Gadget Mania: May It Never End

By MoneyMorning.com.au

What kind of events are worth reporting on in real time, with updates every few seconds? Such events have to be pretty dramatic. Well, the release of the iPhone 5 apparently qualifies. The tech blogs were all over it, and so were the wire services and big papers.

A moment to celebrate? Sure! It was the smart phone that changed the whole way people live and access information in our time. The smartphone…is nearly everything you can think of in the size of a deck of cards. It is the greatest consumer product in human history heretofore. Its hype but totally justified.

Maybe you have had this experience. I’ve recommended smartphones to flip phone users, and they never stopped thanking me.

Meanwhile, I’m getting serious upgrade cravings. Suddenly, my iPhone4S has cobwebs on it. I have to blow off the dust to make a call. It is ugly and stupid and slow with a tiny screen, and the battery runs out too fast. Might as well be a telegraph machine or a smoke signal or a note in a bottle. This museum piece must die.

Some cynics think: oh sure, you want me to cough up yet again for a gadget I don’t need. Well, fine. if you don’t like the phone, there is a simple solution. Don’t buy it. That’s the essential glory of a market economy. It has to persuade us to participate. If we don’t want to, we don’t have to.

It’s not so easy in the world of politics. The government rolls out its new reforms and then forces them down our throats. We have no choice but to believe its experts and scientists and bureaucrats, and comply, on penalty of jail time. If you disagree, you are called an outlier, an extremist, even a danger to society.

Mr Market Vs Mr Politician

The first iPhone went to market in 2007. Just look how far the entire smartphone industry has travelled in these years. That same year, the U.S. entered into a recession that the government swore it would fix.

Not only has government not fixed the problem, middle class income continues to shrink under the supposed fix, unemployment still worsens, and there is no end in sight.

In the background, in the world of digits and technology, revolutions were happening. While enterprise working in the digital world has created wonders, government has created disaster and sacrificed untold amounts of unseen potential wealth with its parasitic and backward policies of bailout, spend, regulate and print.

To make matters worse, the G-men have done nothing since 2007 but hector, harass, threaten, and badger makers and innovators of smartphones.

[US] Congress has been holding hearings for five years, there’s always some Justice Department investigation, and the regulators never stop looking for some far-flung imperfections in the way smartphones are marketed, the hardware and firmware, the app economy, the carrier contracts, and every aspect of how these innovations have worked.

Most absurdly, Congress has pretended to protect us from the dangers of how smartphones are tracking our movements and storing private data on our lives. Doctors, heal yourself! There are a thousand government agencies down the street that are doing just that, and they aren’t trying to sell us stuff.

They are spying on us to take our liberty and property without our consent. The supposed violations of our rights pushed by new technologies typically involve selling us stuff we want.

History will record that government did absolutely nothing to create the smartphone and everything possible to hobble its development. The whole thing is quite insulting. If government had its way, we would still be using switchboard operators.

The private sector companies that innovate and sell us these products truly are revolutionaries against a static and decrepit political system.

When was the last time any public sector agency actually created something to enhance our lives? I can’t remember one. But every morning I still see the postal employee driving around a truck and sticking things my mailboxes, and I see yellow school buses from fifty years ago carting kids to their daycare prisons, and I sometimes have to go to government agencies with tellers using technology from the 1930s.

And then we look at the private sector and see miracles unfolding by the day. We not only expect them. We demand them. And then we tolerate no rollback ever. How many people would trade in their iPhone 4 for a flip phone that itself was a dramatic upgrade from anything available even ten years ago? If people were forced to do this, it would be seen as a human rights violation.

And once people get used to the new iPhone or whatever amazing gadget is being pushed by Android or Samsung, the excitement lasts about a day. Then people just figure that this is the way it is: progress is just part of life itself.

We take it all for granted. But we demand no such thing from government. We have the lowest expectations possible for the public sector and impossibly high expectations for the private sector.

What the Airport Tells You About Government and Commerce

My favorite example of this weird confluence comes from airports. We approach the security line with trepidation, careful to remove our shoes, strip down, bag our creams and toothpaste, and say “yes sir” and “yes ma’am” to every demand. We put up with their glares and stares and subject ourselves to every abuse.

We cross through security and enter the glorious marketplace of airport commerce. Here we find merchants reaching out to us, serving us, giving us everything we want, creating ever more amazing things for us. I can get a massage, buy some shoes, have a drink, take a nap, or stock up on chotskies that sample the local culture.

Despite the TSA’s claim that they are there to serve us, the real servants are found only once we pass through the public-sector gauntlet. And yet how do we treat the waitress who brings us that greasy burger?

We complain that it didn’t arrive fast enough, that the tomato is stale, that the fries are cold. We say things to these servants we would never dare to say to the TSA.

And yet, no matter how much abuse we heap on the private sector, it somehow forges ahead. The glaze of the entrepreneur is always toward the future. It is to do what hasn’t yet been done, and always for others.

It is only through doing the exceptional thing in service of society that profits are made. One must leave the crowd, invent and market the new thing, take on the status quo, blow up what exists and make something new that had never been imagined before.

To make new is the great challenge of life. Any society and any system can repeat what has been done in the past, but the result of that is stagnation and eventual death. When economic forces are left to individuals and their creative longings, we experience that most glorious thing call progress.

That’s why the private sector is forever surprising us with things that serve needs we didn’t even know we had. Think of it. No bureaucrat ever thought of the smartphone.

None of us did.

It took a global community of self-interested, market-coordinated producers, thousands and even millions of people wildy interested in making a buck by bringing people cool stuff, to come up with the smartphone.

And despite his vaunted reputation, Steve Jobs didn’t come up with it either. He drew from existing technologies and worked with the best people in the industry to come up with a way to package and market the greatest stuff in existence, rolling out a primitive version and improving it along through way through trial and error, always with a forward and upward glance.

The future is never certain in the world of commerce. As Daniel Cloud shows in his wonderful book The Lily, there is an element of the market economy that is pure play. You never know what is going to work at the outset. It’s always a speculation. The new product or service, the new attempt to try what has not been tried before, always seems a bit crazy.

And it is a bit crazy…not to mention risky. But this is the way toward greatness. As Cloud says, “the real reason the entrepreneur’s profits don’t quickly get arbitraged away is that it takes people who aren’t quite as creative a long time to realize that he is not crazy and begin to imitate him, and by that time, he’s already moved on to some other uncertain project on the basis of some new keen hunch.”

Entrepreneurship, he writes, is about “individual intuitions about objective uncertainties.”

People are said to be gadget weary. Nice problem to have! If the world were ruled entirely by government, we would experience nothing new, just the same old sinking into the mire of the old and worn out. That world is never new and improved.

Whether you buy the new gizmo or not, its creative engine represents a force that is forever renewing the face of the earth and the experience of humanity itself. This is something to celebrate, and never take for granted.

Jeffrey Tucker
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Laissez-Faire Today

From the Archives…

What the Central Banks Are Doing to Your Money
14-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Luxury Firm Burberry Highlights the Chinese Slowdown
13-09-2012 – John Stepek

Gold Up, but Gold Stocks Up More
12-09-2012 – Dr. Alex Cowie

The ECB is Only Fooling the Gullible
11-09-2012 – Dan Denning

Why This ‘Ludicrous’ Investment Keeps Going Up
10-09-2012 – Kris Sayce


Gadget Mania: May It Never End

Market Review 21.9.12

Source: ForexYard

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After seeing significant gains yesterday due to worse than expected economic data out of the euro-zone and China, the US dollar staged a downward correction during overnight trading. As a result, higher yielding assets, including gold and silver, were able to recoup some of their recent losses. Crude oil traded steadily at the $93 a barrel level throughout the Asian session. The commodity has gained more than $2 since hitting a six-week low yesterday morning.

Main News for Today

UK Public Sector Net Borrowing- 08:30 GMT
• The British pound has seen significant upward movement against the US dollar in recent weeks
• If today’s news comes in better than the forecasted 13.2B, the GBP/USD could see additional bullish movement before markets close for the week

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Trinidad & Tobago cuts repo rate 25 bps as inflation falling

By Central Bank News
    The Central Bank of Trinidad & Tobago cut its repurchase rate by 25 basis points to 2.75 percent to support economic growth at a time of falling inflation.
    While there have been incipient signs of a pickup in economic activity in some non-energy sectors through mid-2012, the central bank said the international economic environment remains challenging and this is dampening consumer and business confidence.
   “In order to support a sustained recovery of the domestic economy, while taking into account inflationary developments, the Central Bank has decided to reduce the ‘repo’ rate from 3.00 per cent to 2.75 per cent,” the bank said in a statement from Sept. 21.
    The bank has kept the repo rate steady since July 2011, when it was cut by 25 basis points.

    Inflation in August eased for the third consecutive month to an annual rate of 7.9 percent from 10.8 percent in July and 11.0 percent in June due to a sharp fall in food prices, the central bank said.
    The bank also said that lending to consumers, which has been lethargic over the past few months, rose 0.8 percent in July while real estate mortgage lending remained robust at just under 10 percent and business lending grew 5.1 percent in July.
    It added that the pace of deposit growth was outstripping credit expansion so liquidity in the financial system remained high in September and a Central Government bond issue at the end of this month is expected to temporarily remove some of the excess liquidity.

   www.CentralBankNews.info
 
 
   

Monetary Policy Week in Review – Sept. 22, 2012: Japan, India, Turkey ease, Taiwan and Nigeria worry over hot money

By Central Bank News

    The past week in monetary policy saw interest rate decisions by 7 central banks around the world, with all banks (India, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Japan, South Africa, Taiwan and Nigeria) keeping rates unchanged.
    Monetary policy, however, was still loosened as Japan raised its asset purchase program, India trimmed its cash reserve ratio and Turkey cut the top rate on its interest corridor. Both India and Turkey cited inflationary pressures that limited their ability to ease policy.
    All 7 central banks observed a weaker global economy with the Bank of Japan turning pessimistic after previously expecting a moderate recovery. Taiwan, in contrast, expects the economic outlook to improve slightly in the second half of the year.
    Another message from last week’s central bank statements was concern over the impact of the Federal Reserve’s launch of a new round of asset purchases, known as Quantitative Easing 3, along with a forecast of holding rates close to zero until mid-2015.
    Taiwan and Nigeria expressed concern that the Fed’s latest move would lead to inflows of short-term money to emerging economies. The problem with so-called hot money is that it can be financially destabilizing by pushing up exchange rates and inflation of the destination country. Then, as soon as financial conditions change, the money evaporates, scouring the globe for the next opportunity.
LAST WEEK’S MONETARY POLICY DECISIONS:

COUNTRYNEW RATEPREVIOUS RATERATE 1 YEAR AGO
INDIA8.00%8.00%8.25%
SRI LANKA7.75%7.75%7.00%
TURKEY5.75%5.75%5.75%
JAPAN0.10%0.10%0.10%
SOUTH AFRICA5.00%5.50%5.50%
TAIWAN1.88%1.88%1.88%
NIGERIA12.00%12.00%9.25%
NEXT WEEK:
    The central bank calendar next week looks quiet, with 5 central banks meeting: Israel, Hungary, Georgia, Romania and Czech Republic.
    Hungary may cut rates again while the Czech central bank may follow some of the other major central banks and embark on some form of quantitative easing given a shrinking economy and a policy rate of 0.5 percent.
    Another event to keep en eye on is Mexico City, where Group of 20 deputy finance minsters and central bank governors meet Sunday and Monday, Sept. 23 and 24.

COUNTRYMEETINGCURRENT RATERATE 1 YEAR AGO
ISRAEL24-Sep2.25%3.00%
HUNGARY25-Sep6.75%6.00%
GEORGIA26-Sep5.75%7.50%
ROMANIA27-Sep5.25%6.35%
CZECH REPUBLIC27-Sep0.50%0.75%

US Fed balance sheet to grow 5% to $2.9 trillion end-2012 – Cleveland Fed study

By Central Bank News
   The balance sheet of the U.S. Federal Reserve will expand about 5 percent to around $2.9 trillion by the end of 2012 as a result of its latest plan to purchase additional mortgage-backed securities (MBS), according to a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
    The Federal Reserve’s policy-making body, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), decided on Sept. 13 to expand its purchase of assets to strengthen the U.S. economy and improve the jobs market, a move known as QE3 (Quantitative Easing 3).
    The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet was just under $900 billion in early 2008 but it has expanded to just over $2.8 trillion currently, following earlier rounds of purchases of assets, such as Treasury bonds, MBSs and other debt issued by government agencies.
    Under the latest asset purchase program, the Federal Reserve will purchase $40 billion of agency MBSs a month. Unlike earlier asset purchase programs, the Federal Reserve did not put a time or size limit on the program, but said it would continue to purchase the securities until the outlook for the labor market improved substantially.

     “Looking ahead to next year, if the Committee continues to purchase MBS to support the economic recovery, the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet will likely continue to expand,” the authors, Bill Bednar and Todd Clark, wrote in “Balance Sheet Implications of New Fed Policies.”
     The Federal Reserve will also continue its current policy of reinvesting proceeds from its current holdings of agency debt and MBSs in new mortgage-backed securities, which means that there would be no reduction in the holdings of MBSs over time.
    “Assuming a constant level of current holdings through the end of the year, the decision to purchase an additional $40 billion each month will expand the Fed’s portfolio of MBSs by about $145 billion during that time. This would bring the total value of MBS holdings up to nearly $987 billion, a 17 percent increase from the value in early September,” the authors said, adding:
    “Assuming that the level of the other assets on the Fed’s balance sheet remain somewhat constant throughout the remainder of the year – a reasonable assumption – the $145 billion in additional mortgage -backed securities should lead to a comparable increase in the size of the balance sheet overall. The resulting size of approximately $2.9 trillion would be about a 5 percent increase from the balance sheet’s current level,”
    www.CentralBankNews.info

REPEAT-Turkey holds repo rate steady, cuts ceiling rate on corridor

By Central Bank News

   (Following story was originally published on Sept. 18, 2012 and is being repeated as it disappeared from the website after publication)

     The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey held its benchmark one-week repurchase rate steady at 5.75 percent but cut the ceiling on its interest rate corridor by 150 basis points to 10 percent from 11.5 percent, a move the central bank had signaled last month.
    The central bank, which last month said that it may narrow the interest corridor “in the forthcoming period,” maintained the lower limit on the corridor at 5.0 percent. 
    The bank said today that it may take further “measured steps in the coming period.”
    The bank introduced the interest rate corridor last year to help ward of speculative attacks and control inflation. Interest rates vary daily within the corridor.
    The bank said it was taking a cautious stance as inflation remains above the bank’s 5.0 percent target.  The inflation rate eased to 8.9 percent in August from July’s 9.1 percent.

      The central bank said risk perceptions in financial markets had improved yet there was still uncertainties about the global economy. But domestic and foreign demand remain stable and exports continue their upward trend, despite the weaker global outlook.
    Turkey’s economy expanded by an annual 2.9 percent in the second quarter, down from 3.3 percent in the first.
     Last year Turkey’s Gross Domestic Product grew by 8.5 percent and the government is aiming for growth of 4 percent this year and has urged the central bank to cut rates to achieve this target.

     

Central Bank News Link List – Sept 21, 2012: Factbox: Fed officials’ comments

By Central Bank News
Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

“Gold Uptrend Intact” as Bullion Sentiment “Buoyed by Inflation Fears”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 21 September 2012, 08:15 EDT

WHOLESALE gold bullion prices held above $1770 an ounce Friday morning in London, a few Dollars below six-month highs hit earlier in the week, while stocks and commodities were also broadly flat ahead of a meeting between the leaders of Spain and Italy, with press reports suggesting plans are being discussed for a Spanish bailout.

Heading into the weekend, spot gold would make its fifth straight weekly gain if it closes above $1770 per ounce later today, while gold in Euros remained within 1% of last year’s all-time high this morning.

“The large uptrend is still intact, and it is positive that gold has been able to hold onto recent gains,” says the latest technical analysis note from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.

“The long-term inflation outlook…is keeping gold sentiment buoyed,” says one trader in Shanghai, referring to last week’s Federal Reserve decision to begin open-ended quantitative easing.

Gold bullion holdings to back the world’s biggest gold ETF SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) rose to a new 13-month high of 1308.4 tonnes yesterday.

Deutsche Bank Asset Management meantime reports growing interest in gold among its clients, who are “increasingly concerned” about inflation risks.

Silver bullion meantime fell to $34.63 an ounce this morning – slightly below last week’s close.
The world’s biggest silver ETF, iShare Silver Trust (SLV) saw its holdings hit a new 11-month high yesterday at over 9940 tonnes.

Chinese silver imports rose 304 tonnes last month, up nearly 12% from a month earlier but down 3.4% year-on-year, official Chinese customs data show.

“We still believe that domestic stockpiles [of silver in China] are extremely large when compared to the lackluster fabrication demand,” says a note from Standard Bank, whose analysts highlighted the problem of Chinese silver stockpiles back in February.

“We do not expect Chinese fabrication demand for silver to improve any time soon.”

European Union officials are in talks with Spain’s government over conditions that might be imposed should Spain ask for a bailout, the Financial Times reports.

“It is a kind of ‘proto-program’, if such were needed,” an EU official told the FT.

Spanish leaders are considering a freeze on pension payments and a sooner-than-anticipated raising of the retirement age in a bid to save an annual €4 billion, according to newswire Reuters.

A condition of the European Central Bank’s new Outright Monetary Transactions program – which would see the ECB buy sovereign debt on the open market to reduce borrowing costs – is that beneficiary nations must already be in a bailout program and must be fulfilling agreed conditions such as meeting deficit targets.

Spain has already agreed to borrow up to €100 billion to fund the restructuring of its banking sector.

An independent stress test of Spanish banks is expected to show that between €50 billion and €60 billion will be needed, Reuters reports, raising the prospect that Spain could seek to use the remainder to fund the government and stave off the need for a formal sovereign bailout.

Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy is due to meet with Italian prime minister Mario Monti in Rome around lunchtime. Both countries saw their borrowing costs rise sharply in the summer, with benchmark 10-Year yields on Spanish government debt hitting new Euro-era highs in July.

Like Rajoy, Monti is reported to be reluctant to request a sovereign bailout.

“There won’t be any nation that voluntarily, with a preemptive move, even if rationally justified, would go to an international body and say: ‘I give up my national sovereignty’,” said Italian undersecretary of finance Gianfranco Polillo last night.

“I rule it out for Italy and for any other country.”

Here in the UK, the government’s deficit was smaller than expected last month, official figures published Friday show.

Investment managers holding UK government bonds meantime have said the British government can relax its austerity measures, according to a report by Bloomberg.

“Now that growth has continued to disappoint, there is a good case for higher spending in public-sector investment,” says Michael Amey, London-based portfolio manager at world’s biggest bond fund Pimco.

“Every government has to cut spending, but too many cuts may slow the economy,” agrees Yoshiyuki Suzuki, head of fixed income at Fukoku Mutual Life Insurance in Tokyo.

In Vietnam meantime, the central bank-owned Saigon Jewelry Company began processing and rebranding the gold bars of other refiners yesterday, after the central bank handed it a monopoly on gold bullion production earlier this year.

AngloGold, the world’s third-largest gold bullion producer, became the latest gold mining firm in South Africa to be hit by strike action late Thursday.

“The night shift embarked on an unprotected strike at Kopanang and the morning shift didn’t go down either,” said AngloGold spokesman Alan Fine.

The strike follows a series of stoppages that have hit platinum and gold mining operations in South Africa. These include protests at mines operated by Gold Fields and demonstrations at Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine in which 46 people have dies, including 34 shot dead by police in one incident.

“Both workers and government are seeking a greater share of the returns from mining, just as the mines themselves become more costly to run due to falling ore grades and rising energy costs,” says the weekly commodities note from French investment bank Natixis.

World number one producer Barrick Gold meantime closed its Pierina mine in Peru for one day Thursday, after one person dies and four were injured in clashes between police and nearby villagers.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

Yen to Register a Weekly Gain against Its Counterparts

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dubline) – The Japanese currency is headed for a weekly gain against more of its major peers as speculation global economy is slowing down boosted demand for the yen as investors look for refuge. The euro is the biggest loser this week against the dollar as German report next week is forecast to show business sentiments remained lowest in more than three years. The demand for safety was also spurred by comments by an International Monetary Fund official who indicated that the organization will cut global economic forecast by few decimal points in a statement yesterday.

Junichi Ishikawa, a Tokyo-based analyst at IG Markets Securities Ltd, has noted that the market has shifted its focus from monetary policy by central banks to economic fundamentals and also predicted that buying pressure on yen will increase should data continue to confirm global economic slowdown. The business climate index report from Ifo Institute in Munich is set to indicate a slight rise on the index to 102.8 from 102.3 recorded last month when it is released on September 24. Ishikawa noted that the European economy is weak as the German data has continued to be negative for the euro, putting a lot of downward pressure on the 17-nation currency.

According to a composite index for services and manufacturing sectors, the services and manufacturing sectors shrunk the most in three years while the Chinese factory output report showed the worst contraction in eleven month. Khor Hoe Ee, an Asia Pacific Department assistant director at the IMF said that the weakening global economy has forced the organization to reduce global growth forecast by few decimal points.

The euro is set to make a drop to its 200-day MA after it failed to break about the $13178, which is the 78.6 retracement from February’s high and July’s low on the Fibonacci char. The Japanese currency have advanced by 0.2 percent this week to 78.25 per dollar. It has gained by 1.4 percent against the euro to trade at 101.47, its close yesterday.

 

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AUD/USD: Greenback Giving Up Gains on Fed, European Optimism

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

The US dollar is set to lose ground opposite its Australian counterpart to conclude the week’s trades as the markets cling onto positive remarks from various Federal Reserve officials, enhancing appetites for risk. Likewise, a newspaper report indicating that Spain could seek a new rescue plan within a week, managing to reduce the risks associated with the outlook for the Euro Zone.

Amid skepticism over the effectiveness of the third round of quantitative easing unveiled by the Fed last week, three central bank officials defended the policy yesterday and assured that inflationary risks are remote. In separate speeches yesterday, both Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank President Sandra Pianalto and Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart said they see positive effects from the latest bond-buying. The asset purchases should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, which will likely help the real estate sector. Addressing concerns that the scheme would stoke high inflationary pressures, Lockhart said the risk of a serious bout of inflation was remote. Both also assured that the Fed will continue to evaluate the pros and cons of the program to suggest that central back stands prepared to support the economy.

Meanwhile, Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota said that the central bank should hold rates near zero until the unemployment rate drops below 5.5 percent. Though such objective would likely take four or more years, he said that the Fed should keep its vow as long as inflation expectations remain under control. His current position seemingly reverses his view in May that the Fed could need to raise rates this year or next. His change in view likely signifies how concerned the Fed is over the sluggish US economy. With the Fed officials providing assurance over the effects of QE3, the Greenback is apt to lose ground on risk-on trades.

Optimism over the European debt outlook is also set to put the markets on a high after the Financial Times reported that European Union officials are construction a new Spanish rescue program that will allow for the ECB bond-buying to go ahead. According to the report, the plan is focused on ensuring that reform measures insisted upon by international lenders are in place before a bailout is requested. The plan will likely be announced on September 27 and will focus on structural reforms to the Spanish economy rather than new taxes and spending cuts. On views that Europe is finally taking considerable progress toward a resolution, commodity-linked currencies such as the Aussie are deemed to shine. Hence, a long position is advised for the AUDUSD today.

For more news, analysis, technical charts and candlestick analysis, visit AlgosysFx