Nvidia spirits continue to uplift equities on the day 0 (0)

The surge higher continues as Nvidia carries the world on its back. Since the turn of the year, no other stock has mattered more in the equities space. The latest news in the last few minutes is that Nvidia CEO is saying that they have begun sampling two new AI chips for the Chinese market. And that seems to be giving stocks another jolt higher.

Nasdaq futures are now up over 2% and looks poised to try and take a run at the 2021 highs.

In Europe, the optimism may not be as cheerful amid the lack of tech focus. But still, regional indices are able to benefit from the improved risk mood in general. The DAX and CAC 40 are at fresh record highs as the run higher since November last year looks to take on a new leg.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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EURUSD Technical Analysis 0 (0)

USD

  • The Fed left interest rates unchanged as
    expected at the last meeting while dropping the tightening bias in the
    statement but adding a slight pushback against a March rate cut.
  • Fed Chair Powell stressed
    that they want to see more evidence of inflation falling back to target and
    that a rate cut in March is not their base case.
  • The US CPI beat
    expectations for the second consecutive month with the disinflationary trend
    reversing.
  • The US PPI beat
    expectations across the board by a big margin.
  • The US Initial Claims beat
    expectations while Continuing Claims missed. Overall, the data remains steady.
  • The ISM Manufacturing
    PMI

    surprised to the upside with the new orders index, which is considered a
    leading indicator, jumping back into expansion. Similarly, the ISM Services PMI beat
    expectations across the board with the employment sub-index erasing the prior
    drop and prices paid jumping above 60.
  • The US Retail Sales missed
    expectations across the board by a big margin.
  • The market now expects the first rate cut in June.

EUR

  • The ECB left interest rates unchanged as
    expected at the last meeting maintaining the usual data dependent language.
  • The recent Eurozone CPI came
    in line with expectations with the disinflationary process continuing steady.
  • The labour market remains historically
    tight with the unemployment rate hovering at record lows.
  • The Eurozone PMIs beat
    expectations on the Services side with the measure jumping back into expansion while
    the Manufacturing one missed dragged lower by Germany’s performance.
  • The ECB members recently have been pushing back
    against the aggressive rate cuts expectations placing more weight on wage
    growth and data dependency.
  • The market expects the ECB to cut rates in June.

EURUSD Technical Analysis –
Daily Timeframe

On the
daily chart, we can see that EURUSD broke through the key trendline and the
red 21 moving average and
extended the rally into the 1.09 handle. This is where we can expect the
sellers to step in with a defined risk above the resistance to position for a
drop into the lows. The buyers, on the other hand, will want to see the price
breaking higher to increase the bullish bets into the 1.10 handle.

EURUSD Technical Analysis –
4 hour Timeframe

On the 4 hour chart, we can see more clearly the
breakout of the key resistance zone
around the 1.08 handle. The price pulled back at some point to retest the resistance turned support and
extended the rally into the 1.09 handle. From a risk management perspective,
the buyers will now have a much better risk to reward setup around the upward
trendline where they will also find the red 21 moving average for confluence. The
sellers, on the other hand, will want to see the price breaking below the
trendline to invalidate the bullish setup and increase the bearish bets into
the lows.

EURUSD Technical Analysis –
1 hour Timeframe

On the 1 hour chart, we can see that the latest
leg higher diverged with
the MACD which
is generally a sign of weakening momentum often followed by pullbacks or
reversals. In this case, it might be a signal for a pullback into the trendline.

Upcoming Events

Today we will see the latest US Jobless Claims figures
and the US PMIs.

This article was written by FL Contributors at www.forexlive.com.

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Eurozone January final CPI +2.8% vs +2.8% y/y prelim 0 (0)

  • Prior +2.9%
  • Core CPI +3.3% vs +3.3% y/y prelim
  • Prior +3.4%

No changes to the initial estimates, so there’s not much to extrapolate from this. Although core inflation is nearing 3%, it remains a tall order to get from here back down to the 2% mark in the months ahead.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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Traders lean towards a June rate cut for the ECB now 0 (0)

If you need a refresher, the total rate cuts priced in for the ECB this year at the end of December was 161 bps. Right now, it is standing at just 96 bps after the PMI data today. What a difference two months make, eh?

Meanwhile, the odds of an April rate cut have slipped further to just ~39%. And that is likely to be narrowed down further when we get to the March policy meeting in two weeks‘ time. It seems like traders are aligning with the narrative put out by major central banks, and not just for the Fed.

In the case of the ECB, this now sees a June rate cut as being the most plausible. The balance between the give and take for such pricing seems to be one that markets and the central bank can agree with currently.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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UK February flash services PMI 54.3 vs 54.1 expected 0 (0)

  • Prior 54.3
  • Manufacturing PMI 47.1 vs 47.5 expected
  • Prior 47.0
  • Composite PMI 53.3 vs 52.9 expected
  • Prior 52.9

This should allay any recession fears about the UK economy to start the new year at least. Demand conditions continue to show an improvement but inflationary pressures remain elevated on the month. The rate of input price inflation in particular was the highest since August last year. And that’s not much of a welcome development for the BOE. S&P Global notes that:

“UK economic growth has accelerated in February, with
the early PMI survey data pointing to the largest rise in
business activity for nine months. This is by no means a
one-off improvement, as faster growth has now been
recorded for four straight months after a brief spell of
decline late last year.

“The survey data point to the economy growing at a
quarterly rate of 0.2-3% in the first quarter of 2024, allaying
fears that last year’s downturn will have spilled over into
2024 and suggesting that the UK’s ‘recession’ is already
over.

“It’s particularly encouraging to see that the upturn in
growth has been accompanied by a surge in optimism
about year-ahead prospects to the highest for two years,
in turn encouraging a second month of increased
employment.

“However, there are a number of areas of concern. First,
the upturn is being driven to a large extent by resurgent
demand for financial services, in turn predicated on hopes
of an imminent pivot to rate cutting by the Bank of England.
In contrast, manufacturing remains mired in contraction
and consumer-facing service providers are reporting
falling activity amid the ongoing cost of living crisis.

“Second, February saw the highest degree of supply chain
delays for over one and a half years, linked to Red Sea
shipping disruptions. The resulting increased cost of
shipping contributed to the largest monthly rise in selling
prices for goods seen over the past nine months.

“Service sector inflation also ticked higher, remaining
stubbornly elevated thanks to higher wage costs and the
pass-through of some higher goods prices. The survey
data signal consumer price inflation running around the 4%
level in the coming months – double the Bank of England’s
target.

“With growth accelerating and prices on the rise again,
February’s data mean policymakers are increasingly likely
to err on the side of caution when considering the
appropriateness of cutting interest rates.”

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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