 Okay, perfect. Teddy, good morning, man. Good morning. Folks, you can reach Teddy every trading day. Sign up for the Tiger Forex report, check it out for 30 days. You get the archive of the webinar that he just did. And Teddy, some great calls in the letter this week, man. Where do you want to kick things off on a pretty interesting day in the markets and in general? Well, I think we have a little bit of a pause going on now today. We had some really good market action the past couple of trading sessions, really from Friday going into yesterday's trade. So I think right now you have a kind of like just a little stabilizing profit taking action going on right now. Overall, the dollar is in a correction. I think today it's showing a little strength just because you know, you have the bonds that are down a little bit, the 10 years down a couple, I think like four or five ticks right now, you know. So I think that's what we're seeing right now is just that it's just a little profit taking move. I wouldn't doubt that you're going to see yields kind of pull back a little bit more. That'll also add a little pressure to the dollar over the next couple of sessions. Yeah. Quite the move in the dollar. I referenced at the beginning of my program saying, man, you know, the move today doesn't look that big. Meanwhile, and I just have it going back right now, Teddy, on a 15 minute charge is five days. And I have the Thursday high and the dollar index above 113. And we were pushing almost 109 yesterday. So we're catching a little bit of a lift today, but nothing compared to kind of that run we've had. And what do you anticipate? What did you credit that move? I mean, that was quite a move from 113 to 109 coming into election day. What do you attribute that kind of negative market, actually? Is that just general statement that we may be pulling back there? Or what do you think of that move? And is that going to hold, I guess, or if you can give us some of the information you talk about in the Tiger Forex report, just through the dollar and the general trend short term versus long term, because that's quite a pullback, man, in over three or four days. Sure. I think it's really just a corrective pullback, to be quite honest with you. I really don't think that there's too many people that are getting becoming dollar bears right now and saying inflation is going to die down and stuff like that. I really think this is the calm before the storm, to be quite honest with you, going into the holidays. I mean, I can't see how we're not going to see an explosion in energy prices over the winter, especially like, I would say that probably come December, December's rollovers for the financial futures is going to be probably a nice normal rollover, and then it's going to get crazy as far as going into the new year with March contracts and stuff like that. I think the volatility you're going to see across the board is just going to start to ignite going into the holidays. And I think that what we're seeing right now is just a little bit of a stabilization period. You have the ECB, you have other central banks around the world that are now kind of doing what our Fed is doing, if you will, to some extent. So that's lessening the blow that the U.S. dollar and the Fed has had on these other markets. It's just slowing things down. The trend with Powell is still that there's going to be an aggressive rate hike going on until next year, until they really see inflation pulling back, or that we're in a recession. So that's debatable right now, depending on who you ask, is whether or not we're in one. Yeah. I mean, if we are, maybe it just has to be a tougher recession or whatever it is, because I was just talking about the jobs, right? I mean, it seems like in companies rightfully so, because if I'm a shareholder, man, I almost want companies like to go bare bone, man, cut it all down right now if you can and save some cash. But eventually that's not a good thing for the market overall, but we're not even close, man. We're getting 200, 300, 400, 500,000 jobs almost on some of the months on a pretty recent basis. And that's just not how things have to go, I think, for a turnaround to take place. Euro. I checked the Euro before you came on. You're sitting right at about parity. So I know this ties in basically to the dollar, of course. But what do you think about the Euro sitting at basically a parity on the dot right now? Well, you know what? Yesterday and even today, we're button up against multi-week highs. So I mean, I think that right now you're seeing this little pullback this morning. It's just a little profit taking move. You've got to realize the Euro went from 97 up to almost 101 in a period of a few sessions. And I think that right now what we're seeing just today, this morning, is a pullback. I mean, when the dollar originally started out on the trading session this morning, it was in a totally different direction. So this little pullback, I think, is just a profit taking move. And I would watch what happens to the yield curve. If they start to pull back again and you see a rally in the bonds in the 10 years, then I would bet you that you're going to see the Euro-US dollar higher on the day actually today. So I got a really good feeling that this trend right now, this is just a pullback and that we're going to probably at least spike high over the next couple of sessions just to push things a little bit. You know, yesterday, the yen, the Euro and the pound and multiple currencies hit their 50-day averages are right around here. So the average is when they're, you know, when they, moving averages are great for showing trend when there really is a trend. So you know that right now the downward sloping average becomes resistance. Is it going to be real resistance? Well, that remains to be seen. But that's where we're flirting with right now. And there's no reason why we wouldn't spike in there. You know, just flirt with it and then see that the dollar comes back, roaring back with strength and makes, you know, new highs against these other currencies still. It is pretty interesting on the CPI and just the overall sentiment of how long things are going to take potentially to cool off and where the Fed goes. You're obviously looking for some hot numbers if you're going to see that persist. Is that something that, you know, begins in the short term? As in tomorrow, how do traders, you know, with what you're putting out there, right? Where are you looking for the action to be tomorrow on the CPI? Is the market going to react that short term? Or is this something that's already factored in? Because it's almost like you said, yes, the Fed may begin to stop raising, but that's like a bull case. It seems like the normal case is the bull case because that's the best case scenario. What's the bull case if that's not the bull case, right? The bull case is we're kind of there and things are going to get better pretty soon because boy, the Fed's been hiking pretty rough. It's like, okay, well, that's a pretty hopeful case. And then the other side of things is that boy, things persist. So does this, as in, do these things start happening one month, two months? Where do you look for maybe that dollar, let's say, to really start the next leg higher on a timeframe basis? Or are you just looking for price action? Right now I'm looking for price action and I think that the leg higher is going to happen over the next month or so. I truly believe that we're going to see dollar strength going into the first quarter of next year. That's when you're having to start looking at where things might start to turn around because Powell right now, eventually they do have to start at least cutting back on how much they're raising the rates. That's going to start to slow things. And as like the other central banks continue to do half points and let's say we go down to a quarter, that's going to start to weaken the dollar versus these other currencies in the short run, you know? So I think definitely going into the first quarter, the dollar is going to be the bull and then next year is when we're going to start to see the turn, especially politically if Powell actually falls to political pressure and starts to stop raising rates, not cutting rates, but just stop because of whatever pressure is coming from Washington, that would have a big influence also on the dollar as well. You know, so but I just don't see that really happening and I think that we'll have to wait, that's months ahead of us right now. You know, and at that point you'll see the dollar much stronger, you'll see the bonds much lower. You know, I mean, you got to remember the yield curve has been growing at such a rapid rate. I mean, it needs to, that needs to pull back too. That would be healthy, you know, even if it's not because of cutting rates, it would be just a easing on the rate hiking, you know? So, and I think that that's what we're going to start to see come next year, you know, but not until then. You make some great points, man. I agree with a lot of them. It's pretty interesting. I saw the headline today. 7.14% the yield on the 30 and mortgage. And with that in mind, right? We have the chairman with the rhetoric he's saying, saying we're going to be higher than the market thought. We're going to keep going. So I agree, man, we'll see. Teddy, thanks for the time as always, man. We'll talk to you next Wednesday. See you next week.