Forex Blog

February 1, 2012

Central Bankers Weaken Their Currencies, Boost Gold

By Sam Mattera
Benzinga Guest Writer

Since the turn of the year, nearly every asset class has been on a tremendous bull run.

Precious metals in particular have benefited, as gold and silver have rallied back from their recent lows. Gone are calls for a “gold bubble”. Gold has risen in price throughout January and now sits near $1745 per ounce. Silver has gained as well, and is currently approaching $34 per ounce.

The precious metals may have been getting a boost from the actions of central bankers, who continue to make the yellow metal a seemingly great alternative currency.

Last week, in the Federal Reserve’s statement, the Federal Open Market Committee promised to extend low rates through 2014, and possibly into 2015. In August the Fed had promised to keep rates low until at least mid-2013. Now, the FOMC has extended that promise for at least an additional year.

In August, that rate pledge drew three dissenting votes from regional Fed presidents. However, as the FOMC’s membership shifts from year-to-year, those members no longer have a say in the FOMC’s decision.

Philadelphia Fed’s Charles Plosser —who dissented in August but now no longer has a vote—spoke on Wednesday and derided the move. He attacked it from a bullish perspective, continuing to state his long-standing opposition: that the economy is improving and low rates will not be appropriate for much longer. In that case, to prevent runaway inflation, the Fed would have to hike rates prior to their promised date.

While keeping rates low may contribute to economic growth in the short term, the move has begun to draw fire from some commentators and money managers.

In his monthly letter, Bill Gross—the world’s largest bond fund manager—attacked the move, stating that it could actually have a negative effect.

Ultimately, if the Fed keeps interest rates low, it could spur inflation as investors pile out of a weakening dollar in favor of precious metals. Under this scenario, investors may anticipate the US dollar index to fall while the price of gold may rally.

Still, as other central bankers continue to ease, the dollar index may not give much ground. The US dollar index is a measure of the dollar’s value against other fiat currencies.

Bank of England officials have mentioned undertaking further quantitative easing, while the European Central Bank continues to step into the European bond market from time to time. The Bank of Japan may attempt to weaken its yen once again, in the face of slumping Japanese manufacturing.

The US dollar index dropped 0.5% during early trading on Wednesday, as the EUR/USD pair moved up over 0.64%.

Central Bankers Weaken Their Currencies, Boost Gold

By Sam Mattera
Benzinga Guest Writer

Since the turn of the year, nearly every asset class has been on a tremendous bull run.

Precious metals in particular have benefited, as gold and silver have rallied back from their recent lows. Gone are calls for a “gold bubble”. Gold has risen in price throughout January and now sits near $1745 per ounce. Silver has gained as well, and is currently approaching $34 per ounce.

The precious metals may have been getting a boost from the actions of central bankers, who continue to make the yellow metal a seemingly great alternative currency.

Last week, in the Federal Reserve’s statement, the Federal Open Market Committee promised to extend low rates through 2014, and possibly into 2015. In August the Fed had promised to keep rates low until at least mid-2013. Now, the FOMC has extended that promise for at least an additional year.

In August, that rate pledge drew three dissenting votes from regional Fed presidents. However, as the FOMC’s membership shifts from year-to-year, those members no longer have a say in the FOMC’s decision.

Philadelphia Fed’s Charles Plosser —who dissented in August but now no longer has a vote—spoke on Wednesday and derided the move. He attacked it from a bullish perspective, continuing to state his long-standing opposition: that the economy is improving and low rates will not be appropriate for much longer. In that case, to prevent runaway inflation, the Fed would have to hike rates prior to their promised date.

While keeping rates low may contribute to economic growth in the short term, the move has begun to draw fire from some commentators and money managers.

In his monthly letter, Bill Gross—the world’s largest bond fund manager—attacked the move, stating that it could actually have a negative effect.

Ultimately, if the Fed keeps interest rates low, it could spur inflation as investors pile out of a weakening dollar in favor of precious metals. Under this scenario, investors may anticipate the US dollar index to fall while the price of gold may rally.

Still, as other central bankers continue to ease, the dollar index may not give much ground. The US dollar index is a measure of the dollar’s value against other fiat currencies.

Bank of England officials have mentioned undertaking further quantitative easing, while the European Central Bank continues to step into the European bond market from time to time. The Bank of Japan may attempt to weaken its yen once again, in the face of slumping Japanese manufacturing.

The US dollar index dropped 0.5% during early trading on Wednesday, as the EUR/USD pair moved up over 0.64%.

January 6, 2012

Market Primed for Upside NFP Risk?

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:03 am

Big picture, the markets are torn between the recent run of better than expected US data which has raised expectations for the payrolls number this morning, and worries about the euro-zone debt and health of European banks (UniCredit and Deutche etc).

So far this week the dollar has been the big winner. Yesterday, it managed to get a boost from both sets of US employment data and push the EUR down-1% intraday. Until recently, signs of economic growth would be dollar negative; however, Euro at 16-month lows on refinancing concerns has the currency better bid. Glum headlines from the Euro-zone include Italy’s stubbornly high 10-year bond yield (+7%), weak German data and mixed debt auctions results from France and Europe’s bailout fund. Investors are growing nervous over the sheer amount of debt that needs to be refinanced in the first quarter (+262b). It’s not just the sovereign debt, but bank debt, corporate debt and various derivatives that are coming due. Where is the money going to come from?

No analyst seems to have changed their forecast for today’s payroll number. Yesterday’s outsized ADP print (+325k) historically has technical issues and in the past has overshot the government number by a large margin. The median guess remains close to +155k. If anything, the market is primed for upside risk. Analysts note that other labor market indicators, most notably the sub-50 reading on the non-manufacturing ISM employment component, are not consistent with the very strong ADP result. This time last year ADP recorded a +184k forecast miss regarding the first-reported payroll release. Risk sentiment again seems numb over the past two sessions, unable to capitalize on the strong data yesterday. The market is afraid of Europe’s debilitating reach. I guess if we miss NFP consensus those growth proxy currencies will feel the brunt of this markets ‘pain.’

The lethargic nature of this market is evident when the euro-zone releases ‘not such good’ data and the currency has no interest. All the bets are on North America, at least for the first hour after the payroll print. The not so hot data saw euro-zone retail sales fall -0.8% on the month and -2.5% on the year in November, well below the -0.2%, m/m, and -0.8%, y/y, expectations. Unemployment in the zone held steady at +10.3%. Perhaps its time to admit that the EUR is more attractive as a funding currency, while the dollar is being viewed as an investment currency?

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January 5, 2012

Euro-Dollar Pair Craters

By Sam Mattera
Benzinga Guest Writer

On Thursday, the EUR/USD traded sharply lower, at one point dropping below the $1.28 mark—a level that had not been seen since September of 2010. This move comes after a better than expected jobs figure might have strengthened the dollar, while negative events in Europe may have weakened the euro.

In Europe, yields on Hungarian paper soared.

A three-year Hungarian bond auction failed when the Hungarian government rejected all bids. The failure of the bond auction prompted Hungarian CDS to rally sharply.

CDS bought on Hungarian paper could give investors protection against a default by the country, although the effectiveness of CDS instruments may have been thrown into doubt by recent events in Greece.

Although Greece was given a 50% haircut on its debt, CDS failed to protect investors from this loss. The Greek haircut was ruled “voluntary” and therefore did not trigger CDS contracts. The International Monetary Fund and European Union had been negotiating a bailout with the country to avoid a default. However, that bailout was thrown into doubt when the IMF and EU broke off the talks. The Hungarian parliament had been considering some changes to its central bank—changes that the IMF and EU opposed.

Meanwhile, in France, another bond auction struggled.

France missed its maximum target on a debt auction. Although not a complete failure, the market may have interpreted the event negatively. The yield on the Italian 10-year rose back above 7%.

Those factors may have been working to push the value of the euro down, while positive data in the US may have been pulling the dollar in the other direction.

ADP payrolls came in much better than expected, reporting in at almost double the expectations on the Street. ADP payrolls came in at 325,000 versus an estimated 175,000.

Initial jobless claims came in slightly better than expected, reporting at 372,000 against an estimated 375,000.
Given the boost in jobs, the American economy may be showing signs of further recovery.

If conditions in the Eurozone continue to weaken, while the US economy continues to improve, the currency pair could continue to trade lower.

Still, it may be hard for the US economy to thrive when Europe is weakening. US equity markets dropped on Thursday, as traders may have been pricing in a possible contagion effect.

December 12, 2011

ECB Not Printing Could Be Best Option for Eurozone

By Paul Quintaro
Benzinga Staff Writer

US equity markets traded lower on Monday morning, as the US dollar index rallied roughly 1%. Commodities across the board showed weakness—gold dropped below $1670.

The US dollar index is a measure of the dollar against a basket of other currencies. Perhaps contributing the most to the index’s gain was the dollar’s move against the euro.

The EUR/USD pair dropped over 1.10% on Monday morning, as investors may have become concerned over the fate of the currency given ongoing stresses in Europe. Speculation is high that one of the major ratings agencies will take action in regards to the sovereign credit ratings of Eurozone nations.

France’s Prime Minister Nicolas Sarkozy may have pre-empted a downgrade on France, stating on Monday that while a downgrade would be a setback, it would not be “insurmountable.”

Monday’s action in the EUR/USD pair, while demonstrating the market’s disbelief in the euro situation, may actually act as a positive influence.

After all, the problem in the Eurozone is one of debt: countries have largely spent beyond their means and are now finding it difficult to raise money in the bond market so as to continue their rate of expenditure.

If the euro becomes weaker, it makes the debts of these troubled nations less burdensome.

It may also boost exports. Germany’s economy is the strongest in the Eurozone and is largely dependent upon exports. If the euro weakens, Germany’s exports may become more attractive to foreign consumers as the German-made goods appear cheaper.

A weaker euro does not merely help Germany, however. Other troubled Eurozone nations—like Italy—also do a fair bit of exporting. Greece, meanwhile, is largely dependent upon tourism, and a weaker currency makes the country more attractive to tourists who get more “bang for their buck.”

Thus, while many market participants have called for the ECB to print in an effort to stem the crisis, ultimately not printing may be a more effective solution.

Those calling for the ECB to print may be viewing the situation through the wrong perspective: that of the United States. In the US, the Federal Reserve’s recent policies of quantitative easing have led to weakness in the dollar.

But that relationship may not carry over in Europe. It might seem like a paradox, but printing euros could actually make the crisis worse by strengthening the currency.

Of course, if interest rates continue to rise for indebted Eurozone nations, it may not matter. Even with a weaker currency, the PIIGS may find it difficult to continue to finance their governments while having to borrow at such a tremendous interest rate.

Thus, the ECB and Eurozone politicians will continue to walk a tightrope going forward. They must keep interest rates down while also depressing the value of the euro. Printing money may not be the solution.

November 16, 2011

Oil Spikes Higher To Over $100!

This morning’s CPI reports showed that last quarter’s inflation was contained and as expected, yet that news helped propel oil prices to over $100.  The chart below shows the price spike that occurred at exactly those announcements at 8:30AM EST.

Why would that happen?   The answer is that inflation, particularly in commodites is coming.  The Fed’s easy money policy and cheap interest rates are hurting consumers and this game of investing in tangible assets to get away form the Dollar in risk averse scenarios is starting to gain traction.

Under “normal” conditions, oil would sell-off as part of the risk aversion trade and the fact that there would be less demand for oil should economies begin to contract.  Well that scenario seems likely at this point, especially with what is taking place in the Euro zone and yet oil soars. 

The market is using the red herring of problems in Iran but at the end of the day its Bernanke and the Fed. 

Thanks a lot, Ben.

November 9, 2011

Market still wants Oil and Gold

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:16 am

Oil prices ($96.86) have pared some of their losses after weekly EIA data reported an unexpected -1.37m barrel decline in inventory. Crude prices have been under pressure throughout European and North American sessions due to the political upheaval occurring in Italy. Capital markets are concerned that Europe’s debt crisis may spread, curbing fuel demand as regional economies struggle to recover.

Because Italian yields have imploded, due to the lack of political and economic confidence in the country, has the dollar in demand. This is again putting the “dollar denominated commodity sector” under pressure. With Europe’s third largest economy in trouble there is a global fear that Europe could u-turn back to a recession. However, strong seasonal fundamentals and concerns about a rising dispute over Iran’s nuclear program should be able to provide some support for the commodity on any pullbacks.

Last week’s EIA report showed that crude inventories fell for a second consecutive week by -1.40m barrels to +338.1m, but remains in the upper limit of the average range for this time of year. Not to be left behind, gas stocks plummeted by -2.1m, one week after rallying +1.4m, and are in the middle limit of the average range. The market had expected both crude and gas inventories to rally by +1m and +1.5m respectively. Other data showed that oil refinery inputs averaged +14.3m barrels per day during the week, which were -358k below the previous week’s average as refineries operated at +82.6% of their operable capacity. US crude imports over the week averaged +8.6m barrels per day, down by -336k. Over the last four weeks, imports have averaged +8.7m barrels per day, which were +34k per day above the same four-week period last year.

With an Italian inverted yield curve, a German think tank concerned about its own domestic growth, should be bringing some sellers back to the market hoping to stagger their sales on rallies.

Gold ($1,792) is tentatively edging higher on persistent doubts about Italy’s ability to tackle its debt crisis as political uncertainty and soaring Italian bond yields prompt caution amongst investors. This week the market is back to wanting to own some of the “shiny metal” as a safe haven investment away from market turmoil. Last week, the metal buckled under pressure from the dollar. This time, there is more of a risk aversion type dynamic developing because of all the complications surrounding Europe. Any political or macro uncertainty is promoting risk aversion trading strategies.

Investors have been using the commodity as a safe-haven alternative to equities or FX. Individuals seem to want to insulate themselves from steeper price falls. The bullion is in its eleventh-year of a bull market and has rallied more than +11% since the end of September.

Bigger picture, the commodity has also found support on concern that US monetary policy aimed at shoring up growth will eventually spur inflation. With global sentiment in the fragile category, gold remains the go to “safer-haven” prospect. If we include the demand for ‘physical’ gold from India, then both of these reasons should provide the strongest tangible support to want to own some on these pullbacks. Retracements and corrections are possible even as the market ties to breach the psychological $1,800 barrier with conviction.

Other Links:
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November 7, 2011

Forex Market Outlook 11/7/11

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 6:54 am

Goodbye Greece, hello Italy!  That’s pretty much what the markets are saying right now as Greece is in the rearview mirror and now Italy is to the forefront.  Over the weekend, Greece PM Papandreou agreed to form a coalition government and to step down from that government when it is formed.  In Italy, PM Berlusconi is trying to see whether or not he can hang on to power but it is beginning to look doubtful.

Tomorrow, Italy faces a major vote on its budget and both allies and opponents of Berlusconi are calling for him to step down.  His own hubris may get in the way of this being anything but a three-ring circus, but the most important thing to note is that bond yields are rising in Italy as the market is not convinced that they can do enough in the current political environment to slash budgets in order to continue receiving ECB support.  Even though he survived a confidence vote a few weeks ago, Berlusconi’s days appear to be numbered.

This is seen as a positive by the markets that feel that Berlusconi has been an impediment to economic health so his departure is preferred.  Perhaps then he will be able to release his album of love songs.  Seriously.  In Greece, the situation may be less eventful but nevertheless risk remains.  If a new coalition government is formed, they had better be prepared to institute the terms of the bailout agreement.  At times it seemed like Papandreou was the only sensible one there and when he leaves there could be problems.

So the short and long of it is that the euro debt crisis is still very active like a volcano, with the potential to erupt at any time.  As contagion starts to affect the larger economies like Italy and Spain, the dominoes could fall very quickly. 

On the economic data front, Euro zone retail sales figures came in worse than expected and German Industrial production figures also came in worse than expected, showing signs that Draghi’s “mild recession” call may be spot on.   Thursday’s Euro zone CPI report and EC economic growth forecast will highlight the news out of the Euro zone, as will the unfolding drama of Berlusconi trying to hold on to power.

Also, CPI data in Switzerland showed a decline in prices which could be the harbinger of deflationary forces starting to materialize.  The unemployment rate remained at 3% as expected, and the Swiss franc is weakening as the SNB contemplates a pre-emptive battle against deflation.  Switzerland has been relatively quiet of late after the peg against the Euro was enacted.

There is more data out from the UK this week, highlighted by Wednesday’s GDP estimate and Thursday’s BOE rate policy decision which is expected to produce no change.  The Pound has been strengthening as money has been leaving the EU in favor of the UK.

There is also a slew of economic data coming out of China on Wednesday and Thursday which could affect both the Aussie and Kiwi as both of those economies are dependant upon Chinese growth.  Australia has employment figures due out on Thursday as well.

In the US, there are no significant data releases to speak of so usually the Fed takes this opportunity to hit the rubber chicken circuit and discuss various economic topics.  At the end of the day this will likely amount to nothing but you never know when someone will slip up and say the wrong thing.  “Fedspeak” is generally intended to goose markets higher.

Meanwhile commodities, particularly gold, have been trading like safe-haven currencies and have decoupled a bit from the risk trade as they seem like more attractive places to store wealth.  Stocks are mixed to start the morning, but I could see risk appetite emerging at some point today.

So there is a lot going on this week, but not much of anything if that makes sense.  Berlusconi’s fate will be watched closely by the markets and the quicker he leaves, the better.  Italian politics though is a messy arena so expect the markets to remain on edge until clarity emerges.

November 1, 2011

Forex Market Outlook 11/1/11

Do you remember last week when I said that with regard to the Euro debt crisis resolution, the devil is in the details?   Well it looks like that prognostication was prescient as new information is coming to light.  At the time I noted that while the plan sounded good, how they would actually enact it would be more important.  Now there is sentiment that the process could be derailed as unforeseen issues are starting to materialize.

Case in point; in Greece yesterday the government announced that they would be putting the debt deal to referendum and would be holding a confidence vote for Parliament.  This is dangerous for two reasons, as for starters this unpopular deal could be unwound by a public vote and then secondly, the majority who voted for it could be replaced by those who are against it thereby rendering it ineffective.   While this is a nice idea by the government to be democratic, it is very bad for the markets as now there is increased uncertainty about the deal.  If politicians put every unpopular decision to referendum, nothing would ever get accomplished.

The second potentially disruptive news from the Euro debt deal is that China is publicly stating that they will not bail out Europe so their participation in the expanded EFSF and the SPV may be limited which would reduce the firepower the Europeans thought they had.  This is not a good thing as bond yields continue to rise, most notably in Italy.

Speaking of China, they reported lower than expected PMI manufacturing figures posting a reading of 50.4 vs. an expected 51.8.  This could mean that China is slowing and if they continue to slow, where will global growth come from?

This feeling was not lost in Australia, as the RBA took action by lowering interest rates by 25 bp citing, you guessed it, slowing global growth and a reduced outlook for inflation.  Australia has a keen insight as to the health of China as China is the largest importer of Australian raw materials so the Aussies get a little bit of an advance warning.

However growth is not slowing everywhere as in the UK, GDP figures came in better than expected posting a gain of .5% for the quarter vs. an expectation of .3%.  While this is definitely not robust growth by any means, the repairing of the UK balance sheet through government austerity may be better in the long run.  PMI figures however came in lower than expected posting a reading of 47.4 vs. an expected 50 with index of services lower as well.

So there is massive risk aversion taking place in the market in a continuation of yesterday’s afternoon sell-off.   Stocks are down around the globe, with the German index off some 4%.  US stocks are set to open markedly lower, and commodities are selling off as well with gold crashing through $1700 and oil retreating below $90.

Japanese yen intervention appears to have had little effect vs. the Euro as it is trading back to pre-intervention levels, though it is maintaining weakness vs. USD just above 78.

US ISM manufacturing figures are due out later this morning though they are unlikely to produce enough gains to reverse this market. 

Today’s selling may make tomorrow’s FOMC meeting interesting as Bernanke yet again attempts to jaw-bone markets higher with his free-money pump.  But will it work this time?  Is the hint of QE3 enough to overcome all of the global turmoil and slowing growth? 

At some point, Bernanke’s rhetoric is going to backfire horribly and it is just a matter of time before the markets realize that free money isn’t the answer.  The global economy is in jeopardy of a major slowdown and every threat of this occurring send the market spiraling lower.

The Euro debt crisis resolution was supposed to calm the markets, not inflame them further so someone needs to tell Greece to get their act together.  Will Bernanke save the day tomorrow or exacerbate the crisis further? 

Stay tuned!

October 28, 2011

Does the Dollar have Mojo?

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:30 am

G10 currencies are trading in a well contained range after yesterday’s miraculous recovery amongst risk assets. The selling of the greenback does not seem to be trading in an overextended scenario in either position or price action. Most would have predicted that the dollar should have already come too the fore this morning, citing an “over zealous market” since the Euro agreement of their comprehensive package.

Investors continually look at global bourses for direction, they have been the key drivers behind the dollars move. Manufacturing data in the US and China showing signs of improvement can only push equities higher and dollar lower. Next week is another busy week with rate announcement from the ECB and Fed and of course reports on the all important job situation. However, with these markets turning on a dime is leaving little room for reflection.

Forex heatmap

The market breathed a little easier after US data yesterday. US Q3 GDP estimate reported a +2.5% annualized increase, stronger than the preceding three quarters and thankfully a significant improvement on the first half of this year. It seems that the consumer has come out to play. They have reduced their savings to boost purchases while at the same time companies stepping up their investment in equipment and software. The only negative in the breakdown being a sharp slowing down in inventory growth. Final sales (GDP less inventories) rose by a solid +3.6%, proof that there is strong demand. However, the biggest drop in incomes in two-years (-1.7%), along with declines in home prices and consumer confidence, certainly casts doubt on whether the increase in spending can be sustained. Obama team needs to get “the jobs machine going” and get the housing market moving in the right direction otherwise the US economy remains in a low-to-moderate growth mode and vulnerable to setbacks. In that scenario, the Fed and its Q3 most surely come to the fore.

Core (+2.1%) and headline PCE (+2.4%), inline with expectations, suggests that the underlying inflationary momentum is as how the Fed likes it. They next meet next week. Digging deeper, consumer spending (+70% of GDP) rallied +2.4% with the increase mostly spent on durables (+4.1% in autos). Fixed investment was up a staggering +13.7%, corporations are finally beginning to loosen their purse strings. The only negative was inventories, where growth slowed to a crawl, falling -1.1%. The reason why? It was weather for farmers, restraints in Japanese imports, and perhaps an unexpected improvement in demand. The weakness in disposable income should remain the biggest outlier as we head towards 2012.

Better than expected claims chipped in yesterday and helped to improve investor’s intraday mood. New weekly claims fell ever so slightly last week (-2k to +402k), yet remain elevated and above that psychological +400k print. The more reliable indicator, the four-week moving average edged higher +1.75k to +405k. Despite spending more on fixed investment in the Q3, companies are unwilling to hire en masse. Even Obama’s jobs bill is having trouble, it has met resistance from opposition in congress whom oppose new spending. Now his administration is trying to get it through by piecemeal. The number of continuing claims (one week lag) was +3.645m, down -96k w/w. Have previous claimants got a job or have they just run out of benefits? Next week we get NFP.

The dollar is higher against the EUR -0.03% and CHF -0.26% and lower against GBP +0.11% and JPY +0.11%. The commodity currencies are mixed this morning, CAD +0.03% and the AUD -0.39%.

The loonie certainly went partly along for the ride outright, however, on the crosses it has performed poorly. There are good corporate bids near the dollar lows despite “risk on” in other asset classes. The loonie has been well underpinned by improved risk appetite after Europe finally put together a comprehensive package which is lacking detail, it’s seen as a sign of good faith. The CAD outright seems to be trading as a pricing vehicle for the beleaguer CAD/JPY and EUR crosses. It’s all about fair value.

Governor Carney this week certainly has given the market ‘food for thought’. The BoC has quashed expectations of interest rate hikes and downgraded its growth forecasts, citing Europe’s debt crisis and weakness in the country’s top trading partner south of its own border. The MPR reported that the annualized pace of expansion will average +1.8% in the four quarters through June, compared with a previous estimate of +2.8%. The bank cut its projection for global growth next year by-0.9%, and it said the recovery will be slower than usual as consumers, governments and businesses reduce debt.

It seems that dealers are moving further out the curve and are beginning to slowly price in rate hike in the latter half of next year when inflation indicators begin to move toward the Banks+2% inflation benchmark. Carney is also predicting that the Canadian economy grew +2% in Q3 and will grow at +0.8% rate in Q4.

Where does this put the loonie? Well, it does not put it in the same risk and growth category as the Aussie or Kiwi. The loonie remains vulnerable to what happens in the US. Carney’s comments are transparent, they are concerned about sustainable growth and the market will have to be cautious in trying to push the currency higher at speed. Corporate buyers remain below as dealers focus on the risk reward of owning the loonie at these levels (0.9902)

The antipodeans lead the pack this week. With the RBNZ keeping rates on hold and given the positive EU summit outcome, is providing the basis for a more meaningful recovery in global risk appetite in the near term, supporting the Kiwi and Aussie. In the O/N session, the AUD has fallen from its highest level in almost two months against the greenback as traders speculate that the currency’s biggest advance in more than a year was too rapid.

Even the fear that Australian domestic data showing that underlying inflation slowed last quarter, to its weakest pace in 14-years (+0.3% vs. +0.6%), which would allow the RBA to cut the developed world’s highest borrowing costs next week, is finally being appreciated by investors. Despite futures traders pricing in a-25bp cut, the AUD will remain at the mercy of global developments and progress in the Euro-zone debt aid package. The currency depreciated almost-10% last quarter on the back of weaker employment growth and global risks increasing.

How long will Euros euphoria have investors demanding the AUD? US growth numbers this morning will of course hold considerable weighting on that answer. The market is a better seller of the currency on rallies (1.0674).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($93.21 down-0.73c). Oil prices got the green light to march higher after Euro policy makers agreed on measures to tame a sovereign debt crisis that threatened to slow economic growth. Being the world’s most dominant consumer of crude, the US economy growing at an annual rate of +2.5% last quarter is also supporting prices and this despite elevated weekly inventories.

Last week’s EIA report showed that crude stockpiles rose +4.74m barrels to +337.6m vs. an expected build of +1.3m. Oil imports rose +1.45m barrels per day to +9.34m. On the flip side, gasoline stocks fell -1.35m barrels to +204.9m, slightly smaller than the -1.6m expected drawdown. The average gasoline demand in the last four-weeks fell -0.7% from a year ago. Distillates, which include heating oil and diesel, happened to fall -4.28m barrels to +145.4m. Analysts had been expecting a +1.9m barrel draw. The refinery utilization rate increased +1.7% points to +84.8% of capacity.

The rise in stocks is in marked contrast to recent price rallies. Brent’s premium over WTI has again widened. Expect investors to continue to run into technical selling on rallies as they wait for a clearer idea of what the ECB and Fed will want to do next week.

Gold prices steadied yesterday after a deal by the Euro leaders to tackle the euro zone debt crisis and a positive reading on US growth encouraged investors to delve back into riskier assets and to boost their bullion holdings. Investors have an appetite and desire for a safe-haven alternative to equities or FX. They seem to want to insulate themselves from steeper price falls. The disappointing US consumer confidence print earlier in the week provided the impetus for metal to rally as the data showed consumers were at their gloomiest in 2-1/2 years. The bullion is in its eleventh-year of a bull market and is up +21% this year.

The commodity has also found support (store-of-value) on concern that US monetary policy aimed at shoring up growth will eventually spur inflation. Over the past two-weeks, commodities have followed the moves in riskier assets, with the precious metal’s safe-haven appeal diminishing a tad after the price purge swings in the past quarter. Stronger Chinese growth is also providing a source for support. Last week, the yellow metal rallied the most in a week, as a drop in the dollar boosted investor demand.

With global sentiment in the fragile category, gold remains the go to safer haven prospect. If we include the demand for ‘physical’ gold from India, then both of these reasons should provide the strongest tangible support to want to own some on pullbacks ($1,737 down-$10).

The Nikkei closed at 9,050 up+124. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,411 up+74; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,736 up+22. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher. The US 10-year backed up +16bp yesterday (+2.40%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

The market has reacted positively to the Euro leader’s comprehensive debt package, despite it lacking full disclosure. Benchmark yields have been able to rally to two-month highs. The market realizes that there is much cash remaining on the side lines and a great deal of it could be put to work if investors could be convinced that the European situation will not spiral into disarray. The market also made it easier to “push about” the last of this week’s Treasury supply, yesterday’s $29b seven-year notes. The dealing desks have also reduced their short-dated holdings ahead of selling from the Fed as a part of it’s +$400b “Operation Twist” program.

The $29b 7-year auction was horrible compared to the 2’s and 5’s earlier in the week.
They were sold at a yield of +1.791%, much higher than the +1.759% yield before the sale. The bid-to-cover was 2.59, a two and a half year low compared to the four–sale average of 2.75. Indirect buyers bought +33.9% of the offering compared to +41.3%. “Dealers still own these puppies”.

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