Current Interest Rate Cycle and Rising Rates
You are here: Home / Calculating Bond Index Prices: Analyzing the Bond Bear Market / Current Interest Rate Cycle and Rising Rates
Trading Order Out of Chaos
“Greed is good”, but one shouldn’t always assume that the counterparty won’t notice. Last Wednesday, 27th January 2016, was FOMC day, news event day, and the markets went ape. Following on from the previous articles the idea was to continue to exploit the observed quote outages and extract value. Turns out that (presumably as expected), brokers aren’t that slow on their feet. I was moved from B-book status (i.e. rookie / loser status) to A-book status. Let’s just say that exces… Read more
An upcoming recession in the US is on everybody’s mind (at least that’s what Google Trends shows): And with that bad news for the rest of us. To put that chart into context the last official recession according to the NBER was between December 2007 and June 2009. And the average duration between recessions since World War II has been five years, with the longest period being 10 years: between 1991 and 2001. So is it going to happen soon? Proba… Read more
PBOC fixings have become a fixture (at least for the last couple of days). With the big sell-off in the CSI China is trying to inject liquidity into the market and doing so in different ways. For the FX market it’s been a weakening of the reference rate. Here are the rates over the last couple of days (versus the USD): Of course the market cottoned on to the PBOC’s desperation, and the rout continued. The effect on the Asian time-zone currencies was worth noting. We already covere… Read more
The London Breakout Strategy falls under the category of Open Range Breakout as developed by Toby Crabel. In this article we’ll look at some results with regards to this strategy, as well different ways of trading it. Let’s start out with the notion of Open Range Breakout. The key concept behind this strategy is that the range set at the start of the day sets a neutral zone for the rest of the day. If price moves either side of this range it is a strong indication that price will wa… Read more
In this post I want to cover one of the factors that enters into the creation of the benchmark index outlined in my Trading Approach. This factor is called Value, and provides an underlying fundamental reason for trading various currencies. To explain value let’s assume that the water company Evian sells an identical bottle of water both in the UK and in the US. These two bottles are identical. Same water, same glass bottle, same label, same everything. In essence a tourist from the US coul… Read more
EURUSD tick data for the period 31st January 2016 to 5th February 2016. Zip file contains CSV files for each day. The format of the CSV files are: Local Time, Server Time, Server Time Milliseconds, Bid, Ask. The time resolution is in seconds. This means that there can be multiple quotes per second.
EURUSD tick data for the period 13th March 2016 to 18th March 2016. Zip file contains CSV files for each day. The format of the CSV files are: Local Time, Server Time, Server Time Milliseconds, Bid, Ask. The time resolution is in seconds. This means that there can be multiple quotes per second.
This XLS accompanies my guest article on RectitudeMarket.com describing the performance of short option strategies on EURUSD. It includes the relevant formulas and data so that you can replicate the results or apply them to your own option strategies.
Leave a Reply