Newsquawk week ahead preview: US, Eurozone and Aussie inflation data; US Q1 GDP 5 (1)

MON: German Ifo
(Apr), US National Activity Index (Mar).

TUE: NBH Policy
Announcement; Japanese Unemployment (Mar), UK PSNB (Mar), US New Home
Sales (Mar).

WED: Chinese Industrial
Profits (Mar), Australian CPI (Q1), German GfK (May), New Zealand Trade
Balance (Mar).

THU: BoJ &
Riksbank Policy Announcements, CBRT Inflation Report; Japanese Retail
Sales (Mar), EZ Consumer Confidence Final (Apr), German Prelim. CPI (Apr),
US GDP Advance (Q1), PCE Prices Advance (Q1).

FRI: CBR Policy
Announcement, Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI Final (Apr), German Import
Prices (Mar), German GDP Flash (Q1), Swiss KOF (Apr), EZ Flash CPI (Apr),
Flash Prelim. GDP (Q1) & M3 (Mar), US PCE Price Index (Mar),
University of Michigan Final (Apr), Canadian GDP (Feb).

  NOTE: Previews are
listed in day-order

FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION (SUN):
The first round of voting saw no overall winner with incumbent President Macron
falling short of the 50% threshold required for victory. As such, the race will
now go to a “winner takes all” second round involving Macron and far-right
candidate Le Pen. Ahead of the first round, polls had Macron at 53% for the
second round and Le Pen at 47% despite the spread between the two being as wide
as 58% – 42% throughout March. In the aftermath of the first round vote and
ahead of the TV debate on April 20th, Macron managed to extend his lead to 55%
from 53%. Whilst there hasn’t been a great deal of polling fully encapsulating
the post-debate period, many commentators are of the view that it will not be a
gamechanger in terms of the race. The base case for the market remains one of
continuity with Macron widely expected to be awarded a second term. Macron’s
policy platform will need to be viewed in the context of the June parliamentary
elections which will determine the ease with which he can legislate his policy
agenda. That said, a Macron victory will likely provide support for French
stocks and bonds and some upside in EUR as risks of a disruptive Le Pen
Presidency are priced out; however, the sustainability of any EUR move would be
questionable given that the currency is likely to be more sensitive to the
fallout from the Ukraine crisis and the path of monetary policy at the ECB. A
Le Pen victory would be viewed as less of a market positive, and may result in
downside for the EUR, underperformance in French bonds and stocks. Economic
policies would likely centre around addressing the cost-of-living crisis with
UBS of the view that such policies could be more fiscally expansive than those
presented by Macron. Contagion into Eurozone-wide assets would likely be more
contained than it would have been in 2017 with Le Pen having scaled back her
ambitions for France to leave the EU. However, questions would be raised over
what tensions would arise from Le Pen’s more conciliatory tone towards Russia
in the run up to the election. Furthermore, some commentators have suggested
that Le Pen would look to play a similar role to that of Hungarian PM Orban who
has proved to be a disruptive force within the Union. In the FX space, a Le Pen
victory could prompt calls for parity between EUR and USD.

CHINESE INDUSTRIAL PROFITS (WED)/PMI
(FRI): There are currently no forecasts for the industrial
profits metric, but the release comes against the backdrop of the COVID-related
shut-downs in the region; thus expectations will likely be skewed towards a Y/Y
decline and will likely be overlooked. Greater focus may fall on the anecdotal
commentary within the PMI releases on Friday, particularly on inflation and
growth. Nonetheless from a policy perspective, Chinese authorities are
seemingly more concerned about growth. Note, that Chinese markets will be
closed from May 1-5th due to Chinese Labor Day.

AUSTRALIAN CPI (WED):
Australian consumer prices are expected to have broadly picked up in Q1.
Headline CPI is expected at 1.7% Q/Q (prev. 1.3%) and 4.6% Y/Y (prev. 3.5%),
with the Trimmed Mean gauge seen rising to 1.2% Q/Q (prev. 1.0%) and 3.4% Y/Y
(prev. 2.6%), while the Weighted Mean is expected to rise to at 1.1% Q/Q (prev.
0.9%) and 3.3% Y/Y (prev. 2.7%). Aussie bank Westpac sees inflationary
pressures building due to continued supply disruptions, rising commodity and
energy prices, and robust domestic demand. From a policy perspective, the RBA’s
April meeting minutes stated saw the central bank note the pick up in recent
inflation, and it expects further increases ahead, with the measure of
underlying inflation in the March quarter expected to rise above 3%. The
minutes also suggested that recent developments brought forward the likely
timing of the central bank’s first-rate increase of the cycle. Westpac believes
the RBA will begin the process of raising rates in June.

NEW ZEALAND TRADE BALANCE (WED):
There is not yet a consensus formed for the NZ March trade data, but analysts
at Westpac are expecting a deficit, amid the surge in oil prices. In terms of
the prior month’s metrics, the headline printed at a deficit of NZD 8.37bln;
the breakdown saw exports at NZD 5.49bln and imports at NZD 5.88bln. From a
policy standpoint, the RBNZ is expected to hike rates nonetheless and the March
release will not likely impact pricing.

BOJ PREVIEW (THU): The
Bank of Japan is expected to keep its policy settings unchanged in April,
likely maintaining rates at -0.10% and its QQE with yield curve control to
flexibly target 10yr JGB yields at 0.0%. Its latest Outlook Report is likely to
see growth projections cut and inflation forecasts raised due to effects from
the Ukraine war and China’s COVID outbreak. Traders will also be attentive to
any commentary or measures taken on the currency, given the recent rapid
decline of the JPY, which has seen USD/JPY briefly climbing to 129.00, the
highest levels in around 20 years. The central bank must also contend with a
rising yield environment, which has already prompted it to intervene via
special operations for an unlimited amount of JGBs purchases after yields
breached the top-end of its target range. In terms of the rhetoric on monetary
policy, the BoJ has remained dovish in the face of the policy normalisation by
other major central banks across the world, and Governor Kuroda has reiterated
that it is too early to debate an exit from stimulus policies, adding that the
BoJ will maintain ultra-loose policy to stably achieve its 2% price target, and
is prepared to ease further without hesitation if needed. The data releases
have been varied and support a pause by the BoJ: headline CPI for March was in
line with market expectations at 1.2% and 0.8% for the Core measure, which were
both the fastest increases since October 2018 and January 2020 respectively;
the Tankan data was mixed, where the headline Large Manufacturing Index topped
estimates, although sentiment among Large Manufacturers and Non-Manufacturers
worsened for the first time in seven quarters.

RIKSBANK PREVIEW (THU):
The Riksbank is expected to keep its policy rate unchanged at 0.00% in April,
despite multiple hot CPIF readings and commentary from officials pointing to
earlier than forecast tightening (currently, lift-off is forecast in Q1 2024).
Standing pat on the Repo Rate will likely be justified by the view that the
central bank wants any tightening to be gradual, as expressed by policymakers
Floden and Ohlsson, and more prudently to allow the Bank to communicate a
potential tightening cycle to participants through a formal policy meeting
before its commencement, likely in June with further 2022 hikes thereafter. On
the flip side, market pricing for a 25bps hike in April is now over 90%, with
around 23bps worth of tightening implied. Arguments to begin the tightening
process at the April meeting are supported by headline and core CPIF measures
at levels well above the Riksbank’s “obsolete” February forecasts, and are
seemingly yet to peak. Additionally, an earlier commencement to the cycle may
allow the terminal rate to be lower than if lift-off was delayed – an argument
that has been used by some other global central banks too. Irrespective of the
rate decision, participants will be attentive to how much tightening the
Riksbank is pencilling in this year, and where it estimates the eventual
terminal rate. Elsewhere, the pace of QE was a highlight of the February
gathering after hawkish dissent; the Q3 pace is likely to see a reduction from
the maintained Q2 pace of SEK 37bln.

US GDP (THU): Advance
data is expected to show that the rate of US economic growth slowed to 1% Q/Q
annualised in Q1 after expanding by 6.9% in Q4. As a proxy, the Atlanta Fed’s
GDPNow model is tracking growth of 1.3% in the quarter. However, as is always
the case with the advance data, the consensus view is subject to revisions
given many of the key inputs of the report will be released in the early part
of the week. In terms of the details, analysts at Credit Suisse explain that a
large reversal in inventory accumulation will be the chief culprit of the
growth slowdown in Q1. But while the trade and inventories components are
likely to be a large drag, CS argues that personal consumption should
contribute to the acceleration in domestic demand, business investment has been
rising steadily and is expected to continue, while residential investment
should also remain solid despite the rise in mortgage rates. The commentariat
will naturally focus on the slowdown and the potential for a recession in the
context of aggressive monetary policy tightening by the Federal Reserve as it
tries to put a lid on inflation, and as these high prices weigh on consumer
spending power. But ahead, Credit Suisse is looking for more trend-like growth,
and sees 2022 GDP rising by 1.9% after the 5.5% growth in 2021. „Solid
fundamentals and easy financial conditions now limit the risk of a recessionary
downturn this year, but risks are on the rise from both tighter financial
conditions and growth weakness overseas,“ CS says.

EZ FLASH APRIL CPI (FRI):
Expectations are for HICP to rise further to 7.5% Y/Y in April (prev. 7.4%),
with the core metric (ex-food and energy) seen rising to 3.3% Y/Y (prev. 3.2%).
The March data saw inflation soar to 7.4% from 5.9%, with upside driven by
surging energy and food prices amid the conflict in Ukraine, whilst pressure
was also seen in the core reading following a pick-up in goods and services
inflation. This time around, Moody’s expects an above-consensus 7.9% print with
its analysts of the view that there is “still room for core prices to grow with
costs staying high. Food prices will also contribute largely to the headline
inflation rate, while energy prices will rise further as utility contracts are
renegotiated in view of the higher wholesale prices of the past months”. From a
policy perspective, the upcoming release will be of particular importance given
the increasingly aggressive market pricing triggered in part by commentary from
the typically dovish ECB Vice President de Guindos, who said that a move on
interest rates was possible as soon as July. As it stands, a full 25bps hike is
priced in for the July meeting with three rate rises fully priced by year-end.
Analysts at ING think the release will be a key test for the hawkish pricing,
arguing that a cooling of inflation would be needed for any easing of these
hawkish expectations. The bank notes that such an easing would be required for
markets to realign with their baseline scenario which looks for the ECB to hike
rates in September and December and then twice again next year, bringing the
deposit rate to 0.5% by the end of 2023.

CBR PREVIEW (FRI):
After Russia’s central bank lifted its key rate to 20% in February to stabilise
the currency and ease inflation pressures following the country’s aggression
against Ukraine drew a strong sanctions response from the West, it made an
unscheduled rate cut of 300bps on April 8th. Markets have also been guided to
expect further rate reductions ahead. Speaking to lawmakers this week, Governor
Nabiullina suggested that the central bank would consider a reduction at future
meetings, but did not explicitly say that this could be forthcoming on April
29th; previously she has talked about how officials will assess gradual rate
reductions at future meetings. Deputy Governor Zabotkin has recently said
similar, noting that we should not expect or fear that rates will remain at the
current high levels, and they would be lowered as inflation eases. The CBR
analyst survey this week revealed a view that inflation would not sustainably
fall until 2023, and was set to remain elevated in the near-term. But it won’t
be until 2024 that inflation approaches the central bank’s 4% target, the
Governor has recently argued, adding that combating high prices was the central
bank’s most important challenge. Still, many analysts expect rates to be
lowered again in April; according to Reuters, the head of Russia’s
second-largest lender VTB is expecting the CBR to cut rates to 15% this week,
and sees the key rate at 12-13% by the end of the year. Elsewhere, analysts
will be looking for any updates on the currency, after Nabiullina suggested
that the CBR would consider forex controls to avoid the RUB’s deviation from official
levels.

US PCE PRICE INDEX (FRI):
PCE data for March is expected to show core prices rising by 0.3% M/M (prev.
+0.4%), with the annual rate seen rising one-tenth of a percentage point to
5.5% Y/Y. Although not directly comparable, the US CPI report for March showed
consumer prices rising by 1.2% M/M, lifting the annual rate by 0.6ppts to 8.5%
Y/Y – a forty year high. The core measures, however, rose less than analysts
were expecting (6.5% Y/Y from 6.4%), leading some to declare that the top in inflation
was in. Using the March CPI report as a proxy to estimate how Personal
Consumption Expenditures (which is the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation) will
fare in the month, analysts at UBS suggested that core PCE prices will have
risen by 0.3% M/M, though they see the annual measure falling to 5.2% Y/Y from
5.4% in February – this would represent the first decline in the 12-month core
PCE inflation measure since February 2021, which the bank says „will mark
the first step past peak inflation.“

US EMPLOYMENT COSTS (FRI):
Employment costs are expected to have risen by 1.1% in Q1, picking up from the
rate of 1.0% in Q4 2021. Although the data is backwards looking, analysts tend
to place more stock in this series rather than the Average Hourly Earnings
metrics within the BLS’ labour market report or the Atlanta Fed’s own wage
tracker – both of the latter measures have outperformed employment costs in the
post-pandemic era. Analysts will be framing the employment costs data within
the context of the current high inflation, and will be looking for any signs
that the current inflationary pressures are feeding so-called second-round
effects – something which is likely to influence how aggressively the Fed moves
to normalise policy in the months ahead.

This article originally appeared on Newsquawk.

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It’s a huge week for earnings. What to watch for 5 (1)

I’m not sure if this is the peak of earnings season as measured by the number of companies reporting, but it’s certainly the peak of big names reporting.
Monday morning starts off with Coca-Cola and that afternoon we get economic bellwether Whirlpool. The tech heavyweights go on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, including:

Microsoft
Alphabet (Google)
Meta (Facebook)
Apple
Amazon
Twitter
Ford
Mastercard
DR Horton (largest US home builder)

Probably the scariest big cap tech stock chart out there right now is Alphabet, which on Friday broke through a level that’s been tested four times previously.

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The year is 2022 and the world’s richest men are fighting on twitter 5 (1)

Elon Musk is continuing his quest to buy twitter and dropping hints about a tender offer. At the same time, there’s this…
The latest episode starts with a ‚leak‘ of screenshots from Elon Musk’s telephone of SMS messages between him and — allegedly — Bill Gates. They have an appointment to meet at 720 Wednesday Gates texts to say he’s ‚just landed‘. Musk replies „Do you still ahve a half billion dollar short position against Tesla?“
Gates then replies, „Sorry to say I haven’t closed it out. I would like to discuss philanthropy possibilities.“
Musk then replies, „Sorry, but I cannot take your philanthropy on climate change seriously when you have a massive short position against Tesla, the company doing the most to solve climate change.“
It’s not clear when the exchange took place but in Musk’s retelling, he sent the screenshots to friends and the New York Times „must have got it through friends of friends.“
A short time late, Musk tweeted this:

Naturally, the meme was copied and uncredited.
The top reply:

The idea — I guess — is to galvanize some kind of short squeeze on Bill Gates and boost Tesla shares. Or maybe it’s just Elon being Elon.

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: US dollar breaks out, stocks break down 0 (0)

Canada February retail sales +0.1% vs -0.4% expected
US flash services PMI from S&P Global 54.7 vs 58.0 expected
Fed’s Mester: I’d like to get to 2.50% by year-end
Canada IPPI for March +4.0% versus +2.6% last month (revised from 3.1%)
Kuroda lost in translation
Baker Hughes US oil rig count 549 vs 552 expected
Yellen:Worth considering steps to lower US tariffs on Chinese goods to lower inflation
BOE’s Bailey: There is a risk of second-round effects
BOEs Bailey: We will only do QT in stable markets. Will cease if conditions change
Macron’s poll numbers put him comfortably ahead before Sunday’s vote
Lagarde: Ukraine war may mark a watershed for globalization

Markets:

Gold down $19 to $1932
WTI crude down $2.54 to $101.23
US 10-year yields flat at 2.90%
S&P 500 down 122 points, or 2.8%, to 4271
Nasdaq hits a six-week low
USD leads, AUD lags

For the second day, the market started out in a decent mood and imploded in a move that looks a lot like deleveraging.
The hints of problems in the broader mood were clearest in FX as the Australian and kiwi dollar struggled starting in Asia. In Europe, worrisome comments from Bailey yesterday combined with poor UK retail sales finally led to a clean break of 1.3000 in cable. That extended all the way to 1.2830 in a bruising day with a close on the low.
The euro fell through 1.08 once again but didn’t break the recent lows. That will be something to watch in the week ahead with the April low clocking in at 1.0757, which is just 40 pips from spot.
USD/JPY was taken for a ride as it navigated higher yields, intense risk aversion and some mis-translated comments from Kuroda. Those comments initially boosted USD/JPY to 1.29 but they were taken back hours later and the pair retreated to 128.55. Still, it was an impressive feat for the pair to finish higher despite the ugly mood.
Another area to watch is USD/CNY, which rallied by more than 2% this week. That’s the largest one-week move since August 2015, a week that kicked off some heavy selling in equities as well.
The Dollar Index closed out the week at the highest since the very peak of the pandemic scare in March 2020. Ignoring those two weeks would take it back to 2017. Notably, nearly all trades closed at the extremes of the week, including AUD, NZD, GBP and CAD.
The good news is that it’s the weekend and the Fed blackout period starts on Saturday.

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US stock markets fall nearly 3% 0 (0)

S&P 500 -2.8% down 136 points to 4254
Nasdaq-2.6%
DJIA -2.8%
Russell 2000 -2.5%
Toronto TSX -1.9%

On the week:

S&P 500 -2.8%
Nasdaq -3.8%
Russell 2000 -3.1%

This was the third rough week in a row for stocks and the Nasdaq is now within striking distance of an 11-month low.
Unless you owned Kimberly-Clark or Alibaba, it was a rough day in equity-land. The uniform selling looks like a wholesale deleveraging.

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Fed’s Mester: I’d like to get to 2.50% by year-end 0 (0)

Fed wants to see tighter conditions, though not all at once
I’d rather be more deliberative and intentional than hiking 75 bps
Once at neutral, Fed in a ‚good position‘ to evaluate economy
We need to be resolute in bringing rates back to neutral
Goal is to bring inflation under control but also sustain expansion and labor markets

Ther’s been a small respite for risk trades on her comments, but you have to squint at the chart.

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The market has changed: It’s no longer about inflation, it’s about growth 0 (0)

The US dollar is at the highest levels since the dawn of the pandemic and has surged higher today.
What’s happening?
In short, the market is no longer convinced that global central banks can tame inflation without a major hit to growth. Maybe that’s not a recession but it’s a much slower growth paradigm than assumed.
Eight months from now, the Fed funds futures market is priced for 2.75-3.00% overnight rates after a series of at least three 50 bps hikes to start. The overnight rate hasn’t been that high since 2007 and we just don’t know what the economy will look like when it gets there.
The market is saying that global central banks are behind the curve and will need to over-tighten to halt inflation.
„We are walking a very tight line between tackling inflation and the output effects of the real income shock, and the risk that could create a recession,“ said Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey today.
Yesterday, Powell had this to say:
Our goal is to use our tools to get demand and supply back in synch…and
do so without a slowdown that amounts to a recession,“ he said. „It
is going to be very challenging.“
Not just inflation
Previously, the market was convinced that central banks had plenty of latitude to hike rates at a gradual pace to cool inflation but two things have changed in 2022.
1) The Ukraine war catalyzed commodity inflation
2) China is on lockdown, snarling supply chains again
The market put on the rose-coloured glasses on both fronts for a time but it’s now clear that both aren’t going anywhere. Plus, with inflation continuing to ramp up and central banks now taking a more-hawkish tilt, the risks have hit a point that’s intolerable for the bulls.
Combine that with the irrational exuberance in stay-at-home tech stocks during the pandemic and the resulting bubble burst and it’s a minefield out there.
Ultimately, what’s made me have a rethink is the performance of commodity producers this week. Commodity prices have largely held up this week but producers are being rocked.
Alcoa reported good earnings this week and the commentary in the conference call was overwhelmingly upbeat. Yet here’s the chart:

That’s a 23% fall this week.
It’s not an isolated case either. Freeport McMoran is down 18% and others to a less extent.
If I had to name the watershed it would be the latest IMF global growth forecasts released this week. Those sets of numbers generally tell people what they already know but this time the report seemed to galvanize sentiment. The 2022 global GDP forecast was ratcheted down to 3.6% from 4.4%.
If you look at those forecasts as more of a snapshot of the consensus a month ago, then layer in faster rate hike scenarios since then — you can easily get below 3%. For instance, China was only lowered to 4.4% from 4.8%. Given the covid state-of-play, that’s optimistic.
In addition, here’s a look at 2023 forecasts. If you’re concerned about higher rates and a deeper slowdown, there isn’t much room for error:

UK +1.2%
Italy +1.7%
Eurozone +2.3%
US +2.4%

What does it mean for the currency market?
The pictures tell the story. GBP/USD has clung to 1.30 as important support since mid-March. It crashed through today to the lowest since October 2020.

The New Zealand dollar chart (which looks an awful lot like the Nasdaq) also crashed through the 61.8% retracement of the March rally. It still has some breathing room before the January low but today’s price action is a sign of things to come unless the market mood reverses.

There is still plenty to like with commodity currencies: I think this will be a bullish decade for natural resources due to underinvestment and the green transition. But the rallies are likely to go ‚on pause‘ until we see global central bank hawkishness dialed back.
When will central banks get off the brakes?
That’s the big question.
I can make a compelling case that we’ve already priced in maximum hawkishness. A 2.71% return in two-year Treasury is a decent yield in a time of uncertainty. 
I think the Fed also underestimates just how much leverage is out there. We saw it at the start of the pandemic when bonds imploded before the Fed started buying in unlimited amounts. Financial markets are built on a shaky foundation of wildly over-leveraged trades.
The basket of things that work at a 3% overnight rate compared to 0.1% is infinitely smaller. To get there will require some heavy unwinds and no one knows what that looks like. I fear that it isn’t pretty.
The Fed is going to announce an unwind of its balance sheet on May 4. They’ve already stopped net purchases.
It’s a good bet that Powell will see some turmoil in markets along with growth fears and try to dial back aggressive rate hike expectations so maybe that’s when the coast is clear. The Fed has been a great friend to markets for many years.
At the same time, inflation is a real problem and Fed comments suggest they’re running scared. Powell yesterday said the jobs market was ‚unsustainably hot‘ and that taming inflation was ‚absolutely essential‘.
„We have had an expectation that inflation would peak around this time
and come down over the course of the rest of the year and then further,“
Powell said. „These expectations have been disappointed in the
past…We are not going to count on help from supply side healing. We
are going to be raising rates.“
Watch the Canadian dollarOne currency that I’m particularly worried about in the context of higher rates is the Canadian dollar.The Canadian housing bubble is in the process of popping and the decline will be dramatic. At this point the bull case is that prices fall 20% and Canadians shrug it off because it was all found money anyway.What’s important to remember is that the Canadian and US housing markets have fundamentally diverged. Canadian prices are much higher but structurally, the housing market is also much more vulnerable. That’s because variable rate mortgages are highly popular and have grown even moreso as rates have risen. That means that the freshest money that bought homes at the highest prices is also most vulnerable to higher rates. There’s no room for error there. In addition, even fixed rates in Canada are only for five years so around 20% of those roll over every year and they’ll be resetting higher. In the US, the 30-year fixed is standard so the only real pain is on the new buyers and sellers. The absolute kicker is that it’s not really the Bank of Canada that sets the rates for Canada.Surely you think I jest but I’m serious. Canadian mortgage rates are set around the 5-year government of Canada note. The BOC has some impact on where that trades but the biggest determinant is where Fed funds are.In a nightmare scenario for the Canadian economy, the housing markets goes into a crash and even with the BOC dropping rates to zero, the Fed is still hiking or holding rates at a high level. Perhaps the BOC could counteract some of that with QE but the result would be a significantly weaker loonie.The odds of an outcome along those lines are growing.

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Kuroda lost in translation 5 (1)

Earlier USD/JPY rallied on a newswire headline that said:
‚BOJ must keep aggressive easing, even as the yen drops‘
Not so fast.
There’s been something of a correction now as a newswire reports that his comment about aggressive easing ‚wasn’t in the context of yen weakening‘.
That’s why USD/JPY has given some back.

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ForexLive European FX news wrap: Dollar gains, pound dumped 5 (1)

Headlines:Sterling tumbles on break below 1.3000, what’s next?Yuan fall not letting up towards the end of the weekUS sounded like it will consider the idea of joint FX intervention with Japan – reportEurope PMI recap: Services sector rebound masks continued inflation surgeUK March retail sales -1.4% vs -0.3% m/m expectedLagarde said to told ECB policymakers to hold back on dissenting views, leaksGermany’s Scholz: I don’t see how a gas embargo on Russia would end the warMarkets:JPY leads, GBP lags on the dayEuropean equities lower; S&P 500 futures down 0.2%US 10-year yields flat at 2.916%Gold down 0.8% to $1,935.50WTI down 1.2% to $102.52Bitcoin down 0.3% to $40,535It’s shaping up to be a typical April day in trading today, with bond yields rising, the dollar rallying, and equities looking more sluggish. That has been the sort of familiar theme we have been seeing as of late and today is no different.European indices opened lower, having to play catch up to the late plunge in US stocks yesterday but the overall risk mood is rather soft in any case. In FX, I would say the recent drop in the yuan isn’t getting enough attention as it should but that tends to correlate with a more risk averse narrative and a stronger dollar. That is precisely what we’re seeing.The greenback is continuing its good form as of late with EUR/USD falling from 1.0840 to 1.0790 while GBP/USD took a plunge after poor UK retail sales data, falling from 1.3020 to 1.2865 before keeping near 1.2900.USD/JPY was steadier, though it saw a drop to 127.75 after more intervention talk by Japanese officials. The pair then recovered back to keep near flat levels now around 128.20-40.Meanwhile, commodity currencies struggled heavily amid the more dour risk mood. USD/CAD is up 0.7% to 1.2670 while AUD/USD is down 0.9% to test 0.7300 with its 200-day moving average nearby.Elsewhere, gold is continuing its struggle as price is declining further after having neared the $2,000 mark at the start of the week. Price is down 0.8% to $1,935 at the moment.

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Euro sees lopsided risks ahead of French election runoff 5 (1)

The latest opinion poll sees Macron winning with 56% of the vote, having widened that gap before the first round of elections on 10 April. And the fact that the lead is being consolidated shows that markets could perhaps breathe a little easier during this week.Don’t get me wrong. Politics these days are never certain. Le Pen could bring about an upset and if she does, the euro is going to be reeling from the election result surely.Considering the technical vulnerabilities in the single currency against the dollar below 1.0800, it leaves exposed a potential drop towards the March 2020 low @ 1.0635.As for a straightforward Macron victory, I don’t expect much upside for the euro in France retaining the status quo. There might be a bit of a relief push (though I wouldn’t expect much) but I think the play might be to fade that as long as the dollar continues to hold firmer elsewhere alongside higher bond yields in general.I mean, if a more hawkish ECB pricing isn’t enough to get the euro buoyed this week, I’m not sure what else will.

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