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Mary Verner named ForexLive chief economist

By Jamie Coleman  || January 8, 2010 at 13:42 GMT
|| 18 comments || Add comment

Congrats to Mary Verner who guessed the payrolls number exactly. She wins the tee-shirt and the honor of being the ForexLive chief economist until the January employment report is released next month.

Contact me at jamie@forexlive.com with your address and I’ll get the shirt in the mail.

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18 Responses to “Mary Verner named ForexLive chief economist”

  1. Michael Greenberg on January 8th, 2010 13:46 GMT

    It fits best if worn wet.

  2. FxZ on January 8th, 2010 13:50 GMT

    hopefully she will send a picture )

  3. kwplam on January 8th, 2010 13:53 GMT

    forexlive chief economist + model ? :)

  4. FxZ on January 8th, 2010 13:54 GMT

    mmmh Jamie maybe your seat is at risk :)

  5. cheg on January 8th, 2010 13:55 GMT

    I think we might have some come back in the old forex/assets correlation..

  6. FxZ on January 8th, 2010 13:55 GMT

    Cheg you mean eurusd inverse correlation as before december?

  7. cheg on January 8th, 2010 13:56 GMT

    Now we would like a in depth analysis from Mary of what to expect post figures, and a pic…

  8. cheg on January 8th, 2010 14:00 GMT

    Eur/usd up with stocks and commo. as traders will guess liquidity is here to stay and good for “risk” trades. Prefer to wait a good hour after WS opens, but these are thougts at the moment.

  9. Jamie Coleman on January 8th, 2010 14:03 GMT

    awright you letches, easy on my chief economist…

  10. kwplam on January 8th, 2010 14:08 GMT

    It looks that reflation trade model is not working. Stocks and currencies relations are not significant. The tie between currencies and comm. remains intact.

  11. cheg on January 8th, 2010 14:15 GMT

    Not a surprise it is not working. it didn’t work in Japan, won’t work in the US, the Uk or anywhere else…

  12. cheg on January 8th, 2010 14:21 GMT

    You cannot reflate an economy on the long run only by offering credit for people to consume smtg that is produced elsewhere. Until now we all know whose winning big time, the soon to become the number one economy in the world, thanks to their currency manipulation.

  13. JR on January 8th, 2010 14:28 GMT

    The reflation trade model works- but it takes time. ‘06/’07 inverted yield curve predicted the current recession. The current steep yield curve will lead to a recovery. When things are good, people never think they’ll get bad again; when things are bad, people never think things will get better. But the business cycle is always with us… There were doomsday people 20 years ago, when Clinton took office, 30 years ago when Reagan took office after the oil shocks, 40 years ago when Nixon bailed on Bretton Woods, etc etc etc. This too shall pass…

  14. Mary Verner on January 8th, 2010 15:54 GMT

    Sorry for the late reply, I’m a little under the weather this morning, so no pic!!

    Thanks for the sticking up for me Jamie, and your job is not at risk, I am a forex day trader, the last thing I want is a job. Who knew that thinking so negative about the dollar would pay off so well.

    My first order as chief economist…………buy low, sell high!!!!

  15. Mary Verner on January 8th, 2010 18:07 GMT

    Would someone at forexlive please remove cheg’s first comment….Thank You

  16. cheg on January 8th, 2010 18:14 GMT

    about the market analysis ? (because the wet thing is not my comment Mary..)

  17. Emilio on January 8th, 2010 18:23 GMT

    Hehe, mind your dirty talk about assets Cheg.

  18. cheg on January 8th, 2010 18:25 GMT

    Not a way to talk to a lady, is it ? I should have been more carefull, damn.. :) :)



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