しつこく豪ドルを買っています、が、今朝、また外為ドットコムの鈴木さんのお話的なチャートが現れたので(理解不足でしたら、鈴木さんにはすいませんが)参考にして7:10頃から下値をぬけてボリンヂャーバンドのミドルを抜けられなかったので、AUD/JPYを売っりました。そんなことをしている最中に、7:40位のところできれいにダイバーヂェンスが起こり上昇してきました。その後もきれいに早朝に迷っていた辺りで、一度止まり高値を目指して上昇しています。久しぶりにきれいなチャート見ました。ではみなさま本日一日Good Luckです。
ちなみに昨日の新聞(The Australian110329)によりますと↓だそうです。<色は私>

AUSTRALIA faces a flood of foreign capital as the mining boom boosts export receipts and makes the country a more attractive place to invest in, according to Reserve Bank research.>
Inflows could increase by as much as 10 per cent of GDP, or about $120 billion a year, as global investors decide to invest in Australian resource projects and companies, reported The Australian. The inflow would put further upward pressure on the Australian dollar, says the June 2010 paper, “The effects of large increases in capital inflow for Australia”, by RBAeconomist Kristina Clifton. Strong corporate demand over the weekend pushed the Australian dollar to a post-float high of $US1.0296. The research paper, which was included in advice to the RBA board and obtained by The Australian under the Freedom of Information law, presents a new twist on the resources boom. Not only is the economy being inundated with direct foreign investment in resource projects, but the boom could create a virtuous cycle in which portfolio investors also choose to sink their funds in the Australian dollar. The paper says a key policy response for Australia to offset this upward pressure would be to invest offshore through a new future fund, such as a stabilisation fund or a sovereign wealth fund.“Offshore investment has the advantage that it will reduce the upward pressure on the real exchange rate and resulting negative effects on the tradable and import-competing sectors,” it says. Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens has called on the government to consider setting up such a fund to ensure that Australia does not waste the proceeds of the resources boom, and that the economy is less adversely affected by sharp swings in national income. Several leading business figures have also supported his call. The Greens have publicly support the policy, but not Labor or the Coalition. The paper says Australia will be more attractive to investors now that interest in theUS currency is waning. The prospect of inflows to Australia increasing is in step with the declining share of theUS economy in global GDP, says the paper. Ms Clifton says some emerging countries are now raising the possibility “that the US dollar will not be the sole reserve currency in the longer term”. Private investors are likely to increase their portfolio investment in Australia “in anticipation of the resource boom”, she says.The potential size of the inflow is based on the assumption that foreign investors might increase their holdings of Australian assets by about 10 per cent over a two-year period.