ASIA/EUROPE FOREX NEWS WRAP
After yesterday’s slightly Bullish Engulfing pattern, alongside the USDJPY’s Double Inside Day pivot, the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR) has broken loose of its recent downtrend, adding nearly half a percent thus far on Tuesday as market participants recalibrate their portfolios for tomorrow’s Federal Reserve Rate Decision. Of note, the Euro is quite resilient among the components of the USDOLLAR Index, posting meager gains against the world’s reserve currency that are seemingly lost among the Australian Dollar, British Pound, and Japanese Yen.
On the British Pound: both headline and core inflation figures were above forecast at +2.7% y/y and +2.2% y/y (versus +2.6% y/y and +2.1% y/y expected, respectively), and while these data would normally provoke a bullish response by the Sterling, the PPI data released earlier has had a more apparent impact. The factory gate price data showed unexpected deflation on both the Input and Output readings, and has served as a strong enough counterweight to see the GBPUSD rejected at key technical resistance (see below).
On the Japanese Yen: the Bank of Japan released estimates that showed the current account balance widened to an all-time record amid the monumental easing measures implemented under ‘Abenomics’ and the Kuroda regime. Certainly, the disappointing Japanese trade balance figures last night lend to the notion that the economy’s problems are deeper rooted than just a strong currency – perhaps this is a bit of the “J curve” at work (when an economy whose currency weakens sees its trade deficit widen at first, then narrow), but in any case, if Japanese exporters continue to struggle, we should expect more from ‘Abenomics.’
Taking a look at European credit, peripheral yields have leaked higher all morning, a main impediment on the EURUSD’s rally to overtake $1.3400. The Italian 2-year note yield has increased to 1.756% (+4.4-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has decreased to 2.161% (-0.1-bps). Similarly, the Italian 10-year note yield has increased to 4.274% (+1.4-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has increased to 4.567% (+0.4-bps); higher yields imply lower prices.
RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 10:45 GMT
CHF: +0.33%
EUR: +0.13%
CAD: -0.19%
NZD:-0.35%
GBP:-0.61%
JPY:-0.86%
AUD:-0.93%
Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): +0.45% (-0.25% prior 5-days)
ECONOMIC CALENDAR
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TECHNICAL ANALYSIS OUTLOOK
EURUSD: No change: “The pair has traded into Right Shoulder resistance in a potential Head Shoulders pattern dating back to the September 2012 high (post-QE3 announcement), and the two overshoots on Wednesday and Thursday into $1.3400 have been rejected. Accordingly, a Bearish Key Reversal on the [Thursday, June 13] 4H timeframe (01:00 EDT to 05:00 EDT candle) gives an excellent reference points for shorts, as the period high coincides with the mid-January swing high at 1.3400/05. I maintain: ‘Considered in context of (1) the USDCHF failing to set a new monthly low as the EURUSD set a new monthly high today and (2) the EURJPY reversing sharply off of [¥128.00], there is evidence building that a turn may be coming.’”
USDJPY: No change: “With US Treasury yields [near] their highest level in 16-months and the USDJPY sinking, there is probably trouble ahead (I don’t think Fed begins a significant QE3 taper in June; thus yields fall as bond prices move up, weighing on USDJPY). There are two major bearish patterns in play right now: a Bearish Rising Wedge; and a Bearish Broadening Wedge. The Bearish Rising Wedge was initiated on May 30, and the measured move calls for a return to the base at 92.55. The Bearish Broadening Wedge, initiated yesterday, calls for a move back to the base near 90.84. Accordingly, in context of retail traders adding to their USDJPY longs, we find that the combination of sentiment and technicals offers a favorable opportunity for continued losses.”
GBPUSD: The pair is attempting to crack the 200-SMA at $1.5700 again, after several rejections last week and the week before. Once more, the GBPUSD finds itself in a state trepidation as it makes little headway above the key moving average, as the daily RSI breaks its late-May/early-June uptrend at the top rail of the ascending channel off of the March and May lows (drawn to the early-May high). In terms of daily RSI, the uptrend has broken before achieving overbought conditions, suggesting that a near-term top may be in place. I maintain that I prefer the GBPUSD short from here with risk contained to the weekly highs above 1.5735/40 – although with the Fed this Wednesday, pure volatility rather than a true break could provoke price to clear this tentative level of resistance.
AUDUSD: More short covering for the Australian Dollar (as well as the rest of the commodity currency bloc) as an economic calendar bereft of significant data offers the calm conditions necessary for a rally by the weakest major currency in the 2Q’13. Thus far, the rally from the daily Hammer last Tuesday at major support – the Oct’11 low as well as the Nov’09 and Apr’10 highs between $0.9380/410 – has resulted in a pullback to the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement from the April high to June low at 0.9620/25, just short of the 21-EMA at 0.9655. The AUDUSD has failed to achieve a close above the 21-EMA since April 30 suggesting that selling pressure remains firm. Finally, with the bullish daily RSI divergence having been mostly resolved at this point in time as well, the last bout of AUDUSD strength may arrive this week.
SP 500: The SP 500 held the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the late-February low to the late-May high at 1610, and is trading back to the conflux of the 8-/21-EMA at 1631/33 again – price has touched one of these two moving averages every trading session since June 7. Resistance now comes at the top of the Evening Star candle cluster that formed June 7 to June 11) at 1650. The index is also close to breaking the daily RSI downtrend, which would be supportive of further gains as well (a Symmetrical Triangle on RSI is breaking to the upside). Firm support is at 1595/1600, and a break here would lead to a sharp pullback towards 1585 and 1561.
GOLD: No change: “If the US Dollar turns around, however (as many of the techs are starting to point to), then Gold will have a difficult gaining momentum higher. Indeed this has been the case, with Gold failing to reclaim the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the April meltdown at $1487.65, only peaking above it by 35 cents for a moment a few weeks ago.”
— Written by Christopher Vecchio, Currency Analyst
To contact Christopher Vecchio, e-mail cvecchio@dailyfx.com
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