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Friday, September 19, 2014
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testing account

Summary:
Deposit/Withdrawal: 10 000.00 Credit Facility: 0.00  
Closed Trade P/L: 1 123 078.02 Floating P/L: 0.00 Margin: 0.00
Balance: 1 133 078.02 Equity: 1 133 078.02 Free Margin: 1 133 078.02
 
Details:
Graph
Gross Profit: 1 322 380.22 Gross Loss: 199 302.20 Total Net Profit: 1 123 078.02
Profit Factor: 6.64 Expected Payoff: 118.09  
Absolute Drawdown: 0.00 Maximal Drawdown: 173 912.70 (45.00%) Relative Drawdown: 45.00% (173 912.70)
 
Total Trades: 9510 Short Positions (won %): 292 (100.00%) Long Positions (won %): 9218 (82.04%)
Profit Trades (% of total): 7854 (82.59%) Loss trades (% of total): 1656 (17.41%)
Largest profit trade: 7 152.00 loss trade: -16 500.00
Average profit trade: 168.37 loss trade: -120.35
Maximum consecutive wins ($): 2707 (920 555.12) consecutive losses ($): 375 (-90 751.60)
Maximal consecutive profit (count): 920 555.12 (2707) consecutive loss (count): -97 550.00 (6)
Average consecutive wins: 14 consecutive losses: 3
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Thursday, September 11, 2014
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GBP/USD Daily Outlook

(actionforex) Intraday bias in GBP/USD remains neutral for consolidation above 1.6051 temporary low. Upside of recovery should be limited below 1.6534 support turned resistance and bring fall resumption. Below 1.6051 will target 50% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6002. Break will target 61.8% retracement at 1.5721.

In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. The firm break of 55 weeks EMA affirmed this bearish case and GBP/USD is now heading back to 1.4813 key support level.





Monday, September 8, 2014
Sunday, September 7, 2014
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GBPUSD Daily Outlook


(ActionForex.com)GBP/USD dives sharply today and reaches as low as 1.6164 so far. Intraday bias remains on the downside and current fall from 1.7190 should now target 50% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6002. On the upside, break of 1.6342 resistance will turn bias neutral and bring consolidations. But upside should be limited below 1.6643 and bring another fall.

In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. The firm break of 55 weeks EMA affirmed this bearish case and GBP/USD is now heading back to 1.4813 key support level.







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Monday, September 1, 2014
#gbpusd 020914 #vientradingsystem #staircasefx

#gbpusd 020914 #vientradingsystem #staircasefx





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Asian stocks fall, ECB uncertainty continues to pummel euro

(Reuters) - Asian shares slipped on Tuesday as a U.S. holiday robbed markets of momentum, while the euro hit a fresh one-year low on uncertainty over the European Central Bank's policy decision later this week. Spreadbetters expected an effectively flat open for Europe, with Britain's FTSE .FTSE, Germany's DAX .GDAXI and France's CAX .FCHI forecast to open about 0.1 percent higher. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS lost 0.6 percent after managing to carve out gains on the previous day.

 With U.S. markets closed for Labor Day, investors in Asia were somewhat subdued. The mood was also tempered by persistent geopolitical concerns and anemic manufacturing surveys in Asia and Europe showing pockets of weakness in the global economy. Tokyo's Nikkei .N225 bucked the trend and rose 1.2 percent, with a planned cabinet reshuffle by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe helping fuel reform hopes. The dollar, boosted by the flagging euro and gains in Tokyo shares that dented the appeal of the safe-haven yen, rose to a seven-month high of 104.87 yen JPY=. "The dollar's gains are driven by actual flows, such as options-related buying. The market is also keeping an eye on the rise in equities," said Shinichiro Kadota, chief Japan FX strategist at Barclays Bank in Tokyo. Immediate focus was on the ISM's report on U.S. manufacturing due later in the day, which might point to the U.S. phasing out quantitative easing just as the ECB contemplates its adoption.

 The euro slipped to a fresh one-year low of $1.3115 EUR=. The common currency was expected to remain under pressure ahead of Thursday's European Central Bank policy meeting. While many market participants do not expect the ECB to take major easing steps this week, a few are seen braced for new policy measures. Further central bank easing is considered a matter of when and not if in the face of risks to euro zone growth posed by the Ukraine conflict and stubbornly low inflation. "This week may start to mark the biggest shift in global monetary policy since 'Abenomics' went into full steam on the appointment of Haruhiko Kuroda to head up the BOJ," equity strategists at Jefferies wrote in a note to clients. The decline in European headline inflation rates, collapse in German bund yields, and the call by the president of the ECB for 'growth friendly' fiscal policy suggests that Europe is finally moving towards quantitative easing, they said.

 The Australian dollar showed little reaction to the well-anticipated decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia to keep its cash rate at a record low 2.5 percent for the 12th consecutive meeting. The Aussie was down 0.4 percent at $0.9296 AUD=D4 after brushing a one-week low of $0.9285. In commodities, Brent crude held steady below $103 a barrel on Tuesday, with new unrest in OPEC oil producer Libya balanced by concerns of slowing oil demand growth due to weak economic recoveries in China and Europe. [O/R] Palladium hovered near a 13-1/2 year high of $910 an ounce hit overnight on fears that possible Western sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis could hit supply from the world's top producer of the metal, while gold nudged higher. [GOL/] Spot palladium XPD= last traded at $904.50 an ounce. Russia accounted for more than 40 percent of global palladium supply last year. (Editing by Eric Meijer & Shri Navaratnam)


A man stands in front of an electronic board, showing the various stock prices, outside a brokerage in Tokyo August 6, 2014.  REUTERS/Yuya Shino


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GBP/USD Daily Outlook

GBP/USD's recovery from 1.6534 extended higher and intraday bias remains neutral for more consolidative trading. But upside of recovery should be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. Below 1.6534 will extend the fall from 1.7190 to 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282).
 In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6508). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.

In the longer term picture, we're sticking on to the view that price actions from 1.3503 are forming the fourth wave of the five wave sequence from 2.1161. That means, firstly, 1.3503 shouldn't be the end point of the downtrend yet and a new low is expected. However, secondly, as the next fall could be the fifth wave, the breach of 1.3503 could be shallow and brief from long term point of view and we'll then see a more sustainable rebound.

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart

GBP/USD Daily Chart

GBP/USD Weekly Chart

GBP/USD Monthly Chart

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Sunday, August 31, 2014
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GBPUSD Weekly Outlook

GBP/USD edged lower to 1.6534 and formed a temporary bottom there and turned sideway. Initial bias is neutral this week for some sideway trading. But upside of recovery should be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. Below 1.6534 will extend the fall from 1.7190 to 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282).
In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6508). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.
In the longer term picture, we're sticking on to the view that price actions from 1.3503 are forming the fourth wave of the five wave sequence from 2.1161. That means, firstly, 1.3503 shouldn't be the end point of the downtrend yet and a new low is expected. However, secondly, as the next fall could be the fifth wave, the breach of 1.3503 could be shallow and brief from long term point of view and we'll then see a more sustainable rebound.

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart

GBP/USD Daily Chart

GBP/USD Weekly Chart

GBP/USD Monthly Chart

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Friday, August 29, 2014
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THE GREATEST ELMORE LEONARD MOVIE BY A LONG SHOT






Elmore Leonard's work continues to receive the big-screen treatment with this weekend's Life of Crime, a surprisingly sturdy rendition of the author's 1978 novel The Switch about two crooks' (John Hawkes and Mos Def) plan to kidnap a socialite (Jennifer Aniston) and the numerous, absurd complications that quickly ensue. It's the latest in a long line of adaptations of Leonard's writing, which has been the source for countless Westerns and crime movies that, with a few exceptions, have failed to capture his distinctively droll voice. Leonard, who passed away last year at the age of 87, was fond of slamming the worst of that lousy bunch — think 1974's Mr. Majestyk (featuring Charles Bronson), or 1985's Stick, which Burt Reynolds both starred in and directed. His disapproval was with good reason, since despite boasting stories that seem, on the page, a perfect fit for movies, Leonard's novels have rarely made the transition in faithful form. Which is funny, given how influential his style has become throughout pop culture.

The finest entry in the straight translations of his work remains Jackie Brown, Quentin Tarantino's 1997 spin on Leonard's 1992 tome Rum Punch. What Jackie Brown gets right that so many others don't is its conception of protagonists who are just slightly larger than life, and whose convincing (if just a tad exaggerated) emotional needs and hang-ups ensnare them in a web of intrigue, crime, and ill-fated tragedy, all of which plays out via a sprawling multi-character saga that's intimately attuned to its main players' alternately humorous and poignant conditions. Full of stock archetypes (the menacing psycho, the gruff thug, the femme fatale, the young punk, the regal beauty, the sensitive old-timer) made unique by their idiosyncrasies, Tarantino's film captured many of Leonard's tropes, but, crucially, didn't treat Rum Punch as wholly sacrosanct, instead making whatever changes Tarantino saw fit.


That's also what makes Steven Soderbergh's Out of Sight (1998) and Barry Sonnenfeld'sGet Shorty (1995) similar triumphs in the Leonard film canon: a willingness to tweak narrative particulars and storytelling focus (specifically with Out of Sight, which somewhat shifts the focal point from Jennifer Lopez's U.S. Marshal Karen Sisco to George Clooney's thief Jack Foley) in order to get at the underlying mood and attitude of their tales. Leonard's writing exudes a mixture of laid-back cool, pulsating sexuality, heated tension, and subtle melancholy, as well as a dry, bemused fascination with the foibles and failings of men and women. Transporting that sort of humorously world-weary, tough yet touching voice to the screen has been an arduous task for many, in large part because what defines Leonard's best books, from 52 Pick-Up to LaBrava to Swag to Killshot, is not just his particular characters and the Detroit in which they're often set, but a larger, underlying feeling.

And yet Leonard remains imprinted on so many movies of the past half-century, even ones that have no explicit connection to the author. Paul Newman's 1961 Hombre and Delmer Daves's 1957 3:10 to Yuma (and the 2007 remake) are solid versions of Leonard's early Wild West tales, but the lasting impact of those stories was their willingness to portray well-known types (the noble cattle rancher, the black-hearted scoundrel, etc.) in shades of gray, which has carried on to today. Leonard's vision of strong men who were half-good and half-bad helped spawn the following two decades' worth of revisionist oaters from the likes of Sergio Leone (The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly) and Clint Eastwood (High Plains Drifter), who subsequently reimagined the desperado, the rogue, and the rest of the Old West's familiar faces. It's a mode that's now come full circle with Justified, FX's Timothy Olyphant-starring TV series about Leonard's Kentucky Deputy U.S. Federal Marshall Raylan Givens, which relocates an old-school Western vibe in a contemporary setting to pitch-perfect results, thanks in part to writing that, like Jackie Brown, plays fast and loose with specifics in order to stay true to Leonard's wry vision of gunslingers and outlaws.

Leonard's later crime books (52 Pick-Up, Gold Coast, Freaky Deaky, Cuba Libre) have likewise cast a long shadow over genre moviemaking. Steven Soderbergh's follow-up toOut of Sight, 1999's The Limey, also contains traces of the author in its marriage of righteous, vengeance-minded criminal fury and wistful regret and nostalgia — as well as its skewering of California (Hollywood and the entertainment industry being frequent targets of Leonard's satire, as in Get Shorty). That unique Leonard blend is also found in everything from Robert Altman's revisionist take on Raymond Chandler's The Long Goodbye, to Stephen Frears's Jim Thompson-based neo-noir The Grifters, to Peter Yates's magnificent The Friends of Eddie Coyle, to Tarantino and Tony Scott's still-undervalued True Romance, a sprawling epic of crazy dreamers caught up in a tangled mess of drugs, theft, murder, and alluring women that feels like a tonal prequel to Jackie Brown. By treating screwed-up characters engaged in sometimes ugly, sometimes ludicrous behavior with both ironic detachment and empathetic good humor, Leonard's books have set the now-standard mode for current crime cinema and TV, even as they continue to prove hard to adapt into movies you'd actually want to watch.
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A NEW STUDY SAYS WOMEN DON'T LIKE YOUR BEARD AS MUCH AS YOU DO







(esquire.com)Perhaps we really have reached peak beard, just as scientists predicted. A new eBay Fashion survey of 1,000 people seems to indicate so. And as the scientists said, it might be because women just don't like your beard as much as you do. If that's the case, what's the point then, fellas? You didn't nurture your luxurious beard so you could stroke it while you sit around in your stinky sweatpants playing StarCraft, did you? No, I thought not. You did it to get chicks, and with only 55% of surveyed women saying they like beards, that prospect is diminishing by the second. But don't worry, dudes like them. A full 75% of men are backing them, which is great news if you want to just hang out with your friends playing hacky sack all day like a dirty high school hippy. Have fun.



And that's not the least of it. Nearly 52% of women wish there were fewer beards out there, which seems to indicate that some of the women who claim to be able to tolerate your glorious man-mane still wish there weren't quite as many of them out there in the world. Yikes.



And the survey says this all might be having an effect on the popularity of beards, at least on the Internet. Google searches for beards increased between 2011 and 2013, but took a nosedive in 2014, indicating that the early adopters are done with whiskers and that even the late comers know enough about them now that they don't have to search any longer. Probably because they're staring down at their very own crumb crusted face-nest as they silently weep after their girlfriend left them for a clean shaven used-car salesman that looks just like the Patrick Bateman of Scranton. Fare thee well beards, you sure were fuzzy.

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David Cameron promises new UK powers to tackle Isis terror threat

(theguardian) David Cameron and Nick Clegg will embark on intensive negotiations over the weekend to try to agree a fresh round of measures to tackle the threat posed by terror suspects in Britain. The prime minister announced that he would unveil new measures in a statement to parliament on Monday at a televised press conference, on the day that the terror threat to the UK was raised from substantial to severe. Speaking at Downing Street after his return from a pre-referendum trip to Scotland, Cameron said: "It is becoming clear that there are some gaps in our armoury and we need to strengthen them.

We need to do more to stop people travelling, to stop those who do go from returning and to deal decisively with those who are already here." He was speaking amid fears that extremists aligned to Islamic State (Isis) plan to return from the conflict-torn region to mount attacks in western Europe. Cameron said that Isis and other extremists posed a "generational struggle" for the UK and other western countries. Cameron highlighted plans to make it easier to revoke passports for British citizens amid concerns that this power has only been used on 23 occasions in the last year while up to 250 jihadis are thought to have returned to Britain from Iraq and Syria. It is understood that ministers will embed this power in legislation after it was introduced in April last year through royal prerogative executive powers.

The move is designed to make it easier to prevent suspects from travelling to Syria and Iraq. There are separate powers to strip citizenship from UK citizens with dual citizenship. Cameron did not provide more details of his plans. Government sources later confirmed that he and Clegg will have further discussions over the weekend to reach agreement. It is understood that one key area, where Cameron and his deputy have yet to reach agreement, is on terrorism prevention and investigation measures (TPIMs), which replaced control orders. Cameron and Clegg are looking closer at the recommendation by David Anderson, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, who called for two changes in his annual report in March. Anderson recommended a strengthening of "locational constraints" on those subject to TPIMs to ban them from some areas or to restore the power to relocate them to specific areas. He also called for powers to force those subject to TPIMs to attend probation service meetings.

 Cameron said the beheading of James Foley showed the need to act, though the decision to raise the terror threat alert was not related to the video that featured his killing. He said: "It was clear evidence, not that any more was needed, that this is not some foreign conflict thousands of miles from home that we can hope to ignore. The ambition to create an extremist caliphate in the heart of Iraq and Syria is a threat to our own security here in the UK." He outlined the changes after the home secretary, Theresa May, announced the raising of the terror threat level. May said that raising it from substantial to severe meant that an attack was highly likely, though she said there was no evidence to suggest an attack was imminent. She said the decision was "related to developments in Syria and Iraq, where terrorist groups are planning attacks against the west". She said some of the plots were likely to involve foreign fighters who had travelled to the Middle East from Britain and Europe to take part in the conflicts there. The threat level last stood at severe more than three years ago and it was reduced to substantial on 11 July 2011.

Severe is the fourth level in the five-tier system of alert categories that have been used by the government since 2006 to warn of terrorist activity. The higher level is critical, which is used when an attack is expected imminently. May said the decision to raise the threat level had been taken by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre. "We face a real and serious threat in the UK from international terrorism. I would urge the public to remain vigilant and to report any suspicious activity to the police," she said. Downing Street knew before the defection of the Tory MP Douglas Carswell to Ukip on Thursday that the terror level threat would be raised. It made preparations for Cameron's statement before the Carswell announcement, indicating that the press conference was not an attempt to deflect attention from Tory divisions on Europe.

 Cameron issued a dire warning of the threat posed by extremists at home and abroad as he spoke of the need to tackle support for violent and extremist ideology. He said: "In Afghanistan the Taliban were prepared to play host to al Qaida, the terrorist organisation.With IS we are facing a terrorist organisation not being hosted in a country but seeking to establish and then violently expand its own terrorist state. "With designs on expanding to Jordan, Lebanon, right up to the Turkish border, we could be facing a terrorist state on the shores of the Mediterranean and bordering a Nato member." The prime minister made clear that he would be relentless in tackling supporters of extremist ideology. He said: "The ambition to create an extremist caliphate in the heart of Iraq and Syria is a threat to our own security here in the UK. "The terrorist threat was not created by the Iraq war 10 years ago. it existed even before the horrific attacks on 9/11, themselves some time before the war. "This threat cannot be solved simply by dealing with perceived grievances over Western foreign policy. Nor can it be dealt with by addressing poverty, dictatorship or instability in the region - as important as these things are.

 "The root cause of this threat to our security is quite clear. It is a poisonous ideology of Islamist extremism that is condemned by all faiths and faith leaders." Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said that Labour would work with the government to strengthen TPIMs. She said: "The prime minister is right to say this threat is based on a poisonous ideology of warped Islamic extremism that is condemned by all faiths and all faith leaders. "The head of MI5 warned last year that the threat from Islamist extremism was becoming 'more diffuse, more complicated, more unpredictable', as so many Britons were joining the conflict. I have said to the Home Secretary that we stand ready to work with the Government on any measures that may be needed to respond to the threat."
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#GBPUSD Daily Outlook

(ACTIONFOREX) Intraday bias in GBP/USD remains neutral as the consolidation from 1.6534 is still in progress. Another recovery cannot be ruled out. But upside is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282). In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart
GBP/USD Daily Chart
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Wednesday, August 27, 2014
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#GBPUSD Daily Outlook

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart
 GBP/USD Daily Chart
(actionforex) - GBP/USD's consolidations from 1.6534 continues and intraday bias stays neutral. Further rise could be seen. But upside is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282). In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.
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#GBPUSD Mid-Day Outlook

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart
GBP/USD Daily Chart
(actionforex.com) - GBP/USD's consolidations from 1.6534 continues today with another recovery. Further rise could be seen. But upside is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282). In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.
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German GfK Consumer Sentiment Sep 9 8.9
UBS Consumption Indicator Jul 2.06 -
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Tuesday, August 26, 2014
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GBP/USD Daily Outlook

Intraday bias in GBP/USD remains neutral for some consolidations above 1.6534 temporary low. Upside of recovery is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282). In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart
GBP/USD Daily Chart

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Soros’s Argentine Bond Bet Revealed in Lawsuit in London



Less than a month after Argentinadefaulted for the second time in 13 years,George Soros has suddenly emerged as a key rival of fellow billionaire Paul Singer in the legal fight over the nation’s debt.

According to court documents filed inLondon last week, Quantum Partners LP, a fund managed by Soros’s family office, has joined a group of investors suing bond trustee Bank of New York Mellon Corp. for failing to distribute 226 million euros ($298 million) of interest payments on Argentine debt. The group, which also includes Kyle Bass’s Hayman Capital Management LP, owns more than 1.3 billion of euro-denominated bonds, court documents obtained by Bloomberg News show.

At the crux of the dispute is a U.S. court ruling won by Singer’s Elliott Management Corp., which blocked Argentina from paying its overseas bonds until the country compensates him and other holders of debt from its 2001 default. While the ruling prevents BNY Mellon from transferring any money deposited by Argentina until Singer is paid, it shouldn’t apply to bonds governed by jurisdictions outside of the U.S., the group says.

“The trustee isn’t acting in its official capacity as trustee,” Bass said in a telephone interview fromNew York. “Our interest payment is governed by U.K. law, which hasn’t ruled on this. Until there’s a similar injunction in the U.K., they owe us our interest payments.”
Legal Pursuit

Michael Vachon, a spokesman for Soros, declined to comment. Stephen Spruiell, a spokesman for New York-based Elliott, didn’t return e-mails seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Singer, who also sued the governments of Peru and the Republic of Congo after they reneged on their obligations, bought Argentine bonds before its $95 billion default in 2001.

After a more than decade-long legal pursuit for full repayment, Singer and other creditors who refused to accept losses of 70 percent to provide Argentina debt relief are now owed $1.5 billion as of result of the U.S. court orders.

Soros, meanwhile, has been an investor in the South American country for decades, having joined a group that purchased Argentine real estate company IRSA Inversiones y Representaciones SA in the early 1990s.

On June 26, Argentina deposited $539 million into an account at BNY Mellon for an interest payment on its foreign-currency bonds due four days later -- without also depositing the amount owed to the holdout creditors led by Singer.
‘Illegal’ Payment

U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa called the payment “illegal” and prohibited New York-based BNY Mellon from distributing the funds to bondholders.

A default was triggered on July 30, after Argentina failed to reach a settlement with the holdouts by the end of a grace period for making the interest payments. The money remains at BNY Mellon’s account in Buenos Aires.

Argentina revoked the authorization of two BNY Mellon officials for failing to provide local financing, according to an Aug. 25 resolution. The lender had no operations in the country since December 2012, the document said.

In the U.K. lawsuit, Soros, Bass, Knighthead Capital Management LLC and RGY Investments LLC said that BNY Mellon’s London-based unit acted “consistently to protect its own interests, without reference to the interests of the beneficiaries,” according to the documents.

The bondholder group asked the London court to require BNY Mellon to disburse the money to holders of Argentina’s euro-denominated bonds and prevent the bank from doing anything else with the cash.
‘Without Merit’

“The suit is without merit,” Ron Gruendl, a spokesman for BNY Mellon, said in a statement on Aug. 22. “BNY Mellon has consistently followed the binding court orders that govern its actions as trustee in this matter.”

A separate group of investors in euro-denominated bonds plans on appealing Griesa’s ruling in New York. Last year, that group sued Bank of New York Mellon Brussels and Brussels-based Euroclear SA in Belgian court. The outcome of a Sept. 9 hearing set for that case will be “important” for investors and the holdouts, said Bass.

Euroclear, the world’s biggest settlement system, has said the orders are in violation of Belgian law, which prohibits the obstruction of cash transfers made by settlement agents. The law was established in 2004 after an appeals court in Brussels overturned a lower-court order that had prevented Euroclear from accepting or making any payments on Nicaraguan bonds at the request of holdout creditors.
Distributing Payments

Citigroup Inc.’s Argentina unit is also appealing a decision by the judge that bars the bank from distributing payments on securities issued under Argentine law. Fintech Advisory Inc., a hedge fund run by David Martinez, who has litigated against Singer in other cases, said on Aug. 19 it will also appeal Griesa’s ruling.

“Clearly there’s a process of trying to carve out legal and local law” from the ruling,’’ Siobhan Morden, head of Latin America fixed-income strategy at Jefferies Group LLC, said by phone from New York. “The euro bondholders are aggressively trying to separate U.K. law from this expansive injunction.”

Argentina’s euro-denominated debt has outperformed its dollar bonds since the default, with yields on notes due 2033 rising about 2 percentage points, compared with a 2.7-point increase on same-maturity dollar bonds. The spread between the securities widened 15 basis points today to 45 basis points, the biggest since January.
Soros Investments

Soros, the world’s 23rd wealthiest person, met with Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner last year to discuss investment in the country, according to local newspaper BAE. Soros Fund Management LLC more than doubled its stake in Argentina’s state-owned oil producerYPF SA (YPF), adding 8.47 million shares in the second quarter, according to an Aug. 14 filing. Soros’s 3.5 percent stake worth $450 million makes him the fourth-biggest private holder.

Soros also owned 25.9 million shares worth about $244.6 million in South American agricultural company Adecoagro SA as of June 30, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. That works out to a 21 percent stake, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Economy Minister Axel Kicillof has called on bondholders to demand their money from BNY Mellon, saying the nation fulfilled its obligations and isn’t in default.

“In a broader sense, what’s going on right now is the chickens coming home to roost,” Tim Samples, a professor of legal studies at the University of Georgia, said in a telephone interview. “People have been warning for years about the complexities and burdens for third parties in this case and we’re just seeing that unfold.”

(An earlier version of this story corrected the dollar amount of Adecoagro shares Soros owns in the 22nd paragraph.)

By Katia Porzecanski and Camila Russo Aug 27, 2014 4:18 AM GMT+0700
To contact the reporters on this story: Katia Porzecanski in New York atkporzecansk1@bloomberg.net; Camila Russo in Buenos Aires atcrusso15@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Tsang at mtsang1@bloomberg.net; Bradley Keoun at bkeoun@bloomberg.net Lester Pimentel, Bradley Keoun
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Gaza ceasefire takes hold as focus turns to longer term

Palestinian children hold guns as they celebrate with others what they said was a victory over Israel, following a ceasefire in Gaza City August 26, 2014.  REUTERS-Suhaib Salem
(Reuters) - A ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinians aimed at ending their seven-week conflict in Gaza appeared to be holding early on Wednesday as the focus shifted to securing an arrangement for the long term.

No clear victor emerged from what had become a war of attrition between the Middle East's most powerful armed forces and the dominant Hamas militant movement in the Gaza Strip.

Exacting a heavy toll in Palestinian lives and property, Israel said it dealt a strong blow to Hamas, killing several of its military leaders and destroying the group's cross-border infiltration tunnels.

But Israel also faced persistent rocket fire for nearly two months that caused an exodus from a number of border communities and became part of daily life in its commercial heartland.

Palestinian and Egyptian officials said the deal, which was mediated in Cairo and took effect on Tuesday evening, called for an indefinite halt to hostilities, the immediate opening of Gaza's blockaded crossings with Israel and Egypt and a widening of the territory's fishing zone in the Mediterranean.

A senior official of the Islamist group Hamas, which runs Gaza, voiced willingness for the security forces of Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the unity government he formed in June to control the passage points.

Both Israel and Egypt view Hamas as a security threat and are seeking guarantees that weapons will not enter the territory of 1.8 million people.

Under a second stage of the truce that would begin a month later, Israel and the Palestinians would discuss the construction of a Gaza sea port and Israel's release of Hamas prisoners in the occupied West Bank, possibly in a trade for body parts of two Israeli soldiers believed held by Hamas, the officials said.

TAKING STOCK

After the ceasefire began, crowds and traffic filled the streets of Gaza. Car horns blared and recorded chants praising God sounded from mosque loudspeakers. Celebratory gunfire killed one Palestinian and wounded 19 others, hospital officials said.

"Today we declare the victory of the resistance, today we declare the victory of Gaza," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said.

Israel gave a low-key response to the truce, saying it would facilitate the flow of civilian goods and humanitarian and reconstruction aid into the impoverished territory if the "open-ended" ceasefire was honored.

"We have no problem with civilian support for Gaza," said Mark Regev, a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. "We don’t want to see Hamas rebuild its military machine."

Many residents of southern Israel remained skeptical, and some officials recommended against returning home too soon.

"We had ceasefires in the past that didn't succeed or work out well, and (Hamas) continued with their terror, destruction, with all their craziness, and we no longer believe them," said Israeli Meirav Danino outside a supermarket in the border town of Sderot that for years has been hit by rockets.

The United States and United Nations urged both sides to comply with the terms of the agreement.

"We are all aware that this is an opportunity, not a certainty," said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. "We have been down this road before and we are all aware of the challenges ahead."

Palestinian health officials say 2,139 people, most of them civilians, including more than 490 children, have been killed in the enclave since July 8, when Israel launched an offensive with the declared aim of ending rocket salvoes.

Sixty-four Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel have been killed - a civilian died after the ceasefire was announced from a mortar attack earlier in the day.

Thousands of homes in the Gaza Strip have been destroyed or damaged in the most prolonged Israeli-Palestinian fighting since a 2000-2005 Palestinian uprising. The United Nations has named a panel to investigate possible war crimes committed by both sides.

The Palestinian Center for Human Rights said 540,000 people had been displaced in the Gaza Strip. Israel has said Hamas bears responsibility for civilian casualties because it operates among non-combatants and uses schools and mosques to store weapons and as launch sites for rockets.

"We have mixed feelings. We are in pain for the losses but we are also proud we fought this war alone and we were not broken," said Gaza teacher Ahmed Awf, 55, as he held his two-year-old son in his arms and joined in the street festivities.

Many of the thousands of rockets fired at Israel were intercepted by the Iron Dome anti-missile system, a partly U.S.-funded project hailed by many Israelis as an example of their nation's high-tech capabilities.

But short-range mortar bombs rained down on farming communities and towns near the Gaza border, putting into question the start of the school year in the area on Sept. 1.
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GBP/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Intraday bias in GBP/USD remains neutral for some consolidations above 1.6534 temporary low. Upside of recovery is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282).

In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.





GBPUSD Outlook | Written by ActionForex.com | Aug 26 14 13:48 GMT
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GBP/USD Daily Outlook



Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.6542; (P) 1.6570; (R1) 1.6604; More...

Intraday bias in GBP/USD remains neutral for some consolidations. Upside of recovery is expected to be limited by 1.6737 resistance and bring fall resumption. The decline from 1.7190 medium term top is expected to extend lower. Below 1.6534 will target 1.6251 cluster support (38.2% retracement of 1.4813 to 1.7190 at 1.6282).

In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.3503 (2009 low) are treated as consolidations to long term down trend from 2.1161. The current development, with medium term top formed at 1.7190, argues that such consolidation is possibly completed, just below 50% retracement from 2.1161 to 1.3503 at 1.7332. Focus now turns to 55 weeks EMA (now at 1.6506). Sustained trading there will pave the way for 1.4813 key support and below.





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GBPUSD Outlook | Written by ActionForex.com | Aug 26 14 06:49 GMT



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