Pigs Get Slaughtered
OK, I admit it, this EUR/GBP bull became a pig on Friday and my great position is now sitting slightly negative. It’s always important to analyze your own trading psychology and this is what I’ll attempt to do in this article.
What caused me to become a pig?
RECAP
- I did not honor the EUR/GBP’s characteristic to move from whole number to whole number. As EUR/GBP approached 0.9200, the pair ran into resistance and retraced. The best thing to do to maximize pips was to get out at the highs and re-enter long on the correction. Or even better, get out at the highs and ride the correction down for a quick scalp.
- Upon further scrutiny of the daily chart, we can see that on Tuesday, not only was 50% Fibo broken, the 61.8% Fibo was breached. On Wednesday, this move followed through with a low of 0.9074. This is a clear sign of a possible reversal of the 2nd bullish wave on the daily chart (0.8981-0.9298). After a breach occurs, I look for price to bounce then return in the direction of the correction. If price is serious about a reversal, the pair would have printed a low lower than 0.9074. It did not. That was the signal that the longs were still in play and we got confirmation when price continued in the direction of the uptrend and printed a high at 0.9196 in Friday’s session.
- After this high, I would expect a correction that, first, found support at the 80s level and, second, did not exceed 50% Fibo level of the day’s move. The correction breached both levels and closed very weakly at 0.9154. Look at the hourly chart (not pictured here).
RED FLAGS
There are several red flags in this recap that EUR/GBP bulls, like myself, need to pay attention to.
- The high on Friday at 0.9196 is a lower high than the high on Tuesday at 0.9208. We may get a spike in Asia when markets open for the new trading week on Sunday. If we don’t see 0.9208 and hold at those levels, expect price to go lower.
- The retracement on Friday did not find support at the 9180s level nor did price close at this level. This level is an important level for the EUR/GBP. If the pair was truly bullish, we would have seen price supported by this level and a close at or above this level. The fact that price did neither is a bearish development.
- The retracement exceeded 50% Fibo level. You know what I think about this. Another bearish development.
- Several ECB officials have started unofficial verbal intervention of the euro’s appreciation and it has had a real effect on the euro as the currency failed to rally significantly against the GBP and USD last week.
GAME PLAN
I will exit my longs on the spike that I expect we will get in Asia as it gets a chance to react to the lower-than-expected NFP numbers released in the US on Friday. If price action remains below 0.9208, I will initiate shorts and to build a short position that will first target the 0.9074 low and then the 0.9000 large quarter point and whole number.
It looks like Goldman Sachs obviously knew something when they called EUR/GBP to fall to 0.8400. Due to an increasingly nervous ECB with a strong euro, this call may have some validity. Nevertheless, the fundamentals still look bearish for the GPB. The BoE would prefer a weak pound and is taking a stance to support the economy. Though the housing market still show signs of stabilizing, it is a function of supply rather than demand. Uemployment is still high in the UK and manufacturing lags behind other countries in showing strength. On the other hand, the EZ economy is relatively robust with good numbers in both its manufacturing and services sectors. The consumer continues to be drag on the economy but that is a global phenomenon in this recession so has little impact on market direction at this time. EZ is very much suffering from deflation which will halt an interest rate hike ambitions coming out of the ECB.
The upcoming week sees interest rate decisions from both the Bank of England and the European Central Bank as the main spotlight events for this currency pair. The contrast in the statements coming from these central banks will determine the ST direction for the EUR/GBP. I think there is a real possibility that the ECB turns dovish while the BoE maintains its same rhetoric. If this is the case, the GBP will strengthen mightily against the EUR and we could see price return to 0.9000. A break and hold below this level will confirm a beginning of a reversal of the daily chart trend.
As always, trade what you see, not what I think. And don’t become a pig.











