with an estimate of 1.3% for the July release. Will the indicator meet or beat this month’s prediction?
*All times are GMT.
USD/JPY Technical Analysis
USD/JPY started the week at 101.49, and this also marked the pair’s high point. The pair dropped sharply, touching a low of 98.24. USD/JPY then pushed back above the 99 line, closing at 99.19. This leaves 98.90 (discussed last week) in place as a weak support level.



Technical lines from top to bottom
With the yen posting sharp gains, we begin at lower levels:
105.50 is above the round number of 105 and worked as resistance during 2008. It reverted to support later in the year, and is back providing strong resistance. Below, 104.60 slowed the pair’s rise in early 2008.
103.50 provided support for the pair in July and September 2008 before reverting to a resistance line in October 2008. The line has been quiet since then but was briefly breached in mid-May of this year. Next, 102.80 capped the pair in May 2013.
101.44, which was the post-crisis high seen in April 2009, started the week as very weak resistance, but is stronger with the yen rising sharply and trading near the 99 line. 100.85 failed to hold and has reverted to a resistance role.
USD/JPY crashed through the 100 level in mid-week, and this significant number is now providing weak resistance. It has been busy in July and could see more action this week.
USD/JPY continues to receive support at 98.90. This line was breached as the pair moved sharply lower, but remained in place at the end of the week. It is a weak line and could fall if the yen picks up where it left off at the end of the week and continues to move higher.
97.80 was quite busy in June, and continues in a support role. Given the volatility that we are seeing from the pair, this line cannot be considered safe.
The March 2013 peak of 96.71 is providing support. This is followed by the round number of 95, which was last tested in mid-June.
The final line for now is 93.79. This marked the low point of a rally by the dollar which started in mid-June and saw the pair climb to the mid-101 range earlier this month.
I am neutral on USD/JPY
The dollar was broadly weaker after the FOMC minutes and Bernanke’s dovish comments, but some strong economic numbers out of the US could bolster the dollar. Japan has been posting some better numbers lately, but with only a couple of releases this week, the pair’s direction could well depend on this week’s US releases.

Forex - GBP/USD weekly outlook: July 15 - 19


The dollar was higher against the pound on Friday, as the greenback recovered following a selloff earlier in the week after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the U.S. economy still required monetary stimulus.

GBP/USD hit session lows of 1.5076 before settling at 1.5107, down 0.51% for the day, paring back the week’s gains to 1.61%.

Cable is likely to find support at 1.4996, Thursday’s low and resistance at 1.5220, Thursday’s high.

The dollar fell sharply on Wednesday after Bernanke said the Fed will continue to maintain accommodative monetary policy for the foreseeable future, citing low levels of inflation and the high unemployment rate.

Bernanke said the bank will not raise interest rates until the U.S. unemployment rate hits 6.5%.

The comments came after the minutes of the central bank’s June policy meeting showed that Fed policymakers remain divided over when to begin tapering its USD85 billion-a-month asset purchase program.

Around half of Fed policymakers believe the bank should start to scale back bond purchases by the end of the year, while many others believe the labor market still remains too weak.

Data on Friday showed that U.S. consumer sentiment ticked lower in July, with the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index slipping to 83.9 from 84.1 in June, compared to expectations for a reading of 85.0.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser said Friday the U.S. central bank should wind down its monetary stimulus program by the end of this year. Elsewhere, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said the bank should not start tapering asset purchases if inflation remains weak.

Sterling fell to three-year lows against the dollar early in the week after the Bank of England indicated at its July meeting that interest rates are likely to remain at record low levels, given weakness in the U.K.’s economic recovery.

In the week ahead, investors will be looking ahead to U.S. data on retail sales, consumer inflation and housing sector activity. U.K. data on unemployment will also be in focus.

Ahead of the coming week, Investing.com has compiled a list of these and other significant events likely to affect the markets.

Monday, July 15

The U.S. is to produce official data on retail sales, the government measure of consumer spending, which accounts for the majority of overall economic activity. The U.S. is also to publish the Empire state manufacturing index and a report on business inventories.

Tuesday, July 16

The U.K. is to release official data on consumer price inflation, as well as reports on producer price inflation and retail price inflation.

The U.S. is to release official data on consumer price inflation, industrial production and the capacity utilization rate.

Wednesday, July 17

The U.K. is to release official data on the change in the number of people unemployed and the unemployment rate, as well as data on average earnings.

The U.S. is to release official data on building permits, a leading indicator of future construction sector activity, as well as data on housing starts. The Federal Reserve is to release its Beige book.

Thursday, July 18

The U.K. is to publish government data on retail sales.

The U.S. is to release the weekly government report on initial jobless claims and the Philly Fed manufacturing index.

Friday, July 19

The U.K. is to round up the week with government data on public sector net borrowing.