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Currencies Crashing at Record Rates! Disaster or Opportunity?

Tuesday, September 2, 2008 | Chris Rowe

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Happy Belated Labor Day!

We enter September beginning a new chapter for the U.S. dollar. The U.S. dollar just recorded its best monthly advance since October 1992 largely because sentiment on the U.S economy improved when data showed the U.S. should have much more stable growth than the rest of the world. 

A Commerce Department report showed inflation rising at 4.5% in July -- the highest rate since February 1991. The revision of the 2nd quarter gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a whopping 3.3% from the initial estimate of 1.9%, helping the U.S. dollar maintain the strength of its recent rally.

On the flip side, we are seeing the global economy slowing down. Antonio Sousa at Forex Capital Markets said, "Recent economic data points towards a weakening of real GDP growth in the eurozone economy and a more accommodative monetary policy could be needed to prevent the region from falling into a recession."

  • The euro declined about 8% versus the U.S. dollar -- the worst monthly loss since its launch in 1999.
  • The Australian dollar fell nearly 9% in August, its worst month since February 1989 on expectations of narrowing interest rate differentials between the United States and Australia.
  • Although economists were expecting a 0.7 percent expansion, data showed the Canadian economy was close to a recession in the second quarter, growing at 0.3 percent.

How can you profit from the dollar's current up-trend? If you're in the U.S., you just sit tight because you're currently on the winning team. The green paper you keep in your wallet are stock certificates of the U.S. and the stock has been gaining strength. You should be happy because whether you realize it or not, the stock you've maintained a long-term position in (the greenback) has lost about 40% of its value since early 2002.



Will the Dollar Rally Last?

The questions are:

* How long will the strength in the U.S. dollar last?
* What will you do if the recent up-trend in the U.S. dollar ends and the long-term decline resumes?

Don't sweat it - Chris is here to help you. You might remember the article I wrote on May 13, "Why You Must Reduce Commodity Exposure This Week", where I told you how to avoid losses in commodities as the U.S. dollar began the jolt higher that has now become obvious to the mainstream. 

Check the chart below of the materials (commodity) sector of the S&P 500.  The blue arrow shows where I told you to start selling your commodity stocks.


Hopefully you followed my advice. Today I'll be showing you how to avoid losses in the U.S. dollar when the opposite inevitably happens.

It's impossible to know exactly how long this will last but what we CAN do is get an understanding of the playing field so we understand how to hedge when the tide changes. 

First of all, we know that commodities are in a very long-term up-trend, but the intermediate trend is certainly downward.  Since most commodities are priced in U.S. dollars, commodities and the U.S. dollar have an inverse relationship which explains the dollar getting whacked since late 2001 - early 2002 as the price of commodities like crude oil and gold have advanced.

The next thing you need to know is when commodities are advancing, they tend to have massive explosions to the upside (as we recently witnessed). Conversely, when commodities correct in price, they tend to correct for a long time. (You may recall in summer of 2006 when oil made it up to about $80.00/barrel and corrected. It took about 1 year to make it back to that price level!) 

Whatever the trend is in commodities (up or down), it's strong. Think of commodities like a gigantic Mack truck doing 100 miles per hour and then slamming on the breaks. It will continue skidding for a long time before stopping.

While we have a sharp correction in commodity prices underway, the odds are in favor of the long-term up-trend eventually resuming. Similarly, (or inversely) the U.S. dollar is showing intermediate strength these days, as U.S. consumer confidence hit a five-month high in August, adding to optimism on the greenback. But the odds are good that the current optimism will return to long-term pessimism.

How to Profit When the Dollar Dives

This article may be a bit premature for the time being, but better early than late, right?

First, I will give you the security and then I will tell you when to use it...

The ETF that tracks the inverse of the U.S. dollar's performance is PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bearish (UDN).

Below is the Fund Summary, courtesy of Yahoo Finance:

FUND SUMMARY     
The investment seeks to track the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the Deutsche Bank Short US Dollar Futures index. The index is comprised solely of short futures contracts. The futures contract is designed to replicate the performance of being short the US Dollar against the Euro, Japanese Yen, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona and Swiss Franc.


I don't think this is the perfect time to get in, but I do think we are getting close to it. Here's how you should time it:

You may or may not be familiar with a momentum indicator called the "Relative Strength Index" (aka. the "RSI"). I won't get into the mechanics of how it is calculated, but I'll tell you how to use the squiggly line to find a good entry point in UDN.

Below is a chart of the U.S dollar index. Here's a link to the chart http://www.fxstreet.com/rates-charts/usdollar-index/. Save it to your favorites.

You can see at the bottom we have the RSI. You can see the last three times the RSI moved well above the 70 and reversed lower, the U.S. dollar was at a high point in the long-term down trend and it immediately continued its declining trend. You might notice the RSI moved further into the "overbought territory" (over 70) than anywhere else on the chart.  

Now here's the part that really needs some explaining...

The RSI is good at calling tops in a down-trend or bottoms in an up-trend. (You wouldn't use it to call a top in an up-trend or a bottom in a down-trend unless other things are in place that I won't get into here).  


The top (within a down-trend) is not officially called until the RSI reverses from above 70 to below 70. Don't think just because the RSI is above 70 that it is a good time to get bearish on the U.S. dollar. 

You may notice the RSI has, in fact, reversed back below 70. But this time I think it's a fake out and here's why...

When we see such a sharp advance in the security (in this case, the U.S. dollar) it's best to not act on the first signal (the one we are seeing now). Chances are we will see another move in the RSI back above 70, and then the second reversal back below the 70 line and THAT is when I suggest putting at least 30% - 50% of your available cash in UDN.

Why "at least 30% - 50%" and not 100%? Because it's a hedge and not really a trade. The idea is to soften the blow of a decline in the U.S. dollar. Currencies are volatile, and if you have cash saved that you plan on saving for another year, you may consider putting all of it in UDN. If you view it as a trade, however, you may get in and emotionally exit it at a lower price.

Of course you can decide to put 50% or 100% of your available cash into the ETF. But for some reason I have a feeling many people will view this as a trade and not a hedge. I think that because if you don't hedge the dollar, most people never really comprehend that their money is losing value or gaining value. They just think the dollar is the dollar. But if you look below, anyone who hedged the U.S. dollar since UDN launched in 2007 may consider themselves up 20% (since June anyway).  Would you have been up 20% or did you merely avoid a 20% decline in the dollar?

So that's the way to hedge folks. 30%, 100%, you decide how deep you want to get. Below is the chart of the ETF "UDN" for some perspective. See ya next Tuesday!



(Please let us know what you think about Chris Rowe's article.)
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“Profit from the Trend”

Chris Rowe
Chief Investment Officer
The Trend Rider




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11 Comments

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  1. Chris R (9 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    KEE,

    Can't give personalized advice, but in "there's always a bull market somewhere" I'm not making recommendations (sometimes I do, and I say so in the recommendation) but usually I am just showing you that there is always a place to make money. I show there HAS BEEN a bull market in XYZ. But they are almost never recommendations.

    Chris

    PS: Recommendations are for TTR members. Occasionally I give some in the Tycoon Report.
  2. kee (10 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Hi Chris ,i am a bit confused in this article you mentioned UDN which is short USD , but the market wrap up on 8 sep you mentioned UUP in the there is always a bull market section , if i want to play option on USD which one should i choose ??? TQ
  3. Martyn (10 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Thanks Chris.



    You are of course correct. I was referring to PnP.
  4. Chris R (10 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Martyn,



    Just to be clear here, we are not talking about The Trend Rider which has position updates as recently as August 31.
  5. Martyn (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Heiko's comment could be addressed by sending out a position update. It's overdue. Most recent was June 20 and most recent webinar was June 30.
  6. Heiko (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Hi Chris, unfortunately I did not follow your advice :-(((

    I'm a PnP member and Teeka never said to sell our commodity positions, not even half a position size.

    Now I'm sitting on huge paper losses, not knowing whether I should throw the towel or just sit another year or how long that consolidation phase might last.

    Which advice should I take? An advice I pay for or the free advice given by you, Chris?

    My portfolio is a complete disaster.



    Next time I will take your advice, that's for sure, because it looks like you are not only able to understand end figure out what is currently going on in the market, but you also know how to explain it very very well! Plus you know how to take advantage!

    Heiko
  7. Chris R (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Chris Rowe here.

    Oh by the way, I know TTR members would be all over Dean's comments except I sent this article to them Monday (before publishing in The Tycoon Report) so they don't really have a reason to open this one or comment (they sent lots of comments to me).
  8. Chris R (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    *** Chris Rowe HERE,

    HA! Thanks Chris M, you're funny.

    Dean, three things:

    First of all, totally cool leaving your comments. While the defense Mr. Miller presented is true, I can't say I have any problem with anyone ever leaving any kind of comments, good or bad. That's why we offer the chance! Take advantage of it, we encourage it. Way cool - you can tell people not to join if you want man. LMFAO. You da man.

    Second, I think you may have missed what I was saying based on your first sentence informing me that foreign currencies have been dropping vs. U.S. dollar for weeks now. Clearly it seems you thought I was recommending the US dollar as a bullish position. Wasn't doing that - you missed the point amigo. Re-read above if you like (cuz I'm not about to re-write).

    Third, about your comment where you said: "Perhaps you both know how to read certain charts but they pale in comparison to what I posted here"..........

    I have one word for you: HAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhahahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhahaHAHAHAHA !!! HAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhaha !!!!! no-no-no-wait ....... ....... HAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHhahahahahahHAHAHAHAHAhaha!.

    Good one.

    My advice - that is, if you want it - is to try not to think of "the stock market" as these external major averages as most people have been programed to. They are just indications of what's happening in the stock market. Not always exact pictures. Actually hardly ever depending on how you look at it.
  9. Martyn (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Chris Rowe mentioned the USD thing to TTR Aug 5th to be precise. I was a bit late into SBUX so I got more than 40%. I also got in and out of the Merrill Lynch & Morgan Stanley puts twice-over 90% or so for me there. So ditto Chris Miller's comments.



    Teeka Tiwari flagged UUP months ago but P & P could be going a wee bit better.
  10. chris (11 weeks ago) Is this Spam?

    Dean? Is that you? The same Dean that left like 4 or 5 comments on the same day in last week's tycoon report?

    Haha. WOW your awesome. Are you suggesting Chris lying about TTR track record?

    I would like to say that Chris, aside from having, a very wonderful cool name (lol B-) is a stand up guy no question. Why do I have to defend him here? I'll tell why.

    I personally made money in a crazy market because he told me how to play.

    Did you see the track record? I didn't believe it at first when read about it in Tycoon , but The Trend Rider had a 30 day money back guarantee that one of their guys called me on the phone and told me about and promised me so I tried it and I looked at the track record and calculated it. (hey, if I didn't like what I saw I would just cancel)

    Last I calculated it was an average return of 22% (including winners and losers which many trading services won't calculate losers in their pitches) and the average holding was 50 something days. (Sorry I forget) But 77% of all trades (about 130 trades or so) were profitable.

    I signed up in I think April of 2007. I signed up because I read a over 100 page report I bought for $100.00 a report Tycoon wrote in December 2006 about credit crisis coming and mortgage crisis coming. Called Tycoon 7 or something. (yes i said december 2006... thats 06)They called this whole thing when people were super bullish.

    Chris made bullish money the first half 07, mostly energy stock, he called the exact top in TTR in this market last summer (for about a month before it topped out we positioned ourselves in bearish positions in all financials - Merrill Lynch, Bear Sterns (when it was in the hundreds) Morgan Stanley, Pipper Jaffray, CIT, CSH, bunches more but this is off the top of the head. Look at the charts. Guess what - many of them were down at first all at the same time. ANyone want to comment to confirm this true? ANy TTR member can see it right now if they check site or if they live through it like me.



    I have positions that are down now with Chris and others that are up right now. Lately only 65% or more of his trades profitable. I lost all my money I put into this one trade recently (and of course that's one I put a sht load of cash into). But the winners outweigh the losers big time.



    And we are trading "OP-TIONS" so they are volatile but the proof is right there in black n white just lke they said - nearly 80% work out and not super risky type of options, these are different high deltas.

    Now one of two things happened before I signed up. Either:

    1. this guy took the time to create a website (The Trend Rider) that has FAKED archived over 100 past trade alerts with old charts, going into great detail in his thinking as well as about 60 or 80 FAKE weekly market commentaries that are sometimes several pages long where they must have reasearched everything that was happening back on those dates and carefully and masterfully constructed a counterfit archived commentary in website that didnt' really exist before April of last year 07 just so that they can fool me into signing up.

    OR

    2. They were telling the truth.

    The next question is: Do I care? Answer is HELL NO!. Even if they did do possibility number 1, they have still made me big money and that was when the rest of the world lost their shirt (Q2&Q3 2007.

    I know what a head and shoulders top is. (It's one of the first things any pre-schooler learns when learning how to read charts. DUH. (I think my paperboy knows what it is). What you forgot to mention in your comments is a H&S "top" is called a "top" for a reason. It's a reversal of an upwards trend. It was complete in January. I know what you see here. But not a H&S "TOP" again, found at a TOP - hence the name. Chris told us in the first days of January 08, when some people called a bottom, that the market just broke one of these formations and because of the chart H&C the S&P would continue lower and go to about 1260, the NYSE would go to 8,400 and the nasdaq something else I forgot but all of which were on the money. I think the guy who TEACHES TA knows the formation pretty well. So when you're done trading your pork bellies - go chew on that!

    I think he saying the bull trend is "intermediate" which I understand to be "weeks to months" while the "LONG-TERM" trend is down. but maybe I just read every single tycoom report and TTR commentary wrong. Care to comment? Or - neh, not really?

    Chris Miller, San Diego, Long Time Fan, ex skeptic - turned Tycoon evangelist, stock jockey, Father of 7, and first time commenter in Tycoon comment section. YeeHaaaaa! TOo much coffee tonight but today, starbux coffee got Chris a nice comment and defense from me!

    (PS: Chris recommended puts on starbux and made me 40% too - hehehehehehehe)

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