The euro was seen on a unpleasant note against the dollar for a second consecutive day on speculation tests to demonstrate the resilience of the region’s banking system would fall short of assuring investors.
Joe Manimbo, a market analyst in Washington at Travelex Global Business Payments said: “There is renewed uncertainty about the European stress tests. That’s depressing market sentiment. We’ve seen more of a cautious tone.”
The euro fell 0.5 percent to $1.2573. The euro slipped 0.6 percent to 111.39 yen. The dollar was little changed at 88.60 yen.
By the time of your post,it was 1300gmt, E$ had been rising for the last 4 or more hours. Clearly you waint looking at any charts when you made that post?
The guy you say made that comment that made the E$ fall, Is he a buddy of yours? The other day you quoted someone from FXpro and I wouldnt go trusting those folks either - their charts are alittle disjointed (costed me a bit) something you youldn’t know since you dont look at charts much? If you kept it in one piece maybe it wouldnt stink as much?
At this point, I think this is a bot from the GnuTrades brokerage house.
I’ve relentlessly called this guy/gal out, and there is never a response.All this old news clutters up this forum page, and takes meaningful threads off the main page.
A real shame for that to happen because of a bunch of recycled crap with nothing to offer.