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Forex / Yen Pops on BOJ Comments on In...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Yen Pops on BOJ Comments on Inflation, but the Dollar holds Most of Yesterday's Gains against the other G10 Currencies

Overview: The dollar is mixed as the market awaits
the US personal consumption expenditure deflator, which is the measure of
inflation the Fed targets. While there is headline risk, we argue that the
signal has already been generated by the CPI and PPI releases. The yen is the
strongest of the G10 currencies, up nearly 0.5%. The market shrugged off weak
data that spurs speculation of a third quarterly contraction and focused on the
comments from a BOJ board member that were consistent with the exit from
negative interest rates in the coming months. Meanwhile, the Australian and New
Zealand dollars remain fragile after yesterday's drubbing. Most emerging market
currencies are firmer today, led by the Malaysian ringgit, where officials are
threatening to intervene.

Asia Pacific equities were
mixed, including in Japan where the Topix edged higher, but the Nikkei slipped.
Mainland Chinese stocks rose with the CSI 300 up almost 2%. However, Chinese
companies that trade in Hong Kong fell by about 0.2%. South Korea and Taiwan
went in opposite directions as did Australia and New Zealand. Europe's Stoxx
600 is slightly firmer after falling by 0.35% yesterday. US index futures are
trading softer. Bonds are selling off. European benchmark 10-year yields are
4-6 bp higher. The 10-year US Treasury yield is up four basis points to nearly
4.31%. Gold is a little softer but within yesterday's range (~$2024-$2038). April
WTI is flattish near $78.50.

Asia Pacific

Japan's economy continues to
struggle. 
After
dropping 2.6% in January, the most since the early days of the pandemic,
Japanese retail sales edged up by 0.8% in January. Although economists,
including the IMF continue to bang the drum about weak Chinese consumption,
though it has doubled on a per capita basis over the past decade and is
growing, Japan has been given a free ride. In GDP terms, its consumption has
fallen for three consecutive quarters through Q4 23. It might be stabilizing
this quarter, but next week's labor earnings data will show real wages continue
to lag inflation as has been the case since 2019 on an annual basis.
Separately, Japan reported a dramatic 7.5% plunge in January industrial output.
It grew by a little more than 1.2% all last year. Recall that a 7.5-magnitude
earthquake struck northern Japan on January 1 and disrupted economic activity.
There was also a safety scandal at a subsidiary of Toyota that also caused a
temporary halt of production. A recovery appears underway this month. Factory
output is expected to rise 4.8% this month and 2% in March. Separately, Japan
reported a 7.5% drop in January's annualized housing starts, which last rose in
May 2023.

However, the impact of the
data was overwhelmed by the comments from Takata, from the BOJ board.
He said that despite the economic
uncertainties, the "price target is finally coming into sight."
Takata said that the deflationary psychology was pivoting. Japan's 10-year
yield edged up and the yen jumped. Indeed, the dollar was sold below the 20-day
moving average (~JPY149.80) for the first time since the US employment data on
February 2. The poor economic data and the softness of inflation may have seen
some participants waver, but it still seemed to us that an exit from negative
rates in April remained the most likely scenario. And that still is the base
case.

China's PMI will be reported
tomorrow. 
It will
likely show the manufacturing sector continues to be challenged (below the 50
boom/bust level), as it has last March with one exception (September 2023). The
non-manufacturing, which some suggest is a better reflection of domestic
demand, held above 50 all last year. It finished 2023 at 50.4 and may have
ticked up in February amid anecdotal reports of strong holiday activity. If it
does rise, it would be for the third consecutive month. The composite PMI rose
to a four-month high of 50.9. The Caixin manufacturing PMI will also be
reported. It has fared better than the other one (from China Federation of
Logistics and Purchasing.

The dollar held barely below
the high set earlier this month near JPY150.90 yesterday and the BOJ comments
today saw it fall to almost JPY149.60, the low since the US CPI on February 13.
It recorded range that
day of approximately JPY149.25-JPY150.90 and has been in that range ever since.
The dollar settled last week near JPY150.50. It was the eighth consecutive
weekly gain, and that streak is threatened now. The net speculative
(non-commercial) short yen position in the futures market is the largest since
last November. The Australian dollar stabilized after falling almost 1%
yesterday but could not properly recover. 
After falling to about
$0.6490, the Aussie could barely trade above $0.6505 in North America. Today,
it rose slightly above $0.6520 in the Asia Pacific session but is slipping back
below $0.6500 in the European morning. The $0.6475 area stands in the way of a
retest on the year's low near $0.6440 when the US CPI was reported on February
13. The recovery of the yen helped Chinese officials defend the CNY7.20
level.
 The PBOC set the dollar's reference rate at CNY7.1036
(CNY7.1075 yesterday). This allows the dollar to trade in a range of roughly
CNY6.9615 to CNY7.2457. The average projection in Bloomberg's survey was
CNY7.1935 (CNY7.2004 yesterday). 

Europe

The preliminary estimate of
the eurozone's February CPI will be reported tomorrow. 
The median forecast in Bloomberg's survey
is for a 0.6% increase after a 0.4% decline in January. Recall that in February
2023, the CPI rose by 0.8%. That means that the year-over-year rate can slip to
2.5%-2.6% from 2.8% in January. The eurozone's CPI jumped by 0.9% and 0.6% in March
and April 2023, and will be replaced with more moderate numbers this year. This
means that when the ECB meets on April 10, CPI will be close to 2% and poised
to slip below the target. German states reported softer year-over-year CPI
today and the aggregate harmonized measure, due shortly, is expected to fall to
2.7% from 3.1%. France's harmonized measure fell to 3.1% from 3.4%. Spain's
eased to 2.9% from 3.5%. The swaps market has nearly a 90% chance of a rate cut
in June. Three cuts and about 40% chance of a fourth cut are reflected in the
swaps market.

The euro briefly slipped
below $1.08 for the first time in a week yesterday just at start of the
European session.
 It
recovered back to the session high, slightly below $1.0850 before it
consolidated in dull dealings in the North American afternoon. The bulls may
see a hammer candlestick, and the 20-day moving average held (~$1.0790), which
is also the halfway point of the bounce from the February 14 low slightly below
$1.07. The euro managed to settle above the 200-day moving average (~$1.0830).
It had advanced for eight of the ten sessions through Monday and brings a
two-day decline into today. It has traded with a firmer bias today and edged up
to almost $1.0855. The week's high was set on Tuesday near $1.0865 and
recapturing this would help the technical tone. Sterling's price action
was also not impressive, and it did briefly trade below its 20-day moving
average (~$1.2630).
It recovered about half-of-a-cent before sellers
reemerged and knocked it back to $1.2645. Sterling had not fallen since
February 19. It is in less than a quarter-cent range today below $1.2675. With
little market reaction, the UK named the OECD's Chief Economic Economist
Lombardelli to succeed Broadbent as deputy governor of the Bank of England,
whose term ends July 1. Today's byelection in the Rochdale is very
idiosyncratic and will be difficult to generalize. Separately, there are
reports of discussions between the US and the UK about the potential security
risks of holding national elections around the same time. 

America

Although US Q4 23 GDP was
revised lower (3.2% vs. 3.3%) consumption was revised higher (3.0% vs. 2.8%). 
The deflators were also tweaked higher.
However, the January data reported yesterday disappointed. The advanced
merchandise trade deficit widened to a six-month high of $90.2 bln, and retail
inventories rose by 0.5% after a 0.6% increase in December. Wholesale
inventories slipped by 0.1%. This is consistent with the recent pattern whereby
wholesalers are reducing inventory while retails ae see their inventories rise.
Last year, wholesale inventories fell by an average of 0.2% Retail inventories
rose by an average of 0.4% a month last year.

Today's focus is on the
personal income, consumption, and deflators. 
If US economic activity is going to
moderate, the consumer is key. Personal consumption expenditures rose by an
average of 0.5% a month last year. The weakness in retail sales hinted at a
pullback in the American consumer, who buys more services than goods. The
median forecast in Bloomberg's survey is for a 0.2% increase. Personal income
rose by an average of 0.4% a month in both 2022 and 2023, which is also the
average of the two years before Covid. Many participants are more interested in
the deflator, but with CPI and PPI in hand, economists have a fairly good sense
of the PCE deflators  A 0.3% increase in the headline deflator in January
will bring the year-over-year rate to 2.3%-2.4% (from 2.6% in December 2023),
which would be the slowest pace since February 2021. The core deflator is seen
rising by 0.4%, which would allow the year-over-year rate to slip to 2.8% from
2.9%. When the January CPI was reported on February 13, the implied yield of
the December 2024 Fed funds futures contract soared by 23 bp and the Dollar
Index jumped by about 0.75%. Because of the limited new information in deflator
today, the market response should also be constrained.

Canada reports December and
Q4 23 GDP today. 
Unlike
the UK and Japan, which reported back-to-back quarterly contractions, the
Canadian economy is likely to have returned to growth after a 1.1% annualized
contraction in Q3 23. A 0.8%-0.9% expansion seems likely. The monthly GDP
estimates contracted in June and July and were flat in August through October,
before the economy grew by 0.2% in November. It is expected to have grown by
another 0.2% in December. Ahead of the data, which we think is in line with the
central bank's expectations, the swaps market is pricing in about a 70% chance
of a cut in June. It has three cuts fully discounted this year and almost a 25%
of a fourth cut. At the end of last week, there was around a 76% chance of June
cut and only three quarter-point cuts were envisioned for this year. 

The US dollar reached a new
high for the year yesterday, breaching the CAD1.3600 level in early North
American turnover. 
It
pulled back and found support near CAD1.3560. It finished near CAD1.3575, its
highest settlement since mid-December. We had seen risk extending to
CAD1.3600-CAD1.3625. A move above there could spur another big figure advance
(CAD1.3700-CAD1.3730). A break below CAD1.3525, and ideally, CAD1.3500 would
neutralize yesterday's constructive price action. So far today, the greenback
is quiet but firmly trading between CAD1.3570 and CAD1.3590. The
Mexican peso is the strongest emerging market currency this month, gaining
about 0.85% against the dollar. 
That puts it in third place for the
year behind the Indian rupee, the only emerging market currency to have edged
higher against the greenback (~0.35%) and Hong Kong dollar (~-0.2%). The peso
has off by about 0.60% this year. Still, the dollar continues to fray the
downtrend line that we have been tracking off the January 23 and February 5 highs
but has not settled above it. We have it coming in near MXN17.09 today. 





































 


Disclaimer


Source: Yen Pops on BOJ Comments on Inflation, but the Dollar holds Most of Yesterday's Gains against the other G10 Currencies
82
Forex / USD/JPY slides to lowest level...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
USD/JPY slides to lowest level since 1990

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The Japanese yen has edged higher on Wednesday. In the European session, USD/JPY is trading at 151.17, down 0.26%.


Yen falls to 34-year low, will Tokyo intervene?


The Bank of Japan raised interest rates last week for the first time since 2007. The move marked a sea-change in monetary policy. However, the tightening has not translated into gains for the Japanese yen, which remains under pressure. Earlier today, the yen fell as low as 151.97, its lowest level since 1990.


Will the yen's slide trigger a currency intervention from Japan's Ministry of Finance? The MOF intervened last October when the yen dropped to 151.94, which means we are clearly within "intervention territory". The MOF's response to the current decline, however, has been limited to verbal intervention.


On Monday, as the top currency diplomat,  Masato Kanda, sent a warning to speculators that he was concerned by the yen's slide, saying it did not reflect fundamentals. Earlier today, Japan's finance minister, Shunichi Suzuki, warned that excessive movement by the yen would be answered with "decisive steps".


Japanese officials have limited their response to the yen's woes with jawboning but the risk of intervention is very real and will increase if the yen continues to lose ground. Still, it should be noted that last year's interventions didn't really get the job done, as yen gains were short-lived.


The lack of certainty as to whether Tokyo will intervene to prop up the yen could result in volatility for USD/JPY and investors will be listening carefully to every comment coming out of the BoJ or the MOF.


USD/JPY Technical


USD/JPY remains range-bound on the weekly chart:



  • 152.58 and 153.70 are the next resistance lines

  • There is support at 150.74 and 149.62



Source: USD/JPY slides to lowest level since 1990
83
Forex / USD/JPY shrugs after BoJ core ...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
USD/JPY shrugs after BoJ core inflation dips

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The Japanese yen continues to have a quiet week. In the North American session, USD/JPY is trading at 151.36, down 0.03%.


BoJ core inflation eases to 2.3%


Bank of Japan core inflation fell to 2.3% in February, down from 2.6% in January and shy of the market estimate of 2.5%. The release further complicates the inflation picture in Japan, as we continue to see inflation indicators heading in all directions. The BoJ core inflation index eased in February ,while the services producer price index climbed 2.1%, unchanged from January.


The BoJ made a massive pivot last week as it raised interest rates for the first time in 17 years. The central bank is counting on rising service inflation replacing cost-push inflation as the main driver of inflation, which it expects will make inflation sustainable around the 2% target.


The shift in monetary policy has not translated into a win for the yen, which is above the 151 line. There is the threat of currency intervention, as Tokyo intervened last September and October when USD/JPY rose above 152. Japanese officials are trying to jawbone the yen higher before resorting to intervention, with Japan's top currency diplomat sending a warning on Monday to speculators from trying to sell of the yen, saying the currency's recent slide did not reflect fundamentals.


In the US, it was a mixed day. Durable goods recovered in February with a gain of 1.4% m/m in February. This followed a 6.9% slide in January and beat the market estimate of 1.1%. The Conference Board consumer confidence index was almost unchanged at 104.7 in February, compared to 104.8 a month earlier. This was shy of the market estimate of 107.


USD/JPY Technical



  • USD/JPY tested support earlier at 151.35. Below, there is support at 151.13

  • 151.64 and 151.86 are the next resistance lines



Source: USD/JPY shrugs after BoJ core inflation dips
84
Forex / Australian dollar edges higher...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Australian dollar edges higher, CPI next

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The Australian dollar has extended its gains on Tuesday. In the European session, AUD/USD is trading at 0.6557, up 0.26%. On today's data calendar, the US will release two tier-1 events. Durable goods orders are expected to rebound with a 1.1% gain in February, after a 6.1% slide in January. The Consumer Board consumer confidence index is expected to tick up to 107 in February, up from 106.7 in January.


Australian CPI expected to rise slightly in February


Australia's inflation rate is expected to creep up in the February report, which will be released on Wednesday. The market estimate stands at 3.4% y/y for February, compared to 3.4% in January.

That could set back expectations for a rate cut from the Reserve Bank of Australia, which has kept rates unchanged at 4.35% for four straight times. The markets are of the view that the RBA's tightening cycle is done and have priced in a rate cut later in the year. Still, the RBA hasn't ruled out rate hikes, with inflation still well above the 2% target.


The central bank needs to be sure that once inflation reaches the target, it can be sustained at that level and is likely to be very cautious before shifting policy and cutting rates. The RBA doesn't meet until May and barring a huge surprise will again keep rates unchanged.


Australia's Westpac consumer confidence declined 1.8% in March to 84.4, worse than the market estimate of -1.6%. The index has been below 100 since February 2022, indicative of prolonged pessimism about the economy. Consumer confidence took a hit after the 6.2% gain in February, as frustrated consumers didn't see any signs of a rate cut at the RBA's meeting earlier this month.


AUD/USD Technical



  • AUD/USD is testing resistance at 0.6551. Above, there is resistance at 0.6598

  • There is support at 0.6467 and 0.6420



 


Source: Australian dollar edges higher, CPI next
85
Forex / CHF/JPY Technical: On the brin...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
CHF/JPY Technical: On the brink of a potential major bearish breakdown (CHF weakness)

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  • The surprise rate cut by SNB has reinforced the bearish momentum of CHF/JPY.

  • CHF has weakened across the board against the G-10 currencies; it is the weakest against the EUR.

  • Watch the 169.00 key short-term resistance on CHF/JPY with key support coming in at 166.55.


This is a follow-up analysis of our prior report, "CHF/JPY Technical: Potential major bullish trend exhaustion" dated 13 March 2024. Click here for a recap.


The CHF/JPY cross-pair has remained soft as it failed to surpass its 50-day moving average at around 170.00. The previous minor rally from the 11 Mar 2024 low of 167.08 was rejected at the 50-day moving average on 21 March 2024 and reversed sharply to the downside thereafter with a loss of -296 pips/-1.73% in the past three sessions as it printed an intraday low of 167.83 today, 26 March at this time of the writing.


Prior CHF strength has dissipated across the board



Fig 1: 1-month rolling performances of G-10 CHF crosses as of 26 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)


This recent bout of sharp downside reversal of the CHF/JPY has been attributed more to the CHF side of the equation as the Swiss National Bank (SNB) surprised market participants last Thursday, 21 March with a rate cut of 25 basis points (bps) to 1.5% on its key policy rate, its first cut in nine years, and ahead of the US Federal Reserve, Bank of England (BoE), and European Central Bank (ECB).


One of the push factors for enacting an earlier rate cut by SNB is the persistent strength of the franc that could erode the competitiveness of Swiss goods and services which in turn put a dent on economic growth prospects in Switzerland.


The CHF has weakened across the board against other major G-10 currencies and not surprisingly, the CHF is the weakest against the EUR with a loss of -2.5% based on a one-month rolling performance basis with the CHF/JPY coming in fifth position in the pecking order of CHF's weakness (see Fig 1).


CHF/JPY is looking vulnerable to a major bearish breakdown



Fig 2: CHF/JPY major & medium-term trends as of 26 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)



Fig 3: CHF/JPY short-term trend as of 26 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)


In the lens of technical analysis, the major uptrend of CHF/JPY in place since the 13 January 2023 low of 137.44 has shown signs of bullish exhaustion. Firstly, it has traced out a bearish "Ascending Wedge" configuration from the 3 October 2023 low where such configuration/chart pattern typically appears at the end of a significant uptrend phase (see Fig 2).


Secondly, medium-term upside momentum has turned lacklustre as depicted by the observations seen in the daily RSI momentum indicator where it has flashed out a persistent bearish divergence condition since 10 January 2024.


Thirdly, the final straw came after the CHF/JPY broke below its 20-day moving on last Thursday, 21 March ex-post SNB.


In the short-term as depicted in its hourly chart, the latest price actions of the CHF/JPY have transformed into a minor downtrend phase after today's bearish breakdown below its minor ascending trendline from the 11 March 2024 minor low.


If the 169.00 key short-term pivotal resistance (also the 20-day moving average) is not surpassed to the upside, the CHF/JPY may continue to display further weakness to expose the 167.10 near-term support and its key support at 166.55 (the 200-day moving average & lower boundary of the "Ascending Wedge").


A daily close below 166.55 increases the odds of a major bearish breakdown scenario for the CHF/JPY that is likely to trigger the start of a potential major multi-month downtrend phase.


Conversely, a clearance above 169.00 negates the bearish tone for a choppy minor corrective rebound for the next intermediate resistances to come in at 170.00/20 and 170.70 (medium descending trendline from 22 February 2024 high).


Source: CHF/JPY Technical: On the brink of a potential major bearish breakdown (CHF weakness)
86
Forex / Market Insights Podcast – Curr...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Market Insights Podcast - Currency war risk, US PCE, AU monthly CPI on the watch

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OANDA Senior Market Analyst Kelvin Wong joins Jonny Hart to discuss this week’s key economic data and events. A relatively quieter week versus last week’s  major central banks’ galore as we head into the Easter holiday with several key events and economic data to take note.


Firstly, risk of currency war is lingering around the horizon after China central bank, PBoC’s move to weaken the onshore Chinese yuan daily fixing on last Friday, 22 March that led the offshore yuan (CNH) to tumble by -0.8% against the US dollar to hit a two-week low. This move seems to be a deliberate attempt to maintain some form of exports’ competitiveness for China after the surprise rate cut from SNB ahead of the Fed, and ECB that has occurred on Thursday, 21 March that triggered a bout of US dollar strength resurgence. A further weakening of the yuan may spark the revival of currency war vibes as major exporters such as South Korea, and Singapore join in the bandwagon to weaken their domestic currencies against the US dollar which in turn increases the odds of a global risk off episode.


Lastly, we have the release of Australia’s monthly CPI data for February on Wednesday, 27 March, and the all important closely watch US PCE inflation data out on Friday, 29 March.



Source: Market Insights Podcast - Currency war risk, US PCE, AU monthly CPI on the watch
87
Forex / USD/JPY drifting at start of w...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
USD/JPY drifting at start of week

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The Japanese yen is showing limited movement on Monday. In the North American session, USD/JPY is trading at 151.25, down 0.13%.


Yen can't find its footing


Last week's Bank of Japan was dramatic as the central bank raised interest rates for the first time since 2007. The move did not catch the markets completely by surprise, as some media reports ahead of the meeting said the BoJ would raise rates and investors were looking at both the March and April meetings as strong possibilities for a rate hike.


The yen did not respond to the rate hike with gains, as might have been expected. There are several reasons for this. First, the actual tightening was limited, with rates rising from -0.10% to 0.10%. This means that although the BoJ rate is now in positive territory, the move had little impact on the wide USD/JPY rate differential. BoJ Governor Ueda said after the meeting that despite the hike, monetary policy would remain accommodative, saying that there was "some distance to go" until inflation climbs to the 2% target.


As well, many investors approached the BoJ meeting with a "buy the rumour, sell the fact" approach and this resulted in heavy selling of the yen after the rate announcement. The yen slipped 1.60% last week and dropped as low as 151.86, its lowest level since November 2023.


The Japanese yen has dropped to levels that could invite intervention – the Ministry of Finance intervened last September and October when the yen dropped to around the 152 line. If the yen continues to lose ground, the threat of intervention will become greater.


In the US, the markets have priced in three rate cuts this year, and the Fed also projected three cuts this year at last week's meeting. However, Atlanta Federal Reserve President Raphael Bostic sounded hawkish on Friday when he said that he expects only one quarter-point cut this year.


Bostic said that he was "definitely less confident than I was in December" that inflation will continue to drop towards the 2% target, as he noted that inflation remains stubbornly high and the US economy has been more resilient than he expected.


USD/JPY Technical



  • USD/JPY is putting pressure on resistance at 151.44. Above, there is resistance at 151.88

  • 151.02 and 15058 are providing support



Source: USD/JPY drifting at start of week
88
Forex / Australian dollar stabilizes, ...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Australian dollar stabilizes, consumer sentiment next

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The Australian dollar has started the week with slight gains, after sliding 0.86% on Friday. In the European session, AUD/USD is trading at 0.6530, up 0.24%.


PBoC move sends Aussie sharply lower


The Australian dollar ended the week with sharp losses after China's central bank set the daily fixing of the Chinese yuan lower than expected on Friday. The PBoC weakened the yuan in order to boost China's struggling economy and the move led to an AUD/USD sell-off on Friday. China is Australia's number one trading partner, and currency interventions such as the PBoC move can have a major impact on the Australian dollar.


It's a light day on the data calendar, which means we can expect a quiet day for AUD/USD. The only tier-1 event is US New Home Sales, which is expected to rise to 680,000 in February, up from 661,000 in January.


Australia releases Westpac Consumer Sentiment on Tuesday, with the markets braced for a decline of 1.6% for March. This follows a sparkling 6.2% gain in February, as consumer confidence climb sharply after the Reserve Bank of Australia held interest rates earlier in February. Consumers expressed optimism that the RBA had winded up its rate-tightening cycle.


In the US, the markets have high hopes for three rate cuts this year, and the Fed's "dot plot" projection at last week's meeting also projected three cuts this year. However, Atlanta Federal Reserve President Raphael Bostic dampened the mood on Friday when he said that he expects only one quarter-point cut this year. Bostic said that he was "definitely less confident than I was in December" that inflation will continue to drop towards the 2% target.


AUD/USD Technical



  • AUD/USD is testing resistance at 0.6534. Above, there is resistance at 0.6558

  • There is support at 0.6490 and 0.6466



Source: Australian dollar stabilizes, consumer sentiment next
89
Forex / Hang Seng Index: Potential cur...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Hang Seng Index: Potential currency war may kick start another bearish leg

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  • A less dovish Fed with a surprise cut by SNB has triggered a bout of US dollar strength since last Thursday, 21 March.

  • China’s central bank, PBoC responded with a lower-than-expected daily fixing on the onshore yuan (CNY) last Friday, 22 March which led the offshore yuan (CNH) to plunge by -0.8% against the US dollar to a two-month low.

  • Further CNH weakness may trigger a currency war which in turn can trigger a potential negative feedback loop back into risk assets.


This is a follow-up analysis of our prior report, "Hang Seng Index Technical: The countertrend rebound phase may have ended" dated 5 March 2024. Click here for a recap.


In the past two weeks, China, and Hong Kong benchmark stock indices (CSI 300, Hang Seng Index, Hang Seng TECH Index & Hang Seng China Enterprises Index) have traded sideways after recording gains of between +16% to +24% from their respective early February lows to recent mid-March highs.


These recent bouts of positive performances have propelled China and Hong Kong to be the top-performing major stock markets in February and are supported by the absence of a strong US dollar environment that reduces the risk of capital outflows as China remains mired in a deflationary risk spiral as well as ongoing high tech trade war with the US since 2018.


Hence, the recent rallies and outperformance of the key China and Hong Kong benchmark stock indices have been indirectly supported by a stable Chinese yuan where the CNH (offshore yuan) has traded in a tight range of 0.7% against the US dollar between 5 February to 12 March.


SNB surprised rate cut may trigger a currency war


Last Thursday, 21 March, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) engineered a surprise on market participants by enacting a rate cut of 25 basis points (bps) to 1.5% on its key policy rate, its first cut in nine years, and ahead of the US Federal Reserve, Bank of England (BoE), and European Central Bank (ECB).


One of the push factors for enacting an earlier rate cut by SNB other than a clear deceleration in inflationary trend (annualized core inflation rate has remained below 2% since May 2023) is the persistent strength of the franc that could erode the competitiveness of Swiss goods and services which in turn put a dent on economic growth in Switzerland.


The EUR/CHF cross pair has accelerated its decline in the past three years where it tumbled by -17% to print a close of 0.9270 on 5 January 2024, a fresh all-time low on a closing level basis since the surprise EUR/CHF unpeg on 15 January 2015 (intraday low of 0.8600 with a daily close of 0.9753).


The CHF tumbled after the surprise SNB's decision; it fell by -1% against the EUR to its weakest level since July 2023. Also, it dropped -1.2% against the US dollar to hit a fresh four-month low.


Interestingly, the offshore yuan (CNH) tumbled by -0.8% against the US dollar to print a two-month low last Friday, 22 March after the China central bank, PBoC set a weaker-than-expected daily fixing on the onshore yuan (CNY).


This latest set of FX policy moves by PBoC is likely to have signaled a willingness to sacrifice some form of capital outflows over maintaining exports' competitiveness to drive economic growth, and to fill the gap in the absence of robust domestic demand.


If the US dollar continues to strengthen due to the Fed's less dovish stance (in no hurry to cut rates), it may lead to a bout of engineered currency devaluations among major exporters such as South Korea and Singapore which is likely to put pressure on PBoC to weaken the CNH further to make up for a further potential loss of trade competitiveness.


Overall, a persistent US dollar strength trend may trigger "beggar-thy-neighbour" currency war-liked monetary policies among exporters.


A weaker CNH does not bode well for risk assets



Fig 1: CNH/USD direct correlation with CSI 300, HSCEI & HSI as of 25 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)


In the past two years, periods of significant weakness in the CNH (offshore yuan) against the US dollar have triggered a negative feedback loop back into the China and Hong Kong stock markets but to a lesser extent in emerging stock markets excluding China (see Fig 1).


Therefore, the recent softness seen in the CNH may trigger another round of potential multi-week bearish movements in the CSI 300, Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, and Hang Seng Index.


Bearish momentum has resurfaced in the Hang Seng Index



Fig 2: Hong Kong 33 Index major trend as of 25 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)



Fig 3: Hong Kong 33 Index short-term trend as of 25 Mar 2024 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)


The price actions of the Hong Kong 33 Index (a proxy on the Hang Seng Index futures) have staged a bearish breakdown below its former ascending channel support in place since the 22 January 2024 low and its 20-day moving average on last Friday, 22 March.


In addition, the daily RSI momentum has also broken below its key parallel ascending support and just breached below the 50 level which indicates a potential revival of medium-term bearish momentum.


In the lens of technical analysis, this latest set of bearish elements suggests the recent rally of +16% from the 22 January 2024 low of 14,777 has taken the form of a "bearish flag" configuration, aka countertrend rebound motion within its major and long-term secular bearish trend phases (see Fig 2).


Last Friday's bearish breakdown seen in the "bearish flag" and its daily RSI suggested a likelihood that the bearish impulsive down move sequence has resumed.


If the 16,960 key short-term pivotal resistance is not surpassed to the upside, the Index may see a further potential decline to expose the next intermediate supports at 16,135 (also the 50-day moving average), and 15,730 (see Fig 3).


However, a clearance above 16,960 negates the bearish tone to see a retest on the 17,230 minor swing high area of 13 March 2024, and above it sees the medium-term pivotal resistance coming in at 17,570/600.


Source: Hang Seng Index: Potential currency war may kick start another bearish leg
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Forex / Cdn. dollar dips as retail sal...
Last post by PocketOption - Apr 03, 2024, 05:41 am
Cdn. dollar dips as retail sales disappoint

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The Canadian dollar has extended its losses on Friday. USD/CAD is trading at 1.3569 in the North American session, up 0.29%.


Canada's retail sales slip in January


Canada's retail sales fell 0.3% m/m in January, revised from the earlier estimate of -0.4% and well off the 0.9% gain in December. The decline was driven by a sharp drop in motor vehicles and parts dealers (-2.4%).


The silver lining was that six of nine sub-categories showed an increase, which points to some strength in consumer spending. The estimate for February retail sales stands at 0.1%. Year-to-year, retail sales rose 0.9% in January, shy of the forecast of 2.5% and well off the December gain of 2.9%.


The retail sales data comes on the heels of the inflation report for February, in which inflation fell to 2.8% y/y. This was better than expected and the lowest rate since June 2023.

Core CPI, which excludes energy and food and is considered a better indicator of inflation trends, fell to 2.1% in February, which was lower than expected and the lowest level since March 2021.


With inflation continuing to fall toward the 2% target, pressure is growing on the Bank of Canada to lower rates and provide some relief to households, which are feeling the squeeze from elevated interest rates and the high cost of living.


The Bank of Canada has maintained the cash rate of 5.0% for six straight times and rates have likely peaked, although the BoC hasn't signaled that it plans to lower rates.


The markets have priced in a rate cut in June at around 70% and other major central banks are moving in the direction of lowering rates. There is a 70% probability that the Fed will lower rates, according to the CME FedWatch tool, and the Swiss National Bank surprised with a rate cut on Thursday, the first major central bank to lower interest rates.


USD/CAD Technical



  • USD/CAD tested resistance at 1.3577 earlier. Above, there is resistance at 1.3611

  • 1.3518 and 1.3484 are providing support



Source: Cdn. dollar dips as retail sales disappoint
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