> In the end I decided that I could only concentrate on a few products > and they were going to be the main line futures contracts.
I will probably be there too within a year or so ... narrowing the trading base is a process you go through ... I am letting the process run its course .. eventually I expect I will only trade the eS. While you are on line... since you are interested in the carry trade/currency relationship ... Roubini is agreeing with us (see copy below from the RGE Monitor site newsletter). The carry trade succumbed to bank de-leveraging and investor repatriation, resulting in the appreciation of carry trade funding currencies - the most popular being the JPY and USD. Bank de- leveraging has led to a shortage of these currencies, as most cross- border bank liabilities were denominated in them. With tighter lending, investors have had to unwind their carry trades to meet margin calls and, as asset prices adjusted to a recessionary outlook, to avoid further losses. U.S. and Japan provided the lion's share of the world's investment flows. The repatriation of U.S. and Japanese investor funds sapped the strength of other currencies versus the USD and JPY. The spread of recession and financial crisis beyond the U.S. to several other countries kills the appetite for foreign investments, driving repatriation. This leads to further currency depreciation in carry trade destination currencies especially emerging markets which had over-hedged or under-hedged against USD strength. A stronger dollar may contribute to further commodity price declines as countries with weaker currencies are able to purchase fewer goods. By the same token, weaker non-U.S. currencies may sow the seeds of higher inflation in countries vulnerable to imported inflation. In an environment where high yield alone is no longer attractive, the combination of slowing growth and rising inflationary pressures may set up emerging markets for further punishment from currency markets. FWIW a couple of new observations: - Yen and Euro kicked up a little today against the USD - as discussed on the weekend govts have started to intervene (AUD supported by RBA buying, G7 warned they will support the Yen - this is clouding the water a little - if their efforts move a little more then some speculators will get shaken out and prolong the counter move IMO the market is being controlled by deleveraging .. fundamentals are counting for anything anywhere .... US fund managers appear to be buying in stocks. USD/Yen and USD/Euro could be the best indicator we have right now of the leveraging strength ... assuming govt intervention hadn't occurred then weakening there would indicate that the carry trade repatriation was slowing. Also it is likely to be cyclical (Hedge Funds will be playing for their lives and stalling fire sales until nearer the end of the month) .. the current hiatus may signal end of month closure ... if the green days become more frequent in the next couple of weeks, whcih I think they will, look out for any carryover of deleveraging wind-down at the later half of next month.... more fire sales could occur then. brian_z --- In [email protected], "sidhartha70" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Brian, > > Yes I went through the same thought process as you probably. > In the end I decided that I could only concentrate on a few products > and they were going to be the main line futures contracts. > To trade UK stocks I'd also be paying 0.5% stamp duty which just isn't > an option... so the UK lost my business!!! > > > --- In [email protected], "brian_z111" <brian_z111@> wrote: > > > > > Obviously it always depends on the exact product mix... but as a > > > general rule, for most traders, IQ Feed is def. more bang for your > > buck... > > > > > > I'm in the UK... and eSignal also charge me VAT... (17.5%) and IQ > > Feed > > > don't.... > > > > True on the VAT - called GST at 10% in Australia...... > > > > ... but, it looks like you don't trade the UK or Euro stocks? > > > > If you did wouldn't eS be obligatory? > > > > What I am saying is, if we want our local exchange and want to move > > around between Asia, Europe and the US wouldn't eS be the only choice > > (add exchanges for the same base fee). > > > > IQ seems to be for those who have settled on the US or Canada and > > aren't going anywhere else. > > > > To me it is not worth the hassle of changing providers - I settled on > > eS so that I can roam freely. > > > > brian_z > > > > > > > > > > --- In [email protected], "sidhartha70" <sidhartha70@> > > wrote: > > > > > > Brian, > > > > > > I'm not sure thats correct. > > > > > > IQ Feed is $55 basic (includes US stocks), $20 US Futures, $25 Intl > > > Futures. + Exchange Fees (includes 500 symbol viewing) > > > > > > ESignal... if you want a data only feed... $50 basic, $35 US & Intl > > > Stocks, $35 US & Intl Futures. + Exchange fees (includes only 200 > > > symbol viewing - and extra $50 a month to take that up to 500). > > > > > > IQ Feed don't do European futures. If fact I think they only do US & > > > Canadian. > > > > > > Obviously it always depends on the exact product mix... but as a > > > general rule, for most traders, IQ Feed is def. more bang for your > > buck... > > > > > > I'm in the UK... and eSignal also charge me VAT... (17.5%) and IQ > > Feed > > > don't.... > > > > > > > > > --- In [email protected], "brian_z111" <brian_z111@> wrote: > > > > > > > > Not sure if you noticed but IQ is not cheaper than eS, for non US > > > > traders, if you compare apples to apples. > > > > > > > > Exchange fees are the same, and unavoidable for both. > > > > > > > > IQ basic + RT futures + RT international futures == USD 50 + 25 + > > 25 > > > > eS (as above + == USD 95) > > > > > > > > > > > > AFAIK IQ basic doesn't have futures included. > > > > IMO US Indices RT data is pretty average unless it includes > > futures. > > > > Also IQ doesn't have pre/after market data. > > > > For non US citz who take eS they can add any international > > exchange > > > > e.g. ASX RT, for the price of the exchange fee only. > > > > > > > > > > > > brian_z > > > > > > > > --- In [email protected], dingo <waledingo@> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > I'm going to be trying out IQFeed and have noticed some > > differences > > > > in what > > > > > the IQFeed site says vs the Amibroker site: > > > > > > > > > > 1. Amibroker says $50 / month + exchange fees - IQFeed says $55 > > + - > > > > which > > > > > one is correct? > > > > > > > > > > 2. Amibroker says to download IQFeed API client setup (version > > > > 4.2.1.4) - > > > > > IQFeed says to download version Download IQFeed Client 4.4.0.3 > > > > (5/13/2008) > > > > > - which one should I use? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Thanks for your help! > > > > > > > > > > d > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
