- Dollar Maintains Congestion Between Positive Risk Trends and Disappointing Data
- Euro Faces a High Risk Breakout with the Decision and Commentary from the ECB
- British Pound: What Should We Expect from the Bank of England Rate Decision?
- Australian Dollar Pushed down by Risk Trends, Extends Declines after Retail Sales Data
- Canadian Dollar Shows No Progress on Post-Election Promises
- Japanese Yen: When will the G7 Start Threatening Intervention Again?
- Gold Decline Accelerates as Margin Requirement Hikes in Silver Unnerves Speculators
Dollar Maintains Congestion Between Positive Risk Trends and Disappointing Data
Through the past week, the dollar has essentially gone nowhere – yet that is better than suffering the continued pain of a selloff that has already driven the pair the currency down for months. Looking at the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index, we see that the currency has moved little more than 100 points since last Wednesday (now at 9418). This is a disappointing performance considering one of the greenback's two primary sources for strength – risk appetite – should be helping the currency higher. Indeed, the third consecutive drop in the S&P 500 along with the sharp decline in crude has helped out the dollar gain ground against high-yielding currencies; but no progress has been made against the euro and pound. The unexpected drop in the ISM service sector report and disappointing ADP payrolls figure were fought this positive bearing; but the greater pressure comes through the other major driver – rate expectations – as the dollar bows to the upcoming ECB decision.
Related:Discuss the Dollar in the DailyFX Forum, John's Picks: The Best Euro and Pound Trade Setups for the ECB/BoE Combo
Euro Faces a High Risk Breakout with the Decision and Commentary from the ECB
Top, scheduled event risk in this trading session is the European Central Bank's rate decision. Looking at market expectations and EURUSD, it may seem that the market is wholly uninterested in the monetary policy group's efforts; but these seemingly tepid measures belie the true threat this event posses. First we look at the market's most liquid currency pair which has carved a 150-point range for the past week. Congestion following the aggressive rally that has dominated so far this year may seem a sign that the market has suddenly lost interest in the euro; but in reality, the focus has in fact intensified. Considering the fundamental uncertainties surrounding the shared currency; the euro should be exceptionally sensitive to risk appetite trends. However, despite the pullback in equities markets and sharp declines from the high-yield currenciesthe past three days; the euro has instead held its ground. The very fact that the euro is stationary with this fundamental headwind suggests there is a significant counterbalance. The offset to risk is usually the potential reward that can compensate us.
Looking at the consensus forecast for the ECB decision, there is very little speculation that the central bank will lift its benchmark lending rate a second time in a row (if it does, expect an aggressive rally). Instead, traders' interests rest in the nuance of President Jean Claude Trichet's post meeting press conference. Should his follow up statement and the answers to the crowds statement indicate to the market that the central bank could move to hike at the very next meeting; leveraged expectations for a steady rise in yields through the year will be vindicated and the currency will rally. Looking at the rate bias from the market, we note that the 12-month forecast has recovered 19 basis points to price in nearly 92 bps worth of hikes through this time next year. Alternatively, should the European policy authority decide to show greater deference for growing sovereign debt issues and ease its expectations; that recent pull back in rate expectations that the euro simply rallied through will pull the rug out from under the currency. The most likely outcome is the middle-of-the-way scenario where the Trichet said the group makes no commitments ahead of time and that pressures are balanced by slightly skewed towards future rates. For that, we will need to watch the market closely to see exactly how they are interpreting the commentary and how it fits prevailing risk appetite trends.
British Pound: What Should We Expect from the Bank of England Rate Decision?
The sterling tried to recover Wednesday from its sharp selloff; but all it could muster was stabilization. The data through the previous session was notable; but wholly lacking for market impact. Construction activity (slowing faster than expected), consumer credit (showing a smaller increase than expected) and the first drop in Nationwide's housing price indicator in three months (a 0.2 percent contraction) does little to help a recovery effort. Data aside, market participants were far more interested in the upcoming BoE rate decision and its implications for the currency. It is interesting to note that the most likely outcome for this event (and this is a outlook that economists and the markets seem to share) is for the central bank to hold rates and its bond purchasing program while remaining mum on its expectations going forward. Yet, speculation of that potential rate hike is still factored in there. Any surprises from the event will almost certainly be bullish; but status quo will likely come off bearish.
Australian Dollar Pushed down by Risk Trends, Extends Declines after Retail Sales Data
The Australian dollar was already struggling through Thursday's session as soured risk appetite was turning investors away from risky returns to instead look to book profit. However, with the Aussie's yield, we need a meaningful effort to unwind risk exposure to keep the currency down; so already the momentum was looking like it was easing. That was until retail sales for March unexpectedly dropped for the first time in five months.
Canadian Dollar Shows No Progress on Post-Election Promises
It is difficult to identify a major, developed economy that is showing both encouraging economic prospects and a healthy fiscal position. Canada happens to fit that bill; and the investor appeal of the region only seems to have improved with the elections providing a majority government to a party intent on cutting taxes and spending while aiming to wipe out the nation's budget deficit. And, yet the loonie is more interest in risk trends…
Japanese Yen: When will the G7 Start Threatening Intervention Again?
At what point will the G7 live up to its open-ended threat of intervention should the yen ‘undue price action'? Though this is a broad definition, many speculators take it to mean action should the yen advance too far. There is a problem here though. The collective will to intervene is weak; and their means are modest. More importantly, if carry unwinding is taking place; it be a heavy buying pressure on the yen regardless of threat.
Gold Decline Accelerates as Margin Requirement Hikes in Silver Unnerves Speculators
The level of the dollar is still at the top of the list for fundamental influence over the strength of gold; but there is another way to shake any market that has a sharp fundamental focus – threaten is underlying structure. Though we haven't seen much in the way of increased costs for trading in the gold market (beyond price itself), the concern that four margin hikes in silver in 8 days certainly has metals traders' attention.
For Real Time Forex News, visit: http://www.dailyfx.com/real_time_news/
**For a full list of upcoming event risk and past releases, go to www.dailyfx.com/calendar
ECONOMIC DATA
Next 24 Hours
GMT |
Currency |
Release |
Survey |
Previous |
Comments |
1:30 |
AUD |
Building Approvals (MoM) (MAR) |
5.0% |
-7.4% |
Falling quarterly approval rate complement decline in prices |
1:30 |
AUD |
Building Approvals (YoY) (1Q) |
-25.2% |
-21.8% |
|
1:30 |
AUD |
Retail Sales s.a. (MoM) (MAR) |
0.5% |
0.5% |
Will a 5th higher sales level prompt the RBA to reconsider its wait and see approach with cash rates? |
1:30 |
AUD |
Retail Sales Ex Inflation(QoQ) (MAR) |
0.6% |
-0.3% |
|
2:30 |
CNY |
China HSBC Services PMI (APR) |
51.7 |
Expected fall following official data |
|
6:30 |
AUD |
Foreign Reserves (Australian dollar) (APR) |
35.7B |
Reserves rise as purchases of Australian dollars push exchange rate to record highs |
|
7:00 |
CHF |
Foreign Currency Reserves (APR) |
206.2B |
Currently near record highs |
|
8:30 |
GBP |
Purchasing Manager Index Services (APR) |
56 |
57.1 |
Decline seen as result of decreasing government spending |
8:30 |
GBP |
Official Reserves (Changes) (APR) |
$2253M |
Reserves to increase from tightening |
|
10:00 |
EUR |
German Factory Orders n.s.a. (YoY) (MAR) |
15.4% |
20.1% |
Decline in factory orders likely impact of stronger Euro, lower export orders |
10:00 |
EUR |
German Factory Orders s.a. (MoM) (MAR) |
0.4% |
2.4% |
|
11:00 |
GBP |
Bank of England Rate Decision (MAY) |
0.5% |
0.5% |
Governor King likely to keep plan stable to counteract austerity effects |
11:00 |
GBP |
BoE Asset Purchase Target (MAY 5) |
200B |
200B |
|
11:45 |
EUR |
ECB Rate Decision (MAY 5) |
1.25% |
1.25% |
Rate expected unchanged as price indices hold stable |
12:00 |
USD |
RBC Consumer Outlook Index (MAY) |
44.8 |
Early confidence indicator |
|
12:30 |
CAD |
Building Permits (MoM) (MAR) |
-2.5% |
9.9% |
Decline in permits may suggest turning real estate market |
12:30 |
USD |
Unit Labor Costs (1Q) |
0.8% |
-0.6% |
Worse jobs data will confirm Fed's view on slowing recovery, may give more ammunition for prolonged rate hold |
12:30 |
USD |
Non-Farm Productivity (1Q) |
1.1% |
2.6% |
|
12:30 |
USD |
Continuing Claims (APR 23) |
3649K |
3641K | |
12:30 |
USD |
Initial Jobless Claims (APR 30) |
410K |
429K | |
13:45 |
USD |
Bloomberg Consumer Comfort (MAY 1) |
-45 |
-45.1 |
Index suggests slight improvement |
14:00 |
CAD |
Ivey Purchasing Managers Index SA (APR) |
65.5 |
73.2 |
Preliminary PMI slows decline from previous month, cooling growth |
14:00 |
CAD |
Ivey Purchasing Managers Index (APR) |
65.1 |
73.2 |
|
23:30 |
AUD |
AiG Performance of Construction Index (APR) |
39.4 |
May suggest weaker construction sector following housing market |
|
23:50 |
JPY |
Monetary Base (YoY) (APR) |
16.9% |
Showing increase as BoJ continues cash injection for recovery |
GMT |
Currency |
Upcoming Events & Speeches |
13:15 |
USD |
Fed's Evans Gives Welcome Remarks in Chicago |
13:30 |
USD |
Bernanke Speaks at Chicago Fed Banking Conference |
17:15 |
USD |
Fed's Kocherlakota Speaks on Monetary Policy in California |
SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS
CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE - 18:00 GMT
Currency |
EUR/USD |
GBP/USD |
USD/JPY |
USD/CHF |
USD/CAD |
AUD/USD |
NZD/USD |
EUR/JPY |
GBP/JPY |
Resist 2 |
1.5160 |
1.6750 |
89.00 |
0.9345 |
1.0275 |
1.1800 |
0.8400 |
127.60 |
146.05 |
Resist 1 |
1.5000 |
1.6600 |
86.00 |
0.8900 |
1.0000 |
1.1000 |
0.8215 |
125.90 |
140.00 |
Spot |
1.4865 |
1.6525 |
80.50 |
0.8604 |
0.9581 |
1.0742 |
0.7925 |
119.66 |
133.02 |
Support 1 |
1.4000 |
1.6200 |
80.00 |
0.8600 |
0.9500 |
1.0400 |
0.7825 |
115.70 |
125.00 |
Support 2 |
1.3700 |
1.5750 |
75.00 |
0.8500 |
0.9055 |
1.0200 |
0.6850 |
105.50 |
119.00 |
CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE –EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMTSCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT
Currency |
USD/MXN |
USD/TRY |
USD/ZAR |
USD/HKD |
USD/SGD |
Currency |
USD/SEK |
USD/DKK |
USD/NOK |
|
Resist 2 |
13.8500 |
1.6575 |
7.4025 |
7.8165 |
1.3650 |
Resist 2 |
7.5800 |
5.6625 |
6.1150 |
|
Resist 1 |
12.5000 |
1.6300 |
7.3500 |
7.8075 |
1.3250 |
Resist 1 |
6.5175 |
5.3100 |
5.7075 |
|
Spot |
11.6473 |
1.5471 |
6.6728 |
7.7721 |
1.2306 |
Spot |
6.0818 |
5.0163 |
5.3104 |
|
Support 1 |
11.5200 |
1.5040 |
6.5575 |
7.7490 |
1.2145 |
Support 1 |
6.0800 |
5.1050 |
5.3040 |
|
Support 2 |
11.4400 |
1.4725 |
6.4295 |
7.7450 |
1.2000 |
Support 2 |
5.8085 |
4.9115 |
4.9410 |
INTRA-DAY PIVOT POINTS 18:00 GMT
Currency |
EUR/USD |
GBP/USD |
USD/JPY |
USD/CHF |
USD/CAD |
AUD/USD |
NZD/USD |
EUR/JPY |
GBP/JPY |
Resist 2 |
1.4886 |
1.6535 |
80.97 |
0.8653 |
0.9590 |
1.0852 |
0.7994 |
120.25 |
133.65 |
Resist 1 |
1.4858 |
1.6510 |
81.00 |
0.8634 |
0.9558 |
1.0857 |
0.7995 |
120.20 |
133.61 |
Pivot |
1.4832 |
1.6497 |
80.72 |
0.8611 |
0.9564 |
1.0775 |
0.7944 |
119.73 |
133.17 |
Support 1 |
1.4804 |
1.6472 |
80.75 |
0.8592 |
0.9532 |
1.0780 |
0.7945 |
119.68 |
133.14 |
Support 2 |
1.4778 |
1.6459 |
80.47 |
0.8569 |
0.9538 |
1.0698 |
0.7894 |
119.21 |
132.70 |
INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT
\Currency |
EUR/USD |
GBP/USD |
USD/JPY |
USD/CHF |
USD/CAD |
AUD/USD |
NZD/USD |
EUR/JPY |
GBP/JPY |
Resist. 3 |
1.5053 |
1.6690 |
81.46 |
0.8714 |
0.9675 |
1.0894 |
0.8041 |
121.49 |
135.04 |
Resist. 2 |
1.5006 |
1.6649 |
81.22 |
0.8687 |
0.9651 |
1.0856 |
0.8012 |
121.03 |
134.53 |
Resist. 1 |
1.4959 |
1.6608 |
80.98 |
0.8659 |
0.9628 |
1.0818 |
0.7983 |
120.58 |
134.03 |
Spot |
1.4865 |
1.6525 |
80.50 |
0.8604 |
0.9581 |
1.0742 |
0.7925 |
119.66 |
133.02 |
Support 1 |
1.4771 |
1.6442 |
80.02 |
0.8549 |
0.9534 |
1.0666 |
0.7867 |
118.74 |
132.01 |
Support 2 |
1.4724 |
1.6401 |
79.78 |
0.8521 |
0.9511 |
1.0628 |
0.7838 |
118.29 |
131.51 |
Support 3 |
1.4677 |
1.6360 |
79.54 |
0.8494 |
0.9487 |
1.0590 |
0.7809 |
117.83 |
131.01 |
v
Written by: John Kicklighter, Senior Currency Strategist for DailyFX.com
To receive John's reports via email or to submit Questions or Comments about an article; email jkicklighter@dailyfx.com
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.