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GBPJPY is the biggest mover today. Soars toward 2019 midpoint/200 day MA

After an early ping pong pause at target levels, the pair shot higher.

In a post yesterday (on other GBP pairs technicals) I outlined levels of importance for the pair after the sharp moves higher.   Below is the chart from that post.
After an early ping pong pause at target levels, the pair shot higher.

At the end of yesterday and into the Asian session, the price of the pair ping-ponged between the 134.60 level above and the 133.86-99 level below.  The price based one last time at the support area (yellow area), broke above the 134.60 level and did not look back.  This is what that looked like:

GBPJPY on the hourly
What now?
Taking a broader look at the daily chart, the pair has moved above swing levels and currently is testing the 50% retracement of the 2019 trading range at the 137.702 level. The price is also trading at the highest level since June 2019.  There is some pause around the midpoint. However, the buyers still remain in control, and the lure of the 200 day above at 138.588, may be the magnet target for the move.
GBPJPY on the daily
The GBPJPY is getting a double boost from hope for Brexit and hope from US/China (that is propelling stocks and yields higher).  That is the right cocktail for the explosive currency pair.

Winning the Loser’s Game

In the book, Investment Policy: How to Win the Loser’s Game, author Charles D. Ellis discusses the interesting conclusions of Dr. Simon Ramo on playing strategy. Extraordinary Tennis for the Ordinary Tennis Player (New York: Crown Publishes, 1977) identified the difference between a winner’s game and a loser’s game.  Over a period of many years Dr. Ramo observed that tennis was not one game, but two: one played by professionals and a very few gifted amateurs; the other played by all the rest of us. After extensive scientific and statistical analysis, Dr. Ramo summed it up this way: Professionals win points; amateurs lose points.
In expert tennis, the ultimate outcome is determined by the actions of the winner. Professional tennis players stroke the ball with strong, well-aimed shots, though long and often exciting rallies, until one player is able to force an error by his opponent or to drive the ball just out of reach. These splendid players seldom make mistakes.
Amateur tennis, Dr. Ramo found, is almost entirely different. Brilliant shots, long and exciting rallies and seemingly miraculous recoveries are few and far between. The amateur player seldom beats his opponent; rather he beats himself all the time. The ball is fairly often hit into the net or out of bounds and double faults at service are not uncommon. The victor in this game of tennis eventually gets a higher score because his opponent is losing more points.
As a scientist and statistician, Dr. Ramo gathered data to test his hypothesis in a clever way. Instead of keeping conventional game scores—love, 15 all, 30-15, and so forth—he simply counted points won versus points lost. He found that in expert tennis about 80 percent of the points are won, but in amateur tennis about 80 percent of the points are lost through errors. (more…)

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