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Yen Surges to Multi-month Highs 1/9/2006 6:00:00 PM by Korman Tam 1/9/2006 6:00 PM: EUR/$..1.2081 $/JPY..114.46 GBP/$..1.7650 $/CHF..1.2762 AUD/$..0.7536 $/CAD..1.1676
The prevailing theme for the day in the currency market was the strength of the yen, which traders bid to its highest level since October 2005 against both the dollar and the sterling. The sharp advance in the Japanese currency triggered a renewed bout of government jawboning. Japan’s Finance Minister Tanigaki, speaking in New York, reiterated the mantra that currencies should reflect economic fundamentals and fluctuate in a stable manner. Furthermore, in hopes of curtailing further appreciation, he added that government authorities would intervene if deemed necessary.
With exception to the yen, the dollar found reprieve against the majors on Monday, recovering slightly from last week’s steep sell-off. The session was quiet by way of US economic data, with just the release of November consumer credit. There was an unexpected drop of $648.8 mln, adding onto October’s record drop of $8.4 bln. Consensus forecast was calling for a rise of $4.5bln. The Fed noted that it was the first time in 13-yrs consumer credit had posted two consecutive monthly declines.
US equities performed well today as the Dow Jones breached the key 11,000-level for the first time since 2001, closing up 52-pts to 11,011.90, marking its fifth consecutive session of gains. The NASDAQ also closed higher, up 13-pts at 2318.69.
Fed speeches scrutinized for direction
Given market perception that the Fed may be nearing the end of its tightening cycle, speeches from Fed officials are scrutinized for clues as to when the central bank will rein in its hand. Today’s speakers included Kansas City Fed President Hoenig and Atlanta Fed chief Guynn, both of which echoed a similar message that the current Fed funds rate was near neutral. However, they both acknowledged the potential risk of inflationary pressures to the economy. Hoenig expects the economy to perform well in 2006, but foresees a slowdown in job growth since the economy is moving toward potential output. He also sees core inflation remaining low and stable in the coming year.
JPY Posts Broad-based Advance
The Japanese yen was the biggest mover in the currency market at the start of the week, rallying sharply against the dollar, euro and sterling. Government jawboning was to no avail as traders continued to the bid the currency higher.
USDJPY has recovered slightly off its multi-month low at 113.75 and now trades around 114.50. Support starts at 114, followed by 113.75 and 113. Further losses will target 112.70 and 112.20. Resistance is seen at 114.70, backed by 115 and 115.50. Further gains will target 116 and 116.45.
The daily chart of the Euro/Yen cross increasingly resembles a head and shoulders reversal formation, with the pair dropping toward the neckline level today at 137.65. The pair has since regained some traction and hovers near 138.40. Initial resistance starts at 138.70, followed by 139 and 139.50. Additional gains will target 140 and 140.60. Support starts at 138, followed by 137.65 and 137.20.
Euro relinquishes gains, eyes of ZEW
The euro fell back beneath the 1.21-level against the dollar, drifting to a session low near 1.2060. Traders will look ahead to Tuesday’s Germany ZEW sentiment survey, which is forecasted to improve from the previous month. The current situation component is seen improving to -38.5 in January, up from -44.4 from December. The economic sentiment is forecasted to jump to 64.0, compared with 61.6 from last month.
EURUSD is steady near 1.2080, with interim resistance starting at 1.21, backed by 1.2140 and 1.2180. Support starts at 1.2050, backed by 1.20 and 1.1930.
Yen Shines on Dollar`s Fed Doubts 1/9/2006 3:45:00 AM by Ashraf Laidi 1/9/2006 3: 45 am: EUR/$..1.2089 $/JPY..114.10 GBP/$..1.7665 $/CHF..1.2757 AUD/$..0.7521 $/CAD..1.1680
4:00 am E-12 Dec Retail PMI (exp 51.5, prev 50.7) 12:40 pm Atlanta Fed's Guynn Speaks. 1:00 pm Kansas City Fed's Hoenig Speaks. 7:30 pm AUD Nov Trade Balance (exp AUD -1.8 ln, prev AUD -1.3 bln)
It was only the first trading week of the year and the dollar lost over 2.5% alone against the yen and the euro amid a combination of escalating market perception that the Fed interest rate hike policy could be concluded by month end and last week’s disappointing US jobs report aiding to confirm these perceptions. The technical picture of the dollar also looks bleak (see latest Articles&Ideas; on www.forexnews.com) as the dollar index broke 3 key measures; the 50% retracement of the 86.04-92.73 move; breach below the 100-day MA; and the 22-month trend line support. The 200 day MA now follows at 87.70.
The question whether the dollar selling is merely technical has been raised. We feel the sell-off reflects more than technical unwinding of accumulated dollar longs and extends to a fundamental change in the currency’s interest rate and growth foundation. In otherwords, the dollar’s cyclical superiority could become increasingly challenged when the unwinding in the interest rate story is complemented by a cooling in US growth. We go one step further to predict a Fed rate cut in Q4.
Given the considerable certainty of a January 31 rate hike (current market probability at 80%), the probability curve can only change towards a decision to hold, a rude awakening for the dollar. As for the Fed March 28 meeting (where we continue to expect no move), it remains too far ahead to serve as a reliable foundation for dollar bulls, especially given the Fed’s increasingly data-dependent stance. If anything, the odds for a no change would likely increase the current 40-45% probability—again another dollar negative outcome.
The dollar foundation could be further damaged by Thursday’s release of the November trade deficit, which we expect to have eased to $67 billion from $68.9 bln. Tuesday’s release of the January ZEW survey from Germany is expected to show broad improvements, thereby potentially adding to the euro’s gains. Neither of the Bank of England nor the European Central bank are expected to change interest rates on Thursday, paving the way for Friday’s release of the US report on December retail sales, which is expected to show broad strengthening, even without the increase in auto sales. Yen hit 3-month highs amid Tanigaki’s comfort
The yen dragged the dollar below the 114 level for the first time in 3 months after MoF chief Tanigaki said recent yen moves were ``largely in line with fundamentals'', a remark that used to drive down the currency when the Fed was in the midst of its tightening cycle. As the tables reverse, it remains to be seen to what extent does the Japanese government allow its currency to appreciate in a stable manner.
Hitting its 200-week average for the first time in 2 ½ months, the pair is nearing the 113.54 support—the 61.8% retracement of the 108.74-121.36 rally. A breach below 113 calls up the next major figure at 112, which is the 200 day MA. Upside seen capped at 114.60, followed by 115.20. Even if the Bank of Japan does not signal any near term undoing of its quantitative easing policy, the pair is expected to be hit by Chinese currents. Whether it is a subsequent Yuan revaluation, announcing a higher daily rate of the CNY/USD rate, or the eventual diversification into nonUSD FX, the USDJPY pair should eye the 109.00 level by mid quarter.
EURUSD adrift at $1.21
EURUSD loses modest ground off Friday’s 3-month highs of 1.2180, testing the 50% retracement of the $1.26-1.1639 drop at $1.2120. The widening in Germany’s trade surplus is having little impact. Tomorrow’s ZEW survey, however, could reenergize the euro back to the $1.2190s as the recovery story in Germany further transitions into the recovery phase. Key upside stands at $1.2170, followed by the major $1.220 reistsance, which is the 200 day MA and the 61.8% retracement of the said move. Support starts at $1.2060, followed by 1.2010.
CAD serves as the greenback exception
The Canadian dollar shows a familiar pattern of shrugging the major currencies’ performance against the greenback as it enters its third daily decline, losing more than 2.5 cents. Thursday’s disappointing IVEY business survey plunging to 48.3 in December from November's 65.8, breaching expectations of a 62.7 figure was the worst showing since July 2003.
Friday’s Canadian job report showed an unexpected drop of 2,100 jobs in December with the unemployment rate up to 6.5%. Manufacturing jobs continued to lose, tallying the annual losses to more than 100K, but this did not stop finance and high tech jobs from offsetting the overall labor situation. It is also unlikely that the December job report would dissuade the Bank of Canada from raising its cash rate to the expected 3.75% by quarter end from its current 3.25%. But a rising CAD and potential slowing in the US economy could prevent the BoC from delivering the second expected tightening and stop at 3.50% in Q1.
USDCAD upside seen capped at 1.17—the 50% retracement of the 1.1970-1.1424 decline. Bids seen tapering off at 1.1730. Support starts at 1.1633, followed by 1.1580. Key foundation stands at 1.1520.
Speculators react to surging dollar bearishness
The beginning of year turnaround in the dollar appeared to be more than just a technical blip as speculators sharply cut their dollar longs against the yen, sterling and swiss franc, while driving up dollar shorts against the euro, the Canadian and Aussie. Euro bullishness escalated in its fourth straight week, rising 145% to 11,231 contracts and posting the highest bullish positioning in 4 months. It was also the longest streak of rising bullishness since July 2004. The combination of persisted increases in net longs and the sharp advances carry the making of a key improvement in the currency’s sentiment amid speculators and eventually commercial interests.
Yen bearishness edged higher last week, up 12% to 24,737 contracts following 2 consecutive weekly declines, one of which was a tumble to the lowest net short balance since May of last year. But considering the yen’s continued gains vs the dollar (nearly 2 yen in Friday only), we expect net shorts to drop to the mid teens.
Cable net shorts rose 30% to 15,021 contracts despite the ensuing 3-week highs in cable. Sterling’s losses against the euro are helping to moderate overall sterling bullishness especially amid lingering doubts over the Bank of England’s next policy move. The Bank is expected to stand pat at this week’s monetary policy meeting but rates are expected to drop to 4.25% this quarter.
Swiss net shorts fell 57% to 16,511 contracts, with the prior week’s increase in bearishness interrupted what would have been 4 consecutive weekly declines in nest shorts—a pattern not seen since last August. We could see speculators becoming net long in the swissy as the pair drags the dollar towards the 200-day moving average for the first time since May of last year.
CAD bullishness edged up 13% to 36,687 contracts after 2 straight weekly declines. With USDCAD 2 cents away from its 14-year lows, months, we could see net bullishness revisit its recent high of 56,183 contracts attained last month.
AUD net longs exploded by 687% last week to 7,110 contracts, the highest percentage increase since September 2004. With the pair nearing its 200 day MA for the first time in 4 months, we could see further escalation in net longs, especially as optimism in commodities remains unchecked.
Dollar Sentiment Remains Weak 1/8/2006 7:00:00 PM by Korman Tam 1/8/2006 7:00 PM: EUR/$..1.2137 $/JPY..114.25 GBP/$..1.7690 $/CHF..1.2710 AUD/$..0.7524 $/CAD..1.1656
No Key Data
The dollar suffered sharp losses in the first trading week of 2006, partly as a result of a shift in the market’s perception of future global interest rate differentials. Key economic reports proved to be detrimental for the currency, with the catalyst of the sell-off attributable to the language used in the minutes of the FOMC’s December meeting, which signaled a likely slowdown in the Fed’s tightening cycle. It is important to note however, that the possibility of further rate hikes will be contingent on the forthcoming economic data.
Friday’s worst than expected payrolls figure provided traders impetus to sell dollars on the notion that the softening labor market will rein in the Fed’s hand. Key US economic data to be closely watched in the coming week include November’s international trade deficit, due out on Thursday and inflation data in the form of December PPI, as well as December retail sales, slated for release on Friday. The US trade deficit is forecasted to shrink to 66.0 bln, improving from October’s record high deficit of 68.9 bln.
Euro hovers near highs
The key economic highlights from the Eurozone this week include Germany’s ZEW sentiment survey and the European Central Bank’s monetary policy meeting on Thursday. The ECB is expected to leave rates unchanged this week at 2.25%. EURUSD will face interim resistance at 1.2170 and 1.22. Additional resistance is eyed at 1.2240, followed by 1.2280. Support starts at 1.21, followed by 1.2050 and 1.20.
Cable buoyed ahead of data
Sterling continues to trade just beneath the 1.77-level at the start of the week. Traders will look ahead to UK manufacturing and industrial production, as well as the Bank of England’s monetary policy announcement. The BoE is also expected to leave interest rates unchanged.
Resistance begins at 1.77, followed by 1.7720 and 1.7780. Support is seen at1.7650, backed by 1.76 and 1.7530.
Yen creeps higher
The yen maintains its firm tone against the dollar, euro and sterling, which will also likely result in amplified jawboning efforts from Japanese authorities. The breach of the 115.50 level in dollar/yen sent the pair probing levels not seen since October 2005. Support starts at 114, followed by 113.60 and 113. Further losses will target 112.70 and 112.20. Resistance is seen at 114.60, backed by 115 and 115.50. Further gains will target 116 and 116.45.
Dollar Sinks as Jobs Blur Fed Picture 1/6/2006 2:40:00 PM by Ashraf Laidi 1/6/2006 2:40 pm: EUR/$..1.2154 $/JPY..114.32 GBP/$..1.7704 $/CHF..1.2692 AUD/$..0.7544 $/CAD..1.1656
US non-farm payrolls grew by 108,000 in December from a revised increase of 305, 000 in November, while the unemployment rate held fell to 4.9% from 5.0% and average hourly earnings edged up to 0.3% from 0.2%.The revisions for October and November showed a 71,000 increase and a 19,000 decrease respectively, netting an upward revision of 52,000. The December performance failed to keep up with November’s stellar 305K increase, which was the highest since April 2004. The all-industry slowdown was highlighted in construction, services, hospitality/leisure and government jobs. The 156K slowdown in services jobs was the biggest in 6 years, accounting for the bulk of the slowdown in the overall report. This may reflect the aggressive creation of jobs in the hurricane afflicted areas of the South over the October-November periods.
The 9K net drop in construction jobs was the first monthly loss of jobs since February 2004. This followed the 42K rise in November, which was the highest in 7 months. A strong rebound in January construction cannot be ruled out, and is largely dependent on weather conditions.
Meanwhile, the upside surprise in the report was the 18K increase in manufacturing, largely due a 15K increase in durable goods industries. This is the third monthly increase in manufacturing jobs, a feat not attained since spring 2004, when monthly payrolls averaged a creation of 300K jobs.
Average hourly earnings rose by 5 cents in December to $16.37, registering a 0.3% increase from November’s 0.2% monthly increase. The year-to-year reading registered a 3.3% rise, the highest since February 2003 when oil prices soared amid mounting uncertainty ahead of the Gulf War II.
Why today’s payrolls report would not have mattered for the dollar


The 71K upward revision in the November jobs report may have offset the weaker than expected December figure (108K vs expectations of 200K), but the final outcome has deepened the dollar gloom.
EURUSD is less than half a cent away from regaining its 200-day moving average, a feat not attained since May 2005.
USDJPY is near is 20 pips (2/10 of a yen) above its 200-week average, and 40 pips above the 38% retracement of the rise from the 101.66 low (Jan 2005) to the 121.36 high (Dec 2005). Even if the Bank of Japan does not signal any near term undoing of its quantitative easing policy, the pair is expected to be hit by Chinese currents. Whether it is a subsequent Yuan revaluation, announcing a higher daily rate of the CNY/USD rate, or the eventual diversification into nonUSD FX, the USDJPY pair should eye the 109.00 level by mid quarter.
Today’s payrolls report would not have mattered for the recently damaged US dollar. Considering the 95% probability of a 25-bp rate hike in January priced by the market prior to this morning’s report, a strong reading would naturally not have altered that probability. And given the fact that the following FOMC meeting is nearly 2 months away from today, it is too far ahead to make predictions far out based on a jobs report from December—which is 3 months lagged. Besides, going into the March 28 meeting, markets and the Fed would be equipped with data from the January and February labor reports, which reduce the relative importance of today’s numbers.
Given the considerable certainty of a January 31 rate hike (current market probability at 80%), the probability curve can only change towards a decision to hold, a rude awakening for the dollar.
As for the Fed March 28 meeting (where we continue to expect no move), it remains too far ahead to serve as a reliable foundation for dollar bulls, especially given the Fed’s increasingly data-dependent stance. If anything, the odds for a no change would likely increase the current 40-45% probability—again another dollar negative outcome.
Currencies Mired in Range ahead of Jobs 1/6/2006 6:30:00 AM by Korman Tam 1/6/2006 6:30 AM: EUR/$..1.2091 $/JPY..116.16 GBP/$..1.7549 $/CHF..1.2781 AUD/$..0.7466 $/CAD..1.1658
At 7:00am Canada December Net Change in Employment (exp 20.0k, prev 30.6k) Canada December Unemployment Rate (exp 5.0%, prev 5.0%) At 8:30am US December non-farm payrolls (exp 200k, prev 215k) US December Unemployment Rate (exp 5.0%, prev 5.0%) US December average hourly earnings (exp 0.2%, prev 0.2%)
Trading in the currency market slowed overnight as many remained on the sidelines ahead of the US December labor report, slated for release at 8:30 AM. The dollar continued to trade on a weaker footing against the majors, albeit within a close range.
Today’s key jobs report has the potential to either further elucidate the outlook on the Fed’s future moves or further cloud the picture ahead. Forexnews expect payrolls to come in at 150K-160K, while average hourly earnings to remain at 0.2%. The hourly earnings figure should also play a major role in shaping the market reaction, especially at a time when inflationary pressures are seen to have largely acquiesced. Another figure at 0.2% or less should weigh on the greenback. We expect a payrolls number above 250K to drag the euro to no more than $1.2025-30 USDJPY at 116.60.
Euro Steady Near 1.21
The Eurozone unemployment rate held steady in November, unchanged at 8.8% and the 3-month average at 8.3%. The highest unemployment rates in the Eurozone belonged to the two largest economies, Germany and France, at 9.3% and 9.2%, respectively. Eurostat
EURUSD hovered in a narrow range around the 1.21-level, with resistance eyed at 1.2130-40, backed by 1.2170 and 1.22. Additional resistance is eyed at 1.2240, followed by 1.2280. Support starts at 1.2050, backed by 1.20 and 1.1970. Subsequent floors are seen at 1.1940 and 1.19.
Loonie mired near lows ahead of labor report
Also due out today will be Canada’s December labor report, which has been overshadowed by its US counterpart. Nevertheless, the unemployment rate is seen holding steady at 5.0%, while the net change in employment is seen declining to 20.0k down from 30.6k.
USD/CAD edged up higher, rising to 1.1676. Resistance is seen at 1.17, followed by 1.1750 and 1.18. Additional gains will target 1.1840 and 1.1910. Support starts at 1.1620, backed by 1.1575 and 1.15.
Sterling Edges Higher
Cable crept up slightly higher in a quiet trading session, inching up to a day high at 1.7572. Resistance is seen at 1.76 backed by 1.7650 and 1.77. Additional ceilings are seen at 1.7750 and 1.78. Support starts at 1.7530, followed by 1.75 and 1.7450. A move lower will target 1.74, followed by 1.7340 and 1.73.
USDJPY holds above 116
A test below the 116-level was limited to early Tokyo trading. USDJPY has since held steady above and will target resistance at 116.45, the session high, followed by 117 and 117.50. Key resistance is eyed at 118.15. Support starts at 116, backed by 115.50-60 and 115. FX Stalls Ahead of Friday’s Labor Report 1/5/2006 6:20:00 PM by Ashraf Laidi 1/5/2006 6:20 pm: EUR/$..1.2103 $/JPY..115.96 GBP/$..1.7549 $/CHF..1.2765 AUD/$..0.7473 $/CAD..1.1615
Markets showed little reaction to an improvement in the US services ISM and the unexpectedly large drop in the weekly jobless claims as traders stayed on the sideline ahead of Friday’s release of the US labor report. The Services ISM survey rose to 59.8 in December from 58.5 in November, pulling a broad pick up across the new orders and employment indices. This followed Tuesday’s services ISM which hit its lowest level in 4 months.
Jobless claims last week fell by 35,000 to 291,000, reaching their lowest since Sep 2001, reflecting an improvement in the jobs market. But the drop could also be a result of end of year holidays preventing filers from claiming jobless benefits.
Payrolls could confuse FOMC picture
Tomorrow’s job report has the potential to either further elucidate the outlook on the Fed’s future moves or further cloud the picture ahead. We expect payrolls to come in at 150K-160K, while average hourly earnings to remain at 0.2%. The hourly earnings figure should also play a major role in shaping the market reaction, especially at a time when inflationary pressures are seen to have largely acquiesced. Another figure at 0.2% or less should weigh on the greenback. We expect a payrolls number above 250K to drag the euro to no more than $1.2025-30 USDJPY at 116.60.
With futures markets pricing over a 90% chance for a 25-bp rate hike this month and about a 45% chance for a similar move in March. We expect the downward dollar impact from a weak report to be greater than an upward impact from a strong report because any jobs strength in January is seen as too early to impact the Fed’s decision-making in March. A figure of 180-150K is expected to be dollar negative, as markets begin to magnify the possibility of a Fed hold in the January meeting. Some media reports are beginning to circulate stories that the Fed may have already finished raising interest rates pointing to stabilizing inflation (CPI and PCE) and weakening services ISM.
EURUSD lingers between 100 and 200 day MAs
EURUD hovers between the 100 and 200-day moving averages during a day where improving US data were welcomed with relative serenity, emphasizing the increasingly dollar-negative bias emerging in the past 3 trading days. With the yield curve flirting with inversion and the FOMC mulling the end of tightening, dollar bulls are growing increasingly averse to a pushing the bid button.
We showed yesterdays’ EURUSD chart that the pair has finally broken above its 100-day MA ($1.2005) after 4 previous failures of doing so. Drifting around the $1.2120s, EURUSD faces pressure at $1.2150, followed by $1.2175. Key resistance stands at 200 day MA at $1.2218 also the 61.8% retracement of the 1.26-1.1639 move. Support starts at $1.2060, followed by 1.2010.
CAD plunges on sharp IVEY drop
CAD dived by 2 full cents to US$1.1650 after Canada’s IVEY business survey plunged to 48.3 in December from November's 65.8, breaching expectations of a 62.7 figure. It was the worst showing since July 2003, when purchasing managers were pessimistic due to the SARS outbreak. Respondents blamed the strengthening currency and worries about the US economy.
Tomorrow’s job report from Canada could also playa role in shaping the USCAD pair. Forecasts expect a 21K rise in payrolls after a 30.6K rise in November with the unemployment rate seen flat at 5.0%.
We see USDCAD retesting support at 1.1570, backed by 1.1520. Upside capped at 1.1660. Key pressure held at 1.17—the 50% retracement of the 1.1970-1.1424.f
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