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Currency Strategy: The Practitioner’s Guide to Currency Investing, Hedging and Forecasting

November 25, 2009 By: admin Category: EUR CAD

Currency Strategy: The Practitioner's Guide to Currency Investing, Hedging and Forecasting (The Wiley Finance Series)

Currency Strategy, Second Edition develops new techniques and explains classic tools available for predicting, managing, and optimizing fluctuations in the currency markets. Author Callum Henderson shows readers ho to use mathematical models to assist in the prediction of crises and gives practical advice on how to use these and other tools successfully. Given there such huge focus on China at the moment, the timing of this new edition is particularly important. The new e
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3 Comments to “Currency Strategy: The Practitioner’s Guide to Currency Investing, Hedging and Forecasting”


  1. This review is from: Currency Strategy: A Practitioner’s Guide to Currency Trading, Hedging and Forecasting (Hardcover)

    As a professional trader who deals with the ups and downs of the FX market from Monday to Friday for years, particularly with the extreme volatility of USD from last October till now, I am obliged to comment that the book is of little practical/predictive use. Unless you really wanna study academic theories about FX like different kinds of exchange rate regime or exchange rate model (which seldom held themselves), or get reasons to hedge your exposure “completely” for your company’s or your own investment portfolio, please give this book a pass.

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  2. This review is from: Currency Strategy: A Practitioner’s Guide to Currency Trading, Hedging and Forecasting (Hardcover)

    There is a lot of material in this book that traders should know. Some are minor details, but these are the same details that can determine whether a trade will be profitable. It is divided into three parts towards the end to suit three types of investors: (1) corporate, (2) institutional, and (3) speculator. Obviously not all three will suit you, but you can learn some things from all of them. Take a look.

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  3. I was looking for a book on foreign currency strategy well suited for readers with MBAs or degrees in economics – people not afraid to delve into the theory, but not necessarily well-versed in this particular topic. The “Wiley Finance” imprint usually does a good job of exactly this – a thorough serious treatment of a subject, but without differential equations. However, this book was too basic. It breezed by the theory at 10,000 feet with few references to academic papers/studies that could take you farther. Also, the book was poorly edited (shame -it is a 2nd edition) with repetition, rambling and grammatical errors. Callum Henderson clearly knows his subject, but demands too little of his readers and was not helped by his editors. That said, there are few alternatives on the subject that aren’t trading books replete with technical analysis or thick academic tomes that are aimed at shaping public policy rather than informing market participants. So read the book and get what you can out of it.

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