Vantage FX | Aussie dollar Breaks higher on stock rally| 26th November 2012

Last week was a good week for stocks and for the first time in ages my summary of the week’s events had more positives than negatives from the fundamental side of the equation. The Chinese PMI back above 50 for the first time in 13 months, the German IFO business confidence survey released Friday at 101.4 was better than expected by almost a full point, US housing data was better again, we had a cease fire in Gaza. On the downside the two key points were Japanese trade data which showed a fall in exports of 6.5% yoy in September and France’s loss of its Triple A from Moody’s

But this week will need to see confirmation of the moves higher in stocks because of the interrupted holiday trade and also because in terms of the US Stock rally it came on pretty thin Holiday induced volume. One of the tenets of futures trading that I was taught more than 20 years ago was that volume was the confirmation that supported a market move – we didn’t get that last week so as a result we are a little wary this week.

Of course we are also watching the impact of Fiscal Cliff talks in the US given the market has rallied back so well over the past week and has a lot of embedded capital gains for the year in it.

S&P 500

So having called the rally in stocks last week we aren’t going to jump off the band wagon just yet but there is enough potential hiccups in coming weeks for us to drag stops up closer to market and to take some cash if the S&P 500 hits the 1418/21 region for the moment.

Stocks

So at the half day close on Friday the S&P 500 was up 18 pts of 1.30% to 1409 after playing catch up for the day off and the more ebullient tone from the Chinese data earlier in the week. The Dow rose 1.35% and the NASDAQ up 1.38%.

In Europe every index I watch except for Oslo, which was down just 0.08%, rallied. The German IFO certainly helped and buoyed European markets with the FTSE was up 0.49%, the DAX rose 0.89% and the CAC was 0.87% higher.

In Asia it was a similar story of markets finishing in the black and given reports this morning are that the Black Friday trade in the US was the best ever it is feasible that Asia kicks off with a bout of buying. In Australia the SPI 200 has room to run toward 4464 trendline resistance from Friday’s close at 4443. Likewise all the calls for more cuts in Korea probably bias the Kospi higher but the Nikkei might suffer a little under the weight of Abe’s retreat, subtle as it is, from his previously aggressive BOJ stance.

FX Markets

The Euro’s moves last week technically made sense but fundamentally I struggled to make any sense of them given the enduring problems and lack of resolution over Greece or even an agreement on the €1 trillion budget for the zone going forward. Instead the market preferred to focus on the “hope” of a resolution as opposed to the actually non-resolution which is very informative in itself. But the reality seems to be that the correlation between the S&P 500′s moves and that of the Euro might have played more than a small role in this with the Euros 21 day correlation with the S&P about 0.70 and still close to 60 over 55 days.

Euro rate

Last week I thought the Euro was biased back to the trendline resistance you can see was the high on Friday night and came in at 1.2990. It retains a positive bias on the daily charts but is a little overcooked on the shorter time frame and I wouldn’t be surprise to see it pull back a little toward 1.29. So on balance based on both the correlation with the S&P 500 and the technicals EUR needs a continued stock rally and a clear break of 1.30 to push higher. One confirms the other.

In Japan it seems that the putative PM Shinzo Abe is walking back from the attack on BOJ independence that he has been waging since it became clear there was an election coming a couple of week’s back. What possibly changed his rhetoric has been the tensions between his plan to raise inflation and the mountain of Japanese Government debt that needs to be serviced. It was widely reported in the last few days that if inflation rises to his 2% target then the cost of servicing the debt will exceed ALL of the expected tax revenue. This reinforces the USDJPY high for the moment for me even though it did come back very strongly to finish at 82.36 from the low of 82.05

AUD v S&P 500

For the AUD it broke decisively through the 1.04 at the same time that the US equity traders came back and took the S&P 500 higher. For the Aussie bears out there the strength of stocks is a headwind and although the daily 21 and 55 day correlations are quite weak at 0.14 and 0.15 respectively it does set the overall tone for risk assets as you can see in the hourly chart above of the AUDUSD v S&P futures trade.  Obviously a pullback in stocks will probably knock AUD a bit also but my sense is that there are a lot of short term bears out there being pressured and they may break if AUD trades up through 1.0485.

Commodities

Crude was up 1.03% to $88.26 Bbl rising from the outset as the US dollar was hammered by the strength in equities pushing US dollar denominated commodities higher.

Silver rally's

To wit, Gold was up 1.35% to $1735 oz while Silver rose 2.30% to $33.385 oz. As you can see in the chart above from my Vantage platform Silver is approaching long term resistance which stretches back to the September 2011. A break of this line at $34.20 would open the way for a run to the recent high at $35.35 – one thing to note though is that we always respect trendlines and never pre-empt the break.

Datawise We are watching the results from the Catalan election today as well as the Minutes of the BOJ’s recent meeting and of course the Euro EcoFin meeting tonight and what they say and do about Greece. Toniight the Chicago Fed and Dallas Fed indices are out.

Over the rest of the week we’ll be watching the trade data, Business Confidence and private Capital Expenditure in New Zealand, Retail Sales and Industrial Production in Japan, GDP, Mortgage Approvals and Financial Stability in UK, Durable Goods, S&P Case Shiller House Index, Richmond Fed, Beige Book, New Home sales, GDP, Jobless Claims, Kansas Fed, Personal Spending and Chicago PMI in the US.

In Australia the key data in our over leveraged economy is the Private Sector Credit data late in the week but we also have HIA new home sales and construction work done.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Vantage FX | Chinese PMI bouys, Yen low might be in | 23rd November 2012

With US markets closed for the Thanksgiving holiday Europe had a great night after the positive improvement in the Chinese HSBC  PMI was built upon with reasonable PMI outcomes from Europe’s big economies. The Yen also weakened substantially as well but its rally back is suggestive of an interim bottom for the moment.

Looking at the PMI results and starting in China the HSBC Flash PMI showed that manufacturing output was in expansionary territory for the first time in 13 months printing at 50.4 from 49.5 previously. Clearly this is not roaring higher but at a 13 month high it is another indicator that the Chinese authorities have indeed fashioned a soft landing.

Market Euro PMIIn Europe the PMI’s were similarly encouraging although still mainly in the contraction zone as you can see in the chart beside from Markit. Indeed the French PMI increased from 43.7 to 44.7, Germany from 46.0 to 46.8 and the overall Eurozone from 45.4 to 46.2. So its still recession and contraction for Europe at the moment but at least there was some improvement. But the employment sub index was weak still so there is certainly more hard going on the jobs front for the many millions of Europeans who are out of work.

Europe is clearly still struggling under austerity.

Elsewhere in Europe Spain kicked off its borrowing program for 2013 with a bond auction raising €3.9 billion from 2012 to 2021. Spain needs to raise something in the order of €207 billion next year possibly more if the budget deficit overshoots current expectations.

Stocks

So on balance at the close the Europeans were happy with the Chinese data and that of Europe and the bourses were sharply higher. The FTSE was up 0.68%, the DAX rose 0.84% and the CAC was 0.60% higher – indeed all of the European markets I watch were higher overnight. Also worth noting is that hopes continue to grow that a Greek solution is possible at next Monday’s meeting.

In Asia yesterday the Chinese data was the primary Macro focus resulting in a mostly bullish bias across the region. the Nikkei was up 1.56%, the Hang Seng rose 1.02%, the Kospi was 0.82% higher with the Straits Times also ebullient rising 0.89%.

SPI 200

The Australian market likewise was higher up 0.95% in ASX All Ords terms and as you can see in the chart above ran into an old trendline which it was unable to close above. From a trading perspective there is a lot of congestion for the SPI in the 4330-4530 zone on the weekly charts and I would be looking for a consolidation in this zone before the next big move. The top of this zone is an old trendline stretching back to 2007 so it is HUGE.

FX Markets

The first thing I do everyday is run through Reuters and Bloomberg on my iPhone for any news that might be relevant for this note while I’m making a coffee and then the next thing I do is sit down and scroll through the charts of the 40+ markets I watch.

What struck me this morning was the candlesticks on the USDJPY and many of the Yen crosses which, when combined with my other indicators suggest that even within the overall uptrend an interim top might, I stress might, be in for the moment.

Of interest is the very last candle stick which shows the yen made a new low (USDJPY high) in the last 24 hours but has or is closing below the close of yesterday. At the same time my MACD indicator is at a very high level and the ATR has risen materially over the past month or so. What this says to me is that longs need to be brought closer to market or if super aggressive a short could be instituted with a stop above last nights high.

But remember I am very bullish longer term this cross so it is a counter trend trade.

Elsewhere EURUSD pushed a little higher but could not hold onto gains. Euro is currently at 1.2876 up 0.38% but off the days high of 1.29oo. Technically it looks like it can run toward resistance at 1.2985ish and we’ll see how it looks there. Against the GBP Euro is trying to break back inside its old uptrend but its been trying to do that for a couple of weeks now. With GBP hitting trendline resistance against the USD EURGBP just moght be able to get through if EUR kicks on. Worth noting is that EURJPY has broken a 3 year downtrend overnight so a close around these levels would be a big signal for that cross.

For the AUD 1.04 was the high again and the AUD sits at 1.0385 presently – It remains becalmed.

Commodities

For me the big news on commodities overnight was that Barclays are leaving the floor of the LME which has to have an impact on liquidity longer term otherwise not a lot of action except for copper which was pushed higher by the Chinese PMI data up 0.6%.

Datawise German GDP tonight will be important and interesting as will the IFO report and Italian retail sales. Otherwise quiet with no data in Australia and the US having a half day’s trade.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Vantage FX | Stocks, Yen and Aussie dollar down again | 16th November 2012

The Yen was the big story of the past 24 hours as expectations grow that the BOJ is about to man the monetary pump once more but equally it was another weak night on European stock markets after the Eurozone GDP confirmed that Europe is in the technical definition of recession and it became clear that the IMF has had enough of the European Commisions bumbling handling of the Greek debt crisis.  Israeli rhetoric and actions in Gaza haven’t helped the tone of the markets either while in the US data wasn’t too flash either but their stock markets have been able to hold up relatively well even with a negative bias.

Looking at the European data we see that the Eurozone reported growth of -0.1% in Q3 which on top of the -0.2% for Q2 satisfies the economists technical definition of recession but I’m guessing the 80 million Europeans out of work might already know that. Looking at the specific country GDP’s Germany and France printed growth of 0.2% which was on the money for Germany but a positive surprise for France. In Spain GDP contracted 0.3% for a year on year fall of 1.6%. Italy is under real pressure falling 0.2% which was much better than the half a percent fall the punditry expected but its annual contraction stayed at 2.4%. In the UK we didn’t get GDp but retail sales were much weaker than expected printing -0.8% in October against expectations of a flat result.

In other data we saw CPI for Europe and the US which was 1.5% and 2.2% yoy respectively. So no inflation pressure there. Jobless Claims were also out in the US and showed a huge surge to 439,000 from 375,000 previously but I think we can blame Sandy for this one. What Sandy can’t be blamed for though is the huge drop in the Philly Fed manufacturing survey from 5.7 last month to -10.7 in November. The New York Empire State manufacturing index was -5.22 which is a little better than expected.

So all in all a very poor night for data and a bad night for European and US bourses again.

Stocks

At the close of play in Europe losses were across the board the FTSE down 0.77%, the DAX fell 0.52% and the CAC was off 0.52%. Amsterdam was hit hard falling 1.79% after the weak Dutch GDP of -1.01% result but Madrid managed to buck the trend up 0.29%

In the US with 22 minutes to go  the S&P 500 is down 0.48% at 1349, the Dow Jones is 0.54% lower and the NASDAQ is off 0.68%. It’s been a very weak start to November indeed.

In Asia yesterday the Nikkei roared higher as the spectre of Money Printing by the BOJ captured the headlines after more comments from the putative Prime Minister Shinzo Abe continued his push for unlimited Yen. A weaker Yen might just get some competitiveness back into Japanese companies which have clearly lost their innovative Mojo over the past half decade or more – walkman or iPod – so at the close the Nikkei was up 1.90%. The rest of Asia, including our own ASX All Ords were largely lower – the ASX was down 0.91%, Kospi fell 1.23%, Straits Times fell 1.08% and Shanghai fell 1.22%.

FX Markets

While all the news is about the Yen today I want to focus on the Aussie Dollar because readers know that I am of the view the USDJPY is headed over time back toward 100. Levels are 82, 84, 93 then 99 longer term.

But lets look at the AUD which after weeks of ignoring the weak equity market and its sharp selloff has finally had a sell off of its own over the last day or so. Sure the low of 1.0306 overnight is not really that bad when compared to the recent high of 1.0458 just the night before nor even last weeks high around 1.0480 but the questions must be asked as to whether the Aussie might be in for a round of selling.

AUD USD

Now of course it could head lower now that it has broken the uptrend line and I am looking for a move to the mid 1.0250 region and possibly a retest toward the bottom of the recent range at 1.0150.

More medium term though the outlook for equities is the key – again in the US early strength has given way to weakness toward the close and the S&P 500 below 1350 is flashing a warning and I do expect it to head another 100 points lower eventually. Should this come to pass it will really test the Aussie’s status as a safe harbour for e little while because it would signal a real risk off event and buyers would pull their heads in and the specs who are long would need to liquidate. Key here though is that the Sovereigns and Central banks who have so much AUD will not be spooked so even a full on risk off event is not going to see AUD at 60 cents.

On this the catalyst or excuse for some of the past 24 hours selling appears to have been the release of the RBA data on its transactions with the market which showed that it purchased a net $483 million worth of Foreign Currency last month, sold AUD. Some have characterised this as intervention but I would simply say that $483 million is not a lot in the context of a days trade let alone 1 month. I personally sold more than double that amount on one day back more than a decade ago when volumes were lighter with no real lasting impact – so its not intervention, its just leaning against the wind and building up a war chest for when they need to intervene to support the Aussie in the future or where they can make some profits turning the position.

EURJPY

Elsewhere the Euro continued its technical rally against the USD which is in no small part aided by the strong run up in EURJPY which you can see in the chart above. It’s incongrous for the Euro to rally after that poor GDP data last night but equally if think of the surprise in the data and so how the market might react we see that the overall Eurozone result along with that of France and Germany were at or better than expectations which helps explain the EUR strength a little better. GBP also had a better night than could have been expected given the weak retail sales but this one is still pointed lower.

Commodities

On commodity markets the Nymex crude was off 1.23% to $85.26 Bbl and it hasn’t really gone anywhere for a while now. Gold fell 0.94% but Silver somehow rose 1.21% which seems incongrous but needs investigation. Copper was up marginally and the Ags were down again. Soybeans fell 1.07%, Corn dropped 0.62% and Wheat fell 0.38%.

Datawise There are a few Fed guys talking today in our timezone then I’ll be watching the EU trade balance tonight and then US IP tonight.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Catch me on Twitter @gregorymckenna or @FX_Global

Vantage FX | Japan heads over its own cliff – AUD strong | 13th November 2012

Thinish holiday trade left markets to their own devices last night but they lacked the catalyst for any material moves. Certainly Asia had an interesting session after the weak Japanese GDP data was released but balancing this was the better Chinese data from the weekend but new lending data released which showed that new loans fell 14% from a year ago was a concern.

The big news overnight after the settlement between Apple and HTC was that Samsung hit Apple with a 20% price rise on its processors which knocked Apple shares a little but otherwise it really was a fairly quiet night’s trade with enduring concerns about Greece and a report that the embattled country will need an extra €15 billion by 2014.

The Japanese data out yesterday was appalling. Appalling because of the future it shows Europe. Appalling because of the futures it possibly also shows other developed nations and appalling because of the toll that this 2 decades of moribund will have and is taking on Japanese society. GDP for Q3 came in at -0.9% which annulaised to -3.5% which is the worse outcome since the Earthquake and Tsunami. Exports were down 5% and capital expenditure fell 3.2%. In other data Machine Tool orders fell at a -6.7% year on year clip from -2.8% last.

Stocks

At the close of play European stocks were largely unchanged mixed with the FTSE off 0.04%, the DAX up 0.07% while the CAC continues to be the volatile one of the three big European markets falling 0.35%. madrid came under pressure again falling 0.87%.

On Spain I know that conventional wisdom is that Spain will have to ask for a bail out eventually but for mine it seems that the problem with or reason why Spanish PM Rajoy is dragging his feet were writ large by his decision to forestall foreclosures over the weekend after the suicide of an evictee. When or if Rajoy asks for help he will most likely lose the ability to institute such simple but important reactions to the impact of his austerity – he can see how Greece is going and has gone with the ceding of a lot of its fiscal sovereignty – why exactly would he need to tread that path if he can muddle through?

In the US it is Veterans day but the Stock market is open and in fairly quiet trade the S&P 500 is up 0.10% to 1381, the Dow is up 0.10% and the NASDAQ up 0.06% at 7.01 59 minutes before the close.

Japanese stocks as measure by the Nikkei were 0.93% lower yesterday after the weak GDP data and the ASX All Ords was also lower down 0.28%, the Kospi in Korea fell 0.19% and in Singapore the Straits Times fell 0.07%. Shanghai preferred to focus on the Chinese data over the weekend and lifted 0.49%.

FX Markets

Tight ranges overnight in Global FX markets. The Euro sits at 1.2709 this morning after trading in a 1.2695-1.2739 range over the past 24 hours and is roughly unchanged on that time frame. GBP on the other hand is starting to look very weak – granted it hasn’t yet broken the important 200 day moving average at 1.5845 but it is not too far off at the moment sitting at 1.5872.

GBPUSD

The Aussie dollar remains as strong as an Ox and had another good day if you are a bull. Whereas most other currencies are unchanged or weaker against the US dollar the Aussie is up 0.38% to 1.0424 after a high on the 61.8% retacement level of the September October selloff. The big news for those who like to play them continues to be the Aussie on the crosses – our cross report will be up later – but EURAUD and GBPAUD are both in strong downtrends.

Commodities

Interesting story this morning that the US is going to become the world’s biggest oil producer for about 15-20 years from 2017 due to the unlocking of the shale oil and gas according to the International Energy Agency. Certainly an interesting prediction if it comes true with massive geo-political implications.

Overnight Nymex crude was a little lower off 0.26% to $85.85 Bbl. Gold was 0.18% higher at $1733 oz and Silver outpaced the yellow metal once again rising 1.11% to $32.66 oz. The Ags got smashed after the announcement on Friday of a bigger harvest saw prices trade through range bottoms and the technical selling has accelerated the move lower. Soybeans was down 2.41% and is almost at the target we set on the break Friday, Wheat fell 3.19% and Corn was off 2.81%. The chart below is Soybeans but there could be a trade on Corn and or Wheat as they have yet not broken down through their range bottom.

Datawise In New Zealand we get the Food price Index this morning before UK RICS house prices and the NAB Business survey (the only economic data you really need to know for Australia I reckon). Japan has industrial production and capacity utilization to follow up on yesterday’s GDP data and then tonight we have a raft of price data in the UK and Europe along with the German ZEW survey of economic sentiment. Some minor data in the US such as the NFIB business optimism index and Redbook index.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can. 

I’m also on Twitter @gregorymckenna

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Vantage FX | Stocks fall, Yen gains, AUD strong | 9th November 2012

Unlike Thelma and Louise markets are not keen on careening over the Fiscal Cliff and stocks were lower for a second day and the US dollar and the Japanese Yen gained.

Lets not forget though as I have been writing since the start of this Q3 earnings season that I felt the risks were that we had a 2007 style season where the reality of the weak underlying economy meant that top line revenues and profits disappointed expectations. this is largely what we have seen so as much as this fiscal cliff stuff could reverse with soothing words from either the President or Republican leader John Boehner over coming days or weeks for mine it is simply the reality of earnings both now and in prospect which has been the big headwind. The Fiscal cliff just strengthens the breeze. As the Wall Street Journal wrote this morning,

Sure, the election has something to do with the stock sell-off, as does Europe as well. But don’t forget about earnings, which are coming in at their worst rates in three years.

Anyway, looking at the data in Europe overnight we see weakness again with German exports falling a larger than expected 2.5% in September against an expectation of 1.5%.Elsewhere in France both exports and imports were lower than last month while in Greece unemployment rose to 25.4% August from 24.8% previous.

The other big news of course was the decisions by both the BoE and ECB which held rates steady and in England the BoE keep their own QE the same at £375 bln for the moment. In Europe ECB boss Draghi was talking up the OMT again and comparing it to a heavy monetary policy injection but his outlook for growth was pretty poor and he seemed to imply that he and his colleagues at the ECB had done what they can with regard to Greece.

In the US though the data wasn’t terrible by any stretch which reinforces the recent trend of relative outperformance of the US relative to Europe and other nations. Initial jobless claims fell to 355k from 370k expected and 363k last while the improvement in the trade balance from the -$45 billion expected in September to just -$41.55 will increase GDP at the second read most likely as net exports deduct less from growth – the NAB said this morning it might even be a 0.4% uplift.

Stocks

At the close of play European stocks were lower but less so than the previous day with the FTSE  down 0.27%, the DAX down 0.39% and the CAC fell 0.06%. Madrid fell 0.39% even as Spain got a good result from its bond auction over night.

In the US at 7.22 am EDT and 38 minutes before the close the S&P 500 is down 0.62% to 1385, the Dow is off 0.37% and the NASDAQ has dropped 0.92% as Apple is under pressure.

Asian stocks were under intense pressure yesterday with Hong Kong playing catch up to the US selloff getting slammed to its biggest single-session percentage loss in 3½ months with a fall of 2.41%. The Nikkei dropped 1.51% and the Shanghai composite fell 1.63%. Clearly Asian investors are impacted by the tractor beam of the global selloff but equally by concerns about the impact on Asian growth from the weakness in Europe and the US economies (even if the US is doing a little little better).

In Korea the Kospi dropped 1.19%, Straits Times fell 1.02% in Singapore and Bombay fell 0.30%.

Like the Aussie dollar the ASX All Ords is somehow holding up better than most markets falling only 0.70% yesterday but it will be off sharply again today and in SPI200 terms we continue to watch the 4425 level as a trigger for a deeper retracement.

FX Markets

The US dollar is doing OK but getting belted by the Yen – as are all the Yen crosses.

USD JPY Chart

As you can see in the chart above USDJPY might have a long way to drop.

Anyway on of Global FX markets it was more consolidative then hugely negative with the USD appreciating against the EUR which is continuing to slip lower although it has still not closed below the 38.2% retracement of the July to September rally at 1.2734. Momentum is building for a deeper retracement however and my system is short has been for 5 days now. The Euro’s high of 1.2780 gave way to a low of 1.2716 but at 1.2748 as I write EUR is only 0.16% lower. Sterling is larger unchanged down only 0.05% to 1.5976.

The Australian dollar on the other hand has rallied on the back of the better than expected employment report yesterday and at 1.0425 it is up 0.14% and doing better on the crosses, except the Yen. Commodities did a little better overnight helping support the AUD and it is looking more and more like a safe haven every day that stocks fall and it doesn’t.

Commodities

Crude oil futures had a bit of a volatile session but recovered some of the previous days lost ground rising 0.8% to $85.09 Bbl – it does seem clear however that Nymex crude is in a downtrend as you can see in the chart below.

Nymex Crude

Gold continued its 4 day rally rising to $1732 or 0.88% and a long way from last week’s lows – at least in dollars per ounce terms. Clearly gold seems to be rising as a safe haven play at the moment when their price action is view against the prism of what is happening elsewhere in the markets at the moment.

Datawise The RBA’s quarterly Statement on Monetary Policy is out this morning and we’ll be having a good look at that for their view on thinks – at least their justification for not easing this month and any hints on the next meeting or that in February. Then it is a raft of global CPI data starting in China today and then moving into Germany and Greece tonight. Also out is industrial output in Italy, France and Greece as well as Leading indicators and trade balance for the UK. In the US its import and export price indices while in China over the weekend we get money supply, new loans, trade balance and IMPORTANTLY export and import data.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Vantage FX | Euro under pressure from Spain and Greece | 6th November 2012

It was a cautious night with the Euro and European bourses coming under renewed pressure in European trade as concerns about Greece and its bailout combined with a rise in Spanish unemployment of 2.7% last month so that  4.8 million Spaniards are out of work. Equally a bit of US election uncertainty weighed slightly on the markets as well.

Firstly in Europe the struggles of Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras to win a vote to institute the next round of austerity and so secure more bailout funds combined with the Spanish unemployment news to drive German 2 year notes below zero for the first time in a couple of months dragging 10 year bunds lower as well. The Spanish bond auctions on Thursday bears watching particularly as they continue to drag their heals about asking for help with Spanish economic minister De Guindos saying overnight that Spain will make a decision on bailout when ready – So there!

In the US there seems to be two key concerns about the election. The first question is just how tight is the race – some put it at 50:50 but Nate Silver’s more granular approach says Obama will win easily. The second concern is of course about the impact on monetary and Fiscal Policy that would result in either side winning. Romney is seen as more austere, Obama less so but Obama is viewed as less friendly for the capital gains tax  regime. These concerns then of course combine with the fiscal cliff and we just have increased uncertainty.

Datawise overnight in the US the release of the ISM services index showed a slight easing in strength for the services sector as the index dropped back to 54.2 from 55.1 in September. Orders fell to 54.8 from 57.7 although the employment index rose.

Stocks

At the close European markets were lower as a result of the above. The FTSE fell 0.5%, the DAX dropped 0.51% and the CAC continues to be the manic depressive of the big markets falling 1.26%. Madrid was 1.87% lower.

In the US an hour before the close stocks are getting back into the black with the S&P 500 up 0.11% to 1415, the Dow is up 0.04% and the NASDAQ is up 0.47% as Apple has had a good day after news it sold 3 million of its mini iPads.

In Australia our SPI200 contract pushed below but reversed off support the previous day and closed just above the important support at 4425 we are watching. The Australian stock market is likely to head lower if this level gives way on a close basis.

FX Markets

The concerns in Europe and caution in markets helped the USD maintain its bid tone overnight with Euro breaking down through the bottom of the range at 1.2800 to make a low of 1.2765 before rallying a little to sit at 1.2786 as I write. As you can see in the chart below after a double top recently EUR has now broken below the range low of 1.2800, fallen and is closing below the 200 day moving average for the first time in 2 months. At the same time my medium term trend indicator when combined with the ADX suggests further downside for the EUR – support is 1.2740 then 1.2600.

Elsewhere GBP was under pressure from the weaker than expected UK services PMI and traded down to a low of 1.5956 after yesterday’s high of 1.6039 – it now sits at 1.5968. USDJPY couldn’t take out the highs of Friday trading up to 80.56 before falling back once more and it sits at 80.26 presently.

Today the RBA meets in Australia and I favour a cut of at least 25 basis points. Australia and the Australian economy needs a cut – but it will probably only help at the margin given household de-leveraging  and unless it is a shock 50 basis points it won’t impact the Australian Dollar in any material way. Indeed the AUD did really well in Asian trade yesterday and has held those gains overnight sitting at 1.0365 up 0.31% on the day in contrast to the EUR’s fall of 0.19% and the Pounds 0.32% drop.

If you are interested in the SIngapore dollar, indeed if you are interested in trend following, you might want to have a look at the USDSGD rate as it looks like it might be ready for a reversal of fortune. As yet there is little momentum in this move but it bears watching.

Commodities

The caution evident in stock and currency markets gave gold a little bit of a bid tone and lifted it from the 9 week lows from Friday’s close. Gold rose 0.48% to $1682 oz. Silver likewise rallied off recent lows closing at $30.97 up 0.9%. Crude also had as slighthly better day rising to $85.18 or 0.38%. Interesting price action in Crude with it dipping below Friday’s close in Asian trade before recovering helping the negative trend to lose a little momentum.

Datawise The RBA move today is clearly the most important number for the day but we also get data on the House Price Index in Australia. In Japan today we have the Leading and Coincident Indices and then tonight in Europe there is a raft of Services PMI’s before UK production data and German factory orders.

Thoughts, comments, queries together with frank and fearless feedback all welcome. I’m happy to answer questions or comments on the comment stream wherever I can

NB: Please note all references to rates above are approximate and should not be used for trade reference.

Vantage FX | Sterling surges as UK exits recession | 26th October 2012

For those long of Sterling would have been rubbing their hands with glee overnight, with the UK economy lifting out a recession with a 1-percent surge in third-quarter GDP. Despite risk trends favoring the greenback, sterling forged gains against major counterparts with investors encouraged by the Olympics-fueled strength from the economy. While it may not suggest broader economic headwinds will dissipate, it’s clear the recent macro picture has picked-up, implying less of a chance of further monetary easing from the Bank of England.  Cable surged in the period to follow with a break of $US1.61 before leveling out around the 1.6140 levels. Residual support across the risk spectrum was also noted at the expense of the greenback which later managed to claw back gains alongside softer US equities.

True to form, the health of corporate America proved to be a stumbling block for US equities despite a round of encouraging economic reports. Durable goods orders surged 9.9 percent in September, from a previous fall of 13.5 percent. The closely watched weekly jobless claims also came in better than expected while pending home sales continued to show signs of improvement.  Still, despite the stronger data pulse, there remains a number of themes in the way of a stronger, sustained leg higher. The so-called ‘fiscal cliff,’ referring to the expiration of the bush-era tax cuts in late 2012, is also taking on greater market relevance in conduction with automatic spending cuts in early 2013. Political uncertainty is also proving to be a stumbling block ahead of the presidential election.

Earlier in Europe, markets found solace in the completion of Portugal’s IMF review and remain hopeful Greece will soon reach an agreement over budget cuts needed to receive their next bailout tranche.

The Japanese Yen maintained its south-bound trajectory with the USDJPY pair making a convincing break the upside of Y80 level to 4-month highs of Y80.35. The Yen’s welcomed descent is in anticipation to next week’s Bank of Japan policy meeting were its expected the bank will unleash a new round of monetary easing.

Closer to home, after yesterday surge on the back of the RBNZ policy decision, the Kiwi took a hit after newly appointed RBNZ governor Graeme Wheeler said the bank has “scope to cut interest rates if needed.”  After reaching highs of 82.43 US cents yesterday, the NZDUSD pair is stabilizing around the 81.85 US cent level.

The Aussie dollar rose to highs just shy of 104-figure before a lackluster performance from U.S equities began to weigh on risk trends. After falling to lows of 103.35 US cents, the local unit has consolidated higher around 103.6 US cents. Still, it’s been a positive week for the Aussie dollar with tentative signs China is stabilizing and paring back of interest rate cut expectations guiding a move higher. In the absence of scheduled data today, we anticipate regional equity performance to govern A$ dollar moves with further weakness likely to be contained at 103 US cents before the European handover.

Vantage FX | Kiwi surges on RBNZ policy decision; A$ higher on CPI/Chinese data | 25th October 2012

A series of set-backs failed to dull the Australian dollar’s appeal overnight which built on yesterday’s post CPI and China PMI gains. Stronger than anticipated third-quarter CPI data breathed new life into the Australian dollar yesterday, and a subsequent bounce in Chinese manufacturing PMI confirmed the trend. While the rate of underlying inflation remains neatly within the RBA’s 2-3 percent target range, investors have pared expectations of a Melbourne Cup day interest rate cut. Bids for the Australian dollar also increased after yesterday’s preliminary manufacturing PMI. Manufacturing PMI rose to 49.1 in October from a previous 47.9 according to HSBC’s preliminary estimates. Although the index is still in contraction, it’s seen as another sign China’s economy is beginning to stabilize. While the RBA may categorize inflation pressures as transitory given the introduction of the carbon tax, it’s also apparent they now have less “scope” than previously thought. They may also acknowledge tentative signs China is stabilizing, in light of the strong data pulse from the region.

The Kiwi coat-tailed the Aussie higher for most of the session before taking over in the last hour, coinciding with the RBNZ policy decision which saw the overnight cash rate on hold at 2.5 percent. The ensuing statement showed no indication lower interest rates are on the agenda, noting “risks to the global outlook are more balanced.” The Kiwi is now leading a risk offensive against the greenback testing short-term resistance at 82 US cents, and Aussie dollar appears to be receiving residual support testing overnight highs of 103.5 US cents.

Nevertheless, risk trends abroad were hardly conducive to a risk rally with concerns from both sides of the Atlantic remaining play. Euro-Zone PMI releases kept the Euro under moderate pressure. Both German services and manufacturing PMI fell short of estimates, and Euro-Zone Composite fell deeper into contraction territory. Spain’s economic fortunes also continue to hang in the balance. According to central bank estimates, growth contracted by 0.4 percent in third-quarter from the previous quarter. Investors also appear to be growing impatient with Madrid’s apparent reluctance to request financial aid, considered a critical part of the equation needed to restore confidence in the broader Euro-Zone.

US markets managed to finish only moderately lower after Tuesday’s slide. The DOW and S&P500 close down 0.19 and 0.31 percent respectively. The health of corporate America remained a key concern for US markets, but recent losses across equities suggests markets have priced in further disappointing earnings – in  turn, providing greater scope for upside surprises. The Markit manufacturing PMI rose to 51.3 in October from a previous 51.1. Economists had anticipated a slight larger rise to 51.5.

Vantage FX | AUD slides ahead of CPI, China PMI | 24th October 2013

After being the recipient of solid support in recent sessions, the Euro retraced recent gains overnight with a break below $US1.30 before finding support around $US1.2550.  Spanish debt concerns began to infiltrate investor psyche once again after the central bank’s growth revisions and ratings agency Moody’s downgraded five Spanish regions, including that of Catalonia ahead of a November 25 election to vote of separating from Spain. An earlier debt auction which was mixed but the prospect of a bailout continued to cushion demand.

Both the Australian and New Zealand dollars fell in unison with US dollar strength noted across major counterparts. Support around 102.9/95 failed to hold with sell-stops below encouraging a deeper correction for the Aussie.  The health of  US corporates remained a key point of contention for US markets with industry heavyweights such as Xerox, DuPont and UPS failing to meet revenue estimates. The DOW and S&P500 slumped 1.82 and 1.44 percent respectively.

The Canadian dollar was an exception to the rule, managing to ward off  weakness seen across the commodity currencies. Recent sessions have seen the Canadian dollar hit by what appeared to be a dovish turn by Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney. Last week Carney noted: “Elevated global uncertainty is holding back global economic growth and, thus, the demand for Canadian exports. In addition, there is some evidence that global uncertainty is affecting domestic activity.” But Carney maintained the tightening bias overnight; with the policy decision statement showing “modest withdrawal of monetary policy stimulus will likely be required, consistent with achieving the 2% inflation target.” The statement added, “The timing and degree of any such withdrawal will be weighed carefully against global and domestic developments, including the evolution of imbalances in the household sector.”

Local pundits will now be watching closely at today’s domestic inflation data, with the HSBC China manufacturing PMI also likely to be a key barometer for the Australian dollar. The RBA’s preferred measure of consumer prices (the trimmed mean and median) which excludes the most volatile prices on the scale, are both expected to record 0.6 percent growth on quarter, or 2.2 percent annually. Headline inflation is expected to record growth of 1-percent from 0.5 percent in the second-quarter, representing annual growth of 1.6 percent. The bank has made clear the local inflation outlook provides “scope” for further monetary accommodation and markets have suitably priced in the chances of a November rate cut. Nevertheless subdued inflation will serve as a reminder of the RBA’s “scope” to respond to struggling sectors of the local economy. The HSBC Flash China manufacturing data scheduled for release at 1245 AEST will also be closely watched and a considerable barometer for the Australian dollar.  Any deviation from the downside of estimates will once again place the local unit in a vulnerable position, with support at 102 and 101.5 US cents likely to help contain losses before the European handover.  Nevertheless, the upside potential is also present given markets have – for the most part – baked a rate cut on Melbourne Cup day. Should both inflation and Chinese data outpace expectations, we anticipate buyers to return to the market with a break above 103 US cents expected.

Case for RBA cut gains momentum on budget review | 23rd October 2012

The Aussie dollar remained under moderate pressure overnight following the Mid-Year Economic Fiscal Outlook which unveiled a series of budget cuts in an effort to return the budget to surplus. Lower tax receipts and global headwinds have hit the government’s bottom line, requiring further cost cutting in attempt to squeeze out a surplus this year. It’s apparent any fiscal restraint will flow-on to monetary policy, providing even greater scope for the RBA to maintain an accommodative policy stance. This took away some of the Aussie dollars lustre yesterday, but we’ve still seen moderate support above the 103 US cent levels overnight alongside a late bounce from US equities.

Although risk trends will remain a primary directive for the local unit, the domestic week ahead will see inflation and Chinese manufacturing data a primary influence. The RBA’s preferred measure of inflation – the trimmed mean and median – which excludes the most volatile prices on the scale, are both expected to record 0.6 percent growth on quarter, or 2.2 percent annually. Headline inflation is expected to record growth of 1-percent from 0.5 percent in the second-quarter, representing annual growth of 1.6 percent. The RBA has made clear the local inflation outlook provides “scope” for further monetary accommodation and markets have suitably priced in the chances of a November rate cut.

In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, RBA board member Jillian Broadbent flagged the need for a weaker currency as the mining boom comes off the boil, noting “I would hope the Australian dollar gets a bit weaker going forward as the mining boom eases off,” And then we might get a bit more of a boost from having the currency a bit lower, rather than the dampening effect of being higher.” At the very least, this suggests the high currency remains at the forefront of the RBA’s mind, however, although it may add weight to a near-term rate cut, it hardly suggests the bank will embark on a series of cuts specifically targeting the high exchange rate.

Meanwhile, the Euro avoid another meltdown overnight after Spain‘s Peoples Party – led by Mariano Rajoy – secured a win in the region of Galicia. Markets are clearly focusing on the prospect of a Spanish bailout, and any easing in political tension provides further scope for Rajoy’s ruling party. Still, hopes of a Spanish bailout may wear as Rajoy maintains a casual demeanor in spite of growing investor expectations.  “I’m not going to take into account any pressure that people might exert on me, but frankly no one is doing that,” I don’t see any European Union leader telling me I should use the mechanism the ECB has put in place.” Rajoy noted last week. Nevertheless, there’s been little in the way of catalysts to prompt a recalibration of expectations, thus providing an element of support for the Euro which remained supported above $US1.30 overnight.