Forex Blog

February 2, 2012

Despite “Signs of Improvement” Bernanke Holds Near-Zero Rate Pledge

Speaking before the House Budget Committee in Washington today, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that the U.S. economy appeared to be gaining in strength.

“Fortunately, over the past few months, indicators of spending, production, and job-market activity have shown some signs of improvement,” Bernanke testified. “The outlook remains uncertain, however, and close monitoring of economic developments will remain necessary.”

Despite the more positive tone, Bernanke reaffirmed a continuance of the Fed’s near-zero interest rate policy. Last month, the Fed extended its pledge to hold the line on interest rates for an additional year, stating that rates would likely remain at the record low cap of 0.25 percent until late 2014.

To offset fears that low lending rates could lead to inflation, Bernanke told the Committee that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) still considered 2 percent growth to be the ideal target. Given the current conditions, the FOMC expects inflation to remain “subdued”.

U.S. Consumer Confidence Falls Sharply in January

Bernanke’s testimony comes less than a week after the release of the January Consumer Confidence Index. The January result was a sharp decline in confidence, falling to 61.1 percent from 64.8 percent after two consecutive months of significant gains. The downturn in the index suggests consumers are increasingly worried that rising costs will take a greater bite out of household budgets.

There is hope that confidence will rise should the employment outlook continue to improve. For the final quarter of 2011, unemployment fell by half a percent to 8.5 percent and momentum appears to be gathering steam with claims for unemployment benefits falling more than expected for the week ending January 21st.

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September 12, 2011

No ‘We’ in EURO hurts Currency

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:43 am

Last week ended on a sour note with the market being spooked by default provisioning talk. This morning the market continues to price in that Greek possibility. The G7 have done a lousy job in boosting investors confidence last weekend, their self-interested approach is creating a more unstable trading environment this morning. They did however vow to support banks and buoy slowing economic growth as the EU debt crisis threatens a global recession. For investors, this does not seem to be enough!

The negatives continue to pile up against the EUR. ECB member Stark resigning, the Germans preparing covert plans for a periphery default, Greek Prime Minister Papandreou trying to convince the open market that his governments top priority is ‘to save the country from bankruptcy’ is being ignored by investors, French banks slide on a possible Moody’s cut. This has only been since Friday. We have not even mentioned regional data effects yet.

It’s follow the Germans and see what they do. Whatever Merkel and her policy making individuals decide the rest of Europe will follow as they do not have a long term alternative just yet. It’s patch up work policy done at its best!

The US$ is stronger in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘volatile’ trading session.

The market had been expecting more from the finance ministers meetings last weekend. The G7 meeting produced no new policy action or indication of support for joint intervention in the FX market. This jaded response was expected as governments remain focused on their individual national interests rather than policy coordination. The G7 statement did not mention Japan’s August intervention actions. By that no response, the market should read this as a thumb’s up to Japans ‘unilateral’ FX approach. They are on their own so it seems.

Forex heatmap

The dollar is higher against the EUR -0.38%, GBP -0.39%, CHF -0.18% and lower against the JPY +0.92%. The commodity currencies are weaker this morning, CAD -0.12% and AUD -1.45%.

The loonie completed its biggest weekly decline in a month on Friday outright, breaking through parity, as the Canadian economy unexpectedly lost jobs (-5.5k) and risk appetite dropped on concern Europe’s debt crisis is worsening. It was the second consecutive negative week as the BoC kept rates on hold as expected(+4.75%). Upcoming data this week for its largest trading partner may indicate that both industrial production and sales may have slowed.

Governor Carney has applied the expected ‘dovish’ tone on the Canadian economy, explicitly noting ‘the need to withdraw monetary stimulus has diminished’ which is an ‘expected about-face from the July statement. Similar to Trichet, the market expects the Governor will be turning towards becoming more concerned about global growth. For the time being, futures traders anticipate the BoC to remain on hold until the end of the third quarter of next year.

Canadian data of late has done little to have an impact on the loonie’s price action (last month the currency lost -2.3% and completed the first losing month in three), that has been left up to investors own attitude towards risk. When weak, the currency has been underperforming. One of the historical reserve currency, the USD, has been able to rally to a six-month high versus the EUR on concern that ‘European policy makers are failing to find the ideal solution for the region’s debt crisis’

Global focus remains firmly on the Germans. What are they to do with Greece? They remain reluctant to provide any more help. Risk remains the dominant trading them, lack of it or appreciation for it, which ever one, shattered consumer confidence will try to have investors staying closer to home (0.9971).

Last week down-under, markets reacted somewhat favorably to Obama’s ‘job’s speech’. The initial reaction for the Aussie was to rally and even pare some of its weekly losses outright. Data out of China indicated that inflation cooled last month from a three-year high had also helped the AUD, easing concern that the PBoC would take further steps to curtail price gains. However, the ground rules have changed despite the Investor seeming to seek an alternative to the USD and EUR. Previously, there had been strong demand for the AUD on some these deep pull backs.

In the o/n session the AUD has tumbled to a new three-week low on fears that Greece may default has prompted investors to sell higher yielding assets. Domestic data again comes in on the weaker side and not aiding the currency. Aussie Trade balance reported weaker than expected with the priors also revised downwards (1.83b vs. +1,92b). It’s a risk-off market today. It’s going to be very tough for the Aussie to outperform while all eyes are on European issues.

However, it seems that some investors believe that the currency cannot lose. If US data continues to improve then local market pricing for interest rate cuts by the RBA will evaporate. On the flip side, if US data takes a turn for the worst, then the AUD will benefit from a weaker dollar. Now that this growth and interest rate sensitive currency would likely be supported on both poor and strong US data, certainly favors a test to trade higher. Currently, investors are better buyers of Aussie dollars on pullbacks as long as a risk loving environment remains (1.0310).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($85.75 down-$1.53c). Oil prices fell-2% after the EUR declined to a six-month low on Friday and after Euro-banks and sovereign credit risk surged to all-time highs. The positive correlation relationship between the EUR and commodities remains intact. Even Obama’s job plan has failed to boost investor confidence.

Last week’s EIA inventory report revealed that crude stockpiles decreased by-4m barrels to +353.1m, but are above the upper limit of the average range for this time of year. Not as radical but on the flip side was gas inventories move higher by +200k barrels last week, after shedding -2.8m barrels in the prior week, and are in the upper limit of the average range. Analysts were expecting crude inventories to dip by-2m barrels and gas stocks to shed by -1.4m barrels. It was certainly a bullish report for prices. Oil refinery inputs averaged +15.5m barrels per day during the week, which were +6k barrels per day above the previous week’s average as refineries operated at +89% of their operable capacity.

For the moment, Crude prices continue to hold, however, the possibility that Libya may be able to export oil cargo this month, for the first time in six-months, should pressurize the asset class further.

Gold rose for the second straight day on Friday as renewed concern that the Greek debt crisis will worsen and signs of a slowing global economy spurred demand for the metal as a store-of-value. Before, the bulls had been taking a beating, as a rebound in global equities earlier in the week eroded demand for an alternative asset and pushed investors to sell the metal after its rally to an all-time high earlier in the month.

The bulls believe that commodity prices have recently undergone a strong correction, followed by a decent consolidation and particularly as European sovereign concerns escalate. Investors are guessing that the Fed will be required to ease monetary policy in answer to stimulate their economy. The Fed’s efforts to drive interest rates lower to support lending should curtail the dollar’s appeal and by default, support commodities. The commodity is heading for its eleventh consecutive annual gain ($1,852-$7.40c).

The Nikkei closed at 8,535 down-202. The DAX index in Europe was at 5,045 down-148; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,143 down-71. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year eased11bp on Friday (1.90%) and is little changed in the o/n session.

Treasuries rose for a second straight week, pushing the benchmark 10-year note yield to a new record low Friday, on speculation that Germany is or has prepared plans to shore up its banks if there is a Greek default. Capital markets confidence continues to take a battering, pushing investors to seek refuge on concern that both the US and EU officials are not moving fast enough to relieve the financial stress.

This week, the US treasury will issue $32b 3’s, $21b 10’s and $13b bonds near record low yields. Dealers will be expected to cheapen the curve ahead of supply and make the government pay up for some of the issue.

OANDA Top 100 Trader StatisticsOANDA Order Book

*4:00 pm
-USD| FOMC Member Fisher Speaks|
*13th-17th
-NZD| REINZ HPI m/m| -0.6%
*6:45 pm
-NZD| FPI m/m| 2.0%
-NZD| Manufacturing Sales q/q| 2.9%
*13th-19th
-GBP| Nationwide Consumer Confidence| 49
*7:01 pm
-GBP| RICS House Price Balance| -22% vs. -22%
*9:30 pm
-AUD| NAB Business Confidence| 2
*13th-17th
-CNY| Foreign Direct Investment ytd/y| 18.6%

August 2, 2011

Forex Outlook 8/2/11

Half-way home! Last night, the House of Reps passed the debt-ceiling bill and it is expected to pass the Senate today with the President to sign shortly thereafter. This removes the immediate fears from the market, but nevertheless a credit downgrade is still possible which could have uncertain effects.

This really has been a side-show though, as the it removed the focus from the real problem—that the global economy is slowing. Yesterday the relief rally taking place early in the morning completely reversed itself after the ISM manufacturing numbers came out here in the US which were worse than expected, posting a reading of 50.9 vs. an expected 55. This created a 200 point swing in the Dow and reversed the markets from risk-taking to risk-aversion.

Yesterday was interesting in that there was notable Swiss franc and Japanese yen strength, despite higher stocks and oil. This didn’t take long to revert to the mean, with stocks giving back early gains.

This morning the markets are lower as attention has returned to the fundamental fact that the global economy is slowing. The Euro is lower as the bond vigilantes have Italian debt in their cross-hairs as yields are stating to rise. A Spanish re-funding on Thursday has Euro officials on edge and waiting to see where yields settle.

This has prompted the RBA in Australia to leave rates unchanged overnight, citing the slowing global economy (particularly the US and China) as more of a detriment than intermediate inflation.

The recent Japanese yen strength has the markets hopeful that the BOJ will intervene again in its currency and the rate policy meeting on Thursday could bring about such action. The rate decisions from both the ECB and the BOE are expected to produce no change.

Lastly, this week’s Non-Farm Payrolls report on Friday is expected to show gains of 100K jobs. With the dismal number posted last month this may be a stretch, though reduced expectations could produce a positive result.

So prepare for a global slowdown, but be ready to seek yield when you can!

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Debt Deal Signed But Markets Still Nervous

Despite the House’s passing of the debt deal that would raise the borrowing limit, stock market futures were down ahead of morning trading in New York. Even though it appears that the immediate threat of a default has been averted, a concern remains that the U.S. could still suffer a credit rating downgrade.

“A lot of people are very concerned about the potential for a downgrade, and there are also concerns about what the bill means for the overall economy and general concerns about the economy following yesterday’s downer of a manufacturing number,” said Robert Pavlik, chief market strategist at Banyan Partners LLC in New York. “There are a lot of concerns out there right now.”

Source: Reuters

August 1, 2011

US Debt Ceiling Highlights

The debt ceiling deal still needs to be passed by both Houses of Congress. The Senate is expected to vote by lunchtime and approve the deal very easily. The House will probably vote this evening, support will be needed from both Democrats and Republicans, given that a number of members of both parties are unlikely to support the measure.

Market pricing is assuming that the deal will be ratified from here. Some measure of risk is being applied, especially through the equity market. A rejection of the bill this evening would likely create a significant risk-off event.

The principle elements of the deal so far:

1. The first stage of deficit reduction would be $900b

2. The second stage of deficit reduction would be $1.5t, to be defined by a bipartisan special committee of lawmakers appointed by leaders of the House and Senate (more commissions).

3. If the special committee fails to deliver a deficit-cutting package that would trigger $1.2t in cuts, 50% would be defense cuts and the other 50% would be non-defense cuts, exempting low-income Social Security and Medicaid programs and only affecting providers in Medicare.

4. The debt ceiling increase would be done in three phases: $400b initially, another $500b by the end of 2011 subject to a vote of disapproval, and a third increase of $1.5b to get the rest through 2012, also subject to a vote of disapproval.

There is a provision to have Congress vote on a balanced budget amendment. This vote does not have to succeed to leave the deal intact and is unlikely to pass the Senate.

What will the rating agencies think of this? Potentially, there is a good chance that the US will be downgraded by a notch by ‘one’ of the agencies. Why? The deal is not the $4t expected and there remains a strong possibility that the “debt ceiling” may not be raised in the future.

US Debt Ceiling Highlights

The debt ceiling deal still needs to be passed by both Houses of Congress. The Senate is expected to vote by lunchtime and approve the deal very easily. The House will probably vote this evening, support will be needed from both Democrats and Republicans, given that a number of members of both parties are unlikely to support the measure.

Market pricing is assuming that the deal will be ratified from here. Some measure of risk is being applied, especially through the equity market. A rejection of the bill this evening would likely create a significant risk-off event.

The principle elements of the deal so far:

1. The first stage of deficit reduction would be $900b

2. The second stage of deficit reduction would be $1.5t, to be defined by a bipartisan special committee of lawmakers appointed by leaders of the House and Senate (more commissions).

3. If the special committee fails to deliver a deficit-cutting package that would trigger $1.2t in cuts, 50% would be defense cuts and the other 50% would be non-defense cuts, exempting low-income Social Security and Medicaid programs and only affecting providers in Medicare.

4. The debt ceiling increase would be done in three phases: $400b initially, another $500b by the end of 2011 subject to a vote of disapproval, and a third increase of $1.5b to get the rest through 2012, also subject to a vote of disapproval.

There is a provision to have Congress vote on a balanced budget amendment. This vote does not have to succeed to leave the deal intact and is unlikely to pass the Senate.

What will the rating agencies think of this? Potentially, there is a good chance that the US will be downgraded by a notch by ‘one’ of the agencies. Why? The deal is not the $4t expected and there remains a strong possibility that the “debt ceiling” may not be raised in the future.

July 28, 2011

House Debt-Limit Vote Sets Stage for Showdown

The House of Representatives planned to vote today on a debt-limit increase proposal that confronts unified Democratic opposition in the Senate, setting the stage for a congressional showdown to avert a U.S. default.

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio gained support among fellow Republicans for his plan to raise the debt ceiling after reworking the legislation to cut $917 billion over 10 years, more than his original approach. All 51 Senate Democrats and two independents signed a letter yesterday pledging to oppose the measure.

As congressional leaders continued to wrangle with less than a week before a potential U.S. default on Aug. 2, stock markets showed jitters. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 2 percent yesterday, the biggest drop in almost two months, and the cost of insuring against a U.S. default climbed to the highest level since February 2010.

Bloomberg

July 27, 2011

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 19, 2011

Solutions In Sight?

This morning markets are rallying as the Euro zone moves one step closer toward a solution to the debt crisis that has been plaguing them and the global markets in general. The Greek Finance Minister came out and said that an agreement on debt is “attainable” and the ECB seems ready to deal as well.

News in the US today has the Republicans largely going through the political motions of introducing a bill on the debt ceiling debate that will be vetoed by the President if it passes the House, but rumors of a “secret meeting” taking place have raised hopes that a compromise can be reached.

The global markets are in need of some sort of stability as these crises have left Central banks around the globe in limbo as they need to allow these situations to play out before they can potentially raise interest rates to cool off their own expanding economies. At least that’s the thought in Australia and Canada as the release of the minutes from the RBA rate policy meeting and the BOC interest rate decision confirm.

Rounding out the morning are US Housing Starts and Building Permits figures which are likely to beat expectations as the bar has been lowered so much after last month’s dismal reports. So the markets are in risk-taking mode this morning, with global stocks higher, as well as oil and gold.

In the forex market:

Aussie (AUD): The Aussie is mostly higher on risk appetite as the minutes from the RBA rate policy meeting confirmed that the RBA was in “wait and see” mode with regard to the Euro debt and US debt ceiling crises. Inflation is a mild concern but does not outweigh the overall risk to global economic stability.

Kiwi (NZD): The Kiwi is also higher this morning on risk appetite and the carry-over effects of the CPI data that was reported earlier this week. The RBNZ may want to “normalize” rate policy to slow down inflation.

Loonie (CAD): The Loonie is also higher this morning as oil is trading higher despite the fact that the market expects the BOC to leave interest rates unchanged this morning at 1%. The reasoning behind this is similar to that of the RBA, but the market is expecting at least 2 quarter point rate hikes before the end of the year, the first of which could come at the September meeting. (Click chart to enlarge)

usdcad0719.JPG

Euro (EUR): The Euro is also trading up despite the weaker than expected ZEW economic survey figures that were reported earlier this morning. The big news is that Euro zone ministers are moving closer to finding a solution to the debt crisis, as the ECB has indicated it may be more “flexible”. Yields on a Spanish bond offering soared from just 1 month ago. (Click chart to enlarge)

eurusd0719.JPG

Pound (GBP): With no news on the docket, the Pound is drifting higher ahead of tomorrow’s release of the BOE rate policy meeting minutes.

Swissie (CHF): The Swissie is lower across the board as demand for safe-havens has decreased due to increased risk appetite. Gold is also trading slightly lower, though still above $1600.

Dollar (USD): The Dollar Index is falling this morning after much better than expected Housing Starts and Building Permits figures showed that the housing market may not be dead just yet. Improving economic data may mitigate fears of QE3, but we’re not out of the woods yet.

Yen (JPY): The Yen is mostly lower on risk themes and department store sales came in better than expected, showing signs that domestic demand may be improving as a result of the devastating natural disasters.

It’s not over until it’s over, as the saying goes, and these words couldn’t ring more true with regard to the Euro debt crisis and the US debt ceiling debate. While markets may believe that solutions are near, risk still abounds.

Meanwhile, just to update, the BOC did indeed leave rates unchanged, but the hawkish tone could mean a rate hike at September’s meeting.

Until that time, watch the economic data to see signs of economic improvement globally and whether or not Central bankers will be able to address their own domestic economies.

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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June 30, 2011

EUR following the Script?

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:15 am

Papandreou clinched enough votes to pass the first part of an austerity plan aimed at meeting EU aid requirements and staving off a default. The EUR did what most anticipated, rally up towards 1.45 as residual speculative shorts are closed. Now what?

According to the script, upside momentum is expected to stall around these levels as markets turn their focus to this morning’s Greek vote on implementation of the various fiscal measures, weekend discussions on private sector participation in the 2012 bailout, and risks around key US PMI data due out tomorrow.

On the flip side, the EUR is certainly looking prettier than GBP and the USD this morning, proving to be market resilient. Certainly strong proof how fundamentally flawed the markets treatment of the dollar and sterling is!

The US$ is a weaker in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is lower against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ session ahead of the second of Greece’s votes.

Forex heatmap

Finally, a pleasant surprise or is it? May’s US pending home sales index rose +8.2%, well above the market expectation of +3.2%. Analysts note that we should be appreciating the rise in the context of the -11.3% decline that was registered in April. It’s this print that verifies the unimpressive trend in existing home sales. Last month’s spike looks like a correction from the April release. Housing data reported of late does not point to any correction. Yesterday’s pending numbers are consistent with existing sales data, while mortgage information from NAHB and MBA points to further market weakness. The +13.4%, y/y, pending home sales figure is caused by the May 2010 tax credit expiry, which pushed the numbers to move below the underlying trend from the ‘previously inflated levels’. The future trend remains flat at best.

The dollar is lower against the EUR +0.31%, CHF +0.03% and JPY +0.47% and higher against GBP -0.28%. The commodity currencies are stronger this morning, CAD +0.40% and AUD +0.47%.

The Canadian headline inflation number yesterday can be seen as a total ‘head-fake’ (+0.7% vs. +0.3%). Analyst’s noted that the spike can be explained away by seasonal adjustments, gas clothing and footwear. The surprise print does not speak to a ‘fanning out of inflationary pressures’. While headline (+3.7%, y/y) and core-CPI came in higher than expected in unadjusted terms, adjusting for seasonality, inflation still remains well contained with both headline and core-CPI up +0.2% m/m, one-tenth below that registered in the prior month, a scenario that Governor Carney has already alluded to. On an unadjusted basis, both food and gas prices continued to move up in May. However, next months report will likely show ‘modest’ headline gains as gas and energy prices decline.  

Investors liked the data, pricing in a BoC hike for October and pushed the currency to a monthly high outright, aided by rising oil prices. Any fear about rate hikes after yesterday’s print may be tempered by this morning’s GDP data. It’s expected to be weak and underscore the headwinds facing the economy, again backing up Governor Carney’s recent rhetoric.

Will the second leg of Greek voting today have investors looking to pare some of their recent risk appetite? With the Fed cutting its growth objective for the remainder of the year should have higher yielding growth sensitive currencies trading under pressure. Expect the Canadian dollar to be subjected to the pull of either risk or risk aversion trading strategies. CAD is vulnerable now with US data likely to continue to print weak into mid-July (0.9662).

The AUD has ignored the slew of mixed domestic data and traded higher in the O/N session. Job vacancies in the three-months to May fell -4.5% from the previous period. Rismark House prices continued to decline last month and fell -0.3%. Private sector credit growth remained a subdued +0.3% in May and personal and business credit growth softened, while housing credit increased +0.5%, following an increase of +0.4%in April.

The currency advanced for a third consecutive day against the dollar as traders pared bets on a cut in interest rate by the RBA. Investors have been buying equities, pulling markets higher as a relief buying spilled into another session after Greece moved closer to receiving more aid to avoid a sovereign default.

Gains have been capped on fear that that a Greek austerity plan will not resolve Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis. Technically, the market is waiting for funding schedule clarity. Currently, the market is pricing a no hike in August unless inflation and employment surprised on the upside and the situation in Greece clears up sufficiently for a powerful rebound in risk appetite. Global data needs to improve before we can embrace any rate hike policy thinking. Investors remain better sellers on rallies (1.0724).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($94.50 -0.27c). Crude extended this week’s gains after the weekly EIA report showed a larger-than-expected decline in inventories and as more Americans signed contracts last month to buy previously owned homes, a sign that the real estate market may be rebounding from its lows. Also aiding prices was a market concern that the Saudis would cut production in response to the IEA dumping move last week. Tropical Storm Arlene seems to be causing a stir in the Gulf of Mexico.

The market is concerned that the ‘tightness’ in the oil market will continue to undermine the fragile global economic recovery and the reason why the IEA and its members agreed to release crude from their SPR’s to ease some of this market tension. According to analysts, this supply move is significant, as it ‘represents a reach by member countries for the remedy of last resort to high oil prices’.

Oil inventory fell much more than expected last week as imports declined and gas stocks recorded a surprise fall. Crude stockpiles dropped for the fourth-consecutive week by -4.38m barrels to +359.47m. The market had been expecting a drawdown of -1.4m barrels. Weekly crude imports fell-271k barrels per day to +8.84m. A surprise was gas stocks unexpectedly falling -1.43m barrels to +213.1m. Analysts had projected a build of +600k barrels. Distillates (heating oil and diesel), rose +258k to +142.2m. Refinery utilization came off its 10-month high, falling -1.1% to +88.1%.

This year’s energy spike is being cited ‘as the reason for the global economic slowdown. Analyst’s note, that from its peak, crude is off-20%.The technicals see strong support first appearing at around $87.

Gold rallied for a second consecutive day after dropping to a five-week low, encouraging some investors to buy the precious metal as a protection of wealth and alternative to currencies. Last week, the commodity fell -4.4% and is up +6% this year.

After a positive Greek vote, the market had been wishing to see more of a pull back as people reduced their safe heaven position taking. This has not occurred because too many speculators have had the same thought.

Gold is viewed by some investors as a hedge against inflation, and the surprise release of crude oil stockpiles last week from developed nations’ reserves has dampened sentiment amongst investors for rising prices. However, commodities dependency on the buck and the outlook for US rates is likely to remain intact for now. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on these deep pullbacks ($1,509 -0.90c). Technical analyst’s see $1,485 as the first level of real support.

The Nikkei closed at 9,816 up+19. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,302 up+9; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,895 up+39. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year backed up 5bp yesterday (3.09%) and are little changed in the O/N session.

The US yield curve rose from almost a record low ahead of this week’s three-treasury auctions ($99b-2’s, 5’s and 7’s), on bets that the Greek Socialist Party will get parliamentary approval for its austerity measures needed to secure a troika bailout. So far, they are two-thirds of the way there.

The US 10-year benchmark was able to back up for a third consecutive day as Greece’s lawmakers passed the first part of an austerity plan needed to assure further bailout funds, damping demand for a refuge in US government paper. Today, they get to vote for implementation of austerity. Ten-year yields have gained +21 basis points over the past three days, a volatile market or what?

This week’s five-year auction was not well received and drew the lowest demand in a year as the sharp drop in yields has turned off investors. Dealers were able to create a small concession for yesterday’s 7-year auction, however, the concession was not deep enough, as it too was a horrible auction with dealers having to take down over half of the issue (+56.1% vs. +45%).

After the auction, bond prices hit new session lows. The issue tailed a whopping +3.25bp at a record low yield of +2.43%. The tranche had a 2.62 bid-to-cover ratio (smallest since July 2010) compared to an average cover of 2.87 in the six-prior auctions. Indirect bidders took +32.2% of the issue (the smallest take down in two-years) versus an average of +50.5%.

The jump in yield spreads between 2-year US and Japanese bonds (17 basis points to 30) had been partially responsible for pushing USD/JPY up into the large resting offers of 81, temporarily at least.

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