DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
Polecam lekturę http://fxmonster.pl/2012/02/wszystko-co ... no-prawda/
„chcący szuka sposobu, nie chcący szuka powodu"
Dla kogoś, kto nie wie, do jakiego portu zmierza, każdy wiatr jest niepomyślny
- Seneka
Dla kogoś, kto nie wie, do jakiego portu zmierza, każdy wiatr jest niepomyślny
- Seneka
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
Rynek płaci za skuteczność, a nie za udawanie eksperta pierwszy akapit i już baaaaardzo mądre stwierdzenie
Przeczytanie powyższej wypowiedz może doprowadzić do błędnej oceny sytuacji, spowodować przecenienie własnych możliwości, czego konsekwencją mogą być błędnie podjęte decyzje. Ofiarami mogą paść początkujący jak i doświadczeni inwestorzy.
Tak myślę!
Tak myślę!
- roberttheus
- Maniak
- Posty: 1956
- Rejestracja: 28 gru 2011, 21:52
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
luka okazała się świetną okazją do zakupów widać to po momentum które jest prowzrostowe na e/u i e/j
-- Dodano: pn 18-03-2013, 16:46 --
tylko ta zakichana linia spadkowa nie przepuszcza
-- Dodano: pn 18-03-2013, 16:46 --
tylko ta zakichana linia spadkowa nie przepuszcza
windsurfing na falach trendu
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
a co pejsaci postali po MM , ze nie graja 

jak uzyskać parytet na edku -swieca z 03.12 - tu podjada pod 1,053 i wtedy rura w jeden dzien 500 piepek 

Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
pejscaci w piątek byli na S, wieć jakoś im się chyba leń włączył....
Przeczytanie powyższej wypowiedz może doprowadzić do błędnej oceny sytuacji, spowodować przecenienie własnych możliwości, czego konsekwencją mogą być błędnie podjęte decyzje. Ofiarami mogą paść początkujący jak i doświadczeni inwestorzy.
Tak myślę!
Tak myślę!
- ForexTig3r
- Maniak
- Posty: 2462
- Rejestracja: 15 maja 2012, 13:47
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
NICOSIA, Cyprus--Cyprus puts off for another day a debate on a controversial bank deposit levy in the country's parliament--a precondition to receiving a 10 billion euro bailout ($13.1 billion)--even as it proposed a new plan to ease the burden of that tax on small savers in a bid to win votes for the measure.
Speaking to reporters, Cyprus parliament speaker Yiannakis Omirou said Monday the debate and vote would be pushed back to Tuesday--now two days behind schedule--a move that would likely require the country to extend a bank holiday on the island for at least one more day amid fears of a meltdown in the island's financial system.
"The parliament will convene at 6 p.m. [1600 GMT] tomorrow," Mr. Omirou told reporters. "The reason is because there now exist amendments to the government legislation that is to be submitted. Consequently, it requires the necessary time in parliament, in the finance committee, to examine these new proposals."
As negotiations in Nicosia entered a third day, the government was focusing on a new proposal that will aim to raise EUR5.8 billion for Cyprus's crisis-hit banks--the same amount already set as a requirement for Cyprus's bailout--but which would lower the tax on smaller deposits.
According to two European officials familiar with the talks, the new proposal being floated by the government would see smaller depositors, those with up to EUR100,000, taxed at a 3% rate--down from 6.75% as initially envisaged. Savers with EUR100,000 to EUR500,000 would be taxed at a 10% rate; and those with over EUR500,000 would be taxed at 15%, one official said.
Euro-zone finance ministers are likely to hold a teleconference to consider the new Cypriot proposal, one of the officials said.
"As long as the sum remains EUR5.8 billion, I think it will be backed by everyone, but of course the ministers and the troika will need to hear exact figures and proof that this will work," he said.
The original deal was for Cyprus to tax every depositor with less than EUR100,000 at 6.75%, while those with deposits over that amount would be taxed at 9.9%. According to state media reports, the government was also considering a plan to eliminate the tax entirely on small savers with less than EUR20,000.
Cypriot leaders are racing to prevent a looming collapse of the island's financial sector, when banks are scheduled to reopen for business Tuesday after a three-day bank holiday to celebrate the Orthodox Clean Monday holiday.
In a dramatic address to the nation late Sunday, President Nicos Anastasiades warned that without the aid package from euro-zone partners and the International Monetary Fund--agreed to after marathon talks in Brussels Saturday morning--the country would face default and that would lead to the bankruptcy of the island's two largest banks.
On Monday, the government was also in talks with Russian officials over moves to save the country's two largest lenders--Cyprus Popular Bank Pcl and Bank of Cyprus Pcl.
The deposit levy would be felt sharply by Russian financial institutions and companies which have large footholds on the island. According to Moody's Investors Service estimates, Russian residents and institutions could lose around $2 billion if Cyprus goes ahead with this latest unconfirmed proposal to impose taxes on deposits.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has strongly criticized the proposed deposit tax in Cyprus, news agencies reported Monday. "Mr. Putin said that such a decision, if adopted, would be unfair, unprofessional and dangerous," said his spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
On Sunday, the Cypriot government postponed the emergency parliamentary session for one day, as it was uncertain it had the necessary votes to pass the measure in parliament, while the cabinet petitioned the central bank to extend Monday's bank holiday by at least another day, a move that is seen as likely.
As news of the levy spread this weekend, nervous depositors rushed to cash machines around the island and emptied many of them. One distraught resident in the southern town of Limassol parked a backhoe digger in front of a local bank to protest the new levy.
But even before the vote was set to take place, Cypriot authorities had ordered banks on the island to withhold the levy before handing out any cash.
An even-bigger concern than the retail savers in Cyprus will be the reaction of foreign depositors who control more than a third of the EUR68 billion of deposits in the island's banking system.
In January, according to the latest data available, nervous savers withdrew some EUR1.7 billion from Cypriot banks amid fears that some kind of levy on deposits was coming.
In a bid to reassure foreign depositors and prevent a massive deposit outflow, one central-bank official said there would be "support from the European Central Bank" to ensure that Cypriot banks would have adequate liquidity when they reopen, most likely Wednesday.
One such move could include cash shipments from Greece's central bank, which has high reserves of cash available, while ECB executive board member Joerg Asmussen told reporters in Brussels that there was "contingency planning" in place in the event of a bank run, while other officials said capital controls could be put in place if needed. But Cypriot officials say they want a more explicit guarantee from the ECB to avert such a run before it happens.
Mr. Anastasiades and his allies nominally control 30 seats in Cyprus's 56-seat parliament, enough to pass the measure. But with some lawmakers wavering, others demanding some sort of compensation for deposit holders and at least one parliamentarian currently out of the country and unable to vote, passage is by no means assured.
Cyprus's opposition parties have condemned the levy, while the main opposition party, Communist AKEL, has called for a protest outside parliament on Monday.
"Cyprus is in a very difficult position right now, both the government and the financial sector," said John Dimakis, at STR, a political consultancy in Athens. "I can't even imagine the consequences if parliament doesn't back the bailout."
Michalis Persianis in Nicosia, Stelios Bouras in Athens and Lukas I. Alpert in Moscow contributed to this article.
Write to Matina Stevis, Alkman Granitsas and Jenny Paris at matina.stevis@dowjones.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
Speaking to reporters, Cyprus parliament speaker Yiannakis Omirou said Monday the debate and vote would be pushed back to Tuesday--now two days behind schedule--a move that would likely require the country to extend a bank holiday on the island for at least one more day amid fears of a meltdown in the island's financial system.
"The parliament will convene at 6 p.m. [1600 GMT] tomorrow," Mr. Omirou told reporters. "The reason is because there now exist amendments to the government legislation that is to be submitted. Consequently, it requires the necessary time in parliament, in the finance committee, to examine these new proposals."
As negotiations in Nicosia entered a third day, the government was focusing on a new proposal that will aim to raise EUR5.8 billion for Cyprus's crisis-hit banks--the same amount already set as a requirement for Cyprus's bailout--but which would lower the tax on smaller deposits.
According to two European officials familiar with the talks, the new proposal being floated by the government would see smaller depositors, those with up to EUR100,000, taxed at a 3% rate--down from 6.75% as initially envisaged. Savers with EUR100,000 to EUR500,000 would be taxed at a 10% rate; and those with over EUR500,000 would be taxed at 15%, one official said.
Euro-zone finance ministers are likely to hold a teleconference to consider the new Cypriot proposal, one of the officials said.
"As long as the sum remains EUR5.8 billion, I think it will be backed by everyone, but of course the ministers and the troika will need to hear exact figures and proof that this will work," he said.
The original deal was for Cyprus to tax every depositor with less than EUR100,000 at 6.75%, while those with deposits over that amount would be taxed at 9.9%. According to state media reports, the government was also considering a plan to eliminate the tax entirely on small savers with less than EUR20,000.
Cypriot leaders are racing to prevent a looming collapse of the island's financial sector, when banks are scheduled to reopen for business Tuesday after a three-day bank holiday to celebrate the Orthodox Clean Monday holiday.
In a dramatic address to the nation late Sunday, President Nicos Anastasiades warned that without the aid package from euro-zone partners and the International Monetary Fund--agreed to after marathon talks in Brussels Saturday morning--the country would face default and that would lead to the bankruptcy of the island's two largest banks.
On Monday, the government was also in talks with Russian officials over moves to save the country's two largest lenders--Cyprus Popular Bank Pcl and Bank of Cyprus Pcl.
The deposit levy would be felt sharply by Russian financial institutions and companies which have large footholds on the island. According to Moody's Investors Service estimates, Russian residents and institutions could lose around $2 billion if Cyprus goes ahead with this latest unconfirmed proposal to impose taxes on deposits.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has strongly criticized the proposed deposit tax in Cyprus, news agencies reported Monday. "Mr. Putin said that such a decision, if adopted, would be unfair, unprofessional and dangerous," said his spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
On Sunday, the Cypriot government postponed the emergency parliamentary session for one day, as it was uncertain it had the necessary votes to pass the measure in parliament, while the cabinet petitioned the central bank to extend Monday's bank holiday by at least another day, a move that is seen as likely.
As news of the levy spread this weekend, nervous depositors rushed to cash machines around the island and emptied many of them. One distraught resident in the southern town of Limassol parked a backhoe digger in front of a local bank to protest the new levy.
But even before the vote was set to take place, Cypriot authorities had ordered banks on the island to withhold the levy before handing out any cash.
An even-bigger concern than the retail savers in Cyprus will be the reaction of foreign depositors who control more than a third of the EUR68 billion of deposits in the island's banking system.
In January, according to the latest data available, nervous savers withdrew some EUR1.7 billion from Cypriot banks amid fears that some kind of levy on deposits was coming.
In a bid to reassure foreign depositors and prevent a massive deposit outflow, one central-bank official said there would be "support from the European Central Bank" to ensure that Cypriot banks would have adequate liquidity when they reopen, most likely Wednesday.
One such move could include cash shipments from Greece's central bank, which has high reserves of cash available, while ECB executive board member Joerg Asmussen told reporters in Brussels that there was "contingency planning" in place in the event of a bank run, while other officials said capital controls could be put in place if needed. But Cypriot officials say they want a more explicit guarantee from the ECB to avert such a run before it happens.
Mr. Anastasiades and his allies nominally control 30 seats in Cyprus's 56-seat parliament, enough to pass the measure. But with some lawmakers wavering, others demanding some sort of compensation for deposit holders and at least one parliamentarian currently out of the country and unable to vote, passage is by no means assured.
Cyprus's opposition parties have condemned the levy, while the main opposition party, Communist AKEL, has called for a protest outside parliament on Monday.
"Cyprus is in a very difficult position right now, both the government and the financial sector," said John Dimakis, at STR, a political consultancy in Athens. "I can't even imagine the consequences if parliament doesn't back the bailout."
Michalis Persianis in Nicosia, Stelios Bouras in Athens and Lukas I. Alpert in Moscow contributed to this article.
Write to Matina Stevis, Alkman Granitsas and Jenny Paris at matina.stevis@dowjones.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
Przedstawione, poglądy, oceny i wnioski są wyrazem osobistych poglądów autora i nie mają charakteru rekomendacji. Wyłączną odpowiedzialność za decyzje inwestycyjne, podjęte i z wykorzystaniem wniosków w nich zawartych, ponosi inwestor.
subsilver2 趋势线
subsilver2 趋势线
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013



Nie masz wymaganych uprawnień, aby zobaczyć pliki załączone do tego posta.
Przedstawione, poglądy, oceny i wnioski są wyrazem osobistych poglądów autora i nie mają charakteru rekomendacji autora.Wyłączną odpowiedzialność za decyzje inwestycyjne, podjęte i z wykorzystaniem wniosków w nich zawartych, ponosi inwestor.
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
jak pisalem PEjsy dale jebda wyciagac do poki korek z $ im fed nie zakreci a Tak iCYpr to nie ma ja kwidac dla niech znacznei jak i EUR USD wyciaganko pejsow 

- richard.cali
- Pasjonat
- Posty: 924
- Rejestracja: 19 lis 2009, 13:36
Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
Jeszcze ze 100pips i bedzie "short squezze"Nowy123 pisze:jak pisalem PEjsy dale jebda wyciagac do poki korek z $ im fed nie zakreci a Tak iCYpr to nie ma ja kwidac dla niech znacznei jak i EUR USD wyciaganko pejsow

"Analitycy i brokerzy pozostają, zmieniają się tylko inwestorzy"...Mr. Wong Hong Kong sierpień 2010
W 2012 ZEUSS obalił tezę Wonga
2013- Team Zeussa
W 2012 ZEUSS obalił tezę Wonga

2013- Team Zeussa

Re: DayTrading: Poniedziałek 18.03.2013
SL pojechal