Fed’s Harker: January jobs report didn’t change the outlook for monetary policy 0 (0)

<ul><li>Fed not likely to cut this year but may be able to in 2024 if inflation starts ebbing</li><li>25 bps hikes allow the Fed to manage risk</li><li>Fed needs to hike to at least 5% and stay there for some time</li><li>It will take a couple years to get inflation back to 2%</li><li>Expects US jobless rate to peak at 4.5% before ebbing</li><li>Expected rise in unemployment would not be recessionary</li></ul><p>This is dovish stuff from Harker but a few more strong data points could change his tune. For now, this is the clearest dismissal of the jobs report to date.</p>

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

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WTI crude futures settle at $79.72 0 (0)

<p>The price of WTI <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/terms/c/crude-oil/“ class=“terms__main-term“ id=“e1f1b115-23d2-48c8-98c8-24024dada457″ target=“_blank“>crude oil</a> <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/terms/f/futures/“ class=“terms__secondary-term“ id=“2037a59d-f6cf-44c1-a57d-162e04589957″ target=“_blank“>futures</a> are selling at $79.72. That’s up $1.66 or 2.13%</p><p>The high price reached $80.33. That was the highest level since January 30. The low price was at $77.47. For the week, crude oil is up $6.94 or 8.49%. Ever since the biggest one we gained going back to early October.</p><p>Looking at the daily chart, the price is getting closer to its 100 day moving average at $81.08. The price has not closed above its 100 day moving average since early November. A move above the 100 day MA would next target a swing area between $82.48 and $83.34. </p><p>Today Russia cut oil output in response to Western sanctions. They plan to lower production by about 5%. This is a rare move outside of the OPEC alliance.</p><p>The end of year level came in at $80.26. With the sell price at $79.72. It is within $0.54 of the end of your level.</p>

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

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Lindner calls to „rethink“ after German trade deficit with China more than doubled in 2022 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>That is something worth noting as Lindner is saying this through his Twitter account, saying that Germany should „learn from experiences with Russia“ and „instead of becoming too dependent, we urgently need to rethink“ the situation as China remains Germany’s main trading partner for a seventh year running.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>For some context, Germany had a trade deficit with China of around €84 billion last year. The two countries traded goods worth around €298 billion – up by around 21% from 2021. Of note, Germany imported goods worth €191 billion from China last year – roughly a third more than the year before. Meanwhile, exports of German goods to China was seen around €107 billion – just a 3% increase to the previous year.</p>

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

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OPEC+ reportedly not planning any action after Russian oil output cut 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>It’s a surprise decision from Russia and it is likely to have caught OPEC+ off guard as well. We shall see how things develop in the coming days but I reckon they might not have much complaints unless Russia is not leaving this as just a one-off stunt.</p>

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

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Risk stays on the defensive so far on the day 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>It is tough to gather much conviction in this market with there being plenty of headline risks all around. The yen and oil are two examples of that today and it isn’t helping when risk sentiment is positive one day and negative the next. After two poor showings in Wall Street, it looks like market players are seeking caution today though.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>S&P 500 futures are down 19 points, or 0.5%, and we are seeing Nasdaq futures be down 1.0% and Dow futures down 0.2% on the day. Tech is leading the downside but European indices are having to play catch up to yesterday’s losses in US trading and most major indices are down nearly 1% on the day.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>That is translating to some slight dollar strength on the session with EUR/USD down 0.3% to 1.0700 and GBP/USD down 0.2% to just below 1.2100 again. AUD/USD has also come off its earlier high of 0.6960 to trade at 0.6925 at the moment.</p>

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

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Oil a big winner on the day as Russia says that it would cut production in March 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>The decision by Russia is to voluntarily cut oil output by 500k bpd in March, with Novak stating that this will „facilitate the restoration of market relations“. He also adds that Russia may take further actions depending on the market situation and it is being reported that Russia did not consult with OPEC+ on the decision.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>If anything else, the fact that Russia is acting independently is a major blow to those hoping for some kind of stability in the outlook for the oil market. You have to wonder what Saudi Arabia has to say about this and if this will be received kindly by OPEC+ members. I would assume so but you don’t really want to risk Russia going off the rails and creating its own tangent when it comes to decision-making on oil production.</p><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>Looking at the chart, oil has been mostly consolidating between $70 and $80 in the past two months and the latest push higher today brings price close to testing its 100-day moving average (red line) once more. Keep below and the consolidation price action looks set to continue but break above and push past short-term resistance at around $82.50-30, then we can start talking about a potential move towards $90 again.</p>

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

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Ueda says BOJ monetary policy is appropriate, need to continue easy policy 0 (0)

<ul><li style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>Important to make decisions logically and explain clearly, if he were BOJ governor</li><li style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>Says nothing has been decided, when asked about reports he would be nominated as next BOJ governor</li></ul><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>I mean, you wouldn’t really expect him to say much of anything else before he takes over I guess. It would be poor form and not in the right place honestly. But the yen has erased much of its earlier gains with USD/JPY swinging back the other way now to go back above 131.00 on the day:</p>

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

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Japan government to present nominees for new BOJ governor on 14 February – sources 0 (0)

<p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>That will include the nominees for the deputy governors position as well, which will be presented to parliament. That fits with the earlier report from <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.forexlive.com/news/japan-government-plans-to-present-boj-governor-nominees-early-next-week-report-20230209/“ target=“_blank“ rel=“follow“>here</a>. Mark that down in your calendars. This Valentine’s Day is going to be quite an eventful one (US CPI data on the cards as well), not just for dinner dates. 😉</p>

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

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BOE’s Pill: There is a danger of over-steering on rates, given lags in transmission 0 (0)

<ul><li>We have to be prepared to see through policy tightening</li><li>Need to address potential upside risks to inflation</li></ul><p style=““ class=“text-align-justify“>The change in language by the BOE last week reaffirms the headline comment, so there isn’t much of anything new. There will be more rate hikes to follow by the central bank but in all likelihood, we are to see a 25 bps increment next.</p>

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

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The Yen Starts to Rise 0 (0)

<p>Back in October, the
USD/JPY currency pair was holding at 151.95, which left the yen at its weakest
level against the US dollar in 30 years. </p><p>Unstoppable inflation
called into question the central bank’s view that rising costs were temporary,
and that the economy needed another dose of stimulus. Late in November,
analysts saw little hope interest rates would start rising any time before the
end of Governor Haruhiko’s tenure, in April 2023.</p><p>By the new year,
however, the yen was to see gains of as much as 16% due to the intervention of
the Japanese government in the currency trading market, but also due to the
widespread belief that the Bank of Japan was on course to tightening up its
super-dovish monetary policy. </p><p>On January 3rd 2023 one
<a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-03/dollar-makes-strong-start-to-2023-after-months-long-slump“ target=“_blank“ rel=“follow“>US dollar would buy you only 129.79 yen</a>, and “The yen’s current level is
significantly undervalued, even after the recent rally”, suggested Rajeev De
Mello of GAMA Asset Management. </p><p>Join us now for a
currency trading adventure, as we track the yen’s progress since late October,
and also try to decide whether or not its downward slide has finally stopped.</p><p>October</p><p>September 22nd, 2022 was
the date the Japanese government said it was going to take the step, which had
last been taken 24 years before, of directly intervening in the forex market to
support its currency. </p><p>The initial attempt
turned out to be a failure, but policymakers followed this up in October by
quietly spending $42.4 billion towards the same end. </p><p>By the end of October,
when a dollar was worth 148.57 yen, analysts like Atsushi Takeda of Itochu
Research Institute felt that “big interventions at the level we’ve seen in
September and October could happen another three to five times”. </p><p>November</p><p>In the second week of
November, <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-11/yen-gains-past-140-per-dollar-for-first-time-since-september-laccknib“ target=“_blank“ rel=“follow“>the yen climbed over 5%</a>, which was more than it had done since 2008. The reason
seemed to be an unusually slow US inflation reading, which gave traders hope
the US Federal Reserve would ready itself to slow its rate hikes. </p><p>“It is an important
turning point for the yen”, pronounced Lee Hardman of MUFG at the time. On
November 11th, when the USD/JPY was at 138.78, the yen had still recorded
losses of 17% against the USD for the year due to the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ)
prolonged dovishness.</p><p>Governor Haruhiko
Kuroda of the BOJ had been striving to achieve stable inflation of 2% for ten
years. </p><p>Prices were rising,
however, faster than they had done since 1982, sparked by the high costs of
energy and the months of sluggish yen performance. Processed food in the
country, which is largely imported and therefore vulnerable to yen weakness,
shot up by 6.7% in the first three weeks of November. A stimulus package from
the government, worth $210 billion, had been set in place the previous month to
help out consumers. </p><p>December</p><p>The first day of
December marked the fifth consecutive day of <a target=“_blank“ href=“https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=iforexone.clients.android“ target=“_blank“ rel=“follow“>yen gains in the currency trading</a> market, bringing its recovery since October
up to 13%. Later in the month, to analysts’ surprise, the BOJ’s big policy
adjustment arrived. </p><p>The central bank raised
the cap on its ten-year bond yields, which seemed to justify hopes they were
poised to grow more hawkish. The result was a big surge of 4.8% for the yen on
December 21st. </p><p>On that day, when the
yen was trading at 131.93 to the dollar, Amir Anvarzadeh of Asymmetric Advisors
said, “The yen will likely become one of the strongest currencies next
year”. </p><p>Peering Down the Road</p><p>An important reason for
the BOJ’s worries that raising interest rates too early might impede the
economy, is that real wages in the country have been shrinking since April
2022, which has been reducing people’s purchasing power. </p><p>On that score, Japanese
consumers can expect prices on about 2,000 products to climb even more in
February or March this year.</p><p>January 3rd saw the yen
make ground against the Australian dollar (0.4%), the Norwegian krone (0.6%),
and the Canadian dollar too (0.6%). As the new year got underway, Mingze Wu of
StoneX Group wondered “whether the BOJ will be happy with current developments
or will they step in to weaken the yen again”.</p><p>Erik Nelson of Wells
Fargo foresaw a path for the yen to reach 125 to the dollar, and then even to
100, but “this relies on inflation in Japan continuing, growth trajectory
remaining quite strong and BOJ at least providing a little bit more lift in
those nominal yields”. Other analysts believed, in the short term, that the yen
wouldn’t get much stronger than 125 to the USD.</p>

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

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