Automated Binary Options Trading

 

Automated Binary Options Trading

Over the past few years automated trading has become more and more popular. Traders have embraced the fact that automated trading can alleviate the problem of emotion. One problem that is usually faced to traders that has become difficult to overcome is that their system may be right but emotion takes over during the trade.  By creating an automated trading system the trader is instilling the confidence in the system itself.

We have seen an explosion in the use and popularity of automated trading especially in the Forex market especially after MetaQuotes introduced their MetaTrader 4 trading platform, which featured the ability to create and use expert advisors. This revolutionary software really changed the Forex industry forever. Even a novice or average Forex Trader could create build and implement their own trading system, something which was thought to be unheard of before. Now there are expert advisors and trading systems all over the Internet available to download and to try out.

Binary options trading, in many ways, is similar to Forex trading in terms of its need for automation. For many traders, they are looking for either an event or some indication of when to place a binary options trade. Until recently, most binary options brokers work for providing a very simple web interfaced with very little in terms of automation or analytics for that matter. Now through a select few binary option brokers one can trade binary options on MT4. As it did with Forex, this will revolutionize binary options trading.

To learn more about automated binary options trading please visit www.clmforex.com

 

Disclaimer: Trading of foreign exchange contracts, contracts for difference, derivatives and other investment products which are leveraged, can carry a high level of risk. These products may not be suitable for all investors. It is possible to lose more than your initial investment. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) is available from the company website. Please read and consider the PDS before making any decision to trade Core Liquidity Markets’ products. The risks must be understood prior to trading. Core Liquidity Markets refers to Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd. Core Liquidity Markets is an Australian company which is registered with ASIC, ACN 164 994 049. Core Liquidity Markets is an authorized representative of Direct FX Trading Pty Ltd (AFSL) Number 305539, which is the authorizing Licensee and Principal.

 

 

 

Why Australian Farmers Need Foreign Investment – Not Handouts

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Queensland’s drought is now the biggest on record, with 80% of the state declared drought-affected.

While this undoubtedly means many farms are doing it tough, there is a silver lining for them: drought-affected Australian farms have access to taxpayer funded assistance.

And this assistance recently got a lot more generous, with Prime Minister Tony Abbott committing to an extra $320 million dollars of drought assistance.

The decision was a political winner, with Labor joining the agrarian socialists of the National Party in supporting the move.

That doesn’t say anything of public support for Australian farmers. Though most Australians live in capital cities, the image of farmers taming a wide brown land still seduces us.

Yep, it’s popular all right- but still bad policy.

Tony Abbott made the best case against farm assistance when he attempted to dispute the link between climate change and droughts—Australia, he said, has always faced periods of intermittent drought.

You may disagree with interpretation of the science, but he’s right about the frequency of droughts which makes it hard to understand why farmers seem so surprised when the rain stops.

The Queensland drought will end

The Australian farming business enjoys good returns in times of rain, and endures low or no returns in drought. A case in point: while Queensland farmers were begging for assistance, new figures showed WA and SA farmers recorded their highest incomes in 37 years.

WA broad acre farmers generated an average $317,000 income, which is farm revenue minus costs, in fiscal 2014. SA broad acre farmers will pocket an average $231,000.

It wasn’t that long ago that these Aussie farmers were enduring droughts too which highlights the nature of agricultural businesses. The best run farms are able to navigate these bad times by planning for them.

Such assistance only encourages poor farming practices, and does nothing to address agriculture’s real challenge: a lack of investment.

Why farmers need foreign investment

In fact, the same people furiously lobbying for special assistance for Australian farmers are the ones who rail against foreign investment.

The problem with Australian farms is that they’re mostly small to medium enterprises unable to target a growing market: Asia.

Our neighbours in the region are getting richer, and changing their tastes.

They’re transitioning to a more western diet consisting of more meat and dairy. Australia should be well positioned to take advantage of our high quality products and close proximity to Asia.

Instead, our small farms can’t raise capital to ramp up production, or move into value-added products such as dairy.

While Australian farmers and rural politicians lobby for handouts protecting poorly run businesses, they rail against foreign investment with jingoisms. It’s crazy.

For perspective, we could look to New Zealand.

They’ve successfully ridden the wave of soaring Asian demand. Chinese imports of milk products have grown by an average of 32% over the past five years, and some 60% of China’s dairy imports come from New Zealand. Dairy accounts for a staggering 25 % of New Zealand’s economy.

Australia’s economy should be competing with New Zealand selling dairy and beef to Asia.

But as a protected industry, bloated with government handouts and ideologically opposed to much needed foreign investment, it isn’t.

The Queensland drought will end, but this policy nonsense looks set to continue.

Callum Denness
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Copper Falls as China Fear Grows

Is this China’s Lehman Brother’s moment? When the government refuses to step in, instead allowing defaults to occur, when intervention could have prevented a bigger crisis? That may very well be developing. One needs to look no further than Copper to see this crisis starting to unfold.

First, some background on Copper: it is a highly malleable metal with many industrial roles, including serving as a conductor for heat and electricity as well as a building material. But Copper has another role, specifically in China, which is why it appears that a financial crisis is brewing. It’s been estimated that roughly 60-80% of Copper imports over the past few years have been used as collateral for borrowing (Reuters).

Where to now in Copper? If Chinese firms have been using the malleable metal as collateral the past few years, there is reason to believe that Copper isn’t the global bellwether that we thought it was. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that traders will discount Chinese data’s influence on Copper either.

Written by Daniel Elo, www.economiccalendar.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Commodity Technical Outlook: Crude Oil

CRUDE OIL: Weak And Vulnerable

CRUDE OIL: With Although a sign of price exhaustion is now seen, Crude Oil continues to maintain its broader downside pressure. Support comes in at the 97.12 level where a violation clear the way for a run at the 96.26 level. Further down, support is located at the 95.00 level. Its daily RSI is bearish and pointing lower supporting this view. Conversely, on recovery higher, resistance resides at the 99.59 level where a break if seen will aim at the 101.51 level. Above here will pave the way for a run at the 102.89 level. A violation of here will set the stage a for a run at 103.99 level. All in all, Crude Oil remains biased to the downside on further weakness.

Article by www.fxtechstrategy.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

German Inflation and Euro Rates

eur/usd chart

German CPI data could provide traders with a bit of insight into the Eurozone economy and even hint at the upcoming ECB rate decision. German CPI (YoY), German CPI (MoM) and German CPI – EU harmonized (YoY) set for release on Friday, March 14. An all-bullish release will likely break through EUR/USD 4-year highs above 1.3900. An all-bearish release will reinforce resistance, and suggest EUR/USD downside towards 1.3822.

 

Written by Daniel Elo, Analyst at www.EconomicCalendar.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why Unemployment Rates Matter to Your Retirement

By Dennis Miller

My biological clock is ticking—as is yours and everyone else’s. With each passing day, you are either moving closer to or further past the day you quit working full time. Baby boomers are retiring at a rate of 10,000 per day and will continue to do so for the next 17 years. Whether you count yourself among that group or not, understanding where economic data—such as unemployment rates and inflation—come from will make you a better investor and savvier retiree.

The Federal Reserve has some laudable goals. Its current mission includes inflation control and employment promotion, and it uses data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Departments of Labor and Commerce to formulate policy. Investors look at those same numbers, try to anticipate what the Federal Reserve might do, and invest accordingly.

On unemployment, the Fed notes:

“(I)n the most recent projections, FOMC participants’ estimates of the longer-run normal rate of unemployment had a central tendency of 5.2 percent to 5.8 percent. Though a variety of factors influence the level of unemployment in the economy, the Federal Reserve makes monetary policy decisions that aim to foster the lowest level of unemployment that is consistent with stable prices.”

And on inflation:

“The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) judges that inflation at the rate of 2 percent (as measured by the annual change in the price index for personal consumption expenditures, or PCE) is most consistent over the longer run with the Federal Reserve’s mandate for price stability and maximum employment. … The FOMC implements monetary policy to help maintain an inflation rate of 2 percent over the medium term.”

And here is how the Fed evaluates inflation when making policy decisions:

“(P)olicymakers examine a variety of ‘core’ inflation measures to help identify inflation trends. The most common type of core inflation measures excludes items that tend to go up and down in price dramatically or often, like food and energy items. … Although food and energy make up an important part of the budget for most households—and policymakers ultimately seek to stabilize overall consumer prices—core inflation measures that leave out items with volatile prices can be useful in assessing inflation trends.”

Hmm. There are many fallacies in that approach. Sometimes the premise or data is incorrect. Many times the Fed has made predictions that were totally incorrect and then had to jump in to try to clean up the mess when unforeseen bubbles have burst.

Debunking the statistics. The graph below shows the official BLS unemployment statistics. In December 2004 the unemployment rate was 5.4%. Since then it has gone from a low of 4.4% to a high of 10% in October 2009. The current reported rate is 6.7%.

The Federal Reserve committed to holding interest rates down until the official unemployment rate hit 6.5%. Mike Meyer, vice president at EverBank, weighed in via the Daily Pfennig:

“Based on this official number, the job market is getting a lot better. There’s only one big problem: the official number doesn’t really reflect the health of the labor market.

That probably explains why the Fed has moved away from the 6.5% target. Last November, former Fed chief Ben Bernanke said that short-term interest rates might stay near zero ‘well after’ the jobless rate falls below 6.5%. … It seems even the Fed has realized the official unemployment rate is flawed.”

Meyer also notes that many believe the reason unemployment numbers are dropping is because baby boomers are now rapidly retiring; however, the number of workers over age 55 has actually increased over the last five years.

The key to understanding unemployment rates is the Labor Force Participation Rate—meaning the percentage of the population that’s employed. When the BLS calculates the unemployment rate, it doesn’t consider a person whose unemployment benefits have run out and is no longer looking for a job to be unemployed. I guess that means if everyone quit looking for a job, the unemployment rate would be zero?

Meyers went on to write:

“The drop in the number of people who are looking for a job has helped bring the unemployment rate down. In fact, some economists estimate that if the LFPR was at the same level where it was before the recession (66.4% in January 2007), the unemployment rate would be 11.75%.”

Other think tanks like Shadow Government Statistics publish their own unemployment statistics:

“The decline in the headline U.3 unemployment rate, from 7.0% to 6.7%, was not good news. The large drop in the number of unemployed mostly reflected people becoming ‘discouraged’ and being statistically removed from the headline labor force, instead of finding jobs and returning to work. The increasing flow of discouraged workers through the broader U.6 measure, into the ShadowStats-Alternate Unemployment measure, boosted the ShadowStats unemployment rate to 23.3% from a revised 23.1%.”

We know the Federal Reserve was committed to holding interest rates low until the official unemployment rate dropped to 6.5%. That would tend to indicate people were back at work, the economy was improving, and the market could absorb higher interest rates without putting us back into a recession. Now the Fed has backed off on that commitment and is signaling it will hold interest rates down well after unemployment falls below 6.5%.

What difference does it make? For those who are investing their life savings—which they can ill afford to lose—it makes a lot of difference. There’s no point in arguing about whether unemployment is 6.7% or 23.3% or anywhere in between. What matters is how those numbers affect our investments decisions—and the decisions of others.

If the economy is doing well, that means companies are hiring and profits are increasing. It’s a good time to be heavily invested in the stock market. If the economy is not thriving and people are not working, then businesses will suffer, and many will fold. Retirees can ill afford to put a major portion of their nest eggs into the market based on a false premise. The risk is much too great.

How many of our favorite restaurants have shut down since the 2008 crash? In a down economy, business suffers and so do investors—eventually. The Federal Reserve, with its various stimulus programs, is just kicking the can down the road.

If data from the government or the private sector are unreliable—or suspected of being so—we’re investing in the unknown. Investors will move cautiously and spend less freely because they’re worried about an uncertain future.

What about inflation? The Federal Reserve has deemed a 2% inflation rate good for the economy. Inflation is a hidden tax that hurts seniors and savers immensely. If you invest in a Treasury bond paying 2% and inflation is 3%, when your bond matures you have more money in the bank but less buying power. Keep it up and you can kiss your lifestyle goodbye a lot quicker than most folks realize. Go to any potluck dinner in a 55-plus community and you will hear folks complaining about how expensive things are getting.

The Consumer Price Index is used to calculate inflation. Many people think the CPI is based on a constant basket of commonly purchased goods, with the current prices adjusted from year to year. That is inaccurate; the BLS has changed its formula many times.

Why does that matter? For one, the CPI is the basis for Social Security increases every year. Many Social Security recipients have noticed their Medicare premiums increase faster than their Social Security checks. The government has a great financial incentive to keep the official CPI number as low as possible: the lower the number, the less it has to pay.

The Federal Reserve uses many measures to calculate the impact of inflation; they just happen to exclude food and fuel, for example. That makes it hard for investors who happen to eat and drive to grasp the relevance of the numbers.

This is damn important for investors! Why? Interest rates rise during times of high inflation, which dramatically impacts the yield on government-backed securities and top-quality bonds. It’s because of inflation—and inflation fears—that savvy investors have backed off from safe, fixed-income investments. Right now, they’re a surefire way to make sure your money does not last forever.

The Fed’s zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP) means that if you invest in US Treasuries, you will likely lose ground to inflation. That’s good for the government and bad for investors.

The BLS website has a handy inflation calculator. Most people are told to plan for 30 years of retirement. If you retire at age 65, make sure you have enough to make it to 95—and probably much longer.

According to the BLS calculator, something that cost $10,000 in 1983 will now cost $23,389.26. That presents quite an investment challenge—considering the Federal Reserve has been printing a trillion dollars a year for the last several years. Who knows what the inflation calculator will look like 30 years from now?

The market is currently trading in anticipation of what the Federal Reserve is doing (called “sentiment”) as opposed to the true growth of the economy and success of the individual businesses (called “fundamentals”). That, coupled with a great level of distrust in our government, our currency, and the role of the Federal Reserve, affects each and every investment we make.

In the meantime, the biological clocks of baby boomers continue to tick. The headline numbers for unemployment and inflation are for the benefit of the politicians, not investors. That’s why we’re dedicated to showing investors how to safely invest in today’s market. We have no choice but to put our money into investments that are riskier than the previous generation did. Still, there are safety belts available to minimize risk.

An educated investor who reads more than the headlines, understands what is really going on, and does not invest emotionally can still enjoy retirement.

Our Bulletproof Income strategy is designed to give conservative investors the best possible returns with minimal risk. Our Bulletproof Income portfolio is designed to provide safe income—well ahead of inflation—with good diversification and safety belts to protect you and your money. If you haven’t done so, I would urge you to sign up for a no-risk subscription ($99/year). Sign up and receive a copy of my book, Retirement Reboot, all of our special reports, and our monthly issues. If you decide we’re not for you, cancel within the first 90 days and receive a full refund, no questions asked. Feel free to keep the material you’ve downloaded as our thank you for taking the time to look us over. Click here to learn more and get started today.

 

Elliott Wave Analysis: S&P500, EURUSD And GBPUSD

The S&P500 found support yesterday around 1853, at the lower side of a downward channel that is now pointing higher again as decline from 1187 unfolded only in three legs. A break above the upper trend like will open door for 1900.

S&P500 (Mar 2014) 1h Elliott Wave Analysis

While the S&P is showing bullish structure the USD remains weak. On EURUSD we have seen a nice reaction in this week from 1.3820/40 support that we have been focusing on. Current upward reaction is sharp with no overlaps so we assume that rally is impulsive with room for 1.4000 in sessions ahead. In the meantime, 1.3913 support must not be breached.

EURUSD 1h Elliott Wave Analysis

GBPUSD also turned up in the last 24hours after a five wave decline from 1.6783. Pair is already above wave (iv) swing so ideally we have seen a low at 1.6566 figure. In fact , rally from the lows is showing impulsive personality, so looks like pair is heading much higher. A coming intraday retracement will be wave (ii).

GBPUSD 1h Elliott Wave Analysis

Written by www.ew-forecast.com

14 days trial just for 1€ >> http://www.ew-forecast.com/register

 

 

 

 

Indonesia holds, inflation to hit target in ’14, growth lower

By CentralBankNews.info
    Indonesia’s central bank maintained its benchmark BI rate at 7.50 percent, as expected, and said it expects inflation to return to its target corridor in 2014 while it cut its economic growth forecast.
    Bank Indonesia (BI), which raised the BI rate by a sharp 175 basis points last year to curb inflation and defend the embattled rupiah currency, also said the balance of trade is expected to return to surplus as exports were accelerating due to strong demand from leading trading partners while imports remain sluggish due to moderating domestic demand.
    “Recent developments indicate that the rate of inflation is under control and the current account deficit is shrinking,” the BI said in a generally upbeat statement.
    Indonesia’s headline inflation rate fell to 7.75 percent in February from 8.22 percent in January in what the BI described as a “dramatic decline,” continuing the gradual decline since July 2013 when it jumped due to a reduction in government fuel subsidies.
    In August inflation hit a 2013-high of 8.79 percent and prices remained under pressure due to the impact of the rupiah’s depreciation along with higher food prices from flooding.
    “The rate of inflation continued to trend downwards in February 2014, reinforcing the prospect of achieving the inflation target in 2014, more specifically 4.5 +/- 1 %, ” the BI said.
    The BI said core inflation in February was under control at 4.57 percent, up from 4.53 percent, and attributed the “impressive gains made in terms of core inflation” to the policy by central and local governments to minimize the second-round effects of recent natural disasters.
    The recent appreciation of the rupiah has also minimized the impact of higher international commodity prices, the BI said, adding it will remain cautious of potential price pressures from changes to administered prices and reinforce the policy mix with the government to ensure inflation remains on track with the inflation target.
    After tumbling almost 21 percent in 2013, the rupiah has bounced back this year and rose 5.18 percent against the U.S. dollar in February from January. This month it has continued to firm, quoted today at 11,379 to the dollar, up from 11,609 end February.
    “Sound economic fundamentals are driving improvements in the external sector performance, which in turn is strengthening the rupiah exchange rate,” the BI said, adding that foreign exchange reserves amounted to US$ 102.7 billion in February, equivalent to 5.7 months of imports and debt servicing.
    A January trade deficit US$ 430 million was due to seasonal factors, the BI said, and it expects the trade balance to return to surplus while the current account deficit is expected to be managed at a level below 3 percent of Gross Domestic Product.
    In the fourth quarter of 2013 the current account deficit narrowed to $4.018 billion from $8.449 the previous quarter and the BI said it expects inflows of foreign capital to escalate as the domestic economy strengthens. Up to February, inflows of foreign portfolio funds to Indonesia’s markets amounted to 34.6 trillion rupiah.
    Indonesia’s economy has slowed in recent months and the central bank said household consumption is predicted to slow compared with its projections due to a limited impact of elections.
    Indonesia’s Gross Domestic Product contracted by 1.42 percent in the fourth quarter from the third quarter for annual growth of 5.72 percent, up from 5.62 percent.
    But the growth of investment, including non-construction investment, is projected to rebound in the second quarter while exports will accelerate but not as much as forecast due to tepid global economic growth and the temporary impact of the ban of exports of most mineral ores.
    “Against this backdrop, Bank Indonesia projects the domestic economy to expand by 5.5-5.9%,” the bank said. Previously, the BI forecast 2014 growth in the lower end of a 5.8-6.2 percent range.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

   

Who should use a Forex VPS?

By fxvm.net

Traders are often unsure whether use of a forex VPS is necessary for their trading strategy, or even if a forex VPS can benefit trading at all. Certainly, not every trading strategy can benefit from hosting on a remote server, but these are a few of the most common requirements of traders using forex VPS’s:

You would like to move MT4 to a remote desktop that will be online 24/7, for the sake of convenience and security.
Computer crashes and slowdowns, internet disconnections, and other distractions are the last things you need when trading. Using a remote forex VPS helps eliminate any inconsistency in your trading system. In a worse-case scenario, you can live chat or email us to get immediate help with your VPS and software running there.

You have a forex expert advisor, or many EAs, that you need to test in a stable environment for weeks or months.
Forex VPS systems do not shutdown or reboot, and are designed to have the best possible quality of connection to brokers and financial institutions. For these reasons, a forex VPS is ideal forward-testing MT4 EAs and other automated trading software.

You already have a profitable EA or automated trading portfolio, and require a stable remote environment to optimize returns from your system.
For all of the same reasons mentioned above, forex hosting is ideal for deploying established, profiting strategies, in order to give them an additional edge in fastest possible execution speed.

Your system or software requires ultra-low latency connection to the broker.
Since our systems are hosted directly adjacent to major financial data networks in New York and London, they can achieve latency as low as <0.10ms to a large number of brokers and trading services.

You are frequently away from your computer or trading station.
A trading VPS runs on a remote server located in a data center, and can be accessed from any PC or mobile device via RDP. This means that you can “screen in” to your remote desktop from any location, while leaving the applications on the remote desktop to run uninterrupted.

Your orders are executed poorly due to long distance between your broker(s) and your location.
Hosting your MetaTrader 4 platforms on a remote VPS will improve the speed of order executions, since the trading machine will be closer to the destination networks, even while you access the VPS from your location.
If you have questions about how a VPS can be used, whether hosting is right for your application, or another aspect of our service, please don’t hesitate to get in touch with us! We promise not to keep you waiting.

Article by fxvm.net, A company specializing in forex hosting services