Forex Blog

November 29, 2011

Forex Market Outlook 11/29/11

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 6:57 am

This morning has started out with the same vigor as yesterday’s market posting early gains on the news of a successful Italian bond auction and riding what looks to at least initially be two days of gains in a row.  Global stocks and commodities are higher to start the day, with US dollar weakness.

In Italy, 3-year notes had a bid to cover of roughly 1.5x meaning that there was good demand for the debt contrasted with last week’s German auction that was only 65% subscribed.  It should be noted that the yield on the Italian debt was close to 8%, which is a Euro-era high and nearly twice what it was as early as 2 months ago.

What does this tell us?  Well, a couple of things.  For starters, it shows that the markets have some confidence that Italy will not default and that there may be an increased pace of getting the plans in place to combat this crisis.  If the market feels that they can pick up some short-term debt at high yields before credible actions begin to reduce those yields, then that’s a pretty good trade.

But it also tells us that Germany may have some funding problems going forward, as the market deems yields too low to justify the “safe haven” of the Bund, which may not actually be that safe when Germany’s exposure to the rest of Euro zone debt is taken into consideration.  In other words, why receive 2% in Germany when you can receive 8% in Italy for nearly the same outcome.  If Italy goes down, it would likely take Germany down as well so it’s better to be compensated at a higher level. 

Today begins a two-day meeting of EU Finance Ministers that is expected to produce an agreement on how to leverage the ESFS and the actions that will be permitted at the ECB.  After pressure from the Obama administration, the need to act for Europe is now. 

On the data front, economic confidence figures in the Euro zone came in lower than expected, but wasn’t that expected?   So overall, the Euro is pulling back from earlier highs and our chart of the day from yesterday is still in tact, with EUR/USD having held that 1.3430 level.

Overnight in Japan, retail trade figures came in better than expected, showing a gain of 1.9% vs. an expected gain of .7% and household spending decreased just .4% which is better than the decrease of 1.5% that was expected.  Perhaps that had to do with the jobless rate which came in worse than expected, showing 4.5% vs. an expected 4.2% which incidentally is half of what the US jobless rate is.  Friday’s NFP numbers here should confirm the continued bad news of 9% unemployment unless discouraged worker have left the workforce.

In the UK, home prices came in higher than expected showing that inflation may remain stubbornly high despite the protestations of the BOE who claim that prices will magically fall back to their 2% target within the next year from the current 5% they are experiencing.  While this expectation is the justification for monetary easing, the hard data suggests otherwise.  Mortgage approvals came in higher than expected.

And lastly here in the US, home price figures will be do out later this morning are expected to show modest declines and consumer confidence figures are expected to show gains from last month but are still near historic lows.  I suppose the news of the better than expected “Black Friday” sales and yesterdays “Cyber Monday” sales which also came in better than expected (up 18% from last year) belie those figures.  Or it could just be boredom.

Fitch ratings agency finally acted on the Super committee’s failure on debt reduction and moved the US outlook to negative, which means that there is now a 50% of a US credit downgrade within 2 years.  Yay for politics!

Meanwhile the markets are giving back earlier gains but are likely to rebound if we can get through the remainder of the Euro session without any negative news from the Finance Ministers meeting.  So it looks like we’ll continue to trade the range, albeit a larger one.

Italian issue ripe for EUR short?

Italy issued up to €8b worth of bonds this morning with maturities ranging between 2014 and 2020. The major concern to the market has always been any evidence of further weakening in investor demand for “peripheral” sovereign paper. The Italian issue is competing this week with sales of securities in Belgium, France and Spain of as much as 10b EUR’s. The amount of the Italian auction is very “modest, but a challenging one in this economic climate.” The placement could have easily been canceled or postponed as the Italian Treasury and Prime Minister Monti could do without the headache, but, that would have been a very bad signal to the markets and we all know confidence is about perception. Capital markets smell blood and fear very quickly.

The results of the auction seem to be have been spun both ways this morning. Overall, the auction was taken down, with minimal of fuss. The EUR3.5b 11/14’s have been sold out of EUR5.26b total bids, producing a favorable cover of 1.5 (the best cover in seven-months). The 3/20’s received EUR3.3b total bids, of which EUR2.5b were filled, producing a cover of 1.34 just below the average. Finally, 9/20’s received EUR2.3b total bids, of which EUR1.5b were filled, to produce a cover of 1.54.

The EUR popped to a session high on the results, at the same time running stop-losses as macro names are quick to point out that the +7.56% new Euro era lifetime high-yield for a 10-year auction is certainly not good news. With the market focusing on the depth of demand, it has spurred the EUR higher short term, but the underlying tension remain and this could see deeper pocket investors queuing again to sell the single currency ahead of key resistance points.

Businesses and consumers who share the EUR have become more pessimistic about their prospects this month as more governments are forced to pay up for borrowing as highlighted by ballooning yields. The EC monthly survey of sentiment found that manufactures were experiencing a drop in exports, while service providers and retailers expect a slowdown in future activity and consumers become more discouraged about their economy and the job market.

The Eurogroup finance ministers meet today. The meetings are expected to focus on the disbursement of Greece’s next loan tranche rather than on the more significant issues now weighing on market sentiment. Capital markets are not holding their breath for anything of a eureka nature from participants. It seems that the December 9 summit is the next key event on the near-term policy calendar.

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EUR/USD Forex Technical Analysis Update

The EUR/USD is coming into some significant long term support levels that are showing very clearly on the weekly charts. After failing at the previous highs just below 1.4250, prices have reversed sharply and are quickly approaching the yearly lows at 1.3130. There is very little to suggest that this level will hold, given the [...]

November 28, 2011

Euro optimism sinks US bonds

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:04 am

Despite Euro-yields trading within striking distance of their record highs, the US FI market has managed to back away from its record low yields for a second-consecutive day. The US price curve dropped on speculation that European leaders are closer to resolving the debt crisis and after an increase in US Thanksgiving retail sales eased concerns that the US economy would slip into another recession.

The belly of the US curve, 10-years yields (+2.02%), rose to the highest level intra-day in two-weeks as global bourses rallied, damping demand for the relative safety of US government debt. The tail of the curve had 30-year bonds trading north of +3% for the first time in over a week. The US/Bund spread has narrowed, as US product continues to underperform its European counterpart and thus reducing the “extra yield’ that investors required for holding bunds from almost the widest in two and a half-years. Somewhat positive speculation out of Europe over the weekend end has allowed investors to take off some of the risk premium off the table.

Treasury debt prices fell amid “a trio of really good excuses including strong Black Friday sales, a rumored IMF Eur+600b plan for Italy and talk of a Germany willing to issue a common European bond with its poorer neighbors,”. Even with some of these rumors being quashed is still providing that helping hand. However, that being said the story has nonetheless alerted the market to the possibility that some assistance might come from the IMF’s mission to Rome this week and the Eurogroup meeting.

Last weeks flight out of risk assets showed more investors adding US debt to their portfolios in the latest survey results. The percentage rose to +21% from +17% in the previous week. The percentage holding fewer treasuries than their benchmarks, actually fell to +9% from +11% in the same time period. Month-to-date, the 10-year yield has traded in a 29bp range, with a high of +2.16% and a low of +1.87% and is only one-month removed from Octobers +70bp swing. The market can expect this week to be dealing with some month-end window dressing and on a debt crisis debate that’s “increasingly centering on a definitive political response to the crisis.”

Tomorrow morning we will have all of Europe eyeing the Italian bond auctions to at least gauge the appetite for periphery product if nothing else.

The Nikkei closed at 8,287 up +128. The DAX index in Europe was at 5,745 up +253; the FTSE (UK) closed at 5,5312 up +148. US indices remained in positive territory with the Dow currently trading at 11,541 up +309.

    Anatomy Of A Trade: Euro (EUR)

    Last Wednesday, I showed on the chart how the breakdown of support on EUR/USD meant that it would continue to fall until reaching new support and tehn possibly establishing a new range.  Well that’s exactly what happened.

    Take a look at last week’s chart here and compare it to today’s chart.  Notice how in the commentary I indentified the 1.3250 level as support and how price reached that level in the ensuing days, only to bounce from the lows at 1.3215 and move higher toward near-term resistance.

    In that chart I identified the 1.3430 level as resistance (as it was prior support that broke down) and that appears to be holding up so far this morning.  So how does one trade this?

    Well it depends on your time-frame for trading but these trades are known as “swing trades” and have a 2-5 day outlook and are considered intermediate term trades.  The way to trade these is simply to buy at support and sell at resistance, and use an appropriate stop-loss.

    In this case, you could have bought at 1.3250 with a 50 pip stop loss and captured 150 pips of profit, for a tidy 3:1 reward/risk ratio.  By taking trades with a positive expectancy, you are stacking the odds in your favor for success!

    Anatomy Of A Trade: Euro (EUR)

    Last Wednesday, I showed on the chart how the breakdown of support on EUR/USD meant that it would continue to fall until reaching new support and tehn possibly establishing a new range.  Well that’s exactly what happened.

    Take a look at last week’s chart here and compare it to today’s chart.  Notice how in the commentary I indentified the 1.3250 level as support and how price reached that level in the ensuing days, only to bounce from the lows at 1.3215 and move higher toward near-term resistance.

    In that chart I identified the 1.3430 level as resistance (as it was prior support that broke down) and that appears to be holding up so far this morning.  So how does one trade this?

    Well it depends on your time-frame for trading but these trades are known as “swing trades” and have a 2-5 day outlook and are considered intermediate term trades.  The way to trade these is simply to buy at support and sell at resistance, and use an appropriate stop-loss.

    In this case, you could have bought at 1.3250 with a 50 pip stop loss and captured 150 pips of profit, for a tidy 3:1 reward/risk ratio.  By taking trades with a positive expectancy, you are stacking the odds in your favor for success!

    OECD Predicts Eurozone Recession

    The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) revised downwards its growth outlook for the Eurozone countries. The OECD predicted the eurozone economy would shrink in the fourth quarter by 1 percent, and by 0.4 percent in the first quarter of next year.

    The technical definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative growth and by these standards, the OECD also predicts a recession for the UK with a 0.03 percent contraction for the 4th quarter, and a 0.15 percent contraction for the first quarter of the new year.

    Source: BBC News

    OECD Predicts Eurozone Recession

    The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) revised downwards its growth outlook for the Eurozone countries. The OECD predicted the eurozone economy would shrink in the fourth quarter by 1 percent, and by 0.4 percent in the first quarter of next year.

    The technical definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative growth and by these standards, the OECD also predicts a recession for the UK with a 0.03 percent contraction for the 4th quarter, and a 0.15 percent contraction for the first quarter of the new year.

    Source: BBC News

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