Summary
Have you ever looked at a chart and spotted a huge trend, then thought to yourself “why is it so easy when you look back over a chart, but never that obvious there in the moment”. You will feel comfort in the fact that you are not the only one, most retail traders go through this every day, they look at a chart and wonder why things are so easy with the benefit of hindsight but never manage to get into those big trades in the beginning. In this webinar Alex is going to teach you to do exactly that… to get into the big trends right at the beginning, allowing you to make the most amount of profit for the smallest amount of risk. If you are sick of looking back on a chart and wondering what could have been, make sure you attend this webinar as it WILL revolutionise your trading!Latest Live Videos
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How will markets react to January Nonfarm Payrolls data? – LIVE
Nonfarm Payrolls in the US are forecast to rise 70K in January. Annual benchmark revisions and methodology updates could offer additional insights into the labor market conditions and drive the US Dollar's performance by influencing the Fed policy outlook.
EUR/USD holds firm above 1.1900 as US NFP looms
EUR/USD holds its upbeat momentum above 1.1900 in the European trading hours on Wednesday, helped by a broadly weaker US Dollar. Markets could turn cautious later in the day as the delayed US employment report for January will takes center stage.
Gold sticks to gains near $5,050 as focus shifts to US NFP
Gold holds moderate gains near the $5,050 level in the European session on Wednesday, reversing a part of the previous day's modest losses amid dovish US Federal Reserve-inspired US Dollar weakness. This, in turn, is seen as a key factor acting as a tailwind for the non-yielding yellow metal ahead of the critical US NFP release.
GBP/USD remains above nine-day EMA near 1.3650
GBP/USD recovers its recent losses from the previous session, trading around 1.3680 during the European hours on Wednesday. The technical analysis of the daily chart indicates a sustained bullish bias, as the pair trades within an ascending channel pattern.
S&P 500 at 7,000 is a valuation test, not a liquidity problem
The rebound from last week’s drawdown never quite shook the sense that it was being supported by borrowed conviction. The S&P 500 once again tested near the 7,000 level (6,986 as the high watermark) and failed, despite a macro backdrop that would normally be interpreted as supportive of risk.
