TDI Podcast 175: Shorting the Yen and Thoughts From Minyanville
August 22, 2010 11:59 pm
Guest: Kevin DePew, Minyanville discusses a god amount of charting technique as well as direction for various markets and commodities. Silver, Gold, markets and more. Also a closer look at the economics vs. earnings debate.
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Kevin Depew is the Executive Editor of Minyanville.com. Prior to joining Minyanville, Kevin spent more than five years as an analyst with Dorsey, Wright where he edited and contributed to the firm’s daily research reports.
After graduating from the University of Kentucky with a B.A. in Philosophy, Kevin joined the Daily Racing Form as an editor / handicapper / writer where he spent five years covering, and occasionally wagering on, thoroughbred horse racing.
He then worked as a broker for PaineWebber and, later, A.G. Edwards.
In December, 2008, Kevin received an Emmy Award from The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for his role as Writer/Producer of Minyanville’s World In Review, the first (and only) animated business news show.
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4 Responses to “TDI Podcast 175: Shorting the Yen and Thoughts From Minyanville”
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Great Podcast once again. It appears to me the USD-JPY can reverse soon. Let's wait and see.
Hello!
Looks,like everyone knows,that Yen should be cheaper-except BOJ and Japanese politicians.
More about Forex please in future podcasts.
I am long USD/JPY… got in too early it appears. I think the BOJ will bail me out. They are known currency manipulators and could cause quite a run if they flood the currency markets with yen. Run that printing press!!!
Dear Andrew,
Didn't like your guest's comment about gold… when I lived in former Yugoslavia, people were buying western hard currencies to protect their savings from evaporating within a month or two because of high inflation. Now I live in the "West" and inflationary trends are scary – but there are no "hard" currencies to escape to. The only one that remains and has some backing in tradition is gold. True, it's useless, but even more so is paper money or "securities". Your guest's comments show lack of experience and ignorance about what can happen when you can't trust the money of your government. It happened before, no reason why it can't happen again.