What goes down stays down. That has been the story for the dollar in 2009.
Now if we could get a storm over the Wasatch to stay on track and stall out, that would be just perfect. The holidays are ending, tourists are leaving and January still has short enough days where the sun doesn't spoil the snow too quickly.
No, the Head Local won't give you any weather predictions here or tell you his favorite spots in the Deer Valley trees.
If you were able to catch the move and understand it and you added to your commodity portfolio, well, you had a very good year Mr/Mrs. Trader.
Yes, the dollar was weak. If you think about it, all Central Banks weakened their currencies in order to stimulate their respective economies. Why then did the dollar weaken compared to the other currencies when all were devalued?
Maybe it is a blessing in disguise. When markets rally, the dollar weakens. The opposite occurs when markets crash - in the past the dollar has strengthened. In time of need, rely on Uncle Sam.
Will that continue to be the case if the markets deteriorate as the global economy goes into 2010?
Lots of questions will be answered as traders bring the markets back to life after the "Holiday" break. If the equity market rallies, overall volatility stays low and it will be the "grind it out trader" who plugs away each day. If the equity markets swoon due to any number of events, then the disciplined trader will have to quickly adapt to wider spreads and wider ATR's.
Notice that I am NOT making any predictions. I am not an investor in the forex markets and thus don't really care where the currencies go, as long as they go. Also, in order to sleep at night, I RARELY hold open positions going into the close. Therefore, it isn't important to "call" the markets for 2010, but understanding the big picture always helps in intraday trading.
Let's take a quick peak at a longer dated chart:

This look at the GBP/USD on a daily timeframe gives us a great view of the strengthening dollar during the economic freefall and then the weakening dollar during the economic recovery.
BUT, there is a divergence - the equity markets have leaked higher over the past month and the dollar has strengthened.
- Is it a small correction in a bigger downmove in the dollar?
- Is it a sign that the equity markets are overbought and buyers of the dollar are preparing for a downmove in equities?
- Is it fear that the Bernanke and the Fed will raise rates?
The bottom line is, wether you are an intraday trader or an investor, you have to pick your spots and have money/risk management as things can change in a hurry.
If the past 2 years are any indication, change seems to be on the horizon and for traders, change is good!
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