Forex Blog

March 11, 2010

Which Way to Go?

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 7:55 am

As I mentioned yesterday, the currencies are now seemingly beginning to shed the risk on, risk off labels and are starting to trade more on individual fundamentals.  While I don’t want to completely abandon risk themes, I’m not going to be so quick to dismiss market movement as risk-taking or risk-aversion.

That makes it a little easier when we have mornings such as today which are a bit of a mixed bag.  I just watched the Aussie go from slightly positive to slightly negative; and the Pound and Euro are higher.

In news that is important to the global economy, inflation in China reached a 16-month high which should cause monetary tightening.  This means that there could a decrease in global demand.

As I am typing this, the US Initial Jobless Claims numbers came out and while the news was expected to have a benign market impact; it has flipped the market into risk aversion mode.  Maybe those fundamentals aren’t that important after all.

Let’s take a look at the individual currencies:

Aussie (AUD):  The Aussie started the morning in positive territory but then slipped to negative as risk aversion is starting to steer the market action.  There was “disappointing” news earlier as Australia reported the slowest amount of job gains in 6 months and unemployment stayed steady at 5.3%.  This may give the RBA a little bit of wiggle room at the next interest rate meeting and they may not have to raise rates.  I think it’s slightly amusing that this news can be viewed as negative, as just about every other economy would do anything to have such a “problem”.

Kiwi (NZD):  The Kiwi on the other hand started the morning negative and has stayed there now that risk aversion has been added to the mix.  The central bank left rates unchanged at 2.5% as was expected, but quashed hopes of a rate hike before mid-year.  Apparently falling housing prices and weak consumer spending are contributing to a slower than expected economic recovery.

Loonie (CAD):  The Loonie is down this morning on what I’m going to deem the “reverse Midas touch”.   Apparently the Bank of Canada appointed a Ben Bernanke disciple as deputy governor to potentially change the way the central bank looks at interest rate policy.  As of right now, the bank has a mandate which attempts to keep inflation at 2%, but they may want to change to a new system that targets prices rather than inflation.  All the market is seeing at this point is that Canada may get wrapped up in the nonsense that is US interest rate policy and that doesn’t bode well for higher rates.  Add that to lower oil prices, down slightly from yesterday’s move to above $82, and risk aversion.

Euro (EUR):  The Euro is mixed this morning as Greek labor strikes (riots) are causing a backlash against austerity measures.  In the meantime, the ECB maintains a cautious outlook and reiterated that interest rates are at appropriate levels.

Pound (GBP):  The Pound is higher this morning halting a three-day slide and is trading back to 1.50 vs. USD.  This much needed rest from selling came about as the Bank of England’s quarterly inflation attitudes survey showed that consumer price expectations rose to 2.5%, its highest reading since 2008.

Dollar (USD):   The Dollar is higher this morning after the 8:30AM Initial Jobless Claims report which came in higher than the expectation.  While the number 462K vs. the 460K expectation is not that significant, the market was clearly expecting a better figure and this provides pause to the notion that the US economy is in full recovery mode.  Stocks in Europe sold off on this number as traders ran to the safety of dollar and yen.

Yen (JPY):  Japanese GDP was revised lower to show growth rose at 3.8%, slower than the 4.6% reported in preliminary figures last month.  The Yen is higher on, yep; you guessed it, risk aversion.

As you can see from today’s entry, things in the forex can change pretty quickly.  That’s why is ultra-important to be aware of news events.  I should have known better than to tempt the risk gods.

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