Friday, August 5, 2022

Dollar firm ahead of jobs report – BBH



Win Thin, Global Head of Currency Strategy at BBH, offers a brief overview of the US dollar price action on Friday and the closely-watched US monthly jobs data. The popularly known NFP report would play a key role in influencing the near-term USD price dynamics amid the recent hawkish remarks by several Fed officials.

Key Quotes:

“DXY has risen 3 of the past 4 days and is trading near 106 currently. We maintain our strong dollar call as Fed officials are making it clear that markets misread the Fed’s commitment to lowering inflation.  The greenback is also getting more traction as data came in stronger than expected.  Today’s jobs data will likely be key for the medium-term dollar outlook.”

“Consensus sees 250k jobs added vs. 372k in June, while the unemployment rate is expected to remain steady at 3.6% and average hourly earnings are seen falling two ticks to 4.9% y/y.  Fed Chair Powell stressed labor market strength many times in his post-decision press conference, which supports our view that the Fed is not about to pivot while the economy remains at full employment.  June consumer credit will be also reported and is expected at $27.0 bln vs. $22.347 bln in May.”


“WIRP suggests a 50 bp hike September 21 is fully priced in, with around 40% odds of a larger 75 bp move.  The swaps market is pricing in 100 bp of tightening over the next 6 months that sees the policy rate peak near 3.5%, followed by the start of an easing cycle over the subsequent 6 months.  The Fed has made it clear that this is not its expected rate path and so we look for a hawkish shift in market pricing in the coming days and weeks if the U.S. data cooperate.”

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Thursday, August 4, 2022

EUR/USD Price Analysis: Looks side-lined within 1.0100-1.0300



EUR/USD regains poise and approaches 1.0200 on Thursday.

Price action remains stuck with the 1.0100-1.0300 range.

EUR/USD reverses part of the weekly pullback and manages to retest the vicinity of the 1.0200 region on Thursday.


In light of key releases in the US docket on Friday, the pair is expected to keep the current 1.0100-1.0300 range broadly in place for the time being. The loss of the lower bound of the range could see a potential visit to the parity level return to the radar.


In the longer run, the pair’s bearish view is expected to prevail as long as it trades below the 200-day SMA at 1.0934.

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Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD retreats from 50-HMA with eyes on Taiwan, US macro



Gold price fades recovery moves as traders struggle for clear directions.

China Caixin Services PMI, mixed Fedspeak favor XAU/USD buyers.

US-China tensions over Taiwan, recession woes keep sellers hopeful.

US ISM Services PMI, Factory Orders may entertain traders but risk catalysts are more important.

Gold price (XAU/USD) fails to extend daily gains around $1,770 amid the early Wednesday morning in Europe. In doing so, the yellow metal buyers struggle for fresh clues to stretch the latest recovery moves inside a trend-widening chart pattern.


Mixed concerns over Taiwan and an absence of strongly hawkish Fed comments seem to restrict immediate XAU/USD moves. Also challenging the gold price is the upbeat prints of China Caixin Services PMI for July contrasting to the official activity numbers at home and abroad, as well as broad recession woes.

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi vows to not abandon Taiwan amid Chinese pressure, per Bloomberg, while Taiwan President shows readiness to retaliate Beijing military moves, if any. On the other hand, the private services gauge from the dragon nation rose to 55.5 versus 48 expected and 54.5 prior.


Elsewhere, St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard and Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester talked down US recession concerns while supporting chatters about the 50 basis points (bps) rate hike in September. However, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said that she is looking for incoming data to decide if they can downshift the rate hikes or continues at the current pace, as reported by Reuters.


Amid these plays, S&P 500 Futures rise 0.25% intraday while the US 10-year Treasury yields drop 1.5 basis points (bps) to 2.726% at the latest.


Given the market’s indecision, gold traders should wait for the US Factory Orders for June and ISM Services PMI for July. Also important will be to the headlines surrounding China, Taiwan and Fed.

Technical analysis

Gold price pares daily gains inside a one-week-old megaphone trend widening technical chart formation on the hourly play.


That said, the XAU/USD’s latest pullback from the 50-HMA, at $1,770 by the press time, lacks support from the MACD, which in turn hints at the quote’s further advances towards the previous day’s high near $1,788.


However, upper line of the aforementioned megaphone pattern, near $1,790, could challenge the bullion’s further upside.


Meanwhile, pullback moves may initial aim for the stated formation’s support line, close to $1,755, before directing gold sellers towards the 50% Fibonacci retracement of July 27 to August 02 upside, near $1,749.


Also acting as the downside filter is the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level around $1,740.


Overall, gold price grinds higher and may witness further volatility inside the megaphone.


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Tuesday, August 2, 2022

EUR/JPY Price Analysis: Outlook negative below the 200-day SMA



EUR/JPY drops further and challenges the key 200-day SMA.

Below the latter, the cross could risk a deeper retracement.

EUR/JPY extends the bearish move well south of the 134.00 mark on Tuesday.


In the meantime, price action in the cross remains entrenched in the negative territory, losing ground for the fourth consecutive session so far.


A break below the key 200-day SMA, today at 133.69, carries the potential to accelerate losses and shift the outlook to negative.


Immediately to the downside now emerges the May low at 132.65 (May 12).


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Monday, August 1, 2022

GBP/USD climbs to fresh daily high, further beyond 1.2200 amid sustained USD selling



GBP/USD regains positive traction on Monday amid the prevalent USD selling bias.

Diminishing odds for more aggressive Fed rate hikes continue to weigh on the USD.

A softer risk tone, rebounding US bond yields to limit the USD losses and cap the pair.

The GBP/USD pair jumps back above the 1.2200 mark during the early part of the European session, attracting fresh buying on the first day of a new week. Spot prices, however, still remain well below a one-month high at around the 1.2245 touched on Friday.


The US dollar languishes near its lowest level since July 5, which is turning out to be a key factor lending support to the GBP/USD pair. Market participants continue to scale back their expectations for more aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve amid worries about an economic downturn. This, to a larger extent, overshadows Friday's stronger US Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) and continues to weigh on the greenback.

The British pound in contrast is underpinned by rising bets for a 50 bps rate hike by the Bank of England – though, that said, a combination of factors could cap gains for the GBP/USD pair. The recent optimistic move in the equity markets has run out of steam amid growing recession fears. This, along with a modest bounce in the US Treasury bond yields, should help limit the downside for the USD and act as a headwind for the major, at least for now.


Investors might also refrain from placing aggressive bets and prefer to wait on the sidelines ahead of confirmation from the Bank of England policy meeting on Thursday. Apart from this, important US macro data scheduled at the beginning of a new month would determine the next leg of a directional move for the GBP/USD pair. A rather busy week kicks off with the release of the ISM Manufacturing PMI, which could provide some trading impetus to the major.


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Saturday, July 30, 2022

 Dollar slides as mixed U.S. data highlights uncertain path



The dollar dropped to a three-week low in choppy trading on Friday, as investor concerns about recession outweighed inflation worries, for now, amid a mixed batch of economic data.


There was also a lot of month-end position-squaring, analysts said.


Earlier, U.S. economic numbers showed that inflation continued its red-hot rise in June, keeping the Federal Reserve on track to raise interest rates as aggressively as it deems necessary.


The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index jumped 1.0% last month, the largest increase since September 2005 and followed a 0.6% gain in May. In the 12 months through June, the PCE price index advanced 6.8%, the biggest gain since January 1982.


Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the PCE price index shot up 0.6% after climbing 0.3% in May.


The dollar initially rose on the inflation numbers, but gains fizzled amid the final University of Michigan report showing consumers' inflation expectations slipped in July.


Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell had mentioned the Michigan survey last month as key behind the pivot to the more aggressive rate posture.


The greenback was also partly weighed down by data showing the Chicago manufacturing index falling to a 23-month low of 52.1 from a prior low of 56.0, according to Action Economics.


In afternoon trading, the dollar index, a measure of its value against six major currencies, slid 0.3% to 105.89. Earlier, it slid to a three-week trough of 105.53.


"Traders are engaging in some quarter-end position-squaring, preparing for a period in which inflation and growth rates subside, tilting interest differentials against the dollar," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at payments company Corpay in Toronto.


"Next week's (U.S.) jobs report looms as a potential volatility catalyst, and no one wants to be caught offside if job creation slows more than expected," Schamotta added.


Another key indicator, the U.S. employment cost index (ECI), also increased. The ECI, the broadest measure of labor costs, rose 1.3% last quarter after accelerating 1.4% in the January-March period, the Labor Department said on Friday.


The index is widely viewed as one of the better gauges of labor market slack and a predictor of core inflation.


Action Economics, in its blog after the U.S. data, said the ECI was one of the metrics that alarmed the Fed and caused its pivot to a 75 basis points hike.


Post-data on Friday, rates futures markets have priced in a 72% chance of a 50 basis points hike at the Fed's September policy meeting, with a 28% probability of a 75-bps rate increase. .


The rates markets also predict that the fed funds rate will peak in February 2023. Pre-U.S. data, futures were betting that top in the fed funds rate would hit this December.


The euro rose 0.2% versus the dollar to $1.0213.


Against the yen, the dollar slid 0.7% to 133.42 yen. The greenback also posted its largest monthly percentage fall since July 2020.


The yen was the primary short bet of the widening interest rate differential trade between the United States and its global peers, with net shorts on the currency, despite a recent pullback, above historical averages at $5.4 billion.

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Friday, July 29, 2022

Oil prices rise as chances of OPEC+ supply boost dim



Oil prices rose in European trading on Friday as attention turned to next week's OPEC+ meeting and expectations that it will dash U.S. hopes for a supply boost.


Brent crude futures for September settlement, due to expire on Friday, gained $2.30 to trade at $109.44 a barrel by 1200 GMT after touching their highest since July 5. The more active October contract was up $2.24 at $104.07.


U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose $2.20 to $98.62 a barrel.


Both contracts are set for a second monthly loss, however, down 4.7% and 6.8% respectively.


A weaker dollar and stronger equities also lent support on Friday. A fall in the dollar makes oil cheaper for buyers with other currencies.


Global equities, which often move in tandem with oil prices, were up on the hope that U.S. monetary tightening would not be as hawkish as initially expected after disappointing growth figures. [MKTS/GLOB]


A Reuters survey forecast Brent and U.S. crude would average $105.75 and $101.28 a barrel respectively this year. [OILPOLL]


Front-month Brent futures are selling at a rising premium to later-loading months in a market structure known as backwardation, indicating tight current supply.


"The oil market in Europe is considerably tighter than in the U.S., which is also reflected in the sharply falling Brent forward curve," said Commerzbank (ETR:CBKG) analyst Carsten Fritsch.


A key driver will be the next meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies led by Russia, together known as OPEC+, on Aug. 3.


OPEC+ sources said the group will consider keeping oil output unchanged for September, with two OPEC+ sources saying a modest increase would be discussed.


A decision not to raise output would disappoint the United States after U.S. President Joe Biden visited Saudi Arabia this month hoping to strike a deal to open the taps.


Analysts, however, said it would be difficult for OPEC+ to boost supply, given that many producers are already struggling to meet production quotas.


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USD Index Price Analysis: A drop to the 200-day SMA cannot be ruled out DXY breaks below the 106.00 support to clinch new multi-month lows. ...