One of the most interesting trading
strategies that forex traders commonly employ is trading on economic news
releases. Specifically, closely watched economic news items such as the United
States' Non-Farm Payrolls and, Gross Domestic Product numbers tend to result in
significant reactions in the forex market, especially if they differ
substantially from the market's prior expectations. Learn more about how the GDP
and the Non-Farm
Payrolls data influences the forex market.
News and economic data are the main
drivers of market developments, but in a little different way than many traders
think. While many novice traders expect important economic events and news
releases to be reflected on the price immediately, complain about the
irrationality of the market when that doesn’t occur and protest that trading
the news is not possible, in fact it is possible, and extremely lucrative in
the long term, if one is willing to wait for the payback to arrive. In this
article we will take a look at various data types, and attempt to classify them
according to a few basic criteria. We will also try to explain how news
releases determine market prices in the long term, especially those of greater
value and impact on the market. Finally, we will say a couple of words on short
term news trading, and the different data releases that are important.
In the US most major news releases
occur between 8:30 am and 10 am New York time, and consequently trading is also
most active and volatile in this period. Option expiries, and market openings
take place during this period also, when traders are busy at their desks
absorbing and evaluating overnight data, attempting to place all the
developments in a general context for usage later in the day. Since volatility
is so high in this period, the profit/loss potential is also the highest. It is
obvious that proper risk controls and money management techniques will play a
major role in our trading method, if we want to avoid being caught in false
breakouts and whipsaws.
The markets’ reaction to any type of
data is unpredictable. This is not only the case when the news release is in
line with analyst expectations, as published by news channels and financial
news providers, but also when the release surprised significantly. Sometimes
it’s not even possible to predict how volatile the markets reaction will be to
the news release. Sometimes the market will move within a range of fifty or
more pips in response to data released. Sometimes a 100-pip movements in the
span of one or two minutes will be reversed and completely negated by the price
action during the rest of the day. Conversely, while news releases are usually
the most volatile periods of a typical trading day, a very unusual release may
be welcomed with relative calm if the market decides to do so. What is the
cause of all this great unpredictability?
During a news release a number of
speculators will react immediately, hoping to gain a quick profit and exit.
These will create a very brief ballooning of spreads and volume in the
immediate term, but also will distort the underlying technical picture greatly.
As these initial buyers or sellers exit, momentum traders will attempt to join
in and fuel a more sustainable short-term trend with their actions. Depending on
the time and liquidity in the market, they may well be successful, but
sometimes they too are checked by previously unknown order layers that check
the advance of the price. When these absorb the momentum traders, and short
term speculative entrants, the initial reaction of the price may be reversed or
negated also.
But while this is so, we do not
imply that it is not possible to trade the news in the forex market. All that
must be born in mind by the trader is that he’s engaging in a game of
probability; he must be very well aware that there doesn’t exist a news release
that will ensure that the market will move in this or that fashion. Stop loss
orders must not be very tight, and leverage must be kept quite low, so that the
order we enter can survive more than a few seconds of the initial shock
reaction by short-term actors.
The two major problems of trading
the news arise out of the difficulty in gaining
timely information, and evaluating
that in a fast enough manner to facilitate quick entry into a trade.
Hence, it is clear that the trader must have a very good idea of what he
expects from the news release. Will he only open a position if the data shock
the market? What is the threshold value for the data, above or below which a
trade is justified? How long will the position be held? Which technical levels
constitute the take-profit, or stop-loss orders for the trade? All these must
be discussed and determined even before a trade order is entered. News releases
must not be periods when the trader will be hesitating and vacillating between
the various paths he can take. Instead, he must act like a machine, with almost
automated movements, so that he can be immune to the emotional pressures
created by the irrational short-term behavior of the market.
The last issue with trading news
releases is born of the unreliable nature of the first versions. In fact,
studies have shown that the BLS (the Bureau of Labor Statistics), for instance,
consistently underestimates job losses in a recession, and underestimates job gains
at the beginning of the boom. Nor does the experienced trader have any trouble
in acknowledging this fact: revisions which reverse the meaning and character
of the initial release are not at all exceptional in the markets. The
short-term trader is not much bothered by this fact, but it has great
significance for decisions on the long-term positioning.
There are three ways of trading the
news.
1. Straddling Both Sides of the Market
Some traders position themselves on
both sides of the market before a significant release using a hedged position.
They wait for the number to come out
and then proceed to trade out of the position. For example, they might take a
loss on one side during a post number correction, after having hopefully taken
a larger profit on the winning side of the trade.
This straddle or hedge strategy
consists of going both long and short in the same currency pair before the
release of the economic number. Action is not taken until after the number is
released.
Once the number comes out, the
trader must decide how to "leg" out of the two legged position.
Generally this involves taking both a profit and a loss.
If the number was favorable, often
the trader will first take profits on the trade first. This enables the trader
to allow the other unprofitable leg of the position to decrease the loss on the
position as the market corrects after it made an initially often exaggerated
reaction to the number.
If the number released was
unfavorable, the same basic follow up strategy can be taken as the market falls
by closing the winning short position first, and then trading out of the losing
long side of the hedged position.
A variation on this technique
involves placing a stop loss immediately on the losing position and waiting for
the stop loss to be hit. Once the stop loss has been filled, the winning side
of the position can be held for additional profits or liquidated immediately.
2. Long term
Several academic studies have
established that the impact of some news announcements have their immediate impact
spread over a period of weeks and months, instead of the single day in which
the markets are thought to discount them. Non-farm payrolls, and to a greater
extent, the interest rate decisions of the federal reserve are good examples
for this kind of news flow. While the markets react violently and unpredictably
in the short term, the mechanisms set up by low interest rates, and full
employment (or conversely, high unemployment) have consequences that are
relevant to many sectors of the economy, and trading them on a long term basis
is certainly possible. The trader who uses this strategy will build up his
positions slowly, and will attach greater value to low frequency releases (such
as GDP reports), and will wait until the overall picture offers clarity, before
he makes his trade decisions.
3. Short term
To trade news on a short term basis,
the trader must have a clear criterion on what kind of news will justify a
trade. Many news traders seek at least a 50 percent surprise in the data to
consider the release tradeable. The novice trader, in turn, can use the initial
period of his trading career for perfecting his money management skills.
Trading the news on a short term basis can be easy and lucrative if the trader
is disciplined enough to cut losses, and accumulate profits, but panic and mood
swings, and undisciplined methodology will quickly erase all the gains through
shocks and volatility.
These are the various types of
indicators which have the potential to cause the greatest short term movements
in the markets.
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
While very important, the severity
of market reaction to CPI releases partly depends on the health of the general
economy. In a booming economy, a string of uncomfortably high CPI values will
force the central bank to raise rates in order to subdue growth. In a
contracting economy, a high CPI value may prevent the central bank from
realizing counter-cyclical interest rate reductions. Since central bank rates
are so important for determining the tone of economic activity in the long
term, markets pay great attention to the value of this indicator. On the short
term, of course, these considerations have no relationship to the motives of
speculators, but they do present the justification for violent short term price
spikes for momentum traders and short-term speculators, if the data surprises
in either direction.
Fed decisions
Depending on the nature of the
decision, and how surprised by it the market is, the price swings can be very
large and the immediate reaction meaningless with respect to the long term
direction of the trend. Fed decisions are one of the most anticipated events in
the market, and their macroeconomic significance certainly justifies this
attitude. The Fed meetings typically last for about two days, beginning on
Monday and concluding on Tuesday. Then the decision is released to the public
at around 9 pm New York time.
Fed rate decisions can cause large
movements if the rate change is different from what was expected by market
consensus. In the absence of such a surprise, traders will concentrate on the
tone of the statement accompanying the interest rate decision. Depending on how
dovish or hawkish the statement is, the markets will readjust their future
interest rate expectations, and on that basis they will reprice currency pairs.
The repricing period can be quite long, and it’s unwise to expect this process
to be completed in the course of a few weeks.
European central banks and the US
Federal Reserve usually release their rate decisions during the first week of
each month. As most of the important data are released during this first week
from around the world, traders are exceptionally nervous and excited,
amplifying volume greatly, but also increasing volatility, as the large amount
of short term speculative money opens and closes very short-term positions. In
fact, some traders turn the typical movements of this period into a trading
strategy.
Another key news item that can
prompt significant forex market volatility is central bank intervention that is
usually announced over major news wires. In this case, a country's central bank
will sometimes need to adjust their currency and will enter the forex market to
either support or bring down the value of its currency.
Non-farm payrolls
Sometimes called the mother of all
data, on a typical month the time of this release coincides with the most
volatile market action. Non-farm payrolls measure the payroll change of the
non-farming private and public sectors. Since economic cycles, consumption, and
consequently interest rates all depend on the employment situation of the US
economy, the non-farm payrolls release is the most closely watched of all
indicators.
For the most part, most experienced
traders will avoid trading the immediate aftermath of this release, due to the
somewhat nutty price action that follows it. If you’ll forgive the expression.
On the other hand, if the trader is satisfied that the data release strongly
suggests price movement in a direction, he will use the short term fluctuations
that occur as a trading opportunity by entering orders that contradict the
market’s short term direction.
While this data is so crucial to a
nation like the US with a large domestic economy that is less dependent on
trade and commerce, its equivalent is not as important for nations like Japan
where the dynamics of the domestic markets is closely correlated to the
situation of the global economy.
The non-farm payrolls data is
typically released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on the first Friday of
each month.
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)
The PMI provide a very quick and
accurate snapshot of the status of the various sectors of the economy. They do
not create as much volatility as the other major releases (such as the non-farm
payrolls data, or Fed decisions), but as a result they are also more tradable
and safer as entry points. Needless to say, a very extreme value can create
massive price shocks in either direction, but the real use of this data is for
the guidance it provides for predicting the much more important data that is
released towards the end of the week. We can trade these releases both on a
trend following, or contrarian basis, depending on what our analysis is telling
us about market positioning and the fundamental picture.
Other Major Economic Data Releases Most Often Traded Upon
- Gross Domestic Product or GDP - regardless of the currency, this number makes up one of the most important numbers traders use to trade on.
- Employment Numbers - the level of employment in a country can indicate the overall strength in their respective economy, and numbers like the U.S. Non Farm Payrolls and the Unemployment Rate can move the market substantially.
- Trade Balance - Along with the current account data, the trade balance for a country can significantly impact the valuation of its currency.
Some words on insider information and availability of
information
The unregulated and global nature of
the forex market tends to make trading on insider information very unlikely
compared to how trading is conducted in the stock markets. Basically, insider
trading in the truest sense of the word does not really exist in the forex
market, and even retail traders can compete on a fairly level playing ground
when it comes to the availability of forex market information.
In general, the level of information
required to trade forex usually comes from relatively open government sources
for fundamental analysts or from the price action itself for technical forex
traders. As a result, it tends to be readily available to just about anyone in
the world in the modern information age. The primary exception to the general
open availability of information in the forex market tends to be market flow
information. This includes the execution of large trades and substantial orders
in the forex market to which only the parties involved in the major transaction
tend to be privy.
Conclusion
There are many more releases, and
the trader can study each of them for creating his own strategy. The key point
is protecting ourselves from emotional extremes, and making sure that we only
open positions when we are really satisfied with the data release, and are
confident that the scenario offers a reasonable profit potential.
If you take my advices and win, just remember me. Thanks
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