Post Tagged with: "James Chen"
Forex Links for the Weekend
After a busy week with a strong climax to start the year, here are some interesting forex-related articles. All of them have a scope of over a single day’s trading: Casey Stubbs examines EUR/USD in 2010. Macro Man brings his Non-predictions for 2010, and talks about the Federal Reserve not hiking the rates in 2010.
Forex Links for the Weekend
Here are some interesting forex-related reads for the weekend, all with a rather large scope and in a variety of issues: Larry Greenberg looks at policymakers worldwide, and states that the world is too reliant on Asian demand. James Chen sees the recent EUR/USD weakness as a major trend breakdown, a long term move. Adam
Forex Links for the Weekend
Here’s a bunch of forex-related articles that I’ve collected from the web for this weekend. All of them have a rather large scope: James Chen updates on an upcoming webinar titled “Honing in on Oscillator Analysis”. His technical webinars are interesting. Dave Lemont, CEO of Currensee, announces that Shaun Downey joins their team as the Chief Market Analyst. Kathy
Forex Links for the Weekend
Here’s a collection of interesting forex-related articles from various places on the web. All of them have a scope larger than a single day’s trading. Adam Kritzer interviews Edward Hugh, a macro economist that states that the dollar’s demise is overstated. James Chen presents a webinar about combining candlesticks with Western technical analysis. Jay Norris
Forex Crunches for the Weekend – November 13 2009
Here is a nice bunch of forex-related articles from my favorite blogs. I found all of them interesting for the weekend (not for a single day’s trade). Casey Stubbs explains how to blow your forex account in 30 days. Well, he also supplies some positive tips, in a very interesting article. Kathy Lien explains in
Forex Reads for the Weekend – November 7 2009
Here are some interesting forex-related reads for the weekend. All of them have a scope of over a single day’s trading, and are in various areas: Adam Kritzer explains why central banks have an interest to keep the US dollar strong, and how they operate about this. Macro Man dives into the wording of central
