Forex Blog

January 26, 2012

EUR Top is Where Now?

The market sure did not see this one coming from the Fed. An “unambiguous and aggressive” statement from US policy makers is certainly laying the groundworks for QE3. With unemployment elevated and inflation subdued, Helicopter Ben can certainly put this option back on the table. The Fed has set a long term inflation target of +2%, a level they expect to fall short of this year and next. Despite the US economy appearing to be picking up steam in manufacturing, housing and employment, the goto excuse for Central Bankers, Europe and its debt laden outliers, is allowing the Fed to prepare for a third round of large-scale asset purchases.

The Fed’s extended commitment to low dollar funding costs is broadly bearish for the USD and bullish for higher-yielding G10 and EM currencies. The risk addicts are getting what they want. CAD at parity, AUD at new yearly highs, Kiwi, Mexico and other growth currencies following suite. The dollars demise has “emerging” Cbankers intervening to stem the speed of domestic appreciation and other G10 just worried for now about their appreciation. The Fixed Income dealers are taking the middle of the US yield curve sharply lower as pricing for policy tightening gets pushed back further into the future.

With the market lapping up this risk, it is intensifying the EUR bear squeeze. For now, the short positions have some of the crosses working in their favor. USD/CHF sales continue to weigh on the cross, with EUR/CHF being sold to session lows in Europe. There has been rumors of SNB interest in the mid 1.20’s over the last couple of sessions as the cross gravitates towards that Central Bank floor barrier.

An 18-month ‘exceptionally’ low yield extension will obviously take some time to price in, a job certainly not made any easier by EUR record shorts, weak shorts and a plethora of new hopeful position taking, the type who are trying to find the ideal speculative EUR top ahead of the record periphery debt issues this quarter. At such lofty heights, how much more to the top if private lenders accept a lower Greek coupon deal?

US firmer data bodes well for risk. Analysts expect a strong headline print from US durable goods this morning (+2.5%, m/m on the headline), new home sales to have reached a new yearly high and jobless claims to have risen in line with consensus. No one can argue that a dovish Fed, coupled with strong data will help risk and trigger more weak EUR stops and option barriers. Wait until the world stops spinning and pick your levels!

Forex heatmap

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January 6, 2012

Yen and Aussie have their own Battle

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 9:45 am

Finance Minister Azumi says Japan is closely watching the EUR’s decline versus the Yen. Currently, the market is seeing more Yen intervention dangers if the declines accelerate much further. Today’s move is putting pressure on the BoJ/MoF to try and curb their currency strength. The market should not expect the recent US criticism of Japanese intervention policy to influence any of Japan’s decisions. A stone throw away and we have the AUD starting to look like “more” than just a commodity currency. Its strong performance against the EUR indicates that Aussie can be seen as a key alternative as more investors shy away from EUR looking for yield and growth alternatives.

Below are some other highlights of the week:


Asia

  • CNY: Manufacturing PMI rose +1.3pts to 50.3 last month. Analysts believe this as a “relatively weak print given mildly supportive seasonal patterns in December”. Manufacturers tend to push production higher ahead of their Chinese New Year long holidays. Data does not seem to be easing the anxiety about a hard landing. On the flip side, non-manufacturing PMI rebounded to 56 in December from 49.7 in November; and suggests that the services sector is holding up relatively well.
  • SGD: Advanced estimate for Singapore’s Q4 GDP showed a +4.9%, q/q. An annualized fall, largely in line with the consensus forecast. However, the government revised down Q3 growth to +1.5%, q/q.
  • INR: The finance ministry announced an easing of restrictions on qualified foreign investor (QFI) direct investment in Indian equities. QFI’s will be allowed to invest directly in the equity market in two weeks time.
  • THB: Thai inflation for December came in at +3.5%, y/y, well below market expectations for +4.0%. The market believes that the Thai Central Bank intervened this week.
  • AUD: Aussie trade surplus fell to AUD1.4b in November, weaker than the AUD1.7b consensus. Both import and export momentum has slowed. The October trade balance was revised lower to AUD1.4bn from AUD1.6bn. Their largest trading partner, China saw imports from Australia on a three-month/three-month basis slow from the October peak of +28% to +9% in November (Analysts think it could be due to a lagged effect).
  • PHP: The country’s inflation eased more than expected, supporting the case for a rate cut. The inflation rate slowed to an 11-month low in December of +4.2%, much below the +4.7%.Market expects the central bank to cut its policy rate by -25bps in Q1.

July 29, 2011

Central Bank of Ireland Cuts Growth

The Central Bank has lowered its economic forecast for the year, predicting the economy will grow by 0.8 per cent in 2011.

That’s slightly lower than the bank predicted in its April bulletin, when it said the economy would grow by 0.9 per cent.

The bulletin also warned that gross national product, which excludes repatriated profits of multinational firms, may decline by about 0.3 per cent. However, it predicted stronger growth in 2012, with gross domestic product expected to expand by 2.1 per cent and a rise of 1 per cent in GNP.

“The broad narrative behind these figures remains unchanged. Exports continue to grow while domestic demand remains weak, although the contraction in the latter is gradually easing,” the bank said.

Irish Times

July 27, 2011

Aussie inflation accelerates

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 6:33 am

Australia’s consumer prices rose more than forecast in the second quarter as high cost of food and fuel put pressure on inflation.

Prices rose by 3.6% in the three months to the end of June from the same period last year, latest data showed.

Food prices have been rising due to the devastation caused by floods and cyclones earlier this year.

The Australian dollar hit a record high against the US dollar on concerns that central bank will raise interest rates.

BBC News

Boehner debt plan falters, Obama considers veto

The White House has warned that President Obama could veto a debt limit plan proposed by top House Republicans.

Meanwhile, Speaker John Boehner’s plan to trim public spending and raise the limit met with resistance from rank-and-file members of his own party.

A House of Representatives vote on the plan was delayed from Wednesday after doubts arose over the cuts it proposed.

Washington remains deadlocked as a deadline to increase the government’s borrowing authority looms on 2 August.

BBC News

FX Market is not Boring just Exhausting

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

All the fun was in the Aussie last night, with the doves being trounced by the hawks as inflation numbers pushed the currency to post a new float high. Why can it not be this easy to trade the dollar? There is no fundamental trading at the moment, rather the market moves on the bickering qualities of Washington politicians.

With the debt status quo on hold, how much of a US credit downgrade has the market priced in so far? With next Tuesday even closer the average pundit expects ‘the’ sovereign downgrade to be worth another 4-5% loss to the dollar. A contrarian would probably argue that with so many foreign holders of US securities, they likely do not have sufficient dollars on hand to fund positions. Rather than liquidate in the hole, they could prefer to finance “margin calls” requiring them to buy dollars. These markets are not boring, just exhausting!

The US$ is mixed in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 10 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a somewhat ‘subdued’ session.

Forex heatmap

A mixed bag of US data yesterday did little for the dollar as the market brushed aside all fundamentals to continue to pressurize the buck because of uncertainty over the US debt debate stalemate.

US home prices -4.5% decline in the 20-City May S&P’s Case-Shiller house price index was in line with market expectations, but lower than the adjusted April reading of -4.2%. This is the twelfth consecutive deterioration in the y/y pace. It’s worth noting that on a monthly non-seasonally adjusted terms, the survey managed to print a +1% increase, while the seasonally adjusted data was unchanged on the month. Analysts note that the seasonally adjusted print is consistent with other house price surveys. Big picture, with weaker house sales the market should not expect the improved scenario to turn into a succession of positive monthly changes. Digging deeper, eleven cities saw price advances while nine saw declines.

US new home sales fell unexpectedly last month, decreasing-1% to a seasonally adjusted print of +312k vs. +315k, further proof of continued softness in this sector of the US economy. Despite last week’s NAR report of sales of previously occupied homes falling to a seven month low the market had been expecting a seasonally adjusted y/y rise of +1.2%. Surprisingly, with soft demand prices increased, up +7.2% y/y and +5.8% month-over-month. Analysts noted that the ‘glut’ of new homes on the market has been depleted to a record low (-1.8%, m/m to +164k), because of builders cutting deep their inventories. Supplies would take 6.3 months to exhaust, down from +6.4 months in May. The builders arch enemy has been the deeply discounted foreclosure supply and the shadow inventories estimated at 2.2m units.

A pleasant surprise was US consumer confidence levels unexpectedly rising this month (59.5 vs. 57.6), despite the stuttering labor market conditions. Digging deeper, the index of present conditions advanced to 35.7 from 36.6, while the expectations index touched 75.4 vs. 71.6. Of late, household moods have come under pressure from weak US growth concerns, high unemployment, rising food and energy prices and the governments borrowing concerns. These variable are bound to affect consumer spending patterns with households remaining ‘apprehensive about the future’ according to the conference board.

Finally, in contrast to the Dallas Fed survey on Monday, economic activity in the Fed’s Richmond index was mixed in July, with the manufacturing index easing to-1 this month from three months ago, shipments held steady at -1 and the service sector revenues advanced to 7 from-4.

The dollar is higher against the EUR -0.11% and lower against GBP +0.10%, CHF +0.10% and JPY +0.27%. The commodity currencies are stronger this morning, CAD +0.21% and AUD +0.99%.

The loonie is wearing the ‘safer heaven’ hat as investors push the currency towards its four-year high. It’s a currency on steroids, performing well on the crosses especially CAD/JPY and EUR/CAD. The currency is still riding Carney’s hawkish coat tail comment last week that has futures traders pricing in at least one more hike by year-end despite a subdued CPI print. Month-to-date, it’s the fourth best trading currency among its 16 most-traded counterparts. It seems that the markets are now realizing that a reduction in the US credit status is going to have to be priced in overtime.

The currency continues to benefit from expectations of continued reserve manager demand and widening rate differentials. The futures market is moving to fully price in an October hike from Carney, while reserve managers continue to diversify newly accumulated reserves away from the USD and EUR. Technically, the loonie will be expected to underperform against MXN, SEK and AUD in the short term as they too offer even better value at current levels in a pro-risk environment.

The Canadian dollar is guilt free from association to its largest trading partner on many fundamental fronts. Investors are looking forward to this Friday’s GDP print for further currency bullish confirmation. Currently, the market is in dollar sell uptick mode (0.9417).

The AUD vaulted to a post float high this morning after the market digested a higher than expected second quarter inflation print. With Australia inflation surprised higher, it points to rate hike rather than a cut. Core-CPI rose by +0.9% on the quarter and +3.6% on the year against forecasts of +0.7% and +3.4%. The print is a blow for the doves who expect Governor Stevens to perform a rate cut before the year is out, beginning with a 25bp cut in December.

Coupled with ongoing dollar negativity, around US politicians inability to strike a deal before next Tuesday and the stronger than expected inflation figures means Aussie buying dip theory remains in vogue, with strong support ahead of 1.10 and option resistance at 1.11 and 1.1150 this morning.

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($99.21 -$0.38c). Oil prices received a boost from two quarters yesterday, first, US consumer confidence climbed from an eight-month low and second, on concern that the country will default on its debts sending the dollar lower. The market will now shift its attention towards fundamentals with this mornings weekly inventory report expected to reveal another drawdown on stocks.

The bull’s believe the debt issue will weaken the dollar and in turn provide support for commodities. The bear’s believe that a failure to raise the debt ceiling will be bad for commodity demand. Until the market can expect some sort of US debt resolution, the oil market should look forward to remaining volatile. Big picture, failing to raise the debt ceiling would mean the US could either default or have to cut spending on a variety of social services, which would have a negative affect on domestic oil demand, translating into lower prices.

Gold prices rose for the third consecutive session as the “prolonged” US debt stalemate boosts demand for the yellow metal as a haven. There was another record print this morning after US lawmakers failed to agree on hiking the federal debt limit again, raising fears over a possible default and boosting the appeal of bullion versus alternative asset classes.

Year-to-date, the yellow metal has advanced +15.3% and +7.8% this month alone, heading for its eleventh consecutive annual gain. Despite many believing that a deal will be done, “Rational” fear ahead of “the” decision continues to pressurize the dollar, hurting bonds and benefiting commodities. The metal is on course for its biggest monthly advance in three-months on concerns over euro-zone debt levels as well as the US debt negotiations. Monetizing US debt rather than fiscal consolidation has investors demanding the metal as a protection of wealth. In real terms you are not making any money by just holding cash, so there is demand for gold as a store of wealth. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on pullbacks until proven wrong ($1,626+$7.60c).

The Nikkei closed at 10,047 down-51. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,325 down-24; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,913 down-16. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year eased 3bp yesterday (2.95%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

Some of the pressure was taken off the long end of the US yield curve yesterday, a day after printing two-week high yields, on concerns that the debt debate stalemate would cause the loss of economic growth. Weaker US home sales data helped the belly of the curve to advance. Even a $35b 2-year auction that was not a disaster provided ‘some’ support.

Although not a great auction, speculation that the US lawmakers will agree to lift the nation’s debt limit in time to avoid a default boosted investor demand. The issue sold at a yield of +0.417%. The bid-to-cover was 3.14 compared to the average of 3.19 the prior four sales. The indirect bid was +27.2%, beating last months +22%, but lagging the +31% average.

Today we get the second of this week’s three auctions, $35b of five-year paper, and tomorrow’s $29b of seven-year debt. Expect dealers to do their magic and seek a concession, unless the market gets sideswiped from the debt debate.

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July 26, 2011

India hikes rates more than expected

India’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate more than forecast to quell the fastest inflation among major economies, spurring a slide in stocks and gain in the rupee.

The Reserve Bank of India increased the repurchase rate to 8 percent from 7.5 percent, it said in a statement in Mumbai today. None of the 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predicted today’s decision. Twenty estimated a quarter-point rise, while the remainder expected no change.

Bloomberg

U.K. Growth Slows +0.2%

Growth in the UK economy slowed in the three months to 30 June, partly because of the extra bank holiday in April.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 0.2% in the second quarter, according to the Office for National Statistics, down from 0.5% in the previous quarter.

The ONS said growth had also been slowed by some other one-off factors, including the Japanese tsunami.

Chancellor George Osborne said the growth was good news, but Ed Balls accused him of choking the recovery.

BBC News

July 5, 2011

Weaker Euro Retail Sales

A 1.1 percent decline in Eurozone retail sales is the latest indicator to suggest the Eurozone economy is likely entering a weak period – the fact that Germany led the way in taking retail sales lower is cause for outright concern. If the Eurozone’s dominant economy is indeed weakening, this could lead to a shift in tone from the region’s central bank.

For the past two months European Central Bank officials have raised expectations of a rate hike with President Jean-Claude Trichet all but committing to a rate hike later this month with more to follow. This latest result, however, could force the Bank to rethink its position.

“As signs of an economic slowdown pile up, we continue to think that, while the ECB will deliver an interest rate hike this week, it is likely to hold off from hiking rates further this year and probably for the most part of 2012 as well,” said Emilie Gay, European economist at Capital Economics.

Source: The Canadian Press

April 20, 2011

Swedish Krona Higher on Interest Rate Hike

The Swedish Krona climbed to a 2 1/2 year high against the US dollar after Sweden’s central bank – the Riksbank – hiked rates for the sixth time in the past fifteen months. The latest increase added another 25 points to the benchmark rate now set at 1.75 percent.

Sweden’s currency has gained 4.7 percent this year against a basket of its nine most-traded peers, the best performer tracked by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Currency Indexes. The gains come as rising economic growth fuels consumer spending and inflation, forcing policy makers to raise borrowing costs.

Source: Bloomberg

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