 Welcome back folks. That was, that was flat. Nasik has down eight S&Ps off three and a half. Let's go over to our man, Mr. Teddy Cakes. That is, we do each and every Wednesday at 40 past the hour. You can reach Teddy every trading day, folks, at forex-trading-unlocked.com. That's forex-trading-unlocked.com. Teddy Cakes, what's going on, brother? Morning, guys. We've got some interesting market swings going on in some of our Asian markets today, huh? Yes. There's no doubt. We're kind of laying there in the euro and the pound, but there's no doubt that yen, I mean, as you were saying last week, it got over that 109.39, but it hasn't stayed. Thank God. Right, right. Well, today they had the Royal Bank in New Zealand that surprised everybody by not cutting rates a quarter point. So that pushed that market like a balloon underwater. It's kind of funny. The New Zealand dollar, U.S. dollar, looks just like the Hong Kong dollar U.S. dollar, or the U.S. dollar, Hong Kong dollar trade, where it's just an explosion, because they're buying dollars in Hong Kong right now. Interesting. We were just talking about Hong Kong, man. That place is in trouble, man. They are. They are. The currency is it's kind of funny. I heard you guys saying how the euro and the pound are very quiet today, and it's kind of funny, because if you really could have this situation where, you know, we have the U.S., we have the impeachment procedure that's beginning right now. Everything is quiet, you know, and then we have the tariff thing that now is coming maybe on hold again. So that doesn't seem to be phasing anything, but you had the New Zealand dollar, that's exploding, and you have the U.S. dollar yen and the U.S. dollar Swiss that look like they're starting to get kind of heavy, and I think that they're going to start to point the way of the dollar as well. Yeah, no, I can see that. The thing that's amazing, and you just brought it up, is that the market's shaking everything off, man. You know what I mean? It's just like, the dollar just shakes it off and says, okay, nothing else is new, man. You know what I mean? And because we know what the election's in a month, right? Over in Europe, right? Yeah, yes. You think we'll see some movement out there, but I can see the, I like the aspect when you're talking about that. It might be the Frank and the yen that basically tell us where this thing's going, man. I think so, and it really surprises me the most, is like, we have the British pound, which that market never really has a small range, even when it's boring and is slow, and the range has gotten so tight, and we have the Euro-U.S. dollar. Like, how can the Swiss have more volatility than the Euro-U.S. dollar that doesn't make any sense to me? Yeah, no, I'm with you. And what Teddy's saying there, this is cool, folks, because when you have anomalies like that, it's like, you have to pay attention to them, because that just doesn't stay there for a long period of time. Yeah, no way. Yeah. Exactly. There's a volatility play coming up in the pound, and I think it's going to be to the upside. I think the dollar is going to finally have a nice little turnaround over the next couple of days. We have some big numbers. I think the CPI is not going to disappoint tomorrow, but we have Powell's speech also coming into this week, and then we also have the impeachment stuff. So I think the dollar, it has no reason to rally right now, except for, obviously, currencies like the Hong Kong dollar or the Chinese one, you know, there's a reason there. But then you look at some of your lesser majors, you have the New Zealand dollar. This is a big paradigm shift for that currency. So this is probably more than a one-day rally. Then you have the Australian dollar. It looks like it may have bottomed because of this New Zealand dollar shift. So that's going to give those bulls a little bit of a lift. And then with the yen right now, if that's rallying and the dollar is falling apart against that market, well, I think the dollar index as a whole is going to probably start to leak out a little bit over the next couple of sessions. Yeah, I just brought up that Australian dollar. So this thing, you know what's amazing is that, boy, if you live in some of these other countries that your currency fluctuates a lot, then you absolutely have to be a currency expert, don't you? You got to watch a lot of things. That's for sure. It seems it. You know what I mean? It looks like I'm just looking at the Australian dollar. We get, what, 82 cents? Two years ago down to 68 cents, right? I guess if you do business out of the country, you definitely have to watch. That's for sure. Yeah. Doing business in the country a little bit different, but pretty amazing watching how this whole thing is just shaking out. And then the Mexican peso, not that we're trading that, but it was intriguing yesterday that Mexican peso bottom line took off. Mm-hmm. And you talk about a range, man. I was looking at this range because the range is pretty amazing. So, I mean, it's going today, too. I mean, you know, yesterday we had a low of 1911 or 1945. When you bring this back, it's like, man, this is like a range-bound deal that basically likes 21 to 18. And it's pretty much the range. I think it depends on where the vacationers are going and coming and going the most. Okay. Yeah. Really? No. You know what I mean? But you're right. The peso's been pretty much in a range now for a couple years like that. Listen, we have listeners that are right on the border that live both places, and they seem to have done very well. And the aspect, if they can keep their eyes on the peso versus the dollar, you know, because the bottom line is that whether it's real estate, you know, Carlos, going back and forth, you're talking about monster money when you, you know, get a move that's only two or three percent. But guess what? Two or three percent in the real estate market ends up being a big deal. Oh, it's huge. Yeah. For sure. Yeah. Absolutely. It's actually a very good play for people who are looking to buy down there. Yes. Yeah. No doubt. No doubt. What do you think about this yen? I mean, it's still hanging up there. Do you think you get a shot that we get a stronger yen? No, I think, well, yeah, I think the yen can get stronger. Yeah. I think the U.S. dollar yen right now is definitely, it's going to start to be a better trend, I believe for at least, I think the next couple of weeks, you know, especially because we don't have anything with the trade deal thing once again, you know. So I think that's going to start to thwart things with that. You know, it's going to start to make the yen stronger. And I think the dollar index is going to start to get heavy as well, especially if we do get a lift in the pound. Like the pound right now is wedging. It's going to either go up or it's going to go down, you know. And we could still see a correction down to a buck 26, but I don't think it's going to go lower than that. I think it's got a solid base and the bulls want to run with that one still. Yeah. It seems that the pound definitely wants any kind of deal done. That's, that's, it seems like every time they're close to a deal, whatever that deal is, the pound wants to run and it runs pretty good, strong, meaning getting strong, you know. We're on like three years of uncertainty, which is remarkable. Yeah. Yes. There's a little bit of clarity going on with the pound now. A little bit. Yeah. The pound's just saying, let me loose. I'm going to be fine. Okay. You know, I, you know, I, it's so strange that the pound isn't even at 128 because, you know, over the course of years you've always had, you know, 156. I remember when the pound was 211. I was like, oh my God, you go to London and like, forget it. You live in a shoebox. Yeah. Exactly. You know, who might be set up for a run too is like, you guys got to think about this. What happens if they start to finally come to some little bit of a medium ground for the Brexit issue? And then we look at the numbers in Europe, you know, everyone's looking at a slowdown in Germany, but they equate that to the economy and the consumer base. What they're not equating it to is the fact that there's been a big turnover in the manufacturing industry in, especially Germany and throughout the EU. They're transitioned to like electric cars to begin with is they're losing employment because they don't need, the cars are being made differently. There's not as many parts. There's not as many components. It's more modular. Even servicing. There's a whole bunch of jobs now that are being displaced, and they have a lot of foreigners that they don't have. Oh, intense. Listen folks, Teddy. Take care. First off, thank you so much, man. You have a great one, safe one. We look forward to speaking with you next Wednesday. Okay, guys. Thank you. Stay right there, folks. Tommy and I are coming right back. I'm certain.