Forex Blog

March 29, 2010

Money Never Sleeps!

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 7:28 am

This week is a shortened week due to the Easter/Passover holiday for the stock market as it is closed this Friday.  Coincidentally, this Friday is also the Non-Farm Payrolls report which is the “grand-daddy” of forex market news.  It will be interesting to see how traders position themselves prior to NFP so we could see some volatility this week.

So far this morning, the Dollar is down and the commodity currencies are up in what can be described as a risk-taking day.  The Euro is giving back earlier gains as business confidence figure came in higher than expected despite the on-going problems with Greece.

In the UK, mortgage approvals sank to a 9-month low, showing signs that weak demand for housing and tightening credit conditions could cause the BOE to keep a dovish stance for some time.

In the forex market:

Aussie (AUD):  The Aussie is higher this morning on risk-taking as carry traders are seeking yield.  In addition, RBA Governor Stevens said in an interview this weekend that rates may need to be higher to contain inflation.  Retail sales figures are expected on Wednesday and a jump in this figure could prompt speculation that a rate hike is coming sooner than later.

Kiwi (NZD):  The Kiwi is higher again this morning, in a continuation of last week’s run as the best performing currency.  There is some minor news this week for New Zealand, so expect the Kiwi to continue to trade on risk themes.

Loonie (CAD):  The Loonie is higher this morning as would be expected when the market is in risk-taking mode.  With no news on tap for this week, expect the Loonie to look to oil prices and Friday’s NFP report in the US to find direction.  With a good NFP number, could this be the week that the Loonie hits parity with the US dollar?

Euro (EUR):   With all of the recent news regarding the debt crises facing Euro zone members, the market sometimes loses sight of the fundamentals.  Euro zone economic confidence figures came in at a two-year high signaling that economic recovery may be gaining traction.  This week Germany will be reporting its employment figures, with France reporting GDP.  In addition, Greece will begin issuing bonds to try to raise money to fund its deficit and how the market reacts to this offering will be telling.

Pound (GBP):  The Pound is mixed this morning ahead of GDP figures that are due out tomorrow.  In addition to the weaker-than-expected mortgage approvals, the Conservative party is gaining in the polls and have announced that they would enact an immediate reduction in spending and a cut in a proposed tax hike if elected.   The UK maintained its AAA rating by S&P, but the outlook remained negative as they have not been specific enough with how they intend to handle their debt.

Dollar (USD):   The Dollar is lower this morning, though paring losses from the overnight session.  Consumer spending numbers came in as expected and showed a gain for the fifth straight month showing signs that economic recovery is under way.   Consumer Confidence is due out tomorrow and various manufacturing reports as well all leading up to Friday’s NFP.  The expectation for Friday’s figure is a gain of nearly 200K, even though previous readings have been negative.  This is a pivotal figure this week and its importance cannot be understated.  With the stock market closed for Good Friday, a less than expected figure could send markets reeling.  Expect volatility both before and after NFP as traders position themselves ahead of the number, or have to unwind losing positions afterward.

Yen (JPY):  The Yen is lower this morning as traders are seeking yield and taking on carry trades.  A lot of money has been sitting on the sidelines waiting for the global economic recovery story to play out.  As risk appetite increases, then expect to see Yen weakness.   Japanese manufacturing outlook figures are due out later this week.

One of the reasons that the forex market is so compelling for traders is because “money never sleeps” as Gordon Gekko said to Bud Fox in the movie, Wall St.  Every country and every currency is a piece in the global puzzle and affects the way business is done.

However, the major piece to the puzzle is the US economy.  As the largest and most diverse economy, economic growth or weakness starts with the US.  And that’s why Non Farm Payrolls are such an important reading, serving as a proxy for global recovery.  So expect volatility going into this figure, and the market to react heavily to any large discrepancy from the expectation.

To learn more about how you can take advantage of world events through the currency market, be sure to check out our currency trading courses!

To follow these events live with a free, real-time practice account, click here!  Don’t miss out on the world’s fastest growing market!

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Greece Prepares Bond Offering

Greece is preparing its first bond offering since the European Union agreed to provide financial assistance to help the troubled nation deal with its staggering debt load. The seven-year bonds will carry a six percent yield and are expected to be sold about 310 basis points more than the benchmark, mid-swap rate.

“This looks a lot more confident than their other recent issues, which came with a decent discount,” said Toby Nangle, director of asset allocation at Barings Investment Services Ltd. in London. “The market’s been expecting 5 billion euros, so if they come with less than that, it’s probably a signal the demand wasn’t there.”

Source: Bloomberg

US Consumer Spending Up 0.3%

The US Commerce Department announced today that consumer spending in February increased by 0.3 percent over the previous month. The rate of increase was slightly lower than than the 0.4 percent registered in January, but maintained the five-month streak of spending increases, providing further evidence that the economy is slowly turning the corner.

The news was not all positive however as incomes remained stagnant following a 0.3 percent gain in January. The fear is that because wages failed to increase in February, March’s spending could be affected as shopper’s return to more cautious spending patterns.

Source: Associated Press

Look East for Dollar direction.

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:19 am

Greece forced the EU’s hand and they folded. Like a Cbank, lender of ‘last resort’, they are there. The Greeks get to issue their bond knowing that their backs are covered, somewhat. Now, we will get to see how warm the water is. They will be using the EU promise of an emergency fund as a ‘psychological crutch’ for the market. A confidence trick which S&P’s decided that it’s rating of Greek government debt would remain unaffected, despite a deal. Throughout all of this fiasco, a European confidence index of executive and consumer sentiment rose to 97.7, the highest print in almost two-years. Record long dollar positions have caused heightened volatility, specifically in illiquid times zones. Do not be surprised to see this continue, as the one directional lemming trade has become so ‘over-crowded’. This change of positioning, the upcoming Easter holidays and the US employment report this Friday (expectations are for a strong non-farm payroll number plus a Greek problem ‘solved’) are likely to trigger a ‘nervous’ consolidation. Expect further S/L squeezes that we witnessed on the Asian open to remain a strong possibility.

The US$ is mixed in the O/N trading session. Currently it is lower against 10 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘volatile and illiquid’ trading range.

Forex heatmap

The final US GDP print was revised lower on Friday and at the same time prices continue their upward trend. Prices are accelerating, with both headline and core-PCE revised higher once again, supporting other price reports that ‘pipeline pressure are beginning to mount’. Real-GDP growth was revised down from the previous estimate of +5.9% to +5.6%, mainly reflecting downward adjustments to residential construction and consumption. Real-PCE is now growing at an annual rate of +1.6% vs. the previous estimate of +1.7% and the original report in Jan. of a +2.0% rise. Real-final sales are now reported to have grown +1.7% and real final sales to domestic purchasers to have risen +1.4%, as expected and both down from the previous estimates. With the magnitude and composition of the revisions largely as expected, the data is expected to have no obvious implications for 1st Q growth, which analysts expect to see slowing to a +2-3%. Finally, the quarterly PCE price indexes were revised higher, with the all-items index now up +2.5% and the core measure up +1.8%, vs. gains of +2.3% and +1.6% in Feb.

The USD$ is lower against the EUR +0.13%, GBP +0.37% and higher against CHF -0.06 % and JPY -0.40%. The commodity currencies are stronger this morning, CAD +0.26% and AUD +0.87%. Last week the loonie happened to record its first weekly loss in a month. Perhaps, this is good news for the ‘longer’ term bulls. All week, we expected the one directional, oversaturated CAD trade to give up some ground. A healthy purge to relieve the weaker CAD long’s of their positions. This came in the form of the EUR finally finding some traction vs. the greenback on the back of the German-French, EU endorsed solution for Greece. Despite the loonie conceding its largest loss in over a month vs. its southern partner on Friday and an extension in the O/N session, the currency continues to outperform many of the G7 currencies. Governor Carney again has reiterated that rates will remain on hold through June. The loonie is hanging in tough, two weeks ago it was piggy-backing parity. The CAD continues to remain a good news story with stronger fundamentals. To date the USD rallies have been shallow and are met with strong resistance. Look east to Europe for direction and preferably buy CAD on dollar rallies.

The AUD found some positive momentum in the O/N session, first time in four-days, before the anticipated ‘stronger’ retail sales report on Wed. Stronger fundamentals is adding to speculation that the RBA will increase borrowing costs again next month after Governor Stevens’ comments yesterday. Futures traders are pricing in a 50% chance of a 25bp rate increase (4.00%) when the RBA next meet on April 6th to contain inflation. The RBA rhetoric is providing the support, reiterating that the benchmark borrowing costs need to climb toward ‘normal levels’ to contain inflation. The policy member’s comments reinforce the fact that the Australian ‘is in a strong position economically and there continues to be inflationary price movements’. Continue to expect better buying on deeper pull backs (0.9133).

Crude is higher in the O/N session ($80.63 up +17c). Crude prices on Friday did not stray far from home. The commodity prices remain questionable after last week’s EIA report showing a bigger than forecasted increase in inventories. The EUR has clawed its way higher on ‘the’ EU Greek deficit solution. However, crude is managing to maintain its price fragility. As we all know, a strong dollar curbs investor’s enthusiasm to own commodities. Last week, crude stocks increased four-fold, rising +7.25m barrels. The market was only expecting an increase of +1.65m barrels. Compounding the net effect, imports of the ‘black-stuff’ gained +12% to +9.4m barrels, the highest print in 6-months. On the flip side, gas stocks fell -2.72m vs. an estimated drop of only -1.5m barrels. Not to be outdone, distillate fuel (heating oil and diesel) declined -2.42m barrels to +145.7m. A decrease of -985k barrels was forecasted. The four-week US demand average was +19.36m barrels a day, up +3.6% y/y, while gas consumption averaged +8.95m barrels, up +1.2%. Finally, refineries are operating at +81.1% of capacity, up +0.6% w/w. On the face of it, there is plenty of spare capacity available for when demand picks up. There is heightening concerns for sustainable global growth, especially with Europe remaining under the microscope. Technically the market is somewhat optimistic, while fundamentally, weak demand has us not so. A strong greenback remains the commodities biggest opponent. Capital markets anticipate another build of inventories this week which should provide some further resistance to prices.

Gold prices remain contained in a tight trading range, albeit somewhat volatile. The dollar continues to cause havoc with gold technical’s and fundamentals. The surging buck, or weaker EUR, until Friday, has curbed demand for the ‘yellow metal’ as an alternative investment vehicle. On macro term, ‘the underlying problems of the heavily indebted euro zone economies are overshadowing everything at the moment and weighing heavily on the single currency’. Fundamentally it’s expected that the commodity will find some traction as investors seek an alternative to an ‘on going weakening’ of the EUR and low interest rates. However, the market is seeing little evidence of that demand appearing just yet. What about the IMF? Will they require selling gold to finance a Greek bailout? The commodities highs are getting lower and suggest that further weakness is warranted in the short term. The dollar’s direction remains the strongest indicator to wanting the metal or not ($1,111).

The Nikkei closed at 10,986 down -10. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,157 up +38; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,722 up +20. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year backed up 1bp on Friday (3.87%) and is little changed in the O/N session. Treasury prices had a rough go of it last week with supply managing to push yields to a record three month high. A lower than average demand for $118b’ worth of product raised concern that investor interest is declining as the US deficit climbs to a record. Are we in the midst of a failed US auction? Is China quietly protesting their displeasure at foreign involvement in their ‘own’ valuing of the currency? Technically and fundamentally, supply and the realization that there are more issues to come are starting to continuously weigh on Treasuries. The US marketable debt has risen to a record $7.4t, as the Obama administration borrows to sustain the US economic expansion.

March 26, 2010

US 4th Quarter Growth Pegged at 5.6%

The US Commerce Department announced today that the US economy grew at an annualized rate of 5.6 percent during the fourth quarter of 2009. Corporate profits also increased in the final three months of the year. Analysts suggest that should this trend continue, we could see meaningful employment gains, but not until later this year.

“So far, the income related to the surge in GDP is going to profits, but the next step is likely to be a clear pickup in labor income as well,” James O’Sullivan, chief economist at MF Global Ltd. in New York, said before the report. “We do expect to see a clear pickup in job growth, which leads to increases in spending.”

It is important to not however, that the actual results still fell short of the estimate of 5.9 percent. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke made the point in his testimony yesterday before the House Financial Services Committee, that despite the recent growth, the economy is still under-performing and the employment outlook remains “very weak”.

“The economy continues to require the support of accommodative monetary policies,” Bernanke said in yesterday’s testimony.

Source: Bloomberg

EU Reaches Deal to Help Greece

European Union leaders have put forward a financial aid package for Greece reported to be worth €22 billion (US$29.3 billion). The euro gained more than half a cent on the US dollar to $1.3364, after several weeks of losses tied directly to questions surrounding Greece’s future as part of the European Union.

While the news was feted in some quarters, celebrations could be short-lived as attention now turns to other EU countries facing similar struggles. Portugal and Spain have suffered recent credit rating downgrades and it could be only a matter of time before these countries turn to the EU for assistance as well.

Source: BBC News

US and China to control ‘their’ EURO

The round-table internal bickering officially began yesterday. It’s not surprising that it was the EU members verses the independent ECB, and not amongst themselves. Sarkozy had already bowed to Merkel’s desires. It was Trichet who was heading for a collision with European political leaders. He favors a European solution, not outsiders, ‘if the IMF or any other authority exercises any responsibility instead of the Euro-group, this would clearly be very, very bad’. After some arm twisting, the EU members have convinced Trichet to endorse the plan, toning down his opposition to the IMF. Under a French-German accord, each euro-region country would provide non-subsidized loans to Greece. Europe would provide the largest percentage of loans and the IMF the rest, but only when ‘Greece runs out of options’. What about Portugal’s options? What of Italy’s, Ireland’s and Spain’s options? Leaders should not be influenced by their own domestic political survival, but rather on a solution for all involved rather than concentrating on an isolated member. This ‘new agreed’ plan is managing to ease concerns that ‘the nation’s debt crisis will spread and derail the global recovery’. How long will this last? All of a sudden, The European decision making process has gone ‘Global’.

The US$ is weaker in the O/N trading session. Currently it is lower against 11 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ trading range.

Forex heatmap

Finally, US jobless claims seem to be back on target to achieve that psychological sub +400k print. Yesterday, initial jobless claims (+442k vs. +457k) were better than expected for both the current and revisions which happened to be greatly influenced by the adverse weather conditions that we have witnessed thus far this year. Analysts note that we are again encroaching on the Dec. and early Jan. low prints before the backlog of pre-holiday claims. Extended (+139k) and emergency claims (+5.56m) also fell by -16k and -330k respectively. It’s worth noting that these figures are not seasonally adjusted, unlike both the initial and continuing prints (+4.64m), due to their short history. They tend to lag initial claims by two-weeks and continuing claims by one-week.

It was only a matter of time. Trichet said his policy makers will leave emergency collateral rules in place into 2011, a reversal of his stance in Jan. when he said the ECB would not change its collateral policy ‘for the sake of any particular country’. If he had reversed his policy back to the pre-crisis rules, any downgrade by Moody’s and Co., would have meant that financial institutions could not use Greek government bonds when borrowing from the ECB.

The USD$ is lower against the EUR +0.510%, GBP +0.05%, CHF +0.33 % and JPY +0.06%. The commodity currencies are stronger this morning, CAD +0.31% and AUD +0.22%. The loonie is going no where fast, despite higher commodity prices and a Governor signaling that he is open to increasing interest rates as soon as June, as inflation and growth outpace their ‘own’ forecasts. The currency is constantly outperforming many of the G7 members. All week the loonie has hung in tough, this time last week the currency was piggy-backing parity. The CAD continues to remain a good news story with stronger fundamentals continually trying to push the loonie higher. Its equities and commodities that have temporarily stalled this one directional over saturated play. A healthy purge of weak long CAD positions has the loonie bulls adding to their positions. To date the USD rallies have been shallow and continued to be met with strong resistance. We will however experience ‘one wild and crazy’ trading sessions where technicals and fundamentals do not make sense. Despite the trend remaining your friend, the market should be looking for better levels to own the domestic currency.

For a second consecutive day, the AUD found some momentum in the O/N session after experiencing its biggest drop in two-months earlier this week. Again, RBA rhetoric provided the largest support, reiterating that the benchmark borrowing costs need to climb toward ‘normal levels’ to contain inflation. The policy member’s comments reinforce the fact that the Australian ‘is in a strong position economically and there continues to be inflationary price movements’. Another variable supporting the currency has been China, it has aided the currency to advance on speculation they may allow a revaluation of the Yuan, helping to curb rising price pressures and ensure long-term growth. The current AUD direction, like all growth currencies, depends on European factors. Now that the Greek deficit woes seemed to be curtailed by EU and IMF involvement, investors risk appetite should help to push commodity currencies higher. Expectations for low interest rates in the US and Japan will fuel risk appetite. The market expects the RBA to hike with a ‘gradual approach’. Continue to expect better buying on deeper pull backs (0.9062).

Crude is higher in the O/N session ($80.92 up +39c). Crude prices are little changed, despite commodities getting a shot in the arm. Prices have remained close to home after the EIA report reveled a bigger than forecasted increase in inventories. Earlier this week we witnessed crude stocks increasing four-fold, rising +7.25m barrels to +351.3m w/w. The market was only expecting an increase of +1.65m barrels. Compounding the net effect, imports of the ‘black-stuff’ gained +12% to +9.4m barrels last week, the highest print in 6-months. On the flip side, gas stocks fell -2.72m barrels to +224.6m vs. an estimated drop of only -1.5m barrels. Not to be outdone, distillate fuel (heating oil and diesel) declined -2.42m barrels to +145.7m. A decrease of -985k barrels was forecasted. The four-week US demand average was +19.36m barrels a day, up +3.6% y/y, while gas consumption averaged +8.95m barrels, up +1.2%. Finally, refineries are operating at +81.1% of capacity, up +0.6% w/w. On the face of it, there is plenty of spare capacity available for when demand picks up. There is heightening concerns for sustainable global growth, especially with Europe remaining under the microscope. Technically the market remains optimistic, while fundamentally weak demand has us not so. A strong greenback is commodities biggest opponent.

After struggling all week, gold managed to find some traction and tentatively advance as the EUR firmed vs. the dollar. Over the last four-trading sessions the yellow metal managed to fall to a six-week low as the EUR plummeted -1.6% vs. the greenback. It seems that a stronger buck has curbed demand for the ‘yellow metal’ as an alternative investment vehicle. All week the commodity has found it difficult to find or maintain any traction and has been curtailed to a tight volatile trading range. Fundamentally it’s expected that the commodity will find support as investors seek an alternative to an ‘on going weakening’ of the EUR and low interest rates. However, the market is seeing little evidence of that demand, perhaps further weakness needs to be witnessed before that scenario plays out. What about the IMF? Will they require selling gold to finance a Greek bailout? The commodities highs are getting lower and suggest that further weakness is warranted in the short term. Year-to-date, support remains at $1,075-80, but looks vulnerable. The dollar’s direction remains the strongest indicator to wanting the metal or not ($1,098).

The Nikkei closed at 10,996 up +167. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,110 down -22; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,705 down -23. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year backed up 5bp yesterday (3.85%) and is little changed in the O/N session. All this week’s supply and the fear for sovereign debt have been able to push momentum towards higher yields along the curve. Yesterday’s 7-year auction was poorly received. Yields on the 7-year note came in at +3.374%, above the +3.33% yield on the WI’s, technically the government was made to pay up to offload product. Bid-to-cover was 2.61, below the 2.98 Feb print and under the four-auction average of 2.83. Indirect bidders took down 42% of supply, better than the 40.3% last month, but well below the four-auction average of 49.7%. Again, yesterday’s issues were all about ‘uncertainty and liquidity, rather than levels’.

March 25, 2010

A “Normal” Day!

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 7:37 am

This morning, the market is in risk-taking mode as a series of better than expected economic figures have come out showing signs that the global economy is recovering.  In New Zealand, GDP grew at its highest levels in almost two years, meeting analyst expectations.

Earlier today the UK reported much better retail sales figures, which rose by the most in almost 2 years.  This has sent the Pound higher this morning, despite the concerns about the budget and other news weighing on the currency.

In the US initial jobless claims came in lower than expected but still at an abysmal loss of 442K jobs.  While it is good that they weren’t worse than expected, a number this high is not good as it shows that companies are not confident that economic conditions are improving.

In the currency market:

Aussie (AUD): 
Earlier today, an RBA official stated that, “Australian borrowing costs need to continue being moved gradually toward “more normal levels” to prevent the nation’s economic rebound from stoking inflation, according to a Bloomberg report.  This could put gradual rate hikes back into play for the Aussie, as the market has been expecting a pause.  The major underlying factor is going to be Chinese demand, which could increase irrespective of a global recovery.

Kiwi (NZD):  Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose .8% from the previous quarter as consumer spending and manufacturing increased at the fastest pace in over 2 years, meeting analyst expectations.  This comes in advance of an income tax reduction planned for mid-May, as well as potential rate hikes which were expected around mid-year.

Loonie (CAD):  Yesterday, as expected, BOC Governor Carney set the stage for rate hikes, coming possibly as soon as the June meeting.  An earlier pledge to keep current rates through June was conditional on the outlook for prices.  Should the BOC hike rates in June, Canada would be the first G-7 country to do so.

Euro (EUR):  The Euro fell below 1.33 vs. USD earlier today but has since rebounded as the ECB has agreed to extend emergency collateral measures beyond this year.  This comes in advance of the EU summit which is expected to come to some sort of agreement over Greece.  In the meantime, Germany is still pushing for IMF involvement in any potential bailout which weakens the Euro as investors see this as a case of not “being able to manage their own house.”

Pound (GBP):  The Pound is higher this morning against all but the commodity currencies, as retail sales figures crushed estimates and rose the most in almost 2 years.  This bodes well for economic recovery in the UK, however yesterday’s meeting on the budget didn’t produce the deficit-reducing measures that some had hope to see despite the upcoming elections.  Because unemployment has not risen as much as expected, spending cuts will be postponed.

Dollar (USD): 
  The Dollar is lower today against all but the Yen on risk-taking as the “good news” is that initial jobless claims were “only” 442K, vs. the expectation of 450K.  This means that US rate hikes are moving further out raising the cost of capital would even further harm the employment situation.  Not really much more to say here, classic risk-taking day.

Yen (JPY):  The Yen is weaker today on risk-taking themes s well as news coming from the Bank of Japan (BOJ) that they are prepared for further monetary easing.  This comes in advance of tomorrow’s reading of CPI, which is sure to show deflation.  The expectation is for prices to have fallen 1.1%.  Should the number come in worse than expected, then major monetary expansion could be in order which could send the Yen much lower.

Today is a more “normal” day for the forex market, with a few economic reports spread among different world economies.  There was no major bomb or surprise, and for just one more day investors can breathe easy that the world as we know it is not coming to an end.

Part of the problem with financial markets is that they are VERY impatient.  Fear, elation, boredom all comes into play on a daily basis.  So it is definitely important to not only be able to understand the economic figures, but also to be able to get a “feel” for the market.

And that’s what I try to accomplish here every day!

To learn more about how you can take advantage of world events through the currency market, be sure to check out our currency trading courses!

To follow these events live with a free, real-time practice account, click here!  Don’t miss out on the world’s fastest growing market!

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US Jobless Claims Fall More Than Expected

The number of new jobless claims in the US fell by 14,000 to 442,00 for the week ending March 20th. This was fewer than expected and is a sign that the rate of job losses continues to slow as American employers struggle to keep their payrolls intact. While this is good news, for any chance of sustained growth, job losses must be reversed and new jobs must be created before consumer spending can help kick-start the world’s largest economy back to positive growth.

“There is continued firming in the labor market,” Bill Hampel, chief economist at the Credit Union National Association in Washington, said before the report. Initial claims above 400,000 are not yet “consistent with growing employment. Once the job numbers start to improve and household income starts rising, people will have more to spend,” he said.

Source: Bloomberg

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