USDCHF Technical Analysis 0 (0)

On the daily chart below for
USDCHF, we can see that the pair has been ranging for a month now although it
keeps a bearish bias as the moving
averages
act as resistance for the trend. USD/CHF had a pretty solid run to the
downside as the US regional banking crisis and the expectations for rate cuts
weakened the USD a lot.

The market now is watching how
fast inflation is expected to fall to the target as the fear of persistently
high inflation is still there. In fact, across all the other markets we’ve seen
a choppy price action trading into today’s US CPI report. Hot data won’t be
taken well, and the USD is expected to strengthen as the market should reprice
interest rates expectations.

USDCHF
technical analysis

On the 4 hour chart below, we can
see more closely the range between the 0.8858 support and the 0.9000 resistance. The moving averages have
crossed to the upside, so the bias at the moment is bullish and suggests that
we may get back to the top of the range, but of course this will be decided by
the data. The buyers are leaning against the red long period moving average as
it offered support in the past weeks and was pretty accurate in determining the
short-term trend within the range.

On the 1 hour chart below, we can
see that the price action is choppy and confusing. There’s pretty much nothing
we can glean from this chart. We have only the top and the bottom of the range
as clear levels. That’s why today it’s all about the CPI with a hot reading
expected to boost the USD and a cold one to weaken it. Watch out!

This article was written by ForexLive at www.forexlive.com.

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There are potential ‚dovish risks‘ for sterling from BOE meeting – Deutsche 0 (0)

After the recent rally in cable, Deutsche Bank says that it is taking profit on its pound position against the dollar. Adding that they see a potential „dovish surprise“ for the quid at this week’s BOE meeting.

„Having been bullish on the pound since the start of the year, we no longer think the pound presents attractive risk-reward in the short-term. A lot of the domestic good news for the UK is now in the price.“

I’m guessing the dovish risks are more to do with the rates pricing here. Markets are expecting at least one more rate hike after the one this week but a further hike to bring the bank rate to 5.00% remains questionable at this stage. So, if there is some affirmation there by policymakers then that could result in a bit of a dovish spin for the pound.

/GBP

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

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Chinese ForMin: China and Germany agreed to step up coordination in the multilateral field 0 (0)

China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang, during his Berlin visit,

China and Germany have agreed to step up coordination in the multilateral field.

Underscores the importance of Germany-China ties.

To undermine the one-China principle is to undermine the international system with the United Nations at its core.

On the Ukraine crisis, creating conditions for a political solution is the way out of the crisis.

This article was written by Ryan Paisey at www.forexlive.com.

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The @Newsquawk US Market Open: Stocks slip with commodities clipped after Chinese trade 0 (0)

The @Newsquawk US Market Open: Stocks slip with commodities clipped after Chinese trade; Fed/debt updates ahead

Key Points:

European bourses & US futures are softer as the region struggles for a foothold after mixed APAC trade and ahead of Fed/debt ceiling events

USD picks up against peers ex-JPY as yields ease from best while AUD retreats after Chinese imports declined unexpectedly

Yellen reiterates the Treasury could run out of cash as soon as June 1st, with the Bipartisan centre expecting the x-date between early-June to August

Fixed benchmarks have been choppy but are firmer overall with Bunds bolstered on strong supply and USTs near highs

Commodities are, broadly speaking, pressured as the USD picks up and after Chinese trade data

Looking ahead, highlights include ECB’s Lane & Schnabel, Fed’s Williams & Jefferson, Biden meeting Congressional Leaders. Supply from the US, Earnings from Airbnb & Occidental Petroleum.

This article was written by Ryan Paisey at www.forexlive.com.

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ECB’s Vasle: Inflation is becoming increasingly stubborn. 0 (0)

ECB’s Vasle on the wires:

Inflation is becoming increasingly stubborn.

Our job on inflation isn’t complete yet. We need to see change in core inflation.

The aim is returning inflation to 2% with soft landing. Avoiding a recession is possible.

More interest-rate hikes will be required.

This article was written by Ryan Paisey at www.forexlive.com.

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AUDUSD Technical Analysis 0 (0)

On the daily chart below for
AUDUSD, we can see that after bouncing from the bottom of the range at 0.6563,
the market rallied towards the top where it found resistance again from the
38.2% Fibonacci
retracement
level. The price has been stuck in this range for
3 months already as the market remains uncertain on what’s next amid
contradictory economic data. At the moment, the market expects the Fed to pause
in June and start cutting rates before the end of the year. So, the buyers
should remain in control as long as the data confirms this outcome, but if the
data continues to point to a more hawkish path, then we should see the sellers
come back.

AUDUSD
technical analysis

On the 4 hour chart below, we can
see that the price is now being rejected from the resistance and the 38.2% Fibonacci
retracement level. We should see a pullback towards the trendline and the support at 0.6720 where
the buyers are likely to pile in expecting another rally afterwards. The
sellers, on the other hand, will want to see the price breaking through the
trendline to jump onboard and extend the selloff towards the bottom of the
range.

On the 1 hour chart below, we can
see that an eventual pullback towards the trendline will have extra confluence from the 38.2% Fibonacci
retracement level. Therefore, the 0.6720 level is a strong area to watch as it
should define the next big move. Tomorrow, we have the US CPI report and it’s likely that
higher than expected data will give a boost to the USD as the market would
change its interest rates expectations, while lower than expected figures
should lead to more USD depreciation.

This article was written by ForexLive at www.forexlive.com.

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United States NFIB Small Business Optimism (Apr) Actual: 89.0 Expected: 89.6 Prev: 90.1 0 (0)

FULL STORY

The share of owners expecting better business conditions over the next six months fell two points to a net negative 49%. A net negative 19% expected higher inflation-adjusted sales, down four points from March.

United States NFIB Small Business Optimism (Apr) $USD Actual: 89.0 Expected: 89.6 Previous: 90.1

Chart via MrMBrown

This article was written by Ryan Paisey at www.forexlive.com.

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S&P 500 E-mini Futures Technical Analysis: Simplified View for a Bullish Ride to 4200 0 (0)

S&P 500 E-mini Futures Weekly Technical Analysis: A Simplified View

In this technical analysis of the S&P 500 E-mini futures, we focus on the weekly timeframe to provide a clear and simplified picture without using numerous indicators. The aim is to decrypt the story the S&P 500 is telling and identify potential entry points for a bullish ride to 4200.

Price Action Analysis: Bullish Piercing and Trapping of Bears

On the weekly chart, we observe that the price went below the previous week’s low and the 20 EMA (black line). This action triggered stop-loss orders for long positions and motivated bears to go short, trapping them in the process. The presence of two wicks on consecutive weeks and a close near the previous week’s open signals bullish piercing and trapping of bears, indicating a bullish bias.

Key Resistance Level: 4200

The next significant price level to watch is the resistance at 4200, which has been tested multiple times but not conquered since August 2022. A weekly candle close above this level would confirm a bullish bias.

A Line in the Sand: Weekly Close Below 20 EMA

A weekly candle close below the 20 EMA (currently at 4081.25) would signal that the bullish case is over, and traders should reassess their positions.

Regression Trend Analysis: Bullish Channel

Using a regression trend from the October 2022 pivot low and adjusting it to two standard deviations, we see that the price is trading within a bullish channel. The current position in the green part of the channel suggests a potential move to test the 4300 level.

Daily Timeframe: Potential Entry Points for a Bullish Ride

For those looking to join the bullish ride, a possible entry point is around 4130, close to the 20 EMA. This level could provide a good risk-reward ratio with a target of 4200. Traders can choose a stop-loss level below 4100 (e.g., 4096) to minimize risk.

Reward vs. Risk: A Legitimate Long Trade

As the ES technical analysis video above shows as an orientation for traders and investors to consider (at their own discretion), if executed at 4130, the long trade targeting 4200 offers a reward-to-risk ratio of over 2:1, making it a legitimate and attractive trade for potential bulls.

Summary: Bullish Bias Until 4200

In conclusion, the simplified technical analysis of the S&P 500 E-mini futures suggests a bullish bias until the 4200 level is reached. Traders should monitor key levels and price action closely, and always trade at their own risk.

This article was written by Itai Levitan at www.forexlive.com.

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Newsquawk Week Ahead 8-12th: US CPI, Fed SLOOS, UK GDP, China Inflation, BoJ SOO 0 (0)

Week Ahead May 8-12th

  • MON: UK Bank Holiday, EZ Sentix Index (May), German Final CPI (Apr), Fed SLOOS
  • TUE: Riksbank Minutes, NBH Announcement, EIA STEO, Chinese Trade Balance (Apr)
  • WED: Norwegian CPI (Apr), US CPI (Apr)
  • THU: BoE Announcement, BoJ Summary of Opinions, OPEC MOMR, Chinese Inflation (Apr), US PPI (Apr)
  • FRI: New Zealand Inflation Forecasts (Q2), UK GDP (Mar/Q1), French CPI (Apr), University of Michigan Prelim. (May)

NOTE: Previews are listed in day-order

Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey (Mon): The Fed’s quarterly Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices will show that lending standards at midsized banks tightened in the latest period, Fed Chair Powell revealed at the May FOMC meeting. The survey is prepared in advance of the Fed’s policy meetings, and officials use it in their deliberations. The Fed Chair argued that given the recent stresses in the banking sector, the Fed might not need to raise rates as high as it would have traditionally. But he emphasised that the impact was unclear, making it difficult for officials to determine when the policy rate had achieved a ‘sufficiently restrictive stance’. At its policy meeting, the FOMC raised rates by 25bps to 5.00-5.25% in line with consensus expectations, and also hinted at a rate pause by dropping the language about anticipating more policy firming. The Fed said it will determine further policy firming based on tightening to date, policy lags, and other developments; it remains committed to bringing inflation back down to target, and will take a data-dependent approach to determine further rate hikes, while there will be an ongoing assessment of whether the Fed has reached sufficiently restrictive levels.

Riksbank Minutes (Tue): Minutes which will be closely scrutinised following the dovish 50bp hike in April for further insight into the thought process of dissenters Breman and Floden and how close, if at all, the other three members were to voting for 25bp. On the dissenters, this was not entirely unexpected given the economy’s sensitivity to tightening and the marked easing in March’s headline inflation alongside market pricing heading into the meeting and the minority of calls from desks for a 25bp hike. Note, the dissenters were Breman and Floden who are typically on the dovish-side of the Riksbank. Finally, we look for any guidance in the minutes around whether the final hike will be in June or September; though, a discussion on this might be somewhat premature.

Chinese Trade Balance (Tue): The trade Balance is expected to narrow to a surplus of USD 74.30bln from a surplus of USD 88.20bln a month ago. Exports are expected to grow 8% (prev. 14.8%), while imports are expected to contract by 5.0% after printing -1.4% in March. In the prior month’s release, China saw exports defy expectations and surprisingly rise 14.8% vs the 7% contraction forecast and break the downward trend observed over the previous five months. The rebound was driven mainly by electronic parts and products and is expected to support the first-quarter GDP. However, the slowdown in imports suggests that this rebound may be short-lived, with exports potentially slowing down in the coming months, according to analysts.

US CPI (Wed): The consensus expects headline consumer prices to rise 0.4% M/M in April, accelerating from the +0.1% pace in March, while the annual measure is seen ticking up by 0.2ppts to 5.2% Y/Y. The core rate of inflation is expected to rise 0.3% M/M – moderating slightly from +0.4% M/M in March – while the annual rate of core inflation is seen unchanged at 5.6% Y/Y. Credit Suisse says core goods inflation will increase, with higher used auto prices from Q1 showing up in the CPI this month, while inflation in other goods categories is expected to remain flat. Services inflation will remain high, the bank thinks, with shelter inflation showing a slight decline in April, but not expected to meaningfully decline until later in the summer. CS writes that „a reading in-line with our expectations would remain uncomfortably high for the Fed, but is still consistent with gradual disinflation this year once shelter rolls over more significantly, „adding that low ex-shelter core inflation should be enough to keep the Fed on hold in the coming months as banking stress keeps uncertainty elevated.“

BoE Announcement (Thu): Expectations are for the BoE to deliver a 25bps hike in the Base Rate to 4.5%, according to 55/56 analysts surveyed by Reuters, with just one looking for unchanged. Market pricing concurs with economists as 25bps is priced at around 85%. The prior meeting in March saw a 7-2 vote in favour of a 25bps hike with dovish dissent from Tenreyro and Dhingra, whilst the MPC opted to keep forward guidance on rates which notes that if there were evidence of more persistent pressures, further tightening would be required. Data since March has leaned hawkishly with headline Y/Y CPI printing at 10.1%, which was some 0.9pp above the MPC’s forecast, and the core rate at 6.2% vs. the MPC’s projection of 5.8%. In the labour market, headline earnings growth advanced to 6.6% from 6.5%, whilst on the economic growth front, M/M GDP flatlined in February, and survey data showed an increase in the UK Composite metric, fuelled by the services sector. As such, further action from the MPC is expected with Governor Bailey (27th March) reminding markets that more tightening would be required if signs of persistent inflationary pressures become evident, adding that the FPC can focus on the financial system whilst the MPC’s focus will be on returning inflation to target. Whilst there is currently no consensus on the vote split, Oxford Economics suggests another 7-2 decision with Dhingra and Tenreyro the lone dissenters. Focus will firmly be on whether the MPC makes any alterations to its forward guidance to indicate the possibility of a pause given that the likes of Chief Economist Pill has continued to remind markets that “there is a lot of policy-in-the-pipeline still to come through”. As it stands, market pricing puts the terminal rate at around 4.75%, which would imply another 25bps hike beyond next week. For the accompanying macro projections, Oxford Economics anticipates an upgrade to near-term growth, downgrade to near-term inflation, whilst over the medium-term inflation will be materially below 2% in 2024 and 2025.

BoJ SoO (T): The BoJ will release the Summary of Opinions from the April 27th-28th meeting where it kept its policy settings unchanged, as widely expected, in the first conclave under Governor Ueda’s leadership, with the rate held at -0.10% and parameters of QQE with YCC maintained and the decision on the latter made via a unanimous vote. The central bank tweaked its forward guidance whereby it dropped the reference to the COVID-19 pandemic and the pledge to keep interest rates at current or lower levels, although it remained dovish by replacing this with a pledge to take additional easing steps without hesitation as needed while striving for market stability. The central bank also announced a broad-perspective review of monetary policy with a planned timeframe of one to one and a half years, which supported the notion of a slow exit from ultra-easy policy, although Governor Ueda later clarified during the press conference that they will make changes to monetary policy as needed during the review period and may announce results of the policy review in the interim if required.

Chinese Inflation (Thu): CPI Y/Y is expected to tick higher to 1.0%, whilst PPI Y/Y is seen steady at -2.5%. Taking the monthly Caixin PMI as a proxy, the release suggested “Prices ticked up in April with the gauge for input costs remaining in expansionary territory for 34 consecutive months, due mainly to elevated labour costs. Some surveyed businesses also reported higher prices of raw materials and office supplies.” China’s March CPI data revealed cooler-than-expected inflation. The pullback in prices last month was likely on the back of several factors. 1) CPI is heavily influenced by food prices, which were mixed in March. Higher egg prices, caused by a bird flu outbreak, were offset by lower vegetable prices due to warmer weather. 2) A weaker PPI in the month may have been an indicator of slower industrial production in March. Weakening export demand can have a direct impact on industrial production, which in turn affects the inflation rate. Analysts at ING suggest “China should continue to show modest CPI inflation, and weaker manufacturing activities should continue to put deflationary pressures on PPI.”

UK GDP (Fri): Expectations are for M/M growth of 0.1% in March (vs. prev. 0.0%) with the Y/Y rate expected to fall to 0.4% from 0.6%. The prior report was characterised by strike activity weighing on growth and overpowering a pick-up in private sector activity. This time around, analysts at Investec expect strike activity to have a clear impact on the data given action from teachers, junior doctors and civil servants. That said, Investec notes that the strikes will need to be weighed against “the reports of resilient business activity in the service sector in the PMI survey”. Overall, Investec pencils in a 0.1% contraction in March which would equate to Q/Q growth of just 0.1%, but would mean that the UK avoided a recession this winter. Albeit, a potential H2 slowdown has prompted some to call for an eventual recession later in the year. From a policy perspective, it’s hard to gauge what impact (if any) the release will have on the BoE given that it will take place the morning after the MPC’s decision. It is possible that a soft report could see markets coalesce around the idea of a potential pause by the BoE in the event that the MPC refrains from offering hints of further tightening.

New Zealand Inflation Forecasts (Fri): The prior Survey of Expectations indicated that while inflation expectations remain high, the upward momentum has somewhat petered out. The two-year ahead measure experienced a decrease, dropping from 3.6% to 3.3%. Likewise, expectations for inflation five years ahead showed a minor decline, according to Westpac. The RBNZ’s latest Financial Stability Report (FSR) suggested the financial system in New Zealand is well-prepared to manage the rising interest rate landscape and any disruptions in global financial markets. The FSR added that as monetary policy tightens due to elevated inflation, households and businesses face increased debt servicing expenses.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk

This article was written by Newsquawk Analysis at www.forexlive.com.

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Meet Adam Button in South Africa this week 0 (0)

Hi everyone, if you’re in the Johannesburg area this week, I would love to meet up. I’ll be at the Finance Magnates Africa Summit from May 8-10.

It’s a free event and you can register to attend here.

If you’re looking to meet up, the best way to reach me is probably via my LinkedIn page.

This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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