Confirming you are not from the U.S. or the Philippines

By giving this statement, I explicitly declare and confirm that:
  • I am not a U.S. citizen or resident
  • I am not a resident of the Philippines
  • I do not directly or indirectly own more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest of the U.S. residents and/or do not control U.S. citizens or residents by other means
  • I am not under the direct or indirect ownership of more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest and/or under the control of U.S. citizen or resident exercised by other means
  • I am not affiliated with U.S. citizens or residents in terms of Section 1504(a) of FATCA
  • I am aware of my liability for making a false declaration.
For the purposes of this statement, all U.S. dependent countries and territories are equalled to the main territory of the USA. I accept full responsibility for the accuracy of this declaration and commit to personally address and resolve any claims or issues that may arise from a breach of this statement.
We are dedicated to your privacy and the security of your personal information. We only collect emails to provide special offers and important information about our products and services. By submitting your email address, you agree to receive such letters from us. If you want to unsubscribe or have any questions or concerns, write to our Customer Support.
Octa trading broker
Open trading account
Back

Flash: China HSBC PMI surprises on the downside - Nomura

FXStreet (Bali) - Zhiwei Zhang, Economist at Nomura, remains quite pessimistic on the prospects for Chinese growth this year, with his case reinforced by today's poor Chinese data.

Key Quotes

"The flash HSBC PMI dropped to 48.3 in February from 49.5 in January, lower than market and our expectations (Consensus 49.5, Nomura 49.0). New orders fell to 48.1 from 50.1and production to 49.2 from 50.8. New export orders rose to 49.3 from 48.4. We flagged the downside risk yesterday as the other leading indicator, the MNI business sentiment index also fell."

"We reiterate our view that the recovery in China is not sustainable and that GDP growth will slow to 7.5% y-o-y in Q1 and 7.1% in Q2, despite favourable base effects. Considering China's reported 2014 GDP growth target of 7.5%, we expect the government to loosen monetary policy in Q2 to support growth."

Debate over Fed rate hikes evolving - WSJ

According to an article from WSJ's Hilsenrath, titled 'Fed puts rate increase on the radar', the Fed-watcher notes "the possibility of interest-rate increases in the near future."
Read more Previous

EUR/AUD is running high; 1.5400 resistance is in sight

EUR/AUD left the resistance of 1.5300 behind, broke another resistance at 1.5350 and went on growing on a mixture of technical and fundamental factors
Read more Next