OziMak, its a trick trust me. Articals like these always pop up that intice small time traders to short the Euro. Then Bang! the big boys such as soros and banks come in, Bye the euro and take your car, house and shirt with it.
If Soros has a plan to sell the euro, would you think he will tell anyone?
Its just how the big boys want you to believe.
The way currency trading works, is for every buyer you need a seller. Let me give you an example using houses in this case. You can have everyone selling there house, but if you dont have buyers, who's money will you take.
Therefor, i would look at buying the euro at a best price possible. It has hit lows already, so i would not sell euros now, only look at a bargin price to bye.
Sory for the trader talk
PS: Quote "The euro traded at $1.51 in December, but has since fallen to $1.34."
The euro/usd traded at 1.23 back in 26/10/2008 and as low as 1.16 back in 2005. so 1.34 is normal (around par), The recent 1.51 is unusualy high due to the US dollar weekness not the Euro strength, which was caused by US financial troubles and should not be looked at as normal.
If Soros has a plan to sell the euro, would you think he will tell anyone?
Its just how the big boys want you to believe.
The way currency trading works, is for every buyer you need a seller. Let me give you an example using houses in this case. You can have everyone selling there house, but if you dont have buyers, who's money will you take.
Therefor, i would look at buying the euro at a best price possible. It has hit lows already, so i would not sell euros now, only look at a bargin price to bye.
Sory for the trader talk
PS: Quote "The euro traded at $1.51 in December, but has since fallen to $1.34."
The euro/usd traded at 1.23 back in 26/10/2008 and as low as 1.16 back in 2005. so 1.34 is normal (around par), The recent 1.51 is unusualy high due to the US dollar weekness not the Euro strength, which was caused by US financial troubles and should not be looked at as normal.
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