Vantage FX | Big Week for markets – USDJPY a crowded trade | 3rd December 2012

Stocks were largely unchanged in the US on Friday night with fairly quiet ranges. The positivity that pervaded Asian trade after the announcement of  ¥1.2 Trillion stimulus package had most impact in Asian share markets and on Yen crosses but the bourses of Europe and the US were more subdued.

It is a huge week for data with the global PMI call already kicking off with Chinese data over the weekend but equally we are still faced with an enduring division over the fiscal cliff with Republican House leader John Boehner saying there is a stalemate but noting he doesnt want to go over the cliff but Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said on TV Sunday,

I think we’re going over the cliff. It’s pretty clear to me that they made a political calculation

What he is referring to is President Obama’s opening offer in the negotiations and Graham claimed that this offer put the US on the road to Greece. So there is plenty of opportunity for fiscal cliff negotiations to add volatility to the market this week and next.

Looking at the the European employment data released Friday night continued to paint a picture of a continent mired in a generational catastrophe. European leaders need to do all they can to settle this mess because unless or until unemployment which hit a new high of 11.7% Euro wide starts to come down Europe will remain in the mire.

Worth noting is that Moody’s cut the AAA rating of the EFSF and ESM highlighting the issues facing the rescuers rescuing those nations who need to be rescued – Europe is a mess yet Euro rallied again in November, go figure.

In the America’s Brazilian GDP was quite weak at 0.9% year on year while in Canada the rate of GDP growth was just 1% year on year. Looking at the Data in the US showed that personal income growth was flat in November with consumption growing only 0.1% in October.

Stocks

At the close the US market ended pretty quiet trade flat with the S&P 500 up 0.02% to 1416, the Dow up 0.03% but the NASDAQ was 0.06% lower. In Europe it was a slightly less positive day with the FTSE down 0.06%, the CAC fell0.33% and Madrid was 0.37% lower. The DAX bucked the trend however rising a tiny 0.06% but in the black nonetheless.

Asia had a good day Friday with even shanghai managing to reverse its run of negatives rising 0.84%. The Nikkei was 0.48% higher, Hang Seng rose 0.49% while the Straits Times in Singapore rose 0.79%. The Australian market was positive as well up 0.62% and futures are suggesting further rallies in trade when the market opens today.

FX Markets

The Yen was the big mover on Friday once the announcement of the stimulus package hit the screens traders sold Yen with gusto. Looking at USDJPY below it is clear that the announcement was unable to take out the recent high which to me reinforces this level as a tradeable high. Equally important is market positioning which according to the CFTC commitment of traders report released Friday for positions as at Tuesday last week is at a 5 year high – that is in the last 5 years Yen shorts have not been larger than they are now. The full report on the CFTC data is here and while positioning itself won”t cause a reversal it hints at a vulnerable market.

ISDJPY

Elsewhere the Euro still can’t close above 1.30 and the AUD which has large positonns of its own has still not been able to break out of this resistance zone with any gusto. At one stage Friday the AUD looked terribly week but it rallied back off the old trendline which now acts as support.

Australian Dollar

The low Friday was in the 1.0405 zone we highlighted and technically the 4 hour charts seem to be focused back in that direction again today – it’s a huge week for the Aussie with the RBA widely expected to cut tomorrow and the release of a raft of economic data including Q3 GDP Wednesday and the latest employment data Thursday.

Commodities

Silver reversed sharply on Friday which reinforces the cautious tone we took on the break of that big trendline Thursday night preferring to see how the week closed to confirm the break. As you can see in my Vantage chart below it was a avery sharp pullback and Silver closed 3.33% lower at $33.41. Gold was lower by $16 or 0.94% to $1715 oz.

Silver sell off

Crude was up 0.95% to $88.94 continuing its mild uptrend while the Ag’s were low with Wheat hit hardest down 2.82%. Corn fell 0.47% with Soybeans down 0.64%

Datawise It is such a huge week this week there are many event risks so we all need to know when and what data is being released.  On the day however we see the release of the AiG performance of manufacturing index, TD Inflation index, Job Ads, Company Profits and retail sales. In New Zealand we have the Terms of trade and PMI data out of China (things have been running positively lately). Tonight is huge with the release of PMI’s across Europe and the US

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 | Worries surface, stocks and USDYEN off | 27th November 2012

Europe and US markets weren’t so keen on buying stocks in the manner that they had last week as risk appetite went off a little overnight. The Aussie Dollar held in reasonably well although it is down and the USD benefited particularly against the Yen which continues to consolidate from recent highs.

It’s hard to know what’s different on a Monday that isn’t apparent on a Friday because nothing really happened over the weekend to cause stocks and risk to go off. The answer is that nothing really fresh happened but traders just wanted to focus on the negatives over the past 24 hours. Feeding that negativity was the release overnight of the German Gfk Consumer confidence survey which was weaker than expected at 5.9 from 6.1 last and 6.2 expected.  Of course we are also a few days closer to the Fiscal Cliff, and another day without a resolution to the Greek issue if you add the  Catalan election which seems to imply some sort of move toward autonomy plus weaker than expected Chicago Fed (-0.56 v 0.00 last) and Dallas Fed indices (-2.8 v 1.8 last) and there is probably enough marginal negatives to combine to a dour day’s trade.

Equally however it could simply be that as we noted yesterday given the thinness and low volume of last week’s stock rally markets will really need to see confirmation to kick higher. So when there were no positive catalysts over the weekend or yesterday the short term focus turned negative – so after last night’s price action as we also noted yesterday we remain wary.

LoonieThe big news overnight was the announcement that the Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney was to succeed Mervyn King as the Governor of the Bank of England. Global FX traders got a bit excited and took GBPCAD sharply higher which also put upward pressure on the USDCAD rate.

As you can see in this chart USDCAD is right on trendline support from the low of early September. This is a good catalyst for trading with the line looking solid for now but a break looking also likely to prove decisive for a change in trend.

Whatever you view on USDCAD there looks likely to be some action here soon.

Stocks

So with negativity to the fore European Bourses were lower across all the markets I follow. The FTSE fell 0.56%, the DAX dropped 0.23% and the CAC was 0.79% lower. Everything I read is about the Cliff and Greece.

In the US with 40 minutes before the close the S&P 500 has clawed its way back over 1400 and sits down 5.79 points or 0.41% at 1403.36. The Dow is 0.50% lower but the NASDAQ is up on 0.11%

In Asia yesterday most markets had a better day as they caught up with the strong moves in Europe and the US from Friday. Monday Asian trade can often be fraught with getting the wrong signal or message from the Friday close and so it seems was the case yesterday. The Nikkei was up 0.24%, the ASX All Ords rose 0.27%, the Straits Times was 0.51% and Taiwan surged 1.11%. Both Hong Kong and Shanghai were lower however dropping 0.24% and 0.49% respectively.

FX Markets

Like stocks Global FX traders decided it was a good night to take some money from the table as the strength in the Euro, Euro Yen, Sterling  and AUD  were all sapped in different degrees. It was hardly a big or exciting 24 hours by any stretch of the imagination with EUR only trading a 1.2942-1.2984 range and it is right in the middle as I write. Equally the AUD only traded 1.0432-1.0467 to be essentially unchanged on the past 24 hours.

USD JPY Swing high

USDJPY however looks like it is going to continue its pullback – if you are into Swing Lows (no not the Sweet Chariot song) and Swing Highs then you can see in the chart above that USDJPY certainly has a tradable peak against which positions can be placed. I have gone a little early on this one based on my usual indicators – my MACD indicator is yet to confirm a pullback is due, the moving averages that I use still signal and uptrend and the +DMI at +26 is not extreme – so I am out on a limb but with a clear stop level above the recent high.

For the Aussie traders the outlook remains clouded while below 1.0480 which was the recent high but if it can get through here then it can run to the important trendline resistance at 1.0545/50.

Commodities

Crude fell a little as the US dollar did a little better dropping 0.60% to $87.75 Bbl, gold was essentially unchanged at $1750 oz and silver closed at $34.00 oz. Yesterday we noted that Silver had big trendline resistance at $34.21 and this was the high overnight as Silver tried but failed to push through this important level overnight. As we always say respect the trendlines unless or until they break but a move through here plus say 8-10 cents oz would open the way to a move toward the recent range top at $35.35.

Otherwise it was a fairly quiet night on commodity markets except for Coffee which dropped 6.96%.

Datawise In New Zealand today we the trade data which will be interesting as well as the RBNZ inflation expectations. tonight we have German import price index and UK GDP. In the US its Durable goods and Case Shiller house prices.

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 | 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 | Trend changing for the Yen, AUD still pressured | 22nd November 2012

A quieter pre-holiday session overnight in stocks in the US as traders thoughts turn to the Thanksgiving Holiday tonight. The truce in Gaza helped the tone overall but the big news of the night was the huge selling of Yen as the poor trade data from yesterday combined with the election to suggest the BoJ just might get radical sometime soon.

Japan remains the world’s third largest economy but the data that is flowing at present speaks volumes for the malaise that is not only gripping the economy as a whole but also at a more granular level with regard to individual companies. Yesterday the trade data showed both exports and imports fell with the former down 6.5% year on year in October which was a much worse outcome than the market was looking for.

We’ve written much about the Yen lately and it remains our view that substantial weakness is still ahead for this currency   against the USD. Last night it also came under pressure across the board and as you can see on the weekly EURJPY chart above it is at risk of breaking up through a multi year down trend line stretching back to late 2009.

Fundamentally the Yen has been too strong for too long and the economy is suffering – its fall won’t be linear but this trend to Yen weakness looks set to continue.

Elsewhere overnight the meeting of European leaders to discuss the Greek situation broke up again without resolution and they are going to reconvene on Monday to have another try. This disappointed markets as you would expect and the sticking point seems to be that the IMF can”t participate unless they can see some improvement in the Greek position in the future – thus they fiddling with interest payment terms and other measures to get Greece over the line.

Stocks

But this didn’t seem to worry European stock markets overly with all of the European markets I follow except for Oslo ending in the black. The FTSE was 0.07% higher, the DAX rose 0.16% and the CAC was up 0.44%. Madrid rose 0.36% and Helsinki rose 0.93%.

In the US stocks traded in a fairly tight range in pre-holiday trade and with 25 minutes to go the S&P 500 is up 0.12% to 1390, the Dow Jones is up 0.31% and the NASDAQ is 0.24% higher. Jobless claims were out showing a big fall of 41,000 last week but this data is impacted by the recent Hurricane Sandy and as such are not market moving for the moment.

In Asia yesterday even with the weak trade data the Nikkei managed to head higher by another 0.87% percent. The Hang Seng was up 1.39% as 40 of the 49 companies in the index rose lead by the banks. The Kospi fell 0.32%, the ASX Allords also fell and closed 0.38% lower while the Straits Times was essentially flat but Shanghai managed a 1.07% rally.

FX Markets

As noted above its all about the Yen and the Yen crosses at the moment as markets focus on the election and the potential for increased radicalism by the BoJ and money printing. It is a fair expectation because after 20 years what else can the Japanese Government of the BoJ do – if the Yen reflected the economy it would be well north of 100 but it has consistent outperformed its own economic circumstances for much of the GFC period – so in seeking to devalue the Yen or at least putting that in the minds of traders so the trend is slowly changing for the Yen and further weakness beckons over time.

Elsewhere on Global FX markets the Australian Dollar is off 0.25% to 1.0359, off the low of 1.0332 and well off the high for the past 24 hours just under 1.04 again. The Aussie is directionless against the USD at the moment but there is action on the crosses particularly AUDJPY which looks biased up toward 87 sometime soon – but its being driven by the Yen side of the cross as the Aussie is lagging at the moment.

As you can see in the AUDJPY 4 hour chart above the AUD is looking a little overdone and may be due for a pullback – 84.15 would be massive support and we favour this higher in time.

Euro is most unchanged against the USD at 1.2823 but that is almost a full cent off the low of 1.2733 overnight, while the GBP is up 0.1% to 1.5944 and also substantially off its lows of 1.5881.

Commodities

The EIA reported a decline in Crude supplies overnight of 1.5 million Bbl’s against the expected increase of 1 million bbl’s and even with the truce in Gaza  Crude managed to rally 0.63% to $87.30. Crude is in a shallow uptrend at the moment and retains a positive bias as a result.

In the precious metals market both silver and gold were higher with silver once again outpoint gold rising 1.21% to golds 0.27% rise. At $33.31 oz. Silver is close to downtrend resistance which comes in at $34.34 as you can see in the chart above

Datawise Thanksgiving in the US tonight but that doesn’t stop the flow of a huge volume of PMI’s coming out of China, France, Germany, Holland and the Eurozone. Also out are retail sales in Canada

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.

Sentiment sours on corporate earnings | The week ahead | 21st October 2012

After a solid start to the trading week, sentiment turned sour on Friday as investors digested a host of less-than-encouraging corporate earnings.  US markets erased much of the gains seen earlier in the week after earnings from industry heavyweights Microsoft, General Electric and McDonald’s failed to meet expectations. The S&P500, considered a broad measure of investor sentiment, fell 1.66 percent to finish the week a meagre 0.32 percent in the black.  The index was up as much as 2.48 percent on Thursday. The risk-off tone saw the US dollar’s safe haven credentials kick into gear, with the Canadian dollar leading a charge lower. The Australian dollar also succumbed to broad-based market negativity, but managed to finish the week near 1-percent in the black. The Euro also took a hit with a break to the downside of $US1.31 before finding support just above the $US1.30-figure.

Europe’s elite also wrapped up their two-day summit on Friday, and once again markets appeared to be left unfulfilled. Leaders have agreed, in principle, to implement the legal framework of Europe’s banking supervisor by 1 January 2013. The European Central Bank has been given the task of overseeing the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) in an effort to support Europe’s debt ridden banks. Eventually, the SSM will have the capacity to work alongside Europe’s permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) and provide conditional funding to Europe’s most vulnerable banks. Still, with only vague detail provided, it’s apparent there’s much to be debated concerning the finer points of the SSM, with markets keenly watching Germany and France for potential clues. While France is leading the charge for a speedy implementation, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has painted a far more tentative picture stating “There are complicated questions to clarify and we’ll see in December if we complete it or not, “for now, the political will is there.”

European leaders haven’t had the best record for expediting such initiatives, and markets are clearly expecting another elongated series of talks, meetings and summits before any finer detail comes to light. The agreement will also need to be passed through the European Council and Parliament to allow for the implementation by 1 January.

Hopes of a Spanish bailout may also be wearing thin with Spanish Prime Minister Mario Rajoy maintaining a casual demeanour despite high investor expectations. Rajoy said on Friday “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. Nevertheless, expectations that Spain will be the next to join the list of bailout casualties has seen significant improvements across Spanish debt markets, with 10-year yields at their lowest level in 6-months.

The local week ahead will see the release of third-quarter CPI dominate an otherwise quiet week on the data front. China will also remain a key directive for the local unit with the HSBC flash Manufacturing PMI to be released on Wednesday.  Alongside a slew of corporate earnings releases, the US week will see data on the health of manufacturing and housing remain in the spotlight, with Wednesday Fed’s policy meeting and Friday’s GDP the headline events. Across the Atlantic, European corporate earnings may also make their mark on sentiment this week with Electrolux, Volkswagen and Credit Suisse some of big names on the docket. Alongside the usual conjecture surrounding the fortunes of Greece and Spain, data from the region this week includes German and Euro-Zone PMI for both services and manufacturing and the German IFO data series – all scheduled for release on Wednesday.

U.S Dollar enjoys reprieve as sentiment wanes; European Summit eyed | 19th October 2012

After a period of strong support, the Euro wavered overnight with price action making a convincing move below $US1.31-figure to lows of $US1.3055. Solid demand for Spanish debt at auction and further optimism over Spain’s near-term request for aid was overshadowed by moderate weakness across U.S equities,  favoring a stronger U.S dollar across the board. Markets also reacted to signs of slowing in China with yesterday’s growth data showing GDP fell to annual pace of 7.4 percent in third-quarter.

Consolidative behavior seen across risk currencies was amplified by softer U.S equities which focused on corporate earnings and a rise in the weekly jobless claims. The number of U.S citizens filing for unemployment benefits rose to 388,000 for the week ending October 13. Economists had anticipated a more moderate rise to 360,000 from 342,000 the previous week. However, stronger than expected manufacturing data was a concession, with the Philly-Fed index returning to growth in October. The manufacturing gauge rose to 5.7 from a previous negative 1.9. The US leading index, which is a index of a broad range of indicators, pointed to stronger growth in the month of September. The Index rose 0.6 percent from a fall of 0.4 percent in August. Analysts expected the index to edge up by 0.2 percent. The DOW and S&P500 declined 0.06 and 0.24 percent respectively.

After peaking at three week highs of 104.12 US cents, the Aussie dollar consolidated yesterdays gains alongside risk counterpart. Support for the USD prompted weakness across the commodity bloc, but the Aussie dollar held up reasonably well in comparison to counterparts the CAD and Kiwi. The Loonie led the charge lower against the greenback with the USDCAD pair rising back above C$0.98. Speculation of further monetary easing in Japan also saw the Yen weaken across the board, with the USDJPY making a clean break to the upside of Y79 to near 1-month highs of Y79.47.

With little in the way of scheduled releases in the domestic session, we anticipate a quiet close to the week with regional equities likely to be the key directive.  Market will then be look squarely on the events of European Summit which commences this evening. AUDUSD price action has displayed supportive tendencies at 103.55 US cents with further losses likely to be contained at 103.2 US cents during the domestic session. Resistance is likely to be maintained at overnight highs just above 104 US cents.