Taking Profits Off The Table In The Short Euro ETF Trade (EUO, FXE)
June 11th, 2010
Six months ago, in my newsletter True Wealth, I told readers it was time to bet against the euro: This type of opportunity doesn’t come along very often. It’s time to bet against the euro. It’s overpriced. A mountain of factors is against it. And a downtrend has been established – so it’s time to make the trade.I recommended the ProShares UltraShort Euro ETF (NYSE:EUO). It’s an exchange-traded fund designed to rise 2% if the euro falls by 1%. My subscribers are up nearly 40% since December…

But today, the euro is in nearly the opposite position it was in back in December, as I’ll explain. Now, it is time to close out our position and take our profits.
Back in December, investors were extremely optimistic about the euro and pessimistic about the U.S. dollar. Today, six months later, we’re in the opposite position… The sentiment surveys show investors are at record levels of pessimism about the euro.
Traders are putting their money where their mouth is, too. Looking at the “commitments of traders,” you can see they’ve bet against the euro in larger numbers than ever before – by far. The thing is, all these bets will have to be unwound… and the way they are unwound is with a “buy” order for euros.
Back in December, nobody talked about Europe’s woes yet. I wrote about Greece back then and what was possible. But nobody was worried about Europe yet. Now, investors are worried… We’re hearing talk about the potential collapse of the euro. Now that’s pessimism!
Also, back in December, I showed how the euro was wildly overvalued – it was at least 35% overvalued versus the U.S. dollar. But now that the euro has fallen from $1.50 to $1.20, it is no longer wildly overvalued. It’s fallen back to a “normal” range.
Could the euro keep crashing? Absolutely. Could it go to parity with the U.S. dollar… or even lower? Absolutely.
But we have made an extraordinary gain in six months, particularly on a simple currency trade. I am afraid we could see a violent rally higher in the euro, wiping out some of our profits. Then the euro will return to its downtrend.
Sizing it up now, with all the negative sentiment, and with all the bets against it, I’d be more inclined to buy the euro than sell it. I’d need to see an uptrend first, of course. But even then, the euro is not cheap enough. I typically only do currency trades when I have all my ducks in a row, like we did in December.
So it’s not time to buy the euro. It’s simply time to close our bets against it and pocket our big profits.
Here are some more details we have put together on the ProShares UltraShort Euro ETF (NYSE:EUO) and the CurrencyShares Euro ETF (NYSE:FXE) below:
ProShares UltraShort Euro ETF (NYSE:EUO)
The investment will seek to replicate, net of expenses, twice the inverse performance of the EUR/USD daily price change. The fund normally invests assets in financial instruments with economic characteristics inverse to the index. It may employ leveraged investment techniques in seeking its investment objective.
CurrencyShares Euro ETF (NYSE:FXE)
The investment seeks to track the price of the Euro, net of trust expenses. The fund seeks to reflect the price of the Euro. The sponsor believes that, for many investors, the shares represent a cost-effective investment relative to traditional means of investing in the foreign exchange market.
Related posts:
- Technical Trade Video: How To Trade 2012 For Major Profits (SPY, GLD, SLV, USO, UUP)
- Three Long/Short ETF Ideas For Euro Zone Debt Drama (FXB, FXE, EWI, EWG, GXF, EZU)
- The Short Trade: Why This This Inverse ETF Is Still In Play (SPXU, SPY, SDS, SH, SSO)
- VIX Trade: The Inverse VIX Short Term ETN Gets Hot Again (XIV, TVIX, VXX, VXZ, ZIV, VQT)
- The Holiday Short Squeeze & Oil Trade Idea (SCO, VXX, UUP, UDN, USO)


Most Comments