Foerx Tarding

 


TABLE 3.1

Nonfarm Payroll 2006–2014

 

 

Date

 

11/30/14

321,000

10/31/14

243,000

9/30/14

271,000

8/31/14

203,000

7/31/14

243,000

6/30/14

267,000

5/31/14

229,000

4/30/14

304,000

3/31/14

203,000

2/28/14

222,000

1/31/14

144,000

12/31/13

84,000

11/30/13

274,000

10/31/13

237,000

9/30/13

164,000

8/31/13

202,000

7/31/13

149,000

6/30/13

201,000

5/31/13

199,000

4/30/13

203,000

3/31/13

141,000

2/28/13

280,000

1/31/13

197,000

12/31/12

214,000

11/30/12

203,000

10/31/12

225,000

9/30/12

161,000

8/31/12

150,000

7/31/12

160,000

6/30/12

88,000

5/31/12

110,000

4/30/12

96,000

3/31/12

243,000

2/29/12

226,000

1/31/12

360,000

12/31/11

196,000

11/30/11

164,000

10/31/11

183,000

9/30/11

221,000

8/31/11

122,000

7/31/11

106,000

6/30/11

217,000

5/31/11

102,000

4/30/11

322,000

3/31/11

212,000

2/28/11

168,000

 




                  The fear of deflation was so great that in June 2014, the European Central Bank cut interest rates to record lows and actually charged banks for holding funds as a tactic  to stimulate lending bank money out. Forex traders need to keep in mind that in trading the USDJPY and the EURUSD, the fear of deflation attracts capital away from those countries and toward the US dollar. The result is a weakening of the currency against the dollar. Global markets will expect that both of these currencies need to weaken to generate inflation and avoid deflation. Ignoring the underlying lurking threat of deflation by those who trade these currencies will increase being in the wrong direction. The price direction favors weakening over strengthening for these pairs. This doesn’t mean that the USDJPY or EURUSD pair will never have uptrends, but weakening expectations are likely to dominate until inflation reaches 2 percent annualized levels.

 

TABLE 3.1

(Continued)

 

 

 

 

Date

 

 

1/31/11

 

70,000

12/31/10

 

71,000

11/30/10

 

137,000

10/31/10

 

241,000

9/30/10

 

57,000

8/31/10

 

42,000

7/31/10

 

61,000

6/30/10

 

122,000

5/31/10

 

516,000

4/30/10

 

251,000

3/31/10

 

156,000

2/28/10

 

50,000

1/31/10

 

18,000

12/31/09

 

283,000

11/30/09

 

6,000

10/31/09

 

198,000

9/30/09

 

227,000

8/31/09

 

216,000

7/31/09

 

327,000

6/30/09

 

467,000

5/31/09

 

354,000

4/30/09

 

684,000

3/31/09

 

826,000

2/28/09

 

701,000

1/31/09

 

798,000

12/31/08

 

697,000

11/30/08

 

765,000

10/31/08

 

474,000

9/30/08

 

452,000

8/31/08

 

259,000

7/31/08

 

210,000

6/30/08

 

172,000

5/31/08

 

182,000

4/30/08

 

214,000

3/31/08

 

80,000

2/29/08

 

86,000

1/31/08

 

15,000

12/31/07

 

97,000

11/30/07

 

118,000

10/31/07

 

82,000

9/30/07

 

85,000

8/31/07

 

16,000

7/31/07

 

33,000

6/30/07

 

71,000

5/31/07

 

144,000

4/30/07

 

78,000

3/31/07

 

188,000

2/28/07

 

88,000

1/31/07

 

238,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Comments

Post a Comment

If you want more read story books let me know

Popular posts from this blog

iPhone 14 Pro Max

A BRIEF SURVEY OF JOURNALISM: ITS PAST, PRESENT, & FUTURE

Praise for Social Media Marketing: The Next Generation of Business Engagement