Hi cjohnsondies,
Don't be worried about hijacking this thread, it's turned into a joke, anyway. The losers who'll never be successful are bitter about it all they could do is attack those people that are successful.
To your question, this is something I pay attention to. In terms, each currency will have a bullish or bearish bias across all pairs. Therefore, for instance, if AUD is bullish it could go up against EUR (EURAUD heading down), but if JPY is also bullish, AUDJPY may be fairly flat while CADJPY is dropping hard. Make sense?
But also, each currency predominates at distinct times. During 2011, AUD was bullish and I would never be on opposite sides of it. But its dominance is currently weakening and I would be more prone to be on opposite sides.
For another instance, although EUR represents the world's biggest GDP, it can readily be secondary, therefore it wouldn't be uncommon for me to be bullish on EURGBP and bearish on EURAUD, for instance. Right now the only time it seems to dominate is .
Pretty much the only pairs I will never be on opposites sides of are USD pairs and JPY pairs.
Rob