Tentative gains for US futures for now 0 (0)

There’s not much going on so far in European morning trade apart from a slight retracement to the Friday moves in gold and bond yields. Major currencies are not much changed while oil is also flattish, with stocks hanging on to tentative gains for now. S&P 500 futures are up 0.2% while European indices are mostly little changed.

The price action so far on the session has been rather sideways and that speaks to the lack of conviction upon the return from the weekend.

As much as tensions surrounding the Israel-Hamas conflict aren’t getting much worse, there’s still much uncertainty in the region at the moment. And that is likely keeping traders on edge for now.

We’ll have to see what Wall Street makes of this later today but as mentioned earlier, the longer we go without any major escalation in the developments in the Middle East, that is every minute that markets will start to breathe a bit easier to step out of the shelter since Friday i.e. adding confidence to the unwinding of the risk-off flows.

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

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Dow Jones Technical Analysis – Key resistance in sight 0 (0)

Last Friday, the market fell as the University of Michigan Consumer
Sentiment
report saw a big miss across the board with the inflation expectations
figures spiking back up. This might be a signal that the consumers are indeed
weakening, and it could be a bad omen for the broad market. Moreover, we got
some defensive positioning into the weekend as there were some expectations
that Israel could start a ground offensive in Gaza and that could have led Iran
to join Hamas with uglier scenarios becoming likely from that point onwards.

The actual events fell short of expectations as we
haven’t got a ground operation and, although we got mixed signals, it seems
like Iran is not intentioned to join
this war
“provided that Israel does not dare to attack Iran”. This could lead to
a relief rally and the technical levels can help in identifying the likely
entry and exit points.

Dow Jones Technical
Analysis – Daily Timeframe

On the daily chart, we can see that the Dow Jones
found resistance around
the red 21 moving average and the
previous swing level. The buyers should still be targeting the resistance
around the 34000 level where we have a much stronger confluence from the
previous swing low level, the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level
and the major trendline. In
fact, if the price continues higher, we can expect the sellers to pile in even
more aggressively around the resistance to position for another selloff into
the lows with a better risk to reward setup.

Dow Jones Technical
Analysis – 4 hour Timeframe

On the 4 hour chart, we can see that the buyers are
stepping in around the 33500 level as they have the confluence from the 38.2%
Fibonacci retracement level and the red 21 moving average. If the price breaks
lower, the bullish setup would be invalidated, and the sellers will start to
pile in to target the 32597 support.

Dow Jones Technical
Analysis – 1 hour Timeframe

On the 1 hour chart, we can see more
closely the support zone around the 33500 level and the rangebound price action
as the battle between buyers and sellers is starting to heat up. Watch what
happens around this level as a bounce should translate into another rally into
the resistance zone, while a break lower is likely to trigger a selloff into
the 32597 support.

Upcoming Events

This week is a bit empty on the data front. Tomorrow we
will get the US Retail Sales data and it will be interesting to see if the
worse consumers’ sentiment translated into weaker spending. On Thursday, we
will see another US Jobless Claims report where the market will want to see if
the miss in Continuing Claims last week was just a blip or something is
starting to deteriorate in the labour market. On the same day we will also hear
from Fed Chair Powell with the market being attentive to any type of signal on
the upcoming rate decision.

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

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Weekly Market Outlook (16-20 October) 0 (0)

UPCOMING EVENTS:

  • Monday: Japan
    Industrial Production, NZ CPI, PBoC MLF.
  • Tuesday: RBA
    Meeting Minutes, UK Jobs report, German ZEW, Canada CPI, US Retail Sales,
    US Manufacturing Production, US NAHB Housing Market Index.
  • Wednesday: China
    GDP, China Industrial Production, China Retail Sales, China Unemployment
    Rate, UK CPI and PPI, US Housing Starts and Building Permits.
  • Thursday:
    Australia Jobs report, US Jobless Claims, Fed Chair Powell speaks.
  • Friday: Japan
    CPI, PBoC LPR, UK Retail Sales, Canada Retail Sales.

Monday

The New Zealand CPI Y/Y is expected to
tick lower to 5.9% vs. 6.0% prior, while the Q/Q figure is seen at 2.0% vs.
1.1% prior. The elevated inflation rate is mainly due to the sharp rise in fuel
prices. Unless we get a big upside surprise, the RBNZ is unlikely to respond
with another rate hike as it has stated that it’s ready to look through the
short-term “noise”.

The PBoC is likely to keep the MLF and LPR
rates unchanged on Monday and Friday respectively as the economic outlook has
started to improve a little as seen with the latest PMI
figures
. On the other hand, the inflation
figures
last week disappointed, which might
give them space to go for another rate cut, although the monthly reading has
been positive for the last 3 months.

Tuesday

The UK employment change is expected at
-195K vs. -207K prior and the unemployment rate to remain unchanged at 4.3%.
The average earnings excluding bonus are seen at 7.8% vs. 7.8% prior, while the
average earnings including bonus are expected at 8.3% vs. 8.5% prior. The
BoE has paused at the last meeting and, as Governor
Bailey has stated recently
,
“future decisions are going to be tight”,
so strong readings might lead to another rate hike at the upcoming meeting,
especially if the inflation data surprises to the upside later in the week.

The Canadian CPI Y/Y is expected at 4.0%
vs. 4.0% prior, while the M/M figure is seen at 0.1% vs. 0.4% prior. There’s no
consensus at the moment for the Core measures, although those are the ones
that the BoC will look at to decide what to do at the next week’s meeting. As
a reminder, underlying inflation has been surprising to the upside and that’s
what is likely
to trigger another rate hike

from the BoC if this week’s figures remain elevated.

The US Retail Sales M/M are expected to
rise 0.3% vs. 0.6% prior, while the Core measure is seen at 0.2% vs. 0.6%
prior. Watch out for the Control Group, which is seen as the best gauge of
consumer spending. This report is unlikely to change anything for the Fed as
the central bank is expected to keep rates unchanged at the November decision
as well.

Wednesday

The UK CPI Y/Y is expected at 6.5% vs.
6.7% prior, while the M/M figure is seen at 0.4% vs. 0.3% prior. The Core CPI
Y/Y is expected at 6.0% vs. 6.2% prior, while there’s no consensus at the
moment for the monthly rate. The BoE is likely to look through an upside
surprise in the inflation data if the labour market report shows weakness.
On the other hand, if both the reports show strength, then we are likely to see
another rate hike at the upcoming meeting.

Thursday

The US Jobless Claims have been showing
strength for several weeks. Last
week
though, we got a miss in Continuing
Claims, which measures ongoing unemployment benefits and can be viewed as an
indicator of how easily workers can find another job after getting unemployed. It
could be something or it could be nothing, but it’s certainly worth to keep an
eye on. This week the consensus sees Initial Claims at 213K vs. 209K prior,
while there’s no consensus on Continuing Claims at the time of writing.

Friday

The Japanese Core CPI Y/Y is expected at
2.7% vs. 3.1% prior, while there’s no consensus at the moment for the Core-Core
figure and the Headline CPI, which were previously 4.3% and 3.2% respectively.
The Tokyo CPI, which is seen as a leading indicator for national CPI,
disappointed recently and, although the BoJ
is going to revise its inflation forecasts higher
,
they are unlikely to normalise their monetary policy unless they see
sustained wage growth or big upside surprises in the inflation data.

This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at www.forexlive.com.

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IMF: Yen’s recent declines are driven by fundamentals, criteria not met for intervention 0 (0)

Alongside the surge in USD/JPY Japanese authorities have insisted, over and over again, that the rate should trade in a stable fashion ‚driven by fundamentals‘. And over and over again the market has insisted that a 500+ or so bp differential between US and Japanese rates are a solid fundamental.

The IMF have weighed in, an official speaking on Saturday saying:

  • „On the yen, our sense is that the exchange rate is driven pretty much by fundamentals. As long as interest rate differentials remain, the yen will continue to face pressure“

Adding that the IMF assesses intervention in the FX market to be justified only when there is a severe dysfunction in the market, a heightening of financial stability risks, or a de-anchoring of inflation expectations:

  • „I don’t think any of the three considerations exist right now“

The IMF is, of course, correct. The concern now is that once these folks recognise it maybe the trend is nearing completion.

But not before a more determined crack at taking the rate above 150 next week I’d suggest:

Join ForexLive on Monday and the market response to this.

ps.

This
chart is from our charting app, which is free and can
be found at this link

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.

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Newsquawk Week Ahead: US retail sales, China activity data, PBoC, NZ, UK and Canada CPI 0 (0)

Week Ahead 16-20th October

  • Sat: New Zealand General Election
  • Mon: New Zealand CPI (Q3), PBoC MLF
  • Tue: RBA Minutes, German ZEW Survey (Oct), US Retail Sales (Sep), Canadian CPI (Sep)
  • Wed: Chinese GDP (Q3), Chinese Industrial Output (Sep) and Retail Sales (Sep), UK Inflation (Sep), EZ Final HICP (Sep)
  • Thu: BoK Announcement, Bank of Indonesia Announcement, Japanese Trade Balance (Sep), Australian Jobs Report (Sep), US Philly Fed (Oct), Canadian PPI (Sep)
  • Fri: EU-US High-level Meeting; PBoC LPR, Japanese CPI (Sep), UK Retail Sales (Sep), Canadian Retail Sales (Aug)

NOTE: Previews are listed in day order

New Zealand General Election (Sat): New Zealand will hold its general election on Saturday 14th October 2023 and polls suggest a change of government with voters electing 120 members to the House of Representatives under New Zealand’s mixed-member proportional voting system whereby 72 members will be elected from single-member electorates and 48 from closed party lists, while 61 seats are needed for an outright majority. The two main parties vying for control of the 54th Parliament and form the next government include the incumbent Labour Party led by PM Hipkins which currently has 62 seats and won an outright majority in the House at the last election in 2020 under former PM Ardern and was the first time a party achieved a majority under the MMP system since its introduction in 1996. The main opposition is the National Party, led by Christopher Luxon and currently has 34 seats, but are clearly leading across opinion polls. Nonetheless, neither of the main parties are expected to achieve a majority, so the next government will likely be formed through a coalition involving the smaller parties, with the Green Party and Te Pāti Māori which currently hold 9 and 2 seats, respectively, traditionally supportive of Labour, while right-wing ACT currently has 10 seats and is seen to be on track with the National Party to win 59 seats as part of a right coalition. This likely puts the next government in the hands of the New Zealand First Party which is projected to return to parliament after it was ousted in the 2020 election due to a failure to achieve the minimum 5% needed for parliamentary representation, while party leader and effective ‘kingmaker’ Winston Peters, is all too familiar with this responsibility after having supported both the Labour Party and National Party in past governments.

New Zealand CPI (Mon): YY CPI for Q3 is seen cooling a touch to 5.9% from 6.0%, while the QQ metric is expected to tick higher to 2.0% from 1.1%. The RBNZ, via forecasts released in August, see the Q3 YY rate at 6.0% and the QQ at 2.1%. “The September quarter saw a sharp rise in fuel prices and other transport costs, as well as a large increase in local body rates and the annual increase in tobacco taxes. That’s only partially offset by the softening in food prices in recent months”, suggest the analysts at Westpac, as the bank pencils in a QQ metric of 1.9% and a YY forecast of 5.8%. The desk acknowledges that its forecasts are softer than the RBNZ’s projections, as it reflects “a lower forecast for tradable prices. Even so, core inflation and non-tradable inflation are expected to remain red hot.”

PBoC MLF (Mon)/LPR (Fri): The PBoC is likely to maintain its 1-Year MLF rate and benchmark Loan Prime Rates next week with the 1-Year MLF Rate at 2.50%, 1-Year LPR at 3.45% and 5-Year LPR at 4.20%. As a reminder, the PBoC kept its MLF and benchmark lending rates unchanged last month, which was as expected after having just cut its key short-term rates in August by between 10bps-15bps, although it did announce a cut in the RRR last month which was seen to release over CNY 500bln of liquidity and help stabilise the Yuan. Furthermore, the PBoC said it will maintain the basic stability of the exchange rate, firmly support the sustainability of the real economy and promote the economy to achieve effective qualitative improvement and reasonable quantitative growth. The latest data releases have pointed to a lack of urgency for an immediate policy tweak as Industrial Profits returned to growth and PMI figures were mixed in which the official Manufacturing and Non-Manufacturing PMIs topped forecasts, but Caixin PMIs disappointed, while inflation data was softer-than-expected and trade figures mixed with exports remaining in contraction territory.

RBA Minutes (Tue): The RBA will release the minutes from the October 3rd meeting when the central bank kept the Cash Rate Target at 4.10%, as widely expected, while it also stuck to its familiar rhetoric in which it reiterated that some further tightening of monetary policy may be required and that the Board remains resolute in its determination to return inflation to target. Furthermore, it stated that returning inflation to target within a reasonable timeframe remains the Board’s priority and recent data is consistent with inflation returning to the desired 2–3% range over the forecast period, while it also stated that inflation in Australia has passed its peak, but is still too high and will remain so for some time yet, as well as noting significant uncertainties around the outlook. This was new Governor Bullock’s inaugural meeting at the helm, while the language from the central bank was pretty much a carbon copy of the comments during Lowe’s leadership and further bolstered the view of policy continuity.

US Retail Sales (Tue): US retail sales are expected to rise 0.2% M/M in September, cooling from the 0.6% pace in August; the core measure is seen rising 0.1% M/M, and also slowing from 0.6% previously. In its monthly consumer checkpoint analysis, Bank of America’s analysts note that consumer spending has been fairly flat over the last two months. Its data shows total card spending +0.2% M/M, reversing the 0.2% decline in card spending reported in August. It said that total card spending per household was +0.7% Y/Y in September (vs +0.4% in August), according to its internal data. „The labour market is key for the consumer,“ it wrote, „while there has been a relative deterioration in labour conditions at the higher end of the market, most of that underperformance may now be in the past.“ But BofA adds that wages and salaries of higher-income households are still growing at slower rates than other income cohorts. Analysts will monitor the data to see how consumer trends are holding up in the face of a slowing economy. Ahead, Adobe’s online shopping forecast for the holiday season (period that runs from November 1st through the end of this year) predicts that US online holiday sales will rise 4.8% Y/Y and hit USD 221.8bln. It said mobile shopping is set to overtake desktop for the first time, as consumers get increasingly comfortable transacting on smaller screens, and discounts were expected to hit record highs, while ‚Buy Now, Pay Later‘ usage is set to drive a record USD 17bln in online spending as consumers look for flexible ways to manage their budgets.

Canadian CPI (Tue): In the minutes from the September policy meeting, BoC officials were concerned about ongoing and broad-based inflation pressures, with some components rising well above pre-pandemic averages. They noted that shelter costs and high oil prices were contributing to inflation. The minutes said that the outlook for inflation suggests that it will rise in the short-term, due to higher oil and gasoline prices, but gradually ease afterward. The BoC will closely monitor whether momentum in underlying inflation is decreasing, particularly focusing on core inflation, which has remained sticky, and will also consider the balance between economic supply and demand in determining future inflation. Canadian bank RBC says its base-case does not assume further interest rate hikes from the BoC this year, noting that there is still another monthly inflation report and the closely watched Business Outlook Survey to be released before the central bank’s next confab, though adds that the BoC has been clear that it won’t hesitate to respond with more hikes if necessary to cool labour markets and bring inflation down.

Chinese GDP (Wed) / Industrial Output and Retail Sales (Wed): Analysts expect Chinese Q3 GDP to print at 4.4% YY (prev. 6.3% in Q2) and with the QQ rate forecast at 1.0% (prev. 0.8%). The Retail Sales metric for September is seen at 4.5% (prev. 4.6% in August) and Industrial Output at 4.3% (prev 4.5% in August), according to Reuters. A recent piece by the CCP’s mouthpiece, Securities Daily (citing industry experts), suggested the YY metric may be above 4% whilst recently announced stimuli make their way through the economy, “the economy ‘opened low but moved high’ in the third quarter”, Securities Times said. “Judging from high-frequency indicators in September, the current positive factors for economic recovery are increasing, and economic growth is expected to remain steady throughout the quarter.” On the rest of the activity data, the piece says “Industrial production is expected to continue to accelerate month-on-month in September. However, due to the higher base in the same period last year, the year-on-year growth rate is expected to rebound slightly to around 4.7%.” On the retail sales front, Securities Daily says “continued rapid rebound in service consumption this year, and this trend continued in the third quarter.” Looking ahead to Q4, the CCP mouthpiece says Q4 economic growth is expected to improve across the board – “with consumption recovery momentum continuing to strengthen, investment growth rising from a decline, and the dragging effect of external demand on economic growth also easing. In addition, as measures to stabilize the property market continue to be stepped up, the real estate market is expected to stabilize and rebound in the fourth quarter, and its impact on consumption and investment confidence will be weakened.”

UK Inflation (Wed): Expectations are for headline Y/Y CPI in September to fall to 6.5% from 6.7%, with no consensus available for the other metrics at the time of writing. The prior report acted as a decisive factor in the MPC’s decision to stand pat on rates in September after the release saw declines in headline, core and services CPI, with the latter coming in at 6.8% and well below-the BoE forecast of 7.2%; note, the majority of the fall in services CPI was attributed to airfares and package holidays. For the upcoming release, analysts at Investec are of the view that “despite the push higher in fuel prices over the month, we still expect that inflation continued its downward trend in September”. The desk adds that upside pressures could come from education and transport, however, it expects that “these were outweighed by easing price pressures in other areas, such as cooling food price inflation as well as clothing prices”. From a policy perspective, similar to the labour market report, it is hard to see the data having much bearing on pricing for the November meeting which points towards the BoE standing pat on rates once again. That said, if the release is particularly out of line, it could have some impact on expectations for rate cuts in 2024, however, given the difficulties in near-term forecasting throughout the current hiking cycle, it is unlikely that market participants will have too much conviction in cementing calls for next year.

BoK Announcement (Thu): The Bank of Korea is likely to maintain its 7-Day Repo Rate at the current level of 3.50% where it has been since January this year and with the central bank expected to refrain from any rate changes for the rest of the year. As a reminder, the BoK was unanimous in its decision to keep rates unchanged at the last meeting in August, although six out of the seven Board members wanted to keep the door open for one more rate hike, while the BoK said it would maintain a restrictive policy stance for a considerable period of time and Governor Rhee stated it is too early to talk about a rate cut, but did not want to rule out the possibility of an ease this year and acknowledged that interest rates are at the upper end of the neutral range, or higher. Furthermore, the central bank noted high uncertainties, including Chinese economic growth and US monetary policy, while it was stated that the increase in household debt over the last couple of months was faster than expected and they may consider macro policy to tackle the issue, but not for now. Since that meeting, there hasn’t been anything to suggest a change in the status quo and the central bank’s senior Deputy Governor recently stated that there is no need to tighten monetary policy further for now, while inflation data accelerated in September with CPI YY at 3.7% vs. Exp. 3.4% (Prev. 3.4%), although this is unlikely to force the BoK to act as it had anticipated an increase before stabilising from October onwards towards 3% by year-end.

Japanese Trade Balance (Thu): The Trade Balance for September is expected to show a narrower deficit of JPY 425mln vs the August deficit of JPY 938mln. Exports are seen growing 3.1% YY (prev. -0.8%), while imports are seen contracting 12.9% YY (prev. -17.8%). Analysts at CapEco believe the deficit will continue to flatline around JPY 600bln. The desk, citing trading partners alongside prelim figures, posits that imports fell at a slower pace in September. “Given that import prices increased by less on the month, we suspect import volumes also rose slightly”, say CapEco.

Australian Jobs Report (Thu): There are currently no forecasts for the Aussie jobs report. Analysts at Westpac see the employment change at 20k (prev. 64.9k), while the desk sees the unemployment rate steady at 3.7%. The analysts suggest “The choppy profile over the last two months again looks to be partly a reflection of shifting seasonalities around school holidays.” The desk also posits that “ Businesses have demonstrated a remarkable ability to absorb the migration-driven surge in labour supply, although this dynamic will be tested as the broader economy continues to slow… The labour market has moved past its tightest point but is not yet slackening to a material degree.” Westpac anticipates that the labour market will remain tight into the end of the year “before a more material degree of slackening emerges in 2024.”

EU-US Summit (Fri): European Commission President von der Leyen and European Council President Michel will meet President Biden on October 20th at the White House. Topics on the agenda, according to the joint statement, include Russia-Ukraine, clean energy, digital infrastructure, AI, and the leaders will “review joint activities to strengthen economic resilience and to address related challenges.” Away from the official release, sources suggested one area of focus will be the steel sector. A senior EU official cited by newswires suggested steel tariffs are among the issues to resolve, with Bloomberg later reporting the two sides are seeking an interim deal on steel to avoid the return of Trump-era tariffs. Furthermore, from a geopolitical angle, the EU is reportedly planning an anti-subsidy probe into Chinese steelmakers at a summit with the US on October 20th, according to the FT citing sources. An EU official clarified to Reuters that the probe was not limited to China. “A joint statement due at the end of the summit is expected to say the European Union will use its trade defence instruments to assess the market situation for steel, but not mention China. This would lead to investigations by the European Commission”, according to the diplomat. Aside from the steel issue, desks also suggest keeping an eye on commentary surrounding Europe’s opposition to the US Inflation Reduction Act.

Japanese CPI (Fri): The Core YY rate is seen cooling to 2.7% from 3.1%. There is no forecast for the headline YY or super-core YY, which were previously 3.2% and 4.3% respectively. Using the Tokyo CPI (released a couple of weeks ago) as a proxy, the metric ticked down to 2.8% from 2.9% in the month following a sharp decline in August, led by declines in utility tariffs and manufactured goods inflation. Analysts at CapEco forecast a similar cooling in the coming release. The desk also highlights that the pickup in services inflation reversed in the last month, however, inflation is moderating less quickly than the Bank of Japan anticipated, which will lead to the need to revise inflation forecasts in their meeting later this month (30th-31st). In fitting with that view, Kyodo sources from October 10th suggested the BoJ is reportedly mulling raising its FY23/24 core CPI forecast to near 3% from 2.5% forecast in July. CapEco sees the YY headline at 3.1%, core at 2.8% and supercore at 4.1%.

UK Retail Sales (Fri): In terms of recent consumption indicators, BRC Y/Y retail sales rose 2.8% in September (prev. 4.3%), with the consultancy noting “Sales growth in September slowed as the high cost of living continues to bear down on households. Big ticket items such as furniture and electricals performed poorly as consumers limited spending in the face of higher housing, rental and fuel costs”. Elsewhere, the Barclaycard consumer spending release noted “It was nice to see consumers return to the high-street and make the most of the warm weather in early September. However, with the festive period approaching, consumers are balancing their budgets to prepare for this expensive period”. For the upcoming release, Oxford Economics notes “…we think there was a further pickup in sales in September. Food sales have been particularly soft of late and look ripe for further catch-up, while there’s scope for recoveries in non-store and fuel sales after chunky m/m falls in August”.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk.

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

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: Duck and cover; gold and oil surge ahead of dicey weekend 0 (0)

Markets:

  • Gold up $60 to $1928
  • Oil up $4.74 to $87.65
  • US 10-year yields down 7.9 bps to 4.62%
  • S&P 500 down 0.6%
  • CHF leads, NZD lags

This isn’t the kind of price action anyone wants to see while bombs are flying in the Middle East. The strength of the rallies in gold and oil suggest some real fear about a wider conflict beyond Gaza. At best, these moves signal caution mixed in with some short covering but the larger they got as the day wore on, the more it felt like something ominous.

The Swiss franc was the safe haven of choice with sales in EUR/CHF kicking off midway through European trading and extending into the European close.

The pound was also sold for the second day, falling 40 pips and finishing near the lows of the day at 1.2134. The two day slide in cable wiped out the previous five days of gains and leaves a sustainable bounce in doubt.

The antipodeans remain the larger laggards as a three-day fall in NZD/USD puts the pair back to within striking distance of the September lows, which are also the lows of the year. That’s in a week where China floated more fiscal stimulus so it underscores the level of worry.

Treasury yields weren’t as big of a factor today as 30-year yields fell 11 bps on something of a safe haven bid. That’s a big turn after the terrible auction yesterday.

The next big question is what happens on the weekend and beyond. There’s a risk that we’re not into WWIII by the time markets reopen (though Dalio says there’s a 50/50 chance it’s coming) and if that’s the case, we should see some of the safety premium fade.

Have a safe weekend.

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

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US equity close: The Nasdaq lags for a change 0 (0)

Closing changes on the day:

  • S&P 500 down 0.6%
  • DJIA +0.1%
  • Russell 2000 -0.8%
  • Nasdaq Comp +1.3%
  • Toronto TSX Comp -0.3%

Closing changes for the week:

  • S&P 500 up 0.4%
  • DJIA +0.8%
  • Nasdaq Comp -0.2%

You hate to see Lockheed Martin up 1.6% and closing near the best levels of the week ahead of potential Middle Eastern war.

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

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The US can still avoid a recession if its plays its cards right – CIBC 0 (0)

CIBC today indicates that next week it will upwardly revise its forecasts for US economic growth and pencil in an additional Fed hike this year.

That move goes against the current prevailing market thinking that has the Fed stuck on the sidelines for months. Current pricing suggests only an 8% chance of a hike on Nov 1 and about 30% for the Dec 13 meeting.

CIBC said the upcoming forecast will include „an additional Fed rate hike
before this year ends, and a further delay before our forecast
slowdown kicks in“ along with an upward forecast to US growth.

Coupled with that will be a boost in Q3 GDP to „nearly 4%“ from 2.5% just a month ago. They also estimate only a small chance that Q4 growth is negative.

„We still expect that an outright
recession can be avoided if the central bank plays its cards right,
and starts to ease rates in the latter half of 2024,“ CIBC writes.

As for the rate hike call, it appears to have a conditional element.

„if long rates start to edge lower again,
as they could in the absence of a fed funds hike in October, that
could see them hike again before year end,“ CIBC writes.

„We’ll risk being a broken record by simply pushing back our call
for a stall in US growth into Q1 of 2024. Some of the leading indicators for such a retreat, including slowing bank lending,
and weaker activity in interest-senstive measures like housing
starts and resales, are still pointing that way, as is the market’s
favourite omen, an inverted yield curve.“

The Canadian bank notes that it won’t be boosting up its BOC forecast for terminal rates, saying that current interest rates are already providing a sufficient headwind to growth.

Looking to next week, CIBC highlights speeches from Williams and Chair Powell for potential signals about how higher long-dated yields will affect rate setting. Next Saturday the FOMC blackout also begins.

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

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Oil climbs nearly $5. What’s next 0 (0)

Yesterday, we got an enormous US crude oil supply build, erasing five weeks of draws. It was coupled with data showing US oil production at the highest ever.

Yet today we have oil up $4.69 to $87.56 and above the post-Hamas attack peak.

I highlight the fibonacci retracement levels from the October rout on this chart with the first bounce stalling out at the 38.2% level and this rally yet to hit the 50% level. But also notice the three-candle reversal over the past three days and the higher low. Those are bullish signals in a market that’s still materially short oil supply due to OPEC+ curbs.

This week we had Russian President Putin endorse OPEC+ and say that cooperation is likely to be extended. But the main driver is Middle Eastern war and the potential for something to spill over into Iran or the region more broadly. There is also an increasing belief that some possible grand bargain between the US and Saudi Arabia to pump more oil and recognize Israel in exchange for US defense guarantees is a unworkable for now.

I tend to think there’s a big ‚weekend risk‘ bid and/or short covering underway right now but we won’t know until Monday.

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

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EURUSD: The EURUSD moves down to test 1.0500 and finds support. Sellers in control. 0 (0)

In this video, I outline the key technical levels in play for the EURUSD as we end one week, and look to the next.

The bias is more to the downside, thanks to a run higher in the USD on Thursday in Friday.

Today, the price moved into a swing area between 1.0483 and 1.0500. That area will be a barometer for both buyers and sellers to start off the new trading week.

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

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