Week Ahead: US CPI, FOMC, Retail Sales; ECB; PBoC, China activity data 0 (0)

  • MON: NY Fed
    Survey of Consumer Expectations.
  • TUE: OPEC MOMR,
    German Final CPI (May), UK Jobs Data (Apr/May), German ZEW Survey (Jun), US CPI
    (May).
  • WED: FOMC
    Announcement, IEA OMR (2024 Forecast), UK GDP (Apr), Swedish CPIF (May), EZ
    Industrial Production (Apr), US PPI (May), New Zealand GDP (Q1).
  • THU: ECB
    Announcement, PBoC MLF Announcement, Eurogroup meeting, Japanese Trade Balance
    (May), Australian Job Report (May), Chinese Retail Sales and Industrial
    Production (May), US Philly Fed (Jun), US Retail Sales (May).
  • FRI: BoJ
    Announcement, ECB TLTRO III.5-10 Repayment, EZ Final CPI (May), Uni. of
    Michigan Prelim. (Jun), Quad Witching.

NOTE: Previews are listed in day-order

UK Jobs Report (Tue):

Expectations are for the headline unemployment
rate in the 3-months to April to rise to 4.0% from 3.9%, whilst average
earnings (ex-bonus) are set to rise to 6.9% from 6.7%; no consensus has been
published for the other metrics. The prior report was characterised by an
unexpected increase in the unemployment rate to 3.9% from 3.8% amid an increase
in participation, whilst the timelier HMRC payrolls measure for April recorded
its first decline since early 2021. On the wages front, average earnings held
at 5.8%, as expected, suggesting that some of the upside momentum in wage
growth is beginning to slow. This time around, analysts at Oxford Economics
notes that based “on higher recent single-month readings, and the fact that
January’s low outturn will fall out of the three-month average, we expect
unemployment to edge up to 4% in the February to April period”. On pay growth,
the consultancy notes that “data has remained strong in recent months and we
think both main measures are likely to have accelerated further in April
because of the near-10% increase in the national minimum wage that month”. From
a policy perspective, given that 25bps is nearly fully-priced for June on
account of the April inflation data, the release will unlikely cause too much
of a reshaping in BoE expectations.

US CPI (Tue):

CPI is expected to rise 0.3% M/M in May, a
little cooler than the prior 0.4%; the annual gauge is seen easing to 4.1% Y/Y
from 4.9%. Bank of America is in line with the consensus in expecting the
headline annual rate to fall to 4.1%, which would be the lowest reading since
March 2021. BofA says the headline will be driven by a 3.0% decline in energy
prices. It says that seasonal factors are also expected to contribute to the
downward pressure. Food prices are anticipated to increase slightly due to a
rise in food away from home, partially offset by a decline in food at home.
Meanwhile, analysts expect the core measure to rise 0.4% M/M, matching the pace
in April; the annual core measure is seen paring to 5.2% Y/Y from 5.5%. BofA
says core inflation’s rise will be led by a significant increase in used car
prices, while core goods prices excluding used cars are expected to remain
little changed. For core services, BofA sees a 0.4% increase, underpinned by
shelter inflation, but offset by a decline in lodging away from home. BofA says
it is closely monitoring supply chain pressures, trends in consumption spending
on goods, and the ongoing deceleration in rent and owners‘ equivalent rent, and
looking ahead, it expects a continued moderation in inflationary pressures.

FOMC Policy Announcement (Wed):

A Reuters poll revealed that economists
generally expect the FOMC to hold rates at 5.00-5.25% next week, with only 8 of
the 86 surveyed forecasting a 25bps rate rise. Looking ahead, 32 of the 86
economists surveyed still foresee at least one more rate hike later this year.
Goldman Sachs thinks the Fed will pause at the June meeting to assess the
impact of previous rate hikes, as well as tighter bank credit, before
considering another rate increase, with officials likely seeing a pause as a
prudent measure to avoid accidentally overtightening. Goldmans says that
economic downside risks have diminished, with resilience seen in hard data like
spending and the labour market outweighing weakness in other survey data. The
bank recently lowered its outlook on a recession, assigning a 25% probability
(from 35%), and argues that progress towards a soft landing is on track,
supported by improvements in the jobs market, reduced labour shortages, and
cooling wage growth. GS also notes that although core PCE inflation has fallen
less than expected, a significant deceleration is anticipated later this year.
The bank says Fed officials have less reason to be concerned compared to last
summer as inflation psychology normalizes and signs of cooling emerge.

UK GDP (Wed):

Expectations are for M/M GDP in April to rise
by 0.3% vs. the 0.3% contraction seen in March. The prior release saw a
downturn amid softness in a range of sectors with some of the impact as a
consequence of adverse weather and strike action. This time around, Pantheon
Macroeconomics suggests that its forecast of 0.2% M/M would imply that the
MPC’s forecast of 0% Q/Q growth in Q2 would be “in the right ballpark”.
Drilling into the data, PM sees a strong case for expecting GDP to fare worse
than indicated via business surveys given the exclusion of the construction
sector, whereby construction output could fall by around 2.2% M/M which would
trim GDP by 0.15pp. Furthermore, strike action is likely to have played a
similar role in April as it did in March. Looking beyond April, the consultancy
expects May’s data to be impaired by the additional public holiday which will
have weighed on output, whilst a 0.4% increase in June should see Q2 GDP steady
at around Q1 levels. Thereafter, growth in H2 will likely benefit from a recovery
in household disposable income amid the reduction in OFGEM’s price cap.

New Zealand GDP (Wed):

Expectations are for a Q/Q print of -0.1%. The
economy contracted by 0.6% in the last quarter of 2022, with several economists
predicting a further contraction in Q1 this year. It’s worth noting that
Current Account data for Q1 is due a day before the GDP report and thus may
change expectations. Ratings agency S&P previously stated that
„Recession risks and reconstruction costs from Cyclone Gabrielle are delaying
New Zealand’s post-COVID fiscal repair.” In the latest budget, the NZ Treasury
now expects the economy to grow 1% in the 12 months to June, as opposed to
moving into recession in the second half of this year. It noted that the
cyclone rebuilds and the return of tourists were boosting activity. The RBNZ
meanwhile recently said it expects the economy to have expanded slightly in the
first quarter. It continues to see a shallow recession in the second and third
quarters of this year.

China Retail Sales, Industrial Production (Thu):

Expectations are for Y/Y Retail Sales in May
to rise 13.9%, whilst there is currently no consensus for the IP data. To recap
last month’s data, both Retail Sales and IP missed analysts‘ forecasts and
subsequently cast a shadow on the pace of China’s economic recovery. Retail
Sales printed at 18.4% (vs exp. 21%) and IP at 5.6% (exp. 10.9%). Desks,
following the disappointing April data, suggest more fiscal support may be on
the cards to support the economy. Reports last week suggested China is
reportedly mulling a property-market support package to bolster the economy,
while reports via China’s Securities Journal this week suggested a RRR cut may
be on the cards for H2. It was also reported earlier in the week that China has
asked the largest banks to cut deposit rates to boost the economy, according to
Bloomberg sources.

ECB Policy Announcement (Thu):

All 62 economists surveyed expect the ECB to
come to market with another 25bps hike, taking the deposit rate to 3.5%. Market
pricing concurs, with 26bps of hikes priced in for the announcement. To recap
events at the previous meeting in May, the ECB stepped down to a 25bps
increment from the previous 50bps adjustment with the need to keep on hiking
justified by the judgement that the „inflation outlook continues to be too
high for too long“. The reason for the smaller size rate rise was based on
the view that „past rate increases are being transmitted forcefully to
euro area financing and monetary conditions”. Since the prior meeting, headline
Eurozone CPI has cooled to 6.1% from 7.0%, whilst the “super-core” measure fell
to 5.3% from 5.6%. Furthermore, the ECB’s Consumer Expectations survey for
April saw the 1yr ahead inflation expectation decline to 4.1% from 5.0% and 3yr
view fall to 2.5% from 2.9%. That said, despite the disinflationary impulses,
President Lagarde has reiterated that inflation “is too high and is set to
remain so for too long”, adding that the ECB will “keep moving forward”. In
terms of what happens beyond June, as it stands, markets assign a roughly 75%
chance of a further 25bps move in July. However, for now, the ECB will likely
continue to stress its “data-dependent approach” and therefore any calls for
next month will need to be premised on how the data plays out between now and
then. Beyond July, markets will be paying attention to the accompanying macro
projections and how medium-term inflation forecasts align with the ECB’s
mandate. On which, ING expects the 2025 headline and core inflation forecasts
to be held at 2.1% and 2.2% respectively. That said, due to the recent
inaccuracy of ECB projections, they will likely be taken with a large pinch of
salt in some quarters.

US Retail Sales (Thu):

The consensus expects May’s advance retail
sales data to be unchanged vs the prior +0.4% M/M; the ex-auto and gas
component is seen rising 0.3% M/M, paring from a rate of 0.6% previously, while
the Retail Control Group is expected to rise 0.2% M/M following the 0.7% gain
in April. Credit Suisse says the main factor driving the May weakness is likely
to be a decline in nominal gasoline spending. However, when excluding auto and
gas sales, retail sales are still expected to increase. Ahead, the bank has a
bearish outlook for retail sales, noting that recent strength in the volatile
non-store sales category is not sustainable. CS also expects sales of large
durable goods related to housing to remain under pressure due to weakness in
the housing market. Additionally, tighter financial conditions, diminishing
excess savings, slower household income growth, and the resumption of student
loan debt service in Q3 are expected to weigh on consumption growth.

BoJ Policy Announcement (Fri):

The BoJ is expected to keep policy settings
unchanged at its meeting next week with the Bank Rate to be kept at -0.10% and
QQE with YCC to be maintained at the current parameters. As a reminder, the BoJ
kept its policy settings unchanged at the last meeting in April which was the
first policy decision under Governor Ueda’s leadership, with the decision on
QQE with YCC made unanimously, while it tweaked its forward guidance whereby it
dropped the reference to the COVID-19 pandemic and its pledge to keep interest
rates at current or lower levels, although the new guidance remained dovish
with the BoJ 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, but 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. Since then,
rhetoric from the central bank has continued to suggest a lack of urgency to
normalise policy as Governor Ueda has repeated that there is still some
distance before hitting the inflation target stably and sustainably and the BoJ
will patiently sustain easy monetary policy, while he added that the BoJ must
avoid tightening prematurely and should stick to its 2% inflation target. Ueda
also warned that premature tightening could hurt companies even in good health
and may weaken the economy’s potential, as well as noting that patiently
maintaining easy policy would heighten Japan’s potential growth in the long
run. The recent data releases have been mixed which support the view of keeping
policy settings unchanged with the Revised GDP for Q1 stronger than expected at
an annualised growth rate of 2.7% vs. Exp. 1.9% (Prelim. 1.6%), although the
latest Industrial Production, Retail Sales and Household Spending figures all
disappointed, while inflation metrics were mostly in line with expectations
with the headline and core CPI at 3.5% and 3.4%, respectively, but CPI Ex.
Fresh Food & Energy YY showed the fastest pace of increase since September
1981 at 4.1%. Nonetheless, this is not expected to spur a policy shift from the
central bank as Governor Ueda has noted that they haven’t achieved sustainable
2% inflation and inflation is to slow greatly around the middle of FY23.

ECB TLTRO Repayment (Fri):

The repayment figure for ECB TLTRO III.5-10
will be announced on June 16th at 11:05BST, by which point EZ banks should have
repaid around half the outstanding TLTRO funding and Goldman Sachs looks for
some EUR 500bln of repayments. Subsequently, the key repayment date GS
identifies is March 2024, though when that arrives over 90% of the TLTRO funds
will have been repaid. In terms of reaction, the bank does not believe the
announcement will result in banking system tensions. Given much of the focus
for TLTRO is on Italy, it is worth highlighting that the BTP-Bund yield spread
remains steady below 180bps. On June 28th, the TLTRO.III 4 operation will
mature and SocGen writes this will represent flows of circa. EUR 480bln with
the bulk potentially arising from Italy given domestic data points to borrowing
of near EUR 250bln in this tranche. SocGen highlights that whether the maturity
has an impact is dependent on a number of factors and as such expects some risk
premia to emerge in the Italian repo market; but adds that if this passes by
without incident, so should the remainder of 2023.

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

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap 9 Jun: USD falls this week as market awaits the FOMC 0 (0)

This week, the US dollar, tracked within a 103.290-104.400 range in the DXY index. That index (heavily weighted to the EUR) for the week fell -0.49%. The decline was initially triggered this week by below-expectation US services ISM data. In that report, released on Monday, the index for May 2023 came in below expectations with a reading of 50.3 against the predicted 52.2. The figures mark a decline from the prior 51.9. Seeing the nonmanufacturing Index fall implies a potential weakening outside the goods sector.

Within the report:

  • The employment index dropped to 49.2 from the previous month’s 50.8.
  • The new orders index fell to 52.9, falling short of the expected 56.1.
  • The prices paid index slid to 56.2, its lowest since May 2020, from the earlier 59.6.
  • New export orders, imports, and the backlog of orders all saw declines compared to last month’s numbers, coming in at 59.0, 50.0, and 40.9, respectively.

The greenbacks fall deepened when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) on Tuesday unexpectedly raised the cash rate to 4.10% and signaled further tightening to control inflation. The Australian dollar subsequently rebounded from a week low of 0.6578 on Monday to a Friday high of 0.6750. The price is closing the week near the pair’s key 100-day MA at 0.6740. Next week, moving above and away from that MA will be needed to increase the bullish bias. If there is a corrective move lower the 200-day MA at 0.66905 will be eyed for bullish clues. Stay above on a correction, will be indicative of bullish undertones remaining.

On Wednesday, the Bank of Canada (BoC) also increased its interest rate by 25 basis points due to insufficiently restrictive monetary policy and ended the pause that had been in place for 2 consecutive meetings. The USD/CAD moved to a low on Wednesday of 1.3320 (higher CAD). The market price for the USDCAD traded higher and lower on Thursday and again on Friday. The weaker-than-expected Canadian jobs data today took the USDCAD price up to a high of 1.33688 from a pre-employment low of 1.33157, but when the price couldn’t extend up to the falling 100-hour moving average (it currently is at 1.33813), the USD sellers reentered pushing the price back down to test the May low near 1.33132. Buyers leaned against the low level and the price bounced marginally higher into the close to 1.3340. Next week if the price of the USDCAD can’t get above the 100-hour moving average, the sellers will remain in control and a breach of the May low can be anticipated.

Despite the two central bank hikes this week, the market continues to anticipate no change in FOMC rates when they meet on Wednesday. That bias was reinforced on Thursday this week when the initial jobless claims surged to the highest level since October 2021. Jobless claims rose to 261K well above the 235K estimate.

Before the rate decision on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve will get the final key piece of economic data with the US CPI scheduled for release at 8:30 AM on Tuesday. The expectations are for a 0.2% gain MoM and the year-on-year measure to come down to 4.1% from 4.9%. The MoM gains from last year have been shedding the YoY inflationary numbers as they roll off. The YoY numbers have seen a fall from a high of 9.1% in June 2022 and have one more big MoM number to roll off when 1.3% drops out when the June CPI is announced in July. That should bring the YoY rate to the low 3% range, but still well above the Fed target of 2%. Going forward, it would take MoM numbers of 0.0% to 0.1% to reach the 2% target in 2023 which although possible, would be a stretch. Adam wrote about the math in his post HERE. Required reading over the weekend.

A look at the US dollar changes this week with the major currencies shows the USD was lower vs all the major currencies with the largest decline vs the AUD and the NZD.

  • EUR, -0.38%
  • AUD, -2.08%
  • NZD -1.16%
  • GBP, -1.06%
  • CHF -0.62%
  • CAD, -0.59%
  • JPY, -0.36%

In other markets this week:

  • Crude oil fell -2.19% as growth concerns in China weighed on the price
  • Gold rose a modest 0.68% helped by the lower dollar
  • Silver rose 2.77%
  • Bitcoin fell $-651 which seems pretty good given the SEC suing Binance and Coinbase

In the US stock market, the NASDAQ rose for the 7th consecutive week and the S&P rose for the 4th consecutive week although gains were modest:

  • Dow industrial average rose 0.34%
  • S&P index rose 0.39%
  • NASDAQ index rose 0.14%

US yields moved higher this week, despite the lower dollar and expectations of no change from the Fed. Investors are bracing for an estimated $1 trillion deluge of Treasury issuance as part of the latest debt-ceiling resolution, and that may have led to some backup in yields especially in the shorter end this week.

  • 2-year yield up 9.5 basis points
  • 5-year yield up 7 basis points acting like no key she didn’t know you go to far just in the cell the didn’t know when to see you will you mind my mind you find my my window
  • 10-year yield up 4.7 basis points
  • 30-year yield was unchanged

Thank you for your support this week. Hoping you have a good weekend.

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

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NASDAQ index closes higher for the 7th consecutive week 0 (0)

The major US stock indices are closing marginally higher on the day and marginally higher for the week.

The NASDAQ’s gain this week was good enough for the 7th consecutive up week.

The final numbers are showing:

  • Dow Industrial Average 43.17 points or 0.13% at 33876.84
  • S&P index up 4.95 points or 0.12% at 4298.87
  • NASDAQ index rose 20.61 points or 0.16% at 13259.13

Looking at the small-cap the Russell 2000, fell 15.07 points or -0.8% to 1865.70.

For the trading week:

  • Dow Industrial Average rose 0.34%
  • S&P index rose 0.39%. The gain was the 4th consecutive higher
  • NASDAQ index rose 0.14%. The gain was the 7th consecutive up week. The index is up 12.3% from the low.
  • Russell 2000 gained +1.900% despite declines over the last 2 trading days of the week

A look at the top 3 sectors:

  • Technology up 0.46%
  • Consumer discretionary up 0.44%
  • Healthcare up 0.19%

The laggards today were:

  • Materials -0.82%
  • Energy -0.58%
  • Utilities -0.57%

For the trading week:

  • Consumer discretionary rose 2.44%
  • Utilities rose 1.92%
  • Energy rose 1.7%

on the downside this week

  • Information technology -0.66%
  • Consumer Staples -0.53%
  • Communications -0.41%

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

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US crude oil futures settle at $70.17 0 (0)

The price of the WTI crude oil futures is settling at $70.17. That’s down -$1.12 or -1.54%. The low price today reached $70.10. The high price was at $71.77.

For the week, the price fell $1.57. The price last week settled that $71.74.

Crude oil prices recorded a second consecutive week of declines, impacted by the strength of the US dollar and sparse news. Prices initially rose due to Saudi Arabia’s commitment to production adjustments but were later pressured by increases in US fuel stocks and disappointing Chinese export data. The surprise contraction in the Canadian labor market, coupled with weak Chinese inflation data, may have also contributed to the drop in prices towards the end of the week.

In the US, Baker Hughes recounts were little changed in the current week after steady declines this year. Oil rigs increased by one to 556, while natural gas rigs decreased by two to 135, resulting in a total decrease of one rig to 695.

Looking to next week, factors such as demand during the summer driving season and upcoming macro events like US CPI, FOMC, ECB, US Retail Sales, and BoJ will be key in determining oil price movements.

Meanwhile, the US Department of Energy (DoE) plans to issue a new solicitation to purchase an additional 3 million barrels of crude oil for the strategic stockpile. These barrels are scheduled for delivery in September. In August, the DoE awarded contracts for the purchase of 3 million barrels of crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) at an average price of $73 per barrel.

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

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NZDUSD up today, but stalls near 38.2% of the May trading range 0 (0)

The NZDUSD moved higher today based on the lows against a swing area near the 0.60829 level before moving to the upside and breaking outside of what has been an up-and-down trading range until today (largely under the 0.6100 level).

The move to the upside today did extend the range for the week and moved up to test the 38.2% retracement of the May trading range. The retracement level came in at 0.61367 and that’s where the price stalled.

If the buyers are to take more control, getting above the 38.2% retracement is a minimum retracement level needed to show that they are serious about moving against the current trend. Absent that, the move to the upside is just a „plain vanilla“ correction.

So as we head into the new trading week, getting about 38.2% retracement will be needed going forward. If the price can move above that level the 200-day moving average at 0.6148 level would be the next close hurdle. The price in the NZDUSD has not been above the 200-day moving average since breaking below it on May 24. Move above that level and 50% of the same move down would be targeted at 0.61838

On the downside, failure to get above the 38.2% retracement would have traders thinking toward a retest of the 0.6100 level. Move below that level and the 100 and 200-hour moving averages will be in play (blue and green lines on the chart below).

So although the price is solidly higher in trading today, the buyers could not really break to the upside and give the buyers more confidence. As a result, traders will go into the new week with the continued battle between buyers and sellers in the NZDUSD pair.

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

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WTI Crude Oil Technical Analysis 0 (0)

Over the weekend, OPEC+
delivered some good news for the oil market, indicating
their intention to maintain prices above the $70 mark. Notably, Saudi Arabia
declared an additional voluntary production cut of 1 million barrels per day
(bpd) commencing in July, initially for one month, with the possibility of
extension based on market conditions. Furthermore, all other members of OPEC+
will prolong their production cuts throughout 2024.

While the OPEC+ supply cuts
may generate short-term bullish sentiment, it is important to recognize that
during a contractionary business cycle, the demand side heavily influences the
oil market. As evidenced by the recent surprising production cut, which was soon
after faded, oil prices experienced a sharp decline from the $83 peak to $64.
However, had it not been for the Sunday cut announcement, prices could have
dropped even further by now.

The economic data this week
has also weighed on the oil market as we got big misses in the US ISM Services PMI and the US Jobless Claims yesterday.

WTI Crude Oil Technical
Analysis – Daily Timeframe

On the daily chart, we can see that oil just can’t
break above the $75 resistance as it
looks like we have found another range at a lower price level. That’s been the
case for quite some time now that the oil market gets stuck in ranges at lower
and lower levels as demand drops and OPEC+ cuts to avoid a bigger selloff in
prices. The support level at $64.30 will be key to watch as a break below that
should increase the selling momentum.

WTI Crude Oil Technical
Analysis – 4 hour Timeframe

On the 4 hour chart, we can see that there isn’t
much to glean from this chart as the price action remains erratic beneath the
resistance zone. It’s just about waiting for a clear breakout or a fundamental
catalyst.

WTI Crude Oil Technical
Analysis – 1 hour Timeframe

On the 1 hour chart, we can see that we
have a support zone at the $70 level. The buyers are likely to lean on this
zone to target the $75 level first and new highs afterwards. The sellers, on
the other hand, will want to see the price breaking lower to pile in and extend
the selloff towards the $64 support.

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

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ForexLive European FX news wrap: Dollar steadies itself as markets take a breather 0 (0)

Headlines:

Markets:

  • NZD leads, JPY lags on the day
  • European equities lower; S&P 500 futures flat
  • US 10-year yields up 3.7 bps to 3.751%
  • Gold down 0.1% to $1,965.53
  • WTI crude up 0.3% to $71.50
  • Bitcoin down 0.2% to $26,590

It’s just one of those days where markets decided to take a bit of a breather, as we start to turn the page to next week’s main events.

There wasn’t any real conviction in the market moves today as trading appetite is sapped considering that there are no more major economic releases before the weekend. We do still have the Canadian jobs report to come later but that isn’t one to reverberate to broader market sentiment.

The dollar is largely steady but trading more mixed on the day with gains against the euro, yen and franc but now slightly lagging against the commodity currencies. USD/JPY in particular is just swinging around 139.40-60 mostly with large expiries sandwiching price action at 139.00 and 140.00 today.

In the equities space, the mood remains rather subdued with US futures keeping little changed mostly and European indices tracking just slightly lower now in the last hour after a relatively sideways session.

We’ll see what Wall Street has to offer later but there doesn’t seem to be much conviction across the board for now. However, that might still change up before the weekend. That being said, next week’s US CPI and Fed decision will still be the make or break moment for markets moving forward.

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

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How’s the Fed outlook shaping up to be right now? 0 (0)

Here’s a look at the changes in the Fed funds futures curve over the last one week and compared to a month ago:

After the US jobs report on Friday last week, traders moved in to further price a higher for longer narrative by the Fed and that hasn’t changed by much even after yesterday’s weekly jobless claims data.

And when you compare to a month ago when traders were pricing in three rate cuts by year-end, it’s been a dramatic shift in the outlook as the Fed succeeded in getting their message through.

It all comes down to what the next message will be from Powell & co. as they make their decision next week. If they keep rates unchanged i.e. pause, I would expect it to be a hawkish one (or at least an attempt to be) as they are likely to talk up chances that they could only be „skipping“ a meeting before raising rates again.

However, we know how easily markets can waver and all it will take is just one misworded communication and the dovish floodgates will open.

But if the Fed does decide to raise rates by another 25 bps, that will certainly mean more pain for risk assets and there will be significant repricing across broader markets. In turn, expect that to spur a strong rally in the dollar unless the Fed explicitly says that this would be their final rate hike and that they will pause to reassess moving forward.

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

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USDCAD Technical Analysis – Rangebound 0 (0)

Last Friday’s release of
the NFP report once again exceeded expectations,
maintaining its impressive streak of positive results for 14 consecutive instances.
However, upon closer examination, the report unveiled less favourable findings.
The unemployment rate saw a significant jump from 3.4% to 3.7%, representing
the largest month-over-month increase since the pandemic began. Additionally,
there was a slight reduction in average workweek hours, a potential indicator
of impending layoffs by employers. Overall, the report presented a combination
of data that could be interpreted differently by different participants.

Shifting our attention to
the US ISM Services PMI, it reported a considerably lower
figure of 50.3, falling short of expectations and narrowly missing the threshold
for contractionary territory. The employment sub-index indicated contraction,
and the prices paid sub-index experienced a substantial decline, returning to
levels last observed in May 2020. Consequently, the market reacted by further
reducing the likelihood of the Federal Reserve implementing additional interest
rate hikes.

The recent surprising BoC rate hike boosted the CAD and the big miss in
US Jobless Claims yesterday weakened further the USD
as the market is getting increasingly comfortable with the idea that the Fed
may be nearing the end of the tightening cycle even if it leaves a door open
for another hike.

USDCAD Technical Analysis –
Daily Timeframe

On the daily chart, the USDCAD eventually broke
below the 1.34 support and
extended the selloff as the BoC delivered the rate hike. The price is now near
the 1.3300 handle, and we started to see some consolidation as the market is
looking forward to the next week’s CPI report and FOMC meeting. We
might see a bounce or just a rangebound price action until then, so it would be
better to just wait until those risk events are out of the way and we get a
clearer picture.

USDCAD Technical Analysis –
4 hour Timeframe

On the 4 hour chart, we can see that USDCAD ranged
a bit at the 1.34 handle and then broke out as the sellers leant on the red 21 moving average and
pushed the price lower trading into the BoC meeting. We are now seeing some
weakening momentum falling right into the 1.33 handle as depicted by the divergence with the
MACD. That’s
generally a signal of an imminent pullback or reversal, so we may see some
profit taking at the 1.33 level, if the price gets there, as traders may want
to take out some risk before the next week’s events.

USDCAD Technical Analysis –
1 hour Timeframe

On the 1 hour chart, we can see more
clearly the recent breakout of the box at the 1.34 handle. The USDCAD hasn’t done
much since the BoC rate hike and the big miss in US Jobless Claims. This should
be a clear sign that the market is awaiting the CPI and the FOMC before getting
the conviction for the next direction. The levels to watch are of course the
1.33 support and the 1.34 resistance. A break to the upside, may take us to the
1.3553 resistance again, while a break to the downside should result in a test
of the key 1.3225 level first and possibly a breakout afterwards.

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

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A mostly sideways session so far in European morning trade 0 (0)

Major currencies are almost no different from the earlier snapshot here. EUR/USD is down slightly by 0.2% to 1.0760 but keeping within a 25 pips range only for the day. Meanwhile, USD/JPY is up 0.5% to 139.60 but again the pair is rather confined in between large option expiries between 139.00 and 140.00 currently. Besides that, there is a rather subdued mood everywhere else.

It’s a bit lifeless in equities space as well with US futures little changed near flat levels while European indices are also barely showing any change after the opening two hours. Here’s a look at how they are doing:

  • Eurostoxx +0.1%
  • Germany DAX flat
  • France CAC 40 +0.1%
  • UK FTSE +0.1%
  • S&P 500 futures flat
  • Nasdaq futures +0.1%
  • Dow futures -0.1%

Talk about a snoozefest, eh? Meanwhile, bond yields are holding higher at least with 10-year Treasury yields up 3.3 bps to 3.747%. However, that just eats slightly into the over 7 bps drop yesterday after traders reacted to the US weekly initial jobless claims data.

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

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