Week Ahead: US and China CPI; BoC, RBNZ, BoK; ECB and Riksbank Minutes; UK Data 0 (0)

  • MON: Riksbank
    Minutes, Bank of Israel Announcement, Chinese Inflation (Jun), Norwegian CPI
    (Jun), Chinese New, Yuan Loans (Jun)
  • TUE: EIA STEO
  • WED: BoC
    Announcement, RBNZ Announcement, German CPI Final (Jun), UK Jobs Data
    (May/Jun), German ZEW Survey (Jul), US CPI (Jun)
  • THU: ECB
    Minutes, BoK Announcement, OPEC MOMR, IEA OMR, EU-Japan summit, UK GDP (May),
    US PPI final Demand (Jun)
  • FRI: US
    University of Michigan Prelim. (Jul), German Wholesale Price

NOTE: Previews are listed in day-order

Riksbank Minutes (Mon):

June’s meeting saw a 25bp hike as expected and
guidance for further tightening ahead alongside a step up in the pace of bond
sales. All measures which were more or less expected heading in. From this, the
minutes will be scrutinised for just how much further tightening is likely,
with the statement stating “at least one more hike this year”. Additionally, it
will be interesting to see if any member(s) would have preferred another 50bp
increment. The increased pace of bond sales to SEK 5bln from 3.5bln was shy of
SEB’s 6-7bln forecast, and as such any discussion around alternative magnitudes
will be closely monitored. Most interestingly, though not designed for monetary
policy purposes, details on the Riksbank announcing it is considering hedging
some of its FX reserves are keenly sought. Given that details are currently
light, particularly on the monetary/SEK implications; though, desks are viewing
it as a balance-sheet-related measure, not a behind-the-scenes way of
influencing inflation and/or the SEK.

China Inflation (Mon):

There are currently no expectations for the
June inflation metrics. In terms of last month’s print, annual inflation rose
slightly to 0.2% in May 2023, falling short of the 0.3% market forecast, albeit
rising from April’s 26-month low of 0.1%. Increased costs for fruit and cooking
oil helped push up food inflation, while transport and housing costs dropped.
Core consumer prices rose 0.6% year-on-year. Consumer prices saw a 0.2% monthly
drop, marking a fourth consecutive m/m decrease. Using the Caixin PMIs as a
proxy, the release suggested “Average input prices fell for the first time in
just over three years, albeit fractionally, which in turn was driven by a drop
in manufacturing costs. Output charges fell slightly and for the third month in
a row”, although the Senior Economist at Caixin also suggested, “A slew of
recent economic data suggests that China’s recovery has yet to find a stable
footing.” Analysts at ING suggest “Weak domestic demand is the main culprit,
though there are also some helpful base effects and we should see inflation
return to around a 2% rate over the coming months. PPI inflation will remain
strongly negative, reflecting weak factory gate prices as well as subdued
commodity prices.”

Norway CPI (Mon):

In May, the core YY figure printed markedly
above forecast at 6.7% (exp. 6.2%, and the Norges Bank’s expected 6.01%) and
was a key driver behind the Norges Bank’s decision to hike by 50bp in June. In
terms of the forecasts from that meeting, the Bank significantly upgraded the
June view to 6.58% (prev. 6.01%) for CPI-ATE. As it stands, the Norges Bank’s
guidance is for another hike “most likely” occurring in August, with the rate
seen increasing to 4.21% by end-2023. In the scenario that CPI-ATE remains
around the May figure, i.e. above the new June forecast, this week then it may
well serve to cement expectations for a hike in August and make another 50bp
move a real possibility.

UK Jobs Data (Tue):

The ex-bonus average earnings (May) print is
expected to moderate slightly from 7.2% to 7.1%, while the Unemployment rate
(May) is seen remaining at 3.8%. While the employment metrics will draw focus,
and have influence for GDP ahead along with BoE expectations, the main focal
point of the release will be wages, particularly after the particularly firm
data in June for the April period. Reminder, that release showed the largest
growth rate for regular pay outside of the COVID period, and (when Gilts
opened) sparked a marked hawkish reaction. For May, the associated CPI and PMI
prints have had hawkish implications; in particular, the May Services PMI
highlighted “Intense wage pressures continued across the service economy,
despite a moderation in employment growth.”, with the latter remark also of
note for the accompanying unemployment metrics. For the BoE, the data is
another piece in the puzzle before the August 3rd meeting where the wage
figures and the June CPI (due July 19th) will be key in determining whether
another 50bp is delivered or if a return to 25bp is justified.

RBNZ Policy Announcement (Wed):

The RBNZ is likely to keep the Official Cash
Rate unchanged at next week’s meeting at the current 5.50% level, with money
markets pricing in a 92% probability that the central bank holds rates and just
an 8% chance of a 25bps hike. As a reminder, the RBNZ unsurprisingly hiked
rates by 25bps at the last meeting in May which was made by a majority of five
votes to two and was the first time the Monetary Policy Committee voted on the
decision. The announcement was seen as a dovish hike as the central bank
maintained its peak rate forecast at 5.50%, and therefore implied that its
hiking cycle is done, while it also omitted prior language regarding further
rate increases and stated that the OCR is set to remain restrictive for the
foreseeable future. The central bank also noted that the level of interest
rates is constraining spending and inflation, while inflation is expected to
continue declining from the peak and it forecast negative GDP growth for Q2 and
Q3. Since that meeting, Governor Orr stated that rates are restrictive and well
above neutral, as well as noting that economic growth and inflation are weaker
than expected, while Assistant Governor Silk suggested being mindful of
over-tightening monetary policy and that they can halt to see how things go.
Furthermore, the latest GDP data showed that the economy dipped into a
recession with Q2 GDP Q/Q at -0.1% vs. Exp. -0.1% (Prev. -0.6%, Rev. -0.7%)
which further reduces the prospects of a rate hike.

US CPI (Wed):

Consumer prices are seen rising +0.2% M/M in
June (prev. 0.1% M/M), while the annual measure is expected to pare back to
3.0% Y/Y from 4.0% in May. Core consumer prices are expected to rise 0.3% M/M
(prev. 0.4% M/M), while the annual measure of core inflation is expected to
slip to 5.0% Y/Y from 5.3% in May. Credit Suisse says the easing core inflation
would be welcome for the Fed since it has been stuck around a monthly rate of
0.4% this year. The bank notes that the volatile used auto prices component is
are expected to decline after a period of strong increases, while other goods
categories are likely to have minimal inflation. Meanwhile, on the services
inflation front, CS says that services inflation including shelter is expected
to continue declining, with hotel prices weighing; ex-shelter, the bank
predicts that services inflation will be slightly below 0.3%. CS is slightly
below consensus in looking for core inflation to rise 0.2% M/M; it says that a
reading in-line with its estimates would represent the lowest run rate for core
inflation in 22 months, and the first time core inflation has been broadly
in-line with target over that period. It adds that the decline is likely to be
exacerbated by volatile components, which could reverse higher later in the
year, but nonetheless, this would be encouraging for the Fed after months of
disappointment.

BoC Policy Announcement (Wed):

After a five month ‘pause’, the consensus
looks for the Bank of Canada to lift interest rates by 25bps for the second
straight meeting in July, takings it key rate to 5.00%, according to Reuters.
Recent inflation data showed a significant declin in price pressures, with the
annual rate diving to 3.4% Y/Y from 4.4%, though some analysts suggested that
it might be a result of base effect. The BoC itself does not see inflation
returning to its 2% target until early 2025. “The slowdown may not be enough to
remove another BoC rate hike from the table given stickier core rates of
inflation, while a decent GDP report coupled with a tight job market suggests
the economy remains sturdy,” BMO Capital Markets said. Analysts at another
Canadian bank, RBC, said that data is pointing to more persistent momentum in
consumer spending as well as labour demand, and the question is when are we going
to be able to see a material slowdown in labour market conditions as well as
the economic outlook; “in our heads, it is really a question of when, not so
much whether it is going to happen,” RBC adds. The Reuters poll also finds that
analysts are more split on the prospects of a recession, and ahead, analysts
think that after the July hike, the BoC will likely keep rates unchanged well
into 2024.

ECB Minutes (Thu):

The ECB Minutes will be closely watched for
any signs of a potential September hike, with a July hike wholly expected by
markets, as pricing currently infers an 88% chance of a 25bps hike and 12% for
a 50bps move. To recap the June meeting, the ECB delivered another 25bps hike
to the Deposit Rate, taking it to 3.5%. The decision to raise rates was once
again premised on the judgement that inflation “is projected to remain too high
for too long”. Going forward, policy decisions will continue to follow a
data-dependent approach and be taken on a meeting-by-meeting basis. Perhaps the
main takeaway from the initial announcement came via the accompanying macro
projections which saw upgrades to headline and core inflation for 2023 through
2025 with the core 2025 print expected above-target at 2.3%. From a growth
perspective, 2023 and 2024 forecasts were revised lower by 10bps. Elsewhere,
the GC confirmed that it will discontinue reinvestments under the asset
purchase programme as of July 2023. At the follow-up press conference, when
questioned on whether the GC expects to keep raising rates, Lagarde replied
that there was still “more ground to cover” and that the ECB is not done on
hikes. Note, Lagarde again refused to comment on where she saw the terminal
rate. Since the June meeting, Bloomberg sources suggested the ECB is set for a
“tough debate” next month over whether a possible September rate hike is
needed. Meanwhile, at the ECB Sintra Forum (26-28th June), GC members largely
kept the door open for a September hike, whilst refraining from telegraphing a
terminal rate and keeping a data-dependent approach. On that front, EZ CPI for
June was mixed vs expectations, with the core Y/Y rate narrowly topping
forecasts (6.8% vs 6.7%), although headline and super-core both printed 0.1ppts
under expectations.

BoK Policy Announcement (Thu):

The Bank of Korea is likely to maintain its
7-Day Repo Rate at the current level of 3.50% for the 4th consecutive meeting
next week as softening inflation and expectations of weak economic growth
reduce the urgency for the central bank to resume its hiking cycle. The BoK Board
was unanimous in its decision to keep rates unchanged at the last meeting in
May, although prospects of a future rate increase cannot be ruled out as six of
the seven members saw the need to keep the door open for one more rate hike,
while the accompanying statement noted that economic growth is to remain weak
for some time and inflation will likely fall considerably before rebounding
slightly for the rest of the year. Governor Rhee also stated that core
inflation is not easing as much as Board members had expected and uncertainty
increased over whether inflation will approach the 2% target before year-end,
while a senior official pushed back against the view that monetary tightening
is over and warned it is still too early to be relaxed over inflation. Nonetheless,
an immediate policy adjustment is seen as unlikely given that inflation
continued to soften in June with South Korean CPI YY at 2.7% vs. Exp. 2.9%
(Prev. 3.3%), albeit remaining above the central bank’s target.

EU-Japan Summit (Thu):

The upcoming NATO summit on July 11th and 12th
is expected to see a push by US President Biden to secure Sweden’s membership
in the alliance, amid Turkey’s ongoing objections. Biden met with Swedish Prime
Minister Kristersson and expressed support for its NATO bid, despite the
country’s entry being hindered by mainly Turkey. The summit also coincides with
a host of diplomatic events for Biden, including a visit to the UK and a
stopover in Finland, the alliance’s newest member. The discussions will likely
centre on NATO’s expansion, transatlantic coordination on key global issues,
and efforts to support Ukraine against Russia’s invasion. The summit is not
expected to see Sweden’s membership secured yet. Sticking with geopolitics,
Japan and the EU are planning to issue a joint statement declaring an increase
in their maritime, cyberspace, and supply chain security cooperation. The
decision will likely follow a summit scheduled for July 13 involving Japan’s PM
Kishida, European Council President Michel and European Commission President
von der Leyen. The statement may include a commitment to enhancing joint
activities in the Indo-Pacific region and strengthening Southeast Asian
countries’ maritime defences. This move comes as tensions rise in the region,
particularly concerning China’s growing influence and activities in the East
and South China seas, according to Kyodo.

UK GDP (Thu):

April’s data showed 0.2% MM growth, but failed
to entirely reverse the 0.3% contraction in March. At the time of this release,
Pantheon wrote that it expects to see GDP over Q2 to be relatively unchanged
QQ, a view that can be explained via soft consumer confidence generally and
also the additional Coronation Bank Holiday. However, the May PMI reported that
its “surveys are consistent with GDP rising 0.4% in Q2 after 0.1% in Q1” and
continuing the theme of PMIs implying a stronger economic performance than the
hard data shows. Further out and of concern on the growth outlook, the June PMI
indicated that the economy lost momentum again after the brief spring uptick
and “looks set to weaken further in the months ahead”, with emphasis placed on
signs of faltering around services. For the BoE, the findings are noteworthy,
but the MPC remains committed to breaking inflation’s persistence and thus the GDP
metrics are unlikely to change their focus. Though, it may have an influence on
market pricing which currently implies a 6.5% peak by February 2024.

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: Nonfarm payrolls miss helps send the dollar sharply lower 0 (0)

Markets:

  • Gold up $13 to $1924
  • WTI crude oil up $1.86 to $73.66
  • US 10-year yields up 2.3 bps to 4.06%
  • S&P 500 down 0.2%
  • JPY leads, USD lags

The initial reaction to the non-farm payrolls report was mixed as the softer headline competed with higher-than-anticipated wage growth. The dollar fell, then recovered most of the losses.

From there, the bond market took over. Yields began to fell and 2s fell back through 5%, kicking off a strong decline in the US dollar. The USD/JPY selling today was particularly notable and certainly raised some eyebrows regarding whatever the MOF or BOJ is going to deliver, but it could also be profit taking.

The pound and euro were also particularly perky as bot added around 90 pips from early New York levels. Cable tried the June high and matched it to the pip but couldn’t get through and gave a handful of pips back late.

The commodity currencies doubly benefited from stronger commodity prices and better risk appetite, putting up some strong gains. The loonie trailed its mates despite another strong jobs headline. One of the reasons might be the softer wage growth in the employment report. Next week’s Bank of Canada decision is going to be a big one with the implied probability of a hike at 67%.

Have a great weekend.

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

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US major indices give up gains and close lower on the day 0 (0)

The major indices gave up gains into the close with all the major indices closing lower on the day.

At session highs the

  • Dow was up 114.11 points
  • S&P was up 28.29 points, and the
  • she NASDAQ index was up 125.47 points.

At the close, the indices were all negative.

  • Dow industrial average -187.25 points or -0.55% at 33735.00
  • S&P index -12.59 points or -0.29% at 4399.01
  • NASDAQ and -18.34 points or -0.13% at 13660.71

The small-cap Russell 2000 did close higher with a gain of 22.43 or up 1.22% at 1864.66.

For the trading week:

  • Dow Industrial Average fell -1.36%
  • S&P index fell -1.16%
  • NASDAQ and the fell -0.92%

The Russell 2000 fell -1.27%.

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

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Air travel rebounds: Passengers at 69.1% of pre-pandemic levels 0 (0)

Global air travel is perhaps the single-best indicator of covid impacts and the latest data shows that we’re on the cusp of a full retracement.

The May report from IATA shows that passenger-kilometers are at 96.1% of the pre-pandemic level, which is up 39.1% year-over-year. I strongly suspect the job is completed in June or July.

What’s notable is the skew in traffic and the risks later. Domestic air travel is above pre-covid levels for the second month but international travel is still down 9.2%. Some of that is the slower return of Asian customers and covid concerns when booking vacations but there’s also an element of business travel that’s missing.

The rise of remote work has curbed business travel demand and right now that’s being replaced by revenge travel post-pandemic. In time, the demand for travel might be satiated and that will result in travel settling out at lower levels, or at least a lower trajectory than pre-pandemic. Hotels are facing the same question but for now, a return to the office and international business travel has some momentum.

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

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Pound tests the June high in strong dollar selling. What’s causing it? 0 (0)

The pound has extended today’s day to 100 pips, touching 1.2848 in a late-week push. As the 4-hour chart above shows, buyers ran into the June high of 1.2848 exactly before backing off a few pips. The bulls may try to make another push late or in low liquidity at the Monday open in an attempt at a fresh 15-month high.

The pound is benefiting from a hawkish Bank of England and high inflation. I think ultimately this will prove to be playing with fire as some kind of accident happens if/when rates get to 6%. But for now it’s all about yield differentials and US dollar selling.

Some stops were already hit as 1.2800 gave way but with some real resistance above, the shorts have a good argument here.

Overall though, the US dollar is being sold hard in anticipation of next week’s CPI report. I also have to wonder if there are fears of Japanese intervention or a change from the BOJ as a factor.

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

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WTI crude futures settle at $73.86 0 (0)

The price of WTI crude oil futures settled at $73.86. That’s up $2.06 or 2.87%. The gain equaled the gain from July 5 which is the largest gain since June 15. The low price reached $71.19. The high price was at $73.91. The lower US dollar has contributed to the rise.

Technically, the move to the upside has the price testing it’s 100-day moving average currently at $73.86. The last time the price tested that moving average was back on May 1 and April 28. The price closed just above the moving average on April 28 but rotated lower the next day.

Next week, traders will need to decide whether to break above that key 100 day moving average moving average and look toward the 200-day moving average up at $77.47 (the last time the price tested that moving average back on April 13 when sellers leaned), OR use the moving average level to push price back to the downside?

For now, the momentum to the upside has reached its target. The buyers and sellers will now battle it out for control.

Fundamentally, Reuters reports that Russia still plans to cut oil exports in August due to domestic gasoline demand, but it’s unlikely to reduce output. Also, the Baker Hughes US Rig Count for the week ending July 7th reported oil rigs were down by 5 at 540, while natural gas rigs saw the biggest increase in six years, up 11 to 135, bringing the total rig count to 680.

For the trading week, the price of crude oil rose 4.53%. That’s the largest increase since the week of April 3.

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

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The JPY is the strongest and the CHF is the weakest as the North American session begins. 0 (0)

The JPY is the strongest and the CHF is the weakest as the North American session begins.Overnight, Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Uchida, in an interview with Nikkei media, said that the central bank plans to maintain the Yield Curve Control (YCC) policy to continue easy monetary conditions. While discussing the possibility of adjusting YCC, he emphasized the importance of ensuring easy policy while considering its impact on financial intermediation and market function. He suggested that the risk of missing the 2% inflation target due to a premature policy shift is greater than the risk of being late in tightening monetary policy. He also acknowledged that there is a considerable distance to ending the negative interest rate, equating such a decision to a 0.1% rate hike. Uchida also commented on the Yen, saying that rapid, one-sided declines are undesirable and the currency should reflect economic fundamentals.

In addition, Former Japanese Vice Finance Minister Eisuke Sakakibara, also known as „Mr. Yen,“ predicts that the USD/JPY could potentially exceed 160, possibly next year. At that level, he suggests that authorities might be inclined to intervene to fortify the yen. He also indicated that the yen could continue to depreciate unless the Bank of Japan (BOJ) tightens its monetary policy. This could involve abolishing negative rates and relinquishing controls on bond yields by the end of next year. If the Japanese economy heats up as anticipated, he expects a likely tightening in 2024. As for his personal strategy regarding currency intervention, Sakakibara believes in the efficacy of surprise actions, suggesting that he would intervene unexpectedly, without waiting for the market. However, he acknowledges that the BOJ is unlikely to pre-announce any intervention, ensuring an element of surprise remains regarding timing.

Despite the tilt in comments to a weaker JPY, the JPY initially tried to move higher in the earlier Asian session with the comments. However, the JPY turned around and moved higher at the end of the Asian Pacific session, and in the European morning session. The USDJPY is traded to the lowest level since June 23 with the 38.2% of the move up from the June 1 low at 142.528 now in trader’s sites. PS the BOJ next meets on July 27/28.

In the European session this morning, European Central Bank (ECB) Vice President Luis de Guindos described labor market dynamics in the Eurozone and globally as very positive. He noted that inflation in the services sector has proven to be more persistent. The future of interest rates in September remains an open question. de Guindos mentioned the advanced transmission of their unprecedented policy hikes to tighter financing conditions and the emerging impact on the real economy. However, he emphasized the job isn’t done yet, with a need for continued monitoring of services inflation and labor costs. Even though underlying price pressures remain strong, he pointed out that most indicators have started to show signs of softening. The expectations are that the ECB will raise rates by 25 basis points when they announce their next decision on July 26.

Today is nonfarm payroll day in the US and the USD is trending modestly lower. Adam had a nice preview of the data posted yesterday (you can find it here). Expectations are for around 225K, but given the sharp rise in the ADP yesterday (plus 497K versus 170K estimate), the market will likely be looking for something higher.

Some employment statistics for June already released show:

  • ADP employment 497K vs 170K expected
  • ISM manufacturing employment 48.1 vs 51.4 prior
  • ISM services employment 53.1 vs 49.2
  • Philly employment -0.4 vs -8.6 prior
  • Empire employment -3.6 vs -3.3 prior
  • Initial jobless claims survey week 265K vs 259K expected.

Barring a huge surprise on the weak side today (like a negative number), the Fed is expected to hike rates by 25 basis points when they announce their next rate decision on July 26. The odds of a rate hike in July are up to over 92%. The probability of a September 20 move is 29%, but November 1 is near 50%. The Fed penciled in two hikes between now and the end of the year at the June meeting.

Yesterday, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, expressed that she would have been comfortable with a rate hike in June. She believed that additional rate hikes are likely needed and expressed concern about whether inflation will subside quickly enough. Logan attributed the decision to pause in June to the challenging and uncertain economic environment. She also noted that the process of rebalancing the economy has been slower than anticipated and expressed skepticism about the delayed impact of previous rate hikes by the Fed. Logan suggests that the housing market may have reached its lowest point, but warns that a rebound in the housing sector could pose a threat to controlling inflation.

Canada will also release their employment statistics 8:30 AM with expectations of an employment change of +19.8K with the unemployment rate moving to 5.3% from 5.2%.

A snapshot of the markets currently shows:

  • Crude oil is trading up $0.30 or 0.42% at $72.10. Yesterday the price settle at $71.80
  • Spot gold is trading up $6.54 or 0.34% $1917.34
  • Silver is trading down $0.03 or -0.13% at $22.70
  • Bitcoin is trading at $30,129. The price was at $30,240 near 5 PM yesterday

In the premarket for US stocks, the major indices are trading modestly lower after the indices fell yesterday

  • Dow Industrial Average is trading down -2 points after yesterday’s -366.38 point decline
  • S&P index is trading down -1.6 points after yesterday’s -35.21 point decline
  • NASDAQ index is trading down -22 points after yesterday’s -112.62 point decline

In the European equity markets, the major indices are trading mixed. Yesterday the major indices all fell sharply to the downside.

  • German DAX is up 0.55%. Yesterday the index fell -2.57%
  • France’s CAC is up 0.56%. Yesterday the index fell 3.13%
  • UK’s FTSE 100 is down -0.30%. Yesterday the index fell -2.17%
  • Spain’s Ibex is down -0.53%. Yesterday the index fell -2.12%
  • Italy’s FTSE MIB up 0.61% (delayed). Yesterday the index fell -2.53%

In the Asian Pacific market today, markets closed modestly lower

  • Japan’s Nikkei tumbled -1.17% %
  • Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index tumbled -1.69%
  • China’s Shanghai composite index fell -0.28%
  • Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell -0.90%

In the US debt market, yields are modestly higher in early US trading

  • 2-year yield 5.011%, +0.5 basis points
  • 5-year yield 4.397% , +2.7 basis points
  • 10-year yield 4.067%, +2.5 basis points basis points
  • 30-year yield 4.013%, +1.0 basis points basis points

In the European debt market, benchmark 10-year yields are mixed:

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

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ForexLive European FX news wrap: Yen gains, NFP coming up next 0 (0)

Headlines:

Markets:

  • JPY leads, USD lags on the day
  • European equities mixed; S&P 500 futures down 0.1%
  • US 10-year yields up 1.9 bps to 4.059%
  • Gold up 0.3% to $1,916.72
  • WTI crude up 0.5% to $72.15
  • Bitcoin down 0.5% to $30,169

It’s all about the US jobs report today and that made it a bit of a quieter one in Europe, though there were some light market moves.

In particular, the Japanese yen gained across the board with USD/JPY briefly falling below 143.00 from around 143.50 in the handover from Asia trading. The downside momentum in the pair continues despite higher bond yields, so that divergence is something to be wary about as we move towards the closing stages of the week.

Meanwhile, the dollar itself is slightly softer on the balance of things despite the risk mood being fairly tentative and cautious. European stocks opened lower but are now keeping more mixed while US futures are marginally down on the day.

EUR/USD is little changed just below 1.0900 while GBP/USD is up just 0.2% to 1.2770 on the day. The antipodeans are also holding minor gains against the greenback, with AUD/USD up 0.2% to 0.6640 and NZD/USD up 0.3% to 0.6175 currently.

It’s not much but we should be getting more action before the weekend comes along with the non-farm payrolls report later set to induce another round of volatility surely. Will we get the same reaction as yesterday on a beat in the data?

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

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USDJPY Technical Analysis 0 (0)

The US economic data has
been surprising to the upside since the last FOMC meeting. Given the Fed
willingness of hiking another two or more times if the data remains strong, the
market repricing interest rates expectations on the more hawkish side. Although
this development led to higher Treasury yields, the USDJPY pair struggled to
take off and instead pulled back.

On the other hand, the BoJ
maintains its dovish stance keeping rates at -0.10 and the YCC at the usual
settings. Core inflation in Japan keeps on rising and there are only slightly
tentative signs of a possible exit from the current policy. So, ss long as the
policy divergence between the two central banks continues, we should see more
higher highs for the pair, all else being equal.

USDJPY Technical Analysis –
Daily Timeframe

On the daily chart, we can see
that we finally got a pullback in USDJPY. In fact, the price has fallen into
the trendline where we
can also find confluence with the
38.2% Fibonacci retracement level
and the red 21 moving average. We can
expect the buyers piling in here with a defined risk below the 142.17 support and
target the 150.00 handle. The sellers, on the other hand, will want to see the
price to break below the 142.17 support to pile in and extend the selloff into
the next trendline.

USDJPY Technical Analysis –
4 hour Timeframe

On the 4 hour chart, we can see that the market
sold off pretty heavily yesterday although the US economic data was solid
pretty much across the board. This is a strange reaction as the US Treasury
yields rallied instead. The market may have just been too much overstretched and
it needed a pullback. This is a key zone now to decide where the USDJPY will go
next. A bounce should lead to another big rally, while a break lower would open
the door for a big selloff into the 139.00 handle.

USDJPY Technical Analysis –
1 hour Timeframe

On the 1 hour chart, we can see that we
have a swing low resistance at 143.50. If the price pulls back into that level,
we can expect the sellers to pile in there to position for more downside. More
conservative buyers, on the other hand, will want to see the price to break
above that level to confirm the bounce and the continuation of the rally.

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Today we have the US
NFP report. The market is already expecting good data so the only surprise may
come from a much higher than expected numbers or a miss to the forecasts. In
the first case, we should see the USD appreciate as the market will be pricing
a more hawkish Fed. In the second case, we can expect the USD to weaken as
Treasury yields will drop and take USDJPY with them.

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

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European indices keep more mixed on the day now 0 (0)

There’s not much of direction so far on the session and you can understand why there is that sense of apprehension. Everyone is waiting on the US non-farm payrolls later and it’s tough to gather much conviction at the moment. European stocks started the day with losses but are now seeing a more mixed performance:

  • Eurostoxx +0.3%
  • Germany DAX +0.4%
  • France CAC 40 +0.5%
  • UK FTSE -0.3%
  • Spain IBEX -0.5%

It still doesn’t chip away much at the heavy losses this week and US futures are also still looking rather tepid. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures are down 0.1% while Dow futures are flattish currently.

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

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